Boosterettes To Have
Picnic For Boosters
The Hazelwood Boos, rettes will
entertain the Boosters with a
picnic Thursday, August 9. at
6:30 p.m. at the L. N. Davis Camp
on the Balsam Road.
Mrs. Claude Allen, Mrs. Paul
Bryson, and Mrs. Sam Lare com
pose a committee in charge of the
arrangements.
? Mrs. George Bischoff is presi
dent of the Boosterettes and Law
rence Davis is president of the
Boosters.
? ? ?
Meeting-Workshop Held
By Allen's Creek Club
The Aliens Creek Home Dem
onstration Club held an all-day
meeting and copper tooling work
shop Friday in the home ot Mrs.
Moody Farmer.
Guests were Mrs. Bryce Craw
ford. Mrs. Jack McCracken and
Mrs. Dotson of St. Petersburg, Fla.
A number of tooled copper and
plasic articles were completed.
* * *
Thickety Club Holds
Corsage Workshop
A ^^kshop on corsage making
was members of the Thick
ety nKe Demonstration Club
Thursday night in the basement of
the Rockwood Church.
The workshop was held in prep
aration for the club's Achieve
ment Day exhibit which will fea
ture corsage making.
Mrs. Lloyd Parham. club presi
dent, directed the program and
special recognition was given to
the work ol' Mrs. Robert Atkinson, i
Mis', Lura Wright, and Mrs. Art ?
Tianthar".
Hostesses for .he meeting were i
Mrs, Frank Ford and Mrs. Troy .
Ford.
? * *
Maggie Club Meets
For All-Day Workshop
The Maggie Home Demonstra- 1
tion Club held a workshop for
making lamp shades last week in
the home Of Mrs. Eldridge Cald-'
well.
A business meeting was held fol- i
lowing luncheon with Mrs. Cald
well presiding. Mrs. W. D. White,
health leader, discussed "Cancer i
Cures."
Mrs. Grover Caldwell and her
daughter, Mrs. Dorothy McGaha I
were guests.
* * *
CLYDE CIRCLE SETS MEETING
Circle No. 1 of Central Metho
dist Church at ^lyde will meet
in the home of Mrs. Dae Mann.
Thursday. August 9. at 2 p.m.
* * *
Nothing Sells Like
Newspapers ,
I
MR. AND MRS. FRANK FROST l.ANF. were married Saturday.
Jub 28 in Our Lady cf Mt. Carmel Church. Baltimore. Md. The
bride Ls the former Miss Gertrude lit tiwig C.oertz of Baltimore. Mr.
Lane is the son of Col. sand Mrs. Raymond C. Lane of Lake Juna
luska. Thev'are making their home in Fort Worth, Tex., where the |
bridegroom has a position with Conair Aircraft. - wo.
Personals
Mrs. Espey Reed and her chil
dren of New Orleans are spending
several weeks with her father-in
law. Lyman C. Reed, at his home
near Bethel. Her husband, who
was also here for a visit has re
turned to New Orleans
* * * I
I
Jimmy Davis, a student at the
U. S. Military Academy. West 1
Point, is spending a month's vaca- |
tion with his parents. Mr. and Mi's, j
James Davis, in Hazelwood.
? * *
Among the out-of-town guests
here for the Met calf e-Crouser wed
ding Saturday night were Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas R. Hicks. Mr. and
Mrs. C. J. Hicks, Mr. and Mr- E.
D. Brown. Mrs. P. C. Hawkins. |
Mark Summey. and Mrs. II D !
Mayhew. all of Forest City.
* * * I
Mr. and Mrs. John Norman and J
son. of Dallas. Tex., are spending a j
week with Mr. and Mrs.* Frank j
Penland at their home on the Ashe-1
dlle Road.
SUSAN STEIN (above), 15, of
Baltimore, was reported in criti
cal condition from a skull frac
ture after a fall on 11,245-foot
Mount Hood, 60 miles from Port
land, Oreg. She was among a
group of 19 teen-age mountain
climbers who fell into a crevasse.
One girl, Lynn Kaufman, 17, of
Larchmont, N. Y., was killed.
1
Wives Of Federal Officials
Must Be Patient, Versatile
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON ? Somebody
;hould strike a medal for wives of
public officials. Always ready for
any chan?? in plans or jobs pro
motions or demotions, they must
have patience, understanding and
great versatility in order to bolster
the big man's morale and keep the
Family healthy and happy.
Take the President's appoint
ment of Garrison Norton as assist
int secretary of the Navy for air
The Nortons and their two ehil
Iren, Glenavie. 11, and Charles
Dyer. 9. had scheduled a trip
abroad. Instead, they, will go to
Maine and later to a ranch in
Wyoming. Like most wives of men
n public life, Mrs. Norton took
the change in plans philosophical
y. Only hitch is they had rent
ad their house at North Haven.
Me for the summer.
As far as Washington is ? con
cerned, the Nortons will have few
adjustments to make. They've
ived here since 1946. when Nor
'on took an .imuortant position
vith the State Department. Since
1949 he has been a consultant to
the navy secretary.
Mrs. Fred A. Seaton. wife o;'
the new secretary of the interior
has packed up all the family's be
longings and thoir four children
and gone to Hastings, Neb., to their
farm for the summer. Come fall,
she'll have to search for a new
house here and adjust herself to
the responsibilities of a full
fledged cabinet wife. Seaton ftrst
came here to AH out the unexpired
term of the late Sen. Konqeth S
Wherry, later served as assistant
secretary of defense.
Then there's Mrs. Harry P Cain.
Her husband.- former Hepublican
senator from Washington state, is
somewhat doubtful that he'll he re
appointed to the Subversive Aetiv
itles Control Board in view of his
blistering attacks on the Eisenhow
er administration's employe secur
ity program. His current term ex
pires in August.
Mrs. Cain is ready for anv con
tingency. They've rented their big
handsome home and moved into a
one-bedroom apartment. Mrs. Cain
has taken a job In a local decorat
ing shop as well as getting a li
cense to sell real estate. They plan
to sell their property in Taroma.
Wash
"When a ship is going into a
storm you don't leave all the
hatches open. You iust fasten down
the hatches and ride out the storm
together."
Capital Mental Hospital
Is Monument To Teacher
By JANE FADS
WASHINGTON ? The Doro
thea Lynde Dix Pavilion, new six
million dollar adjunct to the gov
ernment's St. Elizabeth's Hospital
here, is a memorial to a former
Boston school teacher who dedi
cated most of her life to improv
ing the lot of the montallv ill.
The modern, 10-storv structure,
which will operate as a receiving
and intensive treatment center
with therapeutic and rehabilitative
facilities and personnel, was de
scribed bv welfare secretary Mar
ion B. Folsom as a "symbol of
progress in the psychiatric world,
providing for a major advance
ment in the care and treatment of
the mentally ill. in which St Eliz
abeth's has beep the leader since
us oeginnings in 1H55
St. -Elizabeth's Hosital, origin
ally known as the Government Hos
pital for the Insane, had its begin
ning in an appropriation of S100.
000 passed by Congress in 1852 for
the purchase of a site and the con
struction of a building. This begin
ning was largely through the ef
forts of Dorothea Lynde Dix who
had become interested in the men
tally ill when forced to retire at the
age of 39 because of illness. She
volunteered to teach Sunday
school to the inmates of the East
Cambridge. Mass., jail, which hous
ed insane persons. From that time
on, until her death in 1887 at the
age of 85. she worked continuous
ly to improve the lot of the mental
ly ill. She also found tirfie to ad
minister to the needs of other af
flicted people, notably the deaf
dumb and blind;
She is credited with having
brought about the establishment
Low Calorie
Desserts Can
Be Delicious
Are you a weight watcher whr
watches with horror the calories
that are piled on your plate al
meal time? Most calorie-counting
people shake their heads sadly
when offered dessert at mealtime
and say, "They're too fattening.''
According to Extension Nutri
tionist S. Virginia Wilson, this
needn't be the story. There are
low calorie desserts that are. be
lieve it or not, good to eat
One way to have low calorie des
serts is to use evaporated or non
fat dry milk for whipped topping!
instead of whipped cream. Miss
Wilson suggests Lemon ChifTon Pie
for a dessert high in food value
yet low in calori -s.
LEMON CHIFFON PIF,
1*2 teaspoons gelatin
*4 cup cold water
l*z cup sugar
1/3 cup lemon juice
14 teaspoon salt
1 egg slightly beaten
1 teaspoon lemon rind
. *4 cup dry milk
1/3 cup cold water
Sprinkle gelatin on cold watei
and let soak for five minutes. Com
bine sugar, lemon juice, salt anr
egg in double boiler, stirring con
stantly until slightly thickened
about ten minutes. Adfl -softener
gelatin and lemon rind and stir un
til gelatin is dissolved. Chill unti
of jelly like consistency, then beal
until fluffy. Add nonfat dry mill
solids to 1 /3 cup ice cold watei
and beat until it is stiff enough t(
hold in peaks. Combine the tw<
mixtures and turn into baked pi<
shell Chill until firm Makes one
8-inch pie.
For even fewer calories, Misi
Wilson suggests leaving off th<
pie crust and serving the fillini
as "Lemon Sponge".
AHentown, Pa of the Easben
League is connected with the St
Louis Cardinals,
or enlargment of some 30 mental
hospitals in this country and
Canada and was the inspiration
behind at least two such projects
in Japan and one in Scotland. Her
efforts on behalf of the mentally ill
won the respect and admiration of
Abraham Lincoln, and during the
Civil War he appointed her chief
of nurses. Though Miss Dix used
many means to get public action on
the problems of the mentally ill.
she relied mostly on gathering first
hand information by visiting the
afflicted in the jails and hovels
where they were kept and then
presenting a documented statement
to state legislatures. She is known
as one of the most effective lobby
ists in history.
TWO OF THE TEEN AGE monntnln climbers Injured In a 1 .000 foot fall
while scaling Mount Hood In Oregon were Sidney H. Rosenberg
(left), Ifi, of Plalnfletd. N. J . and Robert A Hrnwer (right 1, Fair
I .awn. N .1 l.ynh Kaufman, 16. of l.nrchmnnt. FJ..Y,, was killed.
Nineteen young people wcrein tin groupof climb is (Infernal tonal)
MORE AROl'T
Nixon-Golf
(Continued Irom page I)
drive went out of bounds and bis
' second drive fell short, the vice
I president quipped to l)i Graham
I "You must htive been praying that
j I'd miss,"
After the foursome left the first
i tee. Secret Service agents and law
enforcement olTicers stopped the
! crowd and kept them from follow
ing the goners about the course
Before leaving Lake Logan this
morning for the golf course, the
vire president and ln> party got in
a bit of fishing \ppnreiiily. they
did fairly well and made several
catches
Less than two hours before the
cj.i hearing the vice president pa-s
ed the same spot, the Lake l.ocan
?road near the Riverside Church
was the scene of a had accident in
'which one teen-aged ho\ was in
jured critically
The population has Increased so
rapidly in America that there arc
now about seven times as man}
Americans as there were a cen
tury ago.
viokf Anon
Horse Show
tContlnueu from Page 1)
or stake
The event is sponsored by the
Recreation, Commission.
Advance ticket sales are being
handled In the Waynosville Lions
Club, with L. I- Lyda chairman of
the committed'.
The Jaycees are supplying the
bleachers and chairs for the box
seats.
Concessions are under the di
rection ot Kiwanis.
Mrs Jack Dlekerson is chair
man of prdgrani advertising and is
,ilso in charge ?i presentation of
the awards
Calling All Cars
RISMARCK. N IV, 'AIM?In this
cilj Poltoertian Kddie Hayes shot
.1 squirrel that had undertaken to
? euiddel an elm tree and littered
a yard with gnawed-off limbs
Other Officers rounded up cattle
that were gallavanting over lawns
in another part of town. Their
re net said someone cut a fence.
\nd a man and his wife were
charged with throwing stones in
a neighborhood fuss.
| Jonathan Club Holds
! Annual Family Picnic
The Jonathan Creek Home Dem
onstration Club held its annual
family picnic at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Howell Friday night.
Following the picnic games were
directed by Mrs. Troy Leatherwood
I and Mrs. John Frazier.
About forty guests were present.
? ? ?
Mr. and Mrs. C II Yarboroueh
of Nashville. Tonn. are visiting the
i formcr'jf son-in-law and daughter.
Dr and Mrs. Elmer T. Clark, at
Lake JtwaJuska.
? ? *
Use Mountaineer Want Ada
LAST CALL
FOR
195 5 TAXES
THE LAW REQUIRES THAT WE ADVERTISE
AND SELL ALL PERSONAL PROPERTY ON
WHICH 1955 TAXES HAVE NOT BEEN i
PAID
THE NAMES OF ALL DELINQUENT TAX
PAYERS WILL BE PUBLISHED DURING THE |
MONTH OF AUGUST.
PAY YOUR TAXES TODAY!
GENE WYATT
TAX COLLECTOR
TOWN OF HAZEL WOOD !
Office In Town Hall
LeuVem.a
Polio Tularemia
Rabies Encephalitis
Smallpos Scarlet Fever
Tetanus Menm$it?s
Diphtheria
One Person:
2 00 per year
Family:
5 00 per year ?
HOSPITAL CARE J
ASSOCIATION A
Representative
\\ \YNE ROCiKRS
Lalte .liinahiska
Phone GL 6-5593 I ?-3*^3 * H
Advertising...
... keeps prices down
A penny a pound on the price of a pork roast,
can make a world of difference to a grocery
shopper. And food store managers know it!
That's why they do everything possible to
keep prices low fin their advertising. It's the
same for almost any product you can think
of. No store can sell it for ten dollars while a
t second store is advertising it for five,
r
Advertising enables you to sit back, relax and
compare prices and merchandise. Shopping trips
can be planned beforehand to take advantage
of the sales which merchants are advertising
constantly. By providing.a giant market place
where stores of all kinds can compete for your
business, the advertising in this newspaper
helps keep prices low.
I
)
* Prepared by the Promotion Department rtf
? The Dee Moinee Hegieter and tribune for the
ADVERTISING FEDERATION OF AMERICA.
;
ff?MBpHMlW
THE MOUNTAINEER
?