Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 27, 1956, edition 1 / Page 9
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? THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER ? 11 ? 0 Draft Board Classifies 45 County Men Forty-five Haywooo County mer have been assigned new draft classifications by Selective Service Boarl 45. They are: Class 1-A (available for induc tion)?Charles David Moody. Roy Chambers Moody, Billy Ray James William Carroll Smathers, Charles McKinley Cagle, Kyle Keith Han nah. Class 1-C (inducted) ? Hugt Kirkpatrick Terrell, Jr., Cliftor Stewart Terrell, Jr.. Mack Che ney Lovedahl, Jr., Fred Thomas Morris. Class 1-C (enlistedi?Way Rat cliffe Kinsland, Carey Grant Ar rington. Class 1-D (reserve)?Bruce Lynn Corzine. Kenneth Earl Glance. Class 2-S (deferred student) ? Raynityid Eugene Goodson. Cf (prior service or sole surAkJtn--William Hawley Powell Lawr?we Thomas Davis, John Samuel Pardue. Jr.. James Frank Mann, Carl Vernon Farley. James K. Sanford, Luke Lea Terrell, Don aid Nueman Milner, Wayne Bannis 'ter Hawkins, Wade William Mc Clure, Donald Edwin Burress James Roy Parton. Harrison Wil A Ward In Service After TakincrHis Attorney's Oath Hallett S. Ward, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Ward of Lake Juna , luska has reported at the Marine t base at Quantico. Va. to enter 3 , three-months officers' training school. Before leaving here. Ward, a - 1956 graduate of the University of North Carolina Law School, took ! the oath of an attorney before Judge Zeb V. Nettles of Asheville in Superior Court here. He recent t ly passed the North Carolina bar , i :i " Ham Caldwell, Neil Teague How ell, Joseph Morgan, Lucius Eugene i Hudson, Jr., Raymonl Elic Rath | hone, Robert Bruce Waldroop, Otis ; Leon Sorrells, Class (4-F (rejected) ? Harold Ledford, Wade Jefferson Cogburn. Class 5-A (over age'?John Lloyd Mathis. Wilbur risk Owen. James . Earl Hoglen. Harry Lee Wright, Ray Gillett. John Paul Liliard. Rob i ert Lee Lambs, Harle.v Donald : Stiles, George Richard Fish. I The next board meeting will be - held October 3, at which time 13 ? registrants will be sent to Char ?) lotte, for induction and two regis , | trants will be sent for armed forces - physical examination.s I 1ESSO FUEL OIL DIAL GL 6-5612 S. W. Whidden RESIDENT DISTRIBUTOR FOB Waynesville - Hazelwood and Vicinity ? Serving the area from Clyde to Balaam Metered Truck Delivery Office Plant Located on Sulphur Springs Road Night Phone GL 6-5750 ^#y^y//cKT?91Af ^ ? \ Y o u r debtor's prescription ? represents his professional judgment as to what is best V'"' ^or y?ur health . . . and you H HANDIN JSw can depend on us to give you I You always have com- '^^bBS the i>o- ? ^ tency and high quality of the pharmaceuticals with which i!v crasp we accurately compound your HERE'S ^l"1' physician's prescriptions. IIJMI GOOD B ' lH/I \^T ? HEALTH J(j /V ' .. Mb A Registered Pharmacist Dial GL 6 - 3321 Is On Duty Open Sundays At All Times And Evenings Until 9 P. M. CURTIS DRUG STORE EXPERIENCE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE MAIN STREET WAYNES VILLE ? DAVID LING, left, a vice president of Ro-Search here, is shown discussing a technical matter with Dov Gafni, general manager of a \Yel!co-Ro-Searrh affiliated factory in Israel. (Mountaineer Photo). Israel Manufacturer Has Record In Making Shoes Footwear manufacturing pro-' cesses invented and developed here in Haywood County have been the ! basis for a firm in far-off Israel j to establish a world-wide record for the manufacture and sale of footwear. This fact was revealed ' during the recent visit of Dov Gafni. General Manager of Ham gaper in Israel, a Welleo-Ro-Search ! affiliated factory. Hamgaper is the only factory anywhere in the world that pro duces and sells enough footwear to fill the needs of every other per son in the country where it is lo cated. Most of the footwear made by HaniRaper is produced by pro cesses originated at Wellco-Ro Search and much of the equipment on which they are made was made here. Mr. Gafni's recent visit to Well co-Ro-Search was for the purpose of inspecting new equipment and processes recently developed and to study new techniques now being used at Wellco. Cherokee Indian Fair To Open Next Week-Oct.2-6 The 39th annual Cherokee In dian Fair will open on the Reserva tion here October 2. It will con tinue daily through Saturday, Oc tober 6. The president of the Fair is Jar rett B. Blythe. Other officers are Arsene Thompson, vice president; examination. Ward will be in service for three years. Jack Jackson, general manager; and Charlotte Sneed. secretary. Mr. Blythe i.s also chief of the Tribe, and Mr. Thompson, who is pastor of an Indian church, has had for seven years one of the top In dian roles in "Unto These Hills". The Fair is unique in the United States because it is solely an In dian production and the exhibits and prize events are limited to In , dian competition. Since it was started in 1914 the event has out ? grown the limits of a small com I munity exhibition, and now is ! ranked in interest and importance | as equal to the best county and ! regional fairs in this part of the j South. Of chief interest will be the daily "stick ball" games, the arts and crafts exhibits of Indian sculptors, basket weavers, pot ters and wood carvers; displays i of great varieties of colored In dian beans and strawberry pop corn, and the needle work and canning of Indian housewives. Also to be seen nowhere else is an Indian Baby show, bow. and , arrow and blow gun contests, and Indian dancing. October 5 is school children's day. On this day the Cherokee In dian High School will meet An drews high school in a football game on the Fair Grounds. Thomas Jefferson was the first official ambassador from the U.S. , to France. a??????? THIS WEEK'S BEST SELLERS FICTION Don't Go Near The Water, Wil liam Brinkley. A Certain Smile, Krancoise Sagan. The Last Hurrah, Edwin O'Cod nor. The Mandarins, Simone de Beau voir. A Thing pf Beauty, A. J. Cronin J NONFICTION Eisenhower: The Inside Story. | Robert J. Donovan. Arthritis and Common Sense , Dan Dale Alexander. Profiles In Courage, John F I Kennedy. Roosevelt; The I.ion and The ; Fox, James M. Burns. Guestward, Ho! Barbara Hooton ! and Patrick Dennisv THE BOOK STORE Dial GL 6-3691 Main St Stays -Jf Clean Longer rr$ starched\J li' ? ? ?:. r: .'?' ?' "? "' ''*?'? ?". 1 2 Men Injured In Wreck Monday On Crabtree Road Two persons were injured when a car in which they were riding left Highway 209 about 6:30 p.m. Monday and crashed into a tree. State (filghw-ay Patrolman W. R. Wooten reported. ' Albert Luther Holland. 28, of Detroit, Mich., listed as driver of the car, was charged with drunken driving, and a passenger, Law- ] rence Lemmons, 35, of Canton, was charged with public drunk enness, the oatrolinan said. Both men received dispensary treatment at Haywood County Hos pital for head lacerations. Patrolman Wooten said the ac cident occurred on a curve on the Crabtree Road. The car was demolished, and the loss was estimated at $500. Ministerial Group Will Meet Monday The Haywood County Ministerial Association will hold its monthly meeting at the Central Methodist Church in Clyde Monday, October 1. Lunch will be served at noon by the ladies of the Clyde Church. The Rev. James Y- Perry, presi dent of the organization, will be in charge of the meeting. MARKSMANSHIP MEDALS were presented last week by Capt. Charles D. Parker, Jr. (left) to five members of Waynesville's U. S. Army Re serve unit. Company F,.518th Infantry Regiment: (from left) Pvt. William Wyatt, Pvt. Billy Messer. PFC Jhmes Kirkpatrick, Cpl. Jimmy Crawford, and Cpl. Stallard Ja.vnes. (Mountaineer Photo). SSSjE) I JUST LIKE A FURNACE . . . BUT WITHOUT COSTLY y/ I DIRT COLLECTING PIPES AND REGISTERS | HEAT WASTED ON THE-CEIUNG! Tri imu B5r=3 ir~? i :.MJ 1/ hniA/ wreif* P?urs heat over y?ur tloors mou9nour your nome... tlUw Only Siegler gives you push-pull-double action heating. The built in powered , air system, pushes heot into tho rooms white it pulls the cold air out. B?fORDINARYHEATERS^ live in 1 or 2 rooms CRAFTY ^ ^ ^tp ^ #U$ORS You pay for an ordinary heater over and over again because they continually waste heat out the chimney and on the celling! (^eqSfL\ J PATENTED^^AUTOMATIC I^V^OIL furnace HEATER / THE HEATER WITH THE PATENTED * INNER HEAT TUBES SIEGLER is the revolutionary method of ^WARM FLOOR HEATING id every room! A Ul) I f)fik ? ? BTU INPUT ... there is BTU OUTPUT, but what keeps J1W fcVt/A your family warm jg BTU USEPUT... the working BTITS that | k-s'~ J I a I i OT/f OUT fif/I /I heat your home! In BTU USEPUT, Siegler OUTHEATS 'EM pfI dot] t iBf t> IU KJ\ I INbO ALL! A 50,000 BTU Siegler gives more USABLE HEAT than much * *| f | higher rated ordinary heaters. A 75,000 BTU Siegler furnace-volume CO fit USB tjOU I heater can only be compared to a central heating plant. massie furniturV company MAIN STREET WAYNESYILLR Of THE COLO FLOOR PR?
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1956, edition 1
9
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