Newspapers / The Black Mountain News … / June 5, 1947, edition 1 / Page 6
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I—BLACK MOUNTAIN (N. C.) NEWS—Thurs., June 5, 1947 Page 6 Old Fort News 1 1 Social Events . bible school VRESENTS PROGRAM Commencement exercises of the vacation P.ible school in session last week at the Old Fort Baptist •church were held on Friday even-, at seven thirty o’clock in the church auditorium. Following' the program in which each department of the school was represented, exhibits of work done •by the manual arts group were shown. One hundred thirty children were registered. Average attend ance was onte hundred fifteen. • Mrs. Austin Harris, principal of; the school, was assisted by fifteen workers. OR. WALDEN ANNOUNCES SERIES OF SERMONS Dr. H. E. Walden, pastor of the; Old Fort Baptist church, has an nounced a series of sermons on “The Week of the Holy Spirit,"’ which he will preach for the next four consecutive Sundays. “The Work of the Holy Spirit as Re vealed in: “The Wind of God;’' “In Some of His Names;” “ In Salvation;” “As a Teacher;” “The Distinguished Work of the Holy Spirit.” o O. E. S. INITIATION IS POSTPONED Initiation ceremonies for the in duction of two candidates into the Old Fort Order of Eastern Star which were scheduled for Satur- j day evening, May 31, have been postponed on account of illness of <«H- candidate. The date has been set for June 16. Mrs. Leis Mc- Daniel, worthy matron, will pre side. o WESLEYAN GUILD MRT TUESDAY The Wesleyan Service Guild met on Tuesday evening, June 3, at eight o'clock at the home of Mrs. Sidney Bryson. Mr Robert N. Woodward spoke to the group on the recreational youth program for Old Fort. Mrs. T. R Kanipe, president, presided. o MRS. BURGIN HOSTESS T C. H D. CLUB The County Home Demonstra tion club met at the home of Mrs. W. G. Burgin in Old Fort on Thursday at three o’clock. Miss Jean Steele, county agent, was in charge of the meeting. —Mrs. Madeleine M. Taylor ar rived on Thursday from White ville and will spend the vacation at her home here. Mrs. Taylor ex pects to return to her duties as supervisor of public school music in Whiteville in September. —Mr. and Mrs. Vann Hughes and daughters, Mary Vann and Nancy Jean, have returned to Old Fort after a week’s vacation at Daytona Beach and Savannah. —Mrs. H. O. Huss and Mrs. Eli zabeth Lindley will leave on June 9 for Greensboro to attend one session of summer school at VV. | C. U. N. C. WE SPECIALIZE IN ALL GOOD THINGS TO EAT • If you want a snack or a full meal, you won’t be disappointed here. Come and bring the whole family. CRYSTAL CAFE Old Fort, N. C. ■■■IIIIIIISIIIIBIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII fapTO ASK YOUR WJffji DOCTOR v ' |§ Have Your Prescriptions Filled Here With You can be assured that only the purest and finest quality ingredients are used. Old Fort Drug Company Woodward Will j Direct Program o A youth recreational program sponsored by the churches and civic organizations of the town was launched in Old Fort begin- j ning June first and will continue through August. Robert M. Woodward, faculty member of Old Fort schools, will direct the program. Mr. Woodward has had experi ence in scout work. He was recent i ly elected master of the Old Fort I troop. The steering committee I which is made up of members : from the different clubs and I churches of the town, regards the ; appointment of Mr. Woodward as a fortunate one. Mrs. Z. B. Lane Organizes Old Fort Teen-Agers Mrs. Z. B. Lane, who organized the teen-age group in Old Fort into a growing organization with a present membership of sixty odd boys and girls who meet at • the community building on Mon day and Thursday of each week for recreation, will be assisted in this work by Robert N. Woodward, faculty member of Old Fort school. Mr. Woodward is an ex . perienced scout worker and will ? have charge of camping and other r | out-door activities. MRS. ANNIE W. PAYNE Funeral services for Mrs. Annie Wilkinson Payne, who died at a hospital in Rutherfordton on May 17 were held on Monday at the First Methodist church in Ruth erfordton. The pastor of the church, the Rev. Nifong, conduct ed the services. Burial was in the family plot at the church ceme tery. She is survived by one brother, S. F. Wilkinson of Old Fort, two nieces, Mrs. P. P. Sweeney of Johnson City, Tenn., and Mrs. R. 0. Bullard of Winston-Salem; two nephews, Frank and Robert Wilkinson of Old Fort. —Miss Sara Thompson of Old Fort, who has been employed for the past two years in Evansville, Indiana, and Cleveland. Ohio, by Western Union, has been trans ferred to the Asheville office. —Mrs. Lila B. Keatley of Havre-de-Grace, Maryland, ar rived this week for a visit at the home of her daughter and son in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Kimball Miller at Old Fort. —Mrs. W. C. Macon and daugh ters, Mrs. Terry Morrison and j Barbara Jean and son, Tom, of Old Fort, are spending this week with relatives at Statesboro, Georgia. —Mrs. T. R. Kanipe will leave Old Fort on Monday for Green ville where she will attend the first session of summer school at j Eastern Carolina Teacher’s col lege. Child’s Vacation Breakfast Important | During summer vacation children are apt to dash out to play without taking time to eat a nourishing breakfast. Yet, an active youngster burns up more energy in hard play during the morning than he uses in a whole day at school! As ntnnv a conscientious parent knows, getting Johnny to take time for a good breakfast can be a real problem. With the fun of out aide play calling to him from the moment he gets up. he begrudges every minute he spends at the table. This situation calls for real strategy. Be understanding about his urge to show the boys his new baseball mitt, but keep your eye on that breakfast! Do everything you can to see that he comes to the table with an eager appetite. This breakfast menu is a real appetite promoter that not only Johnny but the whole family will enjoy. Vacation Breakfast or.'inf'f Jui(v rtiftVil Hi<v Pancakes Frtsh KhuLnrU Sam* Paeon Curls Milk There is something about pancakes tender, golden-brown and fragrant that makes most youngsters glad to spend the time polis.i ing off that breakfast plate. Nutritionists tell us that light, nui.y pancakes are easy as toast to digest and give children protein, cal cium and phosphorus. And here’s another suggestion—a pancake ready-rmx makes it easy to fix pancakes for your child's vacation breakfast. Lsing a good ready-mix also insures light and fluffy pancakes. Quick Pancakes 2 cups ready-mix for pancakes 2Vi cups milk Just add milk to unsifted mix at once and stir lightly, f.omcwr.at lumpy batter makes light, fluffy pancakes. Pour V 4 cup of batter .or each 'pancake onto a hot, lightly greased griddle. Bake to a goiuen brown, turning only once. Makes 14 to 16 pancakes. ( For Extra Rich Pancakes, add 2 tablespoons melted fat or oil an one beaten egg to pancake batter. Harkins Will Address Masons O Thomas R. Harkins, attorney of I Asheville, will be the principal speaker at a ground breaking ceremony which will be held by the Masonic lodge of Old Fort on Sunday at two thirty o’clock. The meeting will be held on the site of the new temple to be erect ed in the immediate future. Music for the occasion wiil be furnished by choirs from the different churches of the town. District deputy grand master, ■ William J. Powers of Rutherford ' ton, is expected to be present for < the ceremony. Meat production under Federal , inspection for the week ending May 10 totaled 301 million pounds, according to the USDA. - AUTO SERVICE c • Greasing ’ • Oil Change • Washing • Tire Check ; • Bumper to Bumper t Service Moore Bros. Pure Oil Service Black Mountain, N. C. Phone 2401 PETEY AND HIS PALS i>r J maxwell | (nope?) f a “ WTg' wan, someone 'F - \GIRL?) y^TOLD f r ear a new baby A /"a ' :yY"~\ 7, [ COUSIN t BET YOU'LL J ( BOY*) sss%* - 1 THE GARR FAMILY by rod roche ( me twatppose" hoX , . MV HUS3AMO ) « MAB 6 rVBWSId paroon me, but X noticed) r 00. „ y iyouß con^iNG'^ AT THE DINNER THAT YOUR y 7y jfPV — UR COO<l HUSBAND SMACKS HIS' UPS , QUITE LOUDL.Y WHEN HE V Up Mrtgj y— 7 f _ | —Mrs. Fred Youngblood from j Concord. N. C., spent the week | end with Mrs. Clifford Porter. | She and Mrs. Porter’s sister, Miss ! Addie White, who has been visit | ing here for two weeks, returned ■' Monday to Concord. j —— ; “WHO WAS JESUS?” A PLAIN STATEMENT BY JESUS, OUR SAVIOR HIM- J SELF, THAT HE WAS WITH ; I THE FATHER IN GLORY , I AND SHARED IN THE i -GLORY OF HEAVEN BE t FORE THE WORLD EXIST ED. JOHN 17:5. ANOTHER SCRIPTURE - MAKES THIS FACT CLEAR r ER JOHN THE FIRST CHAPTER AND THE TENTH VERSE. HERE IT IS PLAIN j LY DECLARED THAT THE WORLD ITSELF WAS MADE 5 BY CHRIST. HE WAS THE ’’ ACTIVE AGENT IN CREA TION. THIS IS UPHELD BY I THE FIRST EIGHT VERSES .OF THE FIRST CHAPTER OF HEBREWS AND BY THE SIXTEENTH VERSE OF THE FIRST CHAPTER OF CO LOSSIANS. CHRIST WAS THE ACTIVE AGENT IN THE CREATION OF THE WORLD AND MAN. HE EXISTED WITH THE FATHER IN GLORY BE FORE THE WORLD WAS AND BEFORE MAN WAS CREATED. THEREFORE, HE IS MORE THAN MAN. HE WAS BEFORE THIS WORLD EXISTED. Continued Next Week The Old Man. NATURE STUDY Bird Nests Nests are really bird cradles. Do all birds have nests? Oh. no! | Birds that rarely perch in trees j or those that never do so have noj nest, or almost none. Many sea-birds, terns, sand- j pipers, gulls, and others lay their i eggs on the g'round. Some sand- j pipers make a grass-lined depres sion hole in the ground, our sand piper, a spotted one. ma ces hers of grasses, concealed under weeds, near the water. Look for them 1 when you go to the seashore this summer. You may find three to five huff, blackish-brown spotted eggs. Curlews, plovers, and other seashore birds, the rails, grouse, quails, and others, likewise lay their eggs on the ground. Their young are called ‘9 .dependents . Herons make frail platforms in bushes in swamps or near water, cranes, a bulky mass of weeds on the ground in marshes; rails, in grasses on the ground in fresh water marshes; loons, in decaying rushes, floating on the water; and puffins, on ground or rocks. These and many others you’ll see when i \ i I | ,--i ii ii ' SNAP SHOT of a family that lives electrically i And, living elecrically has something to do with the pleas ure so evident in the snapshot. You see, because electricity does so much of the work in this family's home—does it so quickly and so well—there is more time for these happy outings, and mother is not too tired to enjoy them. Electrical living can do the same for you. Plan now to use your low cost electric service to the fullest extent—you'll #njoy it! 1 l (CAROUHA POWER & LEGKT CCFIPANYj ) i i you drive to and through Florida, j The swimmers (ducks, geese, ! and others) do little better The 1 duck does make a substantia, bed , .U n-k’le the eide v *> , w | for O'-rre \ ~ . . I o*ber Arctic dncV-. use quaint,r of molted (shed) down and feather’, eoveri”" the e«"~ I left for a time, to hide them land to keen them warm. If >'° u ba-e ever slept under an eider down “comfort” in '' 11 weather, vou know how snug and, warm the eider duck's eggs a«| kept- “all snug in their .beds , Skimmers make hollows in the, sand on the beach. Nests in trees or other high ulooes must protect the eggs rolling off and smashing, and the j nestlings from falling. Sometimes there are almost flat nests a mere rude flatform of twigs rest ing on branches of trees or bushes, hollowed a little at the center. Why do sparrows and many other species of birds make real nests on the ground or just above the ground or in trees and bush es, while the birds we have men tioned do not ? Their young belong to the “dependent" group . ■ Every kind of bird has a stv ‘B 1 its own in nest building ...-.V' e B kind’’, as in, and since, ”(>„’.,!*■ When you once learn these "B never confuse them, j, ''B | species they are marked by B ! special peculiarity, _ th( , " *B fly -catcher uses bits „f skin in the foundation, leav j little piece hanging outside "’J i sibly to frighten squirrels B and Other enemies. The nes’Jß i l,t straw, weeds and grass, J ld ß I holes of dead limbs or in de- 9 woodpecker holes in trees. | you will find four or f IV( , . B white eggs, streaked or blot'fl with brown. '""H —Mack Burnette of Sal ls , 9 Maryland, has returned t ,' | home after a visit with hi s b fl ther-in-law and sister, M r 9 Mrs. R. E. Hurst of his son Mack of Asheville, and ß sister, Mrs. John S. Trott B West Asheville. 9 —Mrs. Bessie Carr visited B daughter, Mrs. J. R. L oga|) B children, Patrick and Benny B . Marion last week-end. 9
The Black Mountain News (Black Mountain, N.C.)
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June 5, 1947, edition 1
6
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