Ron’s Record Rack & Tape Center When it Comes to Bargain Shopping Remember the Three R’s - Ron’s Record Rack Here are Just a Few of the Low Prices. 1. All Singles 69’ 2. Woodstock Album 51249 3. Woodstock Tapes *14” 4. Steppenwolf Live (2 Records) *5” 5. 8 Track Stereo Tapes *5” 6. 8 Track Stereo Tape Players *44” 7. Magnus Organ with stool *44* 8. Luxurious Felt Lined Tape Carrying Cases J995 9. Radios Record Players and Cusette Players at Cut Rate Prices Drop by today and see Barbara or Ron Lane Next Door to Sandlin Groceries Everette Street Around Swain County GRASSY BRANCH Mrs. Willard Grant and children from Asheville were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Josh Ledford. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Plant from Little Rock, Ark. were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Plant last week. Mr. and Mrs. Clem Culpepper from West Palm Springs, Fla. spent a few days at their summer place here last week. Mrs. Grace Brendle returned home last week after visiting friends and relatives in Tenn. and Florida. Mrs. Sue Kiser is home and much improved after spending some time in the Swain County Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. George Plant spent the weekend in Knoxville, Tenn. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nash from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. are spending some time at their summer place here. Mrs. Blanche Lanier from Bessemer City, N. C. is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Pete Kiser. Mrs. Bessie Moore and Mrs. Mary Scoggins from Englewood, Tenn. spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Brendle last week. Mr. Gene Ashe from Maryland visited Mr. and Mrs. Clint Ashe last week. Mr. and Mrs. Vance Lindsay visited Mr. and Mrs. Clint Ashe last Sunday. Wylie Johnson from Augusta, Ga. visited relatives here on the branch last week. The Grassy Branch Home Extension Club met Nov. 12 with Mrs. Christine Ashe. Our song, “Showers of Blessings” was presented. Mrs. Ashe gave the devotional and six members were present. New officers were elected: President, Mrs. Christine Ashe; Vice-President, Mrs. Gladys Hampton; MSecretary-Treasurer, Mrs. Edith Brendle. After our business session, Miss Deal gave some interesting Christmas ideas for making Christmas gifts. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess. Each one had a wonderful time. The December meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Edith Brendle. ALARKA Our community is saddened by the passing of a very dev friend and loved one, Mrs. Judy Cochran. She will be greatly missed. Our deepest sympathy goes out to the family. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barker of Denver, N. C. was here for the Cochran funeral Sunday. Lisa and Brian Wiggins of Andrews spent the day, Saturday, here with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Wiggins. Mrs. Worley Woodard spent HOTPOINT GIVES YOU THANlfOUBUYFOR -l+trtp^iiutr EXTRA VALUE MODEL RBS36 Deluxe BO” Range With GLASS DOOR • Lift-off oven door • Patterned panorama oven-door window • Oven timing clock • Infinite-Heat surface unit controls • Self-cleaning Calrod" stay-up surface units • Removable trim rings • Lift-out drip pans • Easy-Clean porcelain enamel-finish oven • Hinged bake and broil units tilt up and down make it easier for you to clean the top, bottom and sides of the oven interior • Full-width storage drawer • Small-appliance outlet _ASK ABOUT MONTHLY PAYMENTS_ MACON FURNITURE MART On The Square Bryson City, N. C. WE SERVICE AND DELIVER . .... .. last weekend visiting with her daughter, and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rogers of Highlands. Mrs. Louise Howell of Cherokee will undergo surgery in Memorial Mission Hospital in Asheville this week. She is the daughter of Mrs. John Cochran of this community. Mrs. Bertie Jones and grandchildren, Rhonda and Rickey Barnes, spent the weekend in Hickory, N. C. visiting relatives. Ward-Sanders Vows Spoken Miss Vicky Lynn Ward and William David Sanders were united in marriage October 23, 1970in Spartanburg, S. C. by the Rev. Jerry Norris. The bride is a graduate of Swain County High School and is presently Southwestern Technical Institute in Sylva. The groom is a graduate of Tulsa Central High School, Tulsa, Okla. He has completed his tour of duty in the U. S. Army and is a veteran of the Vietnam Conflict. The couple is presently residing in Cherokee. Deaths RUBEN E. MEDFORD Ruben Enloe Medford, 68, of Bryson City Rt. 2, died early Monday in a Haywood County hospital after a short illness. He was a native of Haywood County and had lived in Bryson City for about 25 years. He retired in 1964 from the Cherokee Furniture Co. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Leona Barker Medford; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Cunningham of Charlotte; three sons, Claude Avery of Waynesville, Capt. Robert J. of the U.S. Army in Northumberland, Pa. and James R. Medford of Hendersonville; the mother, Mrs. Annie W. Medford of Waynesville; six sisters, Mrs. Nellie Kirby of Blue Ridge, Ga., Mrs. Allie Jordan of Robbinsville, Mrs. Ida Bumgarner, Mrs. Mary Lou Curtis, Mrs. Vemie Chapman and Miss Myrtle Medford, all of Waynesville; a brother, Glenn Medford of Waynesville; two stepsons, Warren Cochran of Marion and Richard Cochran of Fort Campbell, Ky.; 23 grandchildren and six great - grandchildren. Services were held 2 pjn. Wednesday in the chapel of Garrett Funeral Home, Waynesville. The Revs. Don McHan and Paul Brooks officiated. Burial was in Green Hill Cemetery, Waynesville. Nephews were pallbearers. The family received friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. WALTER M. CASSADA Walter M. Cassada, 91, of the Whittier Community died Monday afternoon in a Bryson City hospital after a period of declining health. Bill Moody Funeral Home will announce arrangements. MRS. JUDY COCHRAN Mrs. Judy Bowers Cochran, 76, of the Alarka Community, died Friday morning in a Jackson County hospital after a short illness. Surviving are three sons, Lee Floyd and Dave Cochran, all of Bryson City; three daughters, Mrs. Lottie Barker and Mrs. Jodie Waldroup, both of Bryson City and Mrs. Moena Cody of Gastonia; four brothers, Mann, Willie and Avery, all of Bryson City, and Paul Bowers of Winston-Salem; seven sisters, Mrs. Dora Geen, Miss Cora Bowers, Mrs. Maggie Smith, Mrs. Eliza Lackey and Mrs. Marion Franklin, all of Bryson City, Mrs. Ollie Shepherd of York, S.C. and Mrs. Emma Clark of Frankoin; 21 grandchildren and 26 great - grandchildren. Services wereheld at 2 p.m. Sunday in Alarka Free Will Baptist Church. The Revs. Therron Slagle and Joe Messer officiated. Burial was in Brendle Cemetery. Pallbearers were Neber, Gordon and James Gunter, Thomas Cloer, Charles McGaha and Bill Barker. The family received friends From 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at Bill Moody Funeral Home, where die body remained until the service hour. Miss Sawyer Crowned Teenage Winston-Salem . . • ' . *« Miss June Sawyer, a 17-year-old blue-eyed blonde, (pictured above) was recently crowned Miss Teen-Age Winston-Salem at a apageant held there. She is a Parkland High School senior and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Lindsay of Winston Salem. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. W. J. Sawyer of Grassy Branch Community and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. DeHart formerly of the Needmore Community. June was a resident of Swain County at one time. She will be on CBS, December 5, in the Miss Teen-Age America Pageant. Cherokee Senior Citizens Meet Good food and fellowship made the November meeting o the Cherokee Senior Citizens a happy occasion. Approximately 45 men and women gathered for the event Monday, November 9, in the new Civic Center building, which began with a pot-luck dinner, followed by a business meeting and program. Principle business transacted was the election of Mrs. Lula O. Gloyne as Senior Citizen club president, an office which was not filled at the last meeting due to an election technicality. Mrs. Gloyne moved up to head the group from the office of vice-president, to which she was named previously, and Mrs Kate Arkansas was chosen to fill the latter position. Mackinley Ross, wh was elected club interpreter last month, announced that he expects to be out of town a good dealand would need a helper. Mrs. Cindy Taylor was then elected alternate interpreter. Dr. Will Nash, of the Cherokee Indian Hospital staff, was the main speaker of the afternoon, his topic being “Deafness and Hearing Aids.” Another speaker was Eva Nell Thomasson, director of Social Seriices for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, told of ways in which herdepartment can be helpful to older citizens. She suggested that they come see her for assistance in home Christmas Bazaar People will be able to enjoy “refreshment snacks,’’ admire a variety of craft work made by area residents, and do some highly individual Christmas shopping, all at the same time, in Cherokee on Friday and Saturday, November 20 and 21. The occasion will be the annual Christmas Bazaar sponsored by the five Cherokee Reservation Homemakers’ Extension clubs, plus the Senior Citizen women. The exhibit will be held in the gymnasium of the new Qualla Civic Center building, in the gymansium.' The Bazaar will be open to the public from 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, and on Saturday from 10:00 am. to 8:00 p.m. At conclusion of the bazaar, the club members and their friends will gather in the gymnasium for the annual Awards Program of the Homemaking Extension Department. Awards will be announced for the outstanding county club, individual member, and other recognitions. Details of te program wil be announced later, Miss Pell said. repair, improvement and furniture projects, also general counseling. The afternoon concluded with two instrumental duets by Kate Arkansas and Ruth Littlejohn, playing the guitar and mandolin. The next meeting will be on Monday, December 14. Flower Talk by Judy Wright ) With the beginning of Hm> man has felt that slowers were so beautiful that they should symbolize something, and as time grew on they began to represent many more things. The following are some of flowers and what they stand for: Agrimony, means gratitude; azaslea, means temperances cherry blossoms, represents insincerity; four leaf clover, stands for good luck. Pear tree, means comfort; red poppy, means consolation; lavender, stands for distrust; bluebell, represents constancy, and the bramble symbolizes envy. No matter what you want flowers to represent, we will help you arrange them, because that is our business. LILLIAN’S FLOWER SHOP EVERETTESTREET TO THE VOTERS OF SWAIN COUNTY I would like to Thank yoti for the continued support you gave me in the Nov. General Election. I will strive to be worthy of the trust you placed in me by re-electing me as your Clerk of Superior Court Thank You Harold Sandlin . Coming In Porson Coantry Caravan WiU West Show Tommy Scott’s Big Country Caravan with 10 car loads of Radio, TV Recording and Movie Stars direct from Hollywood, California, and Nashville, Term., featuring Sam Baxter, The Hollywood Hillbillies, Dave Delock World’s Fastest She Gun, Ship Shooting, Rope Spinning, Real Cowboys and Indians, Circus Acts and Fumy Clowns. Also TV’s Original Masked Rider, with his Bull Whip Act. Special Extra MM Attraction '• . , ? ' r Col. Inn McCoy Wild West Show The Real McCoy one of America’s most beloved western movie Cowboys and star of more than 200 pictures, including Mike Todd’s Around the World in II days, floe Tim McCoy with America’s biggest Country Caravan and Wild West Stags Show. Appearing in Person at SWAIN COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL GYM, November 20,7:30 P. M. Sponsored by Bryson City Lions Club. Children under 13-$1.00 — Students and Adults_$2.00 TICKETS WILL BE ON SALE AT THE DOORS DON'T MISS IT Toil! ^ Our tonnstnias Glu6 J . f J You can’t beat it for making Christmas shopping more enjoyable. Start with $1, $2. $5, or as much as $10, and save that same amount every week. Then, next Christmas, you'll be able to shop with cash from Northwestern, the Agreeable Bank! ) YOUR HOLIDAY MONEY WEEKLY DEPOSIT NEXT YEAR * 1 .* 50.00 ’ *2. 5100.00 * S..5250.00 *10 . 5500.00 THE NORTHWESTERN BANK **»■—•» ’r+f* Pepe—t (MtM«NC« C«~ro»«*o* TEL. 488-2138 BRYSON CITY#K,C.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view