The Transylvania Times
A State And National Prize - Winning A.R.C. Newspaper
Vol. 76—No. 30 BREVARD, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1964 ★ SECTION TWO it
Nazarenes To
Have Noted
Quartet Tuesday
A service featuring the Evan
gelairs Quartet in “The Gospel
in Song” will be held Tuesday,
July 28th, at the Church of the
Nazarene, 336 King street, Bre
vard.
The quartet is from Trevecca
Nazarene College, Nashville,
Tennessee, and is dedicated to
Christian education.
The service begins at 7:30
o’clock, and the public is invited
to attend by the minister, the
Rev. R. R. Jones.
Singing This
Saturday At
Dunn's Creek
The regular fourth Saturday
night singing will be held at
Dunn’s Creek Baptist church
July 25th beginning at 7:30
^o’clock.
All singers and the public are
invited-to attend.
* Draft Board
Closes For
One Week
Local Board, No. 89, of the
Selective Service System will
be closed during the week of
July 27 th">ugh July 31, while
the clerk is on annual leave.
The office is located in the
basement of the Brevard post
office.
DON J. BROWN, (left), Omaha,
Neb., and Dr. Ronald Goldstein, At
lanta, Ga., representing the U.S. Jun
ior Chamber of Commerce, discuss the
Jaycees’ new mental health and men
tal retardation program with Presi
dent Johnson at a White House con
ference. Ainns of the program are
improved mental hospitals and com
munity centered treatment and reha
bilitation facilities. Jaycee chapters
conducting the 'plan will provide
time, money and volunteers to over
come a ‘20-year lag said to exist in
these areas of concern. Co-sponsors
are the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foun
dation, Sears-Roebuck and the Rock
efeller Brothers Fund.
Jehovah’s Witnesses Will Meet In S. C.
The Brevard Congregation of
Jehovah’s Witnesses wiU be rep
resented by a delegation of local
people at a religious convention
in Greenville, South Carolina,
August 6 - 9.
The announcement by Thomas
E. Mays, presiding minister,
stated the convention will be one
of 37 to be held in the United
States this summer. An esti
mated 8,000 delegates are expect
ed for the Greenville gathering.
According to Mr. Mays the
purpose of the religious meet is
to “aid those in attendance to
improve their personal minis
try.” The theme of the assembly,
“Fruitage of the Spirit” will be
developed by sermons and panel
discussions to aid the delegates
to gain the Scriptural knowledge
necessary to increase fruitages
of the spirit.
The convention is sponsored
by the Watchtower Bible Soci
ety, an international publishing
corporation which distributes
Bibles and Bible study aids
around the earth in some 160
languages. ^
Mr. Mays explained, “Most
Evolution
Revolution
The world-famous army •Jeep* vehicre started it alf.
Then came the evolutionary changes. Sensible
changes. Like more ground clearance. Stronger
suspension. Weather proof tops. Fun changes.
Like pink and white striped upholstery. Fringed
surrey tops. Lively colors. A sports roadster. A
station wagon — rugged, durable, designed for
work and play.
y Then came the 'Jeep' Wagoneer. A revolution!
w The Wagoneer is so revolutionary, it's hard to
recognize your old ‘Jeep’ friend. It’s a station
wagon. And a looker! You’ll be stunned. Slide into
that luxurious interior. Beautiful Comfortable.
Visibility unlimited! ^ -1
•Optional (terns at slight extra
, Turn the fenffton te^TYouVe got an overhead ^
r cam engine purring for you. The only one in any
American production car. Try that steering. Power.*
The brakes. Power again.* The transmission. It’S
automatic.* Feel that ride. Pure luxury. '
And the ‘Jeep* heart and spirit are still ther&
Pull one simple lever and you’re in ’Jeep’ 4-wheal
.l"Drivepower.”t Then there's hardly a hill that can
' keep you down.. . hardly a mud hole that can bog
you down.. In fact, there’s scarcely any driving
- situation that can get you down. You’re free to go
anywhere with the traction to pull you through.,
* v
KAISER Jeep corporation «***«»'
X'DRIVEPOWER"is Wagoneer station wagon’s new, improved and exclusive 4-wheel drive system. |
ALL NEW ’JEEP’ WAGO^VEER- '
See your 'Jeep' dealer and take a demonstration drive today. ^ *
GOODWILL MOTOR CO., INC. + 220 South Broad Street
DEALER LICENSE NUMBER 950 BREVARD. N. C.
See ’Jeep’ vehicles u
in action in
TEE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH”
THURSDAY 8 P. M.
CHANNEL 13
Smith Rites
Held Tuesday
Funeral services for Lloyd
Charles Smith, age 47, were held
Tuesday afternoon in the chapel
of Moore Funeral Home.
The Rev. Bill Wilson offici
ated and burial followed in Pis
gah Gardens.
Pallbearers were: Johnny Al
lison, Lewis Hensley, Sr., Earn
est Gravley, Ralph Gosnell, Lewis
Hensley, Jr., and D. C. Wilson.
Mr. Smith died in a local hos
pital Saturday night after a brief
illness. He resided at 486 Whit
mire street and was a life-long
resident of Transylvania county.
He served in the U.S. Navy dur
ing World War II and was a
member of the V.F.W.
Su%’ivors include: the widow,
Mrs. Ada Gravley Smith; one
son, Robert Lee Smith, of Hen
dersonville; the mother, Mrs.
R. C. Smith; three brothers,
Mitchell and Harold, of Brevard,
and Mack, of Martinsburg, West
Virginia.
people in this country have a
Bible, but it is evident from the
increased delinquency, immor
ality and rising crime rate that
there exists a need for better
application of Scriptural princi
ples to daily lives. Our conven
tions are designed to aid in ac
complishing this.”
The Greenville convention is
slated for the Memorial Audi
torium with delegates coming
from at least 18 states. The high
light of (he four-day meet will
be the public address Sunday,
August 9th at 3 p.m.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to exnress our deep
est appreciation for all acts of
kindness and sympathy from
friends, neighbors and relatives
during the illness and death of
our loved one, Mrs. Eva Orr, and
lor the beautiful flowers.
Mrs. G. J. Eubanks
and Family
In Sherwood Forest
"Our Mr. Sun" To Be Presented
Monday In Robin Hood's Barn
Through the courtesy of
the Bell Telephone Company
and the cooperation of H. B.
Hawkins, curator of the Jun
ior Museum in Greensboro,
Brevard area residents will
have an opportunity of seeing
an unusual motion picture,
"Our Mr. Sun" at Sherwood
Forest on Cedar Mountain,
on July 27th.
The showing is one of a ser
ies of programs on various
phases of nature and natural
phenomena, given Mondays ai
3:30 p. m„ hi Robin’s Hiooc
Barn 8 miles South of Brevarc
on Route 276. This is the head
quarters for summer events a'
the Sherwood Forest Audubor
Colony managed by Mr. anc
Mrs. Arthur Dehon.
"Our Mr. Sun" is a 60-min
ute color film with scientific
facts presented in a manner
understandable to the layman.
It is a fascinating study of the
sun and how it makes life pos
sible here on earth. Beautiful
color photographs show solar
eclipses, explosions, sun spots,
the Aurora Borealis and many
other awe - inspiring scenes.
Persons who have seen this
film term it excellent and well
worth seeing. This is the first
showing of the film in the im
mediate area.
Mr. Hawkins, who will be the
naturalist in residence for sev
veral weeks, will also appear on
the following program August
3rd. At that time he will pre
sent two films from the library
of the North Carolina Wildlife
Resources Commission; "The
Life-Cycle of the Mourning Dove"
and "The Vanishing Whooping
Crane.” Both are in color.
The "Bird Walks will be
conducted on Tuesdays, Thurs
News From
US Forest Service,
Management Story
One of the purposes of this
column is to inform you how
the U. S. Forest Service man
ages the many resources found
on National lands. This week
the spotlight falls on one of
special interest to most peo
ple, our forest wildlife.
What is being done to manage
wildlife populations in the Pis
gah Ranger District? Actually,
nothing is done with the various
species of animals themselves,
lor the wildlife practices which
are used deal more with the
habitat. By manipulating the
habitat to nroduce optimum food
and cover, wildlife species will
have a better opportunity to
prosper.
Wildlife ecologists have
shown that large tracts Of ma
ture timber offer slim pick
ings for forest creatures, and
that ill nature, it is only w here
an opening in the forest oc
curs that the majority of wild
animals is to be found. The
wildlife management system
on the Pisgah District helps
nature along by creating open
ings in the forest canopy.
The majority of those open
days and Saturdays at 9:00
a.m. by Mr. Hawkins during
his stay at Sherwood Forest
Audubon Colony.
ings i.s made in eunjunction with
controlled timber sales. By care
ful removal of timber in an
area, the food and cover avail
able can be considerably in
creased. Logging roads on these
sales are utilized to increase
food supplies by seeding them
with grain bearing grasses.
One of the benefits of wise
timber harvesting and con
stant fire protection is the
continuous supply of high qual
ity water in the streams.
These cold clean waters form
the precise habitat needed for
trout survival. If it were not
for this protection, trout fish
ing could very well become a
thing of the past.
Each year more and more
people visit the Pisgah Ranger
District to fish, hunt, and for
just plain enjoyment. As this
pressure increasas. more de
mands Will be made on our wild
life populations.
Since today’s intensive wild
life management program on
the National Forest is geared
to tomorrow’s demand, you,
the public, can always be as
sured of an enjoyable and
profitable tints1 on your pub
lic lands. (DBS)
When you think of prescrip
tions, think of VARNER’S, adv.
ATTEND
OUR
ALL THIS
WEEKEND!
SEE
"PANCHO"
TV STAR
of WFBC-TV
GREENVILLE, S. C.
IN PERSON
Saturday, July 25
Porky
Pig
Dine In the Air Conditioned Comfort of
Brevard’s Newest
DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT
Netct to Lowe’s on the Asheville Hiway
REGULAR SIZE
PIT COOKED
BAR-B-Q
SANDWICH
LARGE COCA-COLA
BOTH 43C
Free
AVORS
FOR THE
KIDDIES!
DELICIOUS
HOT DOG
with Homemade Chili
EXTRA THICK
MILK SHAKE
BOTH 3 9C
LARGE CHOPPED
BAR-B-Q PLATE
with Hush Puppies & Slaw
ONLY 1.0Q
BAR-B-Q IS OUR SPECIALTY,
BUT YOU'LL FIND ALL KINDS OF
TASTE TEMPTING EATS AT
PORKY PIG BARBECUE!
BE SURE TO
REGISTER
For Both A Boy’* and A
Girl’s Bicycle to Be
Awarded Soon!