ROSMAN PERSONALS
AUSTIN HOGSED, Correspondent
(Omitted Last Week)
■r. end Mrs. Ernest L. Rain)
and children of Rock Hill, S. <
meat the weekend with Mr
lubes’ parents, Mr. and Mr
Dan Snipes.
' J. D. Powell has returned 1
his home in Salisbury after lx
ins called here due to the deat
of A. M. Panton, Sr.
Morris Joe Jones of Ft. Be
voir. Vs., was a recent guest c
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Doc
Jones.
Mrs. Paul Glazener and sot
Kendall, returned Tuesday t
their home in Oak Ridge, Tenr
after a visit with the former’
parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. i
Galloway. Jr. and Mr. and Mrs
Buren Huggins.
Mr. and Mrs. Darell Terr;
and son spent Sunday in Tryoi
with Mrs. Terry's brother-in
law and sister. Rev. and Mrs
John Bades.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Matthew:
were guests Saturday of the lat
ter’s brother and sister-in-law
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Whitmiri
in Hendersonville. J. R. Mat
thews of Hendersonville was :
guest of the Matthews’ home on
Monday.
Rev. Valley Shook of Green
ville, S. C., was a Sunday guest
of his sister, Mrs. L. C. Carter
and Mr. Carter.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stevens
and children of Asheville were
recent guests of the former’s
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. W. S. Hooper Jr. Mr.
Hooper, who has been ill for
some time, is reported to be im
pay
less
for Production
Credit
FINANCING
Vfcy only afmfto Interest
— on the amount at mon
qr you um — only lor ns
• Wf-u you use It! Inter*
get it computed on the
outstanding balance of
gour loanl Borrow aS
your money this way —
by financing everythin*
through Production
Credit!
Tor Jow-oost financing .«
cdU or aw
FRANK L FTTZSIMONS. Jr.
ASHEVILLE PRODUCTION
CREDIT ASSOCIATION
At Transylvania County
Agent’s Office
■ONDAV A WBDNESDAT
2:30 PJt
proving.
M Hr. and Mrs. Hugh Gillesph
and children moved Thursday t<
L their new home which they re
i, cently purchased from Mr. ant
Mrs. Raymond Nicholson in th«
0 Cherryfield section. The Nich
(. olsons have moved to Brevard
h Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Queen and
children of Tuskaseigee spent
l- Saturday with the former’s
f daughter, Mrs. Brenda Jamerson
It and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Allison
i, and children were guests the
> first of last week of the former’s
. father E. Carl Allison and Mrs.
s Allison in Canton.
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Russell of
. Waynesville were guests Wed
nesday of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
r Garren. The Russells and the
1 Garrens were also guests Wed
. nesday of Mrs. Beulah Hanson
, in Easley, S. C.
Beecher Carl Allison left Fri
; day for N. C. State University,
Raleigh where he will begin his
junior year.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Schultz
and children of Sarasota, Fla.,,
were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John Boggess.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Alexan
der and son, Melvin, of Pickens,
S. C.. were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Dutton. The
latter’s daughter, Gail, also left
Sunday for her junior year at
WCU in Cullowhee.
Miss Margaret Winchester left
Wednesday to begin her senior
year at UNC, Greensboro.
Nathan Pressley is reported
to be seriously ill at his home
in Kannapolis, He is a former
Rcsman resident.
Miss Billie Carmichael return
ed Wednesday to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Davis after
spending two weeks in Tampa,
Fla. with Mrs. La Forie Bryant
' and Mrs. Jane Mango in Sara
sota, Fla. She is now spending
a few days with her aunt. Mrs.
Daisy Mackey in Pisgah Forest.
Weekend guests at the Da
vis home were Mr. and Mrs.
James Eaves and son Ronald of
Sumter, S. C.
Mrs. Idell Means and son Clif
ton of West Asheville were Sat
urday guests of the former’s mo
ther, Mrs. J. H. Connor.
Mr .and Mrs. Nelson Burnside
of Walhalla, S. C., were Sunday
guests of Mrs. Tom Mahoney
and family. Mrs. Burnside and
Mrs. Mahoney are sisters.
Mrs. Ed Jones and daughter,
Mrs. Clarence Revis were guests
Monday of the latter’s husband,
Clarence Revis, who is reported
to be seriously ill at the Vet
erans’ hospital in Oteen.
Mr. and Mrs. Hal Cartwright
returned Sunday to College
Park, Md. after spending two
weeks with Mrs. Cartwright’s
parents’ Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Whitmire. The Whitmires also
had as their weekend guests,
their grandson, Eddie Kuyken
dall of Swannanoa.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mahoney
and daughter, Rhonda were Sun
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Er
nest Rogers in Walhalla, S. C.
and Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Gantt in
Salem, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Jamerson
and daughter Janet and Miss
Sylvia Queen spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Dee Berry in Pied
mont, S. C.
f WEEKLY CROSSWORD
1. Name
of actor
McCrea
I •. Scrub
11. Egyptian
dancing
girl
> 12. Agree
ment*
12. Describing
an
unreliable
business
venture
15. Lose color
16. Single
unit
17. Exclamation
19. Roman
pound
20. Rule, as
paper
22. Back
23. German
river
24. Under
ground
bud
25. Coat fold
27. Three
spots
28. Among
29. Aquatic
mammal
30. Public
vehicle
31. Place for’;
ducks
32. Exclama
tion
34. Baseball
position:
! abbr.
35. Over
whelming
amount
36. Valley
38. Being
between
poles
poet.
42. Neat
building
flak
42. Maturing
factor*
44. OUdes
DOWN
1. Part of
TbI-AvIv
2. Bulging
jars
3. Fresh
water
tortoise
4. Tagged
5. Timid
6. Back
bone
7. En
closure
8. Alas!
9. Completely
tton't
three
14. Not any
18. Flre
* place
projec
tions
«. Sick
21. Stoke
23. Sacred
bull:
24. British
general
23. Scien.Vts'
work
rooms,
for short
28. Entertain
ing
27. Decade
29. Fly aloft
31. Noblemen
mmasMaiaotri
Answer
38. Warning1
signal
83. Belonging
to the wife
of Zeus
35. Asterisk
37. Turkish
regiment
39. Bom
40. Dance
step
41. Rough
lava
Mark Price Reports On His
Recent Travels In Russia
By Clarion Staff
Mark Price, who graduated
from Brevard College last
spring, has just returned to the
U.S. after a 35 day study-travel
seminar in the Soviet Union.
The excursion, sponsored by
the school of International Ser
vice, American University, had
two Primary objectives;
1. To give the participants
greater insight into the
Soviet Union as it is today.
2. To explore the feelings of
the Christian community
toward Marxism - Leninism
as a major force in our
time.
Mark’s enthusiam was very
evident as he related his impres
sions. He stated that Russia to
day is entirely different from
the Russia of fifty years ago.
Under the rule of the Czars, the
Russians had been a starred,
backward people. Now in 1967,
their material needs are being
satisfied.
Yet, compared to the United
States, the Soviet Union is still
poor materially and economical
ly. This is due to the fact that
the two countries are separate
types of societies. The U.S. re
volves naturally in an atmos
phere of free enterprise and
private gain. The U.SS.R., how
ever, is a planned society in
which the wants of the people
depend upon the economy of
the country. Thus, the economy
must grow before the Russian
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And Thrifty To
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people can be offered a higher
living standard.
Mark was deeply aware of
this, and said he favored the
trade between the United States
and Russia. Broadened trading,
he declared, would be a boost
to both countries, economics
and would also establish new
channels fer cooperative en
deavor.
The weeks he spent inside
Russia were, in Mark’s estima
tion, invaluable insofar as pro
viding him with a many-facet
ed viewpoint of the conditions
which prevail with the UiJ. and
Russia. For example, the literacy
rate in the Soviet Union is al
most 100% far outdistancing
the U.S.
We are not hated in Russia,
Mark said; rather, we are en
vied. The Russians for the most
part are awed by the richness
of the clothes worn by Ameri
cans. In a movie theater, for
example, or at an opera, an
American is easy to spot be
cause of his extravagant wear
ing appareL
To sum up, Mark Price was
fortunate enough to be able to
live within and study firsthand
a country whose political and
social doctrines are completely
alien to the American way of
life. Though Ms experiences he
learned that America is not the
only nation in the world, that
there are millions of people
across the sea who think differ
ently and, therefore, live dif
ferently. Mark Price likes Has
sle and the people who live
there. His expeience should he
a guirde fo us all.
The statue of Vulcan, famous
Birmingham, Ala. landmark,
weighs 120,000 pounds and is
one of the largest iron figures
ever cast
IEORGE T. CRAWFORD
Chiropractic Physician
When yon tlilnh m
Uriah tf Vi
CHIROPRACTOR
GEORGE
2H
Phene
WED.,
MOW.
,are here.
See them. Drive them. - _
A* your Oldsmobile Dealers.
McCrary auto service inc., n. broad street >
FRANCHISE DEALER NUMBER 1338
DONALD DUCK
By WALT DISNE^
JUST SOUP^-.
AND CRACKERS-,
IM ON A DIET>
TRY TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS
<»!■ ■ ■
HENRY By CARL ANDERSON
By CHIC YOUNG
BLQNDIE
X KNOW
You'Re ec
SAX D6AI