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 It’s So Easy And Thrifty To SHOP BY PHONE! a® • w FOR YOUR EVERY NEED CALL SEARS 883-8232 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

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