Newspapers / The Transylvania Times (Brevard, … / Aug. 22, 1968, edition 1 / Page 11
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Another Workshop For Substitute Teachers Set For September 5th NOTICE State of North Carolina,) County of Transylvania) The undersigned, having qualified as executrix of the Estate of Mrs. Lee J>. Huff, de ceased, late of Transylvania County, .this is to notify all per sons having claims? against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 23rd day of February 1969, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said Estate will lease make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 13th day of August, 1908. Mildred Irene Huff Oliver, Executrix of the Estate of Mrs. Lee D. Huff, deceased c/o Ramsey, Hill & Smart The Legal Building Brevard, North Carolina 8-22-4tc Another workshop for substi tute teachers for Transylvania County Schools will be held at the Education (Building on Thursday, September 5th at 0:30 a.m. All persons desiring to do substitute teaching in the Coun ty Schools must attend the workshop before they can be come eligible. Some training be yond regular high school gradu ation is preferred. i'or further information call Mrs. Hilda T. Olson, Director of Instruction, at the Education Building. Phone: 883-3220. At Wallkill, N. Y., a six-story circular office building with a restaurant an top is being built around the town’s one-million gallon steel water tank. Middle Fork Church Holds Homecoming This Sunday The annual home-coming &l> the Middle Fork Baptist church, which is located on the Pickens Highway, will be observed on Sunday, August 25th. The morning services will be held as usual with the former pastor, the Rev. N. H. Chapman, speaking at -the 11:00 a.m. wor ship hour A fellowship dinner will be held at the Community Club building at 1:00 p.m. The dinner will be followed by a special program of activities celebrat ing the occasion at the church. All friends and former mem bers are invited to be present. BEFORE ( AFTER h The man In the middle can make his honse look bigger and better by eliminating one color. Hero J& K the clapboard siding and dark brick (middle, above) were painted the same color with the M K same paint (below) and then trimmed with a second colojr.. Notice how the home stands out. ■ COLOR CONSULTANT SAYS: Fewer ExteriorTColorsi Make Home Look Larger ; Some suburbanites take better care at their homes than their neighbors do. But this extra effort isn’t always apparent—not at first glance anyway. A homeowner concerned about this situation might ask himself, “What can I do to make my house stand out as it should?” “Well, for one thing he can an alyze his problem,” says Faber Birren, nationally known color consultant. “He can walk outside and take a long look at the three houses across the street-the one directly, opposite his and those on either side of it. “If his is the typical suburban development, all three are prob ably combination brick and siding —either clapboard Or composition shingle. At least two of the three are probably red brick, with white clapboard or siding. All three are more than likely trimmed in a third color—be it blue red, green, yellow or maybe even black. What then is the most obvious course of action for the “man in the middle"? What can he do to give his place that different look? j Mr. Birren, who makes a busi ness of analyzing consumer prefer ences, has a ready answer. “The simplest and most obvious thing ha can do is to eliminate one color,” Mr. Birren advises. “He can accomplish this by painting the bride and the siding the same color and then trimming in a com plementary second shade. In so doing, hell not only make his house Molt bigger, but it will also take oa that ’different’ description he so wants.” • Mr. Birren, who seivea as n I color consultant for a number of business finns-among them the Du Pont Company—goes on to say: “Solid color brick-and-siding homes used to be a rarity, simply because it was next to impossible to get matching masonry and wood paints. But with the develop ment of latex house paints, home owners can now cover both sur faces with one and the same paint.” How do clients i>f American Color Trends, the name of Mr. Birren’s New York City-based firm, take advantage of his serv ices? Du Pont, for example, recently announced two new latex house paint developments — both de signed to make the consumer’s job easier and faster: The first: an improved no-prim fcvv ••••'. • Muatosam m&sam.mms Color ConsnRwit | er “Lucite” house paint for use on bare or previously painted wood, masonry, metal, and-in fact— every surface except staining woods. And second: an all-new “Lucite” exterior enamel for trim and shut ter work. Both the improved house paint and the new latex exterior enamel further reduce the painting effort and the over-all time of the job. No longer do users have to apply an oil-based primer, which takes two or three days to dry, or con tend with additives which are time consuming and often messy. The new house paint formula also features improved blister-re-' sistance, better color rentention, less chalking, and better resistance to soiling, while still embodying the popular 30-minute drying and soap-and-water clean-up. The new latex exterior enamel, meanwhile, offers every advantage inherent to an emulsion finish: ease of appli cation, fast dry, easy clean-up, less effort and more leisure time. No-primer “Lucite” house paint is an even further refinement of a product first introduced iu 1960 for use in combination with a primer on new or bare wood and improved in 1963 to include use on previously painted surfaces in sound condition and carefully cleaned masonry. It is available in 20 ready-mix colors, including two new-fpr-’68 shades: bam red, and Newport gold. Mr. Birren has just one final word of advice: i “Don’t," he says, “settle on white without first considering tho beautiful effects that can be ob tained with light greens, blues, yel lows, grays, and beiges.” % j ';.;4 ■ ERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 23 CHOICE OF CAREER-FOCUSED COURSES 72 We§ks SS COLLEGE it School Executive Secretarial Junior AcQOugutui* *4 Senior A Motor 1 —36 to 52 Wooka - 52 to 60 Weeks - — 52 Weeks FINAL REDUCTIONS DURING PAT’S 12th ANNUAL SUMMER SHOE SALE ON ALL LADIES' FLATS * STACK HEELS ★ WEDGES BLOCK HEELS AND OTHER STYLES VALUES TO 27.95 NOW PRICE LADIES’ IMPORTED ALL LEATHER SANDALS FLATS & WEDGES in White, Tan, Black, Brown Sizes 4 to 10 Widths S, N. M. VALUES TO 8.98 2.98 WOMEN’S COUNTRY FAIR CASUALS Ev B. F. Goodrich U. S. KEDETTES Sizes 4 to 13 Medium & Narrow Widths Up to 5.98 Values 2.98 & 3.98 EOY’S BASKETBALL SHOES HEAVY DUTY White and Black Sizes 10 thru 6 5.98 to 6.98 Values 3.98 LADIES’ KEDS GRASSHOPERS White, Beige, Light Blue, Yellow, Black, Green Sizes 4 to 10 Regular 4.98 Value iHl 11 2.98 P. F. FLYERS 4 EYELET White, Black, Navy, Red, Jeans Blue, Faded Blue In Cotton Green, Tan, Light Blue Navy & White - In Poplin In Medium & Narrow Widths Sizes 4 to 12 Regularly 4.98 to 5.99 CHILDREN'S COTTON P. F. FLYERS All Colors Sizes 4 to 12 - Med. & N. Width Regularly r\ QQ 4.50 to 4.98 Z.70 MISSES POPLIN & COTTON P. P. FLYERS Sizes 12i/g to 3 Regularly O fto 5.50 Value J.70 USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY-A-WAY PLAN : c AND OUR FIRST UNION CHARGE PLAN ,’S SHOE MART Q»‘ North Broad Street — In the College Shopping Center BREVARD’S ONLY DRIVE-IN CANCELLATION SHOE STORE
The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.)
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Aug. 22, 1968, edition 1
11
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