THURSDAY. DECEMDER 7, 1333 THE FRANKLIN PRESS nd THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN PAGE THREE SOCIAL ACTIVITIES and COMINGS AND GOINGS MISS NANCY PATTON WEDS SAM KELLY GREENWOOD Miss Nancy Jane Pattern and Mr. Sam Kelly Greenwood, both of Franklin, were married on Satur day, November 25, in Marlinton, W. Va., where Mr. Greenwood is employed by the United States Forestry service. The ceremony took place at the home of Mr. ahd Mrs. Hull Yeag er and was performed by the Rev. W. G. Winton, pastor of the Marlinton Methodist church. The ring ceremony was used. Mrs. Mary Frances Moore played the wedding march and, while the vows were being spoken, sounded a soft accompaniment. The bride was given in marriage by Mr. T. N.Me. Others wit nessing ; the ceremony were Mrs. T. N. Mize and son, William; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Zinn and daughter, Sallie ; Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Roberts,, Mrs. George , Pettay and daughter, Jean; Mrs.. C, Ful ton and daughter, Jackie. The bride wore a gray suit with accessories to match. The Yeager hofhe was beautiful ly decorated for he occasion with evergreens and chrysanthemums. After the ceremony Mrs". Yeager served a delicious dinner in -honor of the bridal couple. Mr. and Mrs. Greenwood are popular members of Franklin's younger social set. The bride is NO OVERTIME T iVe been smoking overtime since we landed this BIG CONTRACT lijj 111 I nn i :T i tu.: rf THAT'S ALL RIGHT.l I ( X , STAY ON CAMELS I 't 1 if' AND"ouu- NEVER fl yttd. Oaf"' HAVE JUMPY NERVES V 11 f N0 MATTER HOW :: Wf O ' I MUCH YOU SMOKE l. ....'!,.S'it', rvitf if Am CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS . ' -iz olo3 Practical --J NECKWEAR -jg .. lf . . A Large and Handsome V I ? ' AiortmeiH i Jlf 25c to $1.50 I . $6 E. K. Cunningham & Co. "The Shop the daughter of. Mrs. Erwin Pat ton, of the Pattern valley com munity; and Mr. Greenwood is a son of Mrs. Octa Kelly Green wood. ' Mrs. 'Greenwood, a gradu ate of the Franklin high school, was employed until recently by the Macon County Red , Crass chapter and the county Emergen cy Relief office. Before the or ganization pf the relief office about a year ago she was em ployed by The Franklin Press. Mr. Greenwood, who was em ployed by the United Fruit Com pany in Colombia, South America, for several years, returned to Franklin during the past year and took a position as surveyor with the Forestry Service. He recently was transferred to Marlinton. Commenting on the wedding, the Marlinton newspaper said: "While neither of the young people has been in Marlinton long, they are popular with those friends they have met, and a happy future is prophesied- for them." MISS LILLIAN PATTON WEDS MASSACHUSETTS MAN Miss Lillian Patton and 1. W. Goddard were quietly married in Swannanoa on Tuesday, Novem ber 7. ' Mrs. (Toddard is the daughter of Mrs. Ervin Patton, of Cartooge chaye. She has been operating a ON SMOKING Gifts for Men HANDKERCHIEFS Plain or Fancy Linen or Cotton 5c to 50c HOSE In Wool, Silk or Lisle; a Variety of Shades and Patterns . 25c to $1.00 PAJAMAS Of Fine Madras or Broadcloth All Sizes $1.50 up shTrts Philips-Jones and Hanover -Brands $1 to $2.50 LOUNGING ROBES Made of 100 Per Cent Wool Flannel to $7.50 of Quality" -7 in i ;A 1 f t i beauty shop in Swannanoa for sev eral months. The bridal couple left immediate ly after the ccrcmo.uy for a trip to California and other western states. After their return ' they will be at home in Webster, Mass., Mr. Goddard's home. U.' D. C. TO MEET MONDAY The United Daughters of the Confederacy will meet with Mrs. W. W. Sloan on Monday after noon, December 11, at 3 o'clock. ENTERTAINS AT DANCE An enjoyable dance attended by the younger set of Franklin was given at Chickadee Camp on Sat urday night , by John Cunningham in honor of Neville Sloan and Bill Sloan and four friends who spent the week-end in Franklin on a visit from Chapel Hill, where they are students at the University of North Carolina. Miss Mildred Harrison, who is attending Western Carolina Teach ers college, at Cullowhee, had as her week-end guest, Miss Pearl Hawkins, also a student at Cullo whee. N. C. Duncan, Jr., and Harry McCormell attended a banquet at Christ School at Arden Thanks giving. I. T. Peek spent several days the past week hunting deer in Pisgah Forest. Mrs. J. J. Smith, of Highlands, is taking treatment in Angel Brothers hospital. E. H. Meacham left Thursday for his home in Statesville, where he spent Thanksgiving with his mother. Mr. and Mrs. . Jack Stribling at tended the funeral of T. S. Strib lingabrothefrirrSenecaS."C. Saturday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Sloan Rickman have moved to Sylva, where Mr. Rickman has accepted a position with the Medford Furniture com pany. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Hudson spent several days the past week in High Point visiting Mrs. Hud son's mother, Mrs. J. H; Petty. Mr. and Mrs. George P. Young and John D. Hunter, of Nauga tuck, Conn., and Mrs. C. B. Par donner, of Houston, Texas, have been spending several days here visiting Mr. and Mrs. Don Young, Mr. and Mrs. George Young's son. Mns. Dee Porter returned to her home at Spruce Pine Sunday, af ter spending several days here with her father, W. J. Zachary, who is sick.- She was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Higgins and twochildren, .. who.spent .lheda'y there visiting. Miss Elizabeth Dowdle and Miss Margaret Franks returned to North Carolina College for Women at Greensboro Sunday, after spend ing the Thanksgiving holidays here "with" their parentsr"MrT""and Mrs. M. L. Dowdle and Mrs. Sam L. Franks. T. B. Higdon, Jr., has returned to his home in Atlanta, Ga., after spending several days here with relatives and friends. Mrs. Porter Pierson and two sons, of Highlands, were here Monday shopping. Oliver Hall and family have moved from the: Barnard house to the Bidwell house on Bidwell street. . Mr. and Mrs. Charlie B. Bolick, of Washington, D. C, have been spending several days here visit ing relatives and friends. Robert Setser, of Raleigh, spent several days here last week visit ing.hk4)arenlrMrflndllrs.CJ. A. Setser. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Dalton and small daughter, Yand Crawford Dal ton, all of Gastonia, spent Thanks giving here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dalton, at West's Mill, and Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Henson at their home an Franklin Route 2. Mrs. George Wurst and chil dren have moved from their home on the Georgia road to an apart ment in the Orlando apartments on Harrison avenue. Clinton Brookshire, son of Mr and Mrs. J. H. Brookshire, who accidently shot off his right arm about two weeks ago, is able to be out again. i Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Spencer, of West's Mill, were here last Fri day shopping;. " Mr. " and" Mrs. Spencer have recently moved to West's Mill from Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Ben McCollum spent last "Monday in Asheville shopping. i Frank E. Curtis, who has been seriously ill! at his home on White Oak street for several weeks, is able to be out again. Miss Helen Patton spent Thanks giving with friends at Cullowhee. Mrs. R M. Waldroop, of Bry son City, has been visiting her niece, M.ts. H. O, Cozad, for the past week. Site returned to jher home Tuesday afternoon and was accompanied by Miss Margaret Cozad, who will spend several days there visiting. , ' So nigh is grandeur to pur dust, So near is God to man, When 'duty wftispers low, Thou must, The youth' replies, T can. ' j . Emerson. Highlands EDITED BY MRS. TOWN OFFICE MOVED The office of the Townof Hinh lanls,i which was formerly on Fourth street, was moved recently to the lower floor of the Masonic hall building on Main street. W. S. Davis, merchant, is remodeling the office building and will move his store there in the near future. MRS. MARY CHAPIN SMITH IN HOSPITAL Mrs.' Mary Chanin Smith is at the hospital in Franklin for treat ment this week. Mrs. Smith has not been well for some time, and it is hoped that the treatment and rest at the hospital will help her. She is known in Highlands, where she is one of the told time citi zens, as an excellent club woman and a writer. RETURN FROM WEDDING TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hopper fotnrnpfl from thpir vvrddinp 1ril last Thursday, and were serenaded : loud and long .Thursday night about ,10 o'clock. With cow bells and tin cans, Christinas whistles and a pistol or so, making rather too much of a din for comfortable sleeping, Mr. and Mrs.; Hopper finally descended and let in the crowd of "serenaders"- and gra ciously served them with wedding cake and punch. Mr. and Mrs. Hopper are living in an apartment at, the Cleaveland home. Mr. and Mrs. Tudor NY Hall and family have moved into their new home, "Chestnut Lodge," on Fifth street. J Tom Harbison is suffering a se-, ,vere cut on his left foot. The accident occurred Monday even ing while he was' trimming a tree. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde W. Rice, Asheville, were visiting Mr. Irvin and Lewis Rice Thanksgiving. .Miss Oceola Everett, Western Carolina Teachers' collece stu- dent, was with her mother here RELIGION In The Here and Now By Rev. Norvin C. Duncan LIFE is full of paradoxes. Wt are always discovering some thing of value, where we least ex pect it, and failing to find what we do expect. ; ' The past Thanksgiving' Day was a bit of a new experience for me. Heretofore, 1 have been having a service and joining in with the festivities ot '. the. occasion, This year I spent the day in bed, fol lowing a confinement of .nearly eight months.- Yet at the close of the day it came rather as a sur prise to me that there was more genuine gratefulness in my heart than on any Thanksgiving I have ever known. Friends were very thoughtful, and I received a num ber" of cheering messages from them. Looking back, I can see clearly the loving care of our Heavenly Father during my long illness. I have had time to reflect and see, not the reasonableness of our Christian faith, but the . actual working out of it. It is marvelous to see how God provides for the needs of His creatures. . It is wonderful -how-much f God "one tinas- in nis people, ror a iou& while. IJiave-been preachingabout God's care, and how He uses men and women to do Hi's w-ork. It is gratifying and assuring to see His work done before one's eyes, and to have what you have preached confirmed in experience. There arc numbers of things Which have happened to me for which I can find but one explanation God. When I am privileged to con duct services again I shall better understand the Venite and Te Deum, and shall be able to say 300 Rooms . 300 Baths ON THE DECK Dining Dancing Every Friday Night. 0 Hotel ATTILitHTrAM J. WILL YON, Manager BOOM BATES: , 30 Rooms at ! $1.00 lit Rooms at.. 160 120 Rooms at ,- 2 00 ' CAFE RATES:. . . Good Food AS Yon Like It) ' Breakfast, Dinner or Supper 2Bc to Me Vomer Luckie & Cone Sts., ATLANTA; GA. Highlight THOMAS HARBISON during the Thanksgiving holidays. Cecil Edwards of Weaver college, was also home for the holidays. Mrs. I )r. Waldroop, of Bryson C ity, and Miss Margaret ' Cozad, of Franklin, were here visiting Mrs. V. S. Davis several days last week. ; M rs. A. J. . Salinas and her nephew, Mr. dc Vaughan, left their sumnier home here for Augusta, (la., December 5. Col. and Mrs. John Steven Sew ell, who have been hert for sev eral months, left for their home in Birmingham, Ala-, Tuesday. The Rev. Capers Sattcrlee, of Clemson College, S. C, delivered a sermon at the Church' of the Incarnation, . .Episcopal, Sunday afternoon, December 3. Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Havs nt their home in Highlands on December 2, a daughter, Aur i''.'cy Gertrude. . A surprise liartv was given re- '"t'.v toMr. and Mrs. G. A. Ho- Vis at . the Methodist parsonage, by several members of the .Methodist church and others, celebrating the return of Mr. Hopis to his charge here. Miss Bess Hines has returned to her home here after having been for seveal days with her aunt in Kcenansville, N. C. Out of tmvn visitors in High lands recently were Miss Marga ret Harrv. Walhalla, S. C; Mr. A, L. Bliss, Washington, D. CY, Capt. Jack le Lysle, Enfield, N. C, Rev. L. E. Crowson, Cumberland, Md., Dr, Davis, Richmond-, Va., Dr. Hanson, New ; York City, Dr. Cok er. Chapel ; Hill. : Wood row- Cobb has returned to Highlands after being absent for some weeks. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wil son at their home here, Friday, November 24, a son. ' ' H. W. Sloan left here Wednes day morning, November 22, to at tend the funeral of his brother, Mr. Norman Sloan, in Angola, Del. with the spirit and understand- ing,- 6 come, let us sing unto the Lord, Let us ' heartily rejoice in the stfength of our salvation." Births Mr. and Mrs. Alex Angel an nounce the birth of a son at their home in Smithbridge township on Thursday, ; November 30. A son was " born to Mr. ' and Mrs. Ed Carpenter, at their home ort Ellijay, Wednesday, November 29. 7 Mr. and -M rs. Claude Evans, of West's Mill, announce the birth of a-sou-on -Monday ,-Noveniber27. A son, David Lenoir, was born to Mr. and Mrs -Zeb Carpenter on Sunday, November 26, at -Y their home .in Franklin township. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gibson, of West's Mill, announce the birth of a daughter, Luauna, on Tues day, December 5. Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hayes, of Highlands, announce the bir,th of a daughter at their home on Saturday, December 2. a for H BILIOUSNESS H Saiar stomach g as and headache . :y clue do g icesTiPATiorifl 35 m New Bedi, New Bathi, New Car pets, New Decora tions - - A New and Better Hotel fo Less, Money Than Ever Before. tip ; " cYcii AUTO STORAGE AND . . PARKING. Immediately Adjacent to the Hotel. 1 lalotaLs 1 M 10 asas PROBLEMS OF DSARMAJE NT (Continued from Page Two) "It is not to my interest to help things .that hurt .the life -ofour town." When asked by his friend Harry to take stock in a "Corpora tion for the distribution of Shake spear to the Hottentots" he refus ed, and explained to his 'hurt friend that his first responsibility was legitimate profits, by which lie could stand on his own feet, pay his own bills and have something left to help worthwhile proposi tions. ' When he died they wrote on his tombstone: "He was the greatest contribution to Human town in our generation." Tom, Dick and Harry represent three jiossible parts for the United States to play in the life of Hu mantown. There was a tremen dous reaction against ideals and idealism Immediately after the World War. Somehow we felt that We Would be playing the part of Harry in entering the League of Nations. We swung past . the middle course of Dick and went to the extreme of Tom at least for a time, and in smne political attitudes..'' We were going to be guided solely by "our -interests," but we didn't take time to see what our interests were since we'd become the World's greatest credit or. On the one hand stood thnse who said, "We oughtn't to help anything' that doesn't mean money to us." And on the other hand were those who -said,' "A policy of interest is sordid." The Best Policy Surely the part played by Dick is the wisest and the best, the most practical and the most ideal since it gets its dreams realized. To invest in nothing from which we do not expect legitimate prof its though the profits, as- in the case of the parks, may not be at all discernible in dollars. Then from our legitimate profits, to see that it is to our interests to help everything that enriches the life of the community of nations. For, oveiyGifts J . . . and useful, ARCHER Gift Hosiery- In sheer chiffon or ser vice weight All the new shades. 69c to $1.25 Handbags In smooth and rough grain leather black, brown and navy silk lin ed end completely fitted. 50c to $5.00 SCARFS for ladies in silk and wool; also gloves and scarfs to jQ0 to $2 QO HOUSE SLIPPERS to fit every member of the family; 1 ', in kid, crepe and felt Slippers' are an ever-welcome gift. FOR OTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS VISIT OUR STORE EY K. CUNNINGHAM & CO. "The Shop of Quality" example, , it was to our, interests to protect the legations during the Boxer rebellion, and more to make the excellent use that we did of the indemnities therefrom. The League of Nations is riot asking us, or anyone, to play the part, of Hairy. It is asking us and the other nations as well as in Human town leads to bitterness and eco nomic, dissolution in the end. The League of Nations, is asking the nations to see the. plain handwrit ing on the wall, that only the pol icy of Dick among the nations, as in. TTumantown, enables the people to find economic, and political free dom and growth. . Must Dispel Fear The problems of disarmament . are not simply the. question of lay ing down arms, they are first the problems of breaking' down fear, distrust and bitterness which make people and nations take up arms. The three greatest producers of ' distrust, fear and bitterness in the world today are : High -Tariffs, War Debts, and Nationalistic Iso lation. There arc three possible parts on the. stage of the world, Tom,. ' Dick and Harry. Which part shall we play? ' What shall 1 the people of Humantown write on our gravestones ? . ,. I would like to acknowledge help obtained for these articles from two books: "The Problems of Peace," published bv George Allen & I'nwin Ltd., and "Our Foreign Puliev." bv Paul 'Scott Mowrcr s published bv E. K. Dutton & Co. B. Y. P. U. Leader To Speak at Baptist Church Miss Winnie Rickett, of Raleigh, State Baptist Young Peoples Union secretary, will speak -in the Bap--. i tist church. Wednesday ' evening, : December 2n. at 7 :15. The public ' is cordiallv invited to attend. The people from " the Baptist churches and others- throughout the county are urged to hear Miss Rickett, 1 Still nursing the unconquerable j hope , Still clutching the inviolable shade. - - Matthew Arnold. too Lingerie - Pantier. trimmed with 1ace Lovely dance sets in :repe Silk and Jace brai siera Slips of crepe and rayon. . Y Gloves Put the gift in the hand. Stunning novelty glove " in kid and fabric for 50c to $1.95 Children's gloves in kid, fabric and wool 25c to $1. 7