Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / July 9, 1964, edition 1 / Page 3
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MARSHALL, N. C, JULY , 114 THB N1WS-RBC0RD t Hot Springs News B. 0. KIRBY, Oorrup dwt Mm. W. C Swum is on the ikk lilt thU week. Mm. M. 6, Burgin returned home Tuesday after several days in Takome Hospital, GreenevUle, Mr. William Hadad of Clemson College spent the holiday in Hot Springs with friends. Our July 4th was a good suc cess. An estimated two thousand visitors came in, to see the fire works, etc. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blank enship, and children, Karen end Billy of Hot Springs, Ark., were gueste of Mrs. Branken ship's par ents, Mr. end Mrs. Pege Lamb dar ing the holiday week-end. They epent Friday night in Asheville with Mr. end Mrs. Harold Lamb, before leaving for Richmond, Va., to visit Mr. Blankenshlp's family. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brooks and daughter, Cathey, Margory, Lou, Glenna and Sherry spent several Hays with Mrs. Ester Brooks dur the 4th of July celebration. Mr. and Mrs. David Kimbery, end Mrs. Mae Whltten come down from Washington, D. C, the pest week-end to visit many friends. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Painter, and children of Sylve, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Burgin Son' day. Mrs. Nancy Jarvle, of Odenton, Md., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Kier of Mountain View Court Mrs. Jarvle will spend several weeks here. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kirby Jr., of Charleston, W. Va., Dr. Rice J Kirby. of Hasan). Ky., ere the guests of their parents, Mr. end Mrs. R. C. Kirby. Miss Freeda Davis of Columbus, Ohio, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Neta Davis. Mr. Tom Rector, is home from West Germany, after spending 27 years in the Armed Forces. Tom has retired, and says his future home will be in Hot Springs. Mrs. J. W. Prickett, and little daughters, Jennifer and Nancy of Chicago, are here for the summer months. Tbey will occupy their rustic cottage on Lawson St. Mr. and Mrs. Jas., H. Wells, and Mr. Wells parents from West Va., have gone to Murphy on a camp ing trip. BE SELECTIVE ABOUT SUNNING Although Old Man Sol lives 93 million miles away, he's a mighty powerful fellow. That's why, if you're a paleface seeking a coppery tan, you can profit by being selec tive about your sunning. According to Dr. Archie Black, Dk n u ..ih nirwtrtr nf the Coppertone Corporation, there's a MgJ suntan prouuci mauc Gspcvrauy iui your skin type whether you are gray, blonde, brunette, or redhead. That's why it pays to: Select your lotion, cream, or oil carefully remembering that people with dark complexions are much better able to cope with sunlight than individuals with blue eyes and fair complexion. Select the place for your sun baths carefully. Your own back yard is most convenient because of easy access to your tunning ac cessories. Select the time of day that's the safest The sun's rays are most in tense from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. not only on sunny days but on hazy ones as well ' Select the areas of your body you sun areas, piayuu, " . i . . i t , ,,1. 1 .imninff time jiiaaSgSSsWjassMBssssBassf i "A Tomato Spray Important Failure to maintain a good spray ogram on tomates can be ex pensive. Early blight fungus was allowed to become established in of the tnsiMsto plant beds in County. Failure to fol low the suggested spray program resulted in injury which produced "eollor rot" end nee censed a num ber of plants to break off at the soil level Tomato fruit worm have been found in e number of tomato fields In Madison County. One smell worm hole in e tomato causes the tomato to be culled on the market Good insecticides are on the mar ket; they will really work if they are used properly. Profit or loss from tomatoes can be determined by the spray pro gram. A good spray program on tomatoes includes the following: 1. Using the correct materials; 2. Following the time schedule; 3. Obtaining good coverage of foliage, stems and fruit; 4. Using correct amount of chemicals to control in sects and diseases. "WON'T YOU JOIN MET" Tin ... . J i II.. th tim r: Am kw Umi mm laser iy ana Vwmuj T . """"J "TTTJJT" ilJ " 'resi nee wBi,w e mmrwm. Start wnn a to n vaamm a... A mA.II increase the time. Use caution. Don't try to get a deep tan in a day or two. a Universal Homecoming At Walnut Methodist Church Sunday Homecoming Day will be obser ved nt th Walnut Methodist Church, Sunday, July 12. The eer vices will begin at 11:00 a. m. with the Rev. W. C. Clark, pastor, bringing the message. Special music will be arranged by Mrs. Cloice Pletmmona. The congregation cordially In vites all friends and former pas tors to attend and take part in the services. All are asked to bring a picnic basket as an old-fashioned "dtaner-on-the-grounds" will follow the morning program. THE CRUTCH Depend on your own initiative too many people expect to get up in the world on the shoulders of their associates. Hffy . . . costs less when you trade out wear on clothes. WRINGER lemovet more moisture. Self equalizing tension. Swing to-and lock in 80 different positions. LID rubber-mounted to seal in boat. Tub drains quickly, completely. Bowman Hdwe. Co. MALL, N. C. This Is The Law by ROBERT E. LEE For the N.C. Bsr Association KICKING MULES There was an interesting case be fore the Supreme Court of North Carolina in 1926 involving a kick ing mule. It is the caes of Rector Southern Coal Company, 192 N.C. 804. An employee had been told to get eggs laid by hens in a stall -where a mule was kept. He was kicked by the mule and seriously injured. There was no evidence that this particular mule was more vicious than mules generally or that the owner was aware of its being more than ordinarily vi cious. Although the jury rendered a judgment of six hundred dollars in favor of the injured plaintiff, the Supreme Court would not permit the judgment to stand. It laid the judgment was contrary to law. A portion pf the court's Opinion Is as follows "A mule is a melancholy crea ture. It is nullius filius in the animal kingdom. It has been said that a mule has neither 'pride of ancestry nor hope of posterity.' John Billings remarked that if he 'had to preach the funeral of a mule he would stand on its head. Men love and pet horses, dogs, cats and lambs. These domestic animals have found their way in literature. Shakespeare said of a horse: 'I will not change my horse with any that treads out on four pasterns, when I bestride him I soar, I am a haw, he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches Navy In Need Of Typists And Stenographers The Navy Department in Wash ington, D. S., hoe a definite need for civilian typist and steno graphers to fill essential positions in its administrative offices. To help meet that need, Miss Vera Williamson, civilian Navy Repre sentative, will be located at the Navy Recruiting Station, Post Of fice Building, Asheville, N. C, be ginning July 6. Office hours are from 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m., on weekdays. Saturday and evening appointments may be made by writing or calling her at AL 3-1931. Salaries for these civil service positions range from $3680 to 14690 a year. Benefits include a Ifive-day work week, low-cost government life Insurance, liberal paid vacations and sick leave, group hospitalisation and inter esting work assignments. Housing! is arranged by Navy in advane of arrival. Applications are being accepted for filling immediate vacancies as well as for opening at a lated date. Those selected may be assigned to offices dealing with administra tion, personnel, medicine, account ing, law, or research and nuclear programs. The necessary require ments are a minimum age of 17 years of age, ability to type at least 40 words per minute and, for stenographers, ability to take dic tation at 80 word per minute. -N"tf.:4Sl ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssBSrS' Span tamedoff JMJtff it.' But nobody loves or pets a mule. No poet hoe ever penned a sonnet or an ode to him, and no prose writer has ever paid a trib ute to his good qualities. He is kicked and cuffed, and beaten and sworn at, and frequently underfed and forced to work trader extreme ly adverse conditions; yet, withal, he has a grim endurance and a stubborn courage which survives his misfortune and enables him to do a large portion of he world's imisiJ,, A "It is a matter if common knowledge among men who know mules and deal with them, that they ore uncertain, moody, and morose. "The liability of an owner for injuries committee by domestic an imals, such ae dogs, horses and mules, depends upon two essential facts: 1. The animal inflicting the in jury must be dangerous, mischevi pus or ferocious, or one termed in the law as possessing a 'vicious propensity.' 2. The owner must have actual or constructive knowledge of the vicious propensity character and' habits of the animal." SHADRACK MACE, who wears decades as easily as the Brownie Scout does years, will be welcoming hun dreds of his green-uniformed friendb to the Craftsman's Fair again this year. Some 600 Brownies are current ly being selected across the state to attend the July 13-17 event. Shadrack, a colorful fixture at the entranceof the Auditorium, will be demonstrating the making of chair staves as they arrive. lABOKietNAL HEALTH AMOS Relics unearthed in san ANTONIO, CAL.r PROVE ThiA T THE ANCEN T INDIANS WHO LIVED HERE TOOK STEAM BATHS for HEAL TH AND DIET Mrs. A. H. Hodnett, T Native Of Madison, Dies In Mars Hill Mrs. Amanda Hutchins Hodnett, 70, of Durham, died Sunday, July 5, 1964 at 11 a. m., in a Durham hospital after on illness of some two weeks. A native of Madison County, she woe a daughter of the late J. C. and Allie Tilson Hutchins of Mars Hill and the widow of Howard T. Hoidnett of Durham. She attended Madison County schools and Mara Hill College but had lived in Durham since 1985. Surviving are two sons, Samuel A of Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Howard Thomas of Monroe, N. Y.; a daughter, Mrs. Pat H. Hoffner of Camden, S. C, two brothers, Garner Hutchins and Lige Hut chins, both of Mars Hill; two sis ters, Mrs. Ida Lee Felch of Mars Hill and Mrs. Larry Pomroy of Charlotte; nine grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Services were held Tuesday in Durham and burial was. in the family cemetery at Wake Forest. Hall-Wynne Funeral Home of Dur- Iham was in charge. I Vll .1 .--.,- I 111 I, w . c THE BIS S WIM ,V 1931, FfiED NEWTON PLUN&EO AVTO THE MISVSSPPI IflVER AND STARTED WHAT TUWRO OUTTOBm7m LON&EST SWIM IN HISTORY- -ttHNA&MJS" 7tSIVtXi&1N5. THE SWM COVERED 2300MILES. PITCH Lets' au ptjxm aj and buyan tXTHA US. SAWS SomOlI THE SECURITY WE BUILD WILL BE OUR OWN AND OUR CHILDREN. ATTRACTS ATTENTION Aad Tort Got 1111 m fill
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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July 9, 1964, edition 1
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