Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 25, 1938, edition 1 / Page 11
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
UsDAY. AUGUST 25, 1938 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 11 BOth Anniversary of Grace Church Observed SshopGribbin Made rnncipai ' Address Of Day church In The .Mountains i Wayneviiies wmoi Church Building 1., IV l.otKTI f... Uliuuiii, ui ' "' " h -hot, of the Western ".'''....iinn diocese, of the Epis k ir;r. - " . i r i j,..,,.i assisted tne ivev. ai- ' . '." .,ir. in the service com- .i' . . . . - i. .rit.L. .mniviirsarv nf ilV.,,r ,,f the cornerstone 01 .. Chuivh in the Mountains," : , a!t htlii last Sunday morning V, in the church. 'v' Sunday morning was sc 11 . . .....vn,! ill a series celebrating tne . . .,, nf the erection of the first tscip;il church in Haywood county. uvj on tne ten is urate Church in the Mountains,"'' Episcopal.' as it stands today, having been built j exactly sixty years ago. Appropriate1 services were held here last Sunday,' in observance of the sixtieth ann'i- versary of the laying of the corner-' stone. Pictured below is a photograph made ten years ago at the 50th an-! niversary of the persons living here, who attended the laying of the corn-! erstone t0 years ago. ma Ii.. !, .,.. the Liu GIVES YOU A DRY TRACK ON WET, SLIPPERY ROADS '. T, 0 t fc-rt. i B It cut Ihroush lit Jttp kronvi?. nUv.ii K dry truck loith- ruM-c to rif. nnw-ouT . PROJECTION,,, 100, MTH THE FAMOUS GOLDEN NOW YOU CAN PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST DANGEROUS i ACCIDENTS LIKE MS-ANDATNO EXTRA COST Here' something that's much more than a new tire it's a new kind of tire SAFETY. It hugs dry roads. It dries t roads.: And it protects you JS'inst high-speed blow-outs. M't buy any tire until you've bt(n m tQ get the whole story from tt oft this sensational new Good Safety Silvertown. Ask for a demonstration ride. Let us Pove to you that the Goodrich wertown Life-Saver Tread will op you quicker, safer on wet roads win youve ever stopped belorel EXTRA! Remember, the new Silver town also gives you all these p'h'T "extras" PAT mlFJ3 TRUCK-TYPE W-FLEX CORD that adds Kttngth and long life to the TER TREAD that gives "wnftis of extra mileage and greater ndrng comfort.,.NEW "REAMLINED SIDE v alls that give a new dash or beauty to your car. Wl Silvertown Distributor mission Agent For The ievas Company All persons liv::ig ip tins section who attended the laying of the corner stone sixty years were invited to th. service last Sunday. The rector, the Rev. Albeit Xew, in an interesting manner traced the be ginnings of the Episcopal church in this county. He stated that the first service of the faith was held in 1847 at the home of James Norwood, who with his family had moved here front Hillsboro, N. C. The house stood on the site of the present residence of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Hyatt. The Rev. Dr. Jarvis Buxton, then a young minister, located in Ruther fordton, was holding services once a month in Asheville. and Mr. Norwood invited him to come to Waynesville and baptize his young son, the late Judge William Norwood. Later ser vices were held at regular intervals in the Norwood home. In 18t!l the Rev. Fowles conducted services at a home on the site of the present residence of Dr. Sum String- held. In 1 S the Reverend Dr. Hill house Duel, still remembered bv ;i number ot people locally, was the St r If KEr.- ft 111) 11:; rfW? (R3K,N " " ttWWMWW -re, ... J Vegetables From Supervised Plots Now Being Canned 1'nder the supervision of .Mrs. Rufus Siler, W'l'A county project supervi sor, gardens have been planted and vegetables are now being harvested and canned for use in the lunch rooms ol sixteen .schools in the county. The land for the gardens has been mated by various communities m.il they were planted and have been cared for with Wl'A labor. The sanio womoii vh., t,m.l..l tl,.. ..... ...1.,.,.. are now busy canning the vegetables, I which will be used this winter in the lunch rooms. It is ' planned that every- under nourished child in the schools under! the projects will be fed in the school cafeterias. The selection of the children will be made by the teachers. Recently one woman in the county notified Mrs. Siler that she would like to donate three bushels of tomatoes i to the lunch room project. It is said that others are following her example. ' Anyone desiring to make such a con-! tribution to the lunch rooms are ! asked to notify Mrs. Siler, or to take j the vegetables to the school building I in their community, where the can ning is now being done. The following schools in the county will have Wl'A lunch rooms this year: Saunook, Allen's Creek, Waynesville Elementary. East Waynesville, Juna luska. Dellwood, Maggie, Rock Hill, Crabtiee. Fines ("reek, Clyde, West Canton, l'.ethel, Cruso, and the Way vino colored school. HAS DRIVERS LICENSE RE VOKED d'lenn Parris, of Canton, has had his drivers' license revoked for driv ing drunk according to the .state high way department. LITTLE FEET NEED Proper Care Have Their Hjioes Repaired Hy Us. Reasonable Prices Rest Of Material Champion Shoe Shop MRS. LEON A DUCKETT, Mgr. NEXT TO WESTERN UNION next rector. Dr. Duel, with the per- mission of the members ot the Meth odist church, held services at that edifice. The Hible used today by tho Methodist church was the gift of Grace church members of that time as a token of the grat itude of this permis- i sion. The same Hible was loaned on Sunday by the church and used by the Rev. Mr. New in the services. In 18(Jfi formal application was made to the Diocese of North Caro lina for the establishment of a parish in Waynesville. It was signed by William L. Norwood, Samuel L. Love, Jos. N. Kenners, W. L. Tate, Thus. J. Lenoir, W. W. Lenoir, S. F. Norwood, George C. Hanson, M. H. Love, and J. A. Norwood. Colonel R. G. A. Love, of the Dith North Carolina Regiment, ol the Confederate Army, donated the lot on which the church, rectory and the Parish House now stand. On August the 20th, 1878, sixty years ago, Hishop Atkinson, also remembered by several persons now living in the community, laid the foundation stone on the northeast corner of the church. It is said that the weather was as ideal on that day sixty years ago as it was on last Sunday. Among the persons who witnessed the laying of the corner stone sixty years ago, present on Sunday, were: W. T. Shelton, Mrs. I, J. Brown, Dr. Thomas Stringfield and Mrs. Harry Marshall, the latter the only one a member of the church. Mr. New told of the various activ ities of the church during the sixty years since its organization, stating that the first woman's missionary society in this section in any church was organized in Grace church, on April the 17, 1887, at the home of Mrs. Robina N. Tate. The only ordination of a minister ever held in the church was that of the late Archdeacon W. H. Hardin, by Bishop Horner in 1!0;!, Mr. Hardin served the parish as assistant to the rector, the Rev. Stone, from 1!0:5 to 1907. Another priest of the church who was educated in the Waynesville school was the Rev. Rufus t Morgan, who was ordained in Murphy. The following is a list of the rectors who have served the church: Dr. Jarvis Buxton, Dr. D. Hillhouse Iiuel, Rev. William Stanley Burrows, Rev. F. W. Wey, Rev. Edward S. Stone, Rev. George Sutherland. Rev. Walter Hughson, Rev. J. W. Areson, Rev. Grant KnaufT, Rev. illiam B. Allen, and the present rector. Bishop Gribbin administ red the Hospital News James McFall, of Canton, Route 1, operative case, is .much better. The condition of Bruce Sellars, of Clyde, operative case, is go d. Mrs. .I.H. Lowe, of Clyde, Route 1, operative case, is resting comfortably. Mrs. Carter Parham, of Canton, Route 1, is improving. Mrs. Letch Hall, of Canton, opera tive case, is resting more comfortably Elbert Trull, of Cruso, operative case, is better. The condition of Mrs. Jarvis Mc Cracken. of Waynesville, Route 1, operative case, is good. Miss Fay Parton, of Clyde, Route 1, medical case, is improving. Miss Joan I'laylock, of Canton, op erative case, is better. Claude McCarthy, operative case, is resting more comfortably. Mrs. Vina Lanning, medical case, is resting fairly well. Mrs. Fannon Lowe, of Clyde, Route 1, medical case, is better. .Mis. Sam lflirress, of Canton, op erative case, is resting more comfortably. Mrs. Walter Rathbone, of Joe, op erative case, is better. Miss Mary Elizabeth Copeland, op erative case, is improving. ' Mrs. Martha Aikens. of Clyde. Route 1, is resting olilv fairly well. Mrs. Cornelia Barr, of Waynes ville, Route 1, medical case, is about the same. DISCHARGED Among those discharged from the Haywood County Hospital during the past week are: Marie Strange, Mrs. Dallas Webb, Mis. J E. Whitaket, Mrs. Emma Willis, Mrs. Fred Brown, Mrs. Mary McClure, Avery Allen, Master ('has. Russell, William Hoyle, Mrs. Will Maney, Day Green, Miss Anna Dee Kmgsmore, Baby Samuel Henry Burress, Mrs. J. B. Lee and baby, Mrs. M. II. Clarke and baby, Mrs. W. O. Mintz, Miss Edna Stuart, Fred Mehaffey, 'George Brown, Mas ter Robert Lee Curtis, Mrs. J. H. Griffin, Miss Geticvivie Smith. Ishmael Parton, Eulas Inman, Mrs. Nora Smith, Mrs. James Kuykendall, Miss Caroline West, Master Edwin Winchester, Charlie? Smith, W. V. Haynes, Jr., Miss Virgiloo Blanken ship, Mrs. Chas. McClure, Jack Mor gan, J. R. Hardin, Miss Sarah Mc Connell, Mrs. Bertha Green, Mrs. Bess Moody, Mrs. Vera Tomason, Mrs. Nora Hannah, Mrs. A. J. Sorrells. For A Delightful Place To Dine T R V The Waynesville Golf and Country Club (i()RI)() OTTO, Of Miami, Manager. V V H I. 1 (' W E I. COM E BIRTHS ordinance of confirmation on two candidates. He also congratulated Mr. New on his twenty-three years of rectorate here. Mr. New leaves the church the 1st of October to be gin his work as rector of the Church of the Ascension in Clearwater, Fla. The collection of the morning, which amounted to $450 will be applied to the debt of $2,000 which the rector is trying to raise before he leaves for his new charge. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Patton an nounce the birth of a son on August the 17th. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Lee, of Hazel wood, announce the birth of a son on August the IGth. .Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Liner, of Lake Junaluska, announce the birth of a son on August the 17th. Mr. and Mrs. Sanl Williams, of Waynesville, Route 1, announce the birth of a daughter on August the 22nd. , Mr. and Mrs. Lane Watts, of Can dler, announce the birth of a daugh ter on August the 22nd. mm m ' One of the secrets of college popularity is a fresh immaculate appearance. We dry clean tweeds, sweat ers, gay colors, and filmy dance frocks with expert methods that restore their new appearance, thriftily. Waynesville Laundry, Inc. j. w. KILL I AN BOYD AVENUE ATTEND REUNION Mr. J. W. Phillips and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Phillips and family and Miss Etta Phillips, of Greenville, S. C, were the guests during the week of relatives and friends in Waynesville. They were en route from Cullowhee where they had attended the Phillips reunion on Sunday. COACHES ON ALL THROUGH TRAINS ' Inturr a tool, clean, re$tf ul trip at low cost pullman cans vdining cans Be comfortable in the safety of train travel Consult PasngM Traffic RprntatrVM be Ticket AgeaU lot' Fre4, Schedulas, Pullnua Beierrilions and othai travel Urlormatlor R. H. DeButts Assistant General Passenger Agent ASHEVILLE, N. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Needs -do Sous t j
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1938, edition 1
11
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75