TUESDAY, JANUARY fAGE FOUR (First Section) THE WATNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER in, I 5 I' Ml- I V- i 1 J M I" .1 i ' ,'"5 M 1 3 s Mrs.Quinlan - Is Honored . By Daughters 1 r Mrs. Charles E, .Quinlan was hon ored on Friday afternoon when her daughters. Miss Betsy Lane Quln ian and Miss Mary Quinlan, enter tained at a tea at their home, "Pros pest Hill". The event marked the birthday anniversary of the guest pf honor. I The hostesses were assisted in entertaining by their sister, Mrs. C. C. Crittenden, and her daughter, Anne Lane Crittenden, of Raleigh. Vases of gladioli decorated the living room where the hostesses re ceived with Mrs. Quinlan and Mrs. Crittenden. I During the first hour guests were greeted by Mrs. T. Lenoir Gwyn. Mrs. George Ward received in the library and Miss Alice Quinlan and Mrs. Rufus Siler were in the liv ing room. Mrs. R. L. Coin presided in the dining room and pouring were Mrs. J. F. Abel and Mrs. S. H. Bushnell. Assisting in serving were Miss Ida KIDNEYS" Do yttu suffer from burning, itthing. cloudy lmwMJK ' Have to (jet up nights? Jo ou have lak or leg- pains? Ik vnu hne rotds ttut turn on? if so. et NEF TEX. PirV Antiseptic Tdhlets. uhih contain a modern mirar le liny, used spH lalists Ui kidney troubles It n d.i ' treatinent makes ynu feel like a nt-w peim. Safe for thiMiert iii led wetting. Clip this ad as a reminder Ui Ktt N KK TEX Ta I'lets ut our dru store. Sold by Smith's I'rug Store ur our home town druggist. m Mill Fmd Work Shoes & Boots -Men's And Boys' We Have Shown Since 1940 And They Are Tops ? (S J A Fit Assured ill I PERSONALS Miss Elizabeth Henry will return today from High Point where she has been visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Byrd. Miss Fannie Pearl Felmet, of Brevard, spent last week end here with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Felmet. In the early stages the larvae of malaria carrying mosquitoes lie flat on the water and scoot back ward when disturbed while the lar vae of other mosquitoes dive when disturbed. Mrs. Malcolm Williamson. The tea table was centered with Jean Brown, Miss Tillie Rotha, and an arrangement of mixed flowers in pastel shades and cream-colored candles in silver candelabra were also used. During the second hour Miss Nancy Killian received at the front entrance, while Mrs. H. F. Marley assisted in the .living room and Mr:. Robert Breece and Mrs. Clyde Ray assisted in the library. Mrs. W. F. Swift and Mrs. H. L. Prevost presided at the tea (able and assisting in the dining room were Miss Lois Harrold, Miss Hel en Ray. Mrs. W. L. Hardin, Jr., and Miss Sue Willard Lindsley. About one hundred and twenty-1 five guests called during the hours ! from four Jo six o'clock. 1 The Best Assortment This Favorite 8" Lace-to-Toe Woodsman's Boot in 3 Grades Sizes This Peters Diamond Brand Boys' Boot On Special At $.88 Widths C to Library Notes By MARGARET JOHNSTON Haywood County Librarian Some of the New Books BEST Whistle. Daughter whistle. Grandma Truttle becomes the talk of Lake Champlain country after the Revolutionary War when she kidnaps a stagecoach' from in front of the village tavern rescues her granddaughter from her angry family, saves a sailor, gets drunk, defies the town supervisor b- -nan- aging the tavern, makes matches and has a high old time. BATES Purple Plain Story of a youog British pilot who wanted to die. Then he met Anna, the exquisite Burmese girl whose love charged him with the determination to live and to help others to live. The scene: Wartime Burma. WERTENBAKER Old South; the Founding of American Civili zation. This volume is confined to the at Kay's of' Also And KBS Shoes For Men and Boys Peters Diamond Brand Shoes and Boots Combine All the Skill of the World's Largest Manufacturer; of Shoes. Our Leading Brand ZlA to 5'z Yard Wide XMAS BABY FOR ONLY 15 YEARS OF AGE, Mrs. Patricia Sullivan holds her Christmas present, a baby girl born to her in Pittsburgh. The young mother mar ried her 22-year-old husband, Griffith, last February, after Patricia se cured a court order permitting her to wed at 14. (international) The Worthingtons Are Honored On 25th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs Frank E. Worth ington were honored on Sunday afternoon when Mr. and Mrs. George M. Craig and Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Worthington entertained at the Craig residence. The event marked the twenty-tilth wedding inniversary of the honor guests. The living rooms were decorated hroughout with vases of orchid ind white gladioli and yellow and pink snapdragons. For the occasion Mrs. Frank Worthington wore a silver lame jown with a corsage of blue iris. The hosts and guests of honor ,-eceived in the living room with ittle Margaret Anne Worthington, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Worthington, and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Gaze and Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Martin, of Tryon. close friends of he honor guests. Greeting the guests at the front 1oor were Miss Nancy Killian and Mrs. Roy Francis. Mrs. Clark Ed munds received at the ntranee lo4 .he dining room and Miss Mary Medford was in charge of the guest egister. Mrs. R. R. Campbell and Mis. 1. W. Ray presided in the dining oom and were assisted by Mrs. W. L. Hardin, Jr., Miss Virginia Nichols, Miss Anne Heinz, and Miss Aniie Edmunds. Mrs. J. H. Matney ivas in charge of the gift room. The tea table was covered with i lace cloth and attractively decor Ued in silver and white. A threc iered wedding cake against a back ground of fern and silvered bcr i ies was at one end of the table vhile coffee was poured from a sil ver service at the other. Silvered oliage and white tapers in silver lolders completed the table decor itings. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Malcolm Williamson, Mrs. T. L. Gwyn. and Mrs. M. G. Stamey. Around one hundred and fifty quests called during the hours rom three to six o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Worthington were narried in De Funiak Springs, Fla., in January 18. 1923. with Rev. A. (. Preston officiating. Mrs. Worth ngton is the former Miss Mary Gertrude Barnette, daughter of the ate James Everett and Ada Croft Barnett. of Freeport, Fla. Iir. Worthington is the son of Sugene Lee Worthington and the late Elizabeth Morgan Worthing ton ,of Richland, Ga. For many years he has been connected with :he Southern Railway and moved here from Murphy with his family in March, 1929. He is at present agent for the Southern at Canton. Mr. Worthington is an active member of the Masonic Lodge. He is past High Priest, Waynesville Chapter 169, R.A.M., past illustrous Master of Doric Council No. 20, R. and S. M.; and past Eminent Com mander of Waynesville Command ry No. 31, Knights Templar. Both Mr. and Mrs. Wor ington are members of the Presbyterian Church. They have one son, L. F. Worthington. ' I study of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, for the most part during the colonial and early national periods. There has been no attempt to give a complete so cial history of the Old South, but merely to develop such topics as best Illustrate the forces which moulded its civilization. GOULD House That Jacob Built. A whole century and a halt of the life of a lusty Maine family is glimpsed as the author unfolds the story of the house that he built on the same foundation where his grandfather built before him, in Lisbon Falls, Maine. - When the first gas plant was built .in New Orleans in 1835, it was orerated by slaves. " 15-YEAR-OLD GIRL It fva Water constitutes 60 per cent of meat, 87 per cent of milk, 55 per cent of poultry flesh and 65 per cent of eggs. Dearborn Double 12" Mouldboard Plows Dearborn Double 14" Mouldboard Plows Dearborn Single 16" Mouldboard Plows Dearborn Disc Plows Dearborn Lift Type Tandem Disc Harrows Dearborn Drag Type Tandem Disc Harrows Dearborn Lift Type Single Disc Harrows Dearborn Tandem 9 Ft. Cultipackers Dearborn Bush and Bag Cut-a-way Harrows Dearborn Row Crop Cultivators Full line of Tractor and Implement and Dearborn DEATHS CHARLIE SMITH Charlie Smith, 58, of Clyde, died Sunday in a Waynesville hospital. Onalee Smith; a son, Robert Smith, of Clyde; a daughter, Mrs. Troy Rhinehart, of Lake Junaluska; the mother, Mrs. Sallie Caldwell, of Schulter, Okla.; a brother. Roy Smith, of Schulter; three sisters. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Mrs Florence Peterson, of Okla homa City, Okla., Mrs. Oliver Smith, of Schulter, and Mrs. J. H. Cox, of California; and one grand child. Funeral arrangements, under the direction of Crawford funeral home, were incomplete Monday af ternoon. CHARLIE LEE RIIYNE Charlie Lee Rhyne, 58, an em ploye of the Champion Paper and Fibre company at Canton and resi dent of Canton, died Saturday morning in an Asheville hospital following a long illness. He was a veteran of World War I and a member of the American Le gion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Ruth Scruggs Rhyne; four sons. Richard, Charles, Gary, and Mich ael, all of the home; four daugh ters, the Misses Peggy Ann. Shir ley, Rita and Linda, all of the home: a brother, Ben Rhyne, of Pineola. Avery county; and three sisters, Mrs. John Clark, of Pineola. Mrs. Ida Wiseman, of Plumtree, and Mrs. Leonard Wilson, of San Francisco. Calif. Funeral services were held in the First Baptist church at Canton Monday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock with the Rev. Horace Smith, pastor, sua A The of M0IJM Si IPPI Y SATURDAY, JANUARY 24 IN OUR SALE and SERVICE Of FORD TRACTORS And DEARBORN FARM EQUIPMENT These Items For officiating. Interment was in Bon-A-Venture cemetery. Pallbearers were veterans of For eign Wars. Members of the V.F.W. were in charge of graveside rites. Garrett funeral home was in charge of arrangements. BURCHFIELD INFANT Gravesid rites for the infant son of Mr and Mrs. Joe Burchfield of Waynesville, R.F.D. No. 1, who died hnsDital Thursday, were held Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock at Maple Grove MetnoQisi cnurcn cemetery. Surviving in. addition to the par ents, are the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Burchfield, and 1 grandmother. Mrs. Mary Etta Shulcr, all of Haywood county. Garrett funeral home was in charge of arrangements. MRS. LUCILLE R. CALDWELL Funeral services were held Sat urday afternoon at New Rocky Rranrh church in the Aliens Creek section for Mrs. Lucille Robinson Caldwell, 35, wife of Zimmery cald well. who died Thursday night at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Robinson, of Lake Junaluska. The Rev. Mr. Dickwall officiated and burial was in the Rocky Branch cemetery. Surviving are the husband; one daughter, Sherlie Caldwell; the Darents. five sisters, Mrs. Mark Grasty. of Waynesville; Mrs. W. M. England, of Marion; Mrs. Grady Yarborough, and Mrs. John D. Rrnun nf Lake Junaluska. and Mrs. Myrtle Crawford, of Balsam; two brothers, Roy and Clyde Rob- 0 0 0 TAIN GO, Immediate Delivery Dearborn Terracing Blades Dearborn Angle Dozers Dearborn Wood Saws Dearborn 2-Wheel Tractor Wagons Dearborn 4-Wheel Tractor Wagons Dearborn Roto Tillers Dearborn Heavy Duty Sice Mowers Dearborn New Agricultural Rear Mowers Dearborn Lime Spreaders Harvey Red HeadJIanimcr Mills Power Orchard Sprays Parts and Accessories for Ford Trctf Farm Equipment MEANS LESS WORK . . . MORE INCOME PER ACRE War Bride's par Follow Her Over CULLISON, Kans (t little ir.- 'ufi has a touch nf , -PN English villaee r r-u 3'.1 cashirp ha , "U11l , 1UM residents. 1 The population from the war. cnaries GriiM,, son, was stationed rj part of his3V, Ws Jr ne wooed the ,iauEJ onrl Mrc r.U... .''"Sill; uoming to Kans,ls a(( time weHriinn ,i "" "I ner new hj veteran of 22 years in fl,' ijr 'y Packed u lowed their duuoln,.r . home in the Sou;h KaJ tuuitii y , PROOF OK IloXEsj TALLAHASSKK. Fla n e i- . i-roo.' mat people are J ly honest when inn .. ui . . .. "i comes irom inc Florida Co me Blind. Losses Am from the 40 stands ih, throughout Florida have than one per cent of gros inson, of Lake Junaluska. Garrett funeral home charge of arrangements. FLOOR SANDW FINISHING THE HAYWOOD Phone 539 S

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view