.rnoon, March 2, i::3 TTAYNISVILLE M0UNTAINEE3 F r rr-- - 1Kaju -i Church ;sary Group Meeting ! ..Missionary Society .nS . nntist church Vte home of c JlL during the i i .cm nresi- 'j;n Step:ui - j'by John D. Freeman L social hour, themem fie1" .j Jith lun- fi 1 covwcu - ' fe Cove TVtieCDC At Meeting ir'ftiE RATCLIFFE LMr Correspondent) I ciofv of Chris- church held a meeung tu ih home of Mrs. jUl v L ,ith a large number is present. Lent, Mrs. Joe Turner, kdore Raby led the de nirc Rramlett Stone U of the worship pro- Ject, "Having ine djic lugh " Members taking I. nrncrram were: Mrs. fife, Mrs. Mark Gallo Reeves Noland, Mrs. Wracken, Mrs. Carl I ward KirkpatncK, Mrs. L Mi Mrs. Woody :, To Meet4 Mrs. Queen ch meeting of the Hay (er. United Daughters nfederacy will be held ifternoon at 3:30 o'clock ie of Mrs. John Queen, )lard Ferguson will be i ine program ana miss an will review the UDC V Queen, Sr., will pre- River's rich basin cov- f 0,000 square miles and about 20,000.000 people, includes 150 cities of 10,000 population. Ratcliffe Cove ' WMU To Meet With Mrs. James By MRS. ALGIE RATCLIFFE (Mountaineer Correspondent) The Women's Missionary Union of the Ratcliffe Cove Baptist church will meet at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the home of MrsJes se James for a business meeting. Mrs..Aigie Katctiffe, the WMU president, In her announcement this morning urged all .members to attend. BIRTHS The following new arrivals have been announced at the Haywood County , Hospital: Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Cooper of Canton, a daughter, Feb. 23. Mr. and Mrs. James Grant of Maggie, a son, Feb. 23. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. J. Burke of Canton, a daughter, Feb. 24. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Euart of Dellwood, a son, Feb. 25. " Noland Rites Will Bo Hold Friday At 2:30 Funeral services will be heA to morrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock In the Maple drove Methodist church for David Noland. 44 who. died of a heart attack in Long view, Washington on February 20. The Rev. R. p. McCracken, the Rev. Bill Queen, and the Rev. O. L- Ledford will conduct the ser vices and burial will be in the church cemeterv ; Pallbearers will be Medford. Bill and Tom Noland, Robert Nichols, Eugene Stamey, and Wayne Cars Well. Nieces will be flower bearers. The body will remain at Craw. ford Funeral Home here until the hour of the service. Mr. Noland, the son of Mrs. Margaret Noland and the late W T. Noland of Lake Junaluska, was a native of Haywood county. He had made his home in the state of Washington for the past 24 years, and at the time of his death was employed with the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company. Surviving are the mother; two sisters, Mrs. Wiley Hall of Gas- tonia and Mrs. E. L. Smith of Can ton; four brothers, John and Bad ger Noland of Lake Junaluska: Verlln Noland of Waynesville, and Frank Noland of New York City, Mr. and Mrs. John Parker nf Waynesville, Route 1, a daughter, Feb. 25. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Webb, Jr., of waynesville, a son, Feb. 26. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Moody, Jr., of Waynesville, Route 2, a daugh ter, Feb. 26. EN LIFE 7 rba I .jt i- odoy. lotomia Hunts' linn., terribly of tpptriit with rull. f Wlioht and tiro J. ptm rundown feeling. I tint I felt tee miter j"x. I tried treatment " but with no relief, will llanthard tell ever kw Sialf'i Indian River "elped etheri, o 1 I terted at one eating hin9; then, befere long n ten pounds of much ''9t. I feel so much better that I can da nth mn. now r,com. to others for it "iter than any ether know of," "' Mian Rivtr Medi " Mire's reckbeund rwr money back en if not satisfied. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Crane of Candler, a daughter, Feb. 26. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mehaffev of Waynesville, Route 1, a son, Feb. 26. . Mr. and Mrs. Rov Ross. Jr.. of Waynesville, Route 2, a daughter, Feb. 26. Mr, and Mrs. John H. Roeers of Waynesville, Route 2, a daughter Feb. 27. Mr, and Mrs. Willie Burchfield of Hazelwood, a daughter, Feb. 28. Mr. and Mrs. Sherrill Jamison of Canton, Route 1. a son, Feb. 28. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lewis of Mag' gie, a son, Feb. 28. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Islcy of Waynesville, a daughter, March 1 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cathey of Waynesville, a son, March 1. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harringer of Hazelwood, a daughter, March 2. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Rich of Maggie, a daughter, March ,2. SPIC & SPAN Will Re-Open MONDAY Under New Management STEAKS CHICKEN SANDWICHES ..SOFT DRINKS o Operated By KENNETH MEDFORD PLAY SAFE See Your Doctor ,ust no nse gambling with your health! At l s,Sn of sickness call your doctor. And, for a aP'd recovery, let our registered pharmacists fill P"iptions. ;: P YOUR HEALTH - WITH PROVEN PRODUCTS! Your Walgreen Agency CIJETI RUG STORE Borne Owned and Operated ePend on Us - Your Doctor Does." Last Rites For Mrs. LaPlante Are Held Today Final rites for Mrs. Anna La Plante of Springfield, Mass., who died Tuesday in a Raleigh hospl tal, were held today at noon at Bon-A-Venture Ceiwtery near Clyde. Mrs. LaPlante made her home with a daughter, Mrs. Frank Bell in Raleigh and was well known in Canton and Western North Car olina. : ; A service was held at noon yes terday In the Good Shepherd Church, Raleigh. The rites today were conducted by the Rev. Robert J. McClosky, rector of St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Canton. Pallbearers were C. V. Bell, Charles M. Bcall, C. C. Nichols. G. C. Pegram, Lockwood Sharp and C. C. Worthlngton, ; Survivors in addition to Mrs. Bell include three grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Wells Funeral Home was In Charge of arrangements in Canton. Maggio Scout Troop To De installed March 9 Maggie's new Boy Scout troop will be installed formally into the international organization the night of March 9. Fred Campbell, president of the Soco Gap Road Boosters Club, will receive the charter on behalf of the sponsoring organization from a representative of Daniel Boone Scout Council ' headquarters in Asheville. The ceremony will take dace at a Club dinner meeting which will be.held at 7 p.m. at the Maggie School. The dinner will be served by the ladies of the Maggie Methodist Church. . This Item of business will be an important feature of the session, but not the only one. . During the course of the even ing, the members of the club will elect their officers for 1950 and hear State Park Commission Chair. man Charles E. Ray and Waynes ville Chamber of Commerce Presi dent James Kilpatrick make the DrinciDal addresses. The featured speeches will rnn. cern the comlns Cherokee Indian Pageant and the building of the Heintooga link of the Parkway. TANKS UP GREENVILLE. S. C. (UP) Po lice said a 340-pound Necro arrest ed after emptying a half-callon Inr of whiskey claimed he was "just teeung good." Kadar can be used to detect storms heading toward an area several hours in advance. Two Champion Special Broadcast I Read Tho Mountaineer Vcnt Ada Y Teams To Enter Tourneys Canton's Champion YMCA will have two teams of youngsters in Interstate YMCA basketball tourn aments in Greensboro and Winston-Salem. "Y" Athletic Director Jack Jus tice said one Champion team would compete in the Junior event, which will be held tomorrow and Satur day at Greensboro. Next week, he plans to take a team of 13 and 14-year-olds to Winston-Salem for the "mite" tournament which is scheduled for March 13 and 14. Rev. A. Rohrbacher Is Visiting South America (Special to The Mountaineer) PANAMA CITY. Feb. 26 Rev. Ambrose Rohrbacher, of Waynes ville, arrived at Tocumen Airport here today after a 4 M hour flight from the United States on El In- ter-Americano the "overnight ex press" of Pan American and Pan- agra (Pan American-Grace Air ways). He left Miami, Florida at 8 p.m. last night and arrived In Panama a little after midnight. Rev. Rohrbacher will continue on to Guayaquil, Ecuador before re turning to Waynesville. Tonight At 8:30 This evening from 9:30 to 10:00 O clock radio Station WHCC will present a special broadcast over the Mutual System of "One Great Hour of Sharing." This Is In co operation with the effort of nine teen Protestant denominations and Church World Service to meet the needs of a war ravaged world. This will be climaxed on Sunday, March 12, when the participating churches will receive the special offering. Morning devotions next week will be transcriptions on this same theme. Subject of these transcript ions will be, "Men Without a Country," "My Name on A Mail box." My Brother's Keeper," "Christ In Red China," "Exodus 1950." and "Crisis In Asia." You are invited to listen to all of these programs. Morning Devotions are heard each week day morning from 8:45 to 9:00 A. M. SCARS OF "76 STILL THERE BOSTON (UP) Daniel Mal colm's tombstone in Copps Hill burying ground still bears scars made by musketballs when British soldiers in 1776 used the stones during target practice. F "St. i 'iinV i I I I T , , auitatiint STRAND ONE DAY MARCH 9 IVIRY RMAUNG fAQTl t wrrrrr TUl SlOlYttUFl I ... mu I14BI m iHtow mm ML lUUNtl Itm e m" "M ' -, ' p m' TiT IIKr HIM. IMUU ta ITTUIIRW at U SMOWt I 7 W : VII V v 1 1 : i J mm 1 1 r 15. 7- W1 Instead of watching folks go by, Turn on your self the critic! eye. , Just watch the thlnfs yon daily do; Put In your time Just watching; you. To do the Job and do It rliht. It takes us almost day and night? No doubt, my friends, the thing to do, Is me watch me, and you watch you. 1 I Mrs. Marie Sigmon Dies Suddenly In Knoxville Mrs, Marie Hardin Sigmon, niece Of Mrs. W. L. Hardin of Waynesville, died suddenly at the home of an aunt, Mrs. W. M. Good man, in Knoxville, Tuesday night. Mrs. Sigmon, a frequent visitor to Waynesville, was the daughter of the late Rev. and Mrs, William H. Hardin. She lived here with her parents during her childhood and has many friends in the commun ity; Mrs. Sigmon made her home in Winston-Salem with a son, Ross M. Sigmon, but was visiting in Knox ville at the time of her death. Funeral services were held in Salisbury, her former home, this afternoon. Surviving in addition to the aunts, Mrs. Hardin and Mrs. Good man, are a daughter, Mrs. J. C. Hunter of Raleigh; two sons, Ross Sigmon of Winston-Salem and Bill Sigmon, student at State College in Raleigh; and two brothers, W. H. Hardin and Ernest Hardin of Salis bury. Cole Buchanan Died Wed. Night Cole Buchanan. 80. died Wed nesday night at the home of a daughter, Mrs. M. H. Raby of Can ton, after a lingering illness. He was a retired lumberman, a native of Jackson County and had resided in Haywood County for the nast ten vears Surviving, in addition to the daughter, are one son, V. C. Bu chanan of Gavi 12 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Funeral services win do neia FriHavnt 2:30 nm in New Savan nah - Baptist - Church in - Jackson County. The Rev. Otto Perham win officiate and burial will be in the church cemetery. Grandsons will be palioearers and granddaughters will be flower bearers. The body was taken today to the home of the daughter and will remain there until time for the services. Wells Funeral Home is in charge. t r-iMPTTS mFST CONTEST I'll ww CHAPEL HILL. N. C. (UP) The "ramrjug chest" beauty comesi tni-nori nut a total bust at the tTnivorcitv nf North Carolina. The campus chest fund was de cinnot fnr the relief of needy American and foreign students. To pep up contributions to tne cause sponsors decided on a beauty con test in connection with the Feb. K1n Ariva . Sororities balked at the idea of furnishing candidates for the con after a aernnd look. "What cirl wants to be known Miss Campus Chest 7" saw as Who film Tli Welcome To BefcHudsoii When you come to the program Sat urday,, we .vyant you to make this store headquarters. Meet your friends here use our every facility just make yourself at home in our great big store of three floors. " Saturday will be a gala affair, as some 6,000 members of the Haywood Community Development Program listen for the names of the three winning communities. There is ' $500 in cash for the first place; $300 for the second and $200 for third. It is going to be a big day in Haywood a lot of keen anticipation, but .. . - Just Remember This - J LA, i Tlifl presence of . Governor. Scott here Saturday adds to the importance, and signifi cance of the occasion. Moke your plans to be here Satur dayand remember, you are always welcome at Belk-IIud-son's. , , , , 1 Every One Wins At Belli - Hudson's Win With .These Week-End Specials Large Selection, Colorful Spring Gabardine Wool TOPPERS All shades, styles and colors S7.95toS2rS.50 This Is All New Merchandise New Spring Gabardine Beautiful Spring Rayon S0K.7S In all latest spring patterns. These were $9.95, Now $7.95 COATS In gorgeous pastels, wide assort' ment of styles. These were $14.95, Now s13 .95 44 x 90 Beautiful Ruffled K .Organdy GUE1TMJS In white, yellow, blue and y green $2-98 . j Regular 69c New Spring 30 inches wide, fast color,, wide assortment patterns. Just Received, Shipment of Ladies' Spring r SPORT OOTIDS . In loafers, ties and straps. All sixes in tan, wheat, green, brown, red $3.95 First "Quality, 51-Gauge, New Spring imm hose : : : : 04c These are our regular $1.00 Hose Beautiful Tailored Rayon-Cotton Lace-Trimmed SLIPS : '. : : : : . : : $51 , .1 These were made to sell for $1.98 Boys' 50 to 75 Wool Pants These were to sell up to $4.95, but priced now at only $5L Children's $1.98 Spring . DRESSES In wide range of colors Sies , 1 to 14 Pi 9 x 12 Foot Colorful Manitex Rugs Many, many patterns, now only Tobacco Canvas ; 3-Foot 8c 6-Foot 18c 9-Foot 27c Ladies' $12.95 Rayon, Gabardine and Crepe Spring DRESSES Now Only hdson .1- iTmIH' vV M'-J Men's Sanforized, Red Camel Full Cut 0VERMLS n Nussbaum, a VI Beta v ni.

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