Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 10, 1950, edition 1 / Page 2
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Deaths ! JESSE F. CALDWELL i ! Funeral services will be held in I the First Methodist Church here " tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. for Jesse F. Caldwell, 59, of Candler, who died Sunday afternoon at the home following a long illness. , The gev. J. E. Younlz, pastor of the church, the Rev. Brown Cald well of Greenville, S. C, and the Rev. E. P. Hamilton, pastor of the Candler Methodist Church, will of i t filiate and interment will be in -. Green Hill Cemetery. iV Active pallbearers will be Jack Bussell, Guy Caldwell, Ernest Rog ers, Frank T. Davis, J. C. Rich, Jr., ,.tt i-and Nelson Vanhook. ..- Honorary pallbearers will be Jonathan. Woody. Glenn Palmer, Thurman C. Davis. Frank M. Da vis, V. R,-Davis, Jim Palmer. Dr. ... R. H. Stretcher, Bill Palmer, Floyd , , , , Woody, Dr J. C. Rich, and Jarvis , ,. . Caldwtir.: , The body will remain at Garrett Funeral Ijtome until 2 p.m. tomor- i row wh$a it will lie in state at '. i, the church. Mr. Caldwell was a native of Haywood County and spent most of his life here. He was employed by the American Enka Corporation for eight years before becoming ill. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Vi v ola Moore Caldwell; three daugh ters, Mrs. Cloe Rogers of Wilson, ;4lOkla., Mrs. Ruth Burnett of White Pine, Tenn.. and Mrs. Ethel Fulton J 1 k of Greensboro; six grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Minnie Davis of Waynesville. Route 2; and three .o.'' brothers, Tommy and Hardy cam This Will Make You Forgot Your Troubles - Try It i 4 of - well of Waynesville. Route 2, and Eston Caldwell of Waynesville. .. -. .. DORSF.V W. SUMPTER Dorsey Marcus Sumpter, 55. of Waynesville, died at his home Sun day morning following a long 111 . ness. A native of Royston, Ga., he had i ' been connected with Hazelwood Plumbing Company for several "i years. Survivine are the wife. Mrs. Eve lyn Dunn Sumpter; a daughter, Miss Martha Ann Sumpter and an adopted daughter, Miss Maggie Mae Dunn Sumnteri all of Waynes ville; three sisters, Mrs. Will S. Ayers of Cannon. Ga., Mrs. Maggie Reynolds of Elberton Ga., and Mrs. Maggie Flemming of Griffin, Ga., and three brothers, J. E. Sumpter of Crawfordsville, Ga., A. M. Sumpter of Easley, S. C, and F. R. Sumpter of Roxboro. f uneral services were nelrt in Hazelwood Presbyterian Church this morning with the Rev. Paul P. Thrower, pastor,' officiating. BuiSal was at Cannon, Ga. ' P!beawt flhiWrftiriT row Herschell Caldwell, Bill Win ehester,'' Sam Knight,'.' Ernest Greeno and Lawson SummerrQW. Crawford Funeral Home was in charge. : .' ' x L The youngster on the left is all set for another raisin, while the one on the right is pouting because he thought he was going to get a raisin; and didn't. These pictures were made by Josef Schneider, a successful photographer of children. The raisin technique work this way. Pop a raisin in a child's mouth . . . then another . . . then one more. You'll get surprise, delight, anticipation . each one a picture. Then break the rhythm and pop be next raisin in your own mouth and another and one more. You'll get bewilderment, reproach and anger . . .again a picture in each emotion, says photographer Schneider. Anyway, here's proof of what he is talking about. The picture on the left he Labels "Raisin Hopes" while the one on the right u called "Raisin Pouts." This is something the camera fans of this area might try. . PERSONALS Hospital Fires Spark Checkup Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Davis and daughter of Sumter, South Caro lina spent the Easter week with relatives here. Dr, and Mrs. R. Stuart Robersnn and children returned Sunday from a vacation in Florida. . Miss Louise Leach, student at Virginia Interment College, is spending the Easter week-end at her .home at Lake Junaluska. She has as her guest one of her school mates. Miss Pat Harris, of Gua tamala: -.. Mr' and Mrs. Zeb Rogers and daughters.. Rnsjlyn , and Carolyn Rogers, of South Boston, Virginia, spent the Easter week end with Mr. Rogers' father, John Rogers, at Crabtree, .. Mrs. John Troy and daughter, Louise Troy, and two' sons, Frank and Johnnv Troy, of Durham, spent the-' Easter week end with Mrs.' Troy's mother, Mrs. Frank Fergu son. ' ... i H Schedule Set For Pasture Demonsrations Hi - n - t- .-.;, ! : ' This week's schedule of Ladino seeding ' and pasture renovation -'demonstrations was announced to day .by County' Agent Wayne Cor pening's office. ' ' J.. The first session of the week was held this morning before an inter ested group of farmers at Charles Edward's farm in the Lake Juna luska .community. ' ji At 2 p.m. today, another "demons tration will be held at Hai ry Hem Jbree's farm on .Aliens Creek'. .' The remainder yof, the schedules Tuesday t 1Q '.m.rC. B. Hosa- pook's farm, Dellwood; 8 p.m.. JNorvall Rogers', Maggie;' V ' f Wednesday 10 a.m. Mrs. Head's, Francis! Cove; 2 p.m. R. L. Price's, .Center Pigeqn. the week end with relatives in Mop ristown, Tennessee. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Siler left Wednesday for a visit to their daughter, . Miss Betsy , Siler, in Jacksonville, Fla. . ' ' . ' . Mr. and. Mrs. Ralph Prevost. re turned on Friday after a two weeks visit to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Swift left Thursday, for Larned, Kas., where they are visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. O. R. McDon.ild. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Colkitt re turned Wednesday from Durham where Mr. Colkitt underwent an operation at Duke Hospital. :,.' Miss Anne Osborne of Durham 1 1 .v.i. O TKAGEDY-The Effingham ttospilal fire; 74 died. 1 1 " ,AP Newsfeirtures ! Camera Club Sets Up Definite 1950 Program j i Memzers of the recently-organ- j ized Haywood Camera Club last Tuesday night got acquainted with I each others' equipment and lined up a series of specific programs for their regular monthly meetings. They also go their first photo assignment from Projects Chair man Frank Miller of Waynesville, forester of The Champion Paper and Fibre Company. ; i That is to "shoot" pictures of ' flowers. ' ' J The prints will be studied, criti cized, and analyzed from the stand point of composition and technique at the June meeting. Miller later will make other specific assignments of photo sub jects. One project will be to get action picturesanother, mountain landscape shots; another, rtill life; and so on. Each member will work on the same assignment, and the prints will be discussed at the reg ular meeting following about two months after the assignment of the specific subject. With Howard Clapp, Club presi dent, In charge, the members also set up a definite schedule of sub jects to be discussed at the regu lar sessions. At the next one, May 2, they'll study pr?ss photography technique and problems. Clapp said a news paper s'aff photographer would be invited to lead the discussion. At succeeding meetings, the members will take up these sub ject, In order: films and photo paper; color photography; composi tion in taking pictures; photo-mak. ing technique; and dark-room tech nique. At th same time, the members discussed plans for holding a photo exhibit in the fall. They also appointed Bill Lindau as, the club's publicity chairman. DAR To Meet Friday Afternoon The April meeting of the Dorcas Bell Love Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution will be held at The Retreat, Friday after noon, at 3:30 o'clock. Mrs. Robert Osborne and Mrs. J. F. Abel will be hostesses. Mrs. J. W. Killian, regent, will preside. 1 Mi VI MA .W ' till If i" ::i,hf AP Newsfetures Tbis is Uw fixst cf a new weekly series, designed to test your knowledge of things Biblical. . ' Each week, la the Mountaineer you will find a new Bible. Quiz il lustration, suggesting passafe from the Old or New Testament. &ee if you can identify the scene and recall the story from the Bible iii connection with it. The illustrations are the work of William Sharp. " Cartoonist, caricaturist and etcher, he was forced to flee from bis native Germany when his biting satire aroused the hatred of Hitler end: the Nazis.,. . ,-v- ' ' Soon after gaining refuge in this country, he sketched FDR in the White House .and b,is other subjects have included governors, celeb rities in the news and many courtroom scenes. Since he sketched Bruno Hauptmann on trial for kidnapping the Lindbergh babv, he has been busy with his sketch-pad in most of the fawoug American trials. One of his etchings is included in the permanent exhibit at the Library of Congress in Washington, i (Answer on Page 4) Til. "linois H, j Band To bunion All-Day Service Is Held Bv Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Rector and YY Oman S OOCietV ' daughters, Ann and Nancy, spent - . - The Woman's Society of Christ ian Service ' of Long's . Chapel Methodist Church observed a "Day Apart" service on Tuesday. This was an all-day service held in con nection with the regular meeting of the group. New officers were elected as follows: president, Mrs. Jerry Lin er; vice presidents, Miss Ida Penny and Miss Ray Ballard; recording secretary, Mrs. C. G. Meclford; corresponding secretary, Mrs. C. C. Williams; treasurer, Mrs. Eliza beth Reeves; secretary of Spirit ual Life, Mrs. F. O. Dryman; secre tary of supply work, Miss Ethel McCoy; secretary missionary edu cation, Miss Louise Ballard; secre tary of student work, Mrs. C. R. Ross; secretary youth work, Mrs. W. N. Thomas; secretary of child ren's work, Mrs, Flora Ballinger; secretary of Christian social rela- spent the week end here with her ( tions and local church activities mother, Mrs. Robert Osborne . Mrs: Felix Stovall returned Sat urday from Tltusvllle. Fla:, where she. has: been visiting Mrs. W. C. Klingensmith. Mrs. G. G. Leatherwood. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Doggett and children,' Nancy Joe and Bill Dog gett, of High Point spent the week end at their summer home here. I 'i Phantom Mysteries Revealed mm mm - :-f . Th McPonnct TH-l Navy jet fighter, popularly dubbed the "Phantom" by our air sailors, has had a portion of the skin of her fuselage removed in order that spectators visiting the Navy's Mobile Exhibit may be afforded an X-ray view of tht internal workings which give (he speedy aircraft its get up and go. Wings of the Phantom fold in order that snore nay be accommodated in the limited space aboard aircraft A total of 1,359 hospitals throughout the country have been given cartful checkups for fire and accident hazards since the .start of a'.'nalionwide "inspection "program inspired by the disastrous hospital fires at Effingham, 111., and at Dav enport, Iowa. The death toll in the Effing ham tragedy a year ago was 74. In the Davenport fire last winter 41 persons died. The Davenport hospital had been scheduled for inspection a few days after the date on which it burned. More thgh 1,700 engineers and field men from fire and casualty Insurance companies are eni?iiRed in making the inspections. They draw up specific recommendations for improving each -hospital's. safe ty. 9,090' To Be Checked The National Board of Fire Un derwriters reports that more than 3,000 other hospitals are scheduled for checkups this yoar and that 3 total of $.000 institutions will be surveyed before the program is completed. Col. Perrin C: Cothran, yiceP president of the Phoenix Insurance Co., of Hartford, Conn., who is chairman of the special committee on hospital inspections, says "the scope of these inspections goes beypnd the correction and elimina tion of hazards to life." "We hope," he says, "that one of the most lasting results will be Improvements in the training of hospital personnel and increased consciousness of fire dangers on the part of all who operate" hos pitals. Where Lives Were Saved "How important this, can be was demonstrated only recently when fire destroyed part of the Sauk County Hospital, near Reedsburg, Wis. Employees of that hospital had been trained in fire safety, While three employees fought the fire with inside hose lines, other employees repioved 10Q mental pa tients from the buliding. Help was) quickjy summoned from nearby fire departments. "This emergency was so well controlled that employees and some mental patients were able to re-enter the building to remove all mattresses, bedding, clothing and store-room supplies so that if the whole building had been de stroyed these sifpplies would have been available for the patients in Other quarters. "Fortunately not a patient lost his life or was injured and the building was saved." "Port of Uar Ports" Known as 'the "Pert of Many forts," with its hundreds of piera and 600-odd miles of waterfront, tha Port of New York handles mora than 40 per cent of the nation's ex ports and nearly 50 per cent of lta imports. The Port of New York Authority is a corporation repre senting both New York itatt and New Jersey in the development of trade. At the Port of New York in 1940, imports amounted to 12,853,000 tons of goods; exports. 10,413,000 tons; receipts of coastwise trading goods, 33.821,000 tons, and Coast wise shipments, 8,354.000 tons. Red Squill, Good Poison Poison which thi farmer most commonly uses to make good rats out of bad rates is Red Squill, re commended by the department of agriculture because it is effective, cheap and harmless to domestic animals. When dogs and cats eat it they throw it up, for it is an emetic. Chickens, to?, can eat it with impunity; but wi;en a rat gets it into his system it is pay day. At the outbreak of World War II the upply of squill, which comes from Mediterranean countries, was sud denly cut off. Squill is an extract from a bulb grown chiefly in Italy. Potato water was once regarded1 The cardinal is the official birJ as medicinal lotion in Ireland. o( seven states. Momk . i Canton Ki,h ' tend t nor of u ' llinoisi H1?h sa The v if it,. Camon shortW Tl ,1, . I Paper anU t?P " SUOStS K 1 . W1J be served bj, School ho-n,, " Senior 4-H CluttMeets At Crabtree a The Cnb, - vuiD-.met Frid, uilK III. '"UJi Susie singing and Mattie Mrs. Oral vit. I Kaveademonstrauunl Phinc ii'oH . . sponsor a basket b.' iween 1.1m in ... . 1 Crahtrep 9n Tin.. .1 "'m l illts JJ to raise the quota J tamp, Elaabeth Crawford ford. Pflt; 1 Medford, Emelvn Mccl Gertrude Frady ej -v,ut 11 nicy nao made jects and Susie Molar, Noland modeled cottw A trindpl nt nn. - - . . lw j to those being made bv rnnnprtifin with tk.:. - Jlt uicni was shown by Susie H 4-H Meeting To Held At Iron D; A community mil Iron Duff 4-H. Club. Davis Chapel, WednesI p. 111. Jue Caldwell, pn preside. Shed Their Horna Deer shed their horns and grow new ones every year. In this ftrange process a section of tht main antlers close to the head be comes weak and brittle, finally breaking off, The pew horns rapid ly grow out of the stumps. ' Parish priests once blessed pota to crops in Ireland. ; " 1949. Financial St atemen INCORPORATED Balance, December 31, 1948 '. $46,463.67 RECEIPTS 1. Total assesments collected --.-.$16,680.74 2. Number new members 80 25c 170.00 3. Interest on time deposits, stocks, . bonds, etc. A 1,008.24 4. Total (lines 1 to 3 inc.) $17,858.90 5. Net difference of advance assessments: 5C1.76 6. Receipts 7. Total receipts .$18,420.74 $64,884.41 DISBURSEMENTS 8. Salaries $ 3,000.00 9. Collection commissions 342.43 10. Miscellaneous expenses 873.71 11. Total expenses (lines 8 to 10 inc.) .......'........$ 4,216.14 12. Death benefits paid (No. 102) - 10,100.00 13. Membership fees paid agents 170.00 14. Refunds r 13 20 16. Total disbursements (lines 11 to 15 inc.) $14,499.34 BALANCE TO BE ACCOUNTED FOR . ASSETS 17. .Cash on hand ,. ..$50,385.07 $ 4,144.49 18. Bank deposit First National Bank, Waynesville, N. C 1 40.58 19. War Bonds 30,000.00 20. Building & Loan stock 15,000.00 21 Total assets LIABILITIES 22. Advance assessments 26. . Total liabilities 2,294.56 SURPLUS 450,385'.'07 2,294.56 ....$48,090.51 . Garrett Phono 1-W wneral 1 Home, Inc. Waynesville, N-c
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 10, 1950, edition 1
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