Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 7, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
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(!aV afternoon, September 7, 1930 TIIE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE TI or tli Carolina's Champion Truck Drivers Baptists To Hear Rev. B.E. Wall Sun. Former Resident Returns To U. S. " i ? "' 1 m Vill i (. 1 : it i i I h V ; if 1 ' i w The pulpit committee of First Baptist church have nounccd that Rev. Broadus E. Wall, of Chester. S. C, will preach on Sunday. V !M From Japan j Mrs, W'ilford Jackson, whose husband. Cot Jackson was recent ly killed in a Plane crash near The ehu-ch is without a pastor. ; Tokyo, returned to the States last since the iesisatlim of Rev. L. G.jxvetk from Japan. Col. and --Mrs. Elliott, whose resignation was et-j J.ukson 'formerly resided here, fective August 13ih. j Xows of Ml.s )mmurn Rev. Mr. Wall was pastor of the to thi seountry was reported in a First Baptist in Hendersonville un-1 letter from Charles Hyatt to his til he resigned to volunteer as ! moilier, Mrs. Harry Hyatt. Mr. chaplain in the Navy, After ser; U.vat'. is a third officer of the U. S. Couple Is Honored At Picnic Supper ing in the Pacific area, he returned to civilian life after the war to be come pastor of the Chester church. Be Speedy with hfllnc As shellac sets very fast, it roost be applied rapidly in Mr.-i-ht strokes back and forth, .'working toward the : finished section to avoid lacs Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor were hosts of a picnic supper given at the Evans cabin at Balsam Wed nesday evening, as a courtesy to Miss Anne Osborne and Robert Hall, whose marriage will place this month. Guests included members of the families. ' PERSONALS Miss Norma Jean Brown of Fort Bragg spent the week end with her grandmother. Mrs I. J. Brown, and her asnts. Miss Ida Jean Brown and Mrs. R. H. Gibson. Miss Jean Ann Bradley left take ! Wednesday to resume her studies at Brenau College in Uainesvuie. Ga., where she is a member of the senior class. V ' Baptist Group To Meet Thursday The executive promotion com mittee of the Haywood Baptist As sociation will meet at Baptist head quarters in the Morgan and Ward Building here at 7:30 P. M. Thursday. Mr and Mrs Rnhert Clnrk have Howard Franklin, reigning King! .,,.;.,,, , thir on Wa, of Gasparilla of Tampa, Florida and Mrs. Franklin Jim Warren, N, S. General Greeley, on which M;s Jackson was a passenger. Mr. and Mrs. W, A. Corbett and Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Barefoot left this morning for their home in Wilmington, rifier a weeks visit to Miss Joan Morris left this morn Mrs. J. P. llicus, Mrs. Corbett is Ing for Gainesville, Ga , where a sister and Dr. Barefoot is a she Will enter the freshman class I brother of Mrs. Dieus. 'at Brenau College. captain of the Gasparilla Krewe, with Mrs. Warren are guests at the Piedmont Hotel, nut Street after spending the Labor Day week end with friends m Lew isburg, W. Va. -. ' '. '' H. R. Caldwell, Jr.. member of the senior class at State College in Raleigh, will return to school Mon day after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Caldwell at Waynes ville, Route 2. ... Hallelt Ward, Jr. left this mim ing for Davidson College where he will enter the freshman class. , ' ' Miss Vivian Watkins leaves Sat urday for Columbia. Mo., where she will enter the freshman class at Stevens College. Miss Ida Lou Gibson has re turned to Cincinnati Conservatory of Music after a visit to her par i nts, Mr. and Mrs. R. II. Gibson. ' The National Geographic Soci ety savs that, nound for pound, the leopard is the most destructive animal. T B, Carolina champion ihh-k L orimdlv hold the Cups they T . lflfl a....L- w..!un 11 HIP l'JV 1 1' IH Ik inl bv the Motor Carrier " r .u r..-..i:nu three will compete aganiM Lms f other slates in the Ll roadeo in INew lorit ey in October. Left to rifiht ares 1). F. Muiigiiiii, a driver tor Big gers Brothers Produce Co., Cliur lolte, who won first in the tundein axle semi-trailer event while driv ing a Dodge YA-142: A. S. Mas sey, a driver for Central Motor Lines, Charlotte, who won first in the single axle semi-trailer event while driving a Dodge J.V-128, and R. 1). Wallace, a driver for John son Motor Lines, CJmrloMe, who wim first in the straight truck even! while driving a Dodne HII-152. Forty-seven district champs com peted in the state contests. mm Washington Officials Have 'Sweet Tooth' For Special Kinds Of Cakes wsf cat tires' young sub-deb already has 'p her mind that she's hot o be dependent tipon her J wlu ii and if. Recently lev ot t-liicago leen-ageis that the average teen-ager be married (to a man with lity rather than good looks) years of age and have a She plans to work until she lied, tor a time after mar- fnd possibly when her chil li lunger need her -at home, fine to see that American re getting back to that old spirit. Contrary .to popu- ef American women haven't been the lily-white faint- igh't-of -blood type that painters and robust men teen anxvious to picture Imen of the Revolutionary eriod defended their homes tusket point. Civil War wo- partieularly in the South, noted for their bravery un- ie. Women in World War II World War II showed they knuckle down to any job could find, from cleaning its to packing ammunition. Cross sills in the armed fees during the last war did selves proud up at the front By JANE EADS j AP Newsfeatures WASHINGTON The last thing the Raymond Hollands want to see on their own dinner table is a cake. Cake is their business. Mr. Holland bakes cakes all day cvt.y day for senators and other diners in the Senate restaurant on Capitol Hill. Mrs. Holland decor ates cakes for the Pentagon Bak ery shop, wiiicti sne aiso manages. Her patrons raiige from char wo men to top military brass. Sometimes, "the little one," as her husband calls his petite bru nette wjfe, "dolls up as many as 100 cakes a day with fancy, pastel colored icing in the shape of flow ers and what she falls "lovey" greetings. Once she had an order to trace out a love letter in choco late on a cake. "Men," she told me, "have more of a sweet tooth, or at least are not watching their figures like us gals." Mrs, Holland, the ilaufihter of a grocer .was. born in Delavan, III., but met her husband when the family moved to Dallas, Tex. She got a job in one of Raymond Hol land's two bakery shops about 10 vears ago. lie taugm ner now u decorate cakes, finally married her. She ran the shops for a while when .Raymond was drafted and sent to Fort Sill, Okla., to do all the pastry work and baking at the reception center. Alter the war the Hollands came to Washington. As pastry chef on the Senate side of the capitol, Mr. BIRTHS The Haywood County Hospital i has announced the following births I during the past week: Mr. and Mrs. Clauds Silvers of 1 1 Waynesville, Koute 2, a daughter, Sept. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Claude Stamey, Waynesville, a daughter, Sept 1 Mr. and Mrs. Latham Gillett of i Clyde. Route 1, a daughter, Sept. 2 Mr. and Mrs. Varnell Swanger of Clyde, Route 1, a son, Sept 2 Mr. and Mrs. Evon Cable of! Clyde, Route 2, a daughter, Sept. 3 j Mr. and Mrs. Gaither Rathbone of Clyde, Route 1 , a son .Sept. 3 Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Foster of Joe, a daughter, Sept. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gillis of Clyde, a son, Sept. 3 Mr and Mrs. Ralph Pharr of. I Canton, Route 2, a son, Sept. 4 Mr niiH Mrs. Jim Caldwell of Waynesville, a daughter, Sept. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Doyle McCraeken of Clyde, Route 1, a daughter, Sept. 6 Holland has made quite a reputa- i ..e ay s woman lias the edge I Hon tor nimseii as. d udnei mi . Jail iovmer women with pio- il"s food and angel loou uiKe,, rum and apple pies, ginger mmuus and corn bread. His devil's food cake is as pop ular as the restaurant's famed bean soup, and is a "must," along with the corn bread and apple pie on every day's menu. Not only does Mr. Holland bake for diners at the restaurant, he's forever whipping ... , 1 i Innnhonnc I ! I. ! 1 W m ti rs up special orueis i' iu...-v OOOKIUODIlt; OClYitc upstairs" in the Vandennerg , Room, where senators honor visit- To Be KCSUnied ing dignitaries. , , . , . ,; Mr. Holland got into ine dhmnk Regular Boonmuuue "" spirit. She is huskier, more fled and therefore better Sped-to defend the home fires. a fat paycheck' in the event iusband goes to war. Further- she's ma a slave to Victorian - which held that no woman be glamorous to a man if she look to meet him on an even in sijiHts. fi'.isineqs or hnusc- fcffairs July 31. I!)5fl more than $3,00ft uomen were employed 9ie I'nitcd States arrordinir to stieiaiis about one out of y three workers. This was ncrease of 708,000 over the 'ous month, an indication Americas womanhood isn't E to be caught napping in the at emergency. men who keen busy never old. The active part that n now are playing may re- m mure security and iacle- nce for them in old ace '-'tile old ladies seldom as much fun as little old men. r nieil cin ,nftnc. in parH l'g l sslon vvilli tlioii rtv,niti good time. acations and eye perch on a engage m conversa- with a bartender, and nobody frizes I hem 11 widowed wompn as thev ntrlnr n...i .i. , I r""-' mm inemseives at loose f unless tiiey have mahaged lit-P husv and rriako manv f'ds. Thov vi..-n ti,.,: .,iMm.n u local sewin? hep's and pn- f "i tidbits of Bossio. After a " Ul I) ;inr,1!icr htirta lifn finH I seeds of flfrDi.i inn i hov nt'P loss as to how to occupy their Pie Unm., ...i... .... . . i. "...in, Him IHKCS a JOO n hr child f'nd on h..p ,,..,i,: ...... ... over pnintimi'ji i. . . 1 1 i "naneiaiiv i.,i.. 1 fr'ends in business with mu inierests. Shp'it Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mitchell j of Waynesville, Route 2, a daugh- j ter, Sept. 7 Mr. and Mrs. Homer Franklin of i I Waynesville, a son, Sept. 7 j Mr. and Mrs. Russell Deaver of; Canton, a son. Sept. 7 jng sessions with i a whoppina F can go on vacati ; oathmg beauties, ; chair and engage i,, ic, wmiso he liked to cook: iu, resumed Monday morning alter UUOlllV.1.1 v .. , - . I couldn't keep away from aa month of inactivity due to the hakerv when 1 was a km. r many resignation ot nooeri nuhsc-n, u-. I got myself a job in one. boon ne was helping the pastry chef. He started with Danish pastry then "went on to cakes and cookies." funds from the family and feeling obligated to scrimp because she ac cepts their generosity. Being independent certainly is an easier and happier way for a woman to grow old gracefully. LAFF-ADAY mobile assistant. Mrs.'E. D. Fisher has been nam assistant and will vu an .iv.. - ---- make the regular trip with the bookmobile. She will be accompan-, icd on the first rounas uy Margaret Johnston, county librar-j ian. ! Miss Johnston stated that new : scheduues for the bookmobile are being worked out at this time and , communities desiring this service, , but not on her list, should contact , her immediately. The schedule for next week is , as follows: Monday, Sept. 11th SOCO GAP ROAD & JONATHAN CREEK Mrs. Dave Plott Siler Service Station Smoky Mt. Gift Shop Trailside Gift Shop .... John Boyd's Store ..... David Boyd J. A. Moody s Srtor.e .... . 9:40- 9:55 10:05-10:20 10:30-10:50 11:00-11:20 11:40-12:00 . 12:05-12:20 . 12:30-12:50 about It? Tuesday, SeptJ 12th SOUTH CLYDE & RATCLIFFE COVE Clvde Town Hall 9:30-10:30 Sam Jackson ; . ...... ... 10:35-10:50 Louisa Chapel 10:55-11:10 P. C. Mann ; .....11:20-11:35 Mrs. Henry Osborne ..... 11:40-11:53 m n i in nr Belli - Hudson's BIG AIJIIUHL "Blanket J A is- imvi BIG GOODS SAVINGS RcKulur $1.18 Double Si.e WHITE COTTON BLMMETS now Buy Blankets Mow M This Sale We bought these Blankets Early before the price of woolens ad vanced; 'Take advanfagtftif Ihls M Special Buy Now! .1 Larfje and Complete Stock CHATHAM BLANKETS All Colors $7.95 to $1 0.95 50 - Vool Double BimiCEfS Double Bed Size Regular $5.95 NOW 100 All Wool BLANKETS Satin Bound Regular . $7.95 in wine, white, yellow, urccn, blue, peach, rose, (irregular) Westminster BLANKETS 50 Wool 25 Rayon 2.V,' Cotton Satin Bound Rejjular $6.95 SPECIAL THIS SALE USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY-AWAY PLAN. rvw mm IV.JUI We Will Gladly Cash Your Payroll Check. aason Atom! tvift WMm) It fX..rv -S JK 1 -1 r ' 1 r if p and be able to spend it as I Mrs. Roy Meador rYimn r ....liii : " Lots of people have pet goldfish. Kaicifr0 Cove Groc 12:30-1Z:4S Instead of accepting
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Sept. 7, 1950, edition 1
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