Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 5, 1953, edition 1 / Page 8
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WEATHER PLANE SURVIVORS REACH NEW YORK ? ?? ???????? SNATCHED FROM THE SEA by the steamship Nassau, some of the nine survivors of a B-28 hurricane-hunter plane that crashed off the South Carolina coast, are shown in picture at left safe In a lifeboat. In a state of semi-consciousness (center) is Sgt. Larry Grayville. of Lansdowne, Pa. There's quite a difference in photo at right as Grayville (shown at left) arrives in New York. With him is airman Allen Wilner of a downed rescue plane. Both are a bit bandaged, but otherwise were in good condition. Seven of Grayvllle's crew mates are still missing The plane was en route from Georgia to Bermuda when it fell. (International) HOSPITAL NEWS ADMISSIONS Mrs. Walter Lee, Canton; Mrs. Tilman, Smith, Canton; Mrs. Paul Green, Clyde; Johnny Ferguson,1 Waynesvilje; Mrs. Joyce Plem mons, Horse Shoe; Jerry Shuler, Waynesville; Howard Gentry, Mag gie; Bobby Johnson, Waynesville; Miss Jane Driver, Canton; Mrs. W. R. Cody, Canton. DISCHARGED Mrs. Marvin Yarborough, Way nesville; Mrs. J. H. James, Way nesville; Mrs. Jim Surrett, Canton; Claude Medford, Waynesville; Mrs. Charles Crayne, Waynesville; Walt er Sneed, Balsam; Mrs. Eugene Lewis, Maggie; Mrs. J. B. Donald son and baby, Clyde; Mrs. Clar ence Burrell and baby, Canton; Mrs. Leslie Ensley and baby, Cand ler, Mrs. Burnard Higgins and baby, Canton; Mrs. Tommy Ecken rod and baby, Canton; Frank Mc Elroy, Clyde; Mrs. Milburn Valen tine, Canton; Mrs. J. W. West, Clyde; Mrs. Carl S. Owen and baby, Canton; Mrs. Ray Shelton and baby, Waynesville; Mrs. Tom Evanson. Waynesville; Mrs. Nora Howell, Waynesville; Paul Child era. Clyde? Johnny??.- Ferguson. Waynesville; Miw 'Allen Davis. Waynesville; Jolui Smith, Clyde; Mrs. W. L. McCracken, Waynes ville; Mis. Paul Green, Clyde; Roy Matney, Waynesville; John Camp, Waynesville, .?? Quiet Weekend Reported Despite good weather during the week-end, only light activity was reported by Waynesville police and the Haywood Sheriff. Police Chief Noland said that his men arrested seven for drun keness, two for flghting. Sheriff Campbell reported everything "quiet." Cass Michaels of the Philadel phia Athletics has many hobbies. Among them are basketball, bowl ing, fishing, hunting and music. Rotarians Hear Ward's Report On Paris Trip A tour of a Rotarian through Europe was described Friday to members of the Waynesville Rotary Club by H. S. Ward of Lake Juna. luska, who attended the service organization's international con vention in Paris last June. Mr. Ward, past president of the local Rotary Club, recounted his and Mrs. Ward's travels through England, France, Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Germany, and Hol land. Mr. Ward described the thread bare appearance of English Ro tarians in Cambridge, but praised their hospitality in greeting the visiting Americans. He mentioned the dirt and filth of villages in Southern France and the great change apparent on crossing the oorder into Switzerland. He termed the Swiss the clean est and friendliest of all people and pictured the mountainous country as a "tourist's paradise." High spots of his lour, he said, were visiting Parts, Vatican City in Rome, the world's perfume capi tal of Grasse, France; B^fiie and | Geneva in Switzerland, a trip down the German Rhineland; the swank resort cities of Nice and Cannes on the French Riviera, and visit ing the world's largest flower mar ket and a diamond craft plant in Holland. Admiral Thomas To Speak In Alabama Admiral W. N. Thomas and Mrs. Thomas, will leave Tuesday for Huntsville, Ala., where Admiral Thomas will address the North Alabama Methodist Conference. He will appear in behalf of the Navy Chaplains. Detroit's rookie shortstop, Har vey Kuenn, was the first major leaguer to make 125 hits this sea son. Home Clubs Have Demonstrations On Posture The Good Neighbors of Center Pigeon met Thursday night at the home of Mrs. R. G. Chason with Mrs. Jack Chason as co-hostess. Mrs. W. C. Murray presided and the devotional was given by Mrs. John Shipman. During the business session, a nominating committee was ap pointed as follows: Mrs. Ray Haynes, Mrs. R. G. Chason, Mrs. O. T. Henderson. The members voted to cooperate in sponsoring the Farm Bureau membership drive. Project leaders reporting were: j Mrs. Frank Mease, Food Conser vation; Mrs. Roy Haynes, Foods and Nutrition; Mrs. Robert Clarke, Clothing; and Mrs. R. G. Chason, Home Management. Miss Jean Childers gave the demonstration "Feet, Shoes, and Posture." The Jonathan Creek Club met with Mrs. Tom Rainer Friday af ternoon. Mrs. W. R. Boyd was in charge and the devotional was giv. en by Mrs. Robert Howell. Mrs. F. R. Kennedy, Mrs. Jarvis P41mer and Mrs. Way'Ftsher were named on a nominating committee. Project leaders'" reports were given by Mrs. Glenn Boyd on Foods and Nutrition, and Mrs. G. V. Howell on Cjothing. The dem onstration on "Feet, Shoes, and Posture" was given by Miss Jean Childers. Plans were made for a copper workshop November 6 in the home of Mrs. Troy Leatherwood. The Maggie Club met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Sandy McCracken. Mrs. Herbert Plott, vice president, presided. The devotional was given by Mrs. C. L. White. , Mrs. Hobert White gave a re port on "Curing Meat." Mrs. Jim Plott explained how to stuff and roast a frozen turkey. In a cloth ing report, Mrs. Herbert Plott dis cussed fall fashions. "Safety in the Home" was stressed by Mrs. C. L. wAite in a home management re port. Mrs. C. L. White, chairman, discussed Achievement Day. Plans were made for a copper workshop and a woodplate work shop to be held later in the month. The demonstration "Feet, Shoes, and Posture" was given by the as sistant agent, Miss Jean Childers. Smoked-Out Smoker HAZLETON, ?a. (AP) ? There was a hot contest in the Bee Smok- I er competition at the 49th annual field day of the Pennsylvania Bee keepers' association. The goal of the event was to see who could produce the greatest volume of smoke from a bee smok er?the traditional tool of the Apl Hilturist. No winner was announced?too nuch smoke. ? The first morning duty of cus odians at Blarney Castle is to crub the lipstick off the Blarney itone. ?PARENT PROBLERIS *? Know Your Students by Name By GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D. I SHALL never forget a short visit to a high school in Erie, Pennsylvania, some years ago. As I recall, the principal told me there were about 800 students there. But what impressed me most was that as I walked with him through the halls he spoke to ever so many students be tween classes, addressing them i always by their names. "You seem to know the names of all of them," I remarked. "All but Just a few of the new ones," he replied. "I work at it." Then I said, "Perhaps some of your teachers don't know the names of nearly all their stu dents, as you do." ? "Yes," he replied, "and that's something that always bothers me. 1 do so wish they would work ? harder at it." An Essential Of course, it's not easy for a ( high school teacher, who must ( teach a total of several hundred students, to learn all their names. Yet any person smart enough to 1 teach in high school could learn ' all his students' names if he made 1 it the first essential of his Job. ( Have you ever aske'd a teacher ! about your son or daughter in the Junior or senior high school, { and discovered that this teacher j. didn't know the student by name? t How much more one might be E shocked to discover that the . teacher of a child in the second or third grade didn't recognise the child by name. fn Large Classes y To be sura, some special teach- si era of the upper grades must e: teach a number of classes of w children, perhaps as many as a soma high school teachers. But ct wa certainly aspect the regular h | teacher of a single class to know her children's names soon after school begins. In this respect, some elemen tary teachers are truly wonder ful. They are able to address each child by his first name, at least by the end of the second or third ) I day. One wishes it were possible for every regular teacher In the grades to learn her students' i names by the end of the first , week. ( Suggestions to Teachers Having spent some years 1 teaching at the various grade levels, and being a parent and grandparent, let me venture a 1 few suggestions to the elementary 8 teacher. ? Nothing else can be so Impor tant as learning early your stu dents' names. It will help you If you use each child's name at every reasonable opportunity and encourage your pupils In group discussions to address one an jther by name. Some names, especially family lames, will be unfamiliar to you ind often hard to pronounce. In irivate, ask the child with such i name to help you with the praf mnciatlon. Call the roll dally for he first few weeks. The time re [ulred will be well spent. Be care ul never to smile or make an un dnd remark on saying a name hat strikes you as strange. Ihould other children laugh, re iuke them. No name Is funny rhen we realize how much a part f a person his name Is. Of course, you will do more than now each child's name. You hould also learn about his par nts and other loved ones. You 111 best acquire this Information I you make each child feel you sre about him and those dose to lm ? L afoah rtwwkutt] / i CA>iT max* rr iA9r ^jfi ww nh r vq)ear noaw- to SvUv<B AAONI1V LAST, smoulon't >tju mafcfi it first* P mrs.-tl4?lma &TAJB* ouakeiltbwai, fa. ^gar noah ? ^ulc> ^sailors havb clbae sailing if thiv sftpr? the womron \nith thbir i Tell Children Frankly Of GI Father's Disability By ANNETTE DAVIS . WASHINGTON?A mother drew her 6-year-old son close to her. She wanted to tell him the good news that daddy would be coming home soon from Korea. She held her hus band's last letter in her hand. "I still limp a little," he had written, "but that's because I'm not used to this new leg.'' Mapy young wives don't know how to tell their children about their fathers' disabilities, says Marie youngberg, national direc tor of home service for the Red Cross. "They feel a child will have a hard time getting used to a father who looks different or who can't >do some of the things that other fathers do," she told me. To help cope with this problem, I she suggests the mother give the child a simple explanation of what has happened before his father re turns. Voluminous details aren't necessary, she says, but it is im portant to answer questions and to avofd creating an atmosphere of mystery. Some motners, in an effort to spare their husbands' feelings, caution a child not to talk about nis father's injuries. The Red Cross in its booklet, "Helping Disabled Veterans," says "It is better "to let' little Johnny find out how daddy's artificial arm works, what it does, and what it feels like to wear one.'* Once his curiosity is satisfied, he will accept the prosthetic device as a natural part of the household. Young parents should know, al so, that Johnny's reluctance to sit on daddy's lap probably has noth ing to do with his handicap. A na turally shy child may take some time to warm up to 9 father who hah been away a long time. Many fathers needlessly worry about the things they can no longer do with their children. "But," Miss Youngberg points out, "children are flexible about the things they admire." If dad can't wrestle, he can probably go fishing. His handi cap won't matter as long as he can oiler something else "just as good". leading amateur ornithologists in the world. He has branded 599,498 birds? mostly mackerel gulls, taken on his estate. He is credited with know ing more about the habits of the Tern than anyone in the United States For The Birds SOUTH WELLFLEET, Mass. (APJ?rThe sprawling 400-acre es tate of Dr. Oliver Austin, a retired physician, is strictly for the birds. Dr. Austin became interested in ornithology 25 years ago through his son, a renowned ornithologist. Since then, Dr. Austin has estab lished a reputation as one of the BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Carl "Beasley of Clyde, a daughter, October 4. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mease of Canton, a son, October 4. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Recce of Waynesville, a daughter, October Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evans of Waynesville, a son, October 2. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Haynes of Waynesville, a son, October 3. It's The Yanks! Again... I Associated Pre* I The New York Yankee* J days came, and the W?dt ? by defeating the BrooUn|S 4-J In the last of the ai^l The Yankees sere leak^l 1 at the 8th inning. shea tfcl ferfc started pouring ? crossed the plate twice. | This broke all previa* J tor any one team to wia tfcl Series for ti\.> :atght \m.M Oldest ri\..i on Armyi i schedule is Nav; They hivtS 553 games. Army leads 21V Four games were ties. ? It is estimated thei, A timber in U. S forests to M six room house for every man ?nd child in the have lumber left over. | fifis MOVED .. 1 NEW, AND LARGER QUARTERS I I 208 Haywood Street I Next To Mottinger Motor Co. - Across The Street From TaylN Motor - Potts Motor Co. And Howell Motor Co. I now featuring a I Larger and Varied Sfodl ? Some Oi The Brands Carried In Our Stocks Bund and American Hammered Piston Rings Thermoid Brake Parts Michigan Engine Bearings Toledo Valves, Pistons and Springs , ? Toledo and Mogg Chassis Parts Sherwin-Williairis Finishes Simonize Polishes % and Waxes # Eveready Lamps Dayton Belts and Radiator Hose We have moved from our place on Depot Street, to the new and larger quarters on Havwood Street. Our new building, and new location will offer many advantages to our customers. First of all, we will have the room for a much larger stock of merchandise. We will carry a more varied stock than the many thousands of pieces which we already have on our shelves. Second, there will be for our customers a 30 by 90 foot park ing lot, right next to the build ing. There will always be a place to park from now on when you come to see us. Established In 1946 When we opened this firm in 1946 we were determined then to fill the needs of this area with automotive parts. We have con stantly worked day in and day out towards that goAl. Now, as we operi in new and larger quarters, we can offer you far better service, far larg er assortments, and as always, give you instant service, with out the additional cost of trans portation and telephone calls I which vou have to pav when getting the same items from out of town. No matter what vou need, vou can just about be sure to find it here. We carrv the stock, which is an advantage to all dealers and garage owners. We appreciate your business of the past, and look forward in serving you often now that we have better facilities in which to operate our business. Always Come Here First! Waynesville Auto Parts Companl 208 Hay wood Street " Phone GL 6-5321 WaynesvilJ
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 5, 1953, edition 1
8
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