4-H Club ir*iiUiiu?l from Page One > to see outstanding mountain farms and inspect 4-H Club projects be ing carried on here. Demonstrating their projects will be: T. L. Francis, Betty Felmet. Jack Felmet. Jennings Plemmons. Neal Kelly, R E. Ellen, and Iris Cathey. Martha Swalm, Bernard Ferguson. Edwin Bryson, Carolyn Bryson. Frances Emma Yates, and O L. Yates. Jr. The groun will also visit the state fish hatchery, where they I will be guests of the Saunook 4-H Club, and will eat lunch at the Bethel Schoo: cafeteria, served by I the Bethel and Center Pigeon Home Demonstration clubs. Tomorrow the tour uill go to the Oconaluftee Indian Village at Cherokee and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. A pic nic lunch will be eaten at Smoke mont and the group will attend a performance of "Unto These Hills" | in the evening. On Saturday afternoon a swim party will be held at Camp Schaub, followed bp supper at Rufus Sil er\ and another party at the camp on Saturday night. Another swim party will be held at Camp Schaub Sunday af ternoon After a picnic supper, a vesper program will be conducted . by the Rev. Webb Garrison, pro- ! Dedication (Continued from page 1) the Hev. J. W. Fowler. Jr., As sembly superintendent; Dr. George' i K. Clary. Sr.. program director; j the Rev. M Kail Cunningham of the Methodi.-t Board of Bducation. f Nashville. T-nn.; and the Rev. j Adlai Holler of St. George. S. C. 1, ' fessor at Vanderbilt and Scarritt ? universities. ' Monday's agenda includes it '.our < 1 of the Uiitmore estate, including ( the mansion and the dairy farms. ( and a trip to Mount Mitchell. I On Tuesday, the group will see \ the film "Deep Roots" at the Champion Y, have lunch at the ? Champion cafeteria and tour the r paper plant in the afternoon. That f night, a recreation program will be held in the Bethel School f gym. with refreshments provided | by the Wayne sville Business and s Professional Women's Club. ( Oil Wednesday, the last full day >? when the Massachusetts visitors will be here, the schedule calls for a boat ride on Lake .lunaluska. a J visit to Heintooga. and a farewell party at Mile High. On Thursday, the Berkshire , County group will start the return c trip home. *? The first major human heart r ? tirgery to correct congenital de- p <cts was performed in 1938, si .. Conference (Continued from pate 1> will preach the dosing sermons on Sunday, August 13. Dr. Bullock's daily Bible Hour will be held at 10 a in. in Memor ial Chapel. In addition to Dr. D-iigherty, Dlher staff members of the Nash ville Board of Evangelism who will assist in the 8 45 to 10 a.m. daily workshop for district and confer ?nce secretaries of evangelism in clude Dr. Harry Williams, Dr. ritorge H. Jones, the Rev. Eugene L. Golay, the Rev. Howard W. Ellis ind the Rev. Thomas Carruth. The Rev. Mr, Emurian's work ;hop in congregational singing will neet each afternoon from 4 to 5:30 ('clock. The public is invited to the Camp dreting services, it was announced iv the Rev. J. W. Fowler. Jr.. as embly superintendent; and Dr. leorge E. Clary, Sr., program di ector >ky Hook CRANFORD. N. J. < AP>?-A re ired fire ladder truck has a now aroer as a painter's scaffold. Chester Oaugenti, painter boss ays the 85-foot nt! is ideal for i pairing or painting steeples, flag cles, or any other job where ?? ?afford would be needed. W. AKIN SMART ONE OF TIIE SOUTH'S leading theologians, Or. W. Aiken Smart of Emory University, Atlanta. Cn., will he the guest platform speaker at 8 p.m. Fridav at the Lake Junaluska .tlethodist As sembly. "Finding God in the Bible" will be Dr. Smart's subject in his ap pearance at the lake in connection with the South-wide Leadership School for church workers. One of the largest crowds of the season heard an address Tues day night by the eminent Japanese churchman and evangelist, Dr. Toyohike Kagawa. He is speaking throughout the United States prio' to attending the Second Assembly of the World Council of Churches, 1 August 15-31 in Evanston. 111. Horse Show Continued from Page 1) oilman from Longview, Texas, whose string of walking horses all bearing the family name of Skip per, such as Midnight A1 Skipper, and others, bore evidence of his fondness for them, since he named them after his family, and his many winnings in championship circles justified his pride in them. He has judged at most of the greater shows in Tennessee. Florida. Texas and elsewhere in the Southern States. An interesting sidelight on his career is that he is well known in i Texas also as a judge of hounds, and also of Western Horses, and has served as a judge in many rodeos, and western horse shows, and hound shows. Co-judging with him is .1, T. Tanner, of Franklin, lenn., who has judged walking horses at the great LeBonheur horse show in Memphis, at the Celebration in Shelbyville. Tenn., and at noted shows in all parts of America With these two gentle men will <statid John Curley of , Nashville, Tenn . w ho has exhibitud ( walking horses in mfddle Tenn essee for numerous years, and who enjoys a following for his impar tial decisions wherever walking I horses arc shown. From Blowing Rock and Pine-. hurst, the dean of hunter and j lumper judges. Lloyd Tate, will ' . make the decisions as to awards in , these events. A native of Haywood County. Tate returns to the .scene ( Df his nativity in a field in which ; h" has been active for more than '0 years. Both of his sons, and his daughter are lovers of horses, and | have exhibited at horse shows since i l!;eir infancy, under his tutelage. : To handle the microphones dur ing the progress of the show. Read Wilson of WWNC. will serve as i Master of Ceremonies, and horse i 'how announcer. The president ?f the Haywood Horse Show Assn.', c. C. League, will serve as ring- I master. i Cash prizes, and silver plates will he awarded with silk ribbons I'iroughout the show. f I N. Canton Church Nears Completion By MRS. GEORGE F. WORLEY Community Reporter The new North Canton Church building is expected to be complet ed in lour or five weeks. The con gregation is proud of the progress being made. "" ' The Rev. C. V. Brown has re signed the pastorate of Beaver dam Baptist Church to go to Wash ington, where he will hold a re vival the first of September. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are now visiting their son Howard and his family in Kentucky. j Mr. and Mrs. Sttiart Smathers left Tuesday morning to take their haby to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. The baby has been in an Asbeville hospital for some j time. Larry Rector, who was injured | some time ago in a car wreck, is improving. He has come home from the Haywood County Hospital. Haywood Chapman is still im proving at his home. Fred Best is improving follow ing surgery in an Asheville hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Israel and children from South Carolina are visiting Mr. Israel's parents. Mr. and Airs. Nelson Israel. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Phillips and baby, Robbie Joe Wilson of Cul lowhee and Mrs. Ruby Wilson of Enkh visited Mrs. G. H Wilson Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Byers of Ft. Bragg announce the birth of a son. Mrs. Byers is the former Miss Marie Best. Mrs* C. V. Sorrells and Mrs. Billy Sorrells have returned from a vacation trip,via the Blue Kidge Parkway, the Scenic Highway. Shenandoah Valley and Natural Bridge to Washington. D. C. Homecoming and Decoration Day at the Beaverdam cemetery | near the Beaverdam Methodist Chueh wtjl be held the third Sun-| day of this month. Those present at the home of i Mr. and Mrs. George F. Worley | Sunday for a picnic dinner and j get-together in honor of Mr. and I Mrs. Kenneth Cobb and family ot Vestal. N. Y., were Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Williamson, Kate and Er- j nest Williamson of Thickety; Artie Williamson of the nursing staff of Moore General Hospital: Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Taylor of Greenville. S. C.: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lavalle and son of Brook lyn. N. Y.; Mrs. Mattie Sparks Of Hendersonville; Mr. and Mrs. Vance Holbrooke and son from Fines Creek: Mr. and Mrs. Lee Williamson and daughters Mary, Sue and Lynn from Iron Duff: Mr. md Mrs. Lewis Clark and sons from Thickety: Miss Eva Jane Worley; Miss Ethel Mathis from Cullowhee and Burton West fnii Spartanburg. S. C. Miss Bobby Crowder has re turned to her home at Bryson City [ifter spending some time with her sister, Mrs. James Page. Mrs. Taylor Duckett has moved into her new home on the North Canton Road. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice are a t>out ready to move into their anch-style home. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Mann are darting the foundation for a new "inme. * HHV '??? HANDLING THE WINCH CON TROL valve which controls the j anchor windlass is David W. Greene, seaman, USN, son of Mr and Mrs. Joe II. Greene of Route 1. Waynesville, and hus band of Mrs. Ruby L. Greene of 1912 Veneta St., San Diego, Calif. Green is aboard the escort vessel IJSS Vammen. The Vain men returned to the States re cently after serving in the Far East for seven months. Thickety Continued from Pare 1) horseshoe pitching. The West Pigeon girls' Softball 1 leam walloped the Thickety squad. 20-12. but the boys' contest was ! rained out. Not held were the blindfold con test or the pie-eating contest?the latter because no pies were avail j able. The early part of the tour was ; devoted to visiting a number of West Pigeon homes and farms. Lunch was served in the Bethel School cafeteria. Group singing J was led by J. Hack Clark of Thick I ety. The attendance reported was 120 I for the host. West Pigeon commun | ity, and 80 from Thickety. Presbyterians (Continued from Page One) last through Friday this year in the form of an evangelistic serie beginning Sunday evening at 7:4r and continuing at that time through Friday. The Rev. Mr. Gra ham will be preaching and Mr Hope will lead the singing. A motto for this campaign has heen chosen for the observance of the 120th Anniversary. "A tithe o' our years in new members this week, and a membership of 120 by next August.'' This would mean p net gain of 44 members by next August. Haywood Institute (Continued from page 1) h.iin. Ala.; Mrs. Lila Washington Campbell. John Barnette. principal ol Slater-Marietta High School, and Miss Kathcrine Osborne of Clyde, and Grover C. Underwood of Kingsport. A picnic lunch was served in the basement of the Clyde Baptist Church, and the invocation was given by the Rev. Grady Forrester, pastor of Startex Methodist Church. t After lunch, the Rev. R. P. Mc- ' Cracken of Lake Junaluska. speak- i ins in the auditorium, asserted that | the influence of Haywood Institute and its Christian teachers had never died, hut would go on living. Former graduates and students stood and introduced themselves and specified the year they attend ed the school. Mr. Campbell acted as master of ceremonies. ' Cherokee Service To Be Conducted By Atlanta Pastor Dr. Vernon S. Broyles. pastor ol the North Avenue Presbyterian Church of Atlanta, Ga., will con duct the regular religious services In Mountainside Theatre at Cher okee on Sunday at 4:30 p.m. I)r. Broyles announced that the title of his message would be "Re sources For The Living". A native of Tennessee, Dr. Broyles is one of the outstanding ministers of the Presbyterian church in the South. Special music for the services, fifth in a series of summer-long vesper services held as part of the Cherokee Historical Association's educational, cultural and religious program, will be furnished by the "Unto These Hills" choir, under the direction of Gilbert Plrovano. At the organ will be Temple Painter. Dr. Broyles spent his boyhood days in Mobile, Ala., and attended Davidson College. Later he attend ed Union Theological Seminary at Richmond. Va. He did post-graduate work at the University of Tubingen, Ger many. spending a year abroad. Later, he served in the Waddell Memorial Presbyterian Church at Rapidan. Va., then moved on to the Canton (Miss.) Presbyterian Church for seven years, going to the North Avenue Presbyterian Church in Atlanta in 1941. In 1949 he was elected executive secretary of the Board of Church Extension of the Presbyterian Church in the United States. WM VRTIU'R SMITH AND HIS GANG will brine their TV \alent hunt show to Canton High School at 8 p.m. Saturday for a program which will include nine of Haywood County's leading entertain ers, competing for first pri?e and a chance to appear on Smith's television show from fl'BTV, Charlotte. From ENSLEY'S GROCERY Fresh Home-Grown Produce CORN ' 49c d" Tomatoes2 25c Watermelons ?? FOR YOUR t'ANNINR NBEDS J SURE JELL 0 23c , F (: CERTO- Bottle23c COFFEE EGGS DOME LIDS 2 dz- 25c 1 ?<"? ln?ln FRUIT JARS $119 " 35, 12 ?al. $i.:is ^ (Dozen) - - - . _? FEEDS OP ALL KINDS SHORTS 100 lbs S3.S0 16 PLAIN DAIRY FEED 100 lbs $3.50 16 ' ALL GRAIN DAIRY FEED 100 lbs $4.55 50-50 SCRATCH FEED 25 lbs $1.05 ? BEAN DUST ... 5 lbs 85c TOMATO DUST 5 lbs 65c ! I TOP QUALITY MEAT AT LOW PRICES Tender Home Ground Kib BEEF STEAK SAUSAGE STEW 69c, b 39c11 19c "? I,ay's Clover leaf 'aVmw BACON WIENERS SAUSAGE 65t" 47c" 45c "? j SUGAR FREE! 5 lbs. 47c ICE CREAM 10 lbs. 93c TO ALL CHILDREN FREKI/S CREAM STYLE ACCOMPANIED BY THEIR ^ - - PARENTS! CORN I 2 No. 303 Cans 29' | Come 1 ? Come All ENSLEY'S GROCERY (FORMERLY E& E GROCERY) ON THE HIGHWAY OPPOSITE DAYTON RUBBER CO. OWNED AND OPERATED BY MR. & MRS. WALTER C. ENSLEY SHOP RAYI I SEMI ? ja || ANNUAL J II i MEN'S DRESS SHIQ iscellani Group Q Fanci and Solid E.4 an Win Sizes 14 to 17 $295 Values $2 (You Save $1.00) And for Men In LONGS - SHORT! GABARDI1 SLACK Originally $6.9.". I? SHI' Vi PRIC For Men Either I Unusually Tall ? Or Short I And Men's Sport SW Choice ^ Size* of fr 1 Sma Three I T? Groups X 0 Extra-H Including Some Rayon SPORT SHIRTS ? Short sleev* Priced Up To $2*^ Buy For School Frotj RAY'S sr?j

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