Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 24, 1955, edition 1 / Page 12
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Sounook CDP Adopts Projects For This Year By IMOGENE HOOPER Community Reporter Several families in this commun lty have been busy cleaning oui their gardens and burning brush getting ready for early plowing. The orchardmen have also taker advantage of the warm days ant are pruning their trees. The Saunook Community Devel opment Program organization me1 Monday at the Saunook school. Chairman Bobby Joe McClurt presided at the meeting. Plans were made to purchase uni forms for the basketball players. Projects to be carried out this year are: Improvement of church and school grounds, cemeteries and mailboxes, and beautiflcation of homes In the community by plant ing shrubbery and flowers. The meeting was adjourned tc meet again the second Monda' even'ng in March. The date war set tor the first Monday evenin'* but because of the High Schoo' Parent Teachers Association meet ing on the first Monday, the CDP voted to change the date to the second Monday. Aunt Margaret Hawkins has re turned to her home following treat ment at the Haywood County Hos pital. Mrs. Alice Snyder is a pa tient in the hospital. Mrs. Herman Burgess and Mrs. W. D. Deweese are also on the sick list. Mrs. William Plemmons spent a few days last week as-the gu st of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Moore at Cowaits. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gillet, Mrs Alvin Moore, Miss Edith Buel and Imogene Hooper visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred Moore at Franklin last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Rowland and daughter Betty Lee visited rel atives at Newport, Tenn., Sunday. Joe Sparks who is with the State Highway Commission at Mor ganton spent the week end at his home on the Davis Road. Mrs. Earl McCracken gave a party Saturday "evening at her home in honor of Miss Mary Lou Sinathers on her 18th birthday. Games were played and refresh ments enjoyed by the following guests: Susie Clark. Judy and Becky Hamby, Sara Stephens, Jean Me haffey, Glenda Eavenson, Anne Mc Clure, Clara Sue Blanton, Freda Smathers, Louise and Mona Robin son, Mildred and Betty Wyatt and Leona Davis, Carol Rowland, Billy Moore, Lowell Mills, James Med ford, Harry Lee Hawkins, Billy Snyder, and Sammy McJunkin. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hooper spent the day Saturday in Ashe ille. 4. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lyle of Gaff ney, S. C., were the guests of rel atives in this community last week. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Burgess had as their guest for the week end Mrs. Burgess' brother, Millard Hill, of Kannapolis. Birth Without Bills ALTOONA, Pa. (AP) ? Fret hospitalization and complete lay ettes for each mother who had hei sixth child in Mercy hospital last year went to 86 mothers. The Sis ters of the Holy Family of Nazar eth who operate the hospital re ported the total when they check ed up jrn their operations. The services and gifts went to all mothers, regardless of race- color or creed, who had a sixth child in the hospital. It was in honor of the Roman Catholic Marian year. Citizen Soldier BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) ? Joseph Kleinhandler. 22, a native of France, said he would be a happy man if he could enter the . Armed Forces as an American 1 citizen. Uncle Sam obliged him on both counts. Kleinhandler was drafted eleven days after being swo^n in as a citizen. PLANE DOCTORS Jet mechanics like these maintenance specialists working on an Air Force F-94 Starfire. are the men who keep the world's finest Air Force flying. Qualified high school graduates who enlist in the U. S. Air Force can apply for career eourses leading to work in fields as varied as administration, miuilf guidance systems, photography, and weather mapping. A new 84-page booklet, "Pocket Guide to Air Force Oppor tunities," describes the career eourses offered and the training bases where they are taught, and contains general information on pay scales, promotion, travel, and other benefits. "Pocket Guide" is available without charge at all U. S. Air Force Recruiting Stations. Thickety Group ' Plan Programs An interesting program is being I arranged for the March meeting | | of the Thickety Community to be j : held at the Roekwood Methodist Church on March 3, at 7:30 p.m. j Jeter J. Martin will show slides secured on a recent trip to Europ ean countries as a representative of the Champion Loan Association. Scenes from various sections, in cluding England, France, and oth er areas were secured by Mr. Mar tin. which will bring valuable in formation to the CDP group. It is hoped a large number will attend. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hardin were called to Chicago, III., Mon day by the serious illness of his father. Mrs. Robert Hipps. and children, James Wray and Jane, are spend ing this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Yelton, at Spindale. Mr. Hipps accompanied them down Sunday. A number of women in the com munity expect to participate in the "food sale sponsored by the Beaverdam H. D. . Club for the club's project at the Orthopedic Home in Asheville. The regular meeting of the Wes leyan Service Guild was held Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Charles Jacobs, Jr., with Mrs.' David Burch co-hostess. Visitors at the meeting were Mrs. Wallace Ward and Miss Alma Browning of Lake Junaluska, dis trict secretary and district chair man of Missionary Education re spectively. Mrs. Ward gave a re oort on the Convocation she re cently attended in Charlotte, and discussed plans for the coming months in Guild work for the dis trict. She also announced impor tant meetings on a conference lev el to be held at Junaluska during the summer. Miss Browning dis cussed Study Courses. Mrs. Jacobs presided over the meeting with Miss Melba Willis leading the devotional, and Mrs. Ray McDowell in charge ' of the program. Community workers in the re cent March of Dimes drive, will en tertain workers from the Hominy and Beaverdam communities at a dinner meeting Saturday evening. March 5, at the Roekwood Metho dist Church. Around forty people are expected to attend. , 1 ? r Meet Pamela and Her Father: His Heart Really Beat for Hers Partners in a history-making heart operation, with a father "lending" his heart and lungs to his daughter as surgeons re paired the gaping hole in the wall separating the pumping chambers of her heart, are Ronald Schmidt and 6-year-old Pamela Schmidt of Minneapolis, shown above. Before the operation, Pamela seepied doomed to a life of in validism or possible death at an early age. She had spent 10 months in an oxygen tent. To day, she is given as good a chance as any youngster for a normal, healthy life. The story of little Pamela is the story* of medical science's newest accomplishment ? "con trolled cross circulation"'?a revo lutionary procedure introduced into surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School after several years of intensive re search. This research was aided by the Heart Fund. In the operation, the blood cir culatory systems of Pamela and her father, who was anesthetized on a nearby operating table, be came one circulatory system. They were linked by thin plas tic tMbes passing through a me chanical pump. With Pamela's heart Isolated and her lungs col lapsed, the pump fed into her circulatory system bright red, oxygenated blood carried from her father's femoral artery while carrying back to the father an equal amount of dark, venous blood for purification and oxy genation in the father's lungs and other organs. Although the operation re quired four and a half hours, Pamela's heart was Isolated from the rest of her circulatory system for only IStt minutes. During this period surgeons opened the wall of her heart, sewed up the defect In the inner partition and then closed the outer heart wall. They worked in a blood-free operating field under direct vis ion, and, what is equally im portant, they worked unhurried ly and without fear that their patient q^ght either bleed to death or that her brain might be damaged by impairment of the circulation. This and other great advances in heart surgery prove that heart research pays off. Your contribu tion to the Heart Fund supports research, and brings the benefits of latest knowledge to you in your own community. When you Help Your Heart Fund, you Help Your Heart Send your gift to your local Heart Association, or to "H E-A R T", care of Post Office. It Pays To Use Mountaineer Want Ads South Clyde CDP Will Meet Monday By MRS. KYLE LINDSAY (Community Reporter) The CDP will have their regular meeting Monday night at 7 o'clock at the community house, with the chairman, Edwin Jackson, in charge. The women of the CDP will have a benefit supper at the community house Saturday, Feb. 26th from 5 to 7 o'clock. The women of the Louisa Chap el Church are invited to meet with the women of Piney Grove Church Friday for an all-day meeting. This will be a day of prayer in observance of the week of dedica tion. Wess Fowler is spending a vaca tion iii I .uriiia He daughter, Miss Ger^M of Atbevlll*. V Koy Stamey a birthday pan? atght h\ l\'S^y Thin* oumH were: 1' Mason,p9 sey 1' inson. 1. . ScrjB Houston. .U an SlevjS Penlantl Teni Cau^M Cole, Wallace Lo\pI Walker, Jerry ? Hayes, nmiic Rogers. ( ,,il Harri^I anil Keith Cathey. I Game-. were play?(V ed many - n,- audi were serwd by thel Mi-^ \ ' r\ Undseefl ing her birthday Mool Use Mountaineer tl WARNIN Ole' Houn' Daws Ben says, "These prices can t sniffin' aroun' in my inventory an' have discorn ?DAWG GONE GOOD BARGAINS', Remember l( quit barking about these giveaway prices Saturday i STOCK YOUR LOCKERS AND I KEEZERS \0 PIE CHERRIES 20 ox. Can 33c ORANGE JUICE Doz. $1.40 VEGETABLES Butter Beans, Broccoli Spears, Cut Beans, Cut Corn, Green Peas, Whole Okra, Baby Limas, Cauliflower, Mixed Vegetables | Z 15c SEAFOOD Perch Fillets I Cod Fillets .? Fish Sticks J Scallops M VEGETABll Broccoli Cuts, Ohfl Fren< h Fries, H Carrots, Spinal Turnip Gnofl ' 111 J'ks I FARMERS FEDERATION 9 YOUR FROZEN KOOII CENTO I I Depot Street I'houfl (LUITTING BUSINESS COMPLETE CLOSE-OUT OF '25.000* STOCK NEW FURNITURE ? NEW APPLIANCES ? AFTER 10 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION, LARRY CAGLE HAS DECIDED TO CLOSE-OUT AND QUIT BUSI . NESS. FOR QUICK ACTION HE HAS DECIDED TO SAC RIFICE HIS SPLENDID STOCK AT PUBLIC AUCTION. LARRY'S LOSS - YOUR GAIN! DON'T MISS A SINGLE SALE! W ENTIRE STOCK GOES ? BEDROOM SUITES ? LIVING ROOM SUITES . ? DINETTE SETS ? MATTRESSES AND SPRINGS ? MIRRORS, PICTURES, LAMPS ? RUGS AND FLOOR COVERINGS ? TV SETS ? RADIOS ? RANGES ? REFRIGERATORS ? YOUNGSTOWN KITCHEN SINKS ? WATER HEATERS ? and many other items! ? Also ? OFFICE EQUIPMENT STORE FIXTURES 2 PICK-UP TRUCKS ^ FIRST SALE FRIDAY NIGHT FEBRUARY 25th AT 7:30 P.M. AND I WILL CONTINUE EVERY NIGHT AT 7l30 P.M. UNTIL STORE IS EMPTIED! J FREE PRIZES CHAIRS FOR YOUR COMFORT - HEATED BUILDING - PLENTY PARKING SPACE - I CDCC $189-50 ARVIN DINETTE! 11%EC To Be Given At Conclusion^! | CAGLE FURNITURE COMPANY I Larry Cagle, Owner | f| . CLYDE, North Carolina 3,, Lylo Sweet, Auctioneer
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 24, 1955, edition 1
12
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