L PAPER PICTURES were shown by the Whit* Oak u^.? r? , ? The pirtiur* Jow?'.?"' ^ k*"- ""W' ""* l""0 ? "'*"?? (Mountaineer Th.'h,, P _ ' THE HOMEMAKER'S PRIDE, was the theme of the CeeU Home Demonstration Club exhibit at the Tobacco Festival. The booth contained many accomplishments of the homemaker in the way of cooking and sewing. ?(Mountaineer Photo). * ? a ' I THE GOOD NEIGHBORS CLUB of Center Pigeon stressed the Importance pi Good Reading for the Family with its exhibit at the Armory. An attraotive Betting with good lighting encourage# even the smallest member of the family to pick up a booh. i !Resident Dies Lrt Illness Lj MaeQuen Lins, 55, fiorida and Balsam died pood County Hospital ?lawing a brief illness. k is being returned to ffiiDeral services and in feuld MaeQuen Lins( of pes. Dangerous Newcomers? ALBUQUERQUE <AP)?A lun cheon speaker warns that 7.400 people entered this country last year who are illiterate, don't be lieve in God or the constitution, who distrupt church services and are a threat to the schools. They are the babies born last year. Arrangements here are under the direction of Garrett Funeral Home. [ - -- - ? m Give Thfs Beautiful 7 vr Doll To Some Under privileged Child This Christmas D YOUR FAB BOXTOPS TO WWII CANTON, N. C. or to kaynesville mountaineer or to your local kiwanis club i * ?-? ? Frank Kennedy Passes At 69 Frank R. Kennedy, 69, highway construction contractor, died at 12:30 a.m. Wednesday at his home on ' Jonathan Creek following a lingering illness. He was a native of Knoxville, Tenn., a sop of Er. and Mrs. J. M. Kennedy. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2:30 p.m. in the Shady Grove Methodist Church on Jona than Creek and burial will be in Crawford Memorial Park. The Rev. John Fra?ier will offi ciate. Pallbearers will be Robert Howell, Billy Boyd, Jule Boyd. Pearson Caldwell, Lee Howell, and Marvin Leatherwood. Flower bearers will be members of the WSCS of the church. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Kate Howell Kennedy; two sons, Frank, Jr., of Raleigh and John Kennedy of Houston, Texas; one brother, Paul Kennedy of Knoxville; seven sisters, Mrs. Harry Camp, Mrs. E. C. Clark, Mrs. Jack Baton, Mrs. Frank Dickey, Mrs. L. M. Moses, Mrs. J. K. Feale, and Miss Helen Kennedy, all of Knokville; and four grandchildren. Arrangements are under the di rection of Garrett Funeral Home. Mrs. Washington, Dies In Charlotte Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. George Wash ington a few weeks ago at the Methodist Home in Charlotte. Mrs. Washington had been a resident of Lake Junaluska for sixteen years. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs James Huey of New York City. ? . Funeral services were held in New Rochelle, N. Y. ? Although some areas have rice surpluses, some of the rice-eating peoples may go hungry because price and political struggles pre vent their getting it, says the Na tional Geographic Society. DEATHS THOMAS H. QUEEN Thomas H. Queen, 71, of Way nesville RFD 1, died at 3 a.m. Tuesday at the t?ome of a son, James A. Queen of Waynesville RFD 1, after a long illness. He was a native and life-long resident of Haywood County and was a member of the Church of God. He retired from work at the Unagusta Manufacturing Co. in Hazelwood in 1951. Funeral services wil be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Sulphur Springs Baptist Church. The Rev. Thomas Erwin and the Rev. George Huggins will officiate, and burial will be in Sunburst Ceme tery. The body has been returned to the home. Active pallbearers will be Law rence, Harold and Bobby Queen, Leamon Morgan, Frederick Chand ler and Wayne Roberts. Surviving in addition to James A. Queen are a daughter, Mrs. OIlie Queen Farmer of Canton RFD 2; a sister, Mrs. Amber Phil lips of Asheville RFD 3; six broth ers, the Rev. Bill and Wesley Queen of Hazelwood, Harrison Queen of New Jersey, Ralph Queen of Waynesville RFD -1, and Fred and Zeb Queen of Canton; and sveen grandchildren. Garrett Fueral Home is in charge of the arrangements. __ . ! ISAAC P. RATHBONE Isaac P. flke) Rathbone, 74, died Tuesday at his home on Clyde, Route 1, following a heart attack. He was a native and lifelong resident of Haywood County, a son of the late Jack and Avaline Rathbone. Funeral services will be held Friday at 10:30 a.m. in" the Lower Fines Creek Methodist Church with the Rev. Mrs. M. B. Lee and the Rev. G. L. Lovett officiating. Burial will be in the church ceme tery. Pallbearers will be Reeves Rog ers, Bill McElroy, Goble Rathbone, Graham Rogers, Jack Rogers, and David Rathbone. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Mary McElroy of Sikesvilie, Md? and Mrs. Ed Webb of Finks burg, Md.; three sons, Grover and Joe Rathbone of Clyde, Route 1, .. i: Morris Rites Are Conducted Funeral services were held Wed nesday afternoon in The Plains Methodist Church for Frank W. Morris, 41, of Canton, who died Monday after a brief illness. The Rev. L. B. George and the Rev. George Culbreth officiated and burial was in The Plains Cemetery. . Pallbearers were Mark Swaim; Wilson Trantham, Charles Willis, Claude and Porter Broyles, Ernest Branson, James Mathis, and Har old Moffitt. Members of the Champion's Old Timers' Club were honorary pall- j bearers. ' x Morris was a native and lifelong y resident of Haywood County, a re- w tired employee of the Champion tl Paper and Fibre Co., and a mem ber of the Champion Old Timers' Club. w He was chairman of the board of stewards of The Plains Metho dist Church, and was a member of Pigeon River Lodge No. 386, AF 11 and AM. v Surviving are the wife, Mrs. ti Rowena Williams Morris; two e brothers, Ned Morris of Sylva and C J. B. Morris of Pasadena. Texas"; _ and the maternal grandmother. s Mrs. Hattie Hipps, of Canton. Arrangeentms were under the ; direction of Wells Funeral Home. s and Ed Rathbone of Waynesville; j a brother, Sate Rattibone of. Way- e nesville; a sister, Mrs. Sam E. ? Rathbone of Lake Junaluska; 16 grandchildren and one great grand child. Arrangements are under the di rection of Garrett Funeral Home, Loses His Shirt DETROIT (AP)??A bandit give the shirt off his back following a robbery. - The man, "clad in a gaudy shirt, shoved a note demanding money in the * cashier's cage of a down town theater. The cashier gave him $44 and he fled down the street, discarding his shirt as he ran. I The Panama Canal runs north and south instead of east and west as is often popularly supposed. Library Notes ( Margaret Johnston County Librarian a POPULAR NON-FICTION Brown I My Left Foot The direct simple story of Sn s rush boy (a cerebral palsy victim) ii onsidered mindless for a few L ears, who abruptly tried to write f dth his left foot and thereafter r hrough his mother's great faith p nd his own courage learned to a frite, read, and talk. t Bradford Smith ^ Dangerous Freedom Our original right of assembly, tie author believes, has been de- t eloped into a remarkable prac- i ice of voluntary association ? as i xemplified in unions, the Red t 'ross, community enterprises, etc. < - which is America's greatest i trength. Rumer Godden i Hans Christian Andersen This biography recreates Ander en's life in terms of his own faith n himself and his dream of be oming a great writer. The author hows hqpr his early struggles In 1 Copenhagen and his later travels ^ n Germany, France and Italy pro- 1 'ided him with material for his * lories and fairy tales. George Wells Ferguson Signs and Symbols In Christian Art The most generally and common y recognized signs and symbols ound in Renaissance religious art lave been selected and illustrated trofusely with plates, sixteen of hem colored, as well as marginal llustrations. Includes a full index nd a bibliography. Frederick Harvey Pough i'ield Guide to Rocks and Minerals Every mineral which the non peclallst is likely to encounter s described in detail. Emphasis s on immediate identification in the leld, and chapters on crystallog aphy and mineral environments trovlde the basic material on which t visual identification can usually te made. Winfred Ernest Garrison A Protestant Manifesto This book seeks both to define he Protestant faith and to show its message and meaning in the world we live in. Written expressly for ?very Protestant Christian who would correctly and fully under stand his own beliefs and disbe liefs, and who would carry the evangelical witness forward into a world which so deeply needs it. Hy Turkin Official Encyclopedia of Little League Baseball Tbie covers the field from creed Aiss Mehaffey Dies At 82 Fpneral services were held Wed lesday afternoon in the First Bap ist Church for Misa Sadie Clem ntine Mehaffey, 82, of Waynes ille who died Mjonday at 8:10 p.m. n the Haywood County Hospital fter a long illness. The Rev. T. E. Robinett, pastor if the church, and the Rev. George ifehaffey officiated and burial tras in Green Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers were Frank, Conley, lubert, and Raymond Meh*ffh>, Claude Sutton, and Roy Davis. Miss Mehaffey was the daugh er of the late W. T. and Adallne ifehaffey of Haywood County and pent her entire life here. Surviving are three brothers, lohn Mehaffey of Waynesvllle, loute 2, Willie Mehaffay of the lome, and Walter Mehafey of Vaynesville; and one sister, Mrs. I W. Badgett of Rural Hall. Arrangements were under the lirection of Garrett Funeral lome. o official playing rules. Sections n the extensive book include the lational history of Little League ind the benefits derived from it, iow to organise a club with by aws and management rules, rules !or local leagues, general policies with their emphasis on the local level, tourney play, anecdotes, training techniques and playing lints from, famous. baUmem, PHILLIPS 66 FUEL OIL ? (lean burning ? prompt service + metered delivery hone GL 6-3921 . . . ? 20 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE FUEL SERVICE TO WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA ALLISON & DUNCAN OIL COMPANY fclwood 'r , Murphy ^ 1^ Ik. * ! yl y Jl MUSTBEGOO^ #?| many wsa nd s ? I / \ B?F f ? <? A TIME TO BE ?. THANKFUL * FOR ALL THE BLESSINGS WE HAVE RECEIVED DURING THE PAST YEAR Thanksgiving is a time for family gatherings ... for heartfelt rejoic ing in the blessings of home, family, peace and plenty. It's a time to be joyful... and a time to be quietly, prayerfully grateful because the abundance and freedom our forefathers dreamed of are ours in reality. On this Thanksgiving, we join in giving thanks, and among our blessings we count the opportunity of serving you during the past year. May we continue to serve you in a manner that will ever deserve your patronage. .' ir ?' "With thanks to all our customers and friends" BdkHudson ? * ? < I 111 iii i^il *#*??' ? '>y tifriin ??. f -.

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