Mrs. Hyatt Hostess To DAR Meeting The Dorcas Bell Love chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet Friday after noon at 3:30 at the home of Mrs. David Hyatt on Walnut Street, with Mrs. W. A Hyatt as hostess. Mrs. J. W. Klllian will have charge of the program, and Mrs. J. L- Elwood, regent, will preside ? ? ? Tryon Garden Tour Slated Wednesday A tour of Tryon gardens has been announced for Wednesday. April 11, from 10 a.m. to 2 p m Entrance will be at the rear of the Congregational Church. The tour includes the Julian Calhoun gardens, the Nash, Young1 and Parish Watson gardens, Thou sand Pines Inn, and will conclude with a conducted tour ending at the Phillip Reed garden where tea will be served on the terrace. * * * Junoluaka PTA Sets* Womanless Wedding Members of the Lake Junaluska P.T.A. will sponsor and take part In a "Womanless Wedding" plan ned for April 12 at the Lake Juna luska school. The show will start at 8 p.m., with hot dogs, hamburgers and pie on sale from 6:30 to 8. Admission will be 50 cents for adults and 15 cents for children. Chairman of the committee is Mrs. Billy Medford. Taking leading parts will be Shirley Connatser as the bride. Charlie Reed a$ the groom, John Reeves as the baby and J. B. Soes bee as the minister. The cast in cludes 21 other persons under Mrs. Medford's direction. Committee chairmen include Mrs. A1 Phillips, decorations; Mrs. Grady Yarborough, supper; Mrs. Juanita Rivers, tickets; and Mrs. Charles Edwards, publicity. ? ? ? Alpha Theta Chapter Changes Meeting Date Alpha Theta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will meet this Thursday night, April 12, instead of April 19 as originally planned. The meeting will be held at the East Street home of Miss Louise Francis at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs Ray mond Caldwell presiding. Miss Elaine Francis will discuss "The Printed Word in Your Life " ? ? ? RECEIVE HOMEMAKER DEGREES Elaine Curtis and Joy Young of Clyde were among those awarded State Homemaker degrees at the annual convention of the North Carolina Association of Future Homemakers Saturday in Raleigh, according to Miss Louise Swann western district supervisor. DREAM DRESS . . . This waits-length dance dress of nylon tulle is designed by Mary Carter of Dallas. A panel of tiered ruffles in back points the way to the kins-size taffeta sash. IP Newsfeatures Young, fresh and flattering are summer formal fashions seeu "t he recent showings of Texas styles held in Dallas and attended by 'epresentatives of the nation's fashion press. Although Texas designers ire noted chiefly for their skill at turning out casual clothes, their lance dresses and after S fashions also are increasingly popular with he younger set throughout the country. They are notable for youth ful styling and original use of fabrics. Hazel wood PTA To Hear Roberson Dr. Stuart Roberson will discuss "Community Needs and Opportun ities" at the meeting of the Hazel wood PTA set for April 9 at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. T. E. Robinett will give the devotional.v Friends of the organization, as well as members, are invited to at tend. * * * Christian Discipleship Is Theme Of Meeting Of Elizabeth Chapel A program on "Christian Dis cipleship" was presented at the meeting Thursday of the W.S.C.S. of Elizabeth Chapel Methodist Church. Mrs. Woody Jones was in charge, assisted by Mrs. Way Rat cliffe and Mrs. Mary Galloway. Mrs. James Medford was in charge of the meeting; and Mrs. Joe Turner led the devotional. * * ? Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Swift left Thursday for a Florida vacation. Sadie Hawkins Dance Scheduled At St. John's For Saturday Night A -Sadie Hawkins" dance, leap year style, is to be held at St. John s Hall on Saturday, April 14. Hours are from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p. m. and admission is 25 cents a person. The St. John's Parents' Club is sponsoring the dance. ? ? * MRS. SLOAN IMPROVING Mrs. Ben Sloan, Mountaineer woman's activities editor, is con valescent at her home following surgery at the Haywood County Hospital. ? ? # Miscellaneous Shower Honors Miss Huskey Miss Emma Sue Huskey, bride elect of J. L. Mashburn of Enka. was honored last week at a miscel laneous shower at the home of Mrs. J. Edgar Burnette. Co-hostesses were Mrs. Burnette's daughters, Mrs. G. L. Warren, Jr., and Miss Barbara Jean Burnette. About 35 guests attended. Spring flowers were used for decoration throughout the house, carrying out a color scheme of yellow and white, and the bride elect was presented with a corsage of carnations. Ail ice course was served. * ? * MRS. BARBER MAKES NORTHERN TRIP Mrs. R. N- Barber, Sr., has left for a trip to Washington, D. C., to attend the national conferences of several patriotic organizations. She is expected to be gone about two weeks. * * * First Lieut, Joseph L. Michal of Eglin AFB, Fla., is visiting friends in Gloucester, England, on a three week leave. ? KURT GANS Home of Finc Watches" NOW - At KURT GANS NO TRADE-IN NEEDED rz Bulova ? NOT 69* BULOVA "PRISCIILA" LiStits up the wrist wit* (Mm mering diamonds! 17-iewel Precision Accuracy Oarliing wltti genuine diamonds Tiny exquisite design luxury features of watchat costing far moral BULOVA "NAVIGATOR" 17 |ewoli< Certified waterproof*! Shock resistant! Unbreakable main spring I Aati-magaotic! Radium bands and dioll Now you don't have to trade-in your old watch to get these magnificent BULOVA masterpieces! Only through the combined efforts f" BULOVA and ourselves are we able to offer such an outstanding value at such a modest price! tt Of eovrto, if you wont to tfodo-in your tW wotc/i^ we'll gladly giro you a gonorout allowance! tt crystal m tatoet. cm ? Births New arrival* at the Haywood County Hospital include the fol lowing: 4 A son to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas * Pruitt of Canton on April S. A son to Mr. and Mrs. Jay Owen- J by of Canton on April 5. ' A son to Mr. and Mrs. Lenoir Pless of Canton on April 5. A son to Mr. and Mrs. Bruce [ Browning of Canton on April 6. . A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Tom my Brooks of Waynesville on April 8 A son to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bass of Waynesville on April 8. . A son to Mr. and Mrs. William t Millar of Waynesville on, April 8. , A son to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny j Whitman of Waynesville on April 8. A son to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mil- f ler of Rt. 8, Waynesville, on April , 8. t A son to Mr. and Mrs. Woodfln , Ledford of Waynesville on April 9. ( A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. < Payne of Canton on April 9. ' A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Jaipes Henslcyiof Hazel wood on April 9. , ? * * Personals MRS. ROGERS ATTENDS MEETING Mrs. Claude Rogers attended an all-day meeting Saturday of the Legislative and Public Relations section of the North Carolina Edu- 1 cational Association in Raleigb. Mrs. Rogers is incoming presi dent of the Haywood County NCEA. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Bill Prevost re turned Sunday from a four-day 1 trip to Chicago * ? ? Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Snyder of Bude. Mass., are visiting relatives in Clyde. ? * ? Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Caldwell, accompanied by MJss Mary Med ford, will leave Friday for a ten day vacation in Florida. * * * Rufus Gaddis of Hampton, Va.. spent the weekend here with rela tives in Waynesville and Hazel wood. ? ? ? Mrs. Joe C. Howell has had as "guests two sisters and their chil dren. They are Mrs. Don Gordon of Fairbanks, Alaska, and children Liza and Frankie, and Mrs. E. B. Chappell of Candor, and children James and Douglas. * ? * Pvt. James R. Parton has return ed to Fort Benntng. Ga? after spending the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Parton. * ? ? Davidson Alumni To Meet April 17 Davidson College alumni in the Asheville area will meet in Ashe ville on Tuesday, April 17, for the annual spring Banquet and Ladies Night. The dinner meeting, which will begin at 6:45 p.m., will be held In the Fellowship Hall of the First Presbyterian Church, New officers will be elected dur ing a short business session. All Davidson alumni and their ladles, parents of students now at Davidson, and all friends of the college in the Asheville area are invited to the meeting. It is estimated that over 61 mil lion pigs will be produced in the spring of 1956, approximately 1 per cent more than was produced in the spring of 1955. KURT GANS"11" store Bndca Prcfcr ^fe^^fe Ihfonjh oil Ik* fmtn it coroe. "kef" iwntmi wlH R| r|iji>A (|u4k |n ?mriirt|l?irhfti4 hufitifv slflrifttti IALAM A( yjyWW {jtUA **ftrlrfa }? UAIf* IMvn W JW W?v ? ? By^WWl WWHf W f??1 jeod ju4 jmert in buymg ftw tfiwmntf kef*. wherA it *"riniali?fl f# JMWWWMM. You Get 30% to 40% More M For Your Money Because ? Tfr*AjM We Buy Direct r ? W till ????????????aMHaMMMMMnManaMMUMMMBMBaaaMMaHaBai DEATHS MM. Of Ml ROBISON Funeral service* were held Sun lay in Antioch Baptist Church for 4rs. Cl|mi Downs Robison, 78, of handler .who died Friday in a -lyde nursing home after a long llness. , The Rev. Nane Starnes, and lev. J. Lester Lane and the Rev. darsrhall Raby officiated, and bur al was in Crawford Memorial ?ark. Grandsons were pallbearers and iranddaughters were flower bear ers. Mrs. Robison was a native of iaywood County, a daughter of he late James Nelson and El nedia Crawford Downs, and was he widow of Jesse Robison. Surviving are seven sons, Win red A. of Reno, Nev., Herman C. >f Asheville, Marshall D. of Can en, Beaufort H. of West Ashe ville, Roy F. of Enka, Horace R. >f Candler, and Leonard W. of iVest Asheville. Also two daughters, Mrs. Faye Jenkins of Clyde, and Miss Gay Robison of Chicago, 111., 22 grand children; and 19 great-grandchll iren. THOMAS E. BROWN Thomas Everette Brown, 26. of Canton, died in a Waynesville hos pital at 4:30 p.m. yesterday after a brief illness. He is survived by the widow; two sons, Thurman and Newton; a daughter, Cathy Louise; the par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Brown; six sisters, Mrs. George R. Gaddy, Mrs. Harry Warren, Norma Lou Brown, Marion ,Brown, Violet Brown, and Brenda Joyce Brown, all of Canton; two brothers, Charlesand Albert of Canton and the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Cody, of Canton. JOHN H. HOYLE Funeral services were held Sun day afternoon at Balsam Baptist Church for John Harrison Hoyle, 75, of Sylva, Rt. 1, who died Thurs day in his home after a brief ill ness. The Rev. Ray McCall offici ated and burial was in the church cemetery. Pallbearers were Robert Gentry, BUI Penninger, Oscar Wood. Dennis Ammons, Arnold Bryson and Mar ion Ashe. Mr. Hoyle was a farmer, a na tive of Haywood County and a member of the Pleasant Balsam Baptist Church. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Farris S. Hoyle: six sons, Clar ence of Sylva, Rt. 1, Glenn of Asheville, Clem and Ray of the home. Frank of the state of Wash ington and Sam of Salem, N. J. Also two daughters, Mrs. Joseph ine Smith of Salem, N. J., and Mrs. Geneva Wyatt of Pensville. N. J.; one brother, Alvin of Waynesville; two sisters, Mrs. Julia Williams of Waynesville and Mrs. Alpha Williams of Whittier, and eight grdhdchildren. Garrett Funeral Home was in charge. MRS. ELSIE YORK Funeral services for Mrs. Elsie York, 21, of Candler, who died Thursday in an Asheville hospital after a brief illness were held Sat urday in Rocky Branch Baptist Church. The Rev. Wyatt Gentry, the Rev. M. R. Snyder, and the Rev. Lonas Parker officiated and burial was in Buchanan Cemetery at Aliens Creek. , Pallbearers were Earl and Fred Green, Clifton Riggins, Benson Farley, Sewell Rhinehart and Claude Mills. Flower bearers were members of the Young Adult Bible Class at the Maple Ridge Baptist Church, of which she was a member. Mrs. York was the daughter of Wiley McClure of Candler and the late Mrs. Maggie Cunningham Mc Clure. Surviving, in addition to the father, are the husband, Steven York; the stepmother, Mrs. Reva McClure; three brothers, George MeClure of Candler, Gaither Mc Clure of Cleveland, Ohio, and Richard McClure of the home. Also two sisters, Mabel and Oma Lee McClure of the home; one stepbrother, Douglas Green of Candler; and one stepsister, Tava Green of Candler. Crawford Funeral Home, Canton, was in charge. CHILD NEEDS RARE HEART SURGERY ( 6 ~ ? fHlRTEiN-MONTH-OlD Kathy Gomel, of Riverside, Calif.. who has a "turned-around" heart, is shown leaving Los Angeles for Minne- ( apolls where doctors hope to correct the condition Holding Kathy, while her sister Cynthia, 9. looks on. Is the baby's mother. Mrs. Helen Gomez, funds for the child's trip were raised by public appeal. Oklahoma Indian Girl Gets Free Trip To Washington By JANE EAOS WASHINGTON?Pretty Winonia Schmidt. 14, half-blooded Indian girl from Oklahoma, sat in the speaker's chair in the House of Representatives and popped a piece of her priz?-winning Indian fry-bread into the mouth of the secretary of the interior. She went up the Washington monument and was delighted when the guard took her for 19 and said she was old enough to pay for the trip. She rode on the little subway from the Capitol to the Senate office building and was sur prised. she told me, to find the statue on the top of the Capitol was that of an Indian girl. She said she was impressed most of all with the lighting on the seated figure in the Lincoln Memorial and the changing of the guards at the Unknown Soldier's grave. "I'm glad I'm old enough now to go places," she said. Wearing on her first day's visit a lovely Indian dress of fringed and beaded deerskin which her classmates at the Chillcco (Okla.) Indian Agricultural High School had helped her clean with bits of clay, and a white and blue beaded headband that had belonged to her great-grandmother, she was a pic ture. Winonia's trip to Washington and later to New York was her reward for being named grand prize win ner in a recipe collection contest for high school homemaking class es and clubs held annually by a magazine. She was accompanied on her trip by Mrs. Josie Anderson, teacher of the ninth grade class of girls who submitted 20 Indian recipes from the lore of 18 tribes. Winonia says she was selected to represent the class because of her record of five years in 4-H Club work and her student activi ties. She's secretary of her class, on the student council, reporter for her class pep club, and made the honor roll once this year. She's also first baseman on the class baseball team. Winonia says she's also fond of traditional Indian customs the k school Is trying to perpetuate- - ceremonial dancing for instance. She says she thinks the children of the earlier tribal days had more fun with their free-wheeling out ing and fishing?but she's happy the way things are now, and said that deerskin dress was "too hot for words." . Heavy breed turkey production in the U. S. continues to be larger than a year ago. while light breed production continues to be smaller. PUBLIC NOTICE The public will take notice that the Board of Aldermen of the Town of Hazeiwood will, on May 1st, 1956, at 7:00 o'clock P. M. in the Town Hall, in accordance with authority granted in Section 153-9 (17) of the General Statutes of North Car olina, consider a resolution closing, that part of Brook Street, as shown on the original plat of Brookwood Place recorded in Map Book A, page 96, office of the Register of Deeds of Haywood County, lying between the intersection of the Southern margin of Pine Street and Brook Street as shown on said plat and the western margin of Brook Street as now constructed. That part of Brook Street proposed to be closed has never been graded or constructed. It was made un necessary when Pine Street was ex tended Eastward when constructed I and Brook Street was extended I Southward when constructed so as lo intersect more nearly at right angles. All abutting property owners and others interested are notified to appear at said meeting and present any objections that they may have to closing that part of said street. J. R. Carswell Town Clerk 2639?A 9-16-23-30 Uhick Placements Down Slightly In North Carolina During the week ended March II there were 1,577,000 chicks placed with broiler growers In <orth Carolina. This compares with i toUl of 1,630,000 placed during he preceding fceek. Placements in he Central-Western areas totaled 1.520,000 last week compared with 1,585,000 during the week before. Hatcheries in the State set 2,811, )00 eggs for broilers last week com pared with 2.804,000 set the week jefore. For the same period broil er chicks hatched totaled 2,096,000. Nurses Of District To Meet April 11 District No. 1 of the North Caro ina State Nurses' Association will neet Wednesday, April 11, at 4 p.m. at the Ashevllle Orthopedic Hospital, Ashevllle. Dr. H W. Stevens, Health Offi cer for Buncombe County, will speak on Public Health. A.U regis tered nurses are invited to attend. PARK Theatre Program MON. & TUES., APRIL 9 & 10 "SLIGHTLY SCARLET" (In Superscope and Color) Starring JOHN PAYNE ARLENE DAHL RHONDA FLEMING # WED. & THURS., APRIL 11 & 12 "THE NAKED DAWN" (In Color) Starring ARTHUR KENNEDY BETTA ST. JOHN FRIDAY, APRIL 13 DOUBLE FEATURE "THE FIGHTING CHANCE" Starring ROD CAMERON ? ALSO ? "CALL OF THE FOREST" Starring ROBERT LOWRY KEN CURTIS ?PLUS? Selected Short Subjects WAYNESVILLE DRIVE-IN THEATRE Show Starts At 7:30 P. M. LAST TIME TODAY MONDAY, APRIL 9 DOUBLE FEATURE! "THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH" (In Cinemascope & Color) Starring MARILYN MONROE TOM EWELL ? ALSO ? "LAW AND ORDER" With . AN ALL-STAR CAST ? ' TUES. & WED., APRIL 10 & 11 "LUCY GALLANT" (In Color) Starring JANE WYMAN CHARLTON HESTON CLAIRE TREVOR -PLUS CARTOONS * THURSDAY, APRIL 12 "THE COUNTRY GIRL" Starring GRACE KELLY BING CROSBY ? PLUS ? Selected Short Subjects Smoky Mtn. DRIVE-IN THEATRE Balsam Rd. Dial GL 6-5446 LAST TIME TODAY MONDAY, APRIL 9 "LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME" (In Cinemascope & Color) Starring DORIS DAY JAMES CAGNEY m TUES. & WED., APRIL 10 & 11 DOUBLE FEATURE! "THE DAY THE WORLD ENDED" (In Superscope & Color) Starring RICHARD DENNING LORI NELSON ? Plus ? "THE PHANTOM FROM 10,000 LEAGUES" Starring KENT TAYLOR KATHY DOWNS ? THURS. & FRI., APRIL 12 & 13 "TENNESSEE'S PARTNER" (In Superscope & Color) Starring JOHN PAYNE RONALD REAGAN RHONDA FLEMING STRAND THEATRE PHONE 6-8551 MON. & TITES., APRIL 9 & 10 THE MAN WHO OPENED HIE WEST! KIRK m0%T)OUGLAS \ mJM "-INDIAN JrWGHTER. ~V CmSkoK ? //sA miwIknmcouk ? : WED. & THURS., APRIL 11 & 12 B* ? CawOwiHal *ctWM. Inc. W0S. tZ Mil WILLIAMS ? GEORGIA IB ? Coming Soon "THERE'S ALWAYS TOMORROW" and "THE KILLER IS LOOSE"

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