k Mountain Lodge No. 663
■18Ci- ■ Stated Communica
Fraternal Order
.Meeting Schedule
MASONS
P x- \M.
. . First Friday of each month
'"g ], M. Leroy H. Mashburn,
**0rder OF eastern star
,,9.k Mountain Chapter No. 200
Lt and third Tuesdays of each
-••)() p M. Mrs. Reva Hinkle,
tiontn i
n-XIOR ORDER UNITED
AMERICAN MECHANICS
,k Mountain Council No. 14S
Nrat and third Mondays of each
)onth 7:30 P- M. Clarence Pegg,
louncilor.
Swannanoa Camp 970
WOODMEN OF THE WORLD
Swannanoa Camp 970 Woodmen
if the World meets first and third
Thursday, Woodmen Hall Buck
,er building, Swannanoa. Phil
UcElrath, council commander.
MONTREAT
The guest preacher for Sunday
morning service on July 15 was
p, Ben Lacy Rose, pastor of
•entral church, Bristol, Va.
’ The attraction at the Anderson
Auditorium next Saturday, July
Jl. will be the concert given by
John Sinclair, pianist, at 8 p. m.
r Sunday morning worship service
jt 11 a. m., July 22, will nave Dr.
Billy Graham as guest preacher.
Sliest pracher for the evening ser
vice will be Dr. Marshall B.
Dendy.
The Women’s Training School
ill begin its session on Wednes
Jay, July 18, at 7:30 p. m. Dr.
. R. McCain, moderator of the
;eneral assembly, will be the in
irational speaker.
Dr. George H. Vick will have
Jie platform Bible hour each morn
ing during the training school at
1:40.
[ The Rev. John R. Williams,
hastor of the Montreat church, is
Conducting services in Reidsville
through the month of July.
I Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Morrison
lave opened their home “Laurel
Bill Cottage” on South Carolina
terrace.
Mrs. Harry Bryan of Bessemer,
Ala., is in her cottage "Singing
Bills” on Virginia road.
* r. and Mrs L. M. Hull have
r» Jr £Vest thelr grandson, Dr
n tP« -.i.Thompson . Witherington
of Harvard M^dkal'school’lndM*
Charlotte? ^ Medical Center
.^iRS 4J!n Jennings is the guest
of Mrs. V. R. Potter at her home
on Mississippi road.
» M,r’ Mrs- James Grier of
WH>11, S. C., are the guests
of their parents, the Rev. and
Mrs. J. C. Grier at their home on
Virginia road.
Mr and Mrs. R. F. Fernandez
and Glenn have been visiting Mrs,
Fernandez’s parents. Dr. and Mrs!
L. J. Coppedge at their home on
Greybeard road. They returned
last week to their home in New
l ork City.
Mrs Hugh Lobdell with Ann,
Malinda, Retty and Jena of Char
lotte, are guests of Dr. and Mrs.
L. J. Coppedge of Greybeard road.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Cork and
family of Ware Shoals, S. C., are
in the Cork cottage on Louisiana
road.
Mrs. Robert Vanderhoof and
family of Louisville are in the
McDiarmid cottage on North Car
olina terrace.
The Rev. Frank Estes of Orange
burg, S. C., has joined his family
at their summer home on As
sembly drive. Miss Anna Estes,
who was just graduated from
Winthrope college, and Miss
Phillis Estes are in the Estes cot
tage for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Munday and
Michael are spending some time
at "Fount Haven,” the Estes home
on Assembly drive.
The Rev. J. C. Grier of Char
lotte has joined his family at their
summer home on Virginia road.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Johnston,
daughter Edith and son Malcolm,
of Columbia are guests at the
Estes home.
Mrs. Aubrey N. Brown of Rich
mond and children, Zaida, Julia,
Virginia, Eleanor, William and
Ernest, are visiting Mrs. Brown’s
mother, Mrs. W. E. Hill, at her
home on West Virginia terrace.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hunter and
children, David and Scottie, and
Mrs. John Bruce and daughter,
Ann, all of Little Rock, are guests
of the Estes at their home on As
sembly drive.
Mrs. Grace Peele of Memphis
is a guest at the Estes home.
Mr. and Mrs. Mackey of Moores
ville are in the Cook cottage on
Mississippi road.
Dr. George M. Trulock of
Orangeburg, S. C., has joined his
There is Nothing Finer
than to Live in
North Carolina
Next month—August-our
mountains and our beaches will play host to
thousands-with emphasis on play.
But to other thousands of our people it's cotton
Picking time; and in many of our towns the chant
the tobacco auctioneer makes important
music this month.
There's always work to do In North Carolina,
hut there are other things that are important, too.
So remember the Whiteville Tobacco Festival;
the Brevard Music Festival, August 7-19; the
N. C. Federation of Labor meeting in Asheville,
August 13-15; and N. C. semi-pro baseball cham
pionships Roxboro, August 2.
And, at home or vacationing, moat of us can an
t07 4 cool, temperate glass of
h««i—sold under ottr ^n\
system of legal
<»ntrol that is work
W so wall.
North Carolina Division
OJOTIO STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, INC.
t*'.eir summer home on
North Carolina terrace
Miss Clara Belle Williams and
" moKSK* s'ai,ei *"■
Mrs. Helen Wanamaker of
Orangeburg, S. C., is in the Salley
cottage on Alabama terrace
Others visiting in the Salley
cottage are Mr. and Mrs. Julian
Sal ey and Mr. and Mrs. Hamp
Culler and three children, Salley,
Hemp Jr., and Lewis.
Mrs. R. S. Williams Jr., of
Orangeburg, S. C., is in Howerton
Hall for some time. Her niece,
Miss Clara Bell, was a teacher in
the nursery school for the leader
ship conference.
The Cottage Owners’ associa
tion, Marion Welford, president,
held the first meeting of the sea
son on Tuesday, July 17, at 4
p. m. in the Anderson auditorium.
The Rev. and Mrs. Chris Mathe
son and Mrs. C. H. Hamilton of
Gainesville, Fla., have opened
their home on Kentucky road.
The Women’s Training School
will have a social hour on Friday.
July 20, at 4 p. m.
Mrs. William Graham drove to
Knoxville Sunday afternoon to
meet her husband, Dr. Billy Gra
ham, who flew into Knoxville af
ter a 4 p. m. service in Indiana.
They arrived at their home on
Assembly drive early Monday
morning.
Beauvais Staples, the little
seven-year-old granddaughter of
Dr. and Mrs. L. J. Coppedge, came
in a plane from Memphis all by
herself to visit her grandparents.
The Montreat Women’s Club
will hold its next meeting on July
23 at 4 p. m. at the Montreat
Girls’ camp. Miss Sarah Anderson,
head of the camp, will present the
girls in a program. All women
in Montreat are invited.
POET’S CORNER
WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
She marshals her peaks upon
rugged blue walls
Against the round rim of the
sky,
And tempers the fury of every
storm
That crosses these barriers high.
She holds within moss-covered cav
erns of stone,
No thrist of a summer can drain,
Perennial meltings of sleet and
of snow
And storage of yesteryear’1:, rain;
These, slowly released through and
ravine
To dance and make music with
Pan,
Out into rivers unceasingly flow
For the service and pleasure
of man.
She hallows the silence of for
ested coves
That nestle her ridges between,
And ladens each breeze with a
healing perfume
Where hemlock and balsam are
green.
Iter sentinels burnish their hel
mets with gold
Awakening day to receive,
And borrow his embers aglow in
the west
To purple their mantles at eve.
Then after the twilight’s slow re
quiem tolls
And shadows the valleys en
wrap,
She garlands her summits with
glittering stars
And cradles the clouds in her
lap.
—James Peale Parker
Creative Writing Group,
Black Mountain Arts Club.
• READ THE CLASSIFIEDS ! • Find It In The CLASSIFIEDS
Look Who’s Here!
Mr. and Mrs. Dilly Fore of
Swannanoa have a daughter born
July 13 at St. Joseph’s hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cordell
of Swannanoa announce the birth
of a daughter July 13 at the Vic
toria hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Barnes of
Swannanoa have a son born July
15 at the Victoria hospital.
LEAVING FOR BERMUDA
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Milbee and
son, Michael, will leave this week
to make their home in Bermuda.
The Milbees have been making
their home in Norfolk for the
past year. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Jones had a short visit with them
in Norfolk over the week end.
ALLEN AWAY
Allen Holcombe is spending
some time with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Swain Holcombe
in Asheville.
McDonald Cab
Phone 72 8 7
BLACK MOUNTAIN
Courteous, Dependable
24 Hour Service
McDonald
TRANSFER
Phone 7287
BLACK MOUNTAIN, N. C.
TOO LATE FOR WORDS!
Painfully, slowly, a message fa tapped on a dungeon wall. IPs a
familiar message—one heard a thousand times over in a dozen
countries of Europe and Asia.
LISTEN... it’s a message of lost hope, of lost rights and freedoms!
LISTEN .. .for this message is a warning foe those of us who still
are free!
We in America are willingly giving up aome of our rights and
freedoms—temporarily. As the price of rearming, we’re giving
government vast powers over our plans, our businesses, our
very lives.
The danger is that these powers may become permanent.
There are people—in and out of government—who say they
should—even though that means a socialistic U.S.A.
Unless all of us remember the difference between temporary
emergency powers and permanent socialism, it may some day be
“too late’’ for Americans, tool
^CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY)