in Indiana. We got tu.r from Otto and Lucia j,e other day. They have in the country ’mid imi orchards, and Mr. - as busy as "a puppy tails." They hated to ,,r‘ in W. N. C., but use all important. They • remember them to mu , |<, especially Garden club if our ship ever comes c irsio of contraband com w'hich we can sell for ex prices, we will pro to In v -it these lovely folks, of our W. M. U. will • he home of Mrs. Frank second Tuesday of the 1 auth is building a good i,arn, the building is just nished. „ of young people came ...use Saturday night play .... K or treat.” We would fouruJ Flea Powder ih the. y£U©W PAGES* Insecticides, Ken L Is, Dog Foods, Vet erinarians — you’ll find al post any product or service ou need in the Yellow Pages of your telephone di rectory. Save time and energy — turn first to the reJJow Paces. Take a LOOIC in the BOOK, have been deeply disappointed had they not visited us, we served them with some of Marion's choice doughnuts. Fay, Thelma, Shirlev John David, and Raymond Wil liams, Louise Weaver, and John Propst made up the party. They were dressed in bizarre costumes featuring tattered window drapes an«i sundi y haphazard smudges it took us quite a bit to guess who they al were. They had stopped at the Hob Orrs, Dorothy brought them out a pan of cookies, and one of the boys lay flat in the bushes for he wasn't sure whether she had a treat, or hand grenades. There were other angles of the Halloween week-end that weren’t so pleasant. Some smart alecks with a ear showed a lack of breed ing and horse sense and tore down a number of mail boxes, this van dalism isn’t fun for anyone. I guess we will have to do a little vigilant duty next year. These young jackasses need to know what bird shot feels like when applied smartly to one’s posterior. North fork is an agreeable place, but it can be very cruel. t.Jara Propst accepted a position with the office force at Montreat some weeks ago. Wiley Morris visited his broth er Floyd at Landrum, S. C., last week. John Keese did a commendable job of conducting: prayer meeting at Mountain View last week. Carl Edmonds might be in the mai ket for a good bow and arrow, he is thinking of taking up archery. b red Shook and family visited Mrs. Shook’s mother Mrs. Dan \\ atts of Canton this week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Pressley of Can j came home with them to spend several days. We certainly did i miss Betty Jean at the church pi j an<» Sunday morning, but Judy j Byrd filled in most capably. Miss Belle Wicker visited Minnie last Thursday afternoon. It had been a long time since Miss Belle had been to see us, but we have a new road across the field now and the 'walking is much butter when it is dry. A group of young men from Bob Jones college conducted the eve ning services at Mountain View last Sunday. The song service and sermon was very inspiring. Mr. and Mrs. Phillips and Claude Betts ren dered a most beautiful trio num ber. Miss Sara Kitchen spent last Saturday with us and did a paint ing of the mountains from the upper end of our field. We sympathize sincerely with the anxious Meese family. We do hope that Pansy recovers quickly from her recent accident. We offer condolences to the be reaved family of Clyde Gray whose aunt passed away last week. I al so offer most humble apologies to Donna Vee Gray for not listing her with the other girls that con ducted prayer meeting recently. Mrs. I. T. Brooks is ill. We surely do miss the Brookses when they don’t come to church. Nsrth Carolina Travel Notes Wild (iee.se Arriving Huge Canada geese, which win ter in North Carolina, are begin ning to arrive. Supt. L. P. Turner of the Pea Island U. S. Wildfowl Refuge on Hatteras Island reports that hundreds of wild geese and ducks arrived in early October. At the same time Mrs. Lockhart Gad dy, who is carrying on the unique Gaddy’s Refuge near Ansonville in the North Carolina Mid-South Re sort area since the death of her husband last year, reports that big flights brought more than 3,000 early arrivals by mid-October. Up ward of 10,000 big Canada’s are expected at Gaddy’s Refuge. No shooting is allowed, and the geese ou Hear Strange Things About Catholics you can hear some nge things about Cath jfou hear it said that holies believe all non holies are headed for ■ that they believe 1-Catholic marriages are ! lid. htne think Catholics believe | Pope is God... that he can do f wrong... that they owe him ~ allegiance and that he should the political power to rule erica. Is said that Catholics want jgious freedom only for them es... that they oppose public °ls and separation of Church [ State as evils which should be troyed. he claim is made that Catho [Pay the priest for forgiveness eir sins... that they must buy t Reported relatives and friends |°‘ Purgatory... that they adore Fts • • • are forbidden to read the re ■ ■ ■ use medals, candles and P "ater ^ sure-fire protection !:le l°ss of a job, lightning ^mg ran down by an automo ~ ’ 'at is worse, some say, > corrupt the true teach 5 ‘ : us Christ with the ad • 'gan superstitions and | J taat are nothing less than the inventions of the devil If all these things —or any of them—were true, it would be a pity. For at least one out of every six Ameri cans is a Catholic — and it would be a national tragedy if one-sixth of all Ameri cans entertained such er roneous ideas. The Knights of Columbus is an organization of 700,000 Catholic men of reason and intelligence. In our ranks will be found statesmen, < scientists, histoqJuis, physicians, I movie stars, lawyers, educators and others representing every cross section of American life. And for each and all of them loyalty to the Catholic Faith is the act of a rea sonable man. We are deeply interested in the welfare of our Church and our Country. And we believe the in terests of both will be served best when fair minded people know the Catholic Church as it is—not as it is sometimes mistaken to be. If you have heard and believed any of these false claims, and want the truth, we will gladly send you a free booklet which explains many aspects of Catholic belief and prac tice concerning which people are commonly misinformed. Write and and ask for Pamphlet No. 1-N. SUPREME COUNCIL KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Re. gious Information Bureau l,Ndell BLVD. ST. LOUIS 8, MO. Truck Industry Commemorated By Stamp Issue First day cover cancellations of the new design of the trucking in dustry commemorative stamp (three cents), issued Oct. 27 at Los Angeles, were mailed from < alifornia Tuesday, according to an announcement by J. T. Outlaw, ex ecutive vice president of the North ( arolina Motor Carriers associa tion. Commemorating the 50th anni versary of the trucking industry, the new stamp was issued during the annual convention of the Amer ican Trucking associations. It is purple in color. Stamp collectors desiring this special cancellation of this stamp may send a reasonable number of addressed envelopes to the post master at Los Angeles, Calif., with money order remittance to cover the cost of the stamps to bo af fixed. An enclosure of medium weight should he placed in each envelope, and the flaw either seal ed or turned in. The outside en velop should be endorsed “First Day Covers.” Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield has announced that the three cent stamp will be 0.8x 1.44 inches in dimensions, arranged horizontally, with a single outline border, printed by the rotary pro cess, electcriceye perforated, pur ple in color and issued in sheets of 50. The Post Office Department is printing 110,000,000 stamps in this issue. The truck established itself in a “durability contest” in New York City in 1903. Today nine million serve the nation. The stamp de picts the highway and the truck as the connecting link serving Ag riculture and Industry, Outlaw con cluded. become so tame that they will ac cept food from visitors’ hands. Parkway Traffic Increases Further increases were register- j ed in September by the Blue Ridge ' Parkway, most visited of ail Na- , tional Park facilities, linking the Great Smoky Mountains in North Carolina with the Skyline Drive in ( Virginia. The official count show- , ed that 458,608 persons in 139,075 , cars visited the Parkway during • the month, an increase of 58,117 j or 14.5% over September, 1962. Kill Devil Hills Society Membership in a unique organ ization with a name like none other is being opened to the public. It is the Kill Devil Hills Memorial society, whose purpose is to pre serve and foster the memory of the historic achievement of the Wright Brothers by sponsoring appropri ate observance of the first flight on each anniversary at the site of the event, which is Kill Devil Hill, near Kitty Hawk, N. C. The larg est celebration is being planned this year, the Golden Anniversary, during the week of December 17. Dues are only $1 a year. Applica tion form and prospectus may be obtained from the Kill Devil Hills Memorial Society, P. O. Box 24, Kill Devil Hills, 'N. C. Story By Former B. M. College Girl lo Be Published Elizabeth Pollet, who studied painting and writing at Black Mountain college several years ago, has contributed a story, “A Cold Water Flat,” to the Fourth Mentor Selection of New World Writing, to be publisned October 28 by The New American Library of World Literature in a first printing of nearly 150,000 copies. The story is actually the first section of a novella, the second half of which was recently pub lished in Botteghe Oseure. Miss ‘ Collett's first novel, A Family Ro mance, was published by New L>i- j rections in 1950, and was reprint ed with great success as a Signet Book by The New American Li- ( brary. She is now at work on her ( second novel in her home at Pitts- , town, N. J. She is the wife of . Delmore Schwartz, the poet and critic. V CHURCH NOTICES ST. JAMKSS’ EPISCOPAL CHURCH 417 Vance Ave., Phone 7126 SERVICES Sunday, 8 a. m., 10 a. m., 11a. m. Daily, 7:30 a. m. Wednesdays and Holy Days, 10 a. m. • Holy Communion on the first Sunday of every month. Sunday school after the Family service at 10 a. m. Confirmation instruction, Wed nesdays at 7:30 p. m. BLACK MOUNTAIN CHRISTIAN CHURCH Worship service, 2nd and 4th Sundays, 11:00 a. m. Fellowship dinner for members and friends of the church, first Wednesday in the month, 6:30 p. m. Christian Women’s Fellowship, 2nd Monday, 7:30 p. m. BLACK MOUNTAIN FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Montreat Road W. A. Huneycutt, Pastor. SERVICES Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Morning worship 11:00 a. m. B. T. U. 6:45 p. m. Evening worship 8:00 p. m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 64 North French Broad Avenue Asheville, N. C. Schedule of Sunday Services: 11:00 a. m., regular service. Additional service second Sun day of each month at 5:00 p. m. 11:00 a. m. Sunday school. Wednesday evening meeting, 8:00 p. m. “ADAM AND FALLEN MAN” is the topic of the lesson-sermon in all Christian Science churches next Sunday. The Golden Text is from Ro mans 5:18 “As by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift pame upon all men unto justifica tion of life.” Passages from the Bible include: “They which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God:” And from “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy, “The parent of all human discord was the Adam dream, the deep sleep, in which or iginated the delusion that life and intelligence proceeded from and passed into matter.” p. 306. BEE TREE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Bible School, 10:00 a. m. each Sunday. Jim Adams, superin tendent. Worship service, 1st and 3rd Sunday, 11:00 a. m. Women’s Council, 2nd Wednesday in each month. Official Board meeting the first Sunday following worship service. BLUE RIDGE CHAPEL FIRST CHURCH OF GOD (Non-denominational) Blue Ridge road, Black Moun tain, N. C. Rev. R. L. Johnson, pastor. Telephone 4984. Sunday School 10:00 a. m.; morn ing worship 11:00 a. m. Young People 6:30 p. m., evening worship 7:30 p. m. Prayer service Wed nesday 7:30 p. m. You are cordially invited to all services. Old Nick’s Copper Nickel-copper ores found in Sax ony early in the 18th century or iginally were known as “Kupfer Nickel,” meaning “Old Nick’s Cop per.’’ The superstitious miners gave it this name because the met al obtained could not be hammered into useful articles and they be lieved the devil or “Old Nick” had cast a spell over their ores. When from similar ores a previously un discovered element was isolated by Cronstedt in 1751, he named it “nickel.” CLASSIFIEDS SELL - PHONE 4101 FURNITURE FASHIONS ^3; GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN:—T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings has combined gleaming polished brass with fine walnut wood in the illustrated dining room collection—made by The Widdicomb Furni ture Company and featured at the recent Grand Rapids Diamond Jubilee Home Fashion Time Furniture Exposition. Dining table has a walnut top on which the veneers are laid to form a contrasting border; is supported by four polished brass legs in a diminishing tapering design that flares gracefully at the base. New buffet has three recessed drawers mounted with cane and brass handles, flanked by two solid doors. • 4, COLD WEATHER SPECIALS! •a COAT SALE! Sizes 9—17 — 12—18 Special Racks New Fall and Winter Coats—Marked Down for This Sale ONLY! ALL-WOOL Matching Taffeta Linings Values to $35.00 — On Sale for Only $23.66 New Fall SUITS • FLANNELS • GABARDINES SHEEN • NOVELTIES The Very Newest in Fall Colors and the Very Latest in Styles! USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN! Collins Ready-to-Wear Buyers Are in the Manufacturers’ Show Rooms Weekly, Seeking Out New Styles and Best Values For Our Customers $13.66 Ladies’ Flannel Gowns SIZES 34—40 Sanforized Shrunk, Fast Colors. THESE ARE IDEAL FOR COLD WEATHER $1" $2" Ladies’ Flannel PAJAMAS! SIZES 32—40 These Warm Flannel Pajamas Are a Cold Weather Must. FAST COLORS, SANFORIZED SHRUNK. SEW AND SAVE! * * Slab & Nubs MATERIAL JUST ARRIVED! Come In and See This New Fall Material. 59* YARD High Grade FLANNEL Good Heavy Quality for Pajamas or Gowns! PASTEL COLORS. PRINTS! YARD BUY SEVERAL PAIR Bovs’ Corduroy PANTS Regular $3.99 Value Sizes 4—14 Brown, Green, Blue $1.99 Boys' Shirts Sport and Dress. Solid Colors, j Fancy Prints and Checks! Lucky Boy Brand Rayon Gabardine) Here is Your Chance to Stock Up the Boy’s Wardrobe For Winter! Size 8—16 $1.99 Young Men’s DRESS — SPORT OXFORDS Many Styles 'TTorTrTOOOorxTrTooooooooooooor' Hoys'1 and Girls’ School Shoes Many Styles 8V2 to 3s PAIR Long Wearing < K X X X K X X x~x x x x >r~w No Mar Soles — Leather Uppers! USE OUR LAY-AWAY - PAY A LITTLE EACH WEEK! ^JLa-a-g-fiJLg-S-S-a-C-g-g-fij;-a-g-a-g-iut-a-s-iut^^ You Save When You Shop At COLLINS = DEPARTMENT STORE BLACK MOUNTAIN, NORTH CAROLINA nr

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