Newspapers / The Black Mountain News … / Dec. 3, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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'V^LaJULgJiJLSJLa..a S 0 0 O o o o o o o'o DEC3- 195 3 A CREED IN A GARDEN I believe in the God of my garden, the God of the trees. The god with the feet of the fairy who treads on the breeze And makes of the rose leaves a carpet. The God of the light. The God of the dusk and the sunset; the God of the night Who freshens the scents in my garden with breaths of the earth. And juggles and frets with tulip and brings it to birth. 1 believe in the God of the thorn bush, the God of the bird Who fashions a song from an egg shell; of the new world stirred By the sudden comfort of April; the God of all grief In the whimpering pain and death of the leaf. I believe in the God of the sky-paths, whose cumbersome cloud Shakes warm, laughing rain o'er my garden and whispers aloud To the slumbering ant and the earth worm to the uttermost weed His challenge of Life and achievement.—This is my Creed. O Church of God triumphant, above the world's dark fears; In thee our souls find refuge through all these earthly years, Christ’s steadfast holy purpose, illumined by the cross, When hosts encamp against us. reveals their might but dross. Her bells on Christmas morning have set our hearts aglow, At Easter-time her carols with faith still over-flow; Within her sacred portals our children learn God’s truth. While at her hallowed altars to Christ we pledge our youth. Through manhood's sterner challenge, in womanhood’s brave years, The Church of Christ continues in gladness or in tears, To guide our footsteps onward till sunset’s lingering rays Reveal God's Heavenly Country beyond our earthly days. O Church of God triumphant, we pledge anew in prayer, Our youth, our fuller manhood, for Christ’s great cause to dare; Till his redeeming purpose shall prove beyond defeat, When gather all God's children around His mercy seat. Newman Flower, contemporary English. CHURCH TRIUMPHANT S. Ralph Harlow. 2 - Black Mountain (NC) NEWS— Thursday, Dec. 3, 1953 RIDGECREST . . . rambling^ The following message from Mr. Perry Morgan to Mrs I'ate, his sister. Rex Hospital, Raleigh, N. C. I am propped up in bed but feeling fine in comparison to 7 \ Sj Experts M 'ssjf/Sj & Every Barber here is a real artist with the scissors You’ll appreciate the extra touch of dis tinction that our mas ter-barbers give to every haircut. ACME Barber Shop 117 Broadway Dial 5411 BLACK MOUNTAIN how I have felt most of the last fifteen days, my nurse is watching over me, it is 1:40 a. m. and I am as hungry as a bear, how 1 wish it were breakfast time right now. N’o temperature now for three days, but the llr. says 1 will have to stay in bed at least a week after the fever is gone. I hope to leave the hospital on Monday the .‘loth or soon thereafter. My vacation ruined up to now. Here's my church envelope, please put it in for me Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. j. C. McGill of Columbia, S. C., Cecil McGill, a student at the University of S. C., and Miss Miriam Horton a grad uate student at A. P. 1.. Auburn, Ala., \isited Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Pate and Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Weeks Thanksgiving afternoon. Miss Betty Allison from the Home Mission Board, Atlanta, Ga., spent the Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Allison. The many friends of Bob Snypes will be interested to know of his marriage to Miss Beatrice Fox of Marion, a very simple but beau tiful wedding took place Saturday Nov. 21 in the home of the Rev. R. L. Cooper, pastor of the First Baptist church of Nebo, N. C. Mr. John May, student at West ern North Carolina college, Cul lowhee, spent Thanksgiving holi days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. May. Mr. and Mrs. Willard K. Weeks spent the week-end in Atlanta, Ga. They attended the football game between Georgia-Teach and the University of Georgia. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burnett re turned Sunday from Beaufort, S. C. They spent the Thanksgiving holidays with his son, Tom Bur nett and family. Mr. Eugene Moore entered the Veterans hospital at Swannanoa and is expected to be there for several days. Mr. and Mrs. G. Hubert Lee of Beverly Hills, Asheville, were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Pate on Thanksgiving day. B.F. Goodrich Tubeless Tire can be your LIFE-SAVER when these happen: Drive over spikes —no loss of air Wh n the BFG LIFE-SAVER is punc tured— you drive on as if nothing happened. Patented sealing compound inside seals around the spike, keeps air in. l ater, v. hen spike is removed, it plugs the hole, making a permanent Slippery road —you stop quickly The BFG LIFE-SAVER tread has thousands of tiny, flexible grip-blocks. They act like gripping Angers on slip pery roads. Stop you as much as 30 "o quicker in rain. In tests. BFG LIFE SAVERS oatstopped, outstaxted. out pul led regular tires. Damaging Impact — s-s-slowout instead of a blowout—In regular tire, impact causes a bruise-break v. hach pinches rube. Weakened, the tube finally blows out with a bang! But the BFG LIFE-SAVER has no tube to blow out. When bruise-damaged, its inner liner develops tiny leaks. Vou lose air s-s-slowly. Have time for a safe stop! And BFG protection Ford, Chevrolet Plymouth 6.70-15 plus tax and your tire Mercury, Dodge, Pontiac, Studeboker 7 10-15 plus tax and your tire Old<mobile Buick De Soto, Hudson 7.60-15 plus tax and your tire LIFE-SAVER costs little! !30!.5 s34« $3795 *** each And it costs less than any regular tire and blowout-protecting tube. Fits your present rims. As lew as $1.00 down and your old tire puts one on today. WOODCOCK MOTOR CO. Phone 3771 Black Mountain, N. C. Mr. Clarence Allison and Paul spent Sunday in Old Fort with Mr. Allison’s mother. Dr. and Mrs. Hight C Moore and Mrs. Norma Moore had as their guests for Thanksgiving dinner Mrs. Luther Thomas of Black Mountain and Goldsboro and Rev. W. R. Reeves, Jr., professor of Warren Wilson college. Miss Mary Paschel of Hickory spent the day Sunday at her cot tage on Meeks road and attended services at the Ridgecrest Baptist church Mrs. Hensley Snypes returned home ironi St. Joseph’s hospital Sunday after staying several days for treatment. Mrs. B. T. Fleetwood and sons. Stephen and Stewart, confine d at their home on Black Mountain highway with virus infection. Mrs. E. F. Hardin and Mrs. Miller Jackson are spending sev eral days with Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Holts in Mars Hill. Mrs. Holt daughter of Mrs. Hardin ster of Mrs. Jackson, deacons of the Ridgecrest t church elected their of fo:i the new year and they follows: Chairman, W. L. vice chairman, Paul Tur t wo are the the is the and sis The l’aptis fleers are as Snypes the her the her ner; anu secretary, W. M. Pate. Miss Beatrice Bolton of the Willis apartments is spending Thanksgiving holidays with mother in Knoxville, Tenn. Margaret Greenlee spent '! hank ■■ 0 \\ ith father, Mr. J. II. Greenlee. Mar garet is a student at the A. & T. college in Greensboro. Dr. Hight C Moore preached the morning service at the Kerlee Hights Baptist church and our pastor. Rev. Cecil M. Perry the night service. Mr. and Mrs. Hall Neil Smith and son, Mack, of Dodson spent several days with Miss Mary Speight. Mrs. Smith is a niece of Miss Speight. Mr. and Mrs Irvin Willie r*f rvin Willie Hickory spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. i Willis. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. John son and son of Arlington, Va., spent several days over the holiday with his parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Johnson on Royal Gorge road. Mrs. Dorothy Jones and little daughter of Greensboro spent the Thanksgiving holidays with her father, Mr. J. H. Greenlee. Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Biers and Mrs. Sarah Brady of Greenwood, S. spent the Thanksgiving hol idays at their cottage. Miss Cordelia Johnson, teacher at Canton, spent the Thanksgiv ing holidays with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Johnson. AS ord has been received at Ridgecrest that Mrs. C. M. Craig, summer resident of Ridgecrest, underwent a major operation at the Presbyterian hospital in Char lotte and is spending several weeks in the hospital. Miss Naomi Braswell and her brother and his wife spent the day 1' riJay in Ridgecrest visiting friends and making a final check on her cottage for the cold sea son we are having. Mr. and Mrs, Landon Kite, Mr. and Mrs. Glendale Poltz and children, Mickey and Susie, of Shenandoah, Va., arrived Thurs day to spend several days with Mrs. kite's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mason and other relatives in the communitv. Mrs. Kite’s daughter, Mrs. Poltz, and her fam ily are going to Georgia and Flor ida to visit Mr. Poltz’s family this week. Mr. and Mrs. Kite are spending the week here. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Pearson B£ SORE TO USE the RETURN envelope which va sends YOU FOR LACH 61 INSURANCE PREMIUM.THE INFORMATION PRINTED ON IT HELPS VA TO KEEP YOUR ACCOUNT STRAIGHT. A r«r full *»•<»«■ m—r— VFTKRAHS A PMIN[ATIATWN *a~ Veterans attending school or col lege under the Korean GI Bill were reminded by the Veterans Admin istration that the amount of money they may earn outside of school hours has no effect whatsoever on the GI allowances paid them by the Government. The monthly allowances will re main the same, regardless of out side earnings, VA said. In fact, these earning need not even be reported to the VA. The only “ceiling" under the Korean GI Bill applies to veterans taking on-the-job nr apprentice training. But even this “ceiling” of $.‘110 a month imposes no limit whatsoever upon how much a vet eran may earn. Instead it works this way: when the veteran’s earnings as a trainee, plus his monthly GI allowance, ex ceed $310 a month, VA scales down and daughter Carol of Reidsville, visited Mrs. Pearson’s father, Eu gene Moore, who is a patient at a Swannanoa hospital, and Mrs. | Moore and family here this week end. Mrs. Cordia King, Brevard, spent several days during Thanks giving with her brother and sis ter-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. Charles Jollay. Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Meeks re turned last week from a two weeks visit with friends in Columbia and Florence, S. C. Mrs. S. B. Moore continues crit ically ill in Memorial hospital, Roanoke, Va. The covered dish supper at the Ridgecrest Baptist cnurch last Wednesday night was a very de lightful occasion. The attendance was good, fellowship and fun ex cellent. food delicious, (Mrs. Thom as and W. M. Pate will agree to that—or either Hensley Snypes j was fooling). After all had fin ished, table cleared, dishes washed, j those who could stay gathered in the church auditorium with our pastor, Mr. Perry, leading to give thanks to our Heavenly Father for the many blessings He has given us in the past year. ADD R1DGKCREST lived well, loved much, gained re spect of men, never lacked appre ciation, or failed to express it, j who has looked for the best in .ithers and (riven the best he has. rhis is the manager of the Ridge Test Baptist Assembly, Mr. W;l ard K. Weeks, for twice each ! week prior to the Billy Graham reviva1 as the men would gather "or lunch he met with them for a thirty minute devotion, to read from God's word and lead in pray er as others would follow, need less to say as the result these meetings have helped each one to feel his task more keenly and re sponsibility of trying to do his best work, as some have felt they have Seen brought more closely to the Master these meetings will be held once oa-h week. Mrs. Clyde Pickens. (Thursday, Nov. 26) The Buckeye Baptist church has returned to their usual schedule upon the close of the Billy Graham Crusade. On Wednesday evening they will meet at the regular pray er meeting hour and everyone is invited to attend this ThanksgN - ing service. Mrs. Ruth McClure and children, l^arry and Janet, have moved from Buckeye to Asheville. Everyone misses them very much but wishes them well in their new home. Jim Pruitt is home on leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harland Pruitt, from the Navy. Mrs. Homer Uehart had her fam- , ily, the Hodges, as Sunday dinner I guests on Nov. 22. The Hall family gave a birthday dinner honoring their father on his 80th birthday on Sunday, Nov. 22, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C. Hall. Mr. Hall is quite spry for his age and danced a jig for his | children and grandchildren to prove 1 it. Those present were Mr. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dalton, Hel en, Francis. Leon, and Joyce; Mr. and Mrs. Millard Hall, Mrs. Selma j Hall, Carl, Charles, Daniel and Betty, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hall and Annette, Mr. and Mrs. Jim McFee, Wilda Jimmie, and David, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest King, Hubert, Evelyn, Dor is, Reva, Clyde, William, Wayne, Eva Mae and Hurldy, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ray, Eugene, Tom, Howard, Margaret, Lorane, Dennis and Lin da, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hall, Cur- ! tis, Jr, Ted, Elizabeth and David, Douglas Hall, Jimmy Gibbs, and Junior Gowan. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Black and daughter Patsy, from Burnsville, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pangle over the week-end. Mrs. Margaret Hensley has re turned home from the' hospital with her new son, Ronald Hugh. SA VE!!! Black Mountain Building & Loan Association CURRENT INTEREST RATE 3% Full Paid Stock or Optional Shares COME IN AND TALK WITH US. t}1(, , wince accordingly, to m->o t}1(. total within the Sitm limit. Th(, >3l0-a-month ceiling applic to a!! >n-the-job trainc.regard ]cf< ,.f the rate of til allowance thev receiving. The beginning allowance rate for a veteran with no dependents is $70 a month; v. one dependent, it. is $85, and with more than one dependent, it i* 1105. Under the law, the rate is reduei at four-month intervals, as tra ing progresses and »< the r earning ability increases, schr-'' '■'ill-time are $110, with no with lependents; $lhr>, wrdenl ,4nd $160 with one de uirc than >ne dependent. n I am a KTw.n veteran. V<».lid it he possible for me to -n •oil as an apprentice m a / 'reign ountry under the Korean (.1 Bill • want to learn the watchmaking rade in Switzerland. \ So. Training in foreign ,,untries, under th< Korean Cil till, is limited only to ' A-ap ,roved courses in accredited col proniou* training > g Ma ing undei plan! thi State for A—W<> proval i? con rhi* nr (irr the h may enrc Shoe Carolina ,„'-nio the United States, v i taiv on-the-job trn.n r th* Korean (>I Hill in a »t approved by my World War 1! veterans? War II (il Bill ap n : eno .gh. The training i i,,- State-approved un . rean •.! Kill, before you ,11, under the law. i production in North is on the upswing. Mr. Hi j louncu tbp • '•otr. 20 n <• Mr. and Mr< 'wannan >r born \ lospital. Horn to M, \ai** of Su., 29. in S’ . \\ T R Y THE ' in --Ph’ , 0*in au?hp :lassip!E| Mew, Mere fer Yber mi Veer A AP! Savings Eve •*-. 2*-' BLACKBERRIES • • y Packers • Label iff 19-Oz I Con £ZL *1 PINEAPPLE * oc No 2V'2 A&LF.r 3ooz. Con 4P ■ PRESERVES Ann Page 2-Lb. St row berry >or Ann p*|« Amrt«< rUwM Sparkle Puddings - 3 20c Abb PMH Fu«f Tomato Soup - - - - cfresh & rusts & Vegetal>/< PS Cbb Jane Parker Eariched Dinner Rolls - - - 2 »•* 23c Jane Parker Date Filled Coffee Cake - - - - £Y 29c Jane Parker Enriched White Bread - - - - 16-0z. Plortdo Zipper Ski Tangerines Pound 1 A Loaf Jane Parker Spanish Bar Cake Tender Greati Ea. Cake Clapp's Clapp s iBaby ofoocls Strained Foods 3 £ 29c Clapp's Chopped Junior Foods - - 14c For - < y 29c Green Beans - - - - Juicy Florid* Grapefruit - - - - 4 Faoey Nutmeats Pecan Halves - - - - Red Bliss Sweet Bose Potatoes 5c Pears, 2 » % 6 Oz ) Pi. ■ fu Swift's All Meat PREMIUM Franks 45c -• ‘‘Super-Right" Fre»k Fryers - 45c Whole or Cut Up YES, A&P HAS THE MEAT BUYS! “Super Right” Fresh Loin End PORK ROAST - - - - 45c “Super-Right” Fresh Center Cut PORK CHOPS - - - - 55c “Super-Right” Heavy Western Bee*—Chuck Blade POT ROAST - - - 49c “Super-Right” Lean Boneless STEW BEEF-- 65c Morrell’s Pride No. 10 Fancy SLICED BACON - - , 63c “Super-Right” Freshly GROUND BEEF - - - 39* "Super-Right" Boned and Rolled RIB ROAST- 79c Peter Pan Peanut Butter 1202 Glass Ulll Nabisco Premium Crackers 1-Lb Pkg. 25c Fozz Brand Guava Jelly U!Oz 01. Jar £, | (j • Heinz 57 Sauce - 29c Palmolive Soap - 3 & 12c Palmolive Soap - - - ^ 10c - 3 x. 22c Soap Cashmere Bouquet Soap (Jashmere Bouquet Bath Bar 10c Octagon Toilet Soap __- 4 ■“ 19c Vel Powders . % 29c Spry Breeze Cheez -Its 1-Lb. Tin Lge. Pkg. 31c •a 85c 30c £ SOc Sunshine 8-Or. Pkg 19c Margaret Holmes Field Peas n?,H7c Margaret Holmes Cut Squash 17c Chicken of the Sea Tuna Fish While 7-Oz OQj* Meat Can WVW Chicken of the Sea Tuna Fish Bite Siie Cm 33C Del Monte All Green Asparagus - ^7c a Defruit 29c A&P Fancy Grapefruit Sections 2 Cans 4-Ox Bot. 26 Oz PIUS* Popcorn Seasoning Planters — Royal — Assorted Gelatins 3 Free Running Salt Morton’s 2 Heinz Cream of Chicken Soup - Ann Page Prepared Spaghetti Ann Page Salad Dressing Sultana Small Stuffed Olives — _ rfniMim* roce ,,TAI 1 Super Mar^ 14c 22c 21c 17c 10V4-O1 Can Qi. Jar 49c Thru Saturday, pecembcr Super Suds tkg 27c pGkg 65c Lux Flakes Lge I'kg 27c , _2
The Black Mountain News (Black Mountain, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1953, edition 1
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