Happy Birthdays Nov. 1 Marked 177 Years Of Successful , "A mere trifle consoles us, for mere trifle distresses us." Pascal Iff By UVA MIRACLE Two of Black Mountain’s most beloved citizens share the same birthday November 1 and for the past 15 years have celebrated them together. They are Mrs. Mtu'shnll Mott and Mr. M.E. Head. They were honored at a join, dinner on Sunday Oc ober 111 ai ilie Monte Vista Hotel. Mama Moll’s 87th and Daddy Head’s 90th. Present for the occasion wps Mrs. Head, the Head’s two daughters, Hose Marian Andrews of I.aconia, N.H. and Frances Head Gale ol Gloucester, Mass, nephew Uoyd Head of Charlotte and neice I-auretta and sister-in law Mrs. Pear! Head ol Beverly Hills. Mrs. Mott’s daughter Sanchez Mot Williamson was present. Her son Marshall was not able to be present due to illness. I.ula Abigail Cole Mott, daughter of John and Mary Elizabeth Cole was born Nov, 1, 1889 in Prairie Grove, Arkansas., the 11th of 12 XYZ Club News Easier Seal Society Shows Film Miss Sheila I-ambert an Associate Director of the Society showed club members an appealing film on the camp program of .he Society and discussed some of its other activities. The talk was proabably something of a revelation to many of the listeners who tend to receive the literature and talks about the many similar programs rather casually. Miss Lambert’s film said it all about the beautiful but poignantly handicapped children. She t hen referred briefly to the Societies adult services mentioning ’ he availability of financial aid, transportation, braces, artificial limbs, wheel chairs and hospital beds. The Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults is the oldest and largest of national health organizations. The Blue Hidge Easter Seal Society located in Asheville is the regional chapter; its address is 1000-C Haywood Road. Hie local Society co-operates closely with all area agencies and hospitals and 89 per cent of the contributions made to the Society is spent locally. i College Student A Lynne Blankenship of Black Mountain takes time out for a little guitar playing at a recent Berea College Student Association retreat at Feltner4-H camp in London, Ky. The retreat was held to get interested students organized to help set student govern ment goals for the school year. Lynne, a junior, is a member of the Berea College Country Dancers, an active member of the pre ministerial students' association and works as a teaching associate in Issues and Values, a required course for freshmen. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Blankenship, Jr. of Black Mountain. AARP Meeting November 12 The Swannanoa Chapter of the Americcan Association of Retired Persons will next meet at the Black Mountain Library Education Room on Friday, Nove mber 12, beginning at 10:00 a.m. Members and visitors are invited to gather at 9:30 for refreshments and fellowship, Mrs. Carl Persson in charge. The most interesting program will center around beautiful slide pictures of our famous Biltmore House and Gardens. Miss Susanne Brendel has done much curatorial work and historical research on Biltmore and will present the program. She earned her Master’s Degree in such work from Columbia University in New York. The business meeting will include the election of officers for 1977. The Nominating Committee report was read at the October meeting. Other officer nominees may be made from the floor if desired. The new officers will be duly installed during the annual Christmas luncheon on Friday, December 10, at the Monte Vista Hotel. Tickets will be available at the November 12 meeting. CRAFTY IDEAS An enjoyable, inexpensive way to turn your comfort able, cotton clothes, in to smashing one-of-a-kind creations can be as easy as handling a ball point pen. Hand paint in 28 fashion colors using iron-on transfers or your own imagination. . You can get materials and in i structions in a Vogart Crafts Kit, available at many depart ment stores. ♦ Beautiful , Lite ror Ihese Tw MRS. MARSHALL MOTT children. When she was about 12 the family moved to Stilwater, Okla. During her late teens she was playing organ in church and teaching piano while attending the University there she met Marshall Lockhart Mott, Jr., also a student, and they were married in 1909 at Amarillo, Texas. She had four children, two of whem are now living, a son, Marshall I,. Mott III, now a retired lA. Col. (USA) lives in Columbus, Ga. with his wife, Frances. They have one son, Jackson Taylor Mott, living in Atlanta, Ga., daughter, Sanchez Mott Williamson. At time of the marriage of Marshall L Mott and Lula Cole, he was operating a business school, later he became salesman which brought the family back east. Following his service in WWI he attended Wake Forest University and was licensed to practice law in N.C. and practiced in Winston-Salem. The Motts retired to Black Mountain about 25 years ago. “Mamma Mott”, as she is lovingly called by all her girls? had taught the Dorcas Culinary Arts Show Set For Nov. 5-6 Reproduction of a kitchen of the type used by early settlers in the mountains will be part of a heritage booth at the first Western North Carolina Food and Culinary Arts Show Friday and Saturday at the Asheville Civic Center. County Agricultural Ex tension Service Agents and Extension Homemakers leaders in Mitchell, Avery and Yancey counties have joined in preparation of the heritage booth where oldtime methods of perserving food will be displayed. Items to be exhibited in the pioneer kitchen include a 1919 pressure canner, fireplace, step stove, crock of brined vegetables, foods dried on strings and on hanging dryer above the stove, plus many examples of foods as preserved by other methods used by early settlers. A home dryer for vegetables, fruits and herbs, built by the Rev. James Bradley of Spruce Pine will be on display. The frame for the kitchen replica was designed and made by the Mayland Technical Institute’s light construction department. The show is being sponsored jointly . by Asheville Buncombe Technical in stitute, the Asheville Area Lnamner oi commerce, me Asheville Tourist Association and the North Carolina Agriculture Extension Ser vice. The show will feature displays and live demon strations^ in many categories. There will be open competitions for restaurant, hotel and motel cooks, institutional cooks, student cooks and retail bakers. Judging will be conducted by professional chefs and prizes and cer tificates will be awarded. The following 15 Western North Carolina counties have been asked to present the following exhibits for the show; Macon, yeast breads; Mitchell, drying; Cherokee Indian Reservation and Jackson, herbs; Henderson, apples; Madison, food The bagpipe is not originally Scottish, but Persian. storage; Transylvania, nutrition; Haywood, tomatoes; Avery and Yancey, heritage booth; Clay, Graham and Cherokee, potatoes; Buncombe, dairying, and Swain, pumpkins and squash. There will also be com petition in canned goods, including fruits, vegetables, pickles, jams and jellies. The decorative aspect of the show will involve six categories: sugar with cocoa painting, marzipan, patillage, artistic creations with breads, cake decorating, decorating with meat, fish and fowl, tallow and butter sculptures and table settings. All creations must be made with edible foods. M.E. HEAD Woman’s School Class of the First Baptist Church for the past 25 years until her retirement this year. She was honored by the past members of her classes with a huge bouquet of red roses, placed iit the church sanctuary last Sunday in her honor. Middleton E. Head was the Grand Old Man of Operation Youth. He served Operation Youth from its beginning, including helping in its for mation, as chairman of the board, consultant and fund raising chairman, for 12 years until he retired in 1971. He retired as administrator of the Montgomery, Ala. Veteran’s Hospital 17 years ago. He came to Oteen in 1953 as a patient and he and Mrs. Head established a home in Black Mountain early in 1954. In 1955 he and a group of other interested men organized the local Kiwanis Club. This group became interested in reforming and rechartering Scout Troop 25. This was done. In 1957 a wave of vandalism broke out in Black Mountain. Awnings were cut and many other things were destroyed. At this time, Carl Bowness, Ed Knight, the Rev. Ken Donald Mothers NO AGE LIMIT ★ 97* Per Person 1 ""11x14 97* Friday & Saturday Nov. 5th & 6th UNITED 5 AND 10 STORE THE NEW STORE IN Bl L0 PLAZA BLACK MOUNTAIN, N.C. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. S & J Clothing STATE STREET SWEATERS *5 95 Some 3 piece $Q95 from ^ Aiv o and Mr . Head were con sidering a building for the Scout Troop. They decided they should not limit its use to Scouts but should include all youth in Black Mountain. They also felt if the young people were given something worthwhile to do it would be a deterrent to delinquency. Thus Operation Youth was bom. A local architect drew up plans for the building, free of charge. Tom Brown brought his grader and crew and scraped and filled the site donated by the town. It was first started as a year round program but the group soon realized they could not finance so large an un dertaking. So they con centrated on a summer program. Mr. Head is still vitally interested in the community’s youth and is still working for them. r Next week Mr. and Mrs. Head will be visiting son Holman Head and family in Montgomery, Ala. where they will be joined by their other son and his wife Mr. and Mrs. Middleton E. Head, Jr. of Westerville, Ohio. In addition to the two daughters, two sons and their husbands and wives, Mr. and Mrs. Head have fourteen grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Mrs. Mott and Mr. and Mrs. Head are very active mem bers in the First Baptist Church. I read once somewhere - “The beauty and goodness of a person, if it is there, is always revealed in their old age.” It is all personified in these two Iteautiful, lovely, people who 'adiate true goodness wherever they go. Happy, Happy Birthday Dear Ones Sfou Are So Loved. .. IBounkin (Sar^nCjr ■V* 121 Broadway “ Broadway Black Mountain 669-6691 Fertlize Time SPECIAL °p Thurs.f Fri., Sat. *2 95 $*£65 10-10-10 Regular $3.25 5-1010 Regular $2.90 LAWN FOOD Small Bag Regular $7.49 Large Bag $ ) 6)50 Regular $14.95 $fi50 Blooming flowers Mams, Gloxinia Cyclamen, African Violets, Rega Begonia check for our daily special* DON’T WAIT TIL THE SNOW FLIES! Get set for winter now! • Fireplace Equipment 4 Electric Heat Tapes • Electric Heaters • Weather Stripping • Stove Pipe • Sheet Metal Wood Heaters • Cast Iron Coal Stoves • Per fection Oil Heaters Aladdin Kerosene Heaters TOWN HARDWARE 669-7723 103 West State Street Black Mountain % Christian Science Lecture at Christian Science Society 500 Montreat Road Black Mountain, N.C. entitled Let There Be Light by Eward C. Williams, C.S.B. a member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship TUESDAY NOVEMBER 9 , at 8 p.m. The lecture is arranged by Christian Science Society, Black Mountain Admission is free. All are welcome. Get Ready For Winter SPECIAL Complete Cycle - Flow and 2 gallons of Anti-Freeze Completely Cleans Engine, Raditor, Heater Hose. Call For Appointment 669-9854 SAVES BURGESS 66 Service Center East State Street 669-9854