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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 5

Location:
Asheville, North Carolina
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Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-TIMES. ASHEVILLE. N. A 5 Sunday, January 17, 1954 Van Landingham, Miller Lead In St. Louis Has Bridge Tourney Presbyterian Meet To Hear Air Raid Test PINEHURST, N.C., Jan.

16 '(- ST. LOUIS. Jan. 16 Wi St. Loula today became the first Midwesi city to hold a public participation Talbot Speak Going Into the finals of the annual Mid Southern Duplicate Bridge Tournament, in which some 300 are engaged here, Ralph Van Landingham of Charlotte and Haywood Miller of Salisbury, led In points.

air raid warning test. Pedestrians, following advance Instructions from civil defense of ficials, sought shelter In large HAZELWOOD, Jan. 18. The Rev. George Talbot, pastor ol the Swannanoa Presbyterian The top 32 or more of the field buildings.

Motorists pulled to the moved to i church and retiring moderator. curb. Office workers shelter areas. For roughlv 15 minutes St. Louis played a Howell system final round to determine winners.

The rest of the entries met In a one-session Mitchell system event lor the Carolina trophies. became a dead city. The test began at 10:43 am when the city's 127 sirens to wall. At 10:55 a m. the all-clear Greensboro and Charlotte play will preach the opening sermon at the mid-winter meeting of Ashevllle Presbytery which will be held In the Haselwood Presb terian Church Tuesday at 10 a.

m. Ministers from 10 Western North Carolina counties and representative laymen from each of 31 churches are entitled to attend as members of the Presbytery, a prt of the Presbvterlan Church. U. 8., and representing a membership ol signal began at two-minute Inter vals. Federal, state and city officials observed the test, with spotter.

telephoning participation results to the civil defense control center In Forest Park, on the west side than 7,500 In this area, me cuy. The Rev. Archie C. Graham, ers dominated the leaders In the second round. These leaders were, In addition to Van Landingham and Miller, Gertrude Smith and (Tan Story, Ashevllle; J.

G. Crowley and J. P. Earl, Spartanburg, Mrs Prank Fountain, Knoxville- and Mrs. J.

M. Wells, Winston-Salem; Earl Jaffre and H. Sherman, Charlotte; P. M. King Jr and R.

0 Ransom. Charlotte; Mr. and Mrs. Jack White, Mrs. E.

G. Singlo-terry, and Mrs. D. A. Wolff, Mrs Jessica White and Mrs.

P. T. Roberts, all of Greensboro; Mrs. F. H.

Gray and Mrs. Nesblt Cougtirnan, Mr. and Mrs. P. A.

Warner, High pastor of the host church, and the Rev. A. C. Holt. D.

dean ot students of Montreat C'ege. will TIIWB-Tlam rkU Ban MOUNTAIN BOYS, ome 50 of them, have enlisted in the U. S. Marine Corps' Second Mountaineer Platoon and will report to the training base at Parris Island, S. C.

Tuesday morning. The first Mountaineer Platoon completed boot camp several months ago, making one of the highest scores ever recorded at the Marine boot camp. Typical of the young men who have enlisted with the Leathernecks are Jack Bur-rell, left, comparing an authentic "Kentucky rifle," traditional weapon of the mountain man, with the service .03 held by Platoon Leader Lawrence Moore. Burrell is from Haywood County; Moore is an Asheviile boy. Point; Mrs.

Irwin Jensen, Reids-vllle; and Mrs. Margaret Galloway, Greensboro. A TWO-CAR TRAFFIC ACCIDENT on Patton Ave. at the intersection of Druid Dr. about 6 p.

m. yesterday caused injury to three persons and the arrest of the driver of one of the cars. The 1953 Oldsmobile sedan, above, occupied by Mr. and Mrs. John Waller of 59 Covington collided with a 1947 Cadillac police said was being driven south on Druid Dr.

by E. F. Pierce. 57. of 70 Lucerne Ave.

Waller suffered a cut on the back of the head and a sprained shoulder. Mrs. Waller received a laceration on the lower lip and left knee, and Pierce received an abrasion the left side. Pierce was arrested by City Police and booked on a charge of reckless driving President Won't Attend Seminar On Neic Budget WASHINGTON. Jan.

1C UP President Eisenhower, unlike hU Democratic predecessors, will take no part in the advance seminar for the cress on his budget message. White House press secretary James C. Hagert) agreed today that this would be breaking precedent but added smilingly "there are other breakings of precedent In the budget we are cutting The Presjdrrit has promised a spending budget for next year reduced, more than 1W bUltor. dol lars irom that for the current year. Budget Director Joseph M.

Dodge and members of his staff will conduct the confidential budget seminar next Wednesday, a day before the message goes to Tribute Paid Hoover. First Southern President Of Economic Association preside at the Communion service which follows the opening sermon. Featured on the day's schedule will be the recognition of the 15th anniversary of the founding of the Mountain Orphanage. Commissioners, to the 1054 General Assembly of the denomination, to meet at Montreat In May. will be elected.

Two ministers and two laymen, and their alternates nil be namea The annual reports of congregations will be made at this meeting, as the church vear of the denomination closed Dec. SI. Incomplete rrports in the hsnds of the Rev. R. E.

McClure. execu-ttve secretary. tadtoAe totl membership of approximately 7-700. This represents an increase of four and one half per cent during the past nine months. The Rev.

M. R. Williamson. Waynesville. stated clerk of the body will present the official re there is any good he has Of Meet Set Tomorrow i Sister Asked To Pull Trigger; Brother Is Killed lAsheville People Going To Trial iln Michigan been lair, tolerant, never -ieWy never domineering.

Toward the less gifted he Is never arrogant: In Monranton IMEiW lUKrv, Jan. 10 in iiyi and without ever being naive, he has the happy of loosing (EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Calvin B. Hoover, (ml iouthern president of the American Economic Association, received tilth prli at the froup'a annual meeting in Wifrhlncton two eelti ago. The ipeaker vaa Dr.

Earl J. Hamilton, an outstanding economic hlitorian who wi a member of the economic faculty at Duke from 1927-44 atirj president of the Economic Hintory 1850-52. Dr. Hamilton Is now professor of economics at the University of Chicago and editor of The Journal of Political Economy. Br DR.

EARL J. HAMILTON' Last year the Association set AssL-tant Police Chief A. R. Sluder and Capt. Harold Brownlee of the Ashaville Police department and attorneys Robert Swain and Sanford Brown will leave today by and shoot me It won't a 9-year-old girl said her 6-year-old I MORGANTON.

Jan. 16 New of-brother told her today. She pulled 'icers and directors of the Morgan-th trlirirer and killed him. ton Chamber ot Commerce will be tor wnat is good in every person Idea, and cause. Like the rare reviewer who has Congress- Stefan and Wanda Wrobel found 'Installed here Mondaj night at the train for Pontlac, to attend admitted throughout his review In previous years Presidents port of the churches for lorward- that a book Is good.

In closing I war Truman rd Roosevelt and their jtng to the General Assembly. niivpnip nprmnn rifle while uie wmi iiwsaay 01 ran. lucv u-ar- 10 out-trette. formerly 'of Ashevilleon a 'going officers must establish my objectivity and ismying cnarge. secretaries oi me treasury navr also attended these "background ln i Postal Revenue Gain iney naa Deen ept msiae Ku SnMker for bannuet to be keep my self respect by pointing out what Is bsd by t.urnln the a new precedent by having, in the late Harold A.

Inn is, our first Canadian president. ThLs year we Sluder and Brownlee have been ef rouirh weather. helf. in th. Community House at summoned ai character witnesses light on Hoover's Schattenseite -A 7-.

Area Cleared have. In Calvin Bryce Hoover, our first president from the Th worst thin 1 know ahout him is that he began his profession? for Mrs. Cartrette and Swain and Brown have been retained as defease attorneys In the case, along "ii-" aiwji "rj.i in Mie Laec, atuug FRANKLIN, Jan. 16 Receipts at I the Franklin Post Office during 1953 amounted to 132.633 68, an in. crease of S2.621.85 over 1952, Postmaster Zeb Meadows fcas reported.

As In the case of Innis, Hoover's career with great promise as anit, economic historian and turned jt llttWIUIl i with L. Harvey Lodge, a Michigan I teaching, research, and university attorney. administration have been confined almost exclusively to a single Institution, his service as a consul Army Camp Stockholders To Meet The father, Chester Wrobel, a f7 p. wm be the Rev. w.

Ken-contractor, said he had taken pre-. neLh Goodson of Winston-Salem, cautions against such a tragedy Uuperintendent of the Winston-He had removed the bolt and hid-jgaiem District of the Methodist den the rifle In the attic CartrldRes, church. were kept In a kitchen cupboard h. Preston Pitts, hotel man and The little girl told her parents -reming chamber president, will after the accident that her brother 'serve as toastmastcr. found the gun about two months Invocation will be given by the ago.

She did not know how he i Rev. John McCready, First Meth-had replaced the bolt. Today, she.odist Church pastor, said, he took two cartridges when I Organ music will be played by they went upstairs. th Hev- Eugene West, rector ol other fields. His doctoral disser tatlon was on "Property and Contract In Genoa In the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century." To eive thif up, he surely must have lacked the capacity to see how much fun ft Mrs.

Cartrette. a former resident of Hollywood Street here, is to be tried on a charge of shooting her husband, Scarbore Cartrette, in their Michigan home. tant and economic adviser has been at the national level; and his Intellectual interests and hii recog Dr. C. B.

HOOVER nition as a scholar have been in- FREDERICTON. B. Jan. 16; FRANKLIN. Jan.

16 The Macon 'AI Most of the 2.000 former resl- i County Building and Loan Associa-dents of a 436-square-mile area tlon will hold its annual stockhold-near here were gone today, makini ers meeting In the Bank of Frank-It available for Canada's larzes' lin Building Thursday at 7 p. army cai.ip. The government oaid according to Henry W. Cabe, presl-10 million dollars for the property. 'dent.

could be. Since there is nothing 2 Henderson Men temational in scope. ork. As a university administra-1 wrong with the field Hoover for- After taking his doctorate at the tor and as a campus politician in sook, there mjst be something University of Wisconsin and teach-'the good serve of the term, if wrong with him. Trial On little boy inserted a new cartridge.

ation here, will become the chain- Entering Charses Ine two years at the University of Minnesota. Hoover became assistant professor of economics a. Duke University in 1925. In 1927, whn only 30 years old, he was promoted to a full professorship. In 1936 he The bullet struck him in the new 'presjdent.

Other new officers taking their HENDERSONVILLE. Ju. 16 neck, just below the Jaw. He was dead when a doctor arrived. Police held the death accidental.

The enenlf 's department announced became chairman of the economics department, and in 1938 he was appointed dean of the graduate posts Monday night will be W. R. Mullis and J. O. Barbour as vice presidents; P.

W. Watlington, treasurer: Oliver T. Webb, national councilor; and Mrs. Genie Bonier, executive secretary. Watlington and Mrs.

Bohler were reelected. New members of the board ol school, a post he held for a decade. President William P. Few today that two Henderson men. Sonny Case and Charles Fisher, both about 28, were being held In the county jail In detault of bond on charges of entering the home of Mrs.

John King at East Flat Rock. Springtime Glamour In Three Quarter Length Coats by relied heavily upon Hoover In his efforts to build a great graduate school; and as a humble partici Deputy Sheriff Seldon Clark said the home was entered about i p. directors taking of lice Monday pant In this endeavor. I did not see bow anyone could have been yesterday and a ham and shoulder more effective than Hoover was. Girl Scout Troop To Aid March Of Dimes CHIMNEY ROCK.

Jan. 16 The Girl Scout troop members of Hickory Nut Gorge have pledged them-selvei to assist with the March of Dimes here. Their leader, Mrs. Marcus Book, seeks the co-operation of all residents in the Gorge area in the Furthermore, bard aa this may be of meat taken. Tne two men were arrested later In the vicinity of the East Flat Rock School.

Case waa charged with breaking night at the banquet are Burand McOinnls. Nathan J. Cooper. H. L.

Riddle Sr, W. Stanley Moore. C. P. Reinhardt, and Allen, the new president.

Heading the banquet arrange for any of us to believe. Hoover was a very nice fellow even while he was a dean I Last autumn he and entering and carrying con cealed weapon and his bond waa set was named one of the first distin- ments committee Is Oliver T. Webb at $400. Fisher was charged witn hmium ub breaking and entering and bond wasl Deeply concerned over the econ with a reception committee com-DCoed of Mis Nan Jeter. MlfS Ocle ROTHMOOR set at 300.

omic proDtems, particularly me low real Incomes, In the South. drive. IPruett, the Rev. and Mrs. B.

Mrs. Betty Justice of Lurehaven, Bickley. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ed-drive chairman has placed posters wards.

Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Harrell, Hoover was a leadln figure In i organizing the Committee of the and dime banks in many locations.

South, and since 1947 he has served Mr. and Mrs. Phil Pitts. Mr. and Mrs.

C. P. Russell, Mr. and Mrs. T.

M. Thorpe. The Girl Scouts will visit all public meetings seeking donations. Man Is Booked By Police On Liquor Charge as director ol research. In this capacity he has selected an ln i presslve array ot talent ar.d I guided It into fundamental areas of JiL.

research. With Dr. B. U. Raton- Kermit Hill.

39. of 118 Eagle ford of Duke as co-author, he has a.s arrested by City Police at 12:30: written the comprehensive and ONLY m. yesterday and booked on apeneuatlne monograph, the "Eco-charge of unlawful possession otlnomlc Resources and Economic whisky, keeping liquor for sale and Policies of the South." carrying, transporting and deliver- Although Hoover's record of dis- Ing. He was released under a bond public service is too cf S200. long to relate, a few high lights can be given.

While serving as economic adviser to the Depart Macon Pastors Name Hatcliett As 1 'resident FRANKLIN. Jan. 16 The Rev. BryanHatche'tt, pastor of the Franklin Presb terian Church, has aeen elected president of the Macon County Ministerial Association. He succeeds the Rev.

W. L. Sor-rells. Baptist minister who recently left the Macon County charge to become pastor of the Boiling Springs Baptist Church. Other new officers Include the Rev.

M. W. Chapman, pastor of the Franklin Baptist Church, vice president: the Rev. Albert F. Gordon, pastor of the Franklin Methodist circuit, secretary treasurer: and the Rev.

C. E. Murray, pastor of the Franklin Methodist Church, nrogrnm leader. ment of Agriculture in 1933-34 he William Thompson. 41.

of 3'i Walnut was arrested at 4:15 p. m. on Walnut St. and booked on a charge of larceny and receiving. Furman Carver, 17, of Enka, was played an influential role in shap ing and setting up the Agricultural Adjustment Administration.

From arrested yesterday on West Hay wood St. by City Police and booked "oruary to tsepiemoer ne mna vuusuinci buuiiACi ui lire mi nu ii6 company ASHEVILLE IK on a charge of forceful trespass. He wa released under bond of $200 Charles Edward Carver. 19. of Enka.

was arresed at 5:45 p. m. yesterday and booked on a charge AAA. and during the latter part ol that year, as executive secretary of the President's Drought Relief Committee, he surveyed the Dust Bowl and helped plan relief add reconstruction. In 1941-44 he was a One of th outstanding features of this new coat is its clever cardigan neckline flowing into softly rounded shoulders.

Smart tapered sleeves and vertical welted pockets add to the distinctive Rothmoor styling. Being shown in imported Cobble-tone tweed. Sizes 6-20. of aiding and abetting In forceful trespass. He was released under bond of $100 for appearance In Police Court tomorrow.

key fleure in the Research and Analysis Division of OSS, and the following year he was Chief of Economic Intelligence and Eco Trammel To Attend nomic Advisor to the U. S. Group ai on me woniroi council ior uer- Hoard Meet many. As a member of the Presi- BURNSVTLLE, Jan. 18 The dent's Committee on Foreign Aid.

Rev. Charles B. Trammel will go I in 1947, he helped formulate Jie to Raleigh Monday to attend a 'Marshall Plan; he served as ad-meeting, of the General Bora Oiviser to ECA. Finally. If I may the State Convention Baptist, of -reverse the chronological order, in V7 SIX WAYS TO BUY which he In a member, He will also attend a meeting of the trustees ot the Allied Church League In Winston-Salem Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. Trammel also plan Charge Lay Away Cash Budget to visit relatives in Greensboro. WISC Meetings TOMORROW the First World War he fought as a private in the Infantry and field artillery in the battles of Saint Mihiel and the Meuse-Argonne. Drawing upon extraordinary knowledge of economic theory, economic Institutions, politics, history, and human nature In every stratum of society, and utilizing empirical date collected during some three years of residence In Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany, Hoover has made his greatest contribution to knowledge through his books on "The Economic Life of Soviet Russia," "Germany Enters the Deferment or EFIRD'S Will Tailor a Plan to Suit You Waynesvllle-Hazelwood Merchants Association will elect new officers.

Morganton Chamber of Commerce to hold banquet meet. One-week civil term of Yancey County Superior Court opens in Third Reich," and "Dictators and Burnsvllle. Macon County's Young Man of the Year will receive Distinguished Service Award key at banquet sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. WnfernatiQuat 3:30 p. m.

Burke County Build UY IV IHI PIECE. PLACE SETTING. THE SET 50c Per Week Per Place Setting As Little as $29.75 per Setting; ing and Loan Association members to meet, Morganton. Unexploded Shells Make Island Deadlv Democracies. Much more than an other scholar I know who has devoted sustained thought to Communism, National Socialism or Fascism, he has maintained objectivity as a scholar and has sought In these rival systems means of Improving our own.

Yet I do not know anyone, whether scholar or not, who harbors a more intense hatred of every form of authoritarian regime. Everyone who knows Hoover well must admire him more as a human being than as a scholar, administrator, or public servant. He la a liberal with whom it Is perfectly safe to disagree. He is a believer in democracy who practices democracy and who has the Intelligence, patience, and forbear-i OF ASHEVILLE HONOLULU. Jan.

16. Kah Island In the Hawaiian group 'V Is known as the "Island of Death" because of the Intensive bombardment It underwent by air and fleet bombers during wartime practice. The Island Is covered with unex ploded shells, and no one Is per T3 nCX. OW-tfTIB mitted to land on It. ance required to make democracy.

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Pages Available:
1,690,943
Years Available:
1885-2024