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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 10

Location:
Asheville, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 A A ASHEVILLE CITIZEN-TIMES, Asheville, N.C. 1U Sunday, August 7, 1960 W1NC Servicemen Deaths And Funerals ducted at 2 p.m. Sunday in River- About WNC People Charles A. Reid Is Promoted To Colonel In U. S.

Air Force She attended the University of! will accompany him, spent his terminal leave with his parents and with Mrs. Houser's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Davis Moore of Almond of the home. The on- ternal grandparents Arthor ad Evelyn Davis also survive.

Graveside rites will be con- Highland Games Draw Full Field LKVILLE-A full field is ex- pected for the Grandfather Moun- tain Highland Games which have been rescheduled for Sunday. Heavy rains and wet grounds in! Germany where he is a member of the 4th Armored Division. A 1954 graduate of Weaverrille High School, Radford entered the Army in December 1958. -Lt Vera Sluder recently returned to Selfridge Air Force Waynesville. Pvt.

Richard E. Ray, son of! Mrs. G. 0. Ray of Cumberland recently became a rifle-Uw Mrs Hawaii, and received the B.

A. degree from Vassar College After a year's study at the Uni- versiry of Paris, she enrolled at the University of North Carolina i where the was awarded the M.A. and the Ph. D. degrees.

Dr. Robert H. Spire new Van of the College of Liberal Arte ef Mercer University nnd soppy omcer lor me Reserve Training Center AsherlUe, was reeeatly notified of his promotion to commander the U. S. Naval Reserve.

He is now completing his term of office as president of Blue Ridge Assembly. Jerry Dean Kanupp of Ashe-, July forced postponement of Friday alter a years iiiness. ne the annual event on MacRaejwas native of Clay County, a Meadows. son of the late Joseph and Mel- er spending a two-week leave with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

W. T. Han-ey of Alexander. Lt. Sluder entered the Air Force Aug.

1, 1959, and attended a basic orientation course at Gunter AFB, before be- SLUDER ing assigned to 1st USAF Hos- P.u... rharlM W. Yannr. 30. son 1TD If ink Mr.

and Mrs. L. W. Young of Candler RFD 2, recently arrived I in of i According to Don Gallamore, i. k.tj ..4 -ii who registered for the original Charles A.

Reid, a native of Asheville, has been promoted to colonel in the U. S. Air Force at McClellan Air Force Base in California. With his change in rank, Colonel Reid was transferred to the 552nd Wins Staff where he will be director of operations. Both Colonel Reid and his wife, the former Martha Fitzgerald, attended schools in Asheville.

A graduate of Mars Hill REID Junior College and the University of North Carolina, Reid received his pilot's wings and commission as a second lieutenant in July 1941. Rated as a command pilot, he holds the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters. Colonel and Mrs. Reid live in Sacramento with their three children Cara Linda, 13, Cathy Fitzgerald, 10, and Charles Albert Lt. Col.

John D. Medwed of Homestead, Pa. has been as signed chief of the personnel division, medical section, headquar- tm-c First It. Armv at Gov- ernor's Island, N. Y.

1 event have indicated they wfflp. m-Sunday Bethel Method- ville, undergraduate at Florida' rTf -State University, was recently teainersione named to the Dean's list for the The Rev. W. C. Cam) Feather-spring semester.

stone, 76. of 141 Hillside died -at 5:45 p. Saturday in an Pat Fisher, danghter of Mr. Asheville nursing home following and Mrs. W.

H. Fisher of a long illness. Asheville, participated in the Surviving are the widow, Mrs. man in the 1st Cavalry Division Korea. A graduate oi uavia Millard Junior High School, Ray entered the Army in 1959.

Major Thomas E. Ivey. United States Air Force, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.

J. Ivey Bear Creek, recently graduated from the Armed Forces Staff College at it iNorfolk, and has been assigned to U. S. Air Force headquar- jn 'staff col- 1VEY legt graduate leel service Joint 0,, staff to edu-1 jed afticers in the plan- lMik Errant has been awarded severs! Erst nrfces la recea: ilea; coat esti held ac Air Force bases in Florida. Recently he won the Southern Talen.

Contest at Mac-Dill Base. Tam -V in Korea as a member 01 ine(SCft00i under the supervision of awo t. Korea Military Advisory Group in Seoul. A graduate of Candler High School, he is a medical nint employment of land, sea corpsman in the group' Head- 'xl air forces unified and corn-quarters Detachment, bined commands. vaaifcVkc auru sua 11,7 uivis nsv since signed up.

Registration will be held dur ing the morning and actual competition will begin at 1 p.m. Sunday. For caber toss and highland wrestling, entrants will wear highland dress. In addition to those two traditional Games; activities, 60, 100, 220 and 440- yard dashes, shot put, high jump, pole vault and broad jump will be scored. Winners will receive Highland Games medals.

W. H. Hughes, Neidand Police Chief, Dies NEW LAND Wilburn H. Hughes, chief of police of New- Medwed is married to the mer Miss Hattie Lee of Asheville. They have a son, John who pre-reris (ration aad visitatioa program recently held at the icvcoiij ncm ol WC University of North Carolina in Chapel HiU.

Gwendolyn Waters dauehtw ef I Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Waters of 53 Gladstone Road, was named on the dean's list for the spring semester at Florida State University in Tallahassee.

A rising senior FSU, she is majoring in prim WATERS ary education and is amember of Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority. Mrs. Crystal Strom, Credit Bureau Manager of Asheville has beta appointed a member of the Attendance aad Publicity Committee ef the Southern Consumer Credit Clinic to he held hi Charlotte Sept. 13 aad 14. Over 50 credit aad collection executives and credit bureaa managers from the Sooth are expected to attend.

Phillin Crouch, a rising senior, pa, where he isr fraternity. McKelvey is ma-stationed, and; joring in transportation. wlll attend Penn State university icently left for a two-year assign-in the fall. ment in Mainz, Germany where Ben F. Radford, son of Mr.

and he will be stationed with the 21s Mrs. Hannibal B. Radford of Artillery Battalion of the Third Asheville RFD 1, recently waSj.Missile Command, promoted to specialist four in I Sgt. Houser and his family, who iano, wno naa served as died Friday in a Winston-of Avery County for 14 years, jsalem hospital after a long ill-died suddenly in his home Friday ness. night.

He was 70. I Services will be held at 3 p. m. another at the! base in Orlando i Funerals Today Andrew Jackson Garner Jr. Chare.

M. L. Lowe, p. ns.i enapei txrc "eea renwer. p.

Chnnel Baptist Church, Black Moaatain. Mrs. Leander Holmes Leander Holmes of Greensboro, formerly of Asbe- iieA Saturday morning in Greensboro. Mrs. Holmes had resided in Asheville for about, 13 years while her husband was assort- ated with the Cone Company cot ton mill here.

The body will be sent to New Bedford. where services' and burial will be held Monday. Alice Melton Featherstone; two 'brothers, H. N. Featherstone of utvureis, a.

Asheville and D. B. Featherstone of Jasper, several nieces and nephews. Dunn and Williams Funeral Home is in charge of arrange ments which were incomplete Saturday night. Clifford O.

Gantt Clifford Oscar Gantt, 57, of 7 Vinewood Circle, Bingham Heights section, died at 11:30 a.m. Saturday in an Asheville hospital following a two-months illness. Mr. Gantt was a native and lifelong resident of Buncombe County, a son of the late eD and Delilah Rogers Gantt, and had been employed by the North Carolina State Highway Department. Surviving are the widow, Mrs.

Margaret Hagan Gantt: one brother, Harley Fore of Norfolk, three sisters, Mrs. Bessie Head, Mrs. Vurnice Smith and Mrs. Laura Smith of Norfolk, Va Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in Riverview Methodist Church.

The Rev. Harold Sprinkle and the Rev. Daniel Stephenson will officiate. Burial will be in charge. tAla rressley Mrs eh, Milton Pressley.

83, died at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in an Asheville hospital. A former resident of Black Mountain. Mrs. Pressley had beer.

living with a niece, Mrs. Blanche Bost of Biltmore. She was the widow of D. E. (Bob) Pressley of Black Mountain.

Funeral services will be held 'at 4 p.m. Sunday in the chapel of Harrison Funeral Home in Black Mountain, ine nev. oonn McWhorter, pastor or Metnoaisi Church in Black Mountain, will officiate. Burial will be in Mountain View Memorial Park. Mrs.

Pressley is survived by two grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. J. Jones J. V. Jones, 63, a Duuaing coir tMclor of 103, who had; visUing with his mi Ahvilie section about six Satllri.

mornin2 in Uiness of 12 days. Bryant is the Brevard and is now married to BRYANT son of Mr and I the former Miss Joyse C. E. Bryant formerly of land of Asheville. A Letter From The Farm Bountiful Berry Harvest Recalled Day Of Thanks of the University of North church cemetery.

olina School of Pharmacy, is' The body will lie in state for serving an internship in Ideal a nau nour prior of Asheville. Active palbearers will be John- In addition to graduation horn ny McCurry, Preston Ande-son, a recognized school of pharmacy, Oscar and Robert Gantt, win-a candidate for license as a phar- ston Ard and Earl Rogers, macist in North Carolina must! Groce Funeral Home is in West Asheville and now living in Augusta, Ga. He entered the Air Force in January 1958. Sp4 Louis Baird, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Baird of 21 Clemmons left Thursday for Fort Meade, after a 20-day leave with his parents in Asheville. During his stay here, Baird 'married the for-I mer Miss Betty Jean Barnard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barnard of West Asheville. Baird returned from an 18-month stay on BAIRD Okinawa with the 29th Armv Band.

A 1956 graduate of Stephens Lee High School, he will be stationed at Ft. Meade. Md with the 2nd Army Band. Music Festival To Begin Today At Brevard BREVARD The Transylvania Music Camp comes to the end It. HtU Kmaann nnrl IVl Rr.

VI io 1 Before entering law enforce ment work, Mr. Hughes had served for a number of years on the Avery County Welfare Board and the Newland school commission. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Laura Keller Hughes; two sons. Jack Hughes of Charlotte and Lynn Hughes of Newland; three daughters, Mrs.

Estelle Burleson, Mrs. Ratha Hughes and Mrs. Stewart Buchanan of Newland; a brother, John G. Hughes of Lemon Grove, five sisters, Mrs. Minnie Lusk of Asheville, Mrs.

Blanche Hughes of Frank, Mrs. Nettie Carpenter of New-land, Mrs. Pearl Smalley of Toledo and Mrs. Ethel Ray of Oak Ridge, 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m.

Monday in Newland Presbyterian Church. pastor, the Rev. John Cristy, the Rev. James Cornett, the Rev. W.

B. Able and the Rev. Billy Smith will officiate. Burial will be in Hughes Cemetery. Members of the Linville Masonic Lodge will conduct grave side rites.

u. ii. rf.i. iu. the church an hour before serv ices.

Reins-Sturdivant Funeral Home is in charge. Dr. P. W. Major To Be Speaker At Ben Lippen Activities at the Ben Lippen Conference Center on Sunday, August 7, will include a mission ary meSsage by Dr.

Patrick W. Major missionary to India rn.rativ. FUntist i. wir .1 in At the 11:15 a. m.

Worship, I de Cemetery. The Rev. Harry DeVteese will officiate. Goshen L. Ross TRYO.V Goshen Landrum Ross, 43, of Tryon, died Friday night at the home of Will Parker of Landrum RFD 1, S.

C. Services will be held at 3 p. m. Sunday in Oak Grove Baptist Church in upper Greenville County, S. C.

E. F. Patterson HAYESVILLE Elec Furman Patterson, it, of Hayesville, died vin Mcuure Patterson, nt was a deacon in Philadelphia Baptist Church Services will be held at 1:30 VUU11U. Alfred Cotcard CULLOWHEE Alfred M. Cow-aid, 68, of Cullowhee, died Saturday morning in his horn after a long illness.

Services will be held Monday at 2:30 p. m. in Zion AMS Church in Cullowhee. Fred B. Ingram WARNE Fred Bascomb Ingram, 61, of Warne, died at 1:40 a.

m. Saturday in his home after a long illness. Services will be held at lt a. m. Sunday in the Many Forks Baptist Church.

Mrs. ISnrn Innp RUTHERFORDTON Mr. Nora parker Jones, 74. of Rutherford- Sunday in Southern Baptist Church. Clyde S.Freel ANDREWS Clyde Spear Freel, 74, of Andrews, died in an Andrews hospital at 1:13 p.

m. Saturday after an extened illness. Services will be held in First Methodist Church at 2 p. m. Monday.

Jeffrey Blackwell CANTON Jeffrey Blackwell, 13-day-old so nof Mr. and Mrs, J. Oliver Blackwell of Canton, died in a Winston-Salem hospital early Saturday evening. Mrs. Mary Conard CANTON Services for Mrs.

Mary Conard, 44, formerly of Canton, who died Tuesday in Washington, D. after a short illness, will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in Cove Creek Baptist Church. Mark Garland HENDERSONVILLE Mark Garland, 80, retired farmer and former resident of Burnsville.

died Friday night at the home of v. iinu; daughter, Mrs. Minnie Crook, in Mills River community. Mrs. Dora Tabor HENDERSONVILLE Mr.

Dora Elizabeth Tabor, 68, wife of Hamilton Tabor and resident ot Hendersonville, RFD 5. died Sat urday in a Hendersonville hospital alter a lingering illness. Samuel R. Pittman MORGANTOX Samuel Raymond Pittman, 66, a retired attendant at Broughton Hospital, died of a heart attack Friday night in his home in Morganton Services will be tald nt 4:30 Sunday in Catawba Valley i Baptist Church. 01 ln "one; and three sisiers, airs.

w. r. Anderson or Morganton, Mrs. Mae Moore of Ain" "le ana lrs- uulcie Perkl 0' California. I CARD OF THANKS The Familv of Willism A Ri! Bradley wishes to acknowledge with deep aDDrecialion the floral offerings and other kindnesses shown during his illness and at his death.

Also wish to express their appreciation to the doctors and third floor nurses at Memorial Mission Hospital for their services and kindness. MRS. WILLIAM A. BRADLEY AND SONS MRS. ESSIE BRADLEY MRS.

J. H. CORN GROCE FUNERAL HOME 1155 Haywood Road ALpin 2-3535 AMBULANCE SERVICE T. A. GROCE, President ANDERS-RICE Funeral Horn Fnneral Directors Amhnlaae gervir Alpine 4-1SU 4-3511 an MrM Man, niktnn.

BILTMORE AVE. sfcnAL 3-1431 jy "nn 1 ii 1 1 II cf antral B(ome AMBITANCE SERVICE II 37 NORTH SPRUCE IT. I II DIAL AL 2-rn Local members of Delta Kappa Gamma, international honor society for women teachers, will leave Monday to attend the international convention of the society Aug. 10-13 at the Americana Hotel is Bal Harbour, Fla. Mrs.

Marian M. Lee, president af Asheville Gamma chantw. Le0ntiM r. pinn, tate vice president, and Miss Cordelia Camp will leave Ashe- ville Monday to join others of the North Carolina delegation. Mrs.

Plonk will meet with a committee planning the 1961 regional conference of the society, which will be held at Grove Park Inn this time next year. Alaa Case, Ma of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.

Cue, and Wiley Neal Evaas sea ef Mr. aad Mrs. W. Neal Evans both ef Asheville, participated la the pre-registrntioa aad visitation program reeeatly held at the University of North Carolina hi Chapel HiU. John R.

McKelvey has been awarded a scholarshio for h. ariucu orVIIUidldllip I Or (rit I 1M.1W1 academic year at the! University of Tennessee. McKelvey is a rising senior at the university, i Prior to his en- rollment, he was a member of the 1959 graduating class at Mail Hill Junior Col lege. A member of Delta Nu Al- nationa! McKELVEY educational hon He is the son of the late Mr. nd Mrs.

John C. McKelvey of The McKelveys are presently living in Knoxville, Tenn. Mrs. Hntrie S. CarUnd of Fletcher RFD 1 recently completed a three-year course for credit anion personnel at the University of Wisconsin.

Mrs. Carland Is manager of the Enka Credit I'nion in Enkn. Western North Carolina girls included on the Denn's list for the spring semester at Meredith College fat Raleigh are Christine Kress of Stratford Susan Self of 412 Kimberly Elaine Carroll Smith of 175 W. Chestnut SL, Mary Ana Brown and Norma Leckaby of Hendersoaville, Sylvia Comer of Tryon aad Joy Goldsmith of High Point. Miss Colleen Gambill, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. W. J. Gambill of Weaverville and Hollywood, recently vacation with her parents in Weaverville following a trip to New York and New Jersey. Miss Gambill, Western Carolina College GAMBILL Spring.

Robert J. Brown Jr. of Aihr- ville received a bachelor of science degree la physics nt snmrner commencement held Saturday at New Mexico State University kn University Park, N. M. Be hi the son of Mr.

aad Mrs. R. J. Brown of Asheville. Three young women from Ashe- ville and Candler are among 35 outstanding school women eighth in a class of 333.

Alma Barnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Barnes of Candler, received an Honors at Entrance scholarship. She's a graduate of Enka High School, where she was a member of National Honor Society.

Judy Louise Howell, daughter ir nj Mn Fred A Howell' of Candler, received a President's! scholarship. A fc.a.iiate of Enka' nigh School, she was a member 0( Honor Society. Mulori. Himii. Bnchnnnn Ave.

and Everett her) Championship fkld of (Ot of the country's rifle marksmen who will shoot in the IN National Pistol and Rifle Championship Matches held hi Camp Perry, Ohio, Sunday through Thursday. Miss Florence T. McCulioch of 2 Westwood Road. Asheville. has been named to the facuJty of Wellesley College.

Wellesley. as assistant professor of French. Th 196041 academic year at. Wellesley win begin Sept. 22.

Since 1964 Miss McCulioch has been teaching at Sweet Briar College. She previously was a member of the faculty of Old' field School in Glencoe. Mary. land. F5 1 i Sgt.

Frank C. Stems whose wife, Mary, lives in Fletcher, recently qualified as expert in firing the M-l rifle while serving with the 3rd Armored Division in vji i iiiaitj srt Roland B. Honser of the s. Army, son of the Rev. and Mrs.

J. E. B. Houser of Dula Springs Road, Weaverville, re- taken to see hens scratching in the straw and laying eggs in nests, cows being milked and little pigs and wooly lambs running about. There are horses and plows and many other country things which are a daily joy to the child who is lucky enough to live in the country.

Have you ever had a long co'd drink of water straight from the rocks, caught and served in a gourd dipper. If not you don't know what you have missed. Nothing tastes so good. It was my joy to have such a drink the other day. To my delight someone gave me a present of a gourd dipper for The Cove, a most beautifully shaped dipper and beautifully mad and finished.

I took it straight to my favorite spring, for a baptism of ice cold water and enjoyed a drink unequalled to any drink I have had before. There must be some magic wishing quality about The Cove for I had wanted a dipper so much. Perhaps it was part of the luck from finding a horse shoe. Do college professors be-l ee in horse shoe luck? Farmers believe in it and I was delighted when I found the shoe on my drive. I picked it up and put it in a tree just where my house door is going to be.

This will keep my good luck in and all misfortune out. I am sure you did not realize the power of horse shoe, but the luck is for the finder of a discarded shoe so next time you find one pick it up. Speaking of horses, those in the pasture I did not find the shoe in the pasture are so friendly. The other day I dropped a carrot I was offering, and when I bent to pick it up one of the horses put his nose down any neck and blew gently. I took it as a mark of atfection until someone remarked that it was "carrot love." However, on thinking the remark over I remembered that a carat is a unit of weight for gold and precious atones, so why not for love! WUchey receive one year of practical pharmacy Instruction under the' supervision of a pharmacist.

Crouch is serving under William C. Braman. Kenneth B. Farmer of Ashe-' ville uuinf 9 hieh school science teachers receiving cer-j tificates of completion for an eight-week summer science insti- tute sponsored jointly by East Tennessee Stat College and the National Science Foundation. Miss Fanchon F.

Funk of! Asheville, teacher at Lee Edwards High School, received a certificate representing six credit hours of graduate work done at the recently completed Summer Institute for High School Teachers of Science and Mathematics. The institute was sponsored by the National Science Foundation and was held at Randolph-Macon woman college. Garv Harris son of Mr nnd uary Harr son or Mr and Mrs. H. Clyde Harris of 99 Ne- vard Music Festival gets way here Sunday.

At a.m. Sunday a musical ivnrnhin crui nrtinlaH hv Dear Jamie, We had the Lammas Day service in church last Sunday. Lammas is an old Anglo Saxon word meaning loaf mass and the service, is one of thanksgiving for the first fruits as suggested in Deuteronomy, Chapter 26, verses 1-4. Lammas Day is Aug. 1 and the observance is one o'.

four agricultural festivals kept by the early church. Maybe college professors know all this without explaining! It is a service I have loved for a long time this year it was filled with meaning for me. My first fruits were the blackberries, black raspberries and cherries. Tangible proof of the fruit is in the form of cherry jam and blackberry marmalade the pantry shelves. It was good, too, to give thanks for the memory of the cherry pie and the blackberry pie, served piping hot in less than half an hour from the time the fruit was gathered.

Prayers were offered in thanksgiving for the first fruits and for the greater harvest yet to come. It was with a humble heart that I offered thanks for the bounty of the land which provided cherries, blackberries, raspberries and wild strawberries and offers a promise ef grapes, apples and a tobacco ban est. It is good to pause and count one's blessings and the Lammas service should be held in churches everywhere for in both town and country are dependent upon the farms for food. So surely everyone, and not just the farmer, should give thanks to God for the sunshine and rain which makes the food grow and ripen. This is too often forgotten in these days when so many articles of food come off the grocery shelves in packets, and many of them already prepared.

Children grow up thinking milk in bottles and eggs in cartons so that it has been necessary to establish children's too near big cities. There city children can be the Transylvania Symphony this fall in Hollywood, tetethumxuZ.T,toitol.Z' Chorus, will be held in the Music Center Auditorium. Featured I work will be the Vivaldi with soloists Jane Rolandi Coker Margaret Rice, sopranos; tnd Tina Jones, contralto Thef service, one of the special pro- grams on the weekend schedule; for parents, will be free ef. charge. At 4 p.m.

Sunday the Brevard Festival Orchestra and Chorus with guest soloists Irene Callo way, soprano, and Peter Har- rower, bass-baritone, will take Hie Jones familv had in at the plains spending the summer months injmeeting of the first Bible and; Surviving are the widow. Mrs. the Candler and Asheville areas christian Life Conference at P'ttman; two sons, David p. Dr. Theodore H.

Epp.and Claude Pittman of Morgan-founder and director of the Back daughter. Miss Elizabeth for the past 15 years. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Miriam Tucker Jones; two daugh- ters, Mrs. John F.

Young and Mrs. Georze Queen ot New ur- leans; one son, James J. Jones of New Orleans; and one Walter E. Jones of New Orleans, the stage for the initial concert graduates awarded scholarships, of the gala two-week festival from Furman University, period. The all-Brahms program 1 Leonora Eugenia i n.

will include two of Brahms' best-! daughter of Ilr. and Mis. George loved works the "German Re- M. Whitson, of Asheville was quiern" and "Variations of a awarded a President's scholar-Theme by Haydn." Miss Callo- ship. She's attended Lee Edwards way and Harrower, husband-and- High School where she graduated The body wiu oe sent 10 of the China Inland Mission signment as dean of boys at Brogden Junior High School in Durham.

Harris graduated from Lee Edwards High School in 1955 and Mars Hill Junior College and th: University ot N. C. He taught one year at Carr Junior High School in Durham while earning his master's degree in history and math at State. Dr. Philip Woollcott Jr.

of Ashovill -received a $100 award for the best third year paper from the alumni Association of th Menninger School of Psychiatry at an annual graduation dinner held recently at the school. Dr. Woollcott wrote on "The Patient's Religion as an Object of Psychiatric Study He wiU remain in Topeka on! a post-resjdenry fellowship in Psychiatry at th Menninger Clin- His Parents lite at 33 White 0ali Road- ParticiaDuanoMnrMnfh, ville is among 303 candidates for 1 di-grees who will receive their! oiplomas from the Universty of i i fcite team from Atlanta, will be featured soloists in th "Re- HDC Schedule For The Week The Home Demonstration Club: schedule for this week has bejn announced by Mrs. Mary nay, nuncomoe county nome Economics agent. Monday, the Good Neighbor Club will meet at 12 noon for picnic in the Leicester Youth to the Bible Broadcast will bring his final message of the confer- Monday, the Ministers and christian Workers' Conference begins with Rev.

R. Arthur Math conducting the opening service at 7:30 n. m. Thii conference will continue through Friday eve- cing, August 12. Tailoring Workshop To Open Wednesday Registration for a tailoring workshop and the first lesson in a series of eight will be held from 2 to 4 p.m.

Wednesday in Lee H. Edward Hi eh School. The workshoo is beini conduct- ed under the auspices of the Vo- cational Homemaking Program 0f the school. Lessons will bi free and open to all adults in the Asheville area. The first lesson will deal with up-to-date equipment and fabrics.

Emphasis will be placed upon making attractive tailored gar- jments in mioimwn jength of ltime. visor and Mrs. Ralph Kennedy, ERRYMANl Ambulance latoaan, a. a taa 1 II3 emlOTTt jUMSSfl FOREST LAWN I Asheville' Most Modem FREEDOM OF CHOICE Cemetery I I Under Pernetnal Care CALL AL 44353 1 I Center. Tuesday, the Erwin Hills proffiU of 23 Shady Oak Dr.

club will meet at 10 a. m. in the cmptt in the IK Na-home of Mrs. J. C.

Rice Jr. and rUnnl Smallbore Rifle (.21 tali. Miss Morgan will be awarded a' 0tfl BA degree. She's one of three I 5, ofJSljSVlUe: rth eight great-grandchildren. Orleans for services and burial in a cemetery there.

Groce Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements here. Mrs. A. B. Mx Mrs.

A. B. Nix, 84. of 424 Tun- I 1 I I nei aiea Miuruay morning iB hom long ill- Mrs- 1V.X was anauve and me- on resident ot Buncomo coun- tv. a daushter of John Y.

and Catherine Carter Nix, and a member 01 Bethesda Methodist Church. Surviving are one son, Carl Ntx; SMhe home: nd-th Services will be held at 11 a. m. Monday in the chapel of Groce runerai nome. ine nev.

n. Bucsner wiu omciate. nunaiwin, be in the Bethesda Methodist Church Cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Lewis iKerstein. J.

P. Sheehan. Tal- madge Miller, W. E. Whitaker.

George Miller. Lewis Venom. Jessie Lee Davis I(y V0 VUI Jessie Le Davis, infant of Mr. and Mrs. J.

W. Davis ot Arborvale died at 6:10 of Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Davis of p.uu otiuiuuy in ma hospital. Surviving, ia addition to the parents, arc on brother, Arthur Davis of th home: two-half sisters. Peggy and Mattie Ellen I yLJ Nsi ija the Happy. Valley Club will meet for a picnic in the Community Building at p. m.

Wednesday, the Lakeside Club will meet in the home of Mrs. Albert Earwood for a picnic at 6:30 p'. m. Piney Mountain Church will be the sit of an all-day meeting and covered dish supper for the Pisgah Club, starting at 10 a. m.

Thursday. The Barnardsville Club will meet in the home ot Mrs. E. W. Cannon at 7:30 p.

m. Friday and the Biltmore Estate Club will meet at 1:30 p. m. Saturday for a picnic on the Pavilion. Karl Marx, German Socialist and author of "Das Kapital," is buried in Highgat Cemetery, London.

rraduaiino rin. Sewing Classes To Begin Monday An adult sewing class will begin Monday at the Stephens-Lee High School under the sponsorship of the homemakers vocational department of the school. Mrs. E. W.

Williams will conduct classes daily from 10 a.m. to 3 pjn. Monday through Friday for two-weeks periods. uuuikuuh win uc uueicu without charge to all interested. persons on such subjects as se lection of patterns, materials, garment construction and attach- ments.

I 1 UNITED APPEAL Commercial Division co-chairmen for the 1961 campaign are George L. Chumbley. left, vice president and manager of Battery Park Hotel, and Erwin Jackson executive vice president gaid general manager of The appointments were announced Saturday by M. C. Peterson, Jeneral chairman.

The division, which works with, owntown merchants and firms, last year raised through 161 firms with a total of 3,764 employes..

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