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Asheville Citizen-Times from Asheville, North Carolina • Page 10
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Asheville Citizen-Times du lieu suivant : Asheville, North Carolina • Page 10

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Deaths And Funerals BAKERSVILLE Services for James M. Byrd, 73, formerly of Mitchell County, who died Wednesday in Charleston, S. will be held at 11 a. m. Saturday in Pleasant Grove Church of the Brethren, of which he was a member.

The Revs Fred Dancey and Fred Harrell will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Mr. Byrd was the operator of Hub Village Motel in Charleston, a member of Charleston Heights Lions Club and a veteran of World War I. Funerals Lambert Leopard James M.

Byrd Mrs. Chrisawn Charles Lamb, 11 a. NewChurch. Dr. Steelman, 1 p.

HaRPUSSE Riverside Prince m. Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church. James F. Hayes TRIPLETT Services for James F.

Hayes, 81, of Triplett, who died Thursday in a Haywood County hospital, will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in Mount Ephriam Baptist Church. The Revs. Darrell Miller and Hugh Miller will officiate.

Burial will be in the Simmons family cemetery. Mr. Hayes was a native of Watauga County and a retired farmer. Surviving in addition to those first reported are a son, Dale Hayes of Cedar Lake, 44 grandchildren and 19 greatgrandchildren. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.

m. Saturday at Reins Sturdivant Funeral, where, the body! will remain until placed 1 in the church an hour prior to the services. Kenneth Edwards BAKERSVILLE Kenneth R. Edwards, 70, a native of Mitchell County, died Thursday in a Johnson City, Tenn. hospital from injuries received in an automobile accident earlier.

He was a retired farmer. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Mae Gouge of Bakersville and Misses Pearl and Verna Edwards, of Johnson City; and a brother, Paul Edwards of Bakersville Rt. 1. Services will be held at 2 p.

m. Sunday in the Fork Mountain Baptist Church, of which he was a member. The Revs. James Beaver, Rose Cook Clarence, Buchanan will officiate. will be in the Edwards Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p. m. Saturday at Henline Hughes Funeral Home, where the body will remain until the service hour. Mrs. Julia Brittain MARSHALL Mrs.

Julia Christina Brittain. 75. of Marshall, died early Friday in an Asheville nursing home after a long illness. She was a lifelong resident of Madison County and the widow of Conley L. Brittain who died in 1951.

Surviving is a sister. Mrs. T. M. Rector of Marshall.

Services will! be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in Marshall Presbyterian Church, of which she was a member. The Rev. Arthur F.

Williams will officiate. Burial will be in Rector Chapel Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Hilliard Teague, John Gaunflo, Harry Davis, Albert Warner, H. C. Rector Jr.

and W. C. Rector Jr The family will receive friends from 7 to 8 p. m. Saturday at Bowman-Duckett Funeral Home where the body will remain until placed in the church 30 minutes prior to the services.

Mrs. Edna Barnett MOUNTAIN HOME Mrs. Edna Elizabeth Owenby Barnett. 45, of Sixth Street, died Friday in a Hendersonville hospital after a long illness. She was a member of Calvary Baptist Church and was a native of Pickens County, S.

C. and had lived in Henderson County for the past 15 years. Surviving are the husband. Charles B. Barnett: a son, Conley Teague of Balsam Grove: the parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Jess M. Owenby of Hendersonville: three brothers. Mitchell. Clyde and Roger Owenby, all of Hendersonville: two sisters.

Mrs. Helen Reemes of Balfour and Mrs. Randall Clark of Jackson, and two grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m.

Sunday in Thos. Shepherd Memorial Chapel, Hendersonville. The Revs. Ed Yeomans and Buddy Mullinax will officiate. Burial will be in Shenherd Memorial Park.

Pallhearers will be J. D. Tweed, Bovd Cagle. Grady Wilkie. Fred Pace, Fred Peters and Leonard Garren.

The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the funeral chapel. At other times the familv will be at the residence of Ervin Barnett in Mountain Home. Morris Funeral Home 304 Merrimon Ave. 252-1821 Williams Funeral Service 856 TUNNEL ROAD PHONE 298-5555 HENDON FUNERAL SERVICE Next To The Courthouse 254-1911 254-1911 E.

B. Sigmon Sr. E. B. Sigmon of Fletcher Rt.

1, died unexpectedly Friday morning en route to an Asheville hospital. He was a contract hauler for Sealtest: Daries, a member of the Loyal Order of Moose Lodge No. 781 of Asheville and Fairview Men's Club. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Essie Buckner Sigmon; three Lt.

Col. Bruce. Sigmon Jr. of Durham, Roy A. of Atlanta and James W.

Sigmon of Charlotte; two daughters, Mrs Clearence Deweese of Asheville and Mrs. Kenneth Johnston of Salisbury; a stepdaughter Mrs. Harold J. Corn of Winston-Salem; two brothers, Ray A. and Holman Sigmon, both of Morganton; three sisters Mrs.

Mabel Cambell of Durham, Mrs. Irma Hampton of Hampton, Va. and Mrs. Alma Reeves of Asheville; 16 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m.

Sunday in the chapel of Groce Funeral Home. The Rev. B. W. Thomason will officiate.

Burial will be in Calvary Episcopal Churchyard at Fletcher. Pallbearers will be Ralph W. Long, Walter Hunter, Troy Williams, Ralph Parrish, R. V. Young and Paul Webster.

Honorary pallbearers will be employes of Sealtest Daries and members of the Loyal Order of Moose. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home. New Fighting In Belfast BELFAST. Northern Ireland (AP) British troops poured into a riot-torn Roman Catholic district of Belfast early Satur-1 day and opened fire on bombthrowing demonstrators.

One civilian was killed and two were wounded, the army said. battle took place in Balaclava Street in the Falls area, a flashpoint of the sectarian strife that has plagued Northern Ireland for the past two years. Five British soldiers were injured by home-made bombs that sent six-inch nails flying in every direction. Snipers of the outlawed Irish Republican Army were active in their campaign to forcibly unite this British province with the Irish Republic. Army spokesman reported a hail of bullets from apartment rooftops directed at security forces.

Troops used a water cannon against a crowd who seized a bus, set it ablaze and used the burning hulk as a barricade. Historian Allan Nevins Dies At 80 MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) Historian Allan Nevins, a twotime Pulitizer Prize winner, died Friday at a nursing home. He was 80. A spokesman for the Huntington Library, in Pasadena, where Nevins was formerly a senior research associate, said the historian had been ill for more than a year and entered the Sharon Height Convalescent Home last June 23.

The nursing home said cause of death was cerebral vascular arterial sclerosis. The author or editor of more than 60 books, Nevins won his Pulitizer Prizes for a 1932 biography of Grover Cleveland and 1936 biography of tycoon Hamilton Fish. For 30 years before assuming his position at Huntington Library in 1958, Nevins taught history at Columbia University. Oratorical Contest Winners Announced The Asheville Optimist Club named Nilous Avery, a student at David Millard Junior High School, as first place winner in the club's Oratorical Contest at a luncheon meeting of the club Thursday. Other winners in the contest were Bill Roberson, student at South French Broad School, second place; Peter Hapke, also a student at South French Broad, third; and D.

C. Thomas, a student at Johnston School, fourth. Avery will compete in the zone contest later this year. 10 THE ASHEVILLE CITIZEN, March 6, 1971 Sunday School Lesson Jesus And Parable Of Good Samaritan SYLVA Lambert S. Leopard, 67, of 25 Allen died Thursday night in a Sylva hospital after a long illness.

He was retired from General Motors, a farmer, a member of East Sylva Baptist. Church and a resident of Macon County for 38 years. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Allie L. Bryson Leopard; six daughters, Mrs.

Wayne Tilson of Graham, Mrs. John R. Brendle of Franklin, Mrs. Mrs. Owen Childers of Taylors, Charles Carnes, of Dillsboro, S.C., Mrs.

Harley Evitt of Piedmont, S. C. and Mrs. Bobby Pickelsimer of Greensboro; two sons, Francis of Pontiac, Mich. and Harrison W.

Leopard of Atlanta; a brother, Lee Leopard of Sylva; and 15 grandchildren. Services will be held at 3:30 p. m. Saturday in Baptist Church. The Revs.

J. S. Cunningham, pastor, and Wallace Tallent will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. line a ant Funeral Home, Franklin.

until placed in the church 3 30 minutes prior to the services. William R. Denson William Robert Denson, 69, 4 of Christ School Road, Arden, died Friday morning in an 1 Oteen hospital after as short illness. He was a retired lumberman, a native of Mebane, had resided in Buncombe County for 12 years, a veteran of World War II, a member of Craigs-McCue VFW Post in Phoebus, Va. and a member of Skyland Baptist Church.

Surviving are widow, Mrs. Mary Garren Denson; the mother, Mrs. Rosa Denson of Mebane; two sons, Paul and Ed Denson of Stephen City, two stepsons, David Garren of Arden and Edward Garren of Collinsville, three daughters, Mrs. Janie White, Mrs. Margaret Metz and Mrs.

Fay McDonald, all of Stephen City; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Louise Emory of Arden; four brothers, Sam of Winchester, Harrison and Fred of Mebane and Warren Denson of Burlington; three sisters, Mrs. Bessie Shanklin, Mrs. Mary Scott and Mrs. Ruth Thompson, of Mebane: 20 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in the chapel of Penland and Sons Funeral Home. The Rev. D.

K. Brevard will officiate. Burial will be in Martinsville, Va. Monday. The family will receive from 7 to 9 p.

m. Saturday at the funeral home. Mrs. Bonnie Moody ROBBINSVILLE Mrs. Bonnie Stewart Moody, 75, of Dalton.

formerly of Graham County, died Tuesday in a Dalton hospital after a short illness. Surviving are the husband. George H. Moody; four daughters, Mrs. Mary Smith Dalton, Mrs.

Blanche Thweatt of Newport News, Mrs. Mattie Neal of East Point, Ga. and Mrs. Marie Long of Detroit; three brothers, Sherman and Ed of North Carolina and Oliver Stewart of Tellico Plains, three sisters, Mrs. Rosa Blevins of Robbinsville, 10 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in the chapel of Townson Funeral Home. The Rev. J.

B. Waters will officiate. Burial will be in Old Mother Cemetery. Grandsons will be pallbearers. The family will receive friends from 7 ot 9 p.

m. Saturday at the funeral home. John H. Mintz CANTON--John Henry Mintz, 78, of Canton Rt. 3, died Friday morning at his home after a long illness.

He was a veteran of World War I and a member of American Legion, Haywood Post No. 47. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Violet Mintz: two daughters, Mrs.

Clarence Mathis and Mrs. Andrew Hannah, both of Waynesville; eight sons, Boyd of the home. Lawrence and Don of Canton, Gene and Dewey of Waynesville, Roy and Oscar of Hazelwood and Elmer Mintz of Thomasville: five sisters. Mrs. Lloyd Ledford.

Mrs. Walter Groom and Mrs. Annie Smith, all of Hazelwood. Mrs. Jessie Groom of Canton and Mrs.

Dora McMinomv of Asheville: four brothers. William and Robert of Canton. Rufus of Hazelwood and Jack Mintz of Asheville: 24 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m.

Sunday in Bethel Baptist Church. The Rev. Tom Erwin will officiate. Burial will be in Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery. Members of Havwood Post No.

47. will conduct military graveside rites and serve as nallhearers. The body has been taken to the residence by Stanley Funer. al Home, where it will remain until the service hour. BURNSVILLE Mrs.

Bessie Chrisawn, 74, of the Micaville Community, died Friday afternoon at her home after a short illness. Surviving are three sons, Charlie of the home and J. T. and Paul Chrisawn of Spruce Pine; a sister, Mrs. Ada Wyatt of Asheville; 16 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Services will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in Clay Mound Baptist Church. The Rev. Charlie McMahan will officiate.

Burial will be in Wyatt Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at Holcombe Brothers Funeral Home, where the body will remain until the service hour. Robert H. Rice Robert Henry Rice, 83, of Black Mountain, died Thursday night in a Rock Hill, S.

C. hospital after a long illness. 22 live wot. Madisca. Go and a resident of Black Mountain for 35 years, Mr.

Rice founded Grovestone Baptist Church. He was a retired employe of Morgan Manufacturing Co. Surviving are seven daughters, Mrs. F. D.

Parker of Rock Hill, Mrs. F. R. Payne Kings Mountain, Mrs. Maurice Clayton of Jackson, Mrs.

James H. Davidson of Swannanoa, Mrs. Frank F. Barger of Sumter, S. Mrs.

Cecil H. Wilson of High Point and Mrs. W. W. Talbert of Arlington, four sons, A.

C. of San Francisco, John H. of Black Mountain, Ernest of Fort Lauderdale. and Claude C. Rice of Dunedin, three sisters, Mrs.

Minnie Lowe of Rock Hill. Mrs. Laura Spearman of Kings Mountain and Mrs. M. C.

Cudd of Asheville; a brother, Clarence Rice of Mount, Holly; 17 grandchildren four greatgrandchildren. Services will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday in Black Mountain First Baptist Church, where he was a Sunday School teacher. Pallbearers will be deacons of the church. In lieu of flowers.

donations may be made to the organ fund of the church. The family will be at the residence. 113 Fourth and will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at Harrison Funeral Home. Mrs.

Grace Murphy Mrs. Grace Sharp Murphy, 83. of Jacksonville, formerly of Asheville, died Friday morning in a Jacksonville hospital after a long illness. She was the wife of Denton F. Murphy.

Services will be held at 10 a. m. Monday in the chapel of Hardage and Sons Southside Funeral Home in Jacksonville. Burial will be inu Oaklawn Cemetery. Mrs.

Lamontagne Services for Mrs. Valerie Holcombe Lamontagne. Sheppard Branch Road, Weaverville, who died Thursday at her home. will be held at 2 p. Saturday in the chapel of West Funeral Home.

Weaverville. The Rev. Ralph Brigman will officiate. Burial will be in Dodd Cemetery at Barnardsville. Surviving is a brother.

James W. Holcombe of Warner Robins, Ga. James T. Jolliff Word has been received here of, the death Feb. 3.

of James Tavlor Jolliff in Smithfield. He was a brother of E. Corwith Jolliff of Enka and J. T. Jolliff of 431 Governor's View Road.

Asheville. Services and burial were held Feb. 10 in Smithield. Mason B. Wiley Mason B.

Wiley, 66, a native of Asheville. died Wednesday morning in Charlotte after a short illness. He was a former employe of Southern Bell Telephone Co. with 47 years service, retiring in 1970. Surviving are the widow, Mrs.

Edith Forster Wiley: a son, John Mason Wiley of New York City; and a sister, Mrs. Marguerite Bilbro of Asheville. Services and burial were held Thursday in Charlotte. Woman Hurt In Accident Miss Setrena Marie Porter of 69 Annandale Ave. was injured at 10:50 p.m.

Thursday when her car struck a parked truck on Southside Avenue, city police said. She was reported in satisfactory condition in Memorial Mission Hospital Friday. Police said Miss Porter was driving east on Southside Avenue near McDowell Street when her car struck a truck owned by Fitzpatrick and Son Co. Damage to her car was estimated at $1,200. EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr.

Frazier teaches a Sunday School class at the First Baptist Church of Asheville. By DR. CLAUDE FRAZIER Luke Jesus made it perfectly clear that a new and different kind of life results from our new relationship with God when we enter the Kingdom. Our lives are transformed and we are not the same persons we were before. Jesus told a simple story that has become one of the classics of all time.

The hero of the parable we are studying today, was a Samaritan. In Jesus' day the feeling of the Jews and Samaritans was full of intense animosity, one against the other. THE LAWYER'S QUESTION Luke "And hebold.a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, saying, 'Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" Verse 25. It seems that Luke uses "lawyer" as a synonym for the term scribe. It is surprising to find one versed in religious law asking Jesus or anyone else about eternal life.

"He said to him, 'What is written the law? How do you Verse 26. Jesus responded to the lawyer's question with a question, a common rabbinic teaching method. "Why do you consult me on matters of the law? That's your profession. How do you understand the commandments?" "And he answered, 'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, with your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as Verse 27. In Hebrew thought "heart" and "mind" are synonymous.

The meaning is that man is to love God with the totality of his being. The Jews in Jesus' time made a solemn profession of faith in the one true God everyday, in the morning and evening. In SO doing, they recalled the commandment to love God (Deut. 6:5) and dedicated all the powers of their souls to Him. We are asked to love our neighbors in very definite, practical and realistic ways.

It is so that we love ourselves. Love for the neighbor is made dependent on one's attitude toward one's self. Prejudice and contempt for others is an expression of low selfesteem and inner insecurity. If a person does not have the proper concept of one's own value as a human being, it is impossible to have the right attitude toward 3 fellowman. This means that love must be man's basic attitude.

It is not the man who is selfcentered that fulfills God's will and lives up to his image in himself; it is the man who lives for God and for his neighbor. God must be man's center. He must love Him with his whole soul and with all his strength. "And said to him, 'You have answered right; do this, and you will Verse 28. "Do this," Jesus demanded.

He must put it into practice. The emphasis was on the doing. Sinful nature prevents us from keeping God's law. Hence, the law serves the purpose of revealing to us our spiritual inadequacy. As Paul says, the law is "our school master to bring us into Christ" (Gal.

The point of quoting the laws is to show a person how far short of it he falls, so he will see his sin against God and man, acknowledge his guilt and turn to Christ for forgiveness. THE GOOD SAMARITAN Luke "But he, desiring to justify himself, said Jesus, 'And who is my Verse 29. The lawyer finds himself in a some what embarassing situation. "Who is my neighbor?" was justifiable because the answer was a source of common dispute. It was usually agreed that "neighbors" included fellow countrymen and excluded others.

A man need not love his enemies. This question had never been answered clearly. "Jesus replied, 'A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho. and he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him, and departed, leaving him 99 Verse 30. Westgate SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 'TIL P.M.

9 the moment, but until he was recovered. The Samaritan "loved" the helpless victim. From this story we see that love is not a weak sentiment. We also learn how you "do" love. The Samaritan did the practical things required by the man's condition.

"And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper, saying 'Take care of him; and whatever more you spend, I will repay 99 you when I come Verse 35. Two silver pieces, the sum given to the innkeeper, was worth about forty cents in silver content. It represented two days wages for a laborer. He promised to pay any further expenses. His credit was good.

The innkeeper was prepared to trust him. There is a note in ad ac constants told to love our enemies, to go the second mile and to give our cloak, too. The Samaritan was a stranger to the traveler and could have stopped sooner than he did in fulfilling any rule about one's duty to a wounded stranger. The Samaritan was not trying to do his duty. We act toward ourselves because we want to: so the Samaritan acts toward the stranger.

He loves his neighbor as he loves himself. "Which of these three, do you think, proved neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?" Verse 36. Jesus had been illustrating who a neighbor is in such a way there could be no misunderstanding. "He said, 'The one who showed mercy on And Jesus said to him, 'Go and do Verse 37. The lawyer is forced to answer the question.

The Samaritan's neighbor was the one he found in need. In Jesus' interpretation of the commandment of love, a person's neighbor is anyone who needs help. His nationality or religion is of no importance. A person's neighbor is every human being. It is action that Jesus demands.

Do the same yourself. Jesus told the lawyer to put what he had learned into practice. Love for one's neighbor is an active love. To fulfill this commandment one must have a heart open to men's needs. LESSON IN LIFE Showing mercy in time of need to any and all persons is at the heart of the Christian's message of love and compassion.

Everyone knows what the letters IOU mean; they mean I owe you. Our debt arises because we have already received something of value from some other person. Just as the good Samaritan came to the assistance of one in need, we ought to offer IOU's of compassion, kindness and understanding to others. We should do this not because we have already received something from them, but because we have received blessings from God and He wants us in turn to be a blessing to others. Take three steps toward loving people who dislike you.

1. Realize that anyone who is hateful or brutal suffers from some inner conflict. Show understanding rather than vengeance. 2. Make sure you do not give such a person any reason for disliking you.

3. Do something kind or helpful. Perhaps at first you can only pray for your neighbor. Be friendly and do little kindnesses. Be friendly even if your friendliness is not returned.

Love assures our neighbors that they are not alone in their worries and griefs. Love shows a person that his friendship is worth more to us than this hate. It proclaims that in our hearts dwells the love of God. FRAZIER Jesus answered the lawyer's second question with a parable. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho was a dangerous road.

In about 20 miles this road dropped 3,600 feet and was a road of narrow rocky defiles and sudden turnings. In the rocks that lined the road, bandits waited. Robberies were frequent. The first character in the is a we do not know whether he was white, black, Jew or Gentile. He was a human being who became the victim of robbers.

"Now by a chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him he passed by on the other side." Verse 31. After serving God in the temple a priest was given an opportunity to serve man. The situation is complicated for him because he is a religious man. He may have thought that the man was dead. In that case he would be reluctant to touch the corpse because it would make him ritually unclean (Lev.

Perhaps he was afraid he would also be attacked by the robbers or perhaps he was a robber faking an injury. It may be that he was unwilling to be delayed. People consider these and other things when self-interest and tion are given first conself sideration. Whatever the reason. "When he saw him he passed by." "So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side." Verse 32.

A Levite, one of the helpers in the Temple, seems to have given the dying man a closer look before he passed on. "But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion." Verse 33. The third man to come along is a Samaritan. The Samaritans were the national enemies of the Jews. They were half-breeds, having intermarried with Gentiles centuries ago.

They had no dealings whatever with one another. The listeners would obviously expect that the villain had arrived. Once more, Jesus repeats the phrase: "When he saw but then comes the sudden reversal: "He had compassion." It has been said that compassion is love in action. The failure of the professional leaders contrasts sharply with the love shown by the hated Samaritan. What shock and anger Jesus' example must have produced among the hearers! 'And went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine; then he set him on his own beast and brought him to an inn and took care of him." Verse 34.

Jesus carefully enumerates the six different acts of charity which are calmly taken for granted. The Samaritan helped the man, not just for Afram Geis Contract For Nurses The future of Afram Inc. looked considerably brighter Friday with the announcement of plans for producing nonwoven nurses and surgical caps for a leading manufacturer. R. V.

Mathison, consultant to Afram, first all-black Asheville industry, said an agreement had been made with Johnson and Johnson, manufacturer of babies supplies and first aid products, by which Afram employes will be trained to meet Johnson and Johnson's exacting specifications. Two engineers of the firm are here working with the Afram management, surveying the plant and providing engineering assistance in adapting to accommodate the new program. Mathison said credit for the long-term arrangement with a major concern goes to Walter G. Baisdell, industrial support staff of the Office of Business Development, Small Business Administration, who contacted the New Brunswick, N. J.

firm in behalf of Afram and sent copies of newspaper stories concerning the local manufacturing firm. Afram, which started its operation here in June 1969, had to lay off most of its employes last year when its prime contractor, Kimberly-Clark canceled its contract. Immediately, business leaders in Asheville, launched an area-wide campaign to sell disposable coats made at Afram. The firm later received a 064 order to make cubical curtains for the Veterans Administration and a contract for $26,710 for nurses caps for the same agency. Mathew Bacoate, Afram's general manager, said that at present there are 24 employes working at the plant, and, hopefully, more will be hired later this month.

The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord; and he delighteth in his 37:23. INCOME TAX Both State Federal $5 WIG CITY BLDG. 24 College St. 254.9078 If you think a bank loan is hard to come by, come by Wachovia. When you need us, we're there..

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