Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 29, 1935, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY, Al GlST Final Plans Made For Labor Day Program At Canton (Continued from page 1) tenct; instructor for the club, will be in charfef. For boys umler 1 year ot at,--A first and second prize will be of fered for best harmonica p'ayer :n the contest to be staged at 4 ' m Mr. Lunsford will have chait'e ot program. ... , For men and women, inert- m J first anil second prize- in a hotr ca.. ing contest to be staged a: tnt .: stand at 4:aU p. hi. "-"i" open to anyone who w-he; pai ticipate. Mr. T. L. Jami.-on will be m charge and will cvr.diw: program. At 5:LW p. m. Men-. ay a contest will be haired to determine cham pion woman'natl driver. Any woman in Western North Carolina , may participate, -and ru'stj and second prize- will be offered. Mr. Frank Smather.- will be in charge of this contest. At o:30 a band concert will be staged at Champion Park. The following teams will participate in the square dance contest to begin a: 7:45 p. m. on bandstand in Champion Park: Smoky Mt., Soco Gap, Robbins vilie, Happy Hollow, Cane Creek, Limestone, Enka, Rattlesnake Knob, HemMi-son County. Caiton team, and Bear Wallow, sit, 2nd and 3rd prizes will be offered for best per formance on this program. Accompanying each of the above teams will be a string band. Prizes will be given for the best string band performance on thi.- program. B. L. Lunsford, a specialist in folk singing and dancing, will conduct this pro gram. At f:(K) p. m. the largest fireworks display ever offered m Canton will be given under the supervision and direc tion of C. C. Medford. The Junior Woman's Club of Can ton is sponsoring a dance at the Ar morv on Mondav night from 10:00 to 2:00 o'clock. The Tarheel, a promi nent Asheville orchestra, will furnish music. It is a scrip dance, and ad mission will be J1.00. TOO MICH SI.UVHI" Chicago A tired looking, werithc.--beaten itinerant asked the desk .ser pent for a place to spend the night. The officer fin id lie could have a place, then added jocularly: . "Of course, you'll have to be up at 6 o'clock. .That's - the rule at this hotel " The man turned town the exit. "1 never get up before nine," he said over his shoulder. "I'll have to try somewhere else." Shelton's Garden To Be Show Place For Flower Lovers (Continued from page 1 t., scarce or rare as to quanut;. . l't a very striking rich purp.e known ',odumain and is held on long 'urns which make it practical for arrange- . Each vear Mr. Shelter, and Mr, hey c-iui their collection, and discard the tubers that for ome def.'Ct uo not live up to the high standard et them for dahlias worthy of tne time, tnd attention they both g:ve the plants Now coming into b.oom in trie Shelton gardens are many of the la vored varieties that will next week oe on exhibition a-, the Dahlia Show, sponsored bv the Woman s Club. Leading all other, in reaching the peek of development m the Shelton gardens are the Commodores, a de corative vellow of enormous nze. There are'some magnificent specimens of thi, variety, in bloom now, and manv bud- on just the show type of stems. ' . ' 1 Among some of the others are the Buckeve Bride, the Sanhegn Queen,! Jersey's Beauty, Pen Charter, Mable . Good, Kemp's Violet Wonder, Jane Cowl, Jersey's Beacon, Champoung, the peaches and cream effect, tort Washington Hattie SMton, the Thomas Edison, and the Frank Miller, one of the leading show dahlias. But in a visit to the Shelton gar dens the dahlias are just one feature. There are tall mallows, in a not or pink bloom, delphinium in all shades of blue, ro-e. zinnia.-, salvia, azele amum, a new flower, a cross between an azalea and a chrysanthemum, large beds of Princess Feather in gorgeous colors and unusual shapes, and dozens of other flowers. Each variety grown is in a state of pej tac tion. 'Along with the flowers will be een vegetables grown in the tame high sfJte of perfjction. There is a tomato patch containing 1.000 Van Tour plants staked on seven foot poles, growing above the pole.s and bearing tomatoes weighing more thin (two pounds. 50-YEAIl-OLD TRIPLETS STILL FOOL FRIENDS HurlpjockOZOOOO Bill As 74th Congress Adjourns Monday Night w j . - - The 74th Congress headed its way homeward yesterday after a tense and turbelent last session, leaving anx ious Roosevelt leaders seeking ways to obtain millions in funds. As hao been the case on more than one occa sion during the past year Senator Long, of Louisiana, took the last me and a half hours with his usual fil ibuster. 1 Talking on despite taunts, gibes and earnest pleas, Long held the senate floor until the senate adjourned at the stroke of midnight Monday nignt, and thus succeeded in blocking the $102,000,000 third deficiency bill, car rying funds to start the new deals giant social security program, utili ties regulation, the Guffey coal con trol bill, the new neutrality plan and other major measures. Declaring he wanted action on 12- eent cotton and UU-cent wheat loan amendments which were abandoned when the AAA announced a comprom-i7i.-.nt.lnTi-!ihsidv nrotfram for cotton. Long was the center of a high-! but I True ----- ,.v:v.r cnr-ial security measure: a new if only temporary, neutrality policy 'for America; a bank bill-giving a" reorganized federal reserve board K centralized control over money and credit ; amendments to strengthen K and TVA; a $250,000,000 new .... uni. ti1iti reeulaticn. and LdA Ull., MV... f - - r- list of other major acts, It also saw the surpreme court strike down the new deal's nunVber 1 ex periment, NRA, staiting a consul; tional debate sure to echo in the l'Jdb campaign, and it saw the senate vote down American adherence to the There are more farmer" thai, sons 'engaged in any other wee up. in this country. It is claimed ate the same at as a -mouse, it of f..-,,d- daily that lount If an -h propurtii. wi.uld consuiii' 1 Actually it eal. . L,.fnl.p tViP S4 880,0OU,OOU worK reuei uui, W " r :.Srge!rapproPriation of all time; the fflllllllL III. t-3 - - - c held their breath. Long at that point was -droning on n a iei.-urely manner reading Irom an eld numuer oi me cuiiEic.-5"-record. Previously he had shouted, "I won't surrender, as aununistia tion leaders sought to get him to desist. Senator Schweilen'oach, democra. ot Wellington, who argued that Long was blocking funds for the ageu and crippled, arose to point an acusmg finger at the Louisiana senator and say: ."It is now a minute befoie midnight. I ask whether or not because ot his selfish desire for publicity, the sen ator from Louisiana ha.-n't defeated the hopes, the aspirations, and the desires of millions of people." Before Long could yell his oft-reiterated "that ain't so," the big clocks handsmuved to 12 and Vice-president Garner's gavel cracked. "Th -mare is 'ad.iou.rned sine die," the Vice-President proclaimed. " (The two houses, hours earner, had passed resolutions for automatic ad- JULii I.L in. ..... ci The galleries, silent a minute be fore Garner's gavel fell, burst, into a roar. Senator Long walked out of the chamber, leaders had vturned thelir clock back in the half-expectation that perhaps the senate might do likewise, wear Long down, and speed the de ficiency bill to enactment. But 'when jt became certain that nothing like that was to be done, the hou-e too adjourned. It was 12 mid iv'ht by it- clock when that happened, b.r actuady it wa.- 12:0'J A. M., (EST) Thus ended the historic session whk-b saw such measures passed as WO:.,; At t f-.r--.. " -!lJ-- I Printin . , . EXPERT WORK The Mountaineei PHONE 137 j We Represent the following Insurance Companies See financial statement elsewhere in this weeks Yorkshire Insurance Company YORK, ENGLAND j St. Paul Insurance Company ST. PAUL, MINN. Hanover Fire Insurance Co. NEW YORK CITY BRADLEY-DAVIS COMPANY BU Nd Little Food Experiments by zoologists show that iotne species of bats can go for months without entlng. ADRIAN, Mich. The Butrick trip lets, who still look enough alike to fool their friends, have celebrated their 50th birthdays. . . Daughters of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Butrick, the triplets were grad-i- v,ir,v, efflioffl together, taught school, and then married farm- er For the lat 25 years the three have celebrated their birthdays by gather ing with friends and neighbors atone of their homes. This year, amid a variable forest of candles on-the oake thev were entertained by Mrs. Floyd Preston, the only one of the three who married twice. alM,ut 10(1. pounds. fn lit 00 the cancer death rule 63 per ioo ono. Now it is loo 1 00 000, )ut has begun a xlighl cline. There are 110.000 dnis addu ts m lh' citv of Nunking, .-according to tlo estimates of -Hie Chinese govern nient. A fHniale aligator lavs from t!0 to 70 epH They -resemble very much duck e Studies show the average -speed, of lightening to lie 28.500 miles a second. ! We Represent the following Insurance Companies See financial statement elsewhere in this week's paper National Ben Franklin PITTSBURG, PA. E. L. WITHERS COMPANY i "(JLIMI'Si: INTO i-mitF.?" Sunnyvale, Calif. And, asked Jack Francis, who wouldn't, be surprised under the circumstances? Francis drowsed at his gasoline sta tu. on the highway near here, visioning a steady stream of custo mers, or something, and along came this tinmuffled motor sound and an airplane pilot taxied to ma pump, yelling, "Fill r up!" The pilot, Charles P. Cooley. had made an emergency landing in a field beside the highway, mmm nil Snrnnnx clhiool Clothes Supplies Shoes Anything Everything 1 Something Has Been Done About the Weather by the Southern Railway System Air-conditioned Pullman Cars and Southern Dining Cars are now in service Travel in Cool. Quiet. Delightful Comfort, free from Dust. Smoke and Cinders . . . A miracle de velopment of temperature con trol for the convenience of the traveling public 2 Cents per Mile IS Day Limit 2 Vi Cents perMile-6 Months Limit Ticket! honored In ileeplng and plo ecu ob payment ot proper charqe tot space occupied ... no surcharge One Way Coach Fares. lVzc Per Mile PS ini.j .i, cw such measures passed as i ammmmBMtmammKmmmmmimmmimMmatr i I-:,- : , : : , : i ; - ---u,, '- - -i- uf MHMIiaiaHHaHaaMaHMMiiMiiMiiH i.-l-it r1"1'11 1 "' - -ilW i ' 'iiniiiii'T rsi j i.-i i &rr ,tM ' 1 f ?aciaA ma take trtt XJ LM f wnMtl out o noun act fT ( , fT I Tinr-r rcCT IXZn. I V ui put tKem back jp' 'nXJS' ' j v '&lv Npteihtsoft.peldingcoli- t J&m& ' -VL ff- mP$sSSSk4A struction of the invisible ' .& f&Mm'! , Ilfz5l Pcrfect-Ezewle It absorb .Stt ' if- NlJ. junwuiilniaia- -tri and iolt-f rom pa e- ti&ffilStit WJStF m -S: .03-'.cnt and noon . . JnM Jlr' X ... I ; V. Gabardine ,cMh ' ' ft hi ; V- . fMBiH - -.- ti ming, boulevard r 1 blue or brown. -- I Nothing puts lines and wrinkles in your face as quickly jr I as the strain of tired, achina feet. , jt ' I . - . I jf C. E. RAY5S SONS ASK US ABOUT ROYAL CHINA Lv Asheville Ar. Cincinnati Ar. Chicago Lv. Asheville Ar. AVashington Ar. New York 6:40 p.m. 8:10 p.m. 2:15 p.m. 5:00 p.m, fi:40 p.m 11:59 p.m Tor fares, sleeping car reservations aneT other travel inlormatlon. call oi write : R. II. DE BUTTS Assistant General Passenger 'Agentl :f i mi in nrrai nimil nininn Nothing puts lines and wrinkles in your face as quickly as the strain of tired, aching feet. An ungraceful carriage and round shoulders are also 'he result of foot fatigue All this is banished forever with Perfect-Eze Shoes. Slip your feet into a pair. The sheer joy of such undreamed of comfort will mean more to your countenance than a course of beauty treatments. Perfect-Eze Shoes are built on an entirely new principle: The soft, invisible cellular sole actually cushions every step you take acts as a shock absorber for the tiring jolts and jars of unyielding pavements and floors. Not onlt that, Perfect-Eze Shoes beautify your feet because they are so attractively styled. Try a pair today. You'll be amazed at the transformation they bring about in your appearance and carriage. Kid gore P1uPj,heinPi'!':i tongue, boulevard r.eci. or brown- Sold Exclusively In Waynesville By Massifs Department Stoi "A Good Place To Trade"
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 29, 1935, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75