Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 9, 1938, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE WAYNESV1LLE MOUNTAINEER Page 3 Efforts Being Made To Get Peak In Park Named "Mt. Weaver" After Congressman Weaver w m m a j h u m nrv Inline r- r 01 laiinc j PXOPOStO MT.WEAVtR, . tr.t.etdprr M.WfOVHQ GAP suoerintendent HZ BVCKUT HT. IQV ut Sole Plant oi me 8AL& MT.KtMART IDC - " -i.... Pnmnanv. at. Ha rtUHDtlt6 . . i,ineil in a non-technical . i .:iinet i " lAUflCL TC0 ts of cutting 60,000 11 r Vinoe anil ..-,.1 an women a onvv-, "- i,, kind in the South. T'u JtVi-U. brought out that Mr- . . ., vpar are s-nent ' Va dullard color in leath ketrff.w 'careful checks had to i each piece of leather for ca"1 v'li worm holes, made in vuT.i? u-'u , i.. , , . the annnais i:ic if n:Jt- Mt I. t JUNE 9, "1938 .. a r iw i ... .wk''. mb nm 1 S(lIHTII. v.."-", he explained. Each t. graded as to color, :ule of leather. Jla h,r determining some mil this has .rotten . .. ... I- a nilll'h finpr Uie oi ine - ,h.,r, even expert graders could " ' ...,iii,i.,i i, WapenfeW ha(1 samples of htr and explained what type soles cut from every part of the hides. -s are r.t ! I'M IH HERE TO GIVE YOU HE QUICKEST, SAFEST STOPS YOU'VE EVER HAD -And At No Extra Cost! f If you were driving along in the tin, what would you give to turn Cit wet road ur.dcr your car into a ay" track? That's exactly What Hi new Goodrich Safety Silvcr n with the Lifc-Savcr Tread pa. its never-ending spiral bars ft like a battery of windshield "PW, weep the water right and A, force it out through the deep moves, making a DRY TRACK the rubber to grip. In fact, 111 never know what the word STOP" really means until you've ft . the GRIP of this new tread 0 wet road. . ' .. i remember, Silvertowns are Withe only tires that give you " Ply blow-out protection. j iafe. '' GET THF noiviMi iUHRIU OF A LIFETIME. !-05T7 COME IN Fno a fu VEMONSTRATION , BREAKS REcnmv 0N "EW SILVERTOWNS! ew"jer, demonstrated e afety of the new fc.- Tread 'fcaitht 7 ary,curved fettle. . i," Irom Lo oa58 minute, ! ilvertown f'H Distributor f61" Agent For The Texas Company V5 -ii 1 "je. . Petitions have been sent to Wash- Geographical Names Department of Mountains National Park, about U C, in aiding the establishment of theiaver that the above described raoun incrton. bearing the names of scores Interior, Washington, read as follows: mile S. E. of Luftee Gap, about 1 ' Great Smoky Mountains National I tain is now and will always here of interested citizens, asking that k peak in the parK be named "Mt. Weaver" as a memorial to Congress man Zebulon Weaver who has done much toward seeing the park pro ject brought to the brink of comple tion. The petitions, addressed to the executive secretary, U. S. Board of Dear Sir: mile S. W. of Newfound Gap on main : Park, beginning with his introduc- after bo known to us as "Mt. We,, the undersigned, respectfully to of Thomas Ridge, approximately petition and request that a mountain Long. 83 deg. 25' 15", Lat. 35 deg. be officially designated "Mt. Weaver;" 20 ". lying entirely within North this mountain being a hitherto un- Carolina. named peak, approximately 5300 feet This action is requested to honor elevation, shown on East Half of the long, persistent and successful Topographic -Map of Great Smokv .efforts of Hon. Zebulon Weaver, M. tion in Congress of the Enabling Act Weaver." approved February 21, 1925, and con tinuing to the present time. Realizing that it is not the policy of your board to name geographical features for. living persons "UNLESS The poak selected, while not out standing as to actual height in the Park, is tasy of access to hikers on the Thomas Ridge Trail and is visible from the Newfound Gap Lookout as ADOPTED BY LOCAL USAGE,' wcWfil Hs tfu' skyline .Drive to tling- ; man's Dome. LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS PHONE 1J7 . ' Miss Jinsie Underwood has return ed to her home for the summer. Miss Underwood attended the finals at the U, S. Naval Academy at Annapolis last week. Miss Velma and Miss Bernice Mc- Elhannon are leaving today for the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, and will visit Gulfport, Pascagoola, Biloxi, and Mobile while away. Miss Mary and Miss Catherine Palmer, who graduated from Brevard College this spring, have arrived home. 9 Miss Sarah Welch, who is a student at Western Carolina Teachers Col lege, has arrived for the summer vacations. MISS MARION FULRKIGHT TAKES COl'RSE j Mrs. C. C. Francis and daughter, Barbara, and sons, Walter and Wade, 1 have returned from Wake Forest, where they went to attend the grad i uating exercises. The former's son, Ar j thur, was a member of the graduat ing class, ine party was joined in Greensboro by Miss Elizabeth Francis, who is a student at the Woman' Col lege of the University of North Car Miss Marion Fulbright, of C. E. Ray's Sons Department store, will arrive today from Columbia, S. C, where she has been taking a course in a Gossan! Fitting school. . Miss Antoinette Salley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Moss Salley, of Asheville, is the guest of her cousin, Miss Haseltine Swift. Miss Salley mother was the former Miss Wini- I f red Swift, of Waynesville. t i f Dr. I. B. Funke had as her guests .awing ine ween miss rannie ami .mis Alice Moore, of Charlotte. ehind the Seen i - HOLLYWOOD 3 Jack Oakle By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 1938 KinR Keaturea Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD Almost sylph likc compared to his silhouette in "Radio City Revels", Jack Oakie goes be fore the camera 45 pounds lighter in "The Affairs of Anha belle". For the comedian they were expensive pounds. To lose them he had to go into the hospital to en gage the serv ices of doctors and of masseurs. And, now that !. has made the weight for the picture, his clothes don't fit him (any more and he has had to put ' out $600 for a new wardrobe. I .: .. I Biggest laugh In the cinema town is at the expense of Director Elliott Nugent. I Like many other megaphones, ; Nugent always turns actor for at i least one scene in each picture. In his current effort, "Give Me a ,'Sailor". it Was to do a bit in a navy day parade supposed to take Dlace In San Francisco. But todav. Nueent goes about With a rueful smile. i In the cutting-room, he just had to snip himself out of the picture. I J. Weissmuller, a Catalina spy reports, Is paying a diver $50 a day in an effort to recover a nmy ring lost by the swimming star while surf-boarding. It s line iook ing for a needle in a haystack, but Weissmuller Is determined to get the ring back if possible. For two reasons. It cost $2,500 and it was a birthday present from Lupe Velez. : i The youngest of the De Milles is to carry on the family tradition in the show business. He is the baby son just born to the John ;Blount De Milles: In midsummer, i his grandfather, Cecil B. De Mille. will put him before the camera, if only for a moment, in the picture, "Union Pacific". corps in Cuba and inspired the characters played in the film by Sam Levene, Alan Curtis and Robert Montgomery. For 11 years Flo O'Neill has been a script girl at Warners and has never missed a day on the set. The other day. she asked Director Lloyd Bacon ifor a leave of absence from "Racket Busters ". . "Okay",, he said, "But why?" The script clerk answered: "To see my son graduate at the University cf California." In all these years, Hollywood never knew about the son. It touched the imagination of the troupe. Led by Bacon, they are going together and buying a graduation present for the boy. ' An M. G. M. promotion stunt for "Yellow Jack" is an oddity in the news. The studio will give three special showings of the pic ture. In New York for John R- iKissenger; in Lexington, Va., for I Dr. Robert Kooke, and in Havana for John J. Moran, manager of an oil company. The thr.-f men are former 'ir.cjr.rc?-- S. medical At the preview of "White Ban ners", Lloyd C. Douglas cried fill through the picture, so here, ap parently, is one author who wont excoriate the movies for the way they treated his story. Mr. Douglas has no cause for complaint. The Cosmopolitan pro duction is an extraordinarily moving film, beautifully acted 1 y Fay Bainter, Claude Rair.s. Ewim Granville, Jackie Croper and the rest. Miss Eainter's performance is the finest she has given for the screen. I think Douglas far:s will agree that "White Banners" is a better picture than "Green Lights , which cleaned Up at the b office : Earl Caldwell and Elmer Leming spent the past week in Newport News, Va. En route home they were the ' guests of Miss .Yirginiu King in Greensboro. I ... ! Mr. C. E. Burn and sons, Dr. Ed j Burn and Charles Burn, of Charles-1 ton, S. C, have arrived to spend the summer here, as guests at the home of Mrs. John N. Shoolbred. The1 Burns have many friends here, who will be interested in their annual visit. Carroll Louise Bell left yesterday for "Jacksonville, Flu.,' where she will visit her grandmother, Mrs. W, H. I.yle. C. M. Patterson, of Earle, Ark,. has arrived to make an extended visit with his daughter, Mis. W. W. Davis. Mis-s Corrie and Miss Ann Kerr, of Asheville, were the guests of their sister, Mrs. John K. Boone, during tho week. Mr. and Mrs. George Price, of Spartanburg, S. C, were the guests the first of the week of their daughter, Mrs. J. G, Iluggin, Jr. They were en route to Nashville, Teiin., where they will attend commencement of the Medical School of Vnndoi bill Univer sity, from which their son is gradu ating. '..; Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Stovall had as their guests the past week the hit ter's sister. Miss Janie Tinker "and brother, Harold Tucker, of Marion, Miss Tucker was accompanied home by Miss Eula Patterson, who will make the family a visit. Mr, and Mrs. Carroll Bell had as their guests during the week Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Payne, of Charlotte. Mr. James Mielmals, f Durham, has joined Mrs. Micheals at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus H. Rlackwell for a ten -days visit. j Mrs. Robert Hartley, who has been the guest for the past three weeks of her daughter, Mrs. M. II. Bowles, left during the week for her home in Irwinton, Gu. f MOI.I.IE BOONE MISSIONARY SO i ( 1ETY TO HOLD MEETING The Mollie Boone Missionary So ciety of the First Methodist church will hnld the regular monthly meeting in the church parlors tin Tuesday nftcrnimn, June the Hth, at 3:30 o'clock. Airs. S. H. Bushnell will have charge of the program, j Mrs. Vii ginia Rotha Kiniberly, who has been the guest for the past few w4'eks ut Mrs. Allen McLean at her home in- lltighkeepsie, N. Y'., re- jtulneil home on Saturday., j ',.' I Miss Jiimnie and Miss Blanche White rel.urtit.tl .on Saturday from a I week's visit in Cliarlotte. lie Holi- J ...Latest pfi it spot LD Mickey Rooney, now 17 and the possessor of a valet, praduRU s from the M. G. M high ( hf.d tl r June. . ..The Tito Guizars are expecting a baby. He is a top rank sing ing star in Latin America and will be heard by Amer ican fan s in P a r a m o unt s "Tropic day". nigh scheduled for the Sunset boulevard strip is the Club Morocco. It r.ts no connection with New York s 1 Morocco". There's not a zt ! stripe in the house. ... Kennedy, who looks so well. : to Btage a screen comeback hasn't made a picture sir. v married Busby Berkeley ir; And despite the fact tr.-. worked for Chaplin yesrs . Mprna is only 25. . . . That . Eileen Cole with Dennis OK c. at the Band Box. . . . And Ol' de Havilland saw New York on .. arm of Brian Aherne. Tito Guliar Opening THURSDAY June 19th, 2 P. M. Haywood Mutual Stock Yard CLYDE A 11 Kinds of Livestock Sold Patronize The "Home" Yard SAME HOUR EVERY THURSDAY RAIN or SHINE Medford Leatherwood, Auctioneer $ F
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 9, 1938, edition 1
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