Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / May 2, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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 '"""fit They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo . Park, Shop, Childrens Wear KD-NO-THATfe I WDDMS-COMMA N AFTER 'SHIPMENT.' AMD SEMICOLON AFTER BREAKFAST! M-M-MH LETS SEE -DID VOU SPELL CAT RIGHT ? OH-OH-PUTADASH AFTER STREET car;and-er- I ml I W,i--A--S--' f . .. A Ji LJ I 1 Ul I I MA. r i j. jil-i t WSZHftni THIS TO VOU ! " nio iuoitwo M JrV "tf---l! V SHOULDER LIKE I lUrNSV ISN'T THERE ANY f FOG OVER LONDON. CMtali PRIVACY LEFT IN Nv 3 THIS WORLD ? V V LE Will Save You Much! Our large Children's Department is full of bargains you need . . . FIRST CLASS MERCHANDISE ... at prices anyone can afford! For Your Girls Girls slightly soiled DRESSES ... flj-l . ff Kofi, to $2.98 X.UU Girls Print DRESSES . ruc"' $1.49 Girls Printed Rayon DRESSES ec no Regular $3.98 Girls Sheer DRESSES white and color ed reductd to $1.85 Girls Spring SUITS . . . 7 $3.98 Girls Spring COATS . . . r'it $5.oo Bargains For Your Boys Boys solid color DRESS SHIRTS . . . reduced to Little Boys BLOUSES Reduced to Little Boys Dark SHORTS Reduced to . - Little Boys Combat JACKETS . . Reduced to $1.00 USES $1.00 c SHORTS $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 Bovs SAILOR SUITS Reduced to Bovs COVERALLS former ly to S3.98 g- QQ Reduced to X.iO Childrens Broad cloth PAJAMAS Bovs Gabardine JACKETS ... 80c $1.98 Raiff's Childrens Shoe Department Is Teeming5 With Bargains Girls Strap Sandals Black and White Patent . . . Open Toes. Good Soles . . . $1.98 One Lot of SANDALS, Reg. to $2.98 fl- AQ Reduced to l-tU Little Boys OXFORDS Brown and QQ Black ipl.iO Boys and Girls White Slippers Reg. to $3.98 QQ Reduced to ipl.tO One lot of Children's SANDALS tRoeduce1 $1.00 Boys and Girls Tennis Shoes . . . Reduced to '$1.98 UH Vl l new voS err yn. v. i ' -TOtY rJK - L . .kk.m., ..., gggiJ PLEAS1N6 IN QUALITY- PRICE-CANVENifnJ If THERElS ANYTHING THAT MAKES BK300ME BURN, rrfe TO HAVE SOME JERK READING AROUND HIS NECK' jWNCAC Encouraged By Reich Coal Plan National Park Official :?p!i,sGmany in i wo jdiocs 25 lbs. Southern Daisy Self-Rising FLOUR $1 .89 DIXIE CRYSTAL SUGAR - - - - 5 ii, i-LB. PKG. TENDERLEAF TEA l-LB TIN CHASE & SANBORN COFFEE - - - ! tncouraging results were ! brought back from Washington by 1 1 me six men aeiegauon representing I Western North Carolina Associated j Communities after discussions with A. E. Demaray, associate director of the National Park Service of the Department of Interior. In a 75-minute session. Demaray told the group that funds would be unfrozen for a $273,000 start on 'construction of a 10-inillion dollar road linking Bryson City and Fon itana Dam, and that work could be I expected to start this year. An expenditure of $2,531,000 has I been earmarked to go towards i completing sections of the Blue 1 Ridge Parkway in North Carolina. Those who attended the YVashing- Ii ton meeting were Charles E. Ray, WNCAC vice-president; C. N. Al len of Hazelwood; Percy Ferebee, president of the group; Francis J. iHeazel, president of the Asheville I Chamber of Commerce; Fuller Brown of Asheville: and 12th Dis trict Rep. Monroe M. Redden, who i had arranged for the meeting. The group returned home Thursday. The W N C A C representatives plan to return to the Capital in he near future and present their case for park development to the seriate appropriations committee. To be recommended at that time are 1) Sufficient additional con tinuing appropriations to complete tile Parkway and Bryson City-Fon- ;tana roads as soon as possible; i2) 5200,000 additional for fiscal 19-18 for immediate construction of a $135,000 pioneer museum at Min gus Creek, N. C, and a $65,000 wing on the Park administration building at Gatlinburg, Tenn., to be used as a natural history muse um; (3 restore a $28,797 item, cut by the house last week, for admin istration, protection and mainten ance of Great Smokies park, along with $700,000 for existing' roads and trails in all the national parks. of which Great Smokies would re ceive its pro rata share; 4i addi tional funds as soon as possible to improve the Black Camp Gap road to Heintooga, as well as the camp grounds there, and the Cherokee- Newfound Gap road. DEATHS Mrs. Laura Arlington Last riles were conducted at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at Pleasant Balsam Baptist church for Mrs Laura Davis Arlington, 90, widow of Will L. Arlington, of the Balsam road, Haywood county, who died Monday morning at 5:40 at her home. Rev Doyle Miller and Rev. Nando Stephens officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. Grandsons served as pallbearcra and the granddaughters were in charge of the flowers. Mrs. Arrington was a native of Haywood county. Her husband died in 1937. She had been an ac tive member of the Pleasant Bal sam Baptist church for many yearsr Surviving are two sons, 0. T. An rington, of Waynesville, and W. R. Arrington of C?'.lton; four daugh ters, Mrs. Hazel Wright, of Way nesville; Mrs. J. E. Fiscas, and Mrs. H. H. Hurd, of Chehalis, Wash., and Mrs. John Wright of Aberdeen, Wash; 26 grandchildren, 24 great grandchildren and one great-great grandchild. Garret funeral home- wasjypu ! PARLS The French evening j newspaper Le Monde, which fre quently reflects French Foreign opinion, commented that a new coal agreement being announced by the United States, Great Britain, and France confirmed the cutting i of Germany into an eastern and I western bloc. Le Monde added: "The situation being as it is, with the U. S. S. R. and Poland disposing at their pleas ure of all the coal of Saxony and Silesia, the agreement which has just been concluded could only have been reached between the three western powers. "It represents the cutting of Germany into two regions, east and west, and it will not be the last. This division is a fact, even though everyone deplores it and asks that it be brought to an end." 'AH My Sons" Named C' D I T I ucaauu a ucsi Ul tima NEW YORK (API Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" was voted "best play" of the 1946-47 theatri cal season by the New York Drama Critics Circle. The play received 12 of a Dns. sible 25 votes. Eugene O'Neills "The Iceman Cometh" was second choice, with six votes, and "An other Part of the Forest." by Lil- jlian Hellman. was third with four votes. "Brigadoon," a fantasy about a Scottish ghost town, by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Lowe, was winner in the musical classifica tion. "Finian's Rainbow" was run ner up and "Annie Get Your Gun" was third. The Circle's award as the sea son s 'best foreign play" went to "No Exit," written by Jean-Paul Sartre, a Frenchman. The Balmoral Tartan is reserved for the sole use of the British Roy al family. -tSC2Sl Charles W. Hardin Funeral services were conducted Thursday afternoon at the First Baptist Church in Canton at 2:30 o'clock .for Charles W. Hardin, 46, who died at his home on Spring Street. Canton, early Tuesday i morning, following a long illness. The Rev, R. A. Kelley, pastor of the church and the Rev. Howard Hall officiated. Burial was in Lo custfield cemetery. Canton. Active pallbearers were Ed Har kins. Norman Smathers, Buddy Cooper. Otis Thompson. Jack West and Norman Singleton. Mr. Hardin was a native ol Hay wood county and had been con nected with the Russell Motor company in Canton for a number Ellen Glasgow Home Due To Be Restored RICHMOND, Va. The ante-bellum home of Ellen Glasgow here is to be preserved as a shrine to the southern novelist and to the era it presents. The old home is expected to be restored to appear i ery much as it did in the unhurt' ed years of her youth, an era which to many, embodied southern living at its best. Miss Glasgow's brother gave the home to the Virginia Historical Society, and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia An tiquities has purchased it from the society. The home was built in 1841. l-LB JAR FAIRY WAND l-LB. N. B. t. I'KI MILM PEANUT BUTTER 30c CRACKERS CARNATION NO. 2 CAN DOl.i; ' MILK 3 cans 38c PINEAPPLE JUICE CAMPBELL'S NO. 2 CAN GIliKS TOMATO SOUP 11c Mixed Vegetables NO. 2 CAN NIBLETS 7-OZ. CAN LIBBYs" ' ASPARAGUS 35c VEAL LOAF 125-FT. ROLL CUTRITE DPPFT " "" WAX PAPER 19c 1 - 2 PACKAGES LIMITED QUANTITY SUPER SUDS 35c s.O.S. PADS l-LB. WEBSTER'S PLUM l-LB. BLACKBEKKY PRESERVES 29c PRESERVES DROMEDARY NO. 2 CAN BUSH'S GINGER BREAD MIX .. 24c PORK & BEANS 46-OZ. OSAGE SWEETENED NO. 2 CAN TRAFALGAR ORANGE JUICE 23c TOMATO JUICE SKINNER'S RAISIN BRAN 13c PKG. SWAN N UUNSi! PAPER NAPKINS 15c 2-OZ. J SANK coffu 1 SWEETHEART 1 TOILET SOAP 10c 48 of years. Surviving are the widow; five children, Misses Josephine, Betty and Danny Hardin, all of Canton; his mother, Mrs. Icia Cogburn'ldle of Greensboro, one sister. Mrs. W. S. Burnette, of Canton, and a half brother, Jack Cogburn, of Black Mountain. Wells funeral home of Canton was in charge of the arrangements. THE OLD HOME TOWN Vi GALLON B CLOROX 29c By STANLEY s- HE-LLO! SQ&XX THE J, , V A JS-, editor is OUT X W : V ' ' MUST SB swwf 1 " rwiw.MK womjt mown n 2 CANS BAB-0 CLEANSER VISIT OUR NEW Refrigerated Depart For Your Convenience We Have Installed Self-Service Refrigerated Cases F Foods, Dairy Products and Ice Cream r At The Dairy Con l-LB. CREAMKltY Butter I Frozen Food Specials SUMS PRIVATELY SEN TO FRIENDS AND R ELATIVES (CommetKedepr figures for 1946) 14-OZ. BIRD'S-EYE Spinach 23c 1G-OZ BIRD'S-EYE Apple Sauce 24c 12-OZ. BIRD'S-EYE Mixed Vegetables 23c PET DAIRY ICE CREAM l-LB. BLUE BONNET Oleo Margarine 5-OZ. JAR BORDEN'S SMOW Cheese Spread Pii KiiSftllrf'iT8iiiiiif"M EVAPOKATED1L APPLES V GREEN Beans .... 2 lbs, 29c FRESH Spinach 2 lbs. 25c 10 LBS. OLD WHITE Potatoes 39c LARGE SIZE RED ROME Apples .2 lbs. 29c ROASTING FRESH Asparagus sweet Potatoes 0 3 E3Slb.52c WESTERN CHUCK ROAST ,ib. 45c PURE PORK SAUSAGE lb. 45c WESTERN SIRLOIN STEAK -lb. 75c SPICED Luncheon Meat lb. 48c VEAL STEAK RIBSTEW CURED HALF OK WHOLE HAMS VEAL CHOPS I Australia "'ffll ftflrn British i , nfsoolooo t OCCANtA ULT CARISBiAMISlK 1 "Ollllllll r v An AP Nwfrtor Pidoflroph . ... 475.20O.O00 I 4 I 1MN..; ki"ijllllHI 'lli Marl .IX .,
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1947, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75