Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 29, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER r - 7 Farm Tour (Continued From Page One) plowed "thice and a hall" timef ionce getting only one side of the rows), and laid by when 2' - feet high, being in good condition now in spite of lack of rain. A three-acre field of alfalfa also was noted, with an explanation hv Mr. Boyd of how he prepared the land and sowed the -red The field had been in crimson clover, was turned in June, and plant.-d with 25 pounds ol alfalfa sc.il til.- first of August and letlilied Willi (.do pounds ot 2-12-12 leililier and .1" pounds ol boras Next stop was at (ilrnn linul farm where he described his meth od of raising In bud col n -red After ucllnm HI""1 LM-ain- "I foundation libnd -eed limn the N. C Seed Ion nd.il am be i ro- cil this with Hawkins piolilie to pro duce the seed coin i'n'st he re lated, he planted two lows ot pro lific, then two lows ol hshriil foun dation, then alternated with a row each of the two t pes until all the foundation was used. The hard work tonu s in keepiim the. hybrid Inundation ears t.isseled it being the female in the process Mr. Bo d told of itniim through t lit' held even other d.i to keep the tassel puked Inspectors check frequent Iv to v it it metis ceitili eation requirements. fare must he taken to see thai the ditTcrenl H- "l corn tassel al the same tune and -into the pre'ifu throws t.,ster it was planted a wtek later than the foundation The cnui:t aL'elit also htnll'jllt out thai the I II -' National Bank had given a peck ol hv hntl seed al each ot thi planum'- ineelinss last spring to enc ntu a 'r planting I he higher produt live I v pe of corn. Several inn si .milnm shorthorn animals also wen- shown at the Glenn Bovd larm before the group continued their lorn nev into Iron Duff tow iiship. There I lie fir-l stop was at the K W. White home one of the prettiest and best equipped to be found in anv rural ana Mlenlion vvas di rected to the water svstctn and ar rangement ol fixtures A "roup ol llei eloi is were seen at Jan is t 'alilw ell's Itai n I ucludetl were M 11 I ial low at - Hi i II out , Texas I'.t ( 'iaml l-'i amis' r I ) Paladin Ji Heel I M.ti . Domini. 27th owned hv !(o s llavnes and hi- son I lav and 1 Ijii Pav i 4-11 babv h. t t The convi.v slopped 1 1 si at Glenn I'ali-a i - ilan v ti m. u Inn the cuuii'v a.-i ni limit. ht mil that the I'aliin r i I11M1 en alter ;:mn;: through colli", i et in ncd home to take ov i I ' he I a nn in.i na::i mi-lit Ten icgisleic-d (luetiisiv. wire! show n and t h' :i otip look, d o , r the dan : m t -up ard an eseellent pasture whic h had In c n limed and phosphalt d lei 1 ' v ears. It u as hi oil ail nut I hat I 'a- l.il tle mdusiiv m 11,, vwo.nl fountv depends on :ood pa-lure - Alter lunc h a' t he ( 'i ah' n e-li -i. Duff school, lat ui eqinpr a lit di il ers explained their produi-is -,cl ., h were on cli-p!a at the -i hool grtiunds Ft e, w .1)1 i ;m 'on a served the '.'roup hv tin Fits" ,, tional bank ol which .bmathai! Wood is p 1 1 sideiit Walters Dam i Continued From Page One) and outline of the program, and a reproduction of the plaque. Directors of the company voted to name the huge hydroelectric plant lor ice-l'i esidenl Walters at a meet nig in June. Mr. Wallers has been v ice-presi-tlcni and a duecior of the con. pans since il was lormetl in IttZb and as such has participated in I he pro gress of the cimipan.v I'loni a small coiict'iii serving .'iH.;i41 customers 1 1 c i L'.ittili mile-, of lines In a mod em ul silly serving lljil.022 i ii-ltini-h mi'i 1171 ." milt's of lint-. The Wallers hv di tielet 1 1 it plant has plaveil a larte pall in the de velopment ol I he tomp.ni ami in iht' improvement ol Us service in tin ut-si livi-ion The laigtsi ol I h,. i lenpaiiv s 1 1 ut in i al nig planl. the U.il'.ti- plant has gene rated an annual avt r.i'Jt- ol Jl.l. IllillaJu ktlovt.ilt-hoiirs ot eletliic dv Walters plant I lit second highest heat! plain t as ol the Uockies Mi', lee' ha- Ha.OtlO horsepowcl cap.it it.v It went into operation Jniv 1 ltiiiii. attel tout veals of i oi.st i net ton Il is 3 air-line miles northwest ot slieille ami is adiaceul to Hit (In. it Sn.ekv Mountains National j 1'atk. I 1. 1 Walter- plant until June was known a- I he Watcrville planl. Its output has been indispensably iii 1 1 Jtal etl i n'o tin- ( 'al ol ilia I 'ow t-i ..ml l ight c ompa n s eastern North Carolina and Soulh farolma ttrri ior phvsitallv separated froin t he wi-stiin cliviscin lines through in. t ei t ohm tt tons with the neighboring Duke Power tompanv and Ibe Ap paltithian KW-ctiic I'ow er coinp.inv Awaits Stork f" i , sf Pepper REA Com imietl From l'agc One' drawing ot tickrls dining Hie all ernoon. donated hv llavwood coun ty merchants, and a washing" ma chine will be awarded as the mas ter pri.e by the cooperative. A record attendance is expected, representing 2 000 members in Haywood, Jackson. Buncombe and Transylvania counties. Luncheon will be available at the Armory. ' a onl iiiiicd lroni l'agc One) enio.ved ever.v niinule ol the trip. The scenery cannot be accurately described, as it surpasses anything I've seen ill Fasten) America." Senator Pepper was lad to learn that litis community was( starting a campaign to promote travel over Highway No. 27(i from Brevard, drawing from upper Soulh Carolina. He expressed himscll that nianv I'loiKlian- would use the It u it i- coming to this section from the 'Sunshine state. "The proper advertising put on Ihjs lugbwav would bring thousands ol travel ers into Ibis area. ' he said, I ' file drive across IVgali, inn,, hot h V,-iv ne sv ille and Brev al d I certainly an ca-v one The high way is a ma lerpicie ol engineer-, in-!, and as easy a road to drive oa thai I know ol that ha- tin altitude ' er 4 000 feet." he aid. '1 he parlv- limit here was ctini po.ed ol Si'iiaim I'ippei. Charles Ha.v . chairman ol die Slate Park Comnn - 'en. C I Heeec . president e( tin Chamhi i' of Commerce: Rev. I., (i. 1 Hioit. pastor of the First Haplisi iliuich and H W. "Uea-I c "i! Sunn -on Th giotip was met at Wagon I Ho.nl (i,iu bv a delegation from I Brevard who accompanied theni' hat k to Frusta, where Senator Pep-1 pit had a vi-u with Marry Straus.1 president of F.custa. and witnessed iigaretle paper rolling from the; laid mat limes. The Brevard party included May-! or S F, Varner, Senator Verne ( lenient, liavmond Bennett, super-! miendeiii of Frusta: Carl KreugerJ supervisor of l'tsgah National For-' i -l; V V. lluber. district ranger of I'isgnh. f . M. Douglas anil John Anderson. While the party drove along the parkwav. a large deer ran in front of the senator's car and up the bank and looked down at the parly be fore dart ma off into the forest. FAMOUS child actress Shirley Tem ple will soon havf a mother role, hut not on the screen. At a party at the Temple home in Brentwood, Calif., Shirley announced that next January she expects to become a mother. She was married to John Agar in Sept.. 1945.(lnlernofional) 203,663 Visit Great Smokies During July .liih saw 20J.titiJ persons s :it Hie Great Smoky Mountains Na tional Park to reach a tourist trav el level ol JO per cent higher thar the same month last sear the Na tional Park System reported. The number ol visiters recorded al parks, monuments, cemeteries, historic sites, memorials, and rec icalional areas for the month was 4!)H!).H2S. The Jul If 46. figure was :i,fi:tH.r8!). Park unit travel tor 1947 up to August 1 was 17.777 870. On the basis of the July travel rush, a spokesman for the Park Service predicted a national record high of 24.0011.1)1)0 persons. foan's Beauty Shop Opening Is Announced Announcement '. tvtr.4 .'. ;v dav ol the opi'iimj; of Jvstn iiMwrs tv Shop. ltH-lHt in Tv VlfB.' Apartments on HrAm-r i'.wt The new htp is omtsn-t xi tfl aged bv Mrs Jean Ami C3 specialize in tyrtiul . kinds, facials .j;rv..-Y sm. lint nig Mrs Stah' rs' I'.'ix'vvf 5tss she ha be 11 ;; :r. svu;--111 n mimtK-r el si;i.vi .x:Tic. Among iho' jurv Kjx: 'V'vr. lormerlv mt tw SsWBtx Sjt Ion f'-.a: e". v St.. use t.ix"to: Stai 't v ,-t i' x i. .' ,.-ir .r 'e Y'I'k v' 'V .1 V 'is w 7.TH': the mil r.,:vjc' -x : s.-V ;t .HS and K.cr....t Sv sttMlfO al t"e rw-. W S(tv ;A-rni ai-.d w ;. ;w i . r V" M ' v ' 1." ir t .si -; jk-x tr-.rti :- ;r.. st V.r Sth'. tsfers .. - : . s; , ;-7..r.i s.;Wiiis PAT IH1KI WIV.-i DIVOKCE KilNO N-v r Pa, tUta Dor s v rjt-c.hijvsd of Tnnnbon :st Ti-n;:-.-... Diame; pointed civerce sjd ih "firsj person 1 1 hve i due nh vtben she returr.s i0 LoS Aneie-s tomorrow w:i! tv her ev-husfcanci McClure Vayc One' t. s,if'.i,i; s-.sr'. ssi-.l:-tor tor ap ivssvvrrJVi.s '.0 ,iss. Stviii( tf the psivnts Mr ). K VltVlui-e. of H- .Jwie4 iK iAs Mrs. Vusinia KliMMO Wox".)HV t'.i .M1S t,nr X',-,in- VTit hxe. VeOurr two fHifyttcT! vVne.i rid Mars Kuth V.,n"ot' tv hiv!M Vtlvi aril Mo i""Uirr Ai W m ncsx die and v v Me Cbnx ; fy. 'a.-ielphia Pa and .-hrv vits.. M.-s Vd 1. risen of H?eci'zw. V.-v H T nderson. At Miiiie:(v.i ai v Mrs Frank Vltv- At t vace. Hs S. S t"itn.kei: officiated t'twnrci 1 't ,insA vesierdav af tciiwiw V. iv e fVi '.be .irers were 0:-.x r.itrv-: t .e ,-. Titt'.e. Jatk Vt.xtaiY V," Patt.sn .'. '-n Kav and K. r.i KoS. .s, r Hotio: .-.rv pal 1 Ns:vrse:t 1 1. K.ikpatnck. K 1- l-fi ls;:i Xii.ugtiin. Civde Crxvr. J .:" Vof.ure. Wis Patton. Jbh- Rrrtf.ior. .1 K Hail and James T.rse: fai;;: ot the dt'ceast'd srsssi as flower bearers Ol Tl HK "XOT f.OOD" CHICAGO Herbert Hoo ver saopping in Chicago between :rins, said the world fotnl situation "doesnt hiok vers good The 73-er-old former President told ' ne'smn "We have a surplus of food in the I'nited States as usual, but not s great a one as we had list sear and the world need is probablv greater this vear than it was last Mrs. Roosevelt Replies To Jim Farley's Articles In Her Reply, Mrs. FDR Says She Is "Deeply Grieved By Charges PHILADELPHIA Mrs Eleanor Roosevelt declared yesterday in re ply to the recent "Why I Broke With Roosevelt" articles by James A. Farley that she is 'deep ly grieved to find that Mr. Farley was not the person I thought him." The former first lady, writing in September Ladies Home Journal magazine, commented particularly on the statement by Farley quoting her as having said that "Franklin the late President Roosevelt) finds it hard to relax with people who aren't his social equals." 1 About this. Mrs. Roosevelt said: "Mr. Farley has a remarkable memory. 1 am quite sure the re mark which he quotes . . . could never have been made by me. since I never have had such thoughts. Tt nev tr occurred to me that Mr. and Mrs. Farley felt them selves in any group different from that which we were in." In his recent .series of magazine article" the former Postmaster General complained that President and Mrs. Roosevelt did not treat Mrs. Farley and himself as social j Governor Cherry To j Get New Stenographer KALEIUH (API Mrs i,":, ,, Eastman Nickels of Raleigh vmh succeed Miss Ruth Robbs as s... ographer in Governor Cherry's m. 1 fice September 1. Miss Hobbs n' 'signed to join her brother in p;-,. ' vate business here. Mrs Nicke ls . the wife of a World War casual',, a patient in Walter Reed hosp ,-.,! j Miss Evelyn Siler has returned 1 to her home after a visit to Mr and 1 Mrs. Frank Roberts in Portsmouth j Va equals. j Mrs. Roosevelt explained h, , j feelings toward the Parleys "It is always possible thai sue,,. thing you say may be inismt,.. preted. but that happens in ti., other person's mind and not m your own mind. i "1 have always liked people, a j did my husband, for what th, v 1 were as individuals, and we en Ijoyed ourselves and relaxed with j people of many and varied back j grounds. j "It is true, however, that if v(,u J have similar interests and beliefs I it may be easier to relax ... V 11 j wittingly in some way I, who was I responsible for purely social mat ters in the White House, seem to I have hurt both Mr. and Mis Fai ley. "For that I am genuinely son;, but 1 feel 1 never treated them i any differently irom any other member of the mbinet." Labor Day -Continued from Page One) the Canton high band in Champion Park, also judging of window dis plays and decorations in the busi ness section of town. er'aiiicrs will maintain a con t.nii. :.- program during the after no.',, ..in! evening', with hog calling i, el n.ni driving contests being in tersp. 1 .eel with variety programs, trttig music ians. quartets and other ::ioop. Square dance and string hand coni est s will begin at 8 p. m., mi. ol il'e toncluding highlights of the celehr.'il ion and afterwards a siieei d.inif will be held open to ail -.v ho v 1 h to participate. At J i) m Monday Ille Champion V and I i.a.-elw cod baseball teams will pi.--- each oilier on the Canton In li liehl : poit 1 tint- planned lor Salur dav iinlmh sn 1 iiniiivj. checkers, table' ienne- and other contests for boss and ' :l . s'larlint; al !) a. m. in the Ch.ie.ioien V and during the afternoon a temp- tournament at the hili s, ho,. 1 eoiirls for boys Champion Y vs. a baseball game at Highway construction costs in 1946 were b'3 pen cut above those of 1941. WINS S90.000 ON S2 BET CARACAS. Venezuela Cruz Mai pa Rengifo, a shop clerk, won S90.000 on a two-dollar six-horse parlay. and girls and Green River m 3.U0 p. m. Stindav al I) 7i a. 111. Or. F. 1! niackard ol Charlotte will leach a union adult Sunday school class at the YMCA. Colored eiliens will have a union leligious program at p. 111. in Champion Park, and at ! tv m Or. lllackard will direct a union white religious service in the park. Riding t li s it r s have been in stalled since last week-end and platform programs and various contests staged since that time. All activities have been under the. gen eral supervision of C. C. Poindex ter. general chairman of the Labor Day committee. Silo Filling Time Is Almost Here Be Ready For It With A BLIZZARD ENSILAGE CUTTER In Stock For Immediate Delivery Reasonably Priced Bring Your AAA Purchase Orders For Orchard Grass and Ladino Clover to Us For Best Quality Seeds. Farmers Federation Radio Station (Continued fro n Page One) assure the best nf radio broadcasts. All the equipment used in the sta tion is ol the latest design, some with features just perfected dur ing I he past MO days The transmitter house and lal) foot tower are tin the Howell Mil; road. The station operates on 1400 kilocycles The puhlit is mv'."d I.) visil the studios at aMv tune to see the broadcasts heing aired. Mi. Wallat e annotltited I hat the I'nited Press tehlvpe for getting 24-hour con -t ant news service would . in -ailed by Saturday of this week at the studio. The station is owned by the Smoky Mountain Broadcasters, Inc.. with the following officers and stockholders W. Curtis Puss, pres ident Holt McPhcrsrin, vice pres ident: William Medford. secretary treasurer. Robert M Wallace, gen eral manager. J V. Massic. (J. N. Allen. Aaron Pnvost Marion T. Bridges. Wayne r.'orpemng, Lee Weathers. Henrv Let Weather and E. S. Slack. The perj-onnel of the station in cluded Robert M. Wallace, general manager: Zeno Wall. Jr , commer cial manager; George Flowers, pro gram director: E MtFarland, Har ry Robinson, Howard Choate, an nouncer; Donald Hunnicutt and Frank Wilbur, engineer!, and Miw Mary Moody, aecretary. The owners selected the call let ter WHCC to represent Wyn ville, Kazelwood, Clyde and Canton. MEET THE BRAND NEW LINE OF General Electric Appliances IN OUR BRAND NEW STORE MAIN STREET HAZELWOOD rl b )at SEE OUR DISPLAY AT THE REA Meeting Saturday at The Armory A Complete Line On Display Featuring General Electric The Appliances Most Radios General Electric Emerson Temple Farnsworth Home Freezers General Electric Deep Freeze Women Want Oil Burners Lenox Desota Dishwashers General Electric (Fully Automatic) LIGHT FIXTURES All latest designs of fluorescent and incandescent CLOCKS GRIDDLES VACUUM CLEANERS FOOD MIXERS IRONS WATER HEATERS ROASTERS STOVES REFRIGERATORS CONTRACT WIRING AND GENERAL ELECTRICAL REPAIR and REFRIGERATION SERVICE Haywood EOecfcric Phone 45-J Main Street Hazelwood
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 29, 1947, edition 1
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