Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 17, 1947, edition 1 / Page 5
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fftJDAXcOCtOBER 17, 1947 U's Wedding Plans Would (St Taste Of Former Monarch Price Of Round Steak Up 30 Cents Since End of OPA THE WAYNESVHU5 lOpNTAIKCZB ' pace tm ;cM;fWl JoBEBT Ml Staff Correspondent the stale ,.D,-In HL' ,1 ht-iflr lof the dus , " ylll DUm u-j centuries ago, ire 1U . . h.,1,1 are (uur . .1 hnllse ... dding Wov Mr. and Mrs. Claude L. Trantham .r i 'By United I'n !displa i The price of louiu. sieak lias lis- ! en an average of HO cents a pound Vfurtl'l I'lm' CUIIIIOIS L ElizatM' h. heiress I were removed, a price survey in 1 '. i -..m, and ! representative eitii.c i i.-.i. 10 till' ' ' MoUntb-.lin. ; The average increase on four si , i.ii.,n i leeted cuts of meal ii,.,h ......i. L. lhlMll "I WlUUIllfe ..mill X ..trl have I rolled rib roast, leu of lamb V""' .. iii... ! bone steak-was about ) the tier idihl lonal and tliis is n honeymoon . 1 )l II II II V till- " "" '.. ,. leniv. the " iu. . . ,;, ..I 1 - i'ai -mi ii.i anilMiiiie lorm- ......i.Hi.iil. Grew i urn.. ...v !. one 01 i Mi ni any heir to a 1 inn U)d,.ni unu's. Ml. aiiiioir. mwi ii.c s,air an i i"-"" i. , . i, rli'll anv .,, Ih,' 111.111 liO-'.c " 6' ffrin II- incieuioie in I!,., a - H noes in ii rirl1 nl llir House oi l(jUld haw lo worry IddniS tiu:.se.ui. 'i,..-.. in anneal to uie no.. Trade I" bpoiK niai tart ol l': Lid i'ini-i-1 of her ,rn cinllii N auapnu iu figure jo dive I nasi ling luvaklast -- til ways ,ir in tin- past- will be only I'm' I In- toast to nd bridegroom ollered The Ministry ot Y ood asked lor additional s the plain menu will fish dish, toast, sand- liquors Henry VIII, kntuan appetite nappny ith an ear of a dozen i i j les per nicai. wouiu ler to peck ai mo so le offering. Elizabeth and her con- bndly away in a hattle- honi'.vmiion to distant George's subjects are confined to I heir little new exchange restrie he has suggested a within the homeland. My will stay at the cas hes of friends or rela Issibly fabled Glamis lotland. scene of Shakes- lacbcth." where Eliza- and T- cents a the survey showed price check was made in eities New York. 1'itts Detroit. Cleveland Atlanta pound The seven burgh, ua., Minneapolis and C olumhus, () Price ceilings were linally and permanently removed Irom' meat Oct. 15, 1946 a year ago today The survey, conducted by United Press, showed thai the pnee of rolled rib roast advanced an aver age of i!(J cents jn the seen cilies The average price ol leg of lamh increased I.V;. cenls. and T-bone sleak rose more limn 24 cents a pound. The American Meat institute, which represents the nal ion's meat packers, said, how ever, Unit com parisons between present prices and OPA ceiling laded to take into account the price of meal in the black market during OPA. "You cau l very well compare no hamburger at all at 27 cents a pound with hamburger which you can walk into a store and buy for 40 cents," a spokesman said. iniimi m im ifi imi Ti iiiMiwir i -xwm mm mm MH AMI MliS. TH A NTH AM were married in Rabun county on September 111 Mrs Trantham is the former Miss Helen Marie Han nah, daughler of Mr. and Mrs. Mink Hannah, of Cove Creek. Mr. Trantham is Hie son of Albert Trantham. of Houte 2, Waynesville. beth's mother was born Yov the wedding .itself some of the lesser stale coaches will be used in the brief drive from Buck ingham Palace along the Mall , Whitehall and to the Abbey. The J route will be lined with soldiers I of regiments in which Elizabeth holds honorary rank and some nav- al detachments because of Philip's I active service in the navy. ( ! There will he no grandstands in !the streets the Ministry of Sun- ply curtly announced that it could i VOUNCi TO I'lCII cakbov moxim: is DISCOVKKI I) ON M AliS I ('AMKItll);K, Mass. t'I'i The I Harvard observatory says it has the I first definite clue on whal makes up 'the atmosphere on Hie planet Mars. Harvard scientists have discov I ered carbon dioxide on Mars in amounts eipial to or greater than , the carbon dioxide on (be earth, j Previously, all that was known of the atmosphere of Mars was that ', it contained a small amount of moisture. The discovery of carbon dioxide i was made possible by Hie wartime development of an infra-red photo cell - a sort of super-telescope. SALARY ISSUE TO TF..U lil'KS MEET HIGHLIGHT WEREN'T TOO not spare the manpower from the national effort There will be no fireworks display, nor will there be dancing in the parks except as it originates spontaneously with the populace. There will, of course, be crowds in front of Buckingham Palace demanding that the appear on the balcony, but a normal procedure. LINCOLN. Neb. - (UP) Sonic 3.700 of Nebraska's 122,000 World War II veterans arc loo young to vole, according to Ashley West moreland, regional manager of the Veterans Administration. About three per cent of the state's former couple j servicemen are still under 21, he that is said, and 400 arc less than 20 y ears old. vMff C II A 1( I.OTTK --1 U P I -The teach er salary issue may become the major battle front at the annual meeting of the South Piedmont classroom teachers in Charlotte Friday. The possibility became evident last night at the meeting of the Mecklenburg county classroom teacher. They reportedly have agreed lo present their own can didates for district offices who will run on a platform of increased salaries. Mrs. Joe Lemmond of the Mecklenburg county schools would be the candidate for president. Mrs. Peal Tomlinson of Hickory would lie nominated for vice president and Lucille Scott of Thomasboro for secretary. ACCIDENT KILLS TWO C.ASTONIA I UP) A second man has died as a result of the collision of two trucks on the Char-lotte-Gastonia highway on Tues day. Vinnr Proudly Presents Fortune vc. s HOES FOR MEN O Unusual Value Q Ease of Fit O Authentic Style they're all yours when you step into a Fortune Remember, Fortune knows full well that a comfortable shoe for you is good buriness for us $8.95 When a shoe has the stvle and value you want . . then, what's more, feels fine on your fool, you know it's the shoe for you In Fortunes we call it "that famous Fortune fit" a fit that makes a Fortune feel like it's made for your foot alone. To see exactly what we mean, come in and try a Fortune todav. ?inrur G.O.P. Hopefuls Eye South For 1948 Delegates WASHINGTON OP) Dixie Re publicans have advance notice that the presidential candidates are coming on an open hunt for sup port among the 200-odd delegates a dozpn traditionally Democratic states will send to the 1948 GOP convention. Harold E. Stassen announced that he is heading South in Novem ber for speeches and conferences In Little Rock. Ark., Dallas, New Orleans, Gulfport, Miss., St. Pet ersburg, Fla, and Orlando, Fla. His move may be matched soon by a decision by Senator Taft iR.. Ohio) to travel in the same direction. Taft Strong In South? Taft generally is conceded strong support among the Southern dele gates. Backers said he can be count ed on to try to offset Stassen's at tempts to break into this area, which will furnish about one-fifth of those eligible to vote pn the nomination of a presidential candi date at next June's Philadelphia convention. The Ohio senator obviously is depending on a backlog of South ern votes to help boost his total In the early balloting, where Gov. Thomas E. Dewey apparently will have the advantage of a solid 97 votes from New York plus those he claims elsewhere. Some of Dewey's outside support lies in six midweslern states where Stassen, the only avowed candi date for the 1948 nomination, claimed yesterday he will get the backing of 100 out of 130 delegates. Disputing this, Dewey spokesmen accused the former Minnesota gov ernor of an attempt to show that he has a bloc of votes rivaling in size that of New York state. Taft supporters also said they believed Stassen was taking in too much territory. Stassen listed Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, South Da kota and Wisconsin as likely to give him a majority of their votes. "PEACH STATE" CHALLENGED COLUMBIA, S. C Governor J. Strom Thurmond has asked Gover nor M. E. Thompson of Georgia to remove the slogan "The Peach State" from Georgia license tags. Thurmond points out that for the past two years, South Carolina has outstripped Georgia for the title of the nation's number one peach producer. GOV. THURMOND tO "IfiED : ELKO. S. C. (UP) Wedding bells will ring next month, lor South Carolina's bachelor governor J. Storm Thurmondand the girl he's been dictating to the past few The Federal Court at Charlotte months. has sentenced Barney Watts of Thurmond will marry a member Charlotte and Edward Brown of f his secretary staff Mis Jean Valdese to five years each and 1 Crouch at the executive mansion U-JH' .... u ., i. iu,n .,.,. in Columbia on November 7th. TRIO GET 12 YEARS CHARLOTTE A father, his son and another man today face a to tal of 12 years in prison for break ing and entering post offices at Mount Mourne and Boger City. SENATOR .MSTEAD BACKS TRUMAN'S I OOD PROGRAM BESSEMER CITY (UP) North Carolina's junior senator. William B. I'nistead. is urging North Caro linians lo support President Tru man's new food conservation pro gram. I insle.id says by cutting down on food we also will help cut down inll.il nui here at home and "the spread of Russian Commu nism" abroad. mm lira vwmm " - " -r" MlliteM km kMH4 ? Ik illu TltMUtt III HPUM " rkewhau a - u i ... J..'t wr. i t . . " - - Ckcw OM1N Hk fMft itk'i um j. s. u. 1 Zml All -em Smith's Cot Rate Drag Store BE NEAT. . . . Don't threw gum or candy wrappers on the side walk. Remember someone has to sweep them up. . . . FIRE BREAKS Ol'T IN I PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL i A fire broke out today in the up- I per floors of Benjamin Franklin high school in central Philadelphia Early police reports say that :i,0()() i students were led safely from the j school. Two more alarms were I sounded after flames broke through the roof of the high school and threatened an observatory on top of the building. TELEPHONING MADE EASY NEW YORK (UP) Motorists driving between Boston and New York may make a telephone call now at any place along the route provided there is a telephone in the car. The American Telephone and Telegraph Company installed a series of 250-watt transmitters over a 250-mile route. Similar sys tems are in operation between St. Louis and Chicago and New York and Albany. N. Y. BRITISH RAILWAYS SOLVE IT LONDON (UP) To relieve the housing shortage among railroad workers on British railways, "ho-tels-on-wheels" are being provided, each consisting of three cars, one with complete kitchen equipment and chef and two with sleeping ac commodations, writing and rest rooms to accommodate twenty men. ma Ginnery Waynesville, N. C. Black, ulwayt tk fleff trr. Thif ii the way a beautiful fabric like Rayon Ever(rao4 crepe should be draped . . oft, adjustable oecklia. butterfly sleeves and a pepluM rising to a graceful bow. Pretty gold pin included in $10.95 Sizes 9-IV Wine Season after season, wear Gold Cross Shoes than any other brand of fine footwear in the world. And for the very same reasons you'll choose them, this fall: the loveliest, young styles, each Fit-Tested to keep a lUA iWtlt(J in your step... unquestioned quality and craftsmanshi ...and value unchallenged in America, today. Brown AS ADVERTISED IN Black $9.95 SIZES I' to 10 A AAA To B CROSSSHOIES AM 5 1 1 C k' i V NCHAllfNQfD $H0VAIU Brown and Red Ginnery MAIN STREET, WAYNESVILLE Black
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1947, edition 1
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