2. 1948 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE (First SectioaT tire l.rAfl KI.KOW ROOM NKKOI I) Wli.n II I Ik- ,1 IlU-l11'-' iKll 1' ..ilil ,1.1111 I ,,,,'M Ul.tt ., Ill I" M..M li 1 1 i, immiicii , ,1 I lit- ,. , sit-III tilf nef.- M KM PI I IS, Tenn il'J'i Hi.' lioy ). Nash family arc lal)li" to eat. Mrs Nash makes sure dial her children are seated so dial they don't hump elbows. Mrs. Nash and four of her live children are southpaws. 'flic fattier and one daughter are I'lghl-handei s. choice l.iiii.i s of CAROLINA NEWS I l oin The Wires of Associated Tress and United Pre n Aii.uo.vDs are civin H EREHiUT INCREASE v. l. am: c.aston dies ARMY PRESENT 'AUTHORIZED1 p 5 HKNS 8 ECUS fliUe.a ninnllV . ..ff.n l 1 1 ) p..-r? I" r" ! in.- the lrln m-iunied , jrieniullr on it SPK1NGFIEI.D, Mass UPi - i Mrs. David Duncan of Sixteen a alter ' Acres boasts that a total of eight and e- eggs were produced in one day by five chickens. evidence whether Highland tal, Inc., or any individuals be blamed. The testimony took four days. hospi-mit'ht 'I'he Mali- I t ilu,,- i has er.intcd appeals by ,,ul ro.uls tot a 10 i-.-r n-m nuiva-c m rates lor i-ooU-, liauK-d within the slate Certain products, howew-r. are excepted from the increiee They are pulpwood ami road build ins; materials nub a.-. sand, sraycl and crushed stone The neu in crease matches one pre ion Is granted by ihc Interstate Com merce Coiiiiui-moii on 1'reiHii hauled from -tale to another Ik - HUDSON'S BIG HOE SALE STILL MANY GOING ON STYLES FOR WEN - WOMEN - CHILDREN r T"h 1 i lany tteaucea as Much as Half Buy Your Shoes At Big Savings At iielk-Hudson Co. 'Home Of Better Values" l.niu- (laston, oldest stale eni-ui-iit office manager in point ix n e ill North Carolina, died .iImui 8 4ri o'clock yesterday muni .us' at his Home as he was prepar ing lo leave for the office. He vas 1. 1 Mi' Canton had suffered from a heart ailment for some time but had been able lo continue his work lull tune and worked a regular day .it i he A-hey die otlie Wednesday, lie had finished breakfast this mm nine vihen "--truck by a severe heart attack and died 30 minutes later. PRESENT TOTAL US. MILITARY MANPOWER 1,355,700 TAKE Fir.HT TO CAPITAL m i-uiiii. n employees ot the he; Piiimil M.inutaeturing company plant mar (Irecnboro took their tii'lil ai'aiii-t the Textile Workers Ilium ut Aineiua i CIO i to Wa-li-ini'tiiii, -,t t Kiiii; a decertification elciliim al tin- Cone-owned tnilb winch would allow the 1,200 yyuik-ei- ballot ai'.un on the question ol v. In I her llu- ui-.h lo he ri-pie-i nli'd h tin- TWUA. Gardner memorial A buililint' ill memorial lo Noi l 1 1 Cai'iliiias lale Coxcrnor O. M;i ll.iuliiir is under construction at llu- ( iai iliu-i -W chb college campus The I) Max Cardner Memorial tilililil uiiioii buildinn. as it is In he know li. i-. beint! Kiven to the colli -.'.c by nieuibers of the (iaid i le t t .i ii 1 1 1 tliruueji the Gardner I l 1 1 1 1 t . I mu i n i ( i: mist hi: irt.rr SAVS l)R. (XAIIAM Pi c ident l-'rank Graham of the 1 nm-i-ilv ol Ninth Carolina has told an audience in t ' ) i . 1 1 1 1 I Hill thai the truce between Indonesia and the Netherlands must be kepi lie says il is lip to the people of Iho e countries to give fresh hopes of food and freedom to Hie hini i'r and tearful people of the eai Hi. I liiilur Graham u as t he American member of the Good Offices Commission of the Clilled Nation-, security council yylucli helped licentiate the truce. r.OY IS RECOVERING A ear-old boy hit by a train lias lecaiiied consciousness after one week in an Ashcville hospital.; Authorities say Hobby Hurris Mil-! I'lTcil a !C)-per rent squll fracture, j Put thev say his condition now is I good. ' I rrrn i i imini i a r kiivu' 1 I w MARINES 1 S I i i v w i I iincAnii 1 I.J I MIKrUKV.C f si 'AUTHORIZED " TOTAL U.S. MILITARY MANPOWER 730,000 li t BelkHMdsoii9s a j& Rack Ladies' SUITS Spring Styles Colors - Third Off e Lot Beautiful J Spring BESSES egular $5.95 w$3-95 jPecial Group Of HIPS p-Rose White jegular $2.98 Group Ladies' J1ITIES fnk White jn - Elastic Band ?w39c One Special Lot Ladies' Spring Men's Dress mm in PAMTS Hand Bags " IMiislic Fabric Leather All SiZeS - All Colors Uol Ulue - ltlark Tan Were $7.95 $2 .us Now $5 Now $2,-98 One Lot of Men's Beautiful, Colorful Dress Shirts Table Lamps Beautiful Patterns Vorp jeKiar $:t.93 Were $2.98 Now $2 Now $2.85 Genuine 27 x 27 Men's White Birdscye T-SHIRTS diapers All Sizes Were 97c Ucp,wlar $2.98 Dozen Now 5c Now $1.94 Doz. Belk-Hudson "Home of Better Values" NORTON IS CHOSEN j STATK HEALTH OFFICER i A new state health officer has ' been i hosen to succeed Dr. (.'al l lieynolds who will retire next, June ' lie is 49-year-old Dr. J. W Hoy Norton of Chattanooga, Tonn . chief health officer of the Tennes-j see Valley Authority. l)r Norton has been chosen as j l!ey nobis' successor by members of the Stale Board of Health at a! meeting in Raleigh. He won a majority of votes on the first bal lot and was named unanimously by a later vote. j Others proposed on the first hal lol were Dr. W. P. Richardson ot : the county health division of the stale board of health and Dr. M. It J llethel. city health officer of Ha- j leigh. j Dr. Norton will assume his new; duties July I. He will be return- j ing to North Carolina after hold ing important Army medical posts' overseas and at home. During World War II he had charge of medicine in the First Army in vasion of North Africa and later served on the staff of General George S. I'atton. After three years overseas, Dr. Norton was returned to the United States with the rank of lieutenant colonel and placed in charge of sanitation in seven northwestern states. A native of Laurlnburg, N (V. Dr. Norton studied first layv and then medicine. He was graduated from Trinity college and then be gan his study of medicine at the University of North Carolina and Vanderbilt He also studied pub lic health at Harvard The state's new health ollicer once served as city health ollicer at Rocky Mount, and later was a teacher of public health adminis tration in the school of public health at the University of North Carolina. DISPUTE DEADLOCKED Negotiations remained dead locked in Asheville in a dispute between Local U-9UT, International Hi ut hei hood ol Klcctrical Workers and the Carolina lmer and Light company ARMY DAY PROCLAIMED Governor Cherry proclaimed April ti as Army day and encour aged the "observance ot the weeY. beginning April ft and ending on April 1 I as Army week DAMAGE SUIT The Norlolk Southern Railway company has tiled a damage suit against Davis Troen Foods of Slatesville asking $40.0011. The. railway charges a truck owned by the food company struck an over pass near Hailey hist July knA caused one of its trains to be de railed ADVISES HIGHER YIELD The elates bacco per acre president of Tobacco Asso has recommended that to tal mors increase I heir yield of huo-curi'd tobacco by al least 40 per cent J. H. llutson says the expected demand for the 1!)4H crui makes a 10 per cent yield increase a wise and profitable move. ASK 15-C ENT SPECIAL SCHOOL LEVY SAYS HE SHOT AT SPIDER AND NOT POLICEMAN A 53-year-old textile worker, who said he was firing at a .spider when he allegedly took pol-shols at his stepson and a policeman, has been bound over to Gaston Superior Court on two charges of : ssault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. ' Frank Smith of Gastonia is charged with firing a shotgun at 1 his stepson, William Taylor ol the Hex community, and at an invest i- gating officer. Both shots were! I wild. ; The Winston-Salem school : boaid asked l be board ol aldermen , to call a special election on a pro pu'i'd l.ri-reiit additional supple ineiil tax lor support il schools The nronosed addition would be iiiiniarilv lor uav increases for t cache r.s. The board ol aldermen may act upon the reipicsl next Tuesday Nl l'Kr.MK COURT TO HEAR AN l i t I.OSI D SHOP CASK The highest court in the land will rule mi whether the North ( 'a i ol I na anli-closed shop law is ci it 1-1 il ul ioual. The North Caro lina Supreme Court has upheld the law, lull the AF of 1- lias appealed il to Hie United Slates Supreme ('mill And Hie Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case. MURDER SUSPECT IS BEING HUNTED Cleveland county officers sought Doyle Quincy Mitchell, 25, Negro, who, they said, is wanted ou a charge of first degree murder in connection with the slaying of a six-year-old Negro girl, who was stripped and beaten to death Mon day, having been waylaid while on her way to an Easter egfi hunt in' the western part of Cleveland county. i BEER-VVINF. ELECTIONS DEVELOP NEW TURN A new hitch has developed in beer-wine elections in Western North Carolina countis. Judge H. Hoyle Sink cancelled a beer-wine vote scheduled last Sal urday in Madison county. The Judge says that the petition calling for the election was examined and found to contain more than 3'l improperly signed names. lie has warned that elections are serious business and that persons assemb ling petitions must adhere strictly to the law. His order to cancel the Madison ASK FOR FLECTION IN It Al IK. II MILL The CIO has petitioned for a collective bargaining election nt I'M liner Worsted Mill in Raleigh North Carolina CIO director. Wil liam Smith, says there are some 2ftO workers in the bargaining uuh involved. This is the second petition filed by the C'H) in the past 10 days con cerning textile mills in the eastern part ol North Carolina. ONE KILLED, FOUR HURT IN AUTO WRECK June Buckner of Lynn is in crit ical condition in a hospital in Try iin She was burned in a wreck whic h killed 17-year-old Kdna Can non of Lynn and injured three oth er young people. Hetty Chapman of Lynn and Leon Bridges and Hob Dcvhorn ot l.andrum. S C. were seriously burned in the accident. They are also in the Tryon hospital. The car in which the youths were riding overturned and burned 3 miles north of Tryon. Nl RSK HURT IN FALL DOWN SHAFT A 20-year-old student nurse Mary l.eana Jones of Seven Springs, is in critical condition in a Richmond hospital from injuries suffered when she plunged three county election follows closely the i .stories down an open elevator shaft. impounding of votes cast in beer wine elections in Graham and Swain counties. Injunctions have been brought which seek to stop those elections from being official Hearings will be held on the in junctions next month. If the courts uphold them, the ballots cast in Graham and Swain counties may be destroyed without being counted officially. An unofficial tabulation of elec tion results showed that voters favored stopping sale of beer and Win by a majority of about seven to ana la tacb county. Miss Jones a trainee at a Golds boro hospital -was at the Medical Collefie of Virginia Hospital under going special instruction. Time Out for Rest It takes from two to 10 Um i long to become rested after being overly tired at it doei to recuperate at the first algns of fatigue. A nap when one first becomes tired will work wondera. A few minutes stretched out on a comfortable be4 then will be far more valuable, than several hour when completely exhausted. TO HOLD DAIRY ELECTION IN. CHARLOTTE The CIO has filed a pennon with the National Labor Kclations Board to hold an election at the Biltmore Dairy in Charlotte North Carolina CIO Director William Smith says some 1 00 em ployees at the dairy would yule in the proposed election whether, they want the retail, wholesale and department store wdYkers union as their collective bargaining representative. DRAFT GROUP WINS Students supporting draft and universal military training legisla tion invaded a meeting sponsored by anti-draft and anti-U. M. T. students and outside organizations in Gerard hall on the University of North Carolina campus and, after two hours of speech-making and a period of questions tossed from the audience, outvoted the anti-draft and anti-U. M. T. group that had called the meeting 395 to 85. ONE KILLED, SIX HURT IN WRECK One man was killed and six oth er persons were injuied when a Carolina Traihsays bus collided with a light pick-up truck on hn.'h-j way 64 three miles east ol Haleigti Graham W. Bustle, ot Raleigh, driver of the truck, was killed SEVEN CAPITAL CASES Following the Easter holiday, su perior court convened here Tues day with Judge J. Paul Frizzelle presiding. Seven cases charging capital offenses are yet to come Up for trial Clerk K M. Underwood, Si . estimated that there are 75 un tried cases yet to come before this term of court at Sanford. they're coming your ayl "i l oL the nw comedy how trrig V 1S$?k ar,tluf TREACHER-b,enda MARSHALL fe Jjgan FORD, harry VON ZELLj -H to 8:30 F.very Monday Night Over WHCC Sponsored by 1 t Dairy outstanding values in MEN'S SUITS Suits by llvilc lu k anil Stvlc Mai t (iabardines. Worsteds. Tweed-; :md Fi nnic 18 S U I T S at 16.50 10 SUITS at 26.00 13 S U I T S at 28.67 15 S U I T S at 31.34 27 SUITS at 33.33