Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 30, 1948, edition 1 / Page 16
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t THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNT AINEEB Expert Advice On Farm Problems FIRST DOUBLfc-DECK AIRLINER CARRIES 84 IN TESTS t" : .:i U'.irJ of o.ocnv tin u Nuid MicecsU'd Double t he IWi J u Uld Labor: A wide bo. top of til." repubr iron standard site for u o draperies men'-: shirt large pieces, wll -.i, of the irun and -h.: t during ir on nit;. t be put on or or! la- :! .. as needed A idtli of "0 im !-.i tor this boaid. In an ironing study made by .Nc ,uk stale special ists, It Nas tulll.l1 th.it II: U i - .IS wide as any ol the n in the study could reach at t tit ir pre ferred troaing iieiglit without Lend ing forward For tuintorublt , itti Cietit Ironing .a upright posture i: necessary, even while readmit tin full width of the board This al lows free nioement without - ti -iin oo neck, arm-: or buck. Tlie length of the board should be about 42 inches or hehth longer than the board on uhnh it fits. One end may be tapered for convenience in slippim: ilothes over. Cut the board from - uuh plywood or 5-ply wall hoard 1 ,,-ti n wooen cleats on the und tmiI. to fit it to the lower hoard, lo hold it more firinh, wooden buttons may be screwed onto the cleats which may be turned to clamp on the un Hi t At. '' 1 -s vr-11' -m,- 4-e-.Sss f - c- -f s V 5 .rY ' I - ..-j&aJSiiBiiiiiiii inflfc . . . ,Mf t. 81 SfVENTY-FIVE PASSENGERS nnd nine members of the crew line up beside the huge new air clipper America fv.i v. .r.-4 Usts v h i h i:i.t. . cr.: o1 15 tile only io:!.:.Li" mtical landlane w ill cut t it coiiid can y them all and have room to spare. The $1,500,000 ttrBto .t'i a d . le deck, plus a spacious lounge and bar. The largest and fastest Mao :.e tail KruiKisco-llonoluJu rising time from 12 to 8 hours. (fnte Dr. Michal Issues Some Precautions Against Polio 1 I ol Lions Leader 1 Library Notes iiuliuiis to take has l)r Mary Miclial of , llli ih'parl iiitiil in ii. the spread of LEN! mi ml 4 l ill Noiir ilDttor ininii'iliatil o! i r inplonis appear: , i .in r.i. a cold, Uset ! i. i 'i -on ikss or still- i i :,. ; ' oi . il Ii er Infantile i i in many ilillereiil I ol ih, ni pi 1 hke a lot . I i I. ! il I iood ih m ascs. lie oil 1 By MARGARET JOHNSTON County l ibrarian l:l:li,i ; lilt II: I II. MEAN QUALITY In HOME HEATING FIIA TERMS no nous FA V Ml. NT 1 1 111 I; SEE I S TODAY HlflTINO CDfUPHNV d.-r Ih liuai it w Vnik St -it. le the Cir-t I. I id in llii'ir hiiiiie and 1 a' ' fill 1 1 1 10MlC til O Phone Ashcvill, 1357 N. C. 58 l!rodwa on their weekly ironin::. ' IM-im h wide sui (ace, a inai i ced s to he mi) eil only tin, in iroiiiml. . ho V f tt ' ,1 that . pi III !l tin in i : llln," I), I I ,.iil in v, colli. u ts. Try not .."! i -.uds. Local health , 1 , ' i a het her schools U : I in. places nia re- :i II ' "0 can help it, don't , 1 ii. ,-. ' , i ih, .ih 'i - on 1 ranis, I , a - oi In Ivi-.h Iios u here n ,''!,'. 1 1 Ii 1 1 .nn'.ers. I . . ii ' I i:t I n i rtiied. i'.xtieilie o. i oak, v,,ii an easier vic- ,i I , . no. m plav. late lunirs. 0 , I , 1 1 ii les are possi hie in- o . I , , .,1 I o l, la pol 111. miiiI i liillin::. Dnn'l slay loiip , ,,,!,! 1 1 it I I --Mini in polluted wat- II I. " oh von, lleallh De- ., I ! I 1 h ,11,1 lo i I, oi V. ., Ii hand : he I., , p 111, and oilier .i' Ii. ,m Innd. Dnn'l ii h i v o ceo , red. ('me nil our family iltiiliir as ,o ,i,l i clulii ol ri-innval of 1 .ni-1 adenoids, or oilier ii a i,. I ih o.-n hi eery , during i n.il i polemic nioiit hs nl 'oil' a hum 1 1 ic expense, n, Ion, h u il h I he Chapter oi ioii.il I oiiiidal inn for In ' I'.noh i- 'Hie health de nt nl "id I in ni' Ii Hie address. Mildew i ii. In hot, a fillip u - pre damp I a i k in :l in Hi i ' lie illi i mr I hoi , For Winter Warmth and Summer Comfort Lo-" IC" h,,-pii.ii doclnr iul nn known r Ihal infantile he cared for ill to avoid panic. FLAMEPROOFED COTTON INSULATION DEALER'S NAME HAYWOOD BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Phtfnes 82-8,' At the r,(.t,t ve'ops lapnlh, in cotton'; and lin ers pai I it uhii ly. causing a sour odor ami i;ral h brown stains. The oltler the -.tain-, the more difficult they ni o to i cinove, Kresh stairus may ollen he washed out in soap ii.d wati r. Sliihhorn stains may re quire liloat hin'. l or White cottons or linens only, w:i-h in tint suds, moisten with lemon jiiiee and sail and dry in I lie sun. II st un is old, bleach with hydroon pi i oxide, liinse well. For any washable colored fabric, wash in warm suds, old stains are diffi cult to it move. Avoid i.tlinii damp clothes stand In a basket during hot, damp weather. MIX WITH A JAEGER r New, larger capacity drum sizes in the Jaeger SPEEDLINE trailer m,v-. are combined with exclusive features . . . guarantee low cost cone- and big yardage. Automotive transmission, direct drive to drum cuts noiits 50' L while increasing power efficiency 30 to 40r;. Criss-cross "re" mixing action assures more thorough and rapid mix and discharge. Only seconds needed to load or discharge, and automatic Skip Shaker Loader speeds every batch. Model 6S illustrated ia a one bag mixer especially designed to increase production for home building contractors. Other standard tires areO'iS, 1 1 S and 16S. We are headquarters for other fine JAEGER equipment . . . Compressors, Pumps and Paving Machines. Your inquiry will receive prompt attention. w I'll V. ONK IU NDKKD BOOKS , lieprinted here, from the Janu ary 1948 issue of the Kiwanis Mag azine, are the books which two thousand well known Americans (hose for their effectiveness in deserihinn the unique flavors of America as liroiu;lit out by Its people anil then- struriKles, attain ments and ideals. FICTION A (iood ileril.'iKe, by Mary Ellen Chase. A Lantern In Her Hand by Hess Slreelcr Aklrieh. Alice Adams, by Booth Tark iiiRloii. The American, by Howard Fast. An ou - mil h, by Sinclair Lewis. Arundel, by Kenneth Hoberts. Darren (iroitnd, by Ellen Glas gow. Cimarron, by Edna Ferber. Collecled Stories, by ner. The Covered Wafion, by Emer son Hnutdi. Death Conies for The Archbish op, by Willa Cather. Drumi Along the Mohawk, by Walter Edmonds. Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton. The Four Million, by O. Henry. The Forest and The Fort bv Ilervey Allen. The Free Man, by Conrad Rich- tor. Freedom Road, by Howard Fast The C.ieal Meadow, by Elizabeth Madox Huberts. The Crape" of Wrath, by John Steinbeck. Cianls In The Earth, by Ole Holvaa". The I lousier Schoolmaster, by Edward EuMleslon. Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain. The Immortal Wife, by Irving Stone Journey In The Dark, liy Martin F 1 a v i n Let The Hurricane Hoar, by liose Wilder Lone. Last of the Moehieans, by James Fenimore Cooper Took Homeward Angel, by Thomas "Wolfe. The Laic George Apley, by John P. Mnruuanrl. The Man Without A Country, by I Edward Everett Hale M Antonio, by Willa Cather. Moby Drok by Herman Melville. Northwest Passage, by Kenneth Itoberts The Octopus, by Frank Norris. O Pioneers, bv Willa Cather. Old Creole Days, bv George W. Cable. The Ox Dow Incident, bv Walter Van Tilhurg Clark. Rabble In Arms, by Kenneth Roberts. Red liadge of Courage, by Ste phen Crane. Ruggles of lied Gap, by Harry Leon Wilson So Ric by Edna Ferber. Tales of the Gold Rush by Bret Harte. The Trees by Conrad Ritcher. U. S. A, hy John Dos Passes. Valley of Decision by Marota Davenport. Vein of Iron, by Fllen Glasgow. (To be continued I. Actors Are Going To Wear Badges ' Into Los Angeles HOLLYWOOD (UP) The next actors who venture into downtown Los Angeles are going to wear badges. The boys just jren't safe in the big city. Van Heflin, making Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's "Act pf Vio lence" on location near the city hall, was arrested and kept off the set. Two other policemen sent for a patrol wagon for actor Barry Kroeger, Heflin, dressed for his role in the dramatic movie, was unshaven, disheveled, stained and dirty. He had changed clothes in a portable dressing room parked on the street &nd was walking toward the set. A policeman took one look at me." said Heflin, "and figured I'd look better inside a patrol wagon." Happily, director Fred Zinnemann afived to rescue him. That same night Kroeger, re cently arrived from New York, took a break between scenes to sightsee in old Olvera Street. Two plainclothes detectives stopped him. Call the Wagon "One of them thought my face was familiar," Kroeger said. "He said I looked like one of the 'want ed' photographs back at headquarters." Kroeger's driver's license and other identification were back at the dressing room. So the detec tives called the wagon. But I was lucky," he said. "The driver had seen me in "The Iron Curtain.' I'm just glad that by a chance in a million I had turned my gun back to the prop man. If I had that, I'd still be explaining at headquarters." The movie ran into more trouble when it moved down to the Santa Fe freight yards for scenes with a moving train. Producer William Wright, arriving late, couldn't get past the gate. The guard was on alone, and he refused to leave his post unguarded while he went, to check on Wright's admission. The producer waited 40 minutes until a railroad worker leaving his job went back to call someone from the company. That decided the question. From now on, location companies wear badges. Ouifs in Protest : s - m a I I w m swm X. T- Popular Disease TW A number of puiml r , lions conceriimn ion diseases were exploded I G. McGavran, Dean ol in, sity of North Carolina Public Health in an a, I, fore the Chapel lldl l ot recently. Contrary to popular h, er is now seldom a can h i oid fever, Dean .MiC.m And nit much typhoid mi flies ir milk, hut moi, per cent ot it is can ,, mother" and trail nu children, lie said. Discussing scarlet I that the fumigation longer considered woiile.ili that quarantine, while n it. harm, can hardy lie eon ,,i necessary. The examination ,1 !, lers by health deparlmeni It is repeated often i i, mutdi in the ca e ol ii,, for which the evaininai ,,,o tended, he said, for ,lol instance, is ino- l ilan i ,,,, il le I' tor IN PROTEST against acceptance by Columbia University of a Polish Government grant, Dr. Arthur P. Coleman (above) has tendered his resignation to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Dr. Coleman, a faculty member for 20 years, declared that the present Polish regime in War saw was controlled by Moscow and was attempting "academic infiltra tion." The grant was for establish ment of a Chair of Polish Literature and Language. (international) SMOKE SCREEN FAILS PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UP) A quahaug dredger used a naval bat tle tactic, a smoke screen, trying to elude a state fish and game Dat- Ring Lard-Irol boat. When caught, the dred ger was found to have been equip- Shooting Ranges Yield Fortune in Lead CLEVELAND (UP) - A storage battery company here is getting lead from some unusual "mines". The company reports that "pay dirt" in the forir, of shotgun pel lets is being struck in trap and skeet ranges throughout the coun try. At Kansas City, for instance Russ Elliott estimates that more than 200 tons of lead are obtain able on the grounds of his shoot ing park. Elliott mines his vein with a stripped-down wheat com bine. The lead-laden earth is shov eled into the combine and the lead separated from the dirt. At the current price of 15 cents a pound, Elliott s lead is worth $60,000. 4$ n (jM-o1? ' Tl ii . ' Send your I'aniily asli ; porioi' work . . . octiiminn : Don't Call "Any LaundJ CALL Pumpkins have been cultivated peu wun smoKe Domos. me ves-for thousands of years, for rinds sel had zig-zagged behind the smoke have been found in the Swiss lake dwellings. screen for 45 minutes. Waynesville Lam (lni(iiiorali'(l) .1. Y. Kill I , Oh ner WE CALL AND DELHI IMione 205 M The Big News of 1948 3 for 2. Coming Soon . . . Watch this news paper closely. MOUNTAIN SUPPLY C0MPA1 Wavnesville. . I. J VAftfe ! , ; - - tf ' Elf : V3fr4 1 "LESS WORK MORE INCOME PER ACRE" NOW that you have seen the FORD Tractor perform in the field with oilier n..ii KNOW why Haywood farmers nrefer (ho FnRTV im, kvhiv : - .n't lie heal h i KNOW why we haven't been able to supply the great demand for FORD TIIAt'''11' KNOW, too, that it will pay you to wait a little longer and get a FORD. STOP IN TODAY AND ASK FOR DETAILS . . . WI . Rl IM ( I lvlM' FORD TRACTORS REGULAR LY Headauarters For FOOD TRACTORS AND DEARBORN FAB EQUIPMENT SiVMV 1WI 1 Soeolv II IA lllj fl'ut "'j II Dl.t, 4kf In WlH lp ''- 'Ol J "" ''J'''lol!f I ' lie juj; ' li: lo. vinirs (are. tl) rl.iiiiins iirmiipi. 205 ,-liverl iimiintat" ..J, SI
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 30, 1948, edition 1
16
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