Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 6, 1948, edition 1 / Page 13
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i i THE WAYJCEJSnLLF MOUNTAINEER PACE FIVE '(Second SetttmT" TODAY i . ELWOOD HAZ OPE ug 3 NING SARMACY mil ii I I II I ' """,".T'M" V 1m ;:- w wife :t i'y 4 l " Owr Policy Our Firm Is Pledged To Handle Only Well Known, Nationally Ad vertised Brands of Merchandise Merchandise with A Good Rep utation Products We Know Are Good IV I Iff ore North Cam Una" ( fi 13 Bill MORE ABOUT Modern Store (Continued from Page One) Mtvul .spotlights throughout the ceiling are spoiled on the several display ' MTve-yourscLf cases." 'I he prescription department is oi a spcual Uesin. vmh an open new ol the entire department. The ai: jnjicincnl ol shelves, drawers and lights were desiuged tor ef licient operation. The underside of the shclvet. are lined with a row ol fluorescent lights. A special item in the department is a sink with hot and told water. The pres cription dtpartment is "ated"ofl Horn the general public, yet the open-view ' tpe Hunt was utili zed. The lloor of the building are of ml. Nil tile, and the ceiling is of acuslocal hoard, wnh modernistic double rows ol fluorescent lights. The real ol the building is devot ed hi storage rooms, and a room for the compressors used on the soda lountain. " A large oil heating unit is install ed in a separate room, and two large rest rooms are also in the back part ol the building. The sioie has a side entrance from the Church Street side, and nutfirint' raiks mill newspapers arj on display at this entrance. I he neu line will have about ihite innes the ink. of the former lole, Willi lli.ni lieu items add ed in r. i,d ,. the departments. .lu- oppuMie ilu- .(ul.i lountain an- ,i iiiimlii i o Uiullis, made ot o.iK winch ni.il, I, the UllKHIlder o 1 he I iM in es in I In ? ii t-. the 1 1 1 mt ul I he .-line has two lan;e IIimii Uel windows, hut these will iini he used lor display pur ios,v, n Wllr explained, as the I ' v. 1 H will hi' woith inoie, since all nieicli.indise will be on display, and very liltlc lielimd I In-counters. Lawrence Olivier Proves 'Hamlet' Can Be Exciting ii;. c.HNi: it .m).s.ki:k llOl.l.YWiK II) Sliakespearc de voices will lind l.auieiue Oliver's movie "Hamlet" an exciting thing to watch. So will folks to whom the Hard was required high school reading that one, some time, really oumlit to know better. The English-made film lias ma jestic sweep and power Oliver, as the melancholy Danish prince, is magnificent, lie s tender or con fused, bitter, jocular, or savage, with eoual lacilitv In Hik tarti. ing meeting with his lather's ghost atop Klsinore castle, in the sub- I dued "To be or not to be" soli loquy, in his clashing duel with Laertes. Olivier, in voice, gesture, and expression, is in lull com mand. Around him is a superb cast lean .Simmons as the sensitive and finally mad Ophelia; Kileen Hcrlle as the queen, Hamlet's wretched mother; Basil Sydney as his mur derous uncle, the king. Felix Ayl tner is a smoothly conniving old I'olonius. Norman Wood and faithful Horatio, Terence Morgan as fiery Laertes. Stanley Ilolloway l.s a refreshingly ebullieut digger in a grisly graveyard. Technical accomplishments are outstanding except for some close ups of Ophelia that arc too harshly black and white. The grim and barren castle, through which the camera roams at will, is a most effective setting. Sound effects to herald the ghost's arrival, in cluding an amplified heartlike tom tom, are almost ovei poweringly forceful. .Now In ii,,. comparative ridicu lous Abb,, n illK t ostfllo Meet Frankenstein " u,,,! ..,mi Lo ope rate a tieighi oifu e Com. hokum, lots ul' shucks by .mi, plenty of l:u..:hs h,i kid; ln,m nuie to nine. Hut tip-Type Feeding 1 Tried On Calves " ' IHf;i S FALLS. Minn. (UP In M'w Tail county, they 're niak ing "home babies" out and saving money, labor, butter- iai aim grain. I'r II. J. Larson. Kerens Kails veterinai i.in, knew that mirsine calves ii enw inning production to nolhing. ,. a.,, ,,K,VV. I(iat ,et. tin! calv.es du,,k liom pails often resulted m ' iot-i,ei,,.,i 1 calves :iiul Noineiiin.'s le-nll.ti in scours fily sente.i y i an, I pm unu.nia. Ldr-,011 limned a cuntraption that consists of a large nipple on mo enu oi a tube connected with a pail of milk. He placed the nip ple in a frame at udder-height for the calf, which nursed the tuechan cal "mother" instead of its trua mother. Some 200 farmers who have tried the method claim it makes the calves develop better than feeding from their own mothers. One-half cuu cf canned salmon added to an omelette recipe will provide an appetizing chane for Pi It? . ii' ?' . I I. ;1 t 14 a meatless day. Sever with to mato sauce.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 6, 1948, edition 1
13
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