Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 22, 1948, edition 1 / Page 3
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OCTOBEB 22,1948 TflE WAYNESV1LLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE I 5 ; I aiinuunci'd at y Hospital dur p follows: frov Krwin of I ! a son. Octo- li.l Santoid of ipbri U. pin Smiley of I October 15. Uh- Huffman of i daughter, Oc- h,l (iieen of and a daugh- jllai-y Clbsoil of lobei IS. lllie Mehatfey of foiuber 16. jrnest Mathis of October lb. tuciii" Allen of 1, a daughter, $en Ferguson of October 17. jpaniiy Sams of jj, Oilubcr 17. Jf H. Jenkins of Announcements Canton, a son, October 18. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Blackwell of Canton, a daughter, October 19 Mr. and Mrs. Jubn Mooney of Canton, a son, October 20. j Mr. and Mrs. M. W Woodard of 1 Clyde, a son, October 20. Mr. and Mrs. B. c. Mills of Can. ton, a daughter, October 21. Mr. and Mrs. J. 1). dark of Can. ton, Route 2, a sun. October 21. Cope Improves After Deep Knife Wound Monroe Cope was renortod im proving at the Haywood Count.v hospital where he has been since Sunday, suffering from knife wound in his left side. Roy Beck remains in jail, pend ing the outcome of Coue. whilo ki Wright is out under $500 bond The assult was said by officers to have taken place late Sunday at the home of Wrieht in fi Waynesville. Paper parachutes are being used with success in Sweden and have attracted attention abroad. The first foreign order called lor 3 Quo 'chutes for the French army in Indo China. Au4vsrUed in OptoUr CWm TW tip-oot 11 wool lining give you a tuat m can vrr 10 month of Ik year, 7f I I Ja year 'round gadabout with the all wool zip-Heie-s the one basic coat every wardrobe pe magnificent worsted covert fabric. by the &len Company is deftly tailored by Junior F . . brilliantly accented with a smartly jByron collar, self-fabric buttons, wide cuffs .oack. In brilliant year 'round colors . . . Sires 10 - 20 . . . 59.50 iEN AP Newsfeatures So oud like like to be a rodeo o,ueen'.' W.'ll. take a tip from 19-year-old Audrey Ash by, it's mighty hard uirk. Audrey, who happens to be j pretty and brown-eyed besides be ing a beautiful rider, wat recently lii k-.'d as Eastern Rodeo Queen, j The prime requisite for a rodeo career is to like horses, savs And. rev She started riding when she was hive, could ride bareback at the age of five. It huliw if family likes horses, too, she says, i Her father rode bucking horses and was a pick-up man (helped get other men off their bucking horses. Her mother used to do I the square dance on horseback in i shows. j Audrey for the last 7 years has been in shows, east and west (though intermittently. Now she .has hit the big time a show at j.Mamson Square Garden. She savs: This is my first big show and I want to be a success. Horses are Cress Our EXP AN 14 E USE OUR in my blood and rodeo is going to be m career. I've given up the idea of being an airline hostess, the only other career that ever ap pealed to me." In the show at the Garden. Aud rey is a Roman rider (she uses two horses, rides wilt) a foot placed on each. The horses most be good reign ing horses gentle so you can drop around them without being kicked, she explains. At oresent she is using a three- ear-old colt and a 6-year-old horse for her -act and while they are the same height and have the same gait i which is essential they are not twins. This year Audrey and her family are moving from their Elizaville, N. Y., ranch to one in Arizona. There she is gotng to train a pair of twin colts. This is not as easy as it sounds. In the first place you must know something about selecting the horses. Tennessee walking horses, she says, have three gaits flat walk, running walk and canter. The five-gaited English type horse is a show horse. But jt is Western stock horses that Audrey will train for the job. She will train them on calf-roping ,md bull-dogging (steer wrest ling i. The calf roping is mote important to teach her horse con trol, she says. Horses are like people, Audrey says You must learn to under stand their personalities. No two are exactly alike. If a girl wants a career with 'j- s. X Jf fx? 1 1 if ii 1 1 r t is. Hundreds Of ig Departments to CONVENIENT LAY - AWAY jQ) PLAN 5COTTS SCRAP BOOK X w SrfALLOWlSf OF kjL- J Ul WORLDS 0CIAK$ iaoif AV. FamcV r DIVIM4 IS HOf A RILAHA-TlCW- All KE :MllF MUSCLE4 C -fKl GRACEFUL 0ti AAt, VERY 1 LMSL. sfi iM fwa H.m horses she should be around them I as much as possible and listen to I other people who really know about horses Summer jobs on dude ranches help you get acquaint- cd wilh horses and horse people, Audr.'y says. A girl who becomes a good rider can make lots of money, says Aud I Am Just One of the Many Workmen Build ing the Large Modern Belk - Hudson Store Don 't Lei Us Stop You Erifa to AT BELK -HUDSON'S Bargains In Remember It Always Pays To ELK -HUDSON'S By Pj SCOTT fki ttrutst uit-'v lit R If. IPtoRAPMS a wrfL HERY TREE-, Sonqs of MA.MY HtS, PEAt , AXO 1REI - Ll-flRAUY if ME.NS-"MtL00Y of mamy birds m k. rey. The big show pays well if you are very good. Small shows pay well for the average rider. Clothes, however, are expensive. Audrey's riding costume cost $lf(); cowgirl hat $25; shoes $35. While she is out in Arizona breaking in her Itomnn team, Aud rey is going to attend art school. From Getting to Week's It is true we have of the Store, But HGN New Vinler Home Of Better j Charges Wife Made 12-Point Landing j Too Tall For Army But I Girls Think Otherw ise ST LOUIS UPi John Laxton lacks only one inch of being seven feet tall For that reason the Army doesn't want him. but corc of women do. I After the Army refused him for the 19th time, Laxton advertised for a wife in the newspapers. He says he received more than til) pro posals from women who prefer tall men. One of the candidates said she (would willingly divorce her hus band, who was only live feet tall when he stood on tip toe. Use fresh peaches foi a Surprise Fruit Rollup. Make up a recipe of rich baking powder biscuit dough, roll it in rectangular shape, spread with a layer of currant jclK. add a layer of sugared sliced peaches, roll up as you wouM a Jell roll and bake in a hot oven Slice and serve with whipped evaporated milk or cream that has been sweetened and flavored with vanilla. She loves to do charcoals and ex hibited a sketch in the Montana State Fair last ear. amams torn up the front Take My Word, Just VALUES Merchandise Serve Shop At Values' I r-ARKEhS&lRG, W. Va. iUPI A disgruntled husband, apparently fighting for survival, filed 13- 1 point bill of complaint asking for a divorce. His wife, he said, "acts i exactly like a frenzied Malay run ning amok, leaving utter destruc tion in her wake." His wife's wake left these, he charged: . 1. An automobile with all win dows smaihed. 2 An expensive lounging chair and cabinet radio ruined by hot water. 3. Several retreats from his home at the point of a butcher knife. 4. Smashed Christmas gifts. 5. Clothing rubbed with a greasy ham hock. (i. Eight clean shirts ripped into shreds. f 7. A complete surprise supper he prepared dashed to the floor. 8. A $12 box of groceries de stroved by his wife's feet. i). A beating administered with the heel of her shoe until he lapsed I into semi-consciousness. ( 10. A wounded right arm suf jfcred when.his wife sank her teeth into it and at the same time tore j his trousers to pieces. I 11. A disfigured fare which stopped such thrown items as dishes, bottles, butcher knives, roll ing pins and an electric iron. 12. Three trips to a hospital for emergency aid. BELK-HUDSON CO. This Yon 4 1 t ' ' 3i ;. ' 'i
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 22, 1948, edition 1
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