Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Jan. 16, 1950, edition 1 / Page 12
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
'AGE SIX (Second Section) THE WAYMSVILLE MOUNT AINEI fllonJay Afternoon, January l: Damons tration Farmers To Meet Monday Night The men of Haywood County whose farms are used to demon strate the latest agricultural prac tices will be honored tonight at an Achievement Day Ban quet at the East Waynesville School. The principal speaker will be David S. Weaver, assistant direct or of the North Carolina Agricul tural Extension Service. The demonstartlon f a r m e r s, their wives, and their friends will be the guests at the event, which will start at 7 P. M. The officers of the Demonstra tion Farmers Organization are George E. Stamey, the chairman; . R. C. Francis, vice-president. Will iam Osborne, secretary; and T. C. Davis, treasurer. They urge all members, includ ing both area and unit demonstra tion farmers, to attend the ban quet, returning their cards signi fying their intentions of doing so. The program: Invocation by the Rev. D. D. Gross, Pastor Clyde Baptist Church and chairman of Haywood County Ministerial Ass'n; Welcome by William Osborne, Secretary, Demonstration Farmers Organization; Achievements announced by T. C. Davis, treasurer, Demonstration Farmers Organization; Awarding of Plaques by R. C. Francis, Vice Chairman, Demon stration Farmers Organization; Introduction of speakers Dis trict Farm Agent; Addresses by David S. Weaver, Assistant Director of Extension, Raleigh; and Graham Morrison, County Agent, Lincoln County. America's Finest Should Jack Smith, radio enter tainer, ever lose his singing voice, Lloyd's of London will pay him $800,000 on a special insurance policy. Former Resident Given Promotion In State Housing T. Newton Cook, former Hay. wood County supervisor of the Farm Security Administration, is! slated to become the Public Hous-1 Ing Management advisor for all of North Carolina, effective January 23, according to statement by Wade M. Miles, general housing manager in the area. Cook is now Miles' assistant for projects in Norfolk County, Ports mouth and South Norfolk, Va. In his new position, Cook will have his headquarters in the area offire in Richmond. Cook has had extensive experi ence in North Carolina, both in government housing and farm security. He was graduated from the N. C. State College of Agriculture and Engineering in 1931 with a bachel or of science degree in argicultural economics. In 1935 he joined the Farm Se curity Administration as a county supervisor in North Carolina and during the next six years served in Haywood, Buncombe, Onslow, Cherokee, and Carteret counties. .Cook went to work for the FHA, (then known as the EPHA) in 1941 as a project manager at Jackson ville and Camp Lejeune, and the New River area. On April 1, 1946 he was trans ferred to Virginia as housing man ager for Williams Court Apart ments and Barlow Place. On July 1, 1949 seven projects in Norfolk county, Pourtsmouth and South Norfolk were combined und er one head, making it the second largest single public housing set-up in the nation, and Cook was made Bethel Ir. 4-H Club Plans To Help Camp Cheney's Pointer Wins Shore Memorial Trophy OVER 2 MILLION , INSULATED HOMES doesBcperifflcetfuntl PIONEERS m SINCE 9lZ SavTueC PHONE NOW-I2rwrtJ6dr JOHNS-MANVILLE m "BLOWN" INSULATION PHONE 2-246! TRANSFER AND COAL COMPANY ASHEVILLE -1 1 .. i i ' The boys and girls of the Beth !' el Junior 4-H Club are trying to j raise $40. j That was the quota assigned to ' them last Monday as their share of the campaign to help finance the County 4-H Club Camp near Waynesville. The club heard Assistant County Agent Joe Cline discuss the pay ments for the carnp and later gave out record books to the boys. Miss Jean Childers, assistant home demonstration agent, passed out record books to the girls and told each member to make a gar ment for display at the Bethel School auditorium at a later date. The club members also discussed the County 4-H Congress for" club officers. This meeting will be held January 28 at the Haywood County Court House, a week before the Achievement Day program. Hosiery Manufacturer Willy deMond recently named Libby Dean, a Charoltte girl, as the owner of the prettiest legs in America. This photo of the North Carolina model is introduced as evidence to support Mr. de Mond's statement. If you girls want to make comparisons, here are the dimensions of Miss Am erican Legs' lovely means of sup port: ankle 814 Inches; calf 12V$ inches; thigh 19Mi. She keeps them that way with exercise. Children's Friend Makes Amends For Thief DULUTH, Minn. (UP) Burglars broke into a grade school here and stole $9.50. Six dollars of the loot was rrr cious money the children had set aside for their "World Friendship Among Children", fund. When Mrs. Wilkes Covey of Min neapolls heard what happened she promptly sent the children a check for $6. The children are going to use it to send packages of new clothing to youngsters overseas. 'V K ST TVr. '11 ,if r 1 1 r t VW, ' ' - -V .... ' . '. . a: i t V W 11 ... . . ., ii i in Mn ir -n ' 1 ' t'' -7.. . wJ l The U. S. Deparim.. culture has demonstrate chicks may be carried high as 20,000 feet. I Itfs Uever V Mkt np your mlndiw,, .1 Housewives' demands for kitchen work surfaces that can't be harmed by acids or extreme heat have re sulted in widespread use of clay tile surfacings for kitchen drain boards, counter tops and back splashes. William C Chaneyl left at top) of Charlotte looks proudly at his pointer, Plowden Shoal's Frank, win.' ner of the Shore Memorial Trophy in the annual Pinehurst Field Trials, Frank's trainer, Fred Arant, Jr of Fort Mott, S. C," is at right. Bottom: Chaney (left) is presented the trophy cup by Miss Alexis Shore of Atlanta, Ga., daughter of the late Dr. Thad Shore of Boonville. The trophy is in memory of Dr. Shore, famous bird dog fancier, and is presented each year to the winner of the amateur ali-age stake in the Pinehurst trials. (AP Photos). frci th rest of tt wife Iritn tIUr this coiniim- I Job. PntumtUciftV blown hi, J roofndildcwilliofyoKt Etglt Imulttlon will tilth t' fuil bills at much s 40, i proof and wtttr-rcptllm And that's notill i iummr ... an Ei9!i Insulation Job will kitpiJ Umprcturs up to iy J than outsldtl No dowi mnt,thritycrttopty, Phont today for fu I survty. No obligation, f - I ' FOR FREE SURVEY J Ashevllle 3-0946 or CuW EAGLE INSIII.ATivrl w.44i,y John R. Cabe Robert I 30-31 Mclntyre BlJi t ASHEVILLE, N. C Cream Covers Highway As Truck Overturns NORFOLK, Neb. (UP) Highway crews were sent to a stretch of highway 81 north of here when police reported the road was slick and dangerous. They found the highway covered with cream. A truck loaded with 24 10-gaI-lon cans of cream, valued at $425, turned over. The workmen didn't try to skim the cream off. They just covered it up with gravel. the assistant general housing man ager, Cook Is a member of the Kl wanis Club in Portsmouth and is a former member of the Jackson ville Klwanls Club. He is an ama teur floriculturist, specializing, in gladiolus. Mrs. Cook is the former Miss Josephine Coman of Lake Juna- luska. Attention f. Farmer! We Now Have The New Heavier FORD Tractor I We Have In Stock The Following DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS 12-In. Slatted Wing Plows. jHf- Double Disc Plows. -fa 12-In. Moldboard Plows. Lift Type Bush and Bog Harrows f Woodsaws. Tillers fc -Cultivators. fa Side and Rear Mowers. With More Horsepower Call Us For a DEMONSTRATION ON YOUR FARM TODAY! Let Us Show You The Many Improvements The 1950 FORD TRACTORS Have Including The DELIVERED PRICE 7 Exclusive Implement Hydraulic, Touch Control. Plus $15.00 N. C. Sales Tax . - 1 ' ' ' ' ' i 'ff.'V iix ESS s .' .it n ii m -m- va .t-tn. mu rmn i 1 pf I Y( n 3 I' "TEST DRIVE" ' UJ "at your. "V "rl ji S ford fe-- r 1 DEALER'S SMr 1 NOW! : f . JX)! i llOW Ford's V-8 the type of engine found in ; America's costliest cars offers you its 100-horse-power cloaked in an amazing new quiet, h whispers while it works. And now, too, you ride in a quiet, sound-conditioned , . interior so silent you can hear scarcely a ' . sound even at sixty. And this 50-way new Ford brings you that wonderful Ford "feel" more comfortable and safer than ever, ; with its low, level "Mid Ship" Ride .. 13-way stronger "Lifeguard" Body ... 35 easier-acting King-Size Brakes . . . and .' the many, many other advanced features which make " Ford the one fine car In the low-price field. BAVIS-LinEQ H0V0B SMILES Phono 461 Main Street Phones - Day 52, Night 1071 Waynesville
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 16, 1950, edition 1
12
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75