Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 27, 1950, edition 1 / Page 7
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r mr- . . II " l is ! Vl j aft Jhtl THE l0UNGER SET By :rnJ)RED MEDFORD High School Senior 1 WM A w in town, im sure. :. nioniipd the Itfll 111" &.ttheArmory.gven "T " . hv the Muaeni Af lilt? " Council Davidson boys mllSU . . the concen ...-v.. .CS listening to it. Cer- CVtudent band director I jid. No, ne w v"" L wu directing before the Lp, but "was so interest music he forgot about Est, Melvln Sipe. sure !, ihe square dance. -And the square dance but the music as he called It. )lelvia was asked how long (been playing the violin, he 1 "if I told you that, ! would of the boys, am nan uoiu le did," he said. He aid very deed, for beginner. th dance was over ana till! gelling ineu vuaia p of Davidson boys car le boy across the room on jhoBldert. He was Ralph Roberts. Why did tney ao 1st because he was OogieV o it after every concert. Frances McCIure, Dot Mills, Betty Farmer, Mourinc Carver, Braxton Crocker, and Velda Arnngton have passed all tlje requirements for the Junior Homemakers Degree. What are the requirements? Well, the qualifications are "stiff, such as studying the National F.H.A. constitution and having your mother say that you have contrib uted to the family life, and still another is, having your teachers say you have shown interest in the homemaking field. Now, can you pass those three plus about 10 more? Congratulations girls. I hope you can get the State and Ameri can Degree Homemakers soon, These girls will all receive a key, the symbol for the Junior Home maker, which will be put on their chapter pin. Sir to the Teen-Ate The Hereford News, e, the students of that school are no longer inter- lit chewlnj (urn in classes le of the penalties Inflict hit are the penalties, you Sh-sh-sh, not so loud. km eurs as Is. bsville High has proof that pve some Good Home Econ- udents. If you don't believe read on . . . . ,' ;arct Vickery, Ruth Nichols, C. of C. Will Stage Annual Banquet On April 21st The annual Chamber of Com merce banquet will be held on Friday, April 21. the board of di rectors decided here Tuesday night Carl Goerch. editor of The State, is slated to be the principal speak er.' , . . ' Full details of the program have not been completed, but Charles Ray, chairman, said today that varied forms of entertainment, to gether .with some down-to-earth matters which would make the evening of importance to every citizen. The directors approved plans for being co-sponsors to a motorcade into upper South Carolina as a means of promoting expanded tourist business. Several plans of promotion were approved by the board, with de tails to be worked out in plenty of The Haywood High School Student of the W eel The high school students of Clyde High are certainly proud of their new posesslon. Yes, lockers. New ones, too. Last week 108 lockers were put up for the use of the high school students, letting- the seniors have one to themselves. I bet they are so 'crammed' in a week's time, that the English book you need so badly will be hidden far "under", and you will have to clean 'house' to find it. I know, mine's like that. Tomorrow the students of W.T.H.S are going to enjoy a very interesting program, sponsored by the Student Council, and given by the Bible Club. . They will do the Highwayman, a Psalm, Sea-Fever, and "No, Sir" in Choral Reading. Miss Terrell has been coaching and Elaine Francis acting as the director. ' students. ' : ' If you come in late over at St. John's you will stay until 5:00 o'clock rather than Just 45 min utes, as at W.T.H.S. So far they haven't enforced the law about chewing gum, but in the past offenders have had to pay five cents if they were caught, and from all indications, this rule might come back into use. It seems as if Waynesville High School is not the only school that has "laid down the law" to the Maybe we will have some teachers in the future, in spite of everyone saying- they wouldn't be teachers if it depended on their life. Last week at the Clyde High School a Future Teachers Asso ciation was organized with John A. Byers as the advisor. Geraldine Fish was elected president; Alice Medford, vice president; and Freda Hipps, sec retary and treasurer, These are some more of our future teachers from Clyde: Jos eph Medford, Mark Brown, Char lie Morgan, Dorothy Smith, Vicky Hayncs, Buss Morgan, Shirley Well, and Pandy Crane. These girls and boys will get some practice teaching while they are still in High, Just to find out if that is what they are really and truly Interested In. Yes. it's another basketball star from Clyde High School. Gerald ine Fish, a senior, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. Fish from Clyde. Geraldine is the captain of the basketball team this year, and has playe don the first team for the past three years. She was also the captain of the team last year. Besides being at the top in bas ketball she is and has been the president of the Beta Club for two years. No wonder she Is the presi dent, for on her record nothing shows but A's. r Geraldine is the president of the Clyde F.H.A. chapter and also the president of the county F.H.S. chapter. She attended the State F.H.S. Rally at Raleigh, last year, and modeled a suit, and this year she has attended the District Ral ly at Bryson City where she took part on the program doing a South American dance. She was also in the "Follies of 48," given at the Clyde High School, and did the same dance as that at the District Rally. Geraldine is a member of the Clyde Methodist Church, She Is the Secretary of her Sunday School Class, vice-president of the county sub-district M.Y.F., representative from her Sunday School Class to the Board of Education of the church, sings soprano in the church choir, and has been the president of the M.Y.F, in the past. As for music she said that she was an accomplished player of the ukulele and that it had been the "death of her life," because every one was always teasing her about it. "But it's lots of fun." Geraldine plans to enter Wo man's College at Greensboro next fall after graduation from Clyde High. At the present she hasn't decided what her major will be, since she "lives only in the pres ent".,:.' .-. v .' .. ( . ; ' If , GERALDINE FISH Little Symphony To Play Here On' March 7 Resarch scientists have found that there are at least three Kinds of viruses which can cause polio. Infection by one kind doesn't al ways result in immunity against the other two. time to get work underway in time to reach prospective visitors in late spring. ' The North Carolina Little Sym phony, conducted by Dr. Benja min Swalin, will come to Waynes ville for concerts on March 7, ac cording to an announcement by Mrs. Frieda Knopf, local chairman of the Symphony Committee. A children's program will be played in the afternoon at 1:15 o clock in the Waynesville High School Auditorium and will be broadcast over Station WHCC, The adult concert will be pre' sentcd in the evening at the same place. The time has not as yet been announced. The concerts here are made pos Bible by the Symphony Society membership drive held last fall A membership card in the Sym phony Society will serve as admis sion to the evening concert, as well as to all other Society-sponsored concerts throughout the state this season, Children's tickets for the even ing concert may be purchased at the door for 60 cents. Non-mem- berr will also find single-admission tickets on sale the night of ' the concert. Pasture Field Day Set For Next Thursday A Pasture Field Day will be held Thursday at the Mountain Test Farm to aid in the promotion of the campaign to have 10,000 addi- tional acres of Ladino clover and orchard grass or Fescue planted in Haywood County this year. Dr. W. W.1 Woodhour of N. C. State College will be the princi pal speaker on the program, which will open at 10 a.m. In the morning there will be a renovation demonstration to illus trate the seeding of Ladino and orchard grass by practices recom mended by the Experiment Station and N. C. State College Agrlcul tural Extension Service. in the afternoon, there will be an inspection of the pasture denv onstration projects at the Test Farm and of the seeding done at the Farm and Home Field Day at the Jack McCracken Farm in Pigeon Township last July 26. The visitors also will go to the R. F. Rogers farm, in Crabtree to see the results of the renovation demonstration that was started last August. - The Pasture Field Day Is for the benefit of, all farmers interest ed in Improved pastures, all veter ans taking agricultural training ana other student farmers. Extremely hot or cold water, wringing or rubbing, and alkaline soaps are harmful to wool fabrics, Jack-of-AII-Jcbs r Pro-School Clinics Continue Through Next Week The Haywood County Health Department's clinics for children planning to enter school next fall continue next week according to the following schedule: March 7 9 a.m. Pre-chool and clinic for typhoid inoculations, at Rock Hill School. 1 p.m. Pre-school and clinic for typhoid, inoculations, at Maggie School. March 8 a.m. Pre-school and clinic for typhoid inoculations, Lake Juna- iusjta bchool. Health officials reminded par ents again that the law requires the presentation of certificates showing the child has had the re quired inoculations. Otherwise. he or she will not be permitted to enter class. AS THOUGH he didnt already have enough to do, William R. Sadowskl (left), is shown being offered an other Job by John Pomeroy, town clerk of Sunderland, Mass. Among the offices held by Sadowskl are: chief of police, assistant fire chief, superintendent of streets, constable, Art warden, park committeeman, superintendent of flood control and of the town dump. For all this he gets $4,000 yearly. (International) The blue spruce Is Utah's state tree; the Sego lily its flower, the spo gull Us blrcf. The rosefish, or ocean gives birth to live young. perch, SLEEP TOtllGIIT! Da tcaaUitai whm ilnpl akta . . . nrilm twaunt and turning , . .! jrm nhauttnd la tsa Horning. NORMALIM TABLETS oa help bruuj alia. rafmhuMt rat wnnt nenma tfiwmn thraatana Bom (hap. NORMA UN TABLETS ara am4M (amun . , ml U im. Tka at unaaL MnrtKmlly tpprowad infrmlieata, Guuintna itBdmnn or mnnr refunded. 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All Youngstown Kitchen equipment is made to the highest quality stan dards, of spotless white, enameled steel, .and can be purchased on easy payments. imm mmE go. hone 3i MAIN STREET An V r...a V-... W0WT YAUT 70 fMSSi mm at our store: .nOIIDAY TUESDAY VEQIIESDAY 3 Sessions each day: t3Mun.2HMpjn.7:30pjik See and hear factory trained experts demonstrate how the newest home laundry equip ment saves work, time, clothes, soap and water. Waster Model Refrigerators lor 1950 OnlymiGIDAIRt gives you all these features! New full-length food compartment In larger models All-fllumlnum, rut proof, adustabl shelves o New, doopor,all- , percolaln stack-up ' Hydrators o Exclusive Double- "V Easy Qulckube Trays Now half-thelf and swing down shelf o New, all-porcelain Mulli-fwrpoM Tray o Now, alr-porcotal" Meat Tray ' Mora large spaca far big Items o Mora lall-Wfle spaca a large feed fraaslng spaca. . .... ., .. , . .. Famous, economical Meter-Miter mochaix Ism SEE PROOF! 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The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1950, edition 1
7
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