Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 21, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
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Afternoon, Sept. 21, 1930 PACE TTISEE TIIE WAYNESVILLE MOUNYAINTER unto .4 usade For Freedom mpaign To Be Launched State On October 1 Sweet Potatoes For Hearty Fall Menus 1 vlnn Ilia inizaiionai ). .... m. for r reeaom, m . oe . . . . - . . t j jp. this state on wiujei announced tor western Carolina recently by Edwin ol Charlotte wun me ap- ,n u james u. iv. nuiiuic is 0. E. Dameron. both of lrnit-rs reaerauuu wwhoj' Vslu'ville, as co-cnairmen l v.'eslern Nonp Carolina Jonathan vooay, Aaron . t i r . . v. : . In X alHI A. J. nun-i3 ev u of the campaign in this c rresident of the J. A! Construction Company, has Lnicd state chairman by Gen- iicius D Clay, national chair if tin1 Crusade lor r reeaom National Committee for a niOiH'. Inc. of New York, .uler of the Berlin airlift. i n Robertson ot canton, Ln of the board of directors Champion Paper and fibre im i regional chairman for ii Carolines and a member of itioaal committee. Crusade for Freedom's goal t to give every man. woman Jilil the opportunity to sign .nation of Freedom, accord- Chairman Jones. Enrollment on Freedom Scrolls that circulated throughout the and then permanently en- Id, along wjth scrolls from tfsi of the nation, in the base tell tower which will house w Freedom Bell in Berlin. jhers ot ine serous win oe to hack up their signatures voluntary contributions of a or less to help finance Radio :urope, operating along with lice of America and without limitations, beamed to the Iron Curtain and tell fcry of freedom. National of- state that Radio Free Eur pi'oviding hard hitting op- In to the high-geared Soviet lancla machine state chairman pointed out lie overall objective of the Be for Freedom is to carry a fee of friendship, sympathy neouragement from a vast of American citizens to mtl of oppressed peoples ovcr- lit district chairmen through- irth Carolina hre now being tiled to direct the enrollment ign in their sections of the East Waynesville PTA Organizes For Year's Work The East Waynesville Parent Teachers Organization began their year's work on Tuesday, when offi cers and committee chairmen be gan work for the new session. Mrs. J. C. Jennings, president, was in charge of the meeting and I named the lominitteu chairmen as follows; , Program, Robert Hall; Publicity, Mrs. Garrett Howell; membership, Mrs, Carl Jones. Other officers include Robert Hall, ' vice-president; Mrs, Hugh RattlilTe, secretary, and Mrs. Ken neth Stahl, treasurer. Miss Sellar's second grade won the attendance prize. Plans were also made for staring the annual Hallowe'en Carnival on October 30th.; Mount Zion Baptist Church Thomas Erwin, Pastor SUNDAY 10:00 a.m. Sunday School with the superintendent, Mr. Charlie Henson in charge. 7:00 p.m. Training Union with the director, Mr. Z. J, Recce in charge. 8:00 p.m. Message by the pas tor. WEDNESDAY 7:00 p.m. Meeting of Sunday School teachers for study of Sun day School lesson with pastor as teacher. Juniors will meet at same time for prayer meeting under the direction of Mrs. Tom Lanning. VISITORS FROM FLORIDA HERE Mr. and Mrs. Fonda Jackson of St. Petersburg. Fla., are spending a week at the Waynesville Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson are an nual visitors to Waynesville where Mr. Jackson enjoys playing golf. He values the Country Club course as one of the finest he has ever played. .jMMn .. I' ..I ..man. I... I i? Vr ' . x : ! s , s X m , A V-J.. - - J -Vt 1 pons ! Local Student Enrolled At Duke University Jimmie D. Gttllouav, son of Mr. and M?s. M. 1.. Callxway. Huiile 1. has completed t'resnman Orien tation Uei k activitits at Duke Uni versity and has been enrolled m i Many Tar Heels Fail j Harry E. Xoland Now To Pass License Test I Aboard Pacific Sub '' RAI.EIl'iH. Nearly one out of tue )er.von who aoplied for driv er's licenses during August tailed to pass the test, the Mate Depart ment of Motor Vehicles said today. Of the 42.8(18 who applied. 1812 failed road tests. Other reasons for AP Newsteutiires U.S.S. PES MOINES, a cruiser of the Salem class, displaces 17, 000 tons, has 716-foot ltnj;th. 75 foot beam, can do 33 knots. Arm ed with 41 guns in its n win bat tery, it curries a wartime crew of 1.8ii0. Rev. Thomas H. Wright, Wilming ton; George P. Geoghegan, Jr., Ra leigh; Richard G. Stockton, Wins- The district Chairmen will be i ton-Salem; Dr. J. R. Cunningham, tu name county chairmen ommittee members for the lirograms. piier Governor R. Gregg Chcr- Gastonia has been appointed xairman of the state cam- Fourleen members of an committee have also been 1. They are: ' . : .; iator Clyde R. Hoey. Washing- fl'hoinas L. Robertson. Char- Honorable Gurney P. Hood, fell.; Fred S. Royster, Hender- irles Cannon, Concord; IU. Davidson; A. G. Myers, Gastonia; M. Y. Preyer, Roaring Gap; and J. Welch Harriss, High Point. Senator Hoey, in accepting the appointment to the advisory com mittee, stated that. "I am strongly in favor of doing, evetyihijuj . pos sible to get over 4p the people of Europe the American story in or der to check the advance of Com munism and to inform the Russians of the real facts in connection with the actions and attitude of America." YAM PUDDING Ry CEC1I-Y BROWNSTONF. , Associated Press Food Editor For a delicious flavor change serve sweet potatoes often this fall. Used with the main course or for dessert in pudding, pie. custard, cake, or cookies, and they'll add excellent , food values to your family's meals. They're rich in vitamin A and also pro vide wothwhile quantities of vita min C and small amounts of the B vitamins and minerals. You can rely on them to provide food ener gy, too. The deep yellow moist sweet potatoes are often called yams you can learn to tell this variety by their bulbous shape and skin color. You'll find them fresh in many markets but you also can find them packed various ways on grocery shelves. From Louisiana. for instance, romp small whole sweet potatoes packed in syrup. These ' small wholes ' are tully- matured, just small in size. They are usually as free of strings, nu tritious, and full of flavor as the larger yams. It's easy to mash them and their sweet syrup makes them a natural for use in desserts. These small whole potatoes are attrac tive, too, when they're candied. If you prefer yams packed in water instead of a syip, you also can find these in cans. Easiest way of all to prepare fresh yams is to bake them in their jackets to serve with meat, An All-male favorite. poultry, or fish. Choose yams of uniform size for baking: If they're very large you can cut them in half crosswise before baking. Wash and dry them and bake in a hot i425 F.) oven for 35 minutes to an hour, until they're tender, de- AP Newsfeatures U S.S. CORrOR.U,, one of the Navy's hew streamlined sub marines. It is 310 feet long, has a 27-foot overall beam, 1.525-ton pending on their size. If you want displacement, and carries an 85 the yams to have a soft skin when' man crew. Equipment includes you serve them, rub a little fat on! the famed "Schnorkel tuhe," them before baking. When they're! m . .. reads, cut crisscross gashes on one s . side of each potato, pinch the hot- s V' torn mi that some of the soil in- if 'vS.U'.;X'2 side pops up through the open- fr. s TsX ins. Wedge a fat chunk ol butter into each opening, and nui uish ; with parsley. LOUISIANA YAM PUDDING Ingredients; 3 cups mashed yams. 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, 1 cup hot too milk, 2 eggs (beaten), 23 eiip brown sugar, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1 teaspoon salt, 12 marsh mallows, maraschino cherries, .Method: Mash and fluff yams, adding bill lev, hot milk, eggs, sug ar, allspice, nutmeg, and salt. Heat with electric mixer, if available. Turn into buttered baking dish and top with niarshmallows. Hake li hour at 350" F. Garnish with cher-1 ries. .Cool a little before serving.1 Makes 0 servings'. I Note. If canned yams are used, mash with syrup from the can and '2 clip hot top milk or cream. Otherwise, use four to five med ium-size fresh yams, pre-cooked in',: their skins, and fluffed with 1 cup hot milk. S S ' V " f Al' Nt wsfeatures KKI.I.KTT Xll-10, a twiu-ennined transiorl-type Air Forces Heli copter, is all-metal, has a eruis ing spei'd of ao miles per hour, cruising range of 350 mites. It can (.Mi i . 12 men. The 304 women and 014 men in 1 failure were: rules 94u signs 639 this year's freshman c!as r,n:e- eyes 361. equipment fao. other .22. i sent 34 statt and 3 foreign iiim-l , tries. Ad the 48 states and overt ; thirty oreign countries are repre- j ! sented in the overall puke Univer-: isity enrollment of over 5,000. . ; Duke classes are purposely .kept ' small in size, .averaging hetween twenty and thirty students. With an average of one faculty or staff member for every seven students, hifch academic standards are main-, tained and individual attention for each student is assured. ! Recently1 completed buildings on tht Duke eamous include a new million-dollar Phv sics Rmldim; anil ; a million-hollar gift addition to the' main library. The Duke library : with over one million volume Is now the lareest In the entire South and 14th largest University library in the nation. ! New roust ruction totalling over $2,500 000 now in progress in-: eludes a new Nurses' Home, a new graduate dormitory for men, a renovated graduate dormitory for women, and a Cancer-Heart Re search Wing to the Medical Re search Ruildmg. CAT MAKES LIKE FN G INF. BOSTON When his automobile engine seemed to keep purring af ter ho had turned off the ignition, E. Edward Greenuian investigated and found a cat purring under the hood. Kpk inner Good WKYMOUTII. Mass, When Hill Haqlls decided to lake up golf, he proved an apt pupil. During the third round that he played, he scored a hole-ln-one on the 200 yard seventh hole. , Harry Eugene Noland, Yeoman, third ciass. LSN. son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam R. Noland of Waynes ville, is serving aboard the sub marine USS Volador with the Pa nt ic Fleet. Noland. who was graduated from .Clyde. High School, entered the Navel service in October, 1943. Thar She Blows ARTES1A, N. M. The wind really blow in New Mexico, ft. H, Hayes visited his dentist claiming that blowing sand had damaged a gold filling in his tooth, Fred Woods reported that the same sand storm blew out about 250 acres of sugar beets. Still Going Strong WORCESTER, Mass. Gilbert .OKixifluv. 79, still is olng strong after 50 years as a policeman and 35 years as Worcester County mi- m-wmwJ , penor court officer. He is the old est active court officer in Massa chusetts and hopes to continue in service until incapacitated. : fx jrrr r- . t v.,u ' V (hi The Last Grain COUNTS! Anyone can mix the hesmmnsis of a prescription, but It takes a trained rcsistcrcd pharmacist to accurately measure those final grains that fill your doctor's orders. PROTECT YOUlt HEALTH.. WITH PROVEN PRODUCTS! Your Walsreen Agency CURTI DRUGSTORE Tlome Owned and Operated "Depend on Us Your Doctor Does." BELK - HUDSON a, LK - HUDSON CO. V TOTV " J " tx ifc. w".v.; Al Newsleal uies 57 MM. UKCOH.UKSS KIII.K can throw a 2;,.i-pound shell 4.3011 yards. It uses either high explosive or armor - piercing Shells, weighs 44 pounds, re quires a .Vmaii crew. I $A$ki .1 , lit A and at Belk - Hudson Things Are A P Newsfeatures 240 MM. HOWITZER, With its gun and carriage, it weighs 50. 000 pounds. It shoots a 3(i)-potind projectile- the heaviest of any U. S. field weapon. Its maximum range is 25,000 yardsThis how itzer, which requires a crew of 25 men. is designed for use prim arily against enemy troop- con centrations. It takes a tractor to tow it. o USE OUR convenient l$y-away "plan o B hi mm eMudson it twMwmtMt "t'ti-,nriv'"i'ifii 'it'.'mMft'ifi-'i'JifiiitB AP Ncusleatures Tin: I'WTHER. a Navy plane uith Ton-droppable fuel tanks. Built by Grumman, the Panther has a theck valve enabling pilots to jettison gasoline instead of the tank when the plane needs added speed. Too Much Temptation ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. A man charged in municipal Court With drunkenness complained of having been in bad company. "I was out with three men and I had a bottle of Scotch," he said. "The other three were teetotalers." The simple tools used by Ameri can craftsmen to blow glass today a slender hollow tube, wooden paddles, a caliper are the same as those used for centuries by foreign &w0t&Mfyi of Experience prove VBeWork C'othes7r C BsieMij9Mai--' 71 LIliU iJJJJJ Lilf V , , JYjpr; ViS- Jf DRESS SHIRT COLLAR 0 CUFFS il it SINGLE NEEDLE CONSTRUCTION JV s" ' Wh' 1 NON-BREAKABLE BUTTONS TjiF , 4C ROOMY POCKETS WITH FLAPSF jrri$J V'.AV -Y-:"-:ll I I f ? SHIRTS ' 'T! (hi QO CO 6q I xb PANTS $2.98 - $4.95 i i ; iftk Hudson And I jsrM - " HEAVY WEICHT ARMY TWILL POCKETS STITCHED, TURNED f AND STITCHED ALL POINTS OF STRAIN BAR TACKED SERCED SEAMS CUFFED BOTTOMS NON-RIP SEAMS B0ATSAIL DRILL POCKETS - .. .- Best moteriols Well tailored Full cut Better fit Longer wear Good looks RED CAMEL work clothes LEAD in quality. ' X " V GET YOUR FALL NEEDS HERE SAVE workmen.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Sept. 21, 1950, edition 1
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