Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 29, 1951, edition 1 / Page 16
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t . i Tno Nov Davies Hall At WCTC m - ji I u ( if l III- 1 t.v:w -ww- This is a peptii -se'.rr. .J. the budirj that will replace old Dvies ob top of the biiJL Construction is now UM-.er (: f '.- r.r d'.-rx::ir. Old Davies Hall Tom Down At Cullowhee , -'V I - j -... .ft---.- .iiiiiiii "tl i i nil" fi. -m: : trJt .-tit's id ' 'J3u.-ve. . niiout : a '. t4 shu Now il one looks, all he -will find 'is a flat field The Ti ime IsNOl! r .-.-"vu c. ajki ttph i If - i ' ' r' .i. a-rav-v Y v :L- .H -" To Have Us Install Ir Youi Home A Complete BATHROOM Water System We Feature The Famous AIERICAN STANDARD BATHROOM FIXTURES Everite Electric Water Pumps CALL US FOR FREE ESTIMATES NO OBLIGATION SPECIAL OFFER for LIMITED TIME COMPLETE BATEIROOH CAST IRON BATH TUB, tfffr ftft LAVATORY and COMMODE .1111 You Will See These Same Fixtures Elsewhere For $250.00 kitchen sums Double and Single Drainboards ... A Size For Every Kitchen From $aig).oo up Davies Hall Is Giving Way For New Building CULLOWHEE SpecUH "And the mails came tumbling down , . - " and there was no more iw! ia riivioi xrra. some memor- RPNldtnLs of th old 1 budding evacuated by January 15tb : oi this year and the building wasi ()tfr JU.Blx torn down to make room far i new ; 7 1 dormitoo-hkh U to be construct-; ed in the near future. J There's nothing to beat prac- Davies as named for Jude D-iiicai experience when seekirgf a D. Davis, who was a resident of f ,s 4 jirts find out this community and one of the or-1 GuJs hone eeoKWtics iginal trustees of the eollese. It Sjgersuiwn H Pa , are jo was built in 1909. and opened 1") t0 be siiihtij- aheai of their doors to boarding students J,D;!coinpet;tioB this Mr. hwer. nen tney p-acuair ftr t.i on u crtlieie hey part Library Skeleton, Latest Thing Added At WCTC itarv- 10. IMil. On- unique fact concenune Davies which some of our Alumni may remember is that at one ume the building was used tor oaa ! mm ard women students. The 4in ' ing hall was located in the build 1 in inr coi orai vfars- A dinner bU 1 w as ued to call student to meals, j Professor John S. sevtnour rjne ! lo WCTC in 1926. and aside from IrU tearhinp. he had charge of I i Davies At this particular time tj I w as UM-d f'V ah o-erflow Of girls i ,r dou ihe case mignj or. im-n wiwu w -j -- i- Most of the faculty members who; And tsdes giving ner a wiuu 01 f r;,ve ), n the huildins have moved I the business world, she can decide imo the new faculty homes w men 1 hetner sue is suuea 10 me gnuu. hae' been built above Roberson Work in a froien food locker Hall. The homes are modern in ; pisnt might seem a little far fetch even wav and includes one triplex, jej DUt not these girls who Con or, duplex and four cottages which ser that the same general pro- houe nine families. i cess used in the plant applies to deep freezing food in home de- of a fine job travu.ng esjynmem. which gives tfceat swrne business experience in betweea classes. Each Home Ee. sewi spends tww wrets wwli al fr if frreal Mv get a ay. t U rewra far www ker terary makrw eae bee as mwrh a Wat ate Ncsiatess as can be eramanew int tw weeks. It is the kind of a program which should appeal to any girl. alumni, but it is oecause e uu not hive information about them. Some of the information about our alumni is not the most recent, probably, but it is the latest that we hive. Work Of Breeder's Association Here Shows Big Growth lbywood Cooperative Breeding Association. Inc., released figures i today showing that their organiza lion has inseminated a total of 985 ' first service cows in 1950 as com- paied to 9U9 in 1949. Il.nttood Cooperative Breeding Association. Inc., buys semen from the Southeastern Artificial Breed inn Association. an American , Breeders Service, which has boost- I ed its record of cows bred artifici ally iron) 44,533 in 1949 to 73,950 ' in 1950. The Southeastern Artifici al Breeding Association together with the other three studs man am tl by the American Breeders Servile bred 367,002 first service tows in 1950 over 1.000 cows a day as against 250,698 in 1949. , The local organization attributes thrs remarkable increase to the ever increasing demand for serv i ice from high index proved bulls. . More and more dairymen are be ' coming aware of the fact that one ; of the main purposes of artificial j breeding is the use of the best I proved sires obtainable at a. cost a dairv farmer can afford. Every j farmer in the county has this serv- ice available through Haywood Co j .operative Breeding Association, j Inc. which is one of 248 coopcra i lives and breeding organizations in j the 21 principal dairy states fur j nishing service from the high in ; (lex proved bulls of the four studs j -"tinder the management of the Am erican Breeders Service of Chica go. The Southeastern Artificial i Breeding Association at Asheville, j North Carolina Indiana Artificial j Breeding Association at Carmel, I Indiana; Wisconsin Scientific Breeding Association at Madison, Wisconsin; and Northwestern Arti ficial Breeding Association at Du- lulh, Minnesota are the proved sire studs managed by th' American Breeders Service,. - ?"' v vices. They also learn now to process meat from the time it is slaughtered until it is ready for the table. They can cut steaks and oth er meat. The general store has lots of appeal and gives good training, as it has everything from "nails to hairnets' as one girl puts it. Hardware terminology is another The new Library (left) at Western Carolina Teachers College is fast taking shape, whilt tons of steel framing being erected. On the right is the framework of the new science bt thing again, and while the girls do not pretend to know everything about hardware after two weeks, they've learned a lot. At a home furnishings store the girls even do book work and sit in on sales conferences. And of course the piece de re sistance two-week assignment is at Cal's dairy bar where the girls master the fine art of concocting a sundae or flipping a hamburger. Every once in a while we learn that teen-agers drum up a new vocabulary, not quite as gay and colorful as that In vogue a few years back," but descriptive never theless. Houston, Texas, students have 1 little new lingo other young peo ple might like to hear about: "Hoist a flag" is a phrase used in a somewhat scornful manner to someone who is proclaiming a fact which is fairly common knowl edge' , . .-. "Well, send up a rocket" is a re buff to a boastful friend . "What's to it, dumplln'?" re places "Whatcha know, Joe?" "Sure, Bert" is another shush up for a smart-aleck friend. "Hot Rocks" are right guys. Romance often is indicated by a girl and boy exchanging their identification bracelets. "Going steady" sometimes is subtly an nounced by wearing matching sweaters. Too much jewelry is considered junky. Suede loafers rate a "fine- It's The Blinking clinkers MIAMI ad. . equipment rBc,,i,j ::: i imgcsi uauy doubles i-t paai racing season at Hii al Stream (running for the first timei and rl' (running without filing first time combined fori payoff. 0." Heavy cosmetics art 1 girls "in the know." ad,, stick and a bit of po Betty Co-ed through f most important social ev Americans Earn World's Highest Pay LAGE SUCCESS (AP)) Unit ed Stales citizens enjoy by far the world's biggest average per capita income $1,450 apiece a recent U.N. survey states. The survey, made by the U.N. Statistical Office, covered 70 coun tries having about 90 per cent of the world's population and still more of its income. Figures were based on official and semi-official statistics for 1949 and on tentative estimates prepared by the U.N. Statistical Office. The survey also revealed these facts: Eight countries having one tenth of the world's population re ceived in 1949 over half the world's income. They were the United States,- Australia, Canada, Den mark, New Zealand, Sweden Switzerland and the United King dom. ; . - - 1 f t . . . - 4.-:-? ripe- BUY. THE EASY FHA WAY! 10 Down 30 Months to Pay ROGERS ELECTRIC CO. Phone 461 Main Street Happy and Free From Stomach Distress "Food risings and smothering gas pressure pains caused my daughter. Nancy Lou, untold ag ony," writes Mrs Lou Davis, Fay ette, Ala. "Scalf's Nancy Lou Indian River Medicine brought grand relief." . Scalfs Indian River Medicine is a'NEIGHBORTdoesn't have' to live next 'door There are more than five and one-half million famlliej joined together in The Equitable Society, families from every state in the union. lna.reaJsen.se, they ore all neighbors close neighbors. they've banded together in a mutual .-""society; to jachieve"a: mutual, oim jsecurity. Jhe cooperation of that huge group has created protection and peace of mind for, every individual family. Mutual cooperation, the cornerstone of neighborliness, enables these Jamilies to enjoy financial security 'at an expenditure'so low it is readily availableto'olmost everyone a cost made insignificant thanks tocooperative association. tlTes, the nearly six million neighbors in Thejquitable Society "come from o corners of the United States. Actively practicing the friendly'code'of true neighbor; liness, they are. helping each other. to! enjoy reconcmfcnviorr7-frM' years, Mer' happier lives, ' ' - ' ' ' : -' ' -:' :l'.:- :;. : . . F Th Equitable Llf Assurance Society off Tho United States Thomas I. Parkinson Prtsidtnt 393 Seventh Avenue New York 1, New York $ Represented By: if guaranteed to satisfy. On sale at all good drug stores. " worth Main Street Tel. 274
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 29, 1951, edition 1
16
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