Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 29, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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Thursday Afternoon, Mauii 29, 1 JTr:.- r ,., . . ; i : t : : Many Visitations On Upper Crabtrce PEGGY BRADSHAW .' Mour.ta.netr Reporter Miss I-ois McCiiiken is improv ling after Ivitis in bed for a few davs w.tli t bruit trouble. AMERICAN TROOPS FERRIED ACROSS ICY HAN RIVER Mr and Mis. Trov MeCracken j and their iiitall 'ilauuhJer Uremia .have been Mtk at llieir -home with the flu. j " Mr and Mrs. Cordell Bradley. and Mr. and Mrs R. L Russeli nd their daueluer Phyllis, and .""Mr and Mrs. Woodrow Poland ar.d ' familv spent Easter Sunday with Mrs. Rex Meser of Upper Crab- tree. Mr and Mrs. Charles Wilson and their small son Michael visited Mrs.'Wilson s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W L Bradshaw Sunday. Mrs. Wil son is the former Mis Phyllis Bradshaw Mrs. Ted Rhoades and Mrs. Will Bradshaw went ,0 vlslt Ms- Wally Alums. Mrs Bradshaw s dauchter at the state hospital last wick. O' . . --.; T . JSrS: il l - " ' ... mi 1 1 -'..."SLfcl n.UU.. M News Of Saunook Community MRS. JAMES McCLURE. Mountaineer Correspondent The Saunook P. T. A. and C. D. P. will hold a Joint meeting April 5 at which time Mrs. Genevive Burton, State field secretary of P. T. A. will speak. There will also be special music. The people of Saunook are very sorry to lose some of their good neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pette grew. they have bought a farm in Georgia and are leaving soon. Mrs. Pettegrew is president of , the P. T. A. and program chairman of the C. D. P. They both have been very active in community affairs. Wavne Mcklruv lias just cotton I out after quite a ;oni: illness. J Mr and Mrs. Ir.iMk Rocers audi Mr. and Mrs Ui.irh's Diu-ketto: came home to see their family in j Crabtree Sunday. Also Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Rocers and daughters visited Mr. Rocers' father. Mr. John Rocers. Mr. Rogers is from South Boston. Virginia. He teaches Veterans Vocational -School there. KEIPINO ClOSE ON THE HEEIS of hard-pressed Chinese Communist and North Korean troops, members of tha Third Combat Engineer Battalion are carried across the icy Han River on a ferry constructed of four boats. The river has been bridged in several places by U.N. troops as they extended beachheads, (international) Motorists Should Check Driver's License Cards ! Hooper of Waynesville, today re- 1 minded motorists who olitahied re newal of their driver licenses in 1947 under the Reissuance I'ro cram. to check their cards for the expiration date. The expiration 'date. Examiner Hooper stated, will lie found in the lower richt hand corner of the motorists' present license cards. These motorists will be permitted to seek re newel 30 days prior to the expiration d"te, which falls on their birthclate. The majority will have surnames beginning with A j or B, but a few will fall in other The body of the ancient Egyp- j alphabetical groups, tian cluiiot ws, .Mounted directly Motorists who do not seek re 6a the axle, with no springs. newal in advance of the expira- Mr. anil Mrs. Wallace Craw ford of Candler i-ited Mis Cr.iwloid's parents Mr awl Mrs.-Charlie Hill Sunday All blood donors are to send their names to Brock James, Mrs. Frarik M.dford. Peggy Biadshaw and Ca-sius Roi'er. The report is to be in by Friday, s(J get on your phones and call thee people and let them know if you II give blood April 7. 1951. Driver License Examiner R. V. ,tion date on their cards, will be required to take the complete test, Examiner Hooper pointed out New Handbook For Drivers Of State Are Out RALEIGH The Department of Motor Vehicles today is distribut- iu. n....t ..L.I.... it A space will be provided on the , , !" '1"""u ul ,s ,,cw new license cards for blood type, which will he placed on the cards upon presentation of evidence of blood type. Since inclusion of this information is a public service and voluntary on the part of applic ants, failure to present the blood type will not he reason to deny is suance of licenses, said Examiner Hooper, Persons whose last names begin with UVWXYZ must have their li censes renewed by June 30, The daily schedule for Examiner Hooper will be as follows: Waynesville Monday and Thurs- iinvjo-iJ '- inj L n Mr. and Mrs. James McClure were hosts at a breakfast at their home on Balsam Rd. Easter morn ing following the sunrise service at Lake Junaluska. The guests were Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Knight, and son Melbourne. Mrs. Louise Dock and daughters, Peggy and Sally, all of Balsam. The Saunook Community ex tends thanks to Mrs. Richard Bar ber, Jr., and Mr. Boiling Hall for the beautiful signs at the entrances of our community. MEN'S SAMPLE s SHOES THAT ' Two-tones Loafers ... Browns Blacks Sport Shoes . . . : . ; Shoes Selling Up To $16.50 from A A to EEE . . . Leathers a nd Suedes . . By Boblee, Randcraft Yorkshire, Sundial Star Brand Freeman Whites Oxfords . . . Not All Sizes In Every Style, But a Wide Assortment IN TWO GROUPS AND 0.99 You'll find terrific values in all Raiffs Mens Shoes, and all styles Loafers By trampeze Hand Sewn ... leather Soles ... Reg. $9.98 $4.99 Shoes Are Going Up. Lay In Several Pairs Even If You Don't Need Shoes Sport Shoes and Loafers Whites, Browns, Blacks. Braided and plain styles. Regular to $8.98 Group Asst. Sizes Loafers Braided and plain . . . : Reg. to $7.9 ' ; v Driver's Handbook" to Us 100 driver's license examiners through out the Stale. Designed as a textbook on safe driving, the handbook gives the be ginning driver and the driver who is obtaining renewal of his license all the information necessary to enable him to pass the rules ofi the road and road signs phases of the driver's license examination. The handbook, which Is printed in three colors and black, will re place the "Driver Manual," when the present supply of that publica tion is exhausted. One section of the handbook is devoted to highway safety, giving the driver the essential do's and don'ts of safe driving. In addition, the handbook gives Information on applying for a driver's license, procedure in case of an accident, violations which bring revocation or suspension of licenses and re quired equipment on motor ve hicle?. Bicycle and pedestrian safe ty also are stressed. The new publication Is illustrat ed with diagrams of hazardous traf fic situations and how to avoid them and shows all the road signs used in the State. The essential features of each drawing are print ed in yellow, The cover is printed in two colors and carries a typical rrtghway scene. The Department has received 39,000 copies of the handbook to date. A total of 161,000 more arc on order Claud Hill has returned home from Baptist Hospital at Win.'.ton Salem, N. C. Work on the school ground has heen started by a special "working" call by the school ground commit tee composed of Lawrence Hooper Karl McCracken and James Mc Clure. A large crowd brought hoes, rakes and shovels and worked a bout 3 hrs. Monday. WCTC Gets Much New Equipment RALEIGH The state division of purchase and contract has bought $101,389.30 worth of . laboratory equipment for Western Carolina Teachers College and equipment and supplies for other state agen cies and institutions. The orders were placed under contracts approved by the state board of award. Major orders included $6,381.75 worth of microfilming and photo graphic equipment for the Uni versity of North Carolina. $3,590 worth of mattresses for North Car olina College and $134,543.63 worth of Dodge, Chevrolet and Ford trucks. Three Hurt In Georgia Wreck Three persons, two from Can ton and one from Enka, were painfully Injured in an auto Col lision during the week end near Augusta, Ga., it was learned Wed nesday. . They are: Jack Clark of Canton, facial and head lacerations; Mrs. Clark, cuts and bruises; and Mrs. Hillard Brock of Enka, cuts and bruises, . ", All plan to return to their homes this week. Ends Training 1 WILLIAM CLIFFORD GREENE, IIM, recently finished his boot training at Great Lakes Naval Station,, Illinois. He will remain at Great Lakes for medical train ing prior to assignment to a Naval hospital, Greene is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hooper Greene of Waynesville; He graduated from Waynesville High last May, and was employed at Dayton Rubber Company until he en tered the, service. 1 nomas HBc Head Canton Thomas X. pec m-ssman. has u. Car. .an manripr nt tV . r, "ftt serPoStNo.5ls2,vera e.g.. nars ot Canton Best succeeds f r present senior vice the state oi-..1Jt ,jn" " uiner new Jack G. mander Scrubs Zane seniur tjrav 11, uer; . j . 3 auartormt.,.. ., " ''I 1 w ; . ire n Lime, chaplain; x s7c uuiney. n0st ,a, I Hncrh r....L v 1 MM Floyd Robert s Wa: J tee for a th,v-.f.a, J. New officHs win April 7 at the postv the Clyde .highway bv c0 tiring commander ,T,he Pst na., aU ado olution endorsing ctlgbl!, uinec 01 suite ton VFW. mmar.c. Want Ads. bring quick results. Dodger Farmhand: Are Called VERO BEACH. Ha The Brooklyn Dudser f , uas iui do Players out I nuiuucr ui ut,u to the draft. Fresco Thomp Vice-President, hipHn' all 21 farm dubs will ed despite the demands Sam. There are about 75 million tele phones in the world. day of each week; second, fourth and fifth Tuesdays of each month Canton Each Tuesday and Wed nesday. Mrs. Hightower . Dies At 96 At Home Of Son Funeral services were held yes terday afternoon in Cruso Baptist Church for Mrs. Addie Rogers Hightower, 96, who died Monday at the home of a son, Alfred High tower of Lake Logan section. The Rev. Thomas Erwin, the Rev. Lu cius Rogers and the Rev. Weaver Elliott officiated and interment was in Gwyn Cemetery. Grandsons served as pallbearers. Surviving are eight sons, Willie and Arthur of Arkansas, Allie of Asheville, Thad and Annias of Waynesville, Floyd of Canton, Phil lip of Spruce Pine and Alfred Hightower; and two daughters, Mrs. Vard Williamson of Lake Lo gan and Mrs. Jasper Norris of Waynesville. Paternity Leave Granted NEW YORK (AP) Matern ity leave for employees is a routine benefit these days. But recently a large New York concern gave an employee a week's paternity leave. The man applied formally for leave, explaining that he and his wife were adopting a baby girl. He wanted to travel to the mid-west and bring the new baby home, he said, while his wife remained be hind preparing their other child for the new arrival. Russia is nearly three times the size of the U. S. Atomic Age Peanuts AP Newsicatures RALEIGH One of the early Atomic Age achievements promises to be better peanuts. More peanuts per acre, and possibly even something better In nut quality are objectives at North Carolina State College School of Agriculture, The experiments are in charge of Dr. Walton C. Greg ory, associate professor of agronomy. Thirty years ago the U.S. Department of Agriculture set out to discover how to cross-breed these plants to get new or better varieties. This scientific nut has not yet been cracked. The inherited charac tristics of a peanut don't vary much, due to self-fertilization. State College sent peanuts to Oak Ridge, Tenn., to be exposed to gamma rays of atomic origin. These redioactive rays caused a pro fusion of heredity changes, even in peanuts. This year the third gener ation from (he Oak Ridge pappy peanuts is showing hundreds of changes, mostly useless. There are, fo rexample, some the size of wal nuts, and some heart-shaped. The Atomic Age stuff seems to be jar ring the niffs' fixed habits. But State College has added evidence that a solution may be nearer, in the' form of the sixth generation of some iniprofed nuts mat were bred in the old-fashioned way, without benefit of radioactivity. THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLEY f Q"; ' Jl I MOTSUIfE WHETHER - L WAVm&J Si PILE AT-mBJAIL.-- A TWO PLL PMEt M4te. 1 rvv. TO REPLEMISH THff COAL PILE AT TUB JAIL.- 0h A VA .MAR5KAL OTEV WAtKSR IS FOUCEDTO 0 7. "71 OUT ANO PICK LP SCHE 'TWO PLLAft PMEt 4U Every Day Is Bargain day at O Largest Selections Anywhere . . o Quality Merchandise O Find What You Want At What You Want To Pay! O All Items Guaranteed ... Money Cheerfully Refunded! SALE Starts Mar. 8 COATS - SUITS - TOPPER 200 of Our Best Suits x . . Coats . . Toppers . . Wo OFF Reg. Price See What Lovely Styles . . . What Fine Fabrics . . See the regular Low Prices Group Women's Half Size Suits Fine Strea cloth . . . Reg. to $22.98 Reduced to $16.98 Group Misses Suits Regular $16.98 Reduced to $11.98 Misses Summer Suits White and Colors . . . ONE GROUP Reduced to $5.98 White Cotton Corduroy ' Suits Slightly soiled... Regular S9.98 Reduced to $4-98 Misses DrcssSi Fine Fabrics and in Regular t S22.9S.; Reduced to $16-98 Group : Gabardine Regular to S19.9S HUNDREDS OF TOPPERS TO CLOSE OUT ... One Group Gabardine ...fully lined ... Burmil fabric ... Novelty linings REDUCED TO $7.98 SUMMER TOPPERS... Sharkskin and Gabardine Washable . . . REDUCED TO Group A" rr FFfE TQPi Reduced t $3.98 a
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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March 29, 1951, edition 1
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