Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 29, 1951, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX THE WATNESVUXS B10UNTAINEE3 Thursday Aitern oon. MOKE ABOUT Court . . (Continued from Page 1 fine and cost from his wife anil two children in Biltniore. The court suggested he call his wife and have it sent over, and save him a trip to Ashevillc. The mayor decided that a 32-day suspended sentence was deserved, and gave him the usual opportunity to make bond and pay up. The man was still twisting his hat nervously when court adjourned. . -: Two colored men were charged with taking $60 worth of copper tubing, and selling it for $5. One claimed he went along just for company with the other, and did not know what was taking place. He did admit helping drink some of the liquor bought with the $5. Neither man could recall when, where, or under what circumstan ces they bought the liquor. One said: "We met a white man, and he sold us a batwing." Later the other testified: "We just ran into a man who wanted to sell some liquor." One of the defendants, so anx ious to toll the truth, held both hands high when taking the oath. .Mayor Way refused to try a case In which a taxi driver was charged with transporting. He staled the in cident took place outside his juris diction, and was a matter of inter preting law. The arrest was made by a' highway patrolman, The patrolman had written the attorney general's office and had a ruling that a taxi caught with liq uor several days , after purchase, could be interpreted as not taking it from an ABC store home, but hauling it for the purpose of sale. The law allows transportation of a gallon per car from a legal store to the owner's residence. Waynesville Man Congratulates Dr. Graham MORE ABOUT Dr. Hilton (Continued from Page 1) serve the meal. Miss Pauline Slaughter of the Canton Business and Professional Women's club, will be mistress of ceremonies. Mrs. C. O. Newell, Haywood Coun ty Community Development chair man, will give the invocation, and Mrs, Edith P. Alley of Waynes ville, will present Dr. Hilton as guest speaker. Upward to a hun dred women are expected to at tend. The Champion YMCA band will provide music for the program each evening. Friday at noon Dr. Hilton will address ministers of the county at the Clyde Methodist church. The Haywood Ministerial Association is sponxor of this meeting. Saturday morning tit 10:30 a county-wide meeting will be held at the courthouse in Waynesvil! when people from all the rural sections of the county are expected to hear Dr. Hilton. Mrs. C. O. Newell, the County C. D. chairman will preside at the meeting. Music will be furnished by the Waynes ville high school band, under the direction of Charles Isley, and the Canton high school chorus, directed by R. C. Muench. Organizations sponsoring these meetings to present Dr. Hilton to I ' ' . ..V':. : T J. Richard Queen, of Waynesville, former secretary to Senator Frank Graham, congratulates Dr, Gra ham on being sworn in as Defense Manpower Director for the Department of Labor. Secretary of Labor Maurice J. Tobin (center) looks on approvingly. Mr. Queen is presently staff director for the mines and mining sub-committee of the House of Representatives. MORE ABOUT Brooms (Continued from page 1) is the annual minstrel which is scheduled for sometime next month. All the material and cos tumes lor the minstrel have ar rived and practice will begin at an early date. For the past several years this event has drawn large crowds wherever it has been presented. Around a dozen lions will attend the meeting at Canton tonight for the first rally of the combined civic clubs of the county. The balance are planning to attend the First Baptist church for the services. Scbo Was A Slugger EAST LANSING, Mich. (AIM -Steve Scbo, Michigan State's freshman football coach, twice led the Spartan baseball team in hat ting as a catcher during his under graduate days. He hit .342 as a sophomore and a lusty .402 In his junior year. the people of this section are: the Agriculture Mobilization Commis sion of the county; the P.M. A., F.H.A., 4-11 clubs; F.F.A., Veter ans' classes, and the extension ser vice Visiting Training Camps With Camera !yg !r 1 hi i( jtOOKIE Gil McDougald, right, gets lesson at keystone sack from 'Yank coach Frankie Crosetti. Jim Bridewiser, another rookie in flelder, watches attentively. MORE ABOUT Baptists (Continued from Face 1) West Canton, the pastor, Hcv. Otto Parham, and Rev. Frank Early, will conduct the meeting. Clyde, the pastor Rev. D. D. Gross will do the preaching. Crabtree, the Rev. O. L. Ledford, of Canton will do the preaching; Rev. M. H. Raby is pastor. Dellwood, the pastor, Rev. George Mehafley will do the preaching. Dutch Cove, the nev. W. L. Sor rels, of Franklin, will preach. Rev. J. Doyle Miller is pastor. East Fork, the pastor, Rev. O. F. Burnettc, will preach. Hazclwood, the pastor, Rev. M. L. Lewis, will do the preaching. IliRh Street, Canton, the Rev. B. A. Cooper, pastor, will conduct the services. Lake .lunnluska, the pastor, Itcv. W. C. Pipes, will conduct the services. Liberty, the Rev. Charles Mes ser, of Clyde will preach, and the Rev. D. D. Russell, Is pastor. Mt. Zion, the Rev. Elmer Greene of Waynesville, will preach, and the Rev. T. E. Erwin is pastor. Ninevah. the preaching will be done by the Rev. C. L. Allen. Oak Grove, the pastor, Rev. A. M. Wyatt will do the preaching. Olivet, the Rev. Joe Parsons, of Charlotte will preach, and Rev. O. L. Ledford is pastor. Panther Creek, the Rev. Ed wards Messer, Clyde, doing the preaching, and Rev. Roy Webb, pastor. RatclilTc Cove, the Rev. A. M. Wyatt, of Clyde, preaching, and the Rev. R. P. McCracken, pastor. Richland. Rev. Ben Cook, pas tor, doing the preaching. Riverside, the Rev. T. E. Erwin, pastor, preaching. Rocky Branch, the Rev. W. C. Weaver, pastor, preaching. Sunny Point, the, pastor, Rev. B. N. Rogers, preaching. Waynesville First, the pastor, Rev. Broadus E. Wall, doing the preaching. Woodland, the Rev. G. W. Jame son, pastor, doing the preaching. Rocky Face, the Rev. I. W, Scott, pastor, preaching. Pleasant Balsam, the pastor, J. m. w outlaid, preaching. Green Valley, the Rev. Elmer Greene, Waynesville, preaching; the pastor is Rev. J. Doyle Miller! Almost all services in the even ings will begin at 7:30. MORE ABOUT Congress MOKE ABOUT Merger (Contlaaed fiom rage M The Mountaineer learned that In the event Rep. Yates and Senator Medford fail to agree on the pro posal, that the House will name a Conference committee, and so will the Senate. This Impartial commit tee will study the merits of the bill, and make a report to their respective branches of the Gen eral Assembly. The reports of the conference committees are always adopted In full. ADJOURNMENT SEEN By APRIL ELEVENTH Rep. Yates told The Mountaineer he believed the General Assembly would adjourn by April 11. The committees are fast finishing their work, and members are working from early until late each day. Rep. Yates said his typical day started Wednesday shortly after seven, and he got back to his hotel at six, without taking time out for lunch. "Everyone is pushing to get through, and go home," he said. REP. YATES PLANS TO GO TO WASHINGTON Rep. Yates plans to fly to Wash ington sometime Friday in regards to a special piece of national legis lation. He plans to confer with con gressmen from North Carolina about the matter. He did not state the nature of the legislation. About 30 per cent of all non farm home owners in the United States in 1950 estimated their homes Would sell for $10,000 or more. MORE ABOUT Patrolmen (Continued from page I) the proposed bill making a 30-day jail sentence mandatory for all persons convicted of driving while drunk. Somehow, Haywood's patrolmen have learned the knack of being at the most unsuspected places at the right time. Often they, inter change cars, go in pairs, and al ways have their radios tuned with each other. Their system has brought satisfactory results this far and what they have learned of Haywood drivers will go along way in making many an arrest. Their chief concern Is keeping the highways safe, and those who forget that will find themselves dealing with a pretty "hard-boiled" group of patrolmen. March 2j J MRS. HANNAH SM0THtJ Mrs. William Ham,,, , J day for Lumberton wheJ" u" account of tk. . i m ... "",rL4 her mother. UM.f m mm -nour Smir. Crawford Funeral J Lrawlord Mutual Burul Waynesville Ph0Bt : : r m , i li t H If . f. ixi i ' r -' - , . ' - --' I .... h . I ,..,- I I I - T "- ' i .. iJ CINCINNATI'S four starting hurlers of last season watch rookie Jim Blackburn strut his stuff. Left to right: Ken Raffensbierger, liurtaan Wehiueir, Ewell BlackweU and Howie Fox, i MORE ABOUT Trees (Continued from page 1) wards the project. Members of the Club are plant ing additional dogwood trees along Highway No. 19-A and 23, between ihe Welch Farm and the intersee tion of the hirHway. Trees for tills project are being given by Mrs. June Smathers. Harry Lee Liner has planted 154 treesi on his development on Aliens Creek. The men of Aliens Creek have dug, and hauled trees, and in in stances where private landowners did not care to plant the tree, the men of the community hive set out the trees free of charge. Mrs: Slier said that Df. I. B. Funke had contributed many trees for the community plantings. Trees are also being planted at the East Waynesville, and Hztl wood schools in honor of Jack Mes ser, former county superintendent of education, who was recalled in to active Naval duty this past Feb ruary. . - j (Continued from rage 1) ham, and he is now secretary of the House subcommittee on mines. C. E. Brown, secretary to Hep. Redden is also mentioned as the other man from Haywood. In a recent issue, The Times News of Hendersonville, carried a story from their Washington correspondent, as follows: WASHINGTON Will Rep. Mon roe M. Redden decide in the next few months that he spoke too hast ily when he announced he would not be a candidate to succeed him self? Or will he stick to his guns about retiring from Congress but run instead for governor? And if he does the latter, will there be a wide open race in the mountainous twelfth district, of will the political powers that oper ate there be able to narrow the field down to reasonable propor tions? All those questions were being asked around Washington this week on the heels of the annual banquet of the North Carolina Democratic Club, an event which drew to the nation's capital an un usually large number of political ly-minded residents of the state. Redden made the categorical as sertion, for publication, earlier this year that he would not run. But it is being reported around now that (1) Don S. Elias, one of the Hen dersonville man's most influential backers, doesn't want him to retire and that 2i Mrs. Redden, who once didn't like Washington, now is already bemoaning their pros pective departure from the busy capital. Elias is reported to have told people in and out of North Caro lina politics that "Redden will run for Congress again," but on the other hand, some sources who know the Ashcville publisher Well say that Elias is seriously consider ing throwing Redden into the gubernatorial race. Redden, on the other hand, says nothing from his home in Hender sonville, where he retreated some days before the banquet. ho, you pays your money and you takes your choice. But assuming that Redden does stick by his decision not tn run again for Congress, who will be in the race to succeed him? In Washington this week, they're saying that the most certain candi date is Solicitor John M. Queen oi Waynesville there even was I- . ... iinu-wi'CK report mat ms an nouncement for the post would be forthcoming in a few days. But they re also saying that Harry Buchanan, Hendersonville theater magnate who has long been regarded as onc of North Caro lina s most potent lobbyists before the General Assembly, has his eye oh the job. z There s been talk around" ever since Redden's announcement ' his forthcoming abdication that his political protege, Dick Queen of Waynesville: his secretary. Cliff Brown of Clyde, and his political patron. Elias himself, might make the race. And this talk hasn't Uied down much, either, although pre sumably Dick Queen, a nephew of the solicitor, would take hiuuelf out of the race if his Uncle John should decide to run. The political pot appears to be definitely boiling in the twelfth and with ni&nths to go before an nouncing time, it may well boll over before the situation clears. Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, was elected to the American Hall of Fame ia 1947 IPV U7 .Til - -9r- :S" ' j l III ... rtbw . ..... jmi ' r w super! jfg3& ' 1 DEL MONTE fgfl n a t Si ft: i 8 I Get your teeth into these values in grand-tasting foods values that give you double enjoy ment . . . the pleasure you get from eating fine quality foods . . . the satisfaction you derive from keep ing your food bills well within your budget. Yes if you like low prices, you'll eat up those you'll find In every department of our market every day of the week. We make every price a low price and that means you save on the full meal every meal! PEACHES lomatoes 1 ROLL MIX : PURE LARD No 2 Can Ripe Pack No 2 Can Phillips Duff's Pkg 4-lb Ctn Rath 32c Juicy Tender Hcu( Chuck Roast 73c 1 .V Mini t .v.v.v.v 55. i m a FRYERS Pork Chops (( LIVER... BEEF Veal Chops llrt'ssc.l Ih V rnliT f 'uls Ib'l I'oik V Sliced 1. oil M 'Ground Nice Tender It lb lb 10 lb. Bag POTATOES 39 RUTABAGAS . lb 5c TOMATOES lb 29c YELLOW ONIONS... lb 317c BROCCOLI yy 34c BUTTER BEANS GREEN PEAS PEACHES Dulany Pkg Birdseye Pkg Dulany Pkg 25c 28c 39c Del Monte RAISINS 25c No. 2 Bush's HOMINY 2 19c Armour's TREET 47c PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER 3; DEL MAIZE CREAM CORN W. HOUSE APPLE SAUCE 221 RED KARO SYRUP HERSHEY'S COCOA G. SHORE SALMON DEL MONTE LIMA BEANS MOTHER'S OATS SIOUX BEE 21 2! ,4 .27 45 HONEY SPREAD 3 FIG NEWTONS J LUX FLAKES L9e32c SWAN Re92719c Lge 1 fic Cannon Face Cloth Free SILVER DUST Lge33c New Rainsoft RINSO LIFEBUOY Health Reg 2l9c Soap Bath I4c SPRY 3 lbs $ J .07 ' LUX SOAP Bath SCOT TISSUE 2 23c RAWS 33 9A-RK SHOP SAVE g!H!U) '7.'- I I I 1 I I ! J II il I I IJ SUPER MAniiETj
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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March 29, 1951, edition 1
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