Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Nov. 5, 1951, edition 1 / Page 9
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Afternoon, November 5, 1931 .PAC3.Tr:;i.i THE WAINESV1LLE MOUNTAIN 3 hington 3S Every W For ( icemen !j.NE EADS r0NTlie capital is World'. War II repu ood leave town", leanized efforts to keep Lpv are so complete Going' to go into them 11 in this and succeed ith the thought that seful to readers who get such programs un- jtieir own ciues. k girl, top-nignt soci- Ler worKer, rouimiiB- and government Dig Inaking every effort to bored; lonely, ana ' .flocking to Washing- ips' 350 miles around. luncheons wun iu- Capitol Hill, parties in s and foreign encas hing tours, scores ot ier servicemen s cluos ; hand-picked, special Is to dance With and n visiting GI's. Co- Lse activities is the krmed Services Hos fciittee. . newing our efforts to mgton a hospitable , to make the homc at home ... to boost teryone, Mrs, wwiam fcecutive secretary of je said. ; all-important volun- iiion services, tne fcmmittees deal with ality. servicemen's Planning of tours and fcgrams and the train- and senior hostesses wm wm oung! Regain Normal AH-VotaM Woyl p (ot constipation cut tilljr! Their crampi and normal bowel icuon, need of reputed dosing, isionally feel constipated, n relief. Take Dt. Cald itife contained irj Syrup nuMi. No silts , no harsb Mi's contains an extract k and one of the ineet I tnown to medicine, is Senna Laxatire taste I, brings thorough relief fs you get regular, ends I Even relieTes stomach iHistipation often brings. Monty back If ot lartftfUa1 IM hank In MO, N.y.i,N.y. LOWELL'S LAXATIVE Svrua amw ' ' r r Korean Vol Ooiums ffo School In Eighth Grade -J . ? i f Hollywood Trying To Pick Academy Award Winners Reviewers begin feeling that crystal-ball urge about this time every year. Enough celluloid has run through projection machines that picture-reporters , sense safe bets for Academy Award nomina tions. To this fan, Vivien Leigh in "A Streetcar Named Desire" looks like the starring actress to beat. The picture itself will doubtless be nominated: Miss Leigh's closest competition should be from Jane Wyman in "The Blue Veil" and Shelly Winters in "A Place in the Sun." ;, :; .:... As Blanche DuBois, pathetic tarnished belle who totters finally over the brink of Insanity, Miss Leigh is superb. Even her frayed and flossy finery contributes elo quently to her portrayal of the frustrated dreamer In drab New Orleans surroundings. .-, Still, some Academy voters prob-1 ably will prefer the tear-jerking emoting of Miss Wyman in a long career as a baby-nurse in "Blue Veil". One ventures to speculate on some voter reasoning: Yes. Miss Leigh is great, but she had the ad vantage of playing the. 'Streetcar" role on the London Stage for nine months. Miss Wyman had to create her powerful performance from scratch. - Then there's Miss Winters, who steps out of siren roles into the real-actress class under Director George Stevens' guidance. Among men, Marlon Brando in "Streetcar" may well head the pack. Here he is crude Stanley Kowalski, slum-dweller, whose hat red of Blanche helps drive her over the brink. He. too, had the advan tage of stage experience: two years "Quo Vadis". Advance rumbles say in the Pulitzer Prize play in Broad- an English actor named Peter way. , I Ustinov is terrific as Nero." Two "others from the New York - . cast look like strong contenders in NEW STYLE WATERMELON the supporting-performance cate-i LAFAYETTE, Ind. AP) gory. One is baldish, potato-nosed I Watermelons with only two or Karl Maiden as Blanche's tentative three seeds apiece are being grown suitor. The other is Kim Hunter as Stanley's wife, a role which actual ly verges on the starring class. Montgomery Clift, as the social climber who betrays the factory girl (Miss Winters) in "A Place In the Sun", looks like Brando's clos est competition. Gregory Peck might be nominated as King David in "'David and Bathsheba'' or even as swashbuckling "Captain Horatio Hornblowcr." M-G-M is holding back, for late-ln-the-year release, its three hour color-film epic made in Italy, at Purdue University's experiment al farm near Owensvllle W. B, Ward, extension horticul turist, reported today that com mercial seedsmen will offer the "seedless watermelon" seeds next year. . The round melons weigh from eight to. 10 pounds, a handy size for refrigerators, and Ward says they are of high quality; The re duction of seeds almost to the van ishing point was effected by treat ing the plant with a chemical com pound, colchicine. In 1950 the railway passensc-t in dustry did $814 million wort! vt passenger business. isccuciiip For coughs and broachttia fee to ol you can now get Creomulawa epefUy prepared for Children a wfH f.-k and blue package tad b sure: .- ( 1) Your child will liJU ..' ' V (2) It cotstMM oaty Mft, fmmm kupcdiciits (3) H cootaiM mnttiet t Mt turb Mture't procecaM. " . ' , (4) k will aid Mtttrc la aaofct aa4 heal raw, tender, mflanad tfcroal md hroochial membraace, tkfa rlafiM tbe couth and nroaMtiae rajt i sleep. Ask for Creonwlaioa far Cif dren in tbe pink aad btae aarttp.jf cnEor.:ui:s!o;j FOR CHILDStEM (MUa,ir KOREAN VET Ptc. Melvin J. Peters among eighth' grader. Canton Chapter Of Red Cross Elects Officers Officers were elected at the re cent annual meeting of the Canton chapter, American Red Cross, and a "balance of $2,307.00. in chapter lunds was revealed. " " F: E. (Bill) Shull, well known Canton businessman, was elected chairman of the chapter, and J. Bruce Medford became vice-chairman. Al Phillips is the new finance chairman. Elected to the board of directors were Carlton Peyton, Gudger. Palmer, Ralph Ricketson, and Rev, J. Clayton Lime A' short talk on the American Red Cross was given by Miss Hope Buck, general field representative It was also announced that the an nual membership drive, of the Junior chapter was scheduled to begin Nov. 5th, and will continue through Nov. 15th. - institute, in . . ... f ' for in-town club and nearby camp work. The committee issues 30,000 copies of a monthly pamphlet call ed "What Goes on in Washington',' It lists all activities that are espe cially designed for or open to serv' icemen and women. . . The information services keep on hand a working file of some 1.- 200 cards of the questions most frequently asked by servicemen Eight per cent of these concern sight-seeing and recreation pro. grams, said Mrs. Davis, head of the volunteer inlormation services .Most men want to see the Capitol then the White House, the Wash ington Monument, the Smithsoni an Institution and the FBI. She added, however, 1 that the No. question is "where can we find a blonde?" AP Ne.wsfeaturcs v- . BRADFORD,. Pat. Pfc' Melvin J. Peters buried 'his . pride on a recent 30-dry rotation furlough from Korean battlefields but-not hia thirst for knowledge. ' ' The 21-year-old Medical 'orps veteran spent his, leave' among gog gle-eyed youngsters in-an eighth grade classroom at a .nearby Ljnie stone, N..Y., public, school. ;. . Peters is grimly determined' 'to get a high schorjr.dialorfia.'sorae day and is taking up where , he left .'off three years ago' when' he'anlisted in the Army. Hd used his furtough time to speed up the protest -The youth expects to secure ,an. Eighth Grade diploma from the" Ujiped Mates Armed r orces the near future. I was the worst pupil they had in-schoo!," Pfc. Peters says"PIay- ed hooky most of the time,, They couldn't keep' me. in clauses."' Put he added: , f ' : "I was only in the Army "six months when, I . realized itljat.' Hie men who were at least- smart enough to finish high . school1 'got promotions much faster. Jiot .only that but now I realize thatlo find a good job in. civilian life an.-clem-entary and high schooV education are needed." J y 'A native of Chautauqua' County, N: Y., Pfc Peters is.,'one 'of six sons, of Charles A. Peters,'- 'who operates a farm in Leonard uji, near Limestone. He,; hac. a fbrothcr in the Navy, another' in 'the-'Arir Force and' two others- served 'in World War'lLi - .. a. REPORT OF CONDITION OF First State Bank I in the State of North Carolina at the close of business on October 10, 1951 -- - ASSETS with other banks, including reserve balances, "cms in process of rnlleetlon Government obligations, direct and led f States and political subdivisions ftounts (including $139.24 overdrafts) wned $8,700.00, furniture and 2.909.62 ASSETS $184,440.07 181.143.59 2,072.87 250.541.66 11.669.62 826.25 '$630,69406 IIARII.ITIF.S f'ts of individuals, partnerships, and 'iia ' of individuals, partnerships, and oris ' .'ti'd States Government (including J'ngs) wtes and political subdivisions' certified and officer's checks, etc.) .POSITS . . . . $582,481 62 $361,498.34 104,948.30 4.197.84 110,074.71 1,762.43 1.668.54 ABILITIES (lint Intliirlintt Cii hrirHinatnH f shown below) CAPITAL ACCOUNTS fits 5 te,A,L ACCOUNTS ,ni7 ,LITIES AN CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Wtal consists of: U-K with total par value of $25,000.00 . MEMORANDA $584,150.16 $ 25,000.00 19,500.00 2.043.90 "$"46,543.90 $630,694.06 !fii.ii 11 KUH ot ,r,e state ot wonn taroiina aicial thereof . $ 70,000.00 0 or assigned to secure liabilities and 1 Purposes . ....105,416.91 SmiiK V; e aller aeaucuon ot reserves ot o.nu.uo I '"" Cashier, of the above-named bank, do solemnly unrimrin. is iruu, ana mat u iuuy du tuiiv.ti 1-rUn ctutn i. i ji i i nr4 Je hi c U1 in several maiiers nercin luuiauicu au Dllist Of mv knnulnHrr art A Kaliof J. B. SMITH, Cashier. Cpneet Attest: J. H. Woody C. N. Allen . L. N. Davis Directors. Carolina i .j . coMif . bed tetore me this 1st day of November, 1951, i L"y that l am not an officer or director of this bank, m Pv!:rE McCRACKEN, Notary Public, j exPlres July 13, 1952. Money To Burri'JirCahs LIBERTY, N. Y. (AP)J-Saiutd- tion Department workers'-lbund 1- woman here ; who . had.j money r to burn. . ...)' (;' a. .'. v Picking up the refuse .at the home of Mrs.. Ida Paglino, 'one of the workers, Harold . Kortright, found one can that seemed- too heavy. It was exactly '$1,800 worth. He gave the money back to Mrs. Paglino but that's' Jiofall..-. Mrs. Paglino remembered, thjere was a second $l,000-can .some place. This one got by sanitation- .work ers and ended up in the local In cinerator. They fished the, can out of the 1,500 degree heat,- the hot money wasn't there any more. ' It all started When Mrs. Pagli no's kids cleaned out the cellar fot mama. . .- - The biggest gold nugget ever found was 54 Inches' Ion?, SVfc inches thick and weighed 195 pounds. " mm. -U0 v'L-. . . NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA HAYWOOD COUNTY The undersigned, having quali fied as Administratrix of the estate of Ben H. Smith, deceased, late of Haywood County, this is- to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before, the ?9th day of October 1952, or this notice will be pleaded In har. of their re covery. All persons indebted to sai,d estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. . ! This the 29th day of October, 1951. ' POLLY SMITH, Administratrix. . Waynesville " ' . - " '.' Route 3, Box 365. . 2135 O ' 29 N 5-12-19-26 D 3 " " EXECUTOR'S NOTICE 5 The undersigned, having - quali fied as Executor of the .estate of Mrs. Mary L. Sanderson', deceased, all persons having claims . against said estate are hereby notified to file same, duly verified,, with, the Clerk of the Superior Court of Haywood County, NC., on" or "be fore Oct. 15, 1952, or this '.-notice will be pleaded in bar 'of their, re covery thereon, and all persons in debted to said estate will pay the same to the undersigned.' ' - , , This Oct. 20, 1951." y , SAMUEL I. SANDERSON .. . 21250 15-22-29 N 5-12-19 .".,. .V if.. - . mm mmm t Friday, Nov. 16th Brng The Kiddies Santa's Big Red Bag Is Full of Candy And Gifts For Good Little Boys And Girls! fv. yoi,-j,. -:c mWHUp; 4 ' - - Buy In Waynesville, Hazelwood, L Junaluska The For TIRADE Merchants' Participation In This Big EVENT
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1951, edition 1
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