Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 13, 1953, edition 1 / Page 4
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Officers Of Canton Toastmasters Club - _ W Tlu:e six men were installed at a banquet held here Friday night as officers for the Canton Toast masters Club. Front row. left to ri'ht: l.oui Kaplan, secretary-treasurer; Robert Patterson, president; Ernest Messer, deputy governor and R. F. Anton, vice-president. Second row: Bruce Nanney, educational chairman, and William Stephens, sergeant-at-arms. (Mountaineer Photo). DEATHS MRS. EDNA L. BROWNING Funeral services for Mrs. Edna Louise Browning. 38, of the Lake I.ogan section, who died Friday at 3:30 a.m. at her home after a !ong illness, were held Sunday at 11 a.m. in Burnett Siding Baptist C'hureh. The Rev. Gay Chambers and the Rev. Lueious Rogers officiated and hut;:.', was in Aliens Cfeek Cerno 1 '? V I Pa 1 bearers were the following I phew; Robert. Hiliiard and Roy Browning. Glenn Harris, Frank Parker and Bill Hightower. Flower b--arers were Cecil HD Club mem bers. Mrs. Browning was a native and liiclong resident of Haywood Coun-i ty and a member of the Baptist, Church. Surviving are the husband, lien-1 ne It Bruw nlng: five sons. Virgle.i William. Glenn, Oliis and Carroll; el the honie: one daughter, Mrs. / Italics Ford of Waynesville; the patents. Mr. and Mis. W. A. Swon ger if Canton. Itt. 3: two grand children. three sisters, Mrs. Joe 1 oketson of New Jersey, Mrs. Bill Green, Jr., of Hazelwood and Mrs. Le.ro> Mears of Canton. Wells . .... ,-ai ttome was lj charge. Some scientists have believed | that no bird hibernates, but it has j beet) found that the poorwill whicli Invs in WV.tern United States does hibernate, says tlie* National Geo graphic Society. Honor Roll At Clyde Announced A total of 67 students were nam ed to the Clyde High School honor roll for the fourth report period, officially released today by Stanly Livingston, principal of the school. Of that number. 31 made the ? A" roll. Those making the honor list in clude: Third Grade: (A>?Jimmy Jen kins, Mike Ledford. John McCrack en. Kenny Sizemore, Trudy Davis, Pattv Haynes. Reba Snnford. Shar on Shook. Shirley Smart. iB??Bob by Killian. Morris Owenby. Fourth Grade: 'At ?. Mary Ann Smith, Carolyn Shuler: <B)?Mc Lain Rogers, Ted Reynolds, Lou Etta Sanford. Fifth Grade: (At?Trina Rath bone. Brenda Medford, Carol Liv ingston. Carol Latimer. (B>?Gene Sizemore, Gary Jackson, Carol Me Clure, Ruth Conard, Roger Nol and. Sixth Grade: (At?Diana Haynes. Patricia Lindsey, Amelia Robinson: <B)?Peggy Free, Joyce Farmer, Beatrice Green. Doris Haney. Gen eva Jenkins. Barbara Summey, Ronald Creasman, Billy Young. Seventh Grade: (B)?Judith Har ris, Zela Kay Ledford, Eighth Grade: (A)?Elaine Cur tis. Joy Young, Helen Smith, Bar bara Jolley, Willard Haney, Mary Etta Brown, Linda Limbo; (B)? F.dwina Summey,* Alice McCracken, Cora Sue Haney. Barbara Inman. Opal Ledford, Ralph Hall. Ninth Grade: (At?James Hen ry Brown, Donald Livingston, Bar 'Thank Heaven! At Last There's A Special Shampoo For^ryJIairP know who have dry hair, you've experimented with many different shampoos. Hut unless we miss our guess, you've never found a satis factory one. You found that your hair seems dryer than ever, and has a way of behaving in a fly away fashion for from two to three days after your shampoo. And have you wondered why you've had such disappointing results from practic ally everv shampoo you've tried? Well, stop and think a minute. Has it occurred to you that your hair is as individual as your skin? It stands to reason, then, that no one shampoo could'possibly be right for all types of hair. i Since your hair is dry, jlmu need a shampoo that will lubricate your scalp and at the same time give your bain brilliance and lusti*?. These: are things that most "all purpofte" shampoos cannot do. If they could, they wouldn't be right for, let's say, oily hair, which re quires an entirely different kind of shampoo! That's why Revlon developed fabu lous new Aquamarine Shampoo in ? custom formulas?and one was created expressly for dry hair. You'll say ij's a blessing the very first time you use it. You'll find that your hair, instead of being dry and unruly after a shampoo, is actually beaiftiful. shiny and In stantly manageable. There are two reasons for this: 1. This shampoo was developed with the special needs of dry hair in mind. It conditions and lubri cates the scalp. It actually helps to normalize your hair, not rob it of oils as some detergents do. 2. Thanks to a marvelous new ingredient called MagnVtol. your hair actually acquires body during the shampoo and is as manageable immediately after vour shmnoo, as it would ordinarilv he two or three days later! r Let us tell you how Magnetol works. This amazing ingredient actually becomes part of your hair shaft. during your shampoo. It clings through repented rinsings, coating each hair with n normal, protective substance. No after rinse. no hair conditioner is need ed to supplement this action. Aquamarine Shampoo actually conditions as It cleans You need no after-rinse. Your hair will have the gleam and gloss of a hundred brush strokes after your shampoo with Aouamarine Shampoo for dry Jiafr. And It eomes in an unbreak able plastic bottle??o safe, such a comfort! Only $1.25. Now available at cmititc drug arii i n a store Main Street Phone 25 * ' *4 to* , ; MORE ABOUT National Guard Continued from Pare 1) forces. Aclual combat situations are reconstructed on * the sand tables. As one Guardsman said: "Vic tory or defeat in a battle can us ually be attributed to a single phase of a battle. By use of the ?and tables such things may be easier learned.'* Last year the National Guard unit in Waynesville. which has a present strength of 54 enlisted men and six officers, shared in a total pavroll of $32.71(1. Each man receives a full day's pay for each drill he attends. By "full day's pay it is meant the equivalent pay for a similar rank on active duty. Thus, should a man on ac tive duty receive pay at the rate of S5 per dav, a Guardsman of similar rank would receive the same nay for one night's drill (two hours). Approximately 50 per cent of the men in the Waynesville unit are veterans of World War II. The division was stationed at Fort Jackson during the early days of the war. and later at Camp Brand ing, I la., and Camp Atterbury, Ind. Later they were transferred lo a staging area in England in preparation for the invasion of Europe. The division did participate in the invasion, fighting all the way to the Elba River, where they met the Russians. In the latter part of April, 1947. the unit was reorganized at Way nesville under the command of Capt. James M. Davis, now a Lieut. Colonel, commanding the Third Battalion. 120th Infantry, NCNG, with headquarters in Kings Moun tain. Since the outbreak of the Ko rean action, National Guard units from all over the country have contributed approximately 150, 000 officers and men, including eight Infantry divisions, more than 80 per cent of the Air Na tional Guard, and numerous sup porting units. The units have also contributed more than a billion dollars in equipment and facilities to the regular services. The Waynesville unit is just one of some 6.000 units located in 2.200 cities and towns throughout ?he country. The National Guard defense line?on the ground and in the air?runs throughout the ?IB states, the District of Cdlumbla, Puerto Rico. Hawaii and Alaska More than a quarter of a million men are trained and equipped un der direct supervision of the Reg ular Armv and Air Force in 27 \rmv divisions 27 air combat wings, 20 regimental combat teams, anti-aircraft groups, en gineer. ouartermaster. signal corns, medical, military police, and other supporting units. Captain Samuel A. Carswell. with more than 15 year's service. '* company commander of the Waynesville unit. Other officers and their length of sendee, both on active duty and in a resen*e 'tatus?Includes First Lieut. Rob ert H Winchester (13 vearst. ex ecutive officer: First I.lcut Frank C. Bvrd (17 years, platoon lead er Second Lieut. James R Adams, (eight years), platoon leader; 2d >Lt. Albert C. Jones (5 years) nla ; toon leader: and Warrant Officer Paul M Mull (12 years), adminiv trative assistant. The unit has two full-time em nfnvees. Warrant Officer Paul M M"'l ?Pd Srt. James R Robinson Included In the equipment on hand at the Wavnosville Armory are three medium tank* for train inn purposes, one Runners- train er. two two-and-one-half ton trucks, two ieeps. trailers for all four vehicle*, and a garage com plete with shop eoulnment. Other eoulnment include* in dividual weapon* for all officer* and enlisted men 'carbines, sub machine sun* pistol*). .30 and Ml calibre marhine Run* for each tank, complete set* of field equip ment for each man, Including mountain stoves end coov ?et*. and the various training aid* pre viously mentioned. The comnanv maintain* an uo to-date alert nlan for immediate mobilization In case of an emer gency. That bov in the movie the other nleht naturally can't loin the Guard.. Men who wish to Qualify for enlistment must be between the aRes of 17 and 33. This year the local unit Is going all out lo effort to recruit to full strength and fnHMJ^HIPRprt 9* citizen* throughout thla area. bars Owenby; <B>?Lennie Mae Rollings. Betty Sorrells. Tenth Grade: (A)?Joanna Mc Cracken. Judy Pressley; iB)?John Carter, Ronald Dotson, J. L. Duck er, Carroll Fisher, Dan McCrack en. Twelfth Grade: (A)?Azalea Far ley; (Bl?Doris Fowler, Joyce Fowr' ler, Ernestine Osborne. New Officers Are Installed In Club At Banquet Here | The Canton Toastmasters Club held ladies' night, and an instal lation of new officers, at the Towne House here FMday night. Robert Patterson succeeded Ern est Messer as president of the or ganization, with F. E. Shull, retir ing deputy governor making the presentation. The members of the organization gave a routine program, with five j prepared speeches by members, J and three impromptu talks. For j each talk, an evaluation was made, j as well as an evaluation for the; entire meeting. Some of the talks were serious in nature, while oth ers mixed in a general sprinkling of humor, and others were almost wholly humorous. The invocation was by Rev. H. R. Sherman, rector of the Canton Episcopal church. R. M. Ricketson was toastmaster, and presented the five speakers who talked five minutes on a pre pared subject. The speakers were: Ernest Messer, W. J. Stone, G. L. Edgerton, J. E. Wilkinson and Roy I Blythe. The evaluators for the speakers, in the order named in cluded: Edwin Haynes, R. F. An ton, Bruce Nanney, Mr. McMahon and Lou Kaplan. The table topics master was C. A. Stone, with H. B. Whitworth as evaluator of those who were called upon for impromptu two minute speeches. They included Tom MeCracken, J. E. Stutts, Ed Belt, and William Stephens. I)r. J. E. Witters was grammar-! ian for the evening, and Zane Hall master evaluator. Other officers named to serve with Mr. Patterson for the current : term indued: R. F. Anton, vice president; Lou Kaplan, secretary treasurer; William Stephens, ser geent-at-arms; Bruce Nanney, edu cational chairman, and Ernest Mes ser, deputy governor. About sixty people attended the banquet. Reds Meet Sox At Cooperstown COOPERTOWN. N. Y. (API ? The annual pilgrimage of the major leagues to this hallowed spot will take olace Monday. July 27. Then the Chicago White Sox will face the Cincinnati Reds in j the 12th renewal of the Hall of ! Fame game at Doubleday Field It will mark t lve second appear- | ance in the Hall of Fame game for | both teams. The Reds lost to the Cleveland Indians, 2-1. in the 1941 "ontest. The White Sox dropped their game to the Brooklyn T)od- ! gers. 7-5, in 1943. Lions Hear Talk On Importance Of Trucking "Every family and every person 'depends on truck transportation foi the necessities and luxuries of life," Jett B Wilson told Waynes ville Lions Club members at a reg ular meeting of ?heir club held at the Hazelwood High School Thurs day night. Wilson, who is Director of In formation and Safety for the North Caioltna Motor Camera Associa tion. Raleigh, pointed out the fact that more than 1800 North Caro lina communities depend entirely on trucks to bring them everything they eat. wear and use. "North Carolina, like the rest of the Nation, has three-fourths of Its freight moved by truck." he stated as he spoke on the subject ? North Carolina Demands Flex ible Door-to-Door Truck Service". "The cargo which truck drivers move is more than just boxes and crates." he continued, "it repre sents health, happiness and em ployment." "Almost everything grown in the soil of the Tar Heel State moves all or part of the way to market by truck. Ninety-nine per cent of all you eat, wear, and use on your farm or in your home is moved by trucks somewhere on its way to you?agricultural commodities de pend upon truck transport and farm vehicles in every phase of their marketing and production." He also outlined in detail the various safety activities conducted by the North Carolina Motor Car riers Association and the American Trucking Associations in Washing ton, D. C. These activities include: the annual state truck roadeo. the "Driver of the Year" program. "Share the Road" campaign, in dustry self-policing by road patrol and the N. C. Truck Driver Train ing School founded by the Associ ation. operated by N. C. State Col lege. Discussing road taxes paid by trucks, he pointed out that "the trucking industry does not receive or cxocct a free ride?We pay our share. We pay huge highway user taxes, plus the usual business taxes, although trucks number 17% of a the vehicles using the highways." j "Figures for 1952 undoubtedly ( will exceed the more than 900 mil-1 lion dollars paid to the states in highway user taxes and the more than 400 million dollars paid to the Federal Government in excises on gasoline, tires, equipment, etc., in I 1951 by the trucking industry." < -r"ia| Girl Scouts Start Wild Flower Study Members of Girl Scout Intermediate Troop 66 of the East WaynesviUe School are maki* tions for a study of wild flowers. The troop is shown with Mrs. J. R. Cha left, and Mrs. T. W. Camlin, leader, holding a chart of native wild flowers range an exhibit for the spring flower show of the Mountain View Garden l :ub I UouiiUiMtr Identical Batting Marks PHILADELPHIA (AP)?Veteran Johnny Wyrostek and young Mel j Clark, who will compete for the, regular right-field spot on the Phils, compiled identical batting? marks in their first two seasons in organized baseball. Wyrostek hit .332 with Kinston, N. C., of the Coastal Plain League in 1937 and again in 1938. Clark batted .347 with Appleton in the Wisconsin State League in 1947. He repeated with the same figure in 1948 for Raton Rouge in the Evangeline Loop. 'The Lone Hand' Stars! McCrea In Action RoIpI The Technicolor story about the | adventures of a lone cowboy and his young son who go out West to1 make a living on a run-down ranch is especially rich in colorful moun tain backgrounds. Universal-Inter national filmed the picture 11.000 feet up in the rugged mountains above Durango, Colorado. The incomparable scenery of "The Lone Hand" is matched by a tender story of a father and his son as well as top portrayals to make it one of the finest outdoor entertainment features of the sea son. - Joel McCrea as Zachary Hallock. father of an adoring young son, plays one of the most strenuous and engaging roles of his career. McCrea proves again that there are few on the screen today who ?an top him as a man of the open. He is aided by one ai A moppet pi i fui ? other season Jimmj KM in the engaging rule of ifl Sarah Jar.e Skagg. ^B wooed and won by Mc^H played by Barbara Holt.H freshing addition to '.h(H Western he'totsn- tin fl rapidly rising young acuS ly seen in sympathetic i^B prises his fans in "TheLo^B by turning vinous a.idl again his H portrayal. ? are caoably handled b; 1:^B Wesley Morgan ar.d Roy ^B Some - o tiH orcd in warm weather, I^B duriiH'. the wmtir H ANNOUNCING THE NEW lalil'?l?lir< I SUPREME I Tubeless Tires I THE WOALD'S FIRST AND ONLY I ? blow-out safe i ? puncture - sealing | Tubeless Tirel Full Trade-in Allowance On Your Old Tiros fm m Tubesl I ? USE OUR BUDGET PAYMENT PLAN -1 anp| 1bj1m(^muhhl9auto suppfl W. M. "Bill" Cobb, Owner I PHU.S34 >IainS?^B
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 13, 1953, edition 1
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