Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 1, 1936, edition 1 / Page 9
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tAJULY 2. 1936 THE WAYNES VILLE 5I0UNTAINEER (gn Ufa Ollfurrlj imimg c. Truesdale, Mstor 5U -eneral superintendent. H''atll A. M. and 8 P.M., :i Ft wVs meeting at 7 P. M. Vou'? p'. A stentz is doing some M'.J',:.i n the choir and a fea- .a: "u- s. viith the voune i -ha' work i --- - ; : ere . ' L ;,.u, service. Come ana ! sPie - irood choir can do at " vxfsvlaE PRESBYTERIAN AE" ' U KCH n o- Permit this summer weather j pn.?..L vu for any reason not ttS church. Come we are ex- - a.ltJl .,,J fVm church P1'c;;r;i" .u li needs VOU. "?,!Vm Richeson, superintend-' M'- ' v, Cnn.lov school at nr;pator w-ill preach at 11 and the young peopleV service at 7 P.M. Mid-week service of praver Wi-d-nesda at 8 P. M. A hearty welcome to visitors. "Grace Church in the Mouir.airs " EPISCOPAL Rev. Albert New, Rector. Sundav. Julv 5th, 193ti. 10 A. M. Church school. 11 A. M. Choral CVU-bratinr. of :h Holy Communion. The rector will preach at 3 P. M. . . 'Mission service in St. Mary's, church. Micadale. Allen's Creek. Everybody cordially inv.tt.-ri to all our services. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC CHCRCH Rev. Howard V. Lane. Pastor Morning Masses at !.'::) ar.d 11 A. M. Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament after the last Mass. Ser mon by the pastor. News Events of World-Wide Interest ...Briefly Told ,m U RECEIVES LETTER FROM Gloria Lee lioyt, 11, publisher of a m 0n tne great pajwis. uj. t-v when she received tne ursi fcnai icuer uvm , fo'owing his nomination. In the letter Lamkw thanks Gloria Lee for Etiors:ng his campaign. EXATOR SMITH WALKS OUT Senator Ellison Smith of South Car ii . i .... n rtQ i o.:na whikco oui oi oic ueiuvuuuv convention, because Rev. Marshall Shtpard, negro pastor of a Philadel phia Bantist church, led the invoca- r t;on. CRIME COSTS $15,000,000,000 he United States costs the rti-nle $15,000,000,000 per year, ac- 1 . . 1' lir T. . J? f 1.1, .. c ')rd:Hg to V. vv. I eu-Tsuii, cmei 01 u'e Mi'u-wikw i;-men. Thus amounts to approximately $125 for each person in the I'mteii .states. INSTRUMENT I'SEI) TO MEASURE LIGHT OF STARS An instrument so sensitive it will ' detect the light of a candle 3,000 miles away is being used by Pr. Al- ; bert E. Wihitfurd to measure the light of stars; The stars he has used the instrument on thus far are billions j of miles away and are not visible to ; the eye. j WOMAN BREAKS ALTITUDE RE CORD Maryse Hilsz, Frenchwoman, broke both the French men's and the wo- i men's world altitude records last week when she ascended -Iti.'.MT feet. The former record wa held by Nella Negro mne, Italian woman, who climb- , ed '39,510 in 11)35. 99 YEAR OLD VETERAN WEDS Charles Jeanette, Sl'J year old Civil War veteran of Old Forge. New York, married Mrs. Ella Blanche Manning, 54 year old widow, last Sunday. This . was his third wedding. ItKOltiHT AND INSECTS CAUSE $100,000,000 Damage Drought and insects have caused 'da mace' to crops amounting to ap proximately $100,000,000 according to report received here this week. The Miihiie and South West have been the hardest hit. Grasshoppers have destroyed thous ands qf acres of crops. 1 he situation in Canada and in a few widely scattered regions of the U. S. tiirtlv rnlipvpH liv olinwi.r TEEL COMPANIES TO FIGHT LABOR Steel companies capitalized at MOOO.000,000 and employing 500,000 men, have announced they will fight with all their resources any attempt (if tabor leaders to orirnnizp thpir workers. Some laborers-have renort- i that 'lalxir leaders have been try- ir.fr to coerce them to join unions. FISH CATCHES CHICKEN i Will McMillan, farmer of Midville, : Ga., caught the fish that caught his : chicken. Mr. McMillan reported that I the chicken, a small broiler, was drinking water at the edge of the: McMillan pond when an eight pound ! trout flung itself out of the. water1 and seized the chicken. McMil an caught the fish as it floundered in the ! shallow water. He exhibited the fish to prove the story. i DEMOCRATS NOMINATE ROOSU VELT AND GARNER ' The Democratic convention held in! Philadelphia last week adjourned) Saturday night after nominating i Roosevelt and Garner as the Demo-i cratic standard bearers in the fall election. The highlights of the convention were: Tuesday, Al Smith and three colleagues served notice that they are "taking' a walk';". Wednesday, Sen ator Barkley delivered keynote ad- i dress; Thursday, the 104 year old rule requiring vote of at least two-thirds of the delegates in order to nominate a candidate for President was abol ished; Friday, adoption of a plat form calling for continuation of most of the New Deal policies and advo cating reduction of government ex penditures and, if necessary, amend ment of constitution, so as to admit the New Deal; Friday and Saturday, nomination of Roosevelt and Garner; Saturday, the nominees are notified and make acceptance speeches. New Coach Fares ; VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Beginning Monday, June 1, 1936 From ASHE VILLE Coach fare I.v Ashcville 5:30 am 5:00 pm Ar. Washington 7:25 pm 6:10 pm 7-1 1 Ar Pa(imore 8:11 pm 7:1.5 am 8.33 Ar Philadelphia 10:38 pm 9:1 1 am 9.88 Ar New York 12:25 am 12:01 am ll.fiS Ar Boston 6:15 am 1:30 pm 17.1S Lv Asheville 6:45 am 6:10 pm Ar Cincinnati 8:40 pm 8:10 am $ 6.13 Ar Columbus 1:50 am 11:50 am 8.78 Ar Cleveland 6:30 am 3:15 pm 11.53 Ar Detroit 7:30 am 4:00 pm 11.68 Ar Indianapolis 11:55 pm 10:00 am 8.63 Ar Chicago 6:45 am 2:10 pm 12.13 Ar I'ittsburg 7:25 am 4:30 pm 12.68 Ar Buffalo 11:12 am 9:38 pm 15.23 Proportionate low coach fares to all points in the United States and Canada Coach tickets are good thirty days from date of sale an! permit stopovers at any and all stations enroute. AVOID THE HAZARDS OF THE HIGHWAYS. FOR SAFETY AND COMFORT, TRAVEL BY TRAIN. LARGE KOOMY COACHES SEPARATE SMOKING ROOMS FOR WOMEN AND MEN. WHOLESOME MEALS SERVED IN DINING CARS TO COACH PASSENGERS AT MODERATE PRICES; ALSO APPETIZING MEAL SERVICE ON TRAYS IN COACHES See your nearest agent or address, R. H. DeBUTTS, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Asheville, N. C. Here's Nav Picture of Landon Family j personals :L! V brwl $ i 1 LJi i I'i"" ' "" J Mrs. Charles E. Ray had e her guests over the wefk-end her sister, Mrs. Ed Rhinehart and daughter, of Asheville. " Major John R. Martin, of the U. S. A., and Mrs. Martin and two sons, were the guests over the week-end of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Martin. They were en route to their home in Peoria, 111., where the former is now sta tioned, after visiting Mrs. Martin's relatives in Pennsylvania. Mrs. Mary Martin Lynch, of Wilkes boro, N. ('.. w;i the giM-ft over the wet-k-end of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Martin. Mrs .1 H Clarke had as her sruets on Sunday her nephew, Mr. Charles Ford and" family, anil Mr. James llaynes. of Newport, Tenn. Program OF THE NEW Park Theatre Thursday "DESIRE" uilh ;ai) Cmiht and Marline liel litii This excellent new photo of the family of Cov. Alfred M. Landon of Kansas, Republican presi dential nominee, taken at hm Topeka home, shows, left to right, standing, Governor Landon, Mrs. Landon and Peggy Landon, older daughter; seated Mrs Theodore Cobb, mother of Mrs. Landon, hold ing John Cobb Landon; John I-andon, the gover nor's father, holding Nancy Jo London.. Friday THE SINGING KID" uh.li A I .IkImiii mill All Star '-l Saturday "BORDER PATROLMAN uilh ;irr' O'llrlen and Siur Cant Ohioan Marks tilth Birthday N. C. FARM COMMODITIES SELL FOR OVER $188,000,000 The cash income from the Mile of principal farm commodities in North Carol ina last year amounted to $1HS. 74H.C.OU as compared to $Hf, K-!i,000 in l!i:!2. In addition to this, the AAA hem-fit payments in l'..'!.r) am-ounted to $17,5K!l.40b. gers through a blinding rain storm across, Natural liriilgo, in Virginia, skidded and overturned on the edge ii I'M) foMt bank. A '.sign post pre vented the bus from running off the bridge at its highest point. L Sunday, July 5th "THE COUNTRY BEYOND" . .lamtw. Oliver Ciirwood Sliiry Monday and Tuesday "THESE THREE" till Miriam Hopkins and .loel Meltett Wednesday "TROUBLE FOR TWO" Willi ItnlM-rl Moliluonu'i-y and It. ltllSK.ll Night Shows .7:15 and 9:15 ADMISSION 10c & 25c Read The Ads 'IZSSS John H. Davit and ln lOOlh grandchild In-lead of offering a formula for longevity, John II. Pavis .elebiat ed his 1 1 1th ' birthday at his home near Washington Court H.nisf-.,. O , by playing cards for three hours, greeting relatives and friends and telling pioneer stories to several of his 100 grandchildren. Davis is pictured here with Joe Francis Hansford of Wilmington, O, his 100th grandchild. He reads without glasses and has voted in every presidential election since 1840. HEAT RECORD BROKEN Two were (lead from heat and sev eral others were in serious condition in the deep . south this week a heat records wen- broken in teveial states. Hottest places in the South were Atlanta with 99 degrees, Birmingham, Ala;, 100, Macon, Ga., 101. The temperature ranged from 99 degrees in Atlanta, Ga., to 10. in Columbia, S. C. Portions of northern Vermont were covered with snow Tuesday. , bv her :i5-year-old daughter, headed tlie list. I Two per-s-ons were killed in aufomo i bile crashes, two died bv gunfire, one reportedly a suicide, one wa killel when an automobile kno.-keu ner on her horse. i For Beauty MT wumn mc name SELASSIE ADDRESSES LEAGl E Ilaile Selassie, the emperor without an empire, addressed the League of Nations Tuesday amid boos and cheers. Cursing and fighting occurred in the gallcne, and police had to be called to take the disturbers out. Selassie said he "could not believe that nfty4wo nations .... . . could be defeated by a single aggressor." Other notable statements were: "You deserted us to Italy," and "God and history will -remember your judgment." LEHMAN TO RI N AGAIN Governor Herbert Lehman, of New York, has announced that for the third time he will eok to become gov urmir ,f New York. Lehman made thU decision after President Roosevelt made a personal Tequest that he run again and carry on the program uf social security in New York. SLOT MACHINES OUTLAWED The State Supreme Court, in an opinion handed down Tuesday, up held the conviction of James Hum phries, of Cumberland county, for the possession of a slot machine, which was prohibited by laws passed by the 1935 General Assembly. The court split three to two on the case. NORTH CAROLINA GETS $3,220,000 North Carolina will get $3,220,000 of the WPA funds that are to be dis tributed soon. One-fourth of the l,425,000,000 appropriated is to be distributed to the states as soon ae possible. . SIX DIE IN NORTH CAROLINA Six violent deaths occurred in North Carolina, over the weekend. The "torch killing" of an invalid mother GATE BUILT BY SOLOMON FOUND An ancient gate built by King Solomon for the city of Megiddo, the stronghold of Armageddo battlefield for 2,500 years, has bt-en found in Pal estine. This Old Testament battle field wae also the scene of operations when the British broke the Turkish front in 1918. The gate wa found by the Oriental Institute of the Uni versity of Chicago. FIVE KILLED IN BUS CRASH Vive nersnns wre killed Wednes- dayfi, when a bus carrying 33 passen- Lady Took Cardui When Weak, Nervotu I can't say enough for Cardui If I talked all day," enthusiastically writes Mrs. I H. CaldwelL of Btates vllle N. O. T have used Cardui at Intervals for twenty-five years," she adds. "My trouble In the beginning was weakness and nervousness. I read of Oaxdul In a newspaper and decided right then to try It. It seemed before I had taken half a bottle of Cardui I wu stronger and was soon up and around." . ThotwndJ of woman WtlfT Cw4ul bo ntad Uwn. U It itoM not bwaalU TOO, ooanll a pbratolao. De Soto QidchDri Enamel This Enamel produces the most beautiful effects on interior and exterior woodwork, furniture, walls or other surfaces. . . . . Furnished in many attractive colors Ask for Color Cards. Made in Memphis Paints Varnishes ithern Climate tc i MR. FARMER Regardless of what jou are in the market for, we know that it will be to your advantage to see wjiat ; we have, and our prices before buying Anything in hardware, paints, building material, feeds, groceries, shoes, meats and dry goods. Junaluska Supply Go PHONE 263-J JERRY LINER, Owner LAKE JUNALUSKA, N. C.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 1, 1936, edition 1
9
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