Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 31, 1938, edition 1 / Page 7
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I L-RSDAY. MARCH 31, 1938 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 7 Palmer. Mrs. ciauae tfriZ d Mrs. James M. Palmer, , , Brevard Sunday, where tor t Brevard LOi- ""J ... , YOU KNOW FOLKS visited her Medford and II.-,.. T.nfile Wh-T; '. vwited her daughters, S h Vine and Miss Mary Pal sad her son, James Palmer, all s at the coiiejjc. Mrs- Ernt?' Anne Withers Withers, Miss Hes- and Ernest L,. Jr motored vo " ahpre they were the rth."T' ,.mpv's mother, Mrs. C. Satterthwait. Vjies Annie ana wr c, Ux Seville, arrived on Tuesday to spend days with their sisier, mrs. Boone. r. and Mrs. Dewey Stovall and dren were the guesw auring vue of the xvev. ou . . ker, of Marion, parents of Mrs. Jrrot and Celery Salad With Peanut Dressing hit cold cooked carrots in thin strips id mix with an equal quantity of sp celery, cut in small pieces, serve lettuce with peanut dressing, made whipping 4 tablespoons of peanut itter into 1 cup cooked salad dress- HERE and THERE , By Ida Way Gwyu The proposed slogan "The Balan ced State" which was considered for the 1939 automobile tags .... has certainly brought forth much com ment from the North Carolina press . . most vehement as observed by the writer . . . has been Louis Graves, editor of the Chapel Hill Weekly . . . in an editorial which was quoted in full by more than one paper . . Louis Thinks it will strike the public as "a manifestation of puerile vanity" . . he also cites some figures that prove that we are not in reality a well bal anced state . . . and what he left out . . . of our many failings . . . Nell Battle Lewis, columnist and feature writer of the Raleigh News and Ob server . . . certainly exposed . . . . really as a state between them they have taken all the vanity out of us . . which you know is often a very good thing ... for if one is in earnest about doing one's best , . . nraise is as nothing, compared to some healthy constructive criticism . . . maybe it would be best for the visitor to come and decide for himself . , . there are a great many of us who are fed up on this eternal boasting of North Carolina and her achievements . . . . when we only have to look around to know how incomplete the job is . . . we would do well to look more to the future . . . instead of being so com placently satisfied with the past and the present. . . . . The following which appeared as an advertisement . . . more or less attracted my eye this week . . from a "pioneer in self defense, of a man who would be a house keeper." ... IA I RAISE I'VE BEEN PLANTING TOBACCO FOR 20 YEARS. I KNOW CAMEL USES FINER, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS. THEY BOUGHT THE CHOICE LOTS OF MY LAST CR0RPAID ME MORE FOR My BEST KINDS OF TOBACCO. I SMOKE CAMELS BECAUSE I KNOW WHAT FINE T03ACCO GOES INTO THEM As - i HARRY C. KING knows tobacco because he grows it. TOBACCO GROWERS are in a position to speak with authority about the kinds of tobacco that go into the various makes of popular cigarettes. They actually see, at the auctions, who bids highest to get the choice lots of their own crops. They know what cigarette docs get the finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS. They know it's Camel. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted 127 S Main St. C OX S U LT DR. R. KING HARPE OPTOMETRIST Wells Bldg. For Appointment Telephone 201 Canton, N. C. r sups out in RED CR 0 S S C0BBIE8- The IOOIO IwM feortiw feahireil : X2CV t-Zf V $L,aL ewlutivo 'rT'V' :; v "tm," la'1 $ A C fl No matter ho w many pairs of shoes you dwv own, you simply must nave a paur.uv " Cross Cobbie. America's sportiest shoes f : -1 Th smartest. i youngest shoes a'footl Now only fo.au. VOU CAN NOW BUY THESE BEAUTIFUL " Red Cross Shoes , '.-. AT ' Massie's Dept. Store "Since the war women have bee1, replacing men in industry . . so it behooves me to pioneer in a new field for men. I am thor oughly experienced as i house keeper and a plain :ook. 1 like children, can keep them amused and teach them French, Gorma.-. and Italian. I attended Columbia University and college in Chi cago, where naturally I was trained for work of a more mas culine nature. But I am 38 years eld, women are doing my work, so it seems I've got to do theirs. Incidentally and modestly, I can do their work better than they can do mine. PitUsfield, Mass March 24, 1938." I see that Alice Roosevelt Long worth is going to take to the plat form, and this fall and winter tour the country ... I wonder if she will attract the crowds that her late illus trious father did . . . and I also won der if she will take as her subject . . . politics, on which she is supposed to be an authority . . . and will roast her kinsman, the present occupant of the White House, as much as in days gone by . . , her acceptance and her reported enjoyment of the parties given by the Franklin D. Roosevelt . . which is often followed by criticism . . is at least contrary to what most of us have been taught is good manners . . . if he'' lectures are as tult of punch as her privately expressed views are said to be . . . she'll be able to add considerably to her pock et book, which is reported to have suffered . . . along with tin rest of us. . . . In continuance of the ideas ad vanced in this column about havino, one special shrub or (low er as a motif of beautification for this section .... last week's pa per carried a lengthy contribu tion by Charles Kay . . . the ques tion naturally arises . . . what shall we plant here? . . . rhodo dendron . . . has often been men tioned .. . but while native is quite disappointing, when trans planted and takes years to give an effective and satisfactory planting . . the another important factor in selecting the plant or flower . . . iswhat season do We wish to draw the public? . . . we know they will be here in mid summer; .... Mrs. Harry Hall, one of our fore most local gardeners, advocates the planting of four varieties . . . daffo dils . . iris . . dogwood and azaleas . . all four massed in plantings of one variety for the most desirable re sults . . . Mrs. Hall suggests that the street leading from the Pet Dairy Company to the Denton residence . be planted as an inviting entrance in masses of the shrubs and flowers she favors , . . and what would be a more pleasing welcomes . . and there is no doubt if we specialized on such beauty . . . in time our effects Would be rewarded by the dreamed of . . . . "lengthened season." ... FATHER AND SON TO DIE SPRINGFIELD, Ohio. Harry and Henry Dingledine, father and son, and Harry Chapman wcre sentenced to die in the electric chair for the slaying of two police officers, in a gun battle after the men had robbed a cafe pro prietor of $2,500. Hoot Mon! A Scotchman was going on an ex cursion to New York. He asked the agent for a round-trip ticket and handed him a $10 bill. "Change at Jersey City," the agent said. . "No jokes, now," replied the Scotchman. "I want my change right away." i Want Ads Want Ada are one cant a word for each insertion. No ad iff taricen for less than 25c. FOR SALE 5 acre farm, 1 miles from Waynesville, has house, run' ning water, and ; spring. Small down payment, remainder on easy terms. See Ralph Howell, Route 2, Canton, N. C. Mar 31-Apr 7-14-21 I WOULD not be without an electric razor, but have two. Bought one, and had one given me for Christ mas. Will sell almost new Sheik Shaver at a bargain. Dr. J. R. Mc Cracken Mar. 31-Apr. 7 ATTRACTIVE OFFERING FOR SALE 5 -room and Bleeping porch stone bungalow on Pigeon street, first house off Main street, completely furnished $2,500.00. L.. N. Davis & Co. March 31 FOR RENT-Completely furnished 5 room house. Phone 331-J. Mar. 31 Heard At Meeting X , v e- 'iCS'sf V MARTIN G. GAUDIAN, executive secretary of the North Carolina Build ing and Loan League, was one of the speakers at the district meeting in Marion Monday afternoon and night. He spent several days here recently in the interest of the Haywood Home Building and Loan Association. American skyscraper building era IS over. This is the nredietinn nf th American Society of Planning officials who contend that in the future busi ness districts will become more de centralized. FACTS FROM WASHINGTON (Compiled by Ttu UnlUd SUtai Newt) Farmers will be "policed" from the air under the new program to check fulfillment of AAA crop control. Contracts for photographing 108,854 square miles by air have been let and an . additional ouu.uou to wu.uiiu square miles will be photographed in the same way if suitable bids can be obtained. If a bill pending in Congress is enacted,' the United States may build and operate a radio broadcasting sta tion to transmit programs of high frequencies to all the countries in the Western Hemisphere. Purpose of th project is to promote friendly relations between this country an foreign nations. A program is being carried out under Labor Department supervision to solve the problem of aiding men and women over 45 to get jobs. Only One state has taken definite steps to prevent discrimination against older workers. Massachusetts has passed such n law. Violation, however, car ries no penalty except publication of complaint. More than 29 cents out of every dollar spent for amusement in Amer ican villages goes to the movies. This is shown by a study of representa tive towns throughout the country which has just been completed by the Bureau of Home Economics. A bill has been introduced in Con gress to authorize the President to spend Federal money on a matching basis with funds put up by states and local governmental bodies, for adult education in evening colleges and evening high schools. Approximately 94 per cent of the electricity used in the United States is generated by privately-owned com panies. The industry has a total investment of 13 million dollars; it employs directly more than 270,000 persons and has a pay roll of $1,250, 000 a day. This was reported by the Commerce Department in one of its MacFayden Resigns From Biltmore Country Club Henry F. MacFayden, formerly of Waynesville, and son of Mrs. H. L. MacFayden, who has been secretary manager of the Biltmore Forest Coun try Club, in Biltmore Forest, has re cently resigned, after holding the po sition for several years at the club. recent radio broadcasts on American industries. Approximately G.500,000 automo biles, valued at $50 or less, operated principally by motorists with incomes of less than $20 a week, are now in operation on highways of the United States, according to figures of the American Petroleum Institute. Mr. MacFayden, after making- a business trip to Arkansas, will enter Oteen veterans' hospital for treat ment. He is a World War veteraa with active overseas service. You can't convince politicians by an election. Produce Prices This week-end we will pay to farmers the following prices: EGGS, doz. 14c HEAVY HENS, lb 14c LIGHT HENS, lb 13c ROOSTERS, lb. 6c Farmer's Exchange And Produce Co. E. Waynesville Ashevllle Rd. NOTICE Watch this spuee each week for our prices for eggs and poultry. In A Smart Topper Coat FROM The latest for Spring Wear are these Topper Coals. . .and we have them in all styles, colors and sizes. Also the newest shades in TOPPER SUITS He well dressed this' spring." He com fortable. . .slip into one of these $1.98... $14.98 LARGE SELECTION OF DRESSES In jumper and jacket styles. AH new shades. Popular prices rangp from $1.98 to $7.98 Vi? i-in V Lie-- Large Assortment Of Handbags To match your outfit. Variety of Styles. Free Initials With AH. -Hag? 97c See Our New Spring Hats We have a hat for your type and pocket book 97c Up HARiOLO'S DEPARTMENT STORE "II AY WO CD'S B A RG A I S CENT E R" Jul RAY'S for SHOES Shoe Department Our SHOE Values For Spring OUTSTANDING IN STYLE, QUALITY AND PRICE OUR SHOES ARE MOST ATTRACTIVE. Let Us Show, Sell and Please You Remember We Not Only Sell Shoes. We Fit Them. Also We Have Shoes For Every Member of the Family. WORK SHOES - DRESS SHOES PLAY SHOES C. E. Ray's Sons l . f ' a' ;; i n. r;1
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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March 31, 1938, edition 1
7
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