Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 15, 1938, edition 1 / Page 4
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMKFD .. THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page i HERE and THERE w, w'y cm-u Mtfrox Worth $70,000 to Him A mother whose small son attends the East Wuynesville school . . . has made a special appeal to this col umn to ive publicity to the Heed of stricter traffic enforcement on the stretch of load . . . or street ... as one minht term it . . . that starts at Abel's Garane on the Asheville his;. way . . . and ends beyond the hospi tal hill ., . . she is anxious that a policeman be .itatioiieii there (10;;' the hours that the children arrive and leave the sc'uol building . . . she claims ttiat when the average motorist reaches that area after leaving- Main Street . . that they feel they arc out of town and it.- time to step on the U'as . . . and really go . . . and that they pay practically no attention to either the school bus or the children entering- or leaving the school grounds . . . she cited one "near accident" . . . with (he school bus last week that just missed being a very serious tragedy . . . and the driver of the offending car ... just raced on by without so' much as a glance backward ... to see what it was all about . . . Two young boys about town certainly can say of their sum mer vacations . . "well done" . . . from a renumerative standpoint . . . they ate Humes Harte .... son of Mr. and Mrs. Humes Harte . . . Humes watching his mother Lillian Allen Harte . . . director of the Balsam Weavers weaving in her shop became in terested . . . his mother gave him some instructions , . . anil Humes set about weaving like an old time hand ... . recently he had $22.00 saved up . a small portion .of it gifts . . . but most of it what he had made by weaving . . . he was going to buy postal saving bonds , . . jvith it . . . the money was in change . . . but he had a great desire to know how it would feel to have in your hand a twenty dollar bill . . . so before he visited the post, office . . . he went down to the First National and had twenty dollars of his money changed for a twenty dollar bill . . . anil with pride and import lance carried it up to the post office and intrusted his earnings into the hands of Uncle Sam. . . he has taken his carrots, beets, squash, lima beans, and tomatoes each day in a small red wagon . . . for several weeks . . . they have become a familiar sight about town . . . and ne has seemed t'o HKe nis trade as well as his grandfather, the late O. (',. Kinsland . . . who for many years sold vegetables, chickens, butter and eg;rs around town . . . Robert's mon ey has found many useful channels . . . some went for taxes for his mother . . . both boys are to be con gratulated . . . for they are learning early in life the joy of work . . . and the satisfaction of a reward of one's labors. ... The other young boy . . . Robert Clifford is the son of Mrs. Anna 1). (iifford, widow . . . he has made $20.00 by peddling vegetables , . . . Mrs. Mary K. Moore, of Lake Junaluska, contributed the follow ing to this column . . . this week: "The menace of the Roosevelt cam paign does not lie in the third term, but in the state of mind that could desire four or more years of Roose velt in the White House , . . Four more years of personal government . . . four more years of presidential" lawless ness . . . four more years of autocratic rule . . . four more years of execu tive contempt for Congress, courts and the Constitution . . . four more years of centralization . . . four more years of wanton extravagance, of denunciation and demogogy in the state of mind that wants the new na tional aims, that wants Federal inter ference with every form of human in dustry and activity, that wants the stales- stripped of their powers, that Wants the minority deprived of all safeguard against tyranny of the majority, and Bureaucracy substitut ed for the Mill of Rights. Now don't get too excited . . . if you are a loyal New Dealer . . this was not written about Frank lin Delano Roosevelt . . . but about his cousin . Theodore . and appeared in the "New York World" . . . late liberal paper, in 'January, l!H2 . . . These Roose velts seem to have a way with Iheni . . . but we have to admit they are active and popular leaders The following was taken from a small town paper in Alabama . . . the novel way. in which it was put . . . . would attract anybody who had ever been on the inner circle of a news paper . . . so with apologies to our new circulation manager, Mr. Clark Ss73S s ' ft Petect showing how he found will Because an old mattress was torn up, a $70,000 estate will go to the M. A. Peteet family of Tulsa, Okla. Samuel Waller, octogenarian oil operator, who died a year ago apparently without leaving heirs or will, had made his home with the Peteets for 20 years. The ques tion of inheritance remained open for months until the state attor ney general's office went to court in Tulsa, claiming the estate for the state of Oklahoma on the grounds there were no heirs. Peteet tore up the mattress recently and f-und the will which left the est 3'" - Tasty Dishes 1 1$ Guard The Health and Strength They gained During the Summer MILK Furnishes the Necessary Energy For School PASTEURIZED MILK IS SAFE TRY OUR Chocolate Milk I Now put up in half-pint hottles, made from Fure Pasteurized Grade "A" Pet Milk. CORN AND MlST.VRl) UF.LISH 20 ears sweet corn. green sweet peppers. 1 red pepper. M medium-sized onions. 1 small head white cabbage. - cupfuls sugar. l-.'i cup salt. ' 1 cup flour. 1 tablespoon celery seed. 1 tablespoon ground mustard. t tablespoons white mustard seed. la tablespoon turmeric. 2 quarts vinegar. Cut the corn from the cobs, add the peppers seeded and chopped the onion chopped, cabbage chopped or shred ed, and three pints of vinegar. Boil add the salt, flour, spices, sugar and turmetric mixed with the remaining vinegar. Cook thirty minutes and seal in sterilized jars. 1 such its used for jelly. Do not squeeze or handle much. When the cut veg etbles are drained turn into a agate kettle and stir in the spice seed, su 1 gar, stilt and vinegar. Use a wooden I spoon to do all mixing. Stor thor j oughly; pack in clean jars or crocks. I Press down lightly so the vinegar covers the pickle. Always keep the n'i-kle covered with purej unadul terated Vinegar. Cover jars tightly and 'keep-in a cool, dry place. PLAIN choppf:d cold imcklb 2 quarts green tomatoes, 1 quart white onions. 1 quart cucumbers. I pint green peppers, 1 quart sweet and red peppers. 2 quarts cabbage. 1 pint celery. 1 pint cauliflower. 1 teaspoon celery seed. Va cup salt. 1 pound white sugar. 2 quarts pure vinegar. 1 teaspoon mustard seed. Cut all the vegetables fine by hand. Drain overnight in a thin cotton bag . . . I repeat . . . it here. "If you have frequent headaches, dizziness, fainting spells, laine back, accompanied by chills, cramps, jaundice, chillblains, or epileptic fits, its a sign you are not well, and are liable to die any minute . . Hasten to this office at once . . . and pay your subscription a year in advance ... . . . and thus make yourself solid for a good obituary notice. . . ." WKST INDIA CONSERVE 1 pound dried trys. pounds rheubarb. 1 pound raisins. . '! lemons. 1 orange. -5 pounds sugar. Chop the raisins and figs, let stand overnight in water to cover, Wash and chop rheubarb and let stand over night with the sugar. In the morning combine the two mixtures with the lemon and orange juices and cook slowly for three hours, or until the mixture will hold its shape when a little is dropped on a plate. WEST INDIA NUT CONSERVE Add a half pound of finely chopped walnut meats to the conserve fifteen minutes before removed from the heat. FRUIT BUTTERS APPLE HI TTER 8 pounds apple. 3 Va pounds sugar. 1 teaspoonful ground cloves. 1 teaspoon ground allspice. IV2 teaspoon cinnamon. 4 quarts sweet eider or water. Weigh, wash, and slice the apples, combine with cider or water, and cook rapidly until mushy, rub through a sieve, then add the sugar, and spice, cook until thick, stirring often. Transfer to sterilized jars and seal with sterilized rubbers and tops; if it is to be used soon, pour into steril ized jars; when cool wipe the tops with vinegar and cover with parafin. ARTICHOKE RELISH 1 quart of ground artichokes. 1 pint ground pimentos. ; 1 A A&r f- Pet Dairy Products Co. PHONE 10 ASHEVILLE ROAD HAVE YOU TRIED PET SUNSHINE ORANGEADE Delivered With Your Milk Beat "Old Man Winter" to the Punch! t'S for Tune to &rranSe Home heating weather is just around the corner. Play safe and fill your bin now before it's too late to avoid the rush. Besides . i . early buyers get the greater value of freshly mined coal. Insure against cold weather by arranging fcr your coal supply now. No fuel worries ivhen your bin is full . . . order today, and relax! PHONE 272 WAYNESVILLE COAL CO. Higher Quality at Lowest Cost Barber's Apples Are Being Picked Money Raised For The New Church At Saunook; Work Began This Morning The men on Barber's "arm began picking- apples on Monday. Outsiders have not been hired yet. Work will begin on the new church Tiii:isday morning. C. J. Arlington and Frank Smathers will do the work. Steve Plemmons, of Spring Creek, is spending the week with his brother, 1 pint ground onions. 2 cups sugar. 1 quart vinegar. 1 tablespoon turmeric. 1 tablespoons white mustard seed. Soak the artichokes, pimentos, and onions in brine overnight, using 1 cup salt to 1 gallon water. In the morning drain dry, mix with mus tard seed and tumeric. Dissolve the sugar in the vinegar and bring to boiling then pour over the vegetable mixture. Heat to boiling, fill steriliz-1 ed jars and seal. ( Hubert Plemmor.s. William Mom- , - camp, j, ., . father. AI A cake-walk night at the Sau:.., "... the new church. , tended. The qui!:.' by the women 1 . given to p,v , Creek. Thecal-,. The quilt when S40.55. W, for their comiil,i;-: Mrs. Del! Sti!. .. the week-end vi-;. H. Rogers. Mr. and Mr. l Xorth Wilkesbu,,,. week-end with .. Mr. and Mrs. Dili J Mis& Eleanor ( , spending the w, , , Mr. Dillard H Friends and relat of the death of Hi,,,, was loved by all in t Miss Emma Kav, . . for Cullowhee, v!;, i, her second year in sr; It Pays-Read the At In Selling foods Our Policy Is To Give You 1. The Very Closest Prices. 2. Every Choice Of Quality. .'J. Friendly Pleasing Service. 4. A Clean Sanitary Store. A-J A--. J. t miiu ttc rtppittidit iuur II dUt' Flou . (Jl'l Roll Tsill 91 h I Yiiknn'e IW 91 h QOp SHORTENING, 8 lb. carton . . S9c P XX Santo . . . . . 15c Maxwell House PORK & BEANS, No. W can 3 for 25c CORN FLAKES . . . . . . ....2 for 15c 1 F.F.V. VANILLA WAFERS. 2 lbs. 25c HEALTH CLUB BAKING POWDER, 25 oz. can . ,M GREEN GIANT PEAS OUR MOTHERS COCOA, 2 lb. can 15c Rpnn :Hor 25c S Tomatoes, 3- 25c HONEY, 5 lb. pail ggg Land OThe Sky Biltmore WHEAT HEARTS, 2 for 27c JELLO, any flavor . 3 forjTc MM J --... preparing easib All the things you need in body sustaining lunches, J LET US HELP YOU o tiu ice r res a m ti and Seafoods C. E. KAY'S SONS the mm STORE s
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Sept. 15, 1938, edition 1
4
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