Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 13, 1941, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER i 1 - . ' - I ' V! ' I ITT ' rvrm ill Bovs' tiiee iiu oivcb tv(im:m s ink tj County Club Meets For Rest Of Month Are Announced The schedule for the meetings of the home demonstration clubs for the last two weeks of February are announced as follows by Miss Mary Margaret ' Smith, county agent: The Rock Spring club will meet on Tuesday, the 18th, with Mrs. Essie McCracken; the Bethel club will meet on Wednesday, the 19th, with Mrs. Jim Welch at 2 o'clock. The Maggie club will meet on Thursday the 20th, at 2 o'clock with Mrs. Jack Campbell; the Crab tree club will meet at the school house at 2 o'clock on Friday the 21st; the Clyde club will meet with Mrs. Grady Rogers on Tuesday the 25th. at 2 o'clock. The Cecil club with Mrs. G. C. Bourne at 1:30 on Wednesday the 26th; the West Canton club with Mrs. W. E. McElrath at 2 o'clock on Thursday the 27th; the Juna luska club with Mrs. G. iC. Medf ord at 2 o'clock on Friday the 28th. The home demonstration county council will meet on Saturday the 22nd, in the county home agent's office at 2 o'clock. On Saturday the 22nd, at 10 o'clock a handicraft school will be conducted at the court house under the supervision of Miss Anna C. Rowe. Hazelwood Honor Roll Announced Lawrence Leatherwood, principal of the Hazelwood elementary school has announced the A honor roll for the fifth month of school. It is as follows: Sixth grade, Mattie Mills, Char les Frady, Bill Shields. Fifth grade, Geraldine Colkitt. Fourth grade, Bobby Queen, Jinv my Swanger, Barbara Milner, Martha Jane Swanger. Third grade, Juanita Scruggs, Mary Ann James, Frances Hoyle, Fredia Ann Waddell, Frances Hen drix, Homer Snyder, Jr., Joan Scates, Louis Green. Second grade, Jimmy Swift, Sam uel Mehaffey. First grade, Jean Nicholson, Blanche Early, Terry Swaixger, Carroll Swanger and Ralph Swanger. If one will do much listening he is sure to gain some knowledge. m r- A V To. M 1 -f- O -tv. . ... FREE. bfd lor NEW booMat. contalnliia doiant of bright Moot to tmprovo your balk tag. Addraui Runford Inking fowdor Box C Rumfofd, R. I. Miss Ruth Robinson Honored At Party Miss Clema Robinson, Mrs. John Wvatt and Mrs. Tillman Fisher entertained with a surprise birth day party on Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. R. F. Robinson honoring Miss Ruth Robinson on her seventeenth birthday anniver sary. : During the evening games were Dlaved. Miss Robinson received many lovely and useful gifts. Those present were: Miss Eula Mae Wyatt, Miss Mary Palmer, Miss Dorothy Brock, Miss Naomi Palmer, Miss Pauline Harris, Miss Vinirinia Arrinjrton, Miss Frances Wright, Miss Cora Ruff, Miss Stel la Wright, Miss Edna Troutman, Miss Alice Fisher, Miss Lucy Rob inson Tillman Fisher, Furman Wyatt, Shortie Head, Salem Wyatt, Frank Paynter, Hugh Palmer, Miss Lucy Wright, Miss Lucile Wright, Elmer Harris, Mont Wright, Roy Cope, Lynial Conard, Ken Compton, Car rol Wyatt, Mack Robinson, John Wyatt and Charles Hartsell. REQUISITES OF A SALESMAN Must be a man of vision and ambition, an after-dinner speaker, before and after dinner guzzler, night owl, work all day and drive all night and appear fresh next day. Learn to sleep on the floor and eat two meals a day to econo mize on traveling expenses so you can entertain your friends in the next town. Must be able to entertain wives, sweethearts and pet steno without becomine amorous. Inhale dust, drive through snow ten feet deep at ten below and work all summer with out perspiring and acquiring B. 0. Must be a man's man, a ladies man, a moaei nusoanu, a luuienjr father, a good provider, a Plut ocrat, Democrat, Kepubucan, or New Dealer, an old dealer and a fast dealer, a technician, politician, mathematician, and mechanic. Must be a sales promotion ex pert, create a demand for obsolete merchandise, be a good credit man ager, correspondent, attend all dealer meetings, tournaments, fun erals, visit customers in hospitals and jails, contact all accounts ev ery six weeks, in spare-time look for new business, do missionary work, and attend factory sales con-ferences. Must have unlimited endurance, and frequent overindulgence in wine, women, wind, and gab, a wide range of telephone numbers in all principal cities. Must have a car, attractive home, belong to all clubs, pay all expenses at home and on road on five per cent commissions. Price chiseling and bad debts will be deducted from monthly commis sion, plus two per cent excise tax, one per cent old age pension, and two per cent 'lost sales tax." Must be an expert talker, liar, dancer, bridge player, poker hound, golf player, diplomat, financier, capitalist, philanthropist and au thority on palmistry, chemistry, psychology, physiology, dogs, cats horses, blondes, brunettes, red heads, etc. Learning Nazi Mx i ji.ill'f ill ' tlll',",Tlliyf ilfllltllB l ill ,lM.il,tbJmmBmmmmtmmMmnmm Only 27 per cent of the 2,7000,000 youths between the ages of 15 and 25 examined last year in Japan passed the physical standard set by the Government. Farm Production and Livestock LOANS Try your local banker first for loans for farm production or livestock. We are prepared to take care of the needs of those who provide us with a satisfactory credit ..-record. . . Feel free to consult with us on all your financial problems. 102 of your friends and neighbors "1 I have opened a savings account at the h T Friendly Bank. Are you saving a Y part of your earnings! I Firs!; National Bank ,rJUe QUtwUi Bank" Every man, woman and child in Germany is expected to help keep the war machine rolling. These frauleins are being initiated into the mys teries of milking, so they can replace farm hands needed elsewhere. The rubber udder is filled with water, not precious milk, for the lessons. Allen Adds New Store Equipment A large nine and a half foot veg etable counter is being; installed in the grocery department of the C. N. Allen Company store In Ha zelwood this week. "With the installation of this counter," Mr. Allen said, "we are merely carrying out a policy we have always tried to put in prac tice, that of providing our custo mers the very best and latest in service." He continued, "With the new counter we are able to supply to our customers at all times strict ly fresh vegetables and fruits. The low even temperature keeps vege tables and fruits as fresh as when 'bought from the grower and en tirely free from waste." There advantages are secured without added expense to the buyer. Twelve Fines Creek Boys Enter NYA State Center Twelve boys from the Fines Creek section of the county left this week for the NYA Raleigh Resr dent Center, where they will re ceive work. experience for the next six months. The boys selected for this oppor tunity are: Jack Bramlett, Spen cer Walker, Milton Price, Boyd Messer, Paul Rogers, Kenneth Rogers, Billy McCrary, Joe Haynes, Charlie Messer, Reid MoEJroy, and Samuel McCrary. This makes a total enrollment of seventeen youths from Haywood county in the Raleigh NYA center, according to Mrs. Jimmy Boyd, county NYA supervisor. You never get listening. into trouble by VandenhoogensTo Operate Motor Court At Fletcher Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Vandenhoo gen, who came here two years ago from Long Island, are leaving town soon to take up their resi dence in Fletcher. They will be in charge of the Motor Court there,' which is being! constructed by James A. G. Davey, of Soco Gap, of this county. Mr. Davey is developing a tour ist center on the old Fletcher place, and the first unit, which will accom modate around 36 persons, will be completed in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Vandenhoogen have taken an active part in community affairs since coming here to live. They have been operating the Hol land House for tourists, the former home of W. T. Lee on Walnut street. They have been prominent in the work of the Methodist, church. Both have been members of local civic groups, Mr. Vandehoogen a member of the Rotary Club, and they have made many friends dur ing their residence here. Mrs. Vandenhoogen and her youn daughters will leave Satur day for a visit with relatives on Long Island prior to joining Mr. Vandenhoogen at Fletcher. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all the kind friends that helped during my mother's sickness and all the kind deeds. I can't express m words all it means to me. H. L. Rathbone and Family. Clyde, Route 1. Return From Spain iMK-f'rifaWfoiilniW Health Department Announces Grade "A" Distributors The district health department has announced grades of retail dairies serving Waynesville and Canton for the past six months period, ending January 31, 1941. The grades are determined in accordance with grade specifica tions issued by the United State Public Health Service milk code. Distrbutors of grade A raw milk are as follows: J. E. Ferguson, Waynesville; J. E. Henderson, J. F. Mann, H. A. O'borne, M. H. Silver, and W. J. Smashers, all of Canton. The Pet Dairy Products Company is listed as a Grade A distributor of pasteurized milk. It's time to change from politics to patriotism. Program At Canton High School Monday The boy's glee club of the local high school gave a program on Monday afternoon at the Canton high school during the regular, as sembly hour. The program was made up of numbers from a min strel show that the club will give the last of the month. The 32 boys under the direction of T,. T. New. Jr., gave a half dozen ensemble numbers in addition to several solos. In the later group were: song "Little Brown Jug," by Eugene Rogers, accompa nied by himself on the banjo, ine Lost Letter." a duet sung by Jarvis Brock and Elmer Harris, with gui tar accompanist; song "Blue Eyes," by Roy Buchanan; Hawaiian guitar solo by Byron Clark; piano inter pretation of popular tunes by Fred erick Vaughn. oman Clyde Re-elect All Officers The Clyde Woman's nl weir cm uorj meeting, -- SJXJ the President's Ball, and jj vriuuus uirecuy to tae paralysis fund. The meeting was featnj re-election of all officers interesting program on "p A m a vision TOwn n . i The club met at the hoiaZ u. jj.. Aieaiora, with Jin, Stamey associate hostess. The March meeting with Mrs. Grover Haynes t w. m. vieraia, 7a fln'nn wow f-m-.. T-f oTw U Aiajr vv two; uuut. Shown at Jersey City, N. J., are , two of four arrivals, all American citizens, who fought in the Spanish t civil war with the Loyalists, iney; were captured in 1937 and released this past December. Raymond Al veres. 21. of Maryland, is at left; The optimist may not always be, ICorsino Norniella, 23, of Brooklyn, right but he can always have fun. S' I'l " r,niv.- Coffin a Bomb Refuge i A 400-yeMld stone coflSn in the erypt ol the Church of Christ Splt tdfields is the bed of Michael O'Connor, a London East End laborer whose boms was destroyed some months ago by a Nasi bomb. Hundreds - . 1P la tt crypt, a refuge from air bombing. Tlhe fOOO TO R APPLE Butter Quart Jar 15 MARSHMALLOWS Pound In Celophane 2 for 25 SCOTT COUNTY Catsup 10 14-Oz. Size LAND OTHE SKY E(raut No, 2 Can COFFEE SANTO 2 lbs. 2 MAXWELL HOUSE, lb. 2 FLOUR Plain or Self Rising ROLL CALL, 24 lbs. YUKON'S BEST 24 lbs. Dried Beans PINTOS 5 lbs. 2 OCTOBER 4M2 YELLOW EYED 4 lbs. 2 BUSH'S Hominy 3 for 2 CORN COUNTY KIST 3 for 270 Del Mail CREAM STYLE 2 for 230 Del Maiz NIBLETS 2 for 2 1? JUICES LIBBY'S PINEAPPLE No. lean 3 -25c LIBBY'S '-' ' GRAPEFRUIT No. 2 can 3-200 PHILLIPS' No. ZVt Can Pork & Beans 3 27c REAL HEAT SPECIALS Lunch Meat u 27 Pork Chops l 22 Pork Roast as Pork Liver 12 Native Beef Roast 17 Native Hiib Steiv Lb. I ACTIVE LATHER I FOR COMPLEXION AND BATH ' LUM 3 , 20 10.000 SEEDS'tO i f fiom; with the Wnvl I BEIOOCB 4 Hot (a W s.p DAILY -V I I I $TOIS"1.0." I J I TrTUl mi o . r 1 III IN . . I &he IF 7 i
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 1941, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75