Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Dec. 20, 1945, edition 1 / Page 13
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AY, DECEMBER 20, 1945 THE WAYNESYTLLB .nouiM AINEER PAGE riVE (Seond StctionJ 1 and the other & 1 tinJ . ... inp Williams 'Tinii'li' assistant iu Bureau is tho Hi' Capital Letters By THOMPSON GREENWOOD k LAW i ST farm bureau Convi' ntii'ii is now in Chi- ,, 200 going on five ..on. Secretary Flake aster of ceremonies hp's a whiz at or- ,,ui those making the !J. Kim ",1ci,:p in lo proyiue "" r ),j,uU,'.r.e L nnsinws K !i Kaleigh last Fri- . u rvlfk in 23- thP 2 000- lo k':i:;h wuh u' uiiat devout members J" - ' ... 1 ; n 4 U I . i i, ,., uureau una " .u , .4)0111 rnuay infill n i l W. Va., and the next ""oiKituiati, arriving in :,,! out oi v-nicagu ,;,:! this (Thursday) i ..lfiv pvnpl thpm .. . 1 L. 4 s,.;W owe baiuraay iugm. ti'":;';1 ti:r K:i fii'vi'm ;-dnt JCi.u'l '' he IC was no doubt I , l i ful at the conven ,o Farm Bureau has . fi ves in a fight with :i ;iiige and the fer- i:ii"S. yj;iporter of coopera- ,1 liureau want the tn maintain around V :ir plants for the fertilizer. You know, war Muscle Shoals ni,.n i;iif (n nlav crown- but they don't like bad- g adult laxatives. Jjon i icm on a child. '11 Etopbegging your child to hake the laxative ne neeas. r... Tiina Flavnrprt with delicious prune juice, it tastes LnA Truni ic pffprflV tfC. it's made with senna. It may be just what your child pteos, it ne s sui- htrtng with faul ty elimination. Use the laxative Iwith prune wet, lust give JR1ENA as ilirpcieH. On ly 30c for trial size, large size just 50c. hglK was used for some kind of ferti lizer doings, and the Farm Bureau would like to see the Government step into the plant food business again. The National Grange is against it, and the State Grange is one of the leaders in the fight against it and there is just a chance that the North Carolina unit of the National Farm Bureau may go along with the State Grange in opposing the idea. The general feeling around Ral eigh is that the bill to put the Gov ernment into the fertilizer busi ness may be defeated before it reaches Congress. The plant food boys feel they can withstand the Government's lime program all right, but they are afraid the manu facture and sale of fertilizer by Uncle Sam might eventually put them out of business. Since North Carolina used about one-sixth of all fertilizer sold in the United States, this State finds itself right in the middle of the battle. AS THIS COLUMN hinted near ly a year ago, Dean W. Colvard, who runs the mountain teit farms at Waynesville and Transou is re signing and will be replaced by Howard Clapp, whose father was in charge of the Mountain Test Farm ?t Swannanoa for several years. The rejuvenated and growing Animal Industry Department at State College has been after Col vard, a native of Ashe County, for two years and they have finally succeeded in getting him. As an expert in livestock work, his tal ents will now be directed toward experimental work for all the test farms instead of for only two. So he really isn't being lost to the test farms. Here is another hint: Colvard will probably go to school foi another year or two on a leave ol absence after he goes with Animal Industry. He would like to have his doctorate. On the sunny side of 35, he is a cock-sure and confi dent man and with the next 10 years should emerge as one of the outstanding livestock specialists of the entire United States. He's that good. JAMES A. GRAHAM, now teach ing agriculture out from States ville, will take over the mountain farm at Transou, in Ashe County, Graham is a 200-pounder and looks like an Ail-American tackle, 27 years old." He grew up on a big livestock farm near Salisbury and married a W.C.U.N.C. grad, and she is versed in home economics. The house they will live in is modern and beaui.iJ.ui tu you-well. ONE OF THE BIG fertilizer com panies supplying North Carolina farmers with a large percentage of their fertilizer needs is in hot water up to here! So far the whole thing has been kept strictly hush hush, but it may burst right out into the open any day now. If it does, much of the good will this firm has built up o-.er the years will be lost even.iglu. RADIO STATION Wl'TF which lost virtually all of its personnel to the armed services is now be ginning to M them back. This State's be.-,t progi am director. Gra ham 1'oMier. has rejoined the start and jou can te'.l a di.'Terence al ready in the general programming. Working with V c. F.nloe. who manages --and well -live of Ral eigh's six theaters. WPTF has a show four times each Saturday on ihe stage of the State Theatre, broadcasting this hill-billy enter .ainment at 7: IS and 11:15 Satur day nights. Although it's as corny as ail get-out Richard Mason. HTTK announcer in the old days and now the able manager of the station is said to be tickled pink with the show, and so is evidently everybody else. AN OFFICIAL of the State Demoucratie parly last week di rected a stin,",ing letter to our delegates in Congress protesting against continuation of the draft. He said the calling up of thous ands of hoys each week from high ichool and college is rank fool ishness. With the war technically aver and the occupation forces Jtiliing only a very .small per 'iit of the men and women in ihe armed seiviecs, what in thun dcralion are they doing what do .hey plan to do -dith these boys? Those wanting two years" mill .ary training for every American Joy are sett ins their wishes right dung, and the bill hasn't even ap iruached the lighting stage as yet, it begins to look as if the Army vill continue dragging our young urn away from home and educa tion until the war has been de lared officially concluded by 1'resi doing ils reputation no good s doing its reputation no good good football teams or not. The joys being drafted now can be kept n the service until six months ifter Truman decides the war is over. LAST WEEK a group of veterans lulled into Fort Bragg from the Pacific coast. They had ridden six lays and six nights in railroad Shopping Hangover Shocting is hard wnrk at hest hard on the feet and hard 011 Ac pocketbook. Stores are crowded with holiday buyers, Sds arc still scarce, and bargains aren't always easy to find. electricity Lady, you don't have to stir one step out- your home to get a whopping big bargain in comfort ad convenience at low pre-war prices. tric service is always right at your fingertip - plentiful, PcndnWf. ,mj u 1,-oHh.n vour household Dur(kns and make your way of living more pleasant. ' cheap f As a matter of fact, the average family is mi , .Wh-,vifv for its money as . J " "will IWlL-t ai U1UL.I1 HiAU"".; "K vrar. - electric servir-P l,niihold bargain. But not by ent. if. fi1P ch n( ft, -hA tt.ork and experience of men and women in your company. 'W NeUon Eddy in "Th. Bectric Hoor" "J truster; Orchestra Every SmuUy, f3 M THE BOOK CORNER Reading From Left To Right With FRANCES GILBERT FRAZIER Lst call for Christmas presents! i Last call. Book department right in j the front of the store. And what could be a nicer, morel lasting gift than a good book, either j fiction or history? We have all ' kinds and descriptions and authors, and can fit the needs of all mem bers of the family. F'or instance: for Johnnie here's the nicest box of coloring books, five in the set, and by just adding a box of colored crayons. Johnnie will be AWOL (about without leis ure) most of the time. Even if he is decidedly underfoot, you will at least know exactly where he is. Then there's Jennie. She lias grown up into quite a young lady so her choice would be "FLICK.V or "THUNDERHEAD." both by Mary O'Hara Few books have re, Li lied the popularity of these two books so beautifully written. To those who love horses and who doesn't1 add the beauty and gran deur of Wyoming plateaus to the deep, warm-hearted adoration of a boy: you'll find a combination that makes the blood flow a bit faster and the heart beat in double time. Along comes Bill. Now Bill is pretty serious-minded and doesn't go in so much for the frivolities of life. He is just on the rim of high school and has his eye on a journalistic career. Can you think of anything more appropriate I ban a FUNK & W AG N ALLS DESK STANDARD DICTIONARY for his room. He will rise and call you blessed every time he opens the book to settle a question in his mind. Oh, oh! Have you been bit inti your nails trying to think what you can give Nell, for Nell Is just stepping over the brook of adoles ceney into the soft sands of young ladyhood? Can you imagine her unbounded joy if she found wrap ped in Christmas wrapping, the newest copy of "EMILY POST'S ETIQUETTE?" Jim has always loved good books and his library is the pride of his coaches built In lflilG. There were no seats . . . there were benches. There was no dining car. They ale K rations all the way. One of them who had been through a lot of hell in the Pacific said the ride was about the worst thing he had encountered. life. He doesn't care for the frothy thin.s but watch his eyes when he sees the title of the book you have so carefully selected for him. It is Sir Walter Scent's "I VANHOE" in a special classic edition. ""Grandpa"' has alw.r ., been the one in the family who had a quota tion for each hour of the day. He was brought up on 'em and when he opened his Christmas package, what do you think he found? Why ' P AKTLETT'S FAMILIAR QUO TATION." the latest revised edi tion and edited by Christopher Morley and Louella D. Everett. Now with Grandma, it's a little different. She loves good down-to-earth philosophy and would like mote than anything else a little book or two she could read each day and cot inspiration for the tasks that lie just ahead. There are two of these books that fill that desire exactly. "FIVE MIN UTES A DAY"' by Robert Spoor and "ABUNDANT LIVING"' by our own 10. Stanley Jones. Either or both of these books will be a re miiul'r for 305 days of your thoughtf ulness. Then there is a book for The Women Quit Plants For Duties At Home WASHINGTON The Labor De partment says 25 per eent of the 4,000,000 women employed in fac tories last June had quit work or been laid off by the end of Septem ber. Its information, the department's labor statistics bureau said, "makes clear that many women who ac cepted war jobs when there was an urgent need for their services are voluntarily returning to pri vate life." House . No one could ever forget the home and all that it means, so lay at the foot of the tree this lit tle book. "THE HOME BOOK OF PARTY GAMES" by Jerome S. Meyer. The Book Corner wants to thank you for the kind and pleasant com pliments you have left at our door step, and to wish you all the mer riest Christmas you have ever enjoyed. Buy an extra Victory Bond and help bring the boys home. USE (S-66 Cold Preparations IVQUIO. TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DROPS CAUIIUN USt ONLY AS DIHLCTLD mak only necessary fcfance calls luisttnas Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company INCORPORATED T this G DR. W. KERMIT CHAPMAN DENTIST OFFICE IN BOYD BUILDING PHONE 33 WAYNESVILLE. N. C. P&Rli THEATRE WATNESVUXE. NORTH CAROLINA MATINEE: Sunday 2 and 4 I M.; Saturday 2 and 3:30 P. M. NIGHT SHOW: 7 and 9 1 M., Sunday Night, 8:30 ADMISSION: Children Under 12 Years, 12c; Adults, All Seats, 35c TAX: On Children's Pass, 2c; Adult Pass, 6c THURSDAY AND FRIDAY DECEMBER 20-21 "The Incendiary Blonde" (In Color) I!. Hutton SATURDAY DECEMBER 22 "Navaio Trail" Johnny Mack Brown LATE SHOW 10: !0 P "Jealousy" .John Lodcr Jane Ilar.iloipli SUNDAY DECEMBER 2', "Shady Lady" (has. Coliurn Cinnv Sim ins MONDAY DECEMBER 21 "It's In Tho Baj" Fred Allen J. Benny TUESDAY DECEMBER 2 "Swinging On A Rainbow" Brad Tax lor J. Krazee W E DN ESI ) AY DECEMBER 2'i "Three Is A Family" Marjorio R nold C. Rubies Only 4 More Shopping Days Before Christmas - Boy at RELIABLE I BEST SELECTION OF GOLD JEWELRY IN FIVE YEARS Diamond Rings Birthstone Rings Gents' Stone Rings Cameo Rings Diamond Wedding Bands Cigarette Lighters Baby Jewelry Watches Spray Pins - Bracelets Compacts, All New Designs ieiiaSnSe JeweSers Main Street Waynesville ' Notice: No charge for engraving' on any article bought from us. Costume Jewelry Lockets Identification Bracelets Watch Bands - Chains Billfolds - Tie Pins Manicure Sets Gents' Fitted Kits Pearls - Cameo Pins a. I iftHT COMPAWyJ POWER
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 20, 1945, edition 1
13
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