Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / May 2, 1946, edition 1 / Page 4
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ri U PAGE FOUR (First Section) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER 'HOPE CHEST' FOR EUROPE'S NEEDY 'ill WITH THE COLUMNISTS You Will Find At BAT'S . . II i." i. r, I; i ... r, ; 5- :: I- ' I 1 3 i V. i1 v.; t ' t 8 ' if-' c ' ; i f f if v . r I i . -J .f t 1 f I r . J 'iti Sixty Haywood Farm Leaders Go On Tour Saturday Approximately sixty Haywood farm leaders attended the tour of Alfalfa and Ladino clover which was conducted by the farm agents on Saturday. The tour consisted of visits to fields nf alfalfa and Ladino clover in different parts of the county. Faun1, inspected included those of Roy 1- Kuhinson in the Thickety icf'tirm. C Walivor in Crabtrec, ik.1 O: borne farm in Pigeon. At t ,k ti l.trm all the details of ... tl.e iTops were grown, when jMiin'cd ;int the methods used were j;?vcn l; the ctuwcis and the num i ri.'.r., ijne liens .ikecl by the group vciv alumni It was believed I the '-".oui tli.it Mfalfa will pro ( ii.f n;oT.- pminilare nl finer qu;il ,'. . i .e. i 'mii .my ether variety that t i ii be Lt.run in IJ.ivwihhI county 'il.'- Mi. ill;! urmui I" Mr. Koh j:. cm ! hut knee deep, com j '. . 1 i ; i I- ni w i 'I'd ; mid tlie stand .. . un ihir!v and Ihvin . accord -i d iji' e I'll t he tour. It ap 1 1 1 ,-i t il:e tir.t (iitlim; would y m i : ! ,:!.. ui tuns per acic. The ii."!n,i! iiiiii'i '. per year are four, v li .h.hs the heavy yield. i ,. ,i' .ii 'e.uneil that fall seed in,- in i' ... ! : is hcMer than sprine : i in!.' .en to l' tter eontrel of v.iin ;in pounds ef seed 'ii ; i .. i re 1 o insure ,? ;:ood . , .1 ; I ,i . pni nled out t hat ; ... j -1 1 1 1 . 1 -it I'.ni'on and tun tens , ; ,:, ,i. I e .'Hi- iiiTi.s.ji'; for f in., v I .liiali.i and seed in- i !' .I in a .s eil seeubed. weli ' i ' . ' in tin t'shorne firm t : i ii : ' i 1 1 i ' i ',iin that I .ad mo i '"I. i i pni hi' to all oilier clov ii " p. 1- tin e -iiire 1 1 is more .i "..'.; and i i si :'r. w, i ri li w as I '":,' ' ! .1,1 i lie ( isborne held I-.) IL. . ii " 1 1 1 1 . t u I ol seeding .' ' i ''cud pel ,i( re Willi a 1 e . ii, I i .,it ii ti'i"'.' uell on ' i 'd a ' i'i! a . well drained Ni-iv (Cells Koycc Jet ?!(;i Set Power Record I ' I 'i i N New Rolls Koyce l- ' . i 1 i ill i n ' . i it - which develops ' 1 i'i i i j'i'Uer at i'.OO miles an ! in Is h. en claimed by the com- 'ri l" be 'he most powerful in ire v.. rid. I i is s i limine is in production .i'l'l ii'".'. be installed on British ;' hn. "i liiMne, a company an- lieU in. e llienl s.nd. TO HELP RAISE MONEY for the destitute children of Europe, Comedian Bob Hope gets behind the counter and sells dolls collected by Mar garet O'Brien, child star. The doll sale was a feature of a fund raising Fair which was held at Hope's Hollywood home. (international) Canton High To Methodist Youth Stage Spring Group to Install Festival On 10th Plans are hcins; perfected for Hie Canton hib school spring testival to he held I'liday, May in Details of the program will be announced later Activities will get under wav at 0 a. in with a program of motion pictures, group singing, stouts, etc . in the high ;.eliool building. The outdoor ac tivities will include, softball, track, badminton, horseshoes, goal hi, soccer table tenuis, checkers, base ball, picnic lunch .etc Principal V I. Hickard and Athletic Director C C. Poindexter will direct the program. I I HI I SSiriF.D AOS Man Felt Like Swollen Balloon; In!! Of Stomach Gas 1' ' i nil.' , a U'aynesville man : .i'i d tin- he used to feel like a '.I lb n balloon after every meal. ' i 'ii'd hlnat full of gas and spit p lhkJuou, liquids for hours after I in.:. W'a , terribly constipated. n in i- one of the hundreds i iin vuuiifv who now praise sl !.' 'ID. Me states he was n i.. a' the results when he took "i inidiiiiie. Now he eats what u .i'i . uiib'.nit yas or bloating, nl 1'ijv. die lcgular for the i t time n ; ear He feels like n ' .man. IN" "."F.R-AID contain.-, 12 Great ! ;t. the; i . on:e bowels, clear tleni Inei (rh. 01! sUlggish i . ' d t'dt.iv" Mi.?trable ppo ! .".n t.f! ddt'TPnt all over. O n ! ;;o on suffering! Get ".- : I: ID Sold by all Drug i'ie. Inn- m Haywood County. Haywood 4-1 1 Members Will Compete In Annual Pig Show The annual 4-11 club pig show winch is sponsored hy Sears Roe buck and Company, will be held in Ashevilie on Friday of this week at the new tobacco warehouse, near the Ashevilie livestock yards on Hiverside Drive The judging will be completed before noon Haywood county will be repre sented at the show with four out standing 4-II gilts, which are being carefully selected, according to Wayne Corpening. county farm agent. The 4 H rhih bov or girl owning the winning giit entered from each county will be awarded a registered Guernsey heiter. The county win ners will al:-o be given 300 babv clucks. Viennese Get Turnips And Lemons For Rations VIFN'N'A -- Viennese this week rec ti-, .-,1 one lemon and one pound ot tut nips each --first legal ration ol fruit and vegetables since the I liberation of the city more than! a yeai ago. I Officers Monday Newly elected HHii-47 otlieers will be installed Monday night at the monthly meeting of Hie Hay wood counly suhdislriet of the Methodist Youth Fellowship The meeting will be held al Canton Central Methodist church and will get under way al 7.:i0 p. m. Dr. Walter B West, district superinten dent, will be in charge of the in stallation ceremonies. The officers are: President. Betty Frances Tultle. Waynesville. Vice President, Hilda Dotson, Lake Junaluska. Secretary, Dorothy Helen Wor ley. Canton Central Treasurer, II. C. Turner, F.liza both Chapel. Adult counselor, C. C. Poindex ter, Canton Central. Commission chairmen: Worship and Kvangelism, Joe Hobcrson. Canton Central. World Friendship Betty Lee Reno, Canton First. Community Servise, Geraldine Fish, Clyde; Recreation and Leis ure, Charles Fisher. .Morning Slar Retiring otlieers are; President Dot Janes. Bethel, Vice president. J. D. Coker. Morning Star, Secre tary. Betty Lee Reno. Canton First; Treasurer. H C Turner i Re-elected'; Adult Counselor. C. C. Pom dexter 1 Re-elected ' The Canton Central Fellowship will serve refreshment ,. A large attendance is expected. Wedding Follows Collision 2 Years Later SAN DIEGO, Calif. To all who asked how (hey happened to meet, Eddie Wechsler and Marguerite Bennett explained at their wedding that "we just ran into each other a couple of years ago."' Their auto mobiles collided, their explanation disclosed. Atte ntion! We Have a Surplus of EOS. TENDERGREEN MiETY BEAN SEED And will sell this seed at a good price for cash . . . You S know the quality seed we have always furnished . . . This is the same and the best. Land 0' The iky Mutual Association First National Bank Building DANGER SPOT . . . Drew Pearson Several developments recently have made Trieste even more ex plosive. They are: Tito has forbidden American and British airplanes to fly over Yugoslav territory on reconnaissance flights. He has given his men orders to shoot such planes on sight. Twenty thousand Russian troops have left Hungary and crossed the border into Yugoslavia. U. S. observers know this from the reconnaissance flights which Tito has now banned. Probably that's the reason he banned them to prevent further knowledge of Russian troop movements. 1 1. S. troops in Trieste have been given orders to fire if the Yugo slavs enter the city. The Italian government has offered to place 15 divisions al the disposal of the Americans and British. However, they lack heavy arms and would have to be given new equipment. The United States lias declined this offer. In brief, Trieste has all the potentialities of war. WORLD STATE . . . Walter Lippman Much his had to happen, much experienced, discovered, and learned, before the leading peoples of the world could arrive at the point where the formation of the world state was not only what many of them desired but what in fact they were engaged in creat ing. Now the ancient ideal has become an idea, indispensable in fact, to which men have been compelled to turn: there is no other way they can exact justice for the crimes of war, no other way they can establish effective safeguards against the misuse of the weapons of mass destruction, no other way they can hope to make international agreements enforceable. The solution of the most urgent practical problems and the advance toward a wider and greater order of peace among men depend upon the same fundamental idea. We need not hesitate to recognize it and to proclaim it and to employ it as the creative principle of the coming order of mankind. SUPPRESSING NEWS . . . George E. Sokolsky When a "Big Shot" in government gives reporters an "off the record" story, he is usually attempting to suppress news which any first-class newsman should be able to pick up in a dozen places. Many columnists decline to attend such press conferences and re fuse absolutely to listen to anything "off the record." They regard this trick as an indirect form of censorship. Government agencies often issue distorted stories which being universally published are believed to be true. It would be advan tageous if all such published accounts reveal the source of informa tion whenever the source is wholly or in part responsible for the statements. Official distortion is a method of censorship. What is here said about the press, goes doubly for radio. That instrument of expression is completely under government censor ship through the indirect method of licensing. WORLD FAMINE . . . Samuel Grafton Mr. Hoover says we need no rationing (we alone on earth) because it would take three months to set it up, and it is only three or lour months to the next crop; and Mr. Truman is only cause it has just rained in France. One wonders whether those who have starved since 1940 can be restored by being fed a little for a few months. One has heard that it lakes years to wipe out these marks. And one wonders whether the cheerful casualties of this approach would be tolerated in the case of a purely political issue before the Security Council. MAN TO MAN . . . Harold L. Ickcs This nation ought to be on the mourners' bench for being the only power in the Pacific which, even in peacetime, has governed a populated area as a military base. The United States Navy has ruled American Samoa ever since 1900. Guam is in the same boat, although it sent a delegation to Washington several years ago to plead that it be taken out from under the Navy. The rule of the Navy may be beneficient but it certainly is not democratic. PRICE CONTROL . . . Gladstone Williams It is the policy of OPA to remove controls as fast as balance is struck on consumer items. Most of our government and private economists are agreed that it would sheer stupidity to cast off existing controls until we reach something approaching an even keel in production. In the face of facts by Mr. Bowles and other experts, it is disturb ing to have men who should be leaders of thought agitating for a course that can mean nothing but injury to the rank and file. .2 POWER POLITICS . . . Wm. Philip Simms Peace of the world depends upon ending the present game of power politics in Europe, Asia and Africa. The most dangerous powder kegs are in the Middle East and the basin of the Mediter ranean. Therefore, if the United Nations could take Italy's disputed areas under their common wing, and appoint Dr. Zimmermans to manage them as international trusteeships, perhaps the world could get on with the vital job of peacemaking. EMPLOY VETS . . . Eleanor Roosevelt I saw in the paper that in New York State there are now 250,000 veterans who are jobless, and that the U. S. Employment Service feels this number will rise to 600,000 by mid-summer. I feel quite sure that one of the difficulties is that we are not rnlorcing the Fair Employment Practices Act. Therefore a good deal nf our unemployment is among our colored veterans. The It. S. Employment Service estimates that about one-third of the jobs offered carry salaries of from $30 to $40 a week. Another third pay from $40 to $60 a week, with about 10 per cent below $'10 and the remainder above $60. So they are going to make a drive to reach the employers and urge them to employ more veterans. Complete One Stop Service At The Community's Newest CAGE'S D Service J. R. CABE, owner in charge to give you personal service, assisted by a staff of experienced service men. On The Highway in Hazelwood Opposite Bradlev's Store - Phone 402-J In Lovely COTTON DRESSES For The "Your Extra Attractio LIVELY COLORFUL COTTON PRINTS BEAUTIFULLY FOR EVERY AGE GIRL FROM 1 UP. You Will Find Them On Our Main Floor And In Green Room For Instance In l's to 3's LOVELY SUE PARKERS In assorted fancy and solid color broadcloths $1.85 and $2.40 Assorted Sheers By Love $1.85 Dainty as can be INFANTS DRESSES In a lovely assortment offering you about anything you might want. MA We Think That Our Small Dressd "Something Extra" Prepared With Spoils For The Young Miss- In The Season Ahead "Informals" Will Take the With Young America. Anticipating This Trend We An With 9 SPORT DRESSES D PLAY SUITS SHORTS AND KMT SHIRK 9 MISSES OVERALLS A JODHPUR PANTS AND US ITEMS Look These Items l Later We Will Have Riding A For Children And Women D 1 T 1 T - ,.rvM I! In our ureen nuw will find - for Into and Misses Seasonal Merchandise of A1 You Can linage For Youngsters It .Will ray V This Specially rViilHren's UNDEE! Wc take great pride in feat for all ages and groups. I SHO these items. Children's In Children's Sh Feature Everyiinq for Tots! PETERS WEATHERBIRDS AND PLAY P0$ RAY'S DEPARTMENT SI 3 1 1 t , t
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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May 2, 1946, edition 1
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