Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / May 9, 1946, edition 1 / Page 3
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MAY THE WATNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE (First Section; 1. Inducted In Forces From The Area To Dale i Europe Quietly 1:1.571 barged Lspondt-iit1 I Victory in ( lersarv in in i an I hoard eon- . . 1.. ... , -i ti-lf Jt.Mf vi nu n Selec .nl t'M licell E KIDNEYS urine and of the bladder lidity in the urine L.,.,.arV dislrl. ,Ulin nd diicom ty jo tbu urine Ar -J,, fr.qutnt delr you tKould know doctor's dur ovary &MP ROOT lht es,cd reltei- Swamp lindrd combination ol ? tables, balsams. Dr. or habit-lorrainl In III aay mervtloui mii mpl TODAY! JtbiTl you'll be (lad fcame and address to r.. jl fn Inc.. Box Oder limited. Sand ell awauiw ,w.. from higher headquarters regard ing the details of closing work, so Hit' local board will continue their duties so long as they are required. Since Congress is expected to re new the draft before the M.iy 15th (leadline, il is felt that the best thing to do is carry on as usual. As of the last borad meeting May 2nd, the Beaverdam, Clyde, Cecil, Pigeon and F.ast Fork areas had inducted 2,375 men into the armed forces. A total of 1,571 discharges had been cleared through Canton. At present there is no large de mand for inductees, and practic ally all recent additions have been , tilled by enlistments of .young men received j reaching 18. During the latter part of April lour men, Tliunnon L. Burnelle, .John P. Blalock, Jr.. Clarence W. Kuykendall, anil James M. Dayton, the latter having served previously, joined the army by voluntary enlistment. Recruiting continues weekly in the local post office, and Haywood county con tinues to fulfill its obligation to wards winning the peace thai dawned in Kurope.lasl May. iniial action ue Service next Dogs Prefer To Visit The Doctor Socially FORT WAYNE, Ind.-The only difference between a physicians and veterinarian's wailing office is that animals don't finger ner vously through the old magazines, according to Or. V. K. McMahan! an animal doctor. Dogs, cats and other animals re act much the same as people when they visit their doctor's profession ally. Dr. McMahan s..id they dis plav nervousness ;uul attempt o preterit that they are not ill. but merely paying a social call. This tvpe of patient usually has a colli in nervous breakdown, Dr. McMahan said. And they get as much attention as a man or woman. Animals even ale placed under quarantine when they have a dis ease that is trairsinissable to peo ple such as rabies, tuberculosis or uiitlulanl iever. Dr. McMahan said families should be jusl as eai cful about ex posing their pels to their ..wn diseases. Ex-(J. I. Trie (I. I 'sOn Problems s To lleh) Coopers Town, a village of pre fabricated housing units for mar ried veterans at the ( niviisity of Kentucky, has set up its own city government, with a mayor and city council controlling the municipal unit. r IKE SOME O' IjOW-AOAVS Q HUSCAHOq W HUGH fcEV Select the RIMS TIRE & BATTERY COMPANY . . . let us give you :t reliable tire repair job thai will eon serve your tires. We guar antee our recap jobs. Brine; your tire repair problems 1o us, today. ED SIMS, Owner HI PITTSBCRGH - Nick Kostuik, a Pittsburgh veteran, can't rid him self of (,'l problems. As a civilian, however, Nick is on the listening rather than the griping end. j Alter three veals duty in F.ng j land, lielgniiii anil Germany with tne ,vir lories, Mck returned home to become a night worker in the Hume Service department of the Hed Cross. "It's surprising," says the ex soldier, "how many different kinds of trouble people can have." Here is the way he lists them for only one night's work. 1. A soldier's brother calls to say there's been a ileal h in the family. Will the Red Cross please help the GI get home? 2. A stranded veteran wants to find a place to stay for the night. .'!. A mother is worried because her wounili I son hasn't written. 4. A discharged veteran wants to know when his foreign bride w ill arrive here. Nick's job is to set the wheels in motion that will eventually solve the problem. "l!ul 1 can answer many of the questions myself," he says, "I learned a lot in the armv." Study At Vassar Charms 'Mi G. I s POUGHKF.KPSIF., N. Y Found ed 8' years ago as a college for females. Vassar has jusl gone co educational -in a small way. New ly enrolled with the 900 women students at the college are 3(1 G. I. veterans who were allowed to en ter because of general overcrowd ing in the colleges and universities of this stale. Since Vassal' grants degrees only to women, the men students are expected to transfer elsewhere be fore graduation lime comes around, two or three years hence. Mean while, they are discovering that learning has charms not advertised in the CI. I. bill of rights. ial Tissues Are Back!! I f lidO's Boxes of .lOO's i Pond's Tissues, Perfection Tissues; choose your brand ray, May 12th, Is Mother's Day per her with a beautiful GIFT from our Cosmet ic Department S, DOROTHY GRAY, TU-YA, IIUDNUT. IIOURKJANT, PRIMROSE oilier famous names in Cosmetic Essentials . . . and . . . Oilier (.lit ric Heating Pads $4.25 ric Fan, 6 inch blades $4.00 ric Fan, 10 inch blade $7.15 ric Fan, 10 inch oscilating $9.00 Coffee Maker, complete with hot-plate 7.20 ric Ironing Cords 79c n Hair Brushes and Sets $4.00 to $8.00 .Stationery 50c to $2.00 iicure Sets $1.00 to $4.50 We Deck Congress Card Sets $1.09 WY last . . . Beautiful Selections MOTHER'S DAY CARDS jrHs flkue Store Home Owned The Walgreen Agency Drug Store Phone 32 Night Phone 513 74 Students On -Hazelwood Honor! Roll For April j Seventy-four studenti of the Hazelwood school made the current ! honor roll, according to Lawrence I Leatherwood, principal of the I school. Grade 1 Larry Vickery, Jerlene Farley, Theda Chapman, Blanche Chapman, Quinton Cobb, Deanna Jo Farmer, Ann Prevost, Samuel Lane, Ted Ledbetler, Betty Ann Smith, James Edward Hall, Bobby Hill, Charles Lee Robinson, Don ald Kathbone, Grade 2 Mary Sue Creasmun, Barbara Jones, Wilma Grant, Palsy Ann Holder, Doris McLean, Betty Jane Morgan, Nancy Long. Ronald Muse, Anne Hardin, Ernestine Hobinson, Ida Smiley, Fannie Smith, Sonja Sue Snyder. Grade 3 Pauline Inman, Mary Ann Kvans, Ann Grant, Eugene Davis, Medina Jane Queen, Michael Troulman, Joan Robinson, Betty .lean Wyatt. Grade 4 Ellen Gerringer, Bar bara Fortner, Patsy Hall, Earl Cog dill, Barbara Ann McClure, Wanda Sue Mills, Mary Sue Morgan, Mary Jo Hembree, Juanita Kelly. Grade S Carolyn Bischoff, Joel Hun-ell, Patricia Brendle, Nancy Hischoff, Sara Jane Davis, James Arlington, Marjorie Early, Glenda Kerry, Grace Wanton, Denton Hill, Mary Lou Gerringer, Vivian Gilli laud, Louise Gunter, Betty Lou Korbler, Susie Swanger, Barbara Vickery, Shirley Sheehai), Effie Sue Haegan. Grade 6 Joyce Caldwell, Car muii Greene, Carolyn Greer, Bobby lluchanan, Roy Buchanan, Dibe Early, Suzanne Hensley, Samuel McClure, Mary Sue Sparks, Patsy Smiley, Carroll Swanger, Paul Young, Jr. Speedway Predicting Sports Biggest Crowd INDIANAPOLIS Indianapulis motor speedway otlieials lookeil over advance ticket sales and pre dicted the crowd at the 500-mile race on May 30 would be of such colossal proportions as to squelch loreverinore rival attendance claims of the Kentucky Derby. II was a safe statement because there never has been any agree ment on the size of the Memorial Day crowd except that police offi cials usually have estimated it ex ceeded 100,000. Anyway, while mechanics honed up motors in gasoline alley for the beginning of qualification trials on May 18. pruparalions went ahead for seating 65,000 persons, an in crease of 18,000 over the number who could view previous "500's" in relative comfort. At least as many more can sit in parked cars and trucks or roam the infield of the two-and-a-half-mile oval. Seats built on truck beds and auto tops onee were a familiar sight at the gasoline derby, but the speedway corporation put a stop to that before the last race in 1941. Some of the more ingenious infield folk had been parking two or three trucks together and building tow ers almost as tall as the press pagoda. The tempo of activity in the ga rages has speeded up perceptibly since the speedway announced 5(5 entries were received before the deadline last week. Only the 33 fastest in the qualifications can go to the post. CHARLESTON! A NS HERE Judge and Mrs. W. H. Grimball, of Charleston, are here for a few days, making preparations fur opening their summer home in Grimball Park about the first of July. In Memory Of Mother (Dedicated to Mrs. J. J. Grooms) Who Departed This Life June 9, 1934. In mv visions I can see her At the closing of the day. Mother kneeling by the fireside Saying, "Children, come let's pray." Your prayers still linger, Mother, Guiding my footsteps day by day. Thev will guide me, prerious Mother, Until the time I'm called away. She called us 'round her bedside At the closing of the day, Saying, "I must leave you, children: God has called. I cannot stay. It is lonely here without you, But you said you could not stay. You can look for me, dear Mother I'll be coming home some day If you see dear Dad and Sister, Which I know you'll surely do. Won't you tell them, precious Mother, That I surely miss them too? There's no telephone in heaven, Or I'd call nd say hello. And I'd tell you how we missed you Since you left this world below. Oh, my sisters and my brothers Are so lonesome, Mother dear, We're Just wondering how much longer We will have to stay down here. Mother dear, stay close to the fountain, And linger near the Eastern gate, I will see you In the morning . . For you won't have long to wait, A Daughter. Mrs. Clarence Gaddis, Waynesville, N. C. Life Insurance Gained 40 Billion During War CHICAGO Approximately two thirds of all the life insurance in the world is owned by U. S. citi zens, says Claris Adams, president of the American Life Convention, an association of American life in surance companies. Adams, also president of the Ohio State Life Insurance Co., Co lumbus, O., said that at the end of 1MB, 71,000,000 Americans owned life insurnace. That is more than one-half the entire population of the country. Life insurance in force increased by $40,000,000,000 during the war, he said. This represented $1,000 per family, bringing the family av erage in the U. S. to appi oxiinalelv $4, S00. Balsam News By O. J BECK A local service organization for housing in Los Angeles gave the city $b0,000. which Was turned over to the Los Angeles Housing Authority. Mrs. Celestine Curry had as din ner guests Sui.iiay, Mr. and Mrs Claude Rogers and son of Way nesville, and Mrs. Rankin Fergu son. Mr and Mrs Kdd Parson of Miami, are here to open the "Hal sain Lodge " They expect the best season in years Mr. and Mrs. Julius Cogdill and children of F.nka. visited at the home of Mr and Mrs O .1 Heck Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Kelley Hyatt v isited their parents. Mr and Mrs Dill I'. il l is at the home of a brothel . Mr and Mrs. Glenn Pai ris. Sunday Mi ami Mrs Troy G:'ild.v of Canton, visited Mrs. Gadd.v s p:u cuts. Mr. and Mrs. John Coward for the week-end C O If P ?T PART OF THtt HoroK iC& a gift for MOTHER Should Come From HER Store The TOGGERY She will get a bigger thrill out of your gift if you give her one of these practical things that she wouldn't buy herself ... a frilly blouse . . . charming accessories . . . dainty lingerie . . . She'll love it. Our friendly .staff will help you with your selec tions . . . and here you will find things mothers adore. Wo join you in handing a bouquet to the mothers. I
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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May 9, 1946, edition 1
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