12. I!"6 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE (Second StiotfT LIABILITIES ot .mlivuliials. .:irliierships, and corpo- kited 1,1 Reserve District No. 5 rnvnrnoN of rEFORI first National Bank of North Carolina, at the Close of Business I ,C ( Urre..o.v, V'nder Section 5S11, Waynesville Summer Players To Summer Camp Set Open Season On Tuesay, July 16th IFor Aug. 15-23 lirr oi Ptw"r I' S. Revised Statutes. r"1' "i ..ii- i'1"'''' ;,n'1 8uaraiite,'(l t"1 ,,', ,i subdivisions &lr"J ' $;).:iiMK) stock of Federal If.' . . u,k including reserve uai- h """ ',,.,.. of collection 1 ,-147,1 05. Hfi a ,r ',.,- -.7 furnittin' and fixtures ASSETS ;)H4 16 overdrafts $1,419,814.52 2,r4:.H7.5l( Plans arc helm: made fur a gala formal upi-nn-.g iur lliu lii st night, on II. I i, ui i)u. Waym-sville Summer PL.wis m'oii, Nam ice i Goclli ey . dnt-i-ior ot llu- -Theatre j In Tile Sky."' announced yesterday. W it h "CI nulla" as the opening play the series gels nil' to -a brilliant start vv Mh uiie ..1 the funniest coni eilies ever urilten Kuse Franken's eoinedv sue, s?ETs II-"1' 42,247 79 !Uili !)! pulitical subdivisions . I i aslnel S l lll'l . eie. r $r),4iri,!):i.ii7 bit" rertirit-tt am $r,ti!ii?,074 ja 3,002, 1R7.3S I,():i0.fi(i7.41! fl!)l, 123.94 4(i2,ti41.42 29,2112 !)ti fi.000 00 all.ITIK." IreUfnir ,,l muiiiiil tor preferred stock) $r,42 1.903 07 $ 50,000.0(1 (10,000.00 1 10,171.0(1 50. 000 00 Lis Ai-C.iunls Ll,r -anil Capital Accounts MEMORANDA $ 270.171.00 5,(192,074 13 ind wuntirs Inaneil) (book value): Lit iililmali'ins direct and guaranteed, tcutr ili'pusils and oilier liabilities 1 ,1. lll.twil.tlll ledml M secure ilcpo.sns anu oilier iianni Jiii? miles and hills rediseounled and Lid unJ.'i purchase agreement) . . 120,000.00 $1,930,000.0(1 life td bv pledced assets pursuant to rerpiire- $1,353,7(1.5 3(i $1,353,705.30 'Carolina, fun nly of Haywood, ss: I XOI.ANI), cashier of the above-named bank, do thai the above statement is true to the best of my belief. JAMKS T NOLAND, Casliier. Correct Attest: J. II. WAY, JM. L. N. DAVIS J. K. MASSIF. Directors nd subscribed before me this 8th day of Julv, 1940. IRACKKN, Nolan I'ublic. kiwi Iaiuics July 13, 194G. .s hased on her Claudia aid David" stories that have endeared the character of l latnlia to millions of readers. With special Meneiy and lighting effects installed in the High School Auditorium this will be Waynes ville's Inst r, al opening night in main years. Hoseniarie Thomas is in charge ol ihc static settings and Mr. (leoll'rey has spared no ex pense in electrical equipment in order to pio. ale the most elaborate cllecl.s e er seen here. Costuming is under the supci v isioii ol Lima Ilene Ceollrey. l'hy Ills 1 .uis. talented actress of stage and leli wmuii, will take the leading role ol ' (" .cilia " Miss l.llis has -erxeil as a inember of Hie W.A C.'s for Hie past two years and was nnly released from sen ice last Friday in time to join the company hei e lor i ohearsals. Shi' flow to Chicago to piek up elolbes and sta.je wardrobe and then flew to Asheille, arriving here Satur day alternoon. While in service Miss I, uis was leading huh1 of Ceollrey s Third Air Force Guild dm iny I lie last ear ol t he w ai and has recently been doing radio work lor the War Department from Hie 1'enlagnn liidg.. in Washington Appearing as David. Claudia's husband, will be W. Laurence Hen son, who arrived here early last week with Mr. and Mrs. Ccoffrey to make advance preparations for the season. Also iccenlty released from I be Air Corps. Iieiison is well known in radio and dramatic stock find was in a New York production of "Chillies of Normandy" before the war. lie has also played with great success in the dramas of Ibsen. 1 1 race Shiner, well known Chi cago actress, plays the third im porlant role of the play, Claudia s Mother. Mrs Brown. Miss Shiner is here as guest artist for the first , two plays of the season and will 1 then return to Chicago for an ap pearance at the famous Miehianna Shores theatre. A talented actress both in "character" and "straight" parts she has appeared in "The Damask Cheek," "Arsenic and Old I.ace." "Post Road" and many oth ers. Miss Shiner will be seen in a new ltroadway production to open in the fall. The supporting cast of "Claudia" includes Louise Gagnon, June Cole, Cecelia Slathakis and Monroe Lewis, all well known in the the- , aire world. i The oempany, consisting of fif : teen players and technicians are ! now in rehearsal and the audi t torium on Brown Avenue is a hive of activity as the troupe makes ready for the opening night. A new play will be presented each week, running for four per formances only, Tuesday through i Friday . The curtain rises at 8:15 J p. m. Season tickets for the five plays will be on sale through next Saturday. They are available at 1 W'atkins Chevrolet Company, The i Chamber of Commerce, Bradley's Store and The W'aynesville Moun taineer. The regular ticket sale started Tuesday July 9th, at the Chamber of Commerce office on ! Main street and at the auditorium. I liesci vat ions may be made by j phoning 175. The balcony has been I reserved for colored patrons of the 1 1 heal re. By State Guard I The NoVth Carolina State Guard . will hold then annual .summer j camp at Camp Pendleton. Va the week of August 15-23. according to ! an announcement by the state ad j juslant-i'eneral. J. Van B Metis. The local unit, which is Hq and Service company for the second regiment, has been preparing lor the summer eiK ampment in recent meetings. Special training in their duties has been given each Tues day night under the direction of ('apt .lames S Davis, company commander Of the state's 1 (iOO guardsmen, at least 1 450 are expected to attend the summer field training, which formerly has been held at Fort Bragg but this year will be on the coast near Virginia Beach. Training this year will stress the maintenance of internal security in the state, as well as the normal basic training and field work Trie daily program is to be arranged so that all work will be completed during the mornings, and the guardsmen will be free for recrea tion after 4 p m. each day. FOOD Ol N II. Ill GINS WORK W' A S II I N G TON Joint an nouncement by President Truman and the Prime Ministers ol Great Britain and Canada recorded that the newly formed International Kmorgency Food Council will take over the fund ions of the Combine Food Board which is terminated July 1. Old Logging Train Boiler Will Steam Up New Laundry AT LAST. . . RELIEF FOR RHEUMATISM LUMBAGO, SWOLLEN JOINTS ARTHRITIS, BACKACHE. NEURITIS "Say, do I feel swcllf Not on och or pain anywhere Thot's whot you'll exclaim oy frjlly when you've tried this marveloui new discovery which is bringing undrcamed-ofr relief to fhousandi who had suffered tor years, who had tried everything, and were beginning to think rcltet was impossible. Try LAKEN'S 9 DROPS On Sale At All Drug Storat Smith's Cut-Rale Drue Store Steam for James Moody's new laundry now going up on Boyd Avenue will be furnished by a 1909 model train engine boiler that used to haul logging trains in Jack son county. i The boiler, with its smokestack j and two sand bumps on the top. was purchased from the Blackwood Lumber company at East La Port, and hauled by auto-trailer here L'nlouded by the jack-and-wrecker-cable method, it -will be set up fin ally behind the recently-completed stone structure. It has been inspected, found safe for several years use, and insured. Mr. Moody is pleased to get this boiler since equipment of that type is so difficult to find. About half of his pressers and other equipment has arrived, and he expects to be gin business before summer ends. However, the man that gets the UCTIO Vaynesville Arl SA Gallery TWO SALES AILY :30 A. M. :0O P. M. This Season We Have Our Largest, Finest Collection Offered At Auction Daily Fine Diamond Jewelry . . Imparled Pnrrelains . . Watches . . Clocks . . d'emiine Paintings . . Antique English Silver . . Antique Furniture . . Sterling Silver . . Art Goods. TWO SALES DAILY 10:30 A. M. 8:00 P.M. Our Eleventh Season in Waynesville ndreds Of Items Too Numerous To Mention d---The Finest Collection Of Lace Dresden Mures Ever Offered To The Public For Sale Valuable Gifts FREE At Each Sale! Waymiesville Art "iiiH 5s rSales Daily I Gallery Two Sales Daily 10:30 a.m. 8 pjn. Capital Letters (Continued from I'atfc 21 of llo kiimham ('utility. Tom Pear sail of Nash. I.cltoy Martin of Haleiuh. John Kerr. Jr., of Warren. Brandon I lodges of Uunconihe, IrviiiK Carlyle of Winston-Salem all pretty Hood men They must not only (inure what Stale expenses will be from 11)47 to HMD. hut what the State's income will be. This commission is far and away the most important of any of the bodies deriving their power from Slate (jovernnient. NOTL'S- What is this talk about Undersecretary of War Kennel h Koyall lot (ioldsboro) planning to retire from this position nexl spring to run for (Jovcrnor'' Answer Nolliint;. He would like to be (!ov ernor. but isn't sure he could make il ... . been out of the swing loo loiiK With another bin raise for all federal employees cominK on. the Stale is fearful of losinu more valu able stenographers . . . .The turn over is pretty terrific ritdil now . . . Several Slate bulletins arc now be mn held up because of the inavail abilily of slick paper. It's all been grabbed by national inauaincs. Kill new ones made their appearance in May and June . . Had John Folder beaten Thurmond Chalh.nn (in Ihe rifthi by less than 500 voles in stead of more than 2.1100 you would n o w be h e a ring of sonic knock-dow n-di ag-oiil bailies between some election officials in Halcm'i and those in Slokes County. As il is. any minor chance in the ballots would make no ihl ferenco. Henderson Bean Crop Harvest Looks Bright HENDKRSONVILLK. Hender son County, fast developing into one of the Souths leading bean growing centers, has iM'gun harvest ing ils snap bean crop, with the price outlook described as "very encouraging'' by most growers. About 200 migrant workers are ready to aid in the harvest, with 175 more coming from the Bahamas next week. Two hundred more from (he Bahamas are expected later. Analyze your kitchen from the point of view of Ihe woman who uses it. You will find that the greatest deficiency in the average kitchen is Ihe lack of convenient storage space and work surface. In !K)r; of the homes what the house wife wants are modern facilities for cleaning, storage, and preparation. job of firing the boiler, will be a little handicapped in playing Casey Jones. "We've got the whistle." explains Mr. Moody, "but no bell." 2-Second Criam Checks Under Arm Perspiration PnlKk 1mm 1-T Daya "AmMing!", yon'U y how quickly 5 Day chckf ondr arm odo and parspiratioo! Delightfully icented, tnowy-whita "itaj-mlt ' cream it van ishes io 2 aeconds. Pro tect you op to 7 days, depeodtna on yoa and weather. Kinder to akin and clothes. Oanera-va Jar, SO M IXtTd) Ways To Save Sugar In Preserving Fruit Careful planning in the use of sugar allocations will assure ways I to preserve the maximum amount i of fruits for canning, says Mrs. Mary L. McAllister, Extension ) Economist in Food Conservation and Marketing at State College, "The food problems are as great, if not greater, than they were at any time during the war years," she points out. Urging the continued use of the wartime rule for sugar, one-half cup per quart of fruit. Mrs. Mc Allister offers the following sug gestions for substituting honey ami corn syrup to replace part of the sugar in canning fruits and in mak ing jams, jellies, and preserves: In canning fruits, honey may replace as much as 'a the sugar called for in the canning recipe; corn syrup 13 the sugar. For jams and preserves, sugar should be weighed rather than measured by cupfuls. In making substitutions by cupfuls rather than by weight, 1 pound of sugar equals about 2 cups sugar and 1 pound honey or corn syrup measures ap proximately 1 13 cups. Willi corn sy rup or honey replace up to half the weight of sugar called for in the recipe. Ih. tame ot LAKtN'S DROPS hot ipr.od swiftly, everywhere thankful users ere prols ing It. If yau suffer from rheumatic, arthritic, neurltsc ea'ris. backache or aainful loints duete nen-eronic causes, try this phenomena), flaw, 2-woy treatment TODAY. Take Ireetae'. Veu have nothing to lose as your money will bo returned it you do not eltfoy symptomatic relief. Don't delay! f 1 1 ijbim-v. V-rM We Have The Ready Answer To Your S.O.S. When your I'lollic-; need n lift yon ran depend on ns. Tlm-e iirt'-w ;ir piimient". will take on new life when thev receive our treatment. i We Call and Deliver Vaynesville Laundry (Incorporated) J. W. KIIJ.IAN, Owner Phone 205 Hoyd Avenu "How to save money on your electric bill" A FEW SUGGESTIONS BY MR. PODSNAP 1 i 2 Throw away your electric clock and buy a sun-dicrl. Of courio. It won't wake you up for work, buf think of the fun you'll have frying to figure out what time it is on sunny days, anyway. And you'll be saving about 5c every month! At that rate, you'll have the sun-dial almost paid for in only 41 years! Donate your electric washer to an orphanage and start doing your wash by hand. In one month, you'll actually have saved 8c! At the end of a year, you'll have almost enough money to pay for a good strong washboard, which you'll be needing by then. The) exercise will do you worlds of good, and keep you out of mischief for hours and hours at a time. Turn off your radio during "The Electric Hour" on Sunday after noon. Of course, you'll miss a wonderful program, but you'll sav a sixth of a penny every time you do it. In a year, that's nearly 9c. And there's no music so pleasant as those coppers clinking' In your pocketl Watch for mora el these practical money-saving suggestion bv Mr. Pedsnap. He really knows his sublect. We hope hell help yea realise hew Beany Jobs electricity does for yem and hew little it cesti lor C CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY j A 5 DAY .CtlAM MODOIANT Street 2 Doors From Theatre Smith' Cut Rate Drue Store

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