Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Nov. 7, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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
r FAG. 1 vvo (tiiai ScciiWJ There are almost 60 species in the lily family, all confined to the TT T) C To northern hprnnher., i U ,J. 1U THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER Latest Records Serenade Of The BeNs That's What Every Girl Should Know Sammy Ka.ve Would Be Better For Is Both As Advertised Cowboy Copas So Far A Fellow Needs a Girl Frank Sinatra I'll Be No Stranger There He Set Me Free Chuck Waeon Gan Boouie Wooeie Blue Plate Sure Had a Wonderful 'lime Fast Nisht I.ouis Jordan To My Sorrow tasy Kockin' ( hair Kdciy Arnold Two Complete Operas Verdi - La Traviata Bizet-t armen JONES RADIO SERVICE Radios, Record Players and Guaranteed Repair Work Waynesville, N. C. Have October Meeting Today The October meeting of the Uni ted Daughters of the Confederacy will be held this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. John ny Ferguson on the Dellwood Road .Miss Margaret Johnston will pre sent the program on "Southern Books". The magazine will be re viewed b Mrs. Lee Bramlett Mr and Mrs J H Way. Jr., and .Mr and Mrs. Kimball Barber are ' leaving today to attend the Duke- , .Mississippi toothall game in Dur ham tomorrow. Woman's Society Will Meet Next Tuesday The Woman's Society of Chris- : tian Service of the Methodist 1 Church will meet next Tuesday af- I tcrnooi. November 10. at 3:30 o'clock, at the church. PERSONALS ' ln Probe c,ash Mi. and Mrs. Hugh Sloan. Jr . have a their guest the hitter's not her. Mrs Fred Watson, of Win ston-Salem. Mrs C J Reece and Mrs. Claud Allen left Wednesday to spend sev eral days in Atlanta, Georgia. Miss Elizabeth Sheely. of Colum bia. S. C. spent last week end hen as the guest of Miss Louise Francis I I Mrs. Sebe Bryson, Miss Beinice Hanell, and Miss Grace Wilburn spent last week end in Chattanooga and attended the wedding of Miss Eleanor Jarrett and W. M. Carter. Mr. Floyd Rippetoe has returned to his home after a week s visit to his son and daughter-in-law, Mr and Mrs. Floyd Rippetoe. Jr., at their home in Newark, New Jer- se . Mrs. C. E. Sanders has returned i after a visit to relatives in Charles j ton, S. C. Mrs. Sanders is with her sister. Mrs. Arthur Mead. Mi- and Mrs. Marvin Dotson and Mrs. Herbert Buinette. Jr.. and daughter. Carylon. have gone to Houston, Texas for a two-weeks visit. Mr and Mrs David Hvatt are leaving today to spend the week end in Boone as guests of Mrs. Hyatt's brother and sister-in-law, Mr and Mrs. W. H. Danieron. Bill Richeson, who is a student at State College, Raleigh, will ar rive today to spend tin- week end with his mother. Mrs. L. M. Richeson. Mi THE TOGGERY tie 91 (ulhuf, G4V& y Our Lovely Array of Fall Rhythm Step Black Brown if o c $10.95 J Red 0 Green O Black Sizes AAA to B $10.95 GAYTIME Black Only t A tunc XX 'V m -m -m rr i i . . i ' 1 1 THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLEY I Vmil ii ft RiWf Sir X t J have a fbwujtlp) i have two bucks L I XS YfLVil fU lMU ST ii t2 r i SCRATCHES'- IVt J OH THAT SAME" ANt )A Wx ' Experts ff f j25- I V Doc Pn-t.SRurV -is Pi.jc- rr a . I : '-r--r k FIREWORKS finally exploded In the House Un-American Activitie Committee hearing in Washington when JohD Howard Lawson, prom inent playwright and Hollywood script writer, engaged in a heated clash with Sea J. ParneU Thomas, chairman of the investigating group. Here, Thomas is shown during th word battle in which Lawson re fused to say whether he was or wai not a Communist f international) Administration Plans To Offer Own Tax 'Reform' WASHINGTON iAP) The Tinman administration is definite ly planning to offer its own tax program to congress some time next year. Officials in a position to know made that clear. But they added that details are still to be decided. Indications are that the program will stress "revision'' and "rpfnrm" of the tax system over outright cuts. The biggest Jertainty is that there will be no proposal resemb ling the twice-voted $4,000,000,000 bill which Republican sponsors have promised lo revive at the outset of the special session of con. grcss opening November 17. Those two measures would have cut individual income taxes by from 30 per cent for low income groups to 10.5 per cent for those in the top brackets. ABC Vote Carries In Asheville Wets Cast 2,700 Vote Majority In Liquor Referendum On Tuesday The city of Asheville Tuesday voted in favor of the establish ment of legal whisky stores, with election officials reporting the largest vote east In the city's his tory. Official reitirns rrom all the 24 precincts were 8,839 votes cast for the store proposal and 6,139 aeainst eivine nrnnnnents nf the ABC measure a majority of 2,700. Wet forces carried 19 of the pre cincts. Asheville was the fifth Western North Carolina area to vote on the ABC issue during the past six months. Rowan and Alleghany counties and the town of Hickory voted dry, but the city of Charlotte favored the stores. Members of the Asheville city council were expected to aunnint a three-member control board at a special meeting Thursday after noon, indicating that machinery would be set up as quickly as pos sible to begin operation of the stores. In the last-referendum on the question held in 1939, voters of the city favored the stores but their vote was nullified by a heavy dry vote in rural areas of Buncombe county. Tuesday's vote was re stricted to the city itself, Asheville was enabled to vote independently of thp result of special legislation enacted in the closing days of the 1947 General Assembly. Both sides wag- eo. vigorous campaigns and had ef fective organizations at the polls during the election. Raps Film Probe I wB.i.i ii.i itimwn if i. S ..f .1 II VLCai I in 1 COUNSEL or the 18 film notables subpoenaed by the ITouse Un American Activities Committee In W ashington, Robert W . Kenny takes the stand and tells the group that their probe of alleged Communism In Hollywood Is "illegal and un constitutional." He demanded that the subpoenaes be quashed. At the end of the testimony, the committee went into closed session to consider his motion. (fntemattonol) Increase Shown In Tax Report For This State Uncle Sam continued to i,T, , his tax take in North Carol,,,., ' ing uctober. For the fourth consecutive ,,,.,,,) since the begh.ning of the r, , year in July, internal revenue u i lections in the state showed b ,,,', over the last year. A report on the October eoliet Hons, released this week at ,,, office of Charles H. Robinson ,, ternal revenue collector tor u1( District of North Camn ,u. a total of $104,121,905.18 paid ,u the United States iw. , . . Tar Heel sources. This ' . Hi r-e,i, - ed. an increase Mn i u,t ja.wy..' ,,7 over the $95 fifli qsr i , in October, 1946. lU',et"1 Collections for the first ,, months of the current fiscal are $36,953,298.28 greater than ii,, the corresponding period ,t ,he preceding months, standing at $407,438,443.48 aeainet en 443.46 against $370,485,145 18 In the ODeninc thioo ,.!. . . ... v...v iinjiiuis o the year, cniwtinnc ,Q "cur lepurien as follows: July, $97,000,090.68; Au gust, $84,204,683.70; Septemhe, $122,111,718.90. In th ih months of the preceding year ol1"8 Were $82,977,838 08 83,503,911.33. and sins 9m , , respectively. ' ' FRIDAY, vf ic 10 colas... eased VtSKS From 22.50' I'ARKER IH.'LOVA Singing Planned at Clyde On Thursday Evening The jClvde singing convention will be held Thursday night, Nov. 13. at 7 o'clock at the Ohnrrh nf God. it was annnimwrf hv Mi Hulh Sanford. secretary of the con vention. A number of singers have heen invited and are expected to altenrt and take part in the nrosram The public is invited to attend Union Voted Down Kmployes of the Cocker Machine and Foundry Company voted against designation of the Inter national Association of Mnftiinicto as their collective bargaining aepnt The plant is in Gastonia. The election was held under aus pices of the National Labor Rela tions Board. M Ex-Slave Dies At 102 Elsie Gaither, 102-year-old slave died at her homp war Mif.tr,r, Tuesday. She had been an inv.-iliri for 35 years. Familiary known to both white and Negro citizens as "Aunt Elsie," she had lived there for many years. She was the widow of Lee Gaither. Workmen To Set Off Giant Blast Saturday Morning ELIZABETHTON, Tenn. (UP) Engineers at the Watauga dam site here are preparing to blow the side out of a rock bluff in what they call the "largest construction blast ever fired." Nearby residents have been warned to expect the big noise Saturday at 11:45 a. m. Workmen are busily loading tunnels throueh Cardan hinff ,ui. 520,000 pounds of high explosive. wnen it is set oft, they expect n million cubic yards of rock to be displaced. It took about that mount of'cdhcrete to build the enure worns dam, engineers recalled. r it JEWEI Mow Hanging Out In Ray's CHILDREN'S ROOM A variety of lovely new things recently arrived your needs lor children's wear Some of the things which have not been avaiJ Pre-war days. Birds Eye Diapers -Very Specially F Many From Section To Attend Baptist State Convention Nov. 11-13 The 117th annual session nf the Baptist State Convention will hold their next meeting in Winston Salem November 11-13. Many Bap tist ministers and lavmen nf thi area will be attending this conven tion. 21 ARRESTED DURING WEEK FOR DRUNKENNESS Since Saturday there ha VP hnnn 21 arrests bv Wa It was reported yesterday at the station. All were on the rharue of public drunkenness, and were released on paying court costs. KKK FILES STOLEN ATLANTA OP) Voluminous secret files on the Ku Klux Klan and the Columbians, containing names of "many prominent per sons" involved in the race-baiting orders, have been stolen from of fices of the Georgia Law Depart ment, Attorney General Cook disclosed. WRONG KIND OF PRESSURE SPARTANBURG S C (AP) High blood pressure of "210 de grees" caused him to stagger, a defendant charged with drunken ness told Recorder J. Wright Nash. Expressing concern for the man, Nash had him checked by a doctor. The fine was $12.75 after the physi cian smelled whiskey or the de fendant's breath. Although about one - fifth of U. S. people live on farms, it was estimated that in the 1947 nrmm Eugene season they received only one ninth of the U. S. income. 1 Infants' Knit Underwear in IhefV SPEEDOII BRAND Gowns - Kimonas - Sacques - Shirts -Bands - Panties A distinctive group of merchandise of best quality FOR INFANTS - FOR LITTLE GIRLS - 100 Wool Sweaters in pastel shades. Sweater, Cap and Kootee Sels. Sweater, Cap and Le.iny Sels. Handmade Madcria Dresses of cjtl quality Maderia Pillow Cases of i;ill quality. 100 Wool Sweaters in sizes 1 l X 100 Wool Sweaters in sizes 2 t i Broadcloth Dressy Blouses sizes 2 and 3, Dresses in sizes 1 to fi'i- priced Ml' l Pajamas in sizes 2 up of Hani, el. Coats and Coat and LeKKiny Sets. -Boys' Wear 0! Outstanding k up. Cordurov Overalls in sizes 2 Corduroy Pants with elastic ".'is' lml Cnrdiirov .Incite! s iu sizes 1 li j y Tweeduroy Quality Tailored & Blue Denim Overalls sizes 2 up. Hickory Stripe "Coveralls sizes I Jincr Gmi nnrl Shirts sizes 100 Wool Sweaters up. :i up. Coal -n1'1 Slipv i-er Bolls And Other Gift 1 Mow On Bisplay VOTTD rnotv nriAnntMr VISIT IN Vi YOU CAN DEPEND ON US FOR CHILDREN RAY'S Department 1 t
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 7, 1947, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75