Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 2, 1948, edition 1 / Page 13
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APRIL 2, 194S FRIDAY, THE WAYNES VTLLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE FIVE (Second SectioaX Ut Gunning lifornia s Jonopoly fa ftEe ef- tu . hoy" to t "r" 1 ,..,n..rl YUgo- f, iron. St-atlle. who r .1 on-cess in Lai ion. has just de-L-ui biovv ol a one- nan u-.-i is fish" cll L'ubia Kita in o( tin- Caliiui'iians. loiiiur repau impair, " Mip in " ail" v ,0t, HOIULJI l-- rka Cupauo i Ship Vrd js ht. I -1 low-up of ..hu ll Ik- delivered J54 OOO.INHH) spent on Finance luih"- r jfU K.M'I"1'" 1S bL''ng AiiU- toi lurtlier "ex prolwll '"to the t $ lh.- Ilu-sian toast. ,rnjm-tl He sti" all , fdi h'i' eii-livt-i-y. An- hefshi! llu' Tin" ,;igoullil('-'l Astoria. 1 sfciv T.i ten:) of frozen LEADERS HI THE BATTLE FOR ITALY 4' AP Newsfeatures Italy faces a new crisis as its people go to the polls April 18. Communists, allied with one wing of the socialists, hope to over throw the present government which excludes left wing elements. Catholic influence is strong in backing anti-Communist elements. The Reds have been accused of maintaining their own army in Italy and Catholic organizations are said to include close-knit units of vigorous young men. The dis pute between the United States and Russia over the Marshall plan has formed one of the major is sues in the election campaign. Both sides have predicted victory for their candidates. ?;f" yy XT v'j PALMIRO TOGLIATTI Leads Reds in bid for power against right-wing government. ALCIDE DE GASPERI As premier, his job has been to hold off strong leftist forces. PIETRO NENNI Leader of pro - communist so cialists, he asks a change. POPE PIUS XII The Catholic Pontiff's statements may influence the vote. eil I, . I 4 of. drugstore lima sanawicn hli (in the Ins!" seas. ,ril tuna canneries have 1 ug ,inl (luring the iiall nuinths. canning 4 cauylit oil the west ' (jniti'd Si ales. , p Full Year .jnsive nuu-hintvy and t,. .iters can l' kept busy "iiiifllni! the linpical el s then the sandwich is '.i less- -at least, that's in here believe. aiViU be a wider mar iijiiiwesl canneries bc i' stance Albacoic is a de i, jcl like Hie yellowfin t lcs lo snunfile up to M e cotnlii mi nth In this y knd Miiai ely on I be k. Jlc lias In whip the eijerpi isniK California ' f 0 hal tu t i iitl 1 be luna. re ire a ll of bankrupt inwn around who ex- 1 tli lallei can he very CHEESECAKE COUP IN LONDON MUST BE EATABLE KIND NEW YORK Leo Lindy, hap pily waved a cablegram at me as I checked my coat and lid in his famous restaurant ... It said: "Cheesecake you sent Danny Kaye for my birthday party so terrific that I have held Danny over for two extra weeks at the London Palladium. Regards, Val Parnell (manager)." "I'm getting to be in ternational," Leo said as he trotted delightedly off. Charlie Mosconi was asked on Jack Eigen's broadcast why he thought the old time comedians were better than the new brand. . . . "Because they told ihc same jokes earlier," quipped ChM'lie, once the star of the famous vaude ville "Dancing Mosconis." . . . James Mason tells me he's a I'hil Harris fan ... At least when I'hil hustles through those fast jingles such as "That's What I Like About the South." . . . James warned to know what I thought of them . , . "Don't ask," I said. Frankie Carle shot a few scenes of his next picture, "I Surrender Dear," in the Copucabana during the Jack Eigen disk jockey' pro gram . . . The gimmick being that it will give a slight excuse for Frankie to play a couple of his famous recorded ditties, "Carle Boogie" and "The lAnniversa'ry Song," during the movie . . . In cidentally, Eigen, first of the all night gabbers who spin their plat ters in night clubs, is on television, makes vaudeville appearances and generally is cashing in on his dubi ous pioneering . . , Used to be a novelty, but the clubs on Broadway took to the devise like mad. Now there are mikes set up in almost all of them, and the novelty now is nil. Monty Woolley writes that he's well again and v,:nle he likes Saratoga best of all, will make another picture soonest . . . Ray Milland giving folks at Park and 50th a pleasant pedestrian sur prise . . . George Stevens, who directed "1 Remember Mania," and Harriett Parsons. Louella's girl, entering Twenty - one un noticed by I be autograph pests who ganged up on a star so un important none of us could think of her name . . . Beverley Kelly, Hingling Brothers' famous press agent who announced last year he was through with spangles and cir cus publicity, apparently didn't say "positively." . . . Tenny-rate, he's one of a trio of gentlemen who will produce professional dramatics in Columbus, O. . . . Grease paint is like printer's ink: Tough to wash off. Farmers Urged To Get Prepared For Blue Mold Because blue mold is unpredict able and may appea in tobacco i plant beds without warning, farm j ers should prepare in advance to Eels usually remain hidden dur ing the day and feed at night on animal food. fight the disease when it does strike, Howard R. Garriss, exten sion plant 'pathologist at State Col lege, warned this week. Mr. Garriss said Kermate has been found effective against blue mold when used properly and ap plied in time. In addition, it also causes healthier, stronger plants, and farmers feel they are benefit ted whether blue mold ever ap pears or not, he added. The patholigist explained that Fermate may be applied as a sprav or as a dust, with equally good re sults when proper methods art used. The dust treatment is more expensive. The spray is simple to prepare but lakes longer for mix ing and applying. Either treatment, Mr. Garriss said, is a preventative rather than a cure and should begin before blue mold appears in the plant bed. The first application should be made when the plants are about the size of a dime. Treatments should be applied twice a week until plants free of blue mold are assured for trans planting, Mr. Garriss said. Thus 8 to 12 applications are usually needed. Applications of spray or dust that are washed off by rain should be repeated as soon as veather will permit. 29 Haywood Students Are Enrolled For Winter Term At State College N. C. State College's winter term enrollment includes 29 stu dents from Haywood County, a sur vey of the institution's reg-stia-tion figures reveals. The school now has a total en rollment of 5.151. includn.t; S.093 nun and 58 women. Veterans of World War II now enrolled In the college number 3,884. The College's School of Engirt eering attracted the largest num ber of .students, with 2,922 report ing for classes, and the School of Agriculture drew l,03(i. The School of Textiles was third, with 820, and tin' Division of Teacher Educa tion registered :tl)7. There are GO unclassified special students. The following students from Haywood County are enrolled at Slate College: William (). Allen, Canlon: Sam M. Airington, Wiiyncsville: Dwight M. Jiealy. Jr., Waynesville; James K. Boone, Waynesville; Hardy R. Caldwell, Jr.. Waynesville; Sam L. Calhoun, Waynesville; Thomas F. Cannon, ('anion; Alvin G. Chason, Canton; Knnelb L. Complon, Haz flwood; Richard L. Davis, Canton; Josiah W. Francis. Waynesville; Robert II Francis, Waynesville; Milas L. Green, Clyde; William W. llaynes, Clyde; Jack D. Hipps, Can ton. Hobart H, Hyatt, Waynesville; Max II. James, Clyde; Norman C. James, Jr., Clyde; Earl T. Justice, Canton; Ellsworth McGowan, Can ton; David E. McCracken, Waynes ville; Hugh C. Palmer. Wavnes- ville; William E. Richeson, Hazel- New Truck's Mileage A Mere 100 Feet WINDSOR, Vt. (UP Clarence Martin didn't get much mileage out of his new truck. Martin watched it being unload ed from a freight car, climbed in behind the wheel and started it. Only 100 feet along his route it became stalled on the railroad track. The owner leaped to safety as the truck was demolished by a freight train. MAKES OWN WAVES EVANSTON, 111. IUP) A ma chine designed to produce artificial waves has been installed in a large tank at the Northwestern Univer sity Technological Institute. The machine can create waves up to eight feet long and eight inches high and will be used to test the performance of hull shapes in ship models. GIRLS FIGHT BACK NEW YORK (UP) Women engi neering students al City College have formed the Society of Women Engineers to combat "discrimina tion" against them in industry. wood; Fred L. Rogers, Clyde; Charles C. Shaekleton, Waynes ville; James B. Soesbee, Canton; Daniel J. Smathers, Canton; Joe Eugene Terrell, Waynesville; and Murray R. Whisenhunt, Waynesville. Playing Opposite Telephone Not So Interesting, Says Barbara Stanwyck By PATRICIA CLARY United Press staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD 'Li'i Barbara Stanwyck, wno u.cd to make out l tic monllily bilib (lie New York telephone Company sends i(s cus tomers, is looiing around Willi a telephone again anil getting about 200 limes as much money tor it. Tne ex-billing clerk, playifig an invalid wife wno accidentally over hears her own murder being plot ted on the telephone, spends aooul three-fourths of her lime in Ihe picture, "Sony, Wrong Number,'' enioling into I he telephone. "1 in practically playing opposite a telephone when I'm not in a scene with Burt Lancaster,'' Miss Stanwyck said. "Naturally, I find Mr. Lancaster a more sitniulating partner. 1 never could figure out the workings of a telephone." Off the .screen, Miss Stanwyck doesn't care much for telephoning. Tin one oi those people who hale lo answer the phone," she said. "I'm no good at gabbing. My telephone talk is mostly: "Yes, no, sure, glad to hear liom you, good bye'.'' No DubliiiiK In Miss Stanwyck not only is play ing her most important scenes with a telephone cupped in her hands but also is delivering all her off stage lines over I be w ire. Para mount decided on the method to achieve a more natural flow of con versation than by the usual pro cedure of dubbing in voices later. "My arm aches when i get home at night alter an all-day session wilb the phono on the set," she said. "When Hob i Robert Taylor) suggests that 1 call up some friends to come over for dinner I have (o tell him that I haven't the strongl h." A studio executive the other day suggested thai Miss Stanwyck's pi'i lornianee w ith I he telephone i i i .... i i. . nmmu ,i.s imouhu ii were worm an Academy Award. Miss Stanwyck, a runner up three times in the Oscar derby but never a winner, promptly cracked: "They'll have lo make it look like a French phone." Al'SSIES SI.NI) US b'eER MELBOURNE. Australia (UP) --Ex-Gi's who acquired a taste for Australian beer can let their hopes raise a liltle. Beer samples have been sent to the United States to feel out the market. Beer is one of the scarcest items in Australia. Exchange i Club Will ; Observe Anniversary , "Threat To Democ racy" Will Be Theme of Canton Club Meeting April 13 Members oi the Exchange club of Canton will hear an address on "Today's Threat to our Democracy" by Exchangite Howard T. Wells at the meeting April 13 at the YMCA. The address will bo the high point of the club's observance ot the 37th birthday of Exchange. The first Exchange club was formed March 27, lull in the city of De troit, Mich. , Because of the menacing aspect of events in Europe, the birthday month of the organization has been dedicated to education and coniniunfly action in a national program that emphasizes and dramatizes the common heritage of every American our system of democratic government based on individual freedom. Al the last ' national convention of the National Exchange club, in Cincinnati, a resolution was unani mously adopted pledging the mem bers to do everything within their power to expose Communism and any and every other ism' opposed lo the American way of life. This action followed a pattern with res pect lo the defense of democracy that has been pursued by Exchange with increasing tempo every year as the tin eat of Communism to America and to world older be came more and more acute. President .1. W. Stone of Ihe Canton club in Hus connection points out today that "in this cru cial period ,il is highly desirable that the Exchange clubs' compre hensive program of education in the ideals and practices of Ameii can democracy lw given the great est possible emphasis and that citizens be alerted to the grave threat this counlry faces.'' WRONG KIND OI IM'RR COLL' M BUS, Ind. ( UP) John J. Dewey got. into his automobile and pressed on the clutch and ac celerator. The engine purred but not as it should. At a repair shop a mechanic opened the hood. Nes tled between the clutch and the floorboard was a large Maltese cat. Eight lives left, kitty slunk away tinder her own power. lrrrirTraYv7 arrTirr?inn nnawmnn(on7nn n rp rn 10:30 A.M. 1:30 P.M. 3:00 P.M. avid Underwood Farm Harry Hyatt Mill Property Jack McCracken Farm :vjd Underwood Farm on Highway 19 A, part fce L. M. Welch Farm. Good Residence, fine :rjand silo accommodates 100 cattle. 20 acres :je farm land. 7 acres in alfalfa. 8 acres of -ed Grass. Look the above farm over. This will J. Cold Storage Plant. Store Building. Mill race and Power Plant. This Business property should appeal to you. Located at intersection Sulphur Springs Road and Hazelwood Main Street. Takes Place On The Grounds Rain or Shine FREE PRIZES GIVEN AWAY W " hf v" ..JV i l i.IWiimm.. -: :::rv , if "N 4 I t 4 - i i Wmiiipiiiijii iMjilllllWHIJgJMiiiiiiiiijMi pwi.l r V Si 90 Acres of Grass Land. Located in Pigeon Val ley Formerly Fred Blaylock Estate, but now owned by Jack McCracken, near Rickman Store and Bethel School. 8 miles from Waynesville, 6 miles from Canton. LADIES ESPECIALLY INVITED - Music By Our Live- Wire Entertainers Sale Conducted by PENNY BROTHERS The World's Original Twin Auctioneers of Charlotte, N. C. If You Care to Buy or Sell Write or See us Offices 909 Liberty Life Bldg. Phones 4-6176 Night 5240 IF YOU HAVE LAND FOR SALE Sec SHERIFF R. V. WELCH Or DAVID UNDERWOOD t ' t V.' -. r s i. t - l i t i t Sill fi ll'! it tit r I
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 2, 1948, edition 1
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