hums Tever ,11'' A ginia alleni ,1 .' s i t M i n -liots relief propei h minimi l. i I'll In in to 80 per mil ni Mn' ).iiu at-. Dr. O'car Sivm,-t.u d. Jr.. of the University of Wif-iinn. -- t-ne of several rpeaken ailtruhnc the Dal las Soiittlclll C'lili. 'iniuiat tuiitc-uiiii l:i .Sin iet ' 17th A Rre.it itt :il ol Svunetoid -.ml i :i;i i. l,-er. Dr. i .m-cd l) .sell-i-i ilu .ullell, the t: dust liH 11 . I lnle ;i plant tiene;i tu .i invisible teii i drifts thi mi! I. ! IS gOillj! Ill I H Kill. Hi pollen or pi. Hi i aileron ! n,r a flllipie -..lulu Dr. tuviiiUui just kiiu people with l,. tell, except I., each null wilu., dose lie shuuld :-ll lint- of the in h I he ill e I'ljl K n it 11 ,.1 "u In. I (lull t -1 1 e e i all t n'l.ml- aii i,,,, it. j, mi t.ileii he ,u :on" the ; should In treatment Pollen ha indivui but iolu-i.ii ease in, i i .. una! uilh' ...in .uliU-d i-ii.in.it di Attention We :ire ojini inr luisiiit'ss. iii He lie nr p il roii.i:;e . Say I ulk'ii Relieve Hay mu.s r, s FARM SUPPLIES SI ( I KITV I I I DS know ii 1. 1: i i:ki ii.ii ijs M m.itv i: i;v CHICKS roi I. IKY SITIM.IKS I I 11)1 lS. IDI VTAINS, IIROODF.RS I'Ol I.TKV I.1TTKK I'll I I) AM) (AKDF.N SFF.DS SI I I'lllil hi:.ns CI K i ll II I) SKFJ) POTATOFS m; A I I Ol SODA I I .muted Supply ) i) ii: ri i ns $4.10 i m: IIK.III sT (JCAI.ITV IS THi: MOST I C ONOMICAL Waynesville Feed and Seed Company Temporary Lnrniion Highway 19-A at Intersection of Aliens Creek Road PHONE 493-J the WAYNESVILLE FEED AND SEED CO. Temporary Location Highway 19-A at Intersection of Aliens Creek Road Phone 493-J ti ft Q ft Tobacco Man ', I "( '- ' Vc mmmU ml iir 1 n i i I MAX M ROBERTS, educational iliiector for the Fanners Keder- alioii lor several i-ar lor srteral ears, lias been named iiianaper ol tin- Carolina Farmers' tobacco warehouse f'ooiv it has been annuuiiced by James (; K McC'luic. president of "'e tedei atloli. I i Huberts has had many years - 1 expei ieiiie in n.baici) nuik and -eivt-d loi t lie past hui ears as i epi eseiilatue ot tlie federation in Farmers! our temporary location . . . . . We will sae ou money on a few Jshortweeks tel I . their J story:. ... FUfy little balls of life odoy egg producers tomorrow. High Inability, rapid growth and well developed bodies must : be oC complished - during i thii 1 critical, lime. Proved on Security's Jest j Form and under the brooders oJ fhousonds of customers, the Secur.J i Chick Raising Program helps you get profitable results. Sound management principles J teamed up with Security Chick Ration's complete blend of all the essential nutrients is your onswerfo the raising of "paby chides. See us for Security Chick Ration and the success-making details of SecurityProgram.f Household HINTS By VEBNA ST4NTON Assistant State Aieut The finger of an old glove placed over the end of a curtain rod will enable onie to slip tbe curtain onto the rod with no danger of catching ir tearing the material on the metal rod Put the smallest alse white biiaub on the two bottom corners of curtains and also fasten two more about a third of the way up the curtain. Then when the win dows are open at night, or for airing the room, the curtains van be "suapped together" and will not et wet or soiled. Remember it is easier and less tiring to paint chair legs if the chairs are turned upside-down. When painting baseboards, hold a cardboard close against the wall above the baseboard. This will prevent the possibility of getting paint on the wall or wallpaper above. Such card boards are also very useful when washing baseboards, since they prevent the water from marking the wallpaper. To paint a stairway which must be used before the paint has op ; porluiiity to dry. paint every other i step Then when the first set of steps is dry. the alternate steps may be painted the same way. Trellises or window screens ran lie easily reached on all sides when painting, if hung securely un the clothesline with heavy w Lre. Rival 'Phone To Bell's Goes To Museum II ARRISBURG, Pa. (UP) An original telephone whose inventor lost a U. S. Supreme Court patent fight with Alexander Graham Bell been given to the Historical So oicty of Dauphin county. The telephone was donated by M V Jacobs, Jr.. son of the at lornev who represented Daniel Diaubaugh. the inventor. Prawbaugh charged Bell with infringement of patent rights and j carried the case lo the Supreme Court The ruling was in favor of Bell JFWISH PAINTINGS GOING TO AMERICA ROME i API An exhibition of 9") paintings by Jewish displaced persons in Italy is on its way to Lo.s Angeles. w The exhibit was bought by the I Jewish Welfare Federation. Most of ' the pictures deal with the life of Jews in Europe. Some depict the horrors of German concentration ca nips. For about $1!.000, federation offi- I I cials bought these for exhibition in l.os Angeles and possibly oth- ' er American cities as part of the Cinited Appeal's fund raising cam I paign its capacity as agent for the Com modity Credit Corporation to sup port tobacco prices at Asheville. West Jefferson and Boone mar kets. . Prior to becoming educational director of the organization, Mr. Roberts was principal of West Buncombe high school where he also served as coach in the school's athletic program. Prior to that he was principal at Sandy Mush school. A graduate of Marshall high school, in Madison county, he at tended Mars Hill college and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I ! liter aftgos fa) IMgG(Ks " OFFICIAL tignals lor flen forced down have been adopted by the Civil Aeronautics Admi'nistrofon. Instiuttions toy the symbols should be of eosf 10 feef hiyh if pos sible, mode from any available material or tramped into the snow. Rescue fliers ore instructed to ocknowfedge the signals by rocking wings from side to side. Require doctor Require medical supplies Unable tc proceed. Require food and water F Require firearm and ammunition T II X Require map end I I compass . LgJ THE WAYNK5YILLE Stokers Picket " mmmmm n miimmii n n : ' 1 1 " - s sKfi ' i PICKETS GO INTO ACTION around the New York Stock Exchange and Curb Exchange following the walkout of some 1,000 members of the United Financial Employes. The union announced that the Wall Street workers were strik ing lor higher wages and union security. Both exchanges were reported open for trading, with members and super visor! employees filling the jobs of striking clerks. (International) Movieland Names Tom Conway Its 'Biggest Wolf HOLLYWOOD iUPi The title of the binges! wolf in Hollywood" has been given to actor Tom Con way. Conway insists it's only because lie happens to look like a wolf Actualh, lie sas. he's a hoine loving, contented husband, utterly harmless oil the screen, and no more a wolf than the falcon he has played for jears in the "Tal con" series. 'The biggest wolf in Hollywood" was what Universal - International producer Lester Cowan demanded for the role ol Whitheld Savory, the department store owner in "One Touch of Venus," who stalks Ava Gardner, who's Venus. Conway, they decided, fitted the character of the rich and preda tory Savorv even better than such conventional muvie wolves as Vin cent Pi ire. f'raiu hot Tone and Clifton Webb. It's by far the best part to date for Coiiw .in. hi other of the actor Geoir.e S.uidei-. He changed his name when lie came to Hollywood in 19:)!) at his brother's insistence. Actor by Accident A trick of fate started Conway's career on the English stage. "T was a salesman for a safety glass company." Conway explained. "One d.iy 1 tried to sell a casting director an order of glass This man couldn't gel his mind on my sales talk. He ket trying to sell me on being in his play. He said I was j'ust the type he needed. "I told him I had a quota of sales to make; I couldn't spend all day talking theater. So we struck a bargain: I took the part and he bought up the rest of my glass quota." Conway is the second player ip "One Touch of Venus" to epitomize his part. Miss Gardner was chosen to play .1 I K Require signal lamp and radio Indicate direction to proceed -1 l Am proceeding in this direction Will attempt takeoff LI -A Aircraft seriously damaged - MOUNT A1NEB Stock gxchunge POLES 92 PER CENT OF CATHOLIC FAITH WARSAW, Poland 'Al'i Pol and is 92 per cent Catholic, ac cording to Church statistics just released. They show that of Pol and's 24,000,000 people, a total of 21.341,000 are Catholics The capital city of Warsaw is !)7 . . , . ,. i : .. Tl I -,, per cent Lainoiic. ineie ... 1.200 Methodists and .100 liaplisis here. Jews in Poland mini her between 95,000 and lOfi.OOO. Most Jews are centered in Lower Silesia around Wroclaw; in the textiles center ol Lodz, and in western Ponierania around the city ot Szczecin. Venus because she was closest to the classic ideal ot beauty. The Anatolain Venus she depicts was a well rounded gal And the studio found that most other ac tresses were too skinny to do. Woah Numskull DEAR AJOAH Plt BOTH ELEPHANTS KEEP" THEIR TRUNKS LOCKEO AJMlLf3 THEY OM THEAr?K ? UOM A- PlOBLE rxiSTV4 OIT-A PEAR A1CAH - TO BH A GOOD KOOFre OO YOU HAVE" TO 6ET THE; CkSHT SLANT CS4 TtoU WORK ? MBS- HENWY CONtxaM naMtart fcr Kmc tiMfcm iTat Tne. Require fuel and oil All well Y ft -JL Not understood L LL N W Requlf mechanic - Nearly 94 ?MUon Persons In U. S. Eligible To Vote Ten Million New Voters Since 1940, Census Bureau Estimates WASHINGTON Some 93,941,. 000 persons in the United States will be of voting age as of Novem ber 1, 1948, accord iixg to estimates of the U. S. census bureau. That is 10,000,000 more than were able to vote in the 1940 elec tions, 4.300,0011 more than in 1944, It is also estimated that women will out-number the men by 1, 579,000. Numerous organizations, includ ing the major political parties, the CIO, the PAC, the Junior Cham ber of Commerce and the League of Women Voters, are working on intensive campaigns to get out the vote. Not only are these outfits inter ested in getting citizens to the polls in November, but they are working to see that people know what they are voting for. The National Board of the League of Women Voters, at its bi ennial convention, April 26-30, at Grand Hapids, Mich., will decide how best it "may arouse citizens to help solve the cruical problems of the times." The League of Women Voters was born in 1920, on the eve of the victory of the suffrage move ment. It was the result of the in spiration of Carrie Chapman Catt that there must be an organization which could help women to be come intelligent voters. Miss Anna Lord Strauss, presi dent, says: "The purpose of the League is to promise political re sponsibility through informed and active participation of citizens in government." Providing citizens with accurate non-partisan information about candidates, election issues and vot ing procedures was a league com munity service early established. Information booths for voters, questionnaires asking candidates' views, and candidates meetings were new and dramatic devices by w hich the league attracted community-wide attention from the be ginning. To these have been add ed new techniques: Door-bell-ringing campaigns, sandwich boards, sound trucks, movie trailers, in creased use of the radio. Among the most popular aids to voters have been handbooks which individual leagues have published for all-year-round use. These give facts about the machinery of gov ernment; elections and election districts; offices and names of of fice holders among other informa tion. The League works through 550 local units in 35 states and repre ! sents approximately 100,000 worn I en. STOP IM-SEE THE NEK Larger Capacity I Lower Cost I Three great new models from which to choose v AS LOW AS $259.95 FOR MODEL AS PRICED fori Junaluska Supply ( Approves Praft Man,ltfTJ fSSA'M 1 f CALLING upon Congress to sup- port a peacetime draft and Uni versal Military Training, Bernard ' Baruch is shown as he appeared in j Washington before the Senate I Armed Services Committee. Such ! action, he declared, should be sup- j plemented by a "ready-to-go" blue- j print for total mobilization of n;i- j tional resources. (International' 1 Princess Spurns New Fashions LONDON Princess Elizabeth has flatly turned down the look," her friends disclosed "new And that royal "No," many British fashion designers admit, has lost them at least half the bat tle. Style experts, it was reported,! tried hard to win over the princess! but every time hit the snag of hei j rnnservalive tastes. Pai'tieulai 1 i distasteful to her is the long skirl ! The hemline she prefers is not less than 14 inches from the ground. Flouncy bits and pieces hune onto a costume in some ol the current modes are not to her liking. Nor is any other fancy feature which might suggest she approved a drift to an extreme. Prince Philip had his say on the I subject, too. In his opinion, re -j sponsibly quoted, the "new look is pretty much a crude look. What j he thinks about women's clothes! certainly counts with his wife. "We aren't making much head-' way with tne 'new look'," one de signer said. "If only the princess openly approved it would be a dif-j ferent story, it sne maue um one appearance in a 'new look' dress the entire fashion situation would chage in a flash. But nobody ex pects that will happen." HOME FREEZERS 1 1 1 UJml AS 4.S cubic Ml Feoture, galore! No ojherhoj npc reeze n b I ur irn J Ff4,DAY, Am 111 'fit'M; Wasfcoii ki. . i . 'i'"1 Qi mod) '' heo7 4,1, wtr SpieaJ, D Veil, j l FORK I'l.OOE W SlJill Pet IIILCO n.oop, m SUPPLY Phones ! BUILI Probably safe to land hero SOS (If In doubt us Inter national symbol) Phone 88 Lake PI

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