Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 23, 1948, edition 1 / Page 2
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f fa: THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER German War Brides Find Fast Pace In America WHCC Radio Programs STUDIOS OVER PARK THEATRE THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLEY By RICHARD KASISCHKF mU-IN Mil n Gentian are f . -t 1 1 -iu the ide: Hint people in Airmu.i don't knuM ur care how to imik Tll- ,iu-l lirat UP canned I, mil- And liti- .mil movement in Aim i n :i -ill laM i! make our head - i:n 1 (.. ..! ,. j, , nn tin' -straiaht ,i,,. ..."i- !mm daughters ami m-ui- have married imjiiuii -uMiii - mri aoT.e t" the I - In ! : urn German hr:. V in '. i : n i nth h.n i laa :i pi'nl- . ,i ii, hi ap r- lit-r Nrv - a Unit i . ; ! . ..!, ii-'tinu jl.-m: ;'.ot; :lM . nu-i ic.i:i people ,.,,,. .:!..' .tf i ii-!' .ii!l p'eas- ! .,,! , i : . e I- '111- j . ',, I !.. -i lllcI ions ,, ;t, ; ;tll- . 1 u-..ltle- If II , , . (,. : ..I'. 1 iu i evictions : i , 1. 1 ,ui - . i i t', believe ..i; ,.ur HI t he ... ..... va: in re ! ! --i.i on! hi u i 'ern pow- .. .. it f. ii'tn l Ifil ..., l print - lulWi-lled , j -in, r.porl. .,:.- a lio i-oiii-,! ; ,! UiM.med ! - : ' ' . n :;l rii inl--. . 'ii nfri there . 1. 1 ii;Mii'i - , . . .. their : ' ' i -i ni'i'Mv - ' ..' i lit - ; - . : -i ,! in V s- i i - . ., ro! I i W 1 1 I. ml, i; : , ' ., '.I ' ' I 1 I I - : -,. ,,.il . . . ' .'l-lTI ed , ,! !:.. .rc-' - " l I ..II l-Mll- ; . i.. ;.i hut . . , i : i i ' 1 1 I h a 1 1 ., a In r new -. : .. : ! . 1 1 o new .!,! I..iuter ... i - ,n I i.illav : -' . i." New Ynrk , i n'l; to an i ,,h' brae u.: 'fl '1'ip and .,: - .1.1:1 n J j-t i-. K Sh ..b-crved . ' (In ,.!)'. icnk- . ., i: i . iikI i. lit of i : ', ,.t icPi . i bout ennk ih. termer Helene Too Many Friends Delay Trial In Traffic Court FORT WAYNE. Ind. ilP Ar gel Pion had a time getting a trial for a traffic violation becvse he h;id ton many friends. When his rase came ip. Deputy Prosecutor John Reiber said he couldn't take it because he was a friend of Pion s Another deputv prosecutor. A. Kverett Bloom, said the same I i i n 2 Jtidye lohn H Logan said he couldn't sit and pass judgment be cause Pion was a personal friend. Fmail. Robert A Buhler. an at torney, was sworn in as special , prosecutor and Robert Bernini, another attorney, sat in as special judge Pion was fined S15 for reckless ili m ing Grossman. 26. who now lives with her huband on a farm at nugnes, Arkansas "It isn't laziness,'' she wrote, but onl conies naturally heciuiM' all on have to do is heat the food" She also observed from Arkansas that "ou hae no idea about the speed with which people in this covntr move." A former Numiber bank clerk wrote that she undertook the voy age to the I . S with apprehension that she would encounter unfriend liness but that Americans she met on shipboard put her at ease and her in-laws welcomed her "heart- Living in Ohio, she wrote: "The people here have a beautiful lite. Tlu uet up earh. cat well and wt-ar locl clothes I'm wry Inp lu " Fven Susi Evans 22-year-old former ecretar now married to an American farmer in Rose ho ro. C , found things marvelous. hhoutm Leon and I now live in one room, it is beautifully ap pointed." she wrote ' We have a new automobile, like those w in Germain siw only m American picture in. iy a zincs My mother-in-law doe the washing and ironing and won t let me do a thing. And speaking of ironing I must tell you about thai iron we have. Ger mans ncwr saw anything like it. It ha. a little red light on the end and a special switch that one con nects or silk-, woolens and linen.-."' FRK)AY. APRIL 23 r. ii Mtn t Mi r, m lioun nn tlir K.0111 T TWn frier s 111' ri Brlff" ni Stylist ju Hymns I All AjffS 4 Vftft the BmihI xi . Kronr I'.it K.lin.-i. ji j lnn u( Mel..a y ii Montiii Devi'tions y t Hjiywil rjtntr .f K vents y ,,, .ie Snlj;i Trm pi tin Mii!-M. tiiing News in I'., t he I. .(lilt's ltl .yo swi Heart Program in i Ktml Cole Ule Club 1 nit Ikmtri? Featuie I i :o l.eany Heinmn Quintet II MiOial Air 1:ftt World Se'ws Roundup 1 : .i Farm Forum Prayr;iii sf4 "ha. M .lohnon !.'" Mtn. H- 1 00 -.es in Brief Melody l-n I SO Haymes iMf Record 1 : 4,i Kitlil EiM Keys 1 00 Time Oflit j : o," The Sophistical 2 : 1 : Vacal Varieties 2 Foster Fashions I 4j The Four Knights J: AO Nume m the New j.O.'i Sweet Corn j : 1 ." Sawn Serenade 3:. i(tt Truths Mn Live By i:4 Concert Hour (:Ut Anything Ooes j 0 In Movie lundl , 1., rudly We Hail ., : so V eteran' Keporter ... f, SfHitlight "n sport ti.ttt! World Newrf Rounhip ti 1 .". l.miHkn Quartet , :to Telephone 0iu !;:?. Riders of I'lirpl S5;i)fe r; :4 " Mirdr Fur Oining 7:0 4 Jtrolina News T O Chamber of Com merce ProgTam 7 l." Kiddies Bedtime Story 7 Sit Sprinsrdale Srhool v on h;i M Johnson . j Favorite I'oinorrow's Hejlhtni y (((t Sipn Off SATL0AV. APRIL 2-4 :u.tt-iir Ho! 1.'. MM the Hti I Ti. tlir l.iidies. I -11 M u -ti l.A-ll t;i, Viilane I'ri. Id on i hilil. Htoir ; 1T. el 11 m IViuhle Ke.itnte- 1 1 .i Rhjttiin U(ilris 1 1 . .' M.irt ut Airs 1 j itn Worl.l News Rmni.tup 1 2 1 " F.irm Kvriini 1 srt f'h.is lnln,iiri 1 - 4 .'. ( :tl'olili Mill K. ' 1 :rt Nes in Brief 1 Sjtur.i-o lani I'm 1 r. H:i.'!'t Kiei Hi' s 2 On Tune 4 hit 2 0.". (Hi Die Kef-tint My -Chailti' B.iriiet On h. 2 Happ Kjmbler-i 3.0i Nainej, in the 3 :0."--Sweet orn 3 l."- Salon Serenade a ( 'tin err Hour l OiK -Netts Hi n-f 4 ft. HiitbilU Hop ;, nit j :li ii.le nj Muii ;, ;o ;uest st.(r nit Virl'l eu li'iiin-l f, 1 Cpstmt. Itn . tj iit -Miiif For Oinirg 7 HCC .l.tmlHiree - 40 hits M .1. -hii s. -ii l..in..nu - H. . l'i t (Ml Siifii I iff. SUNDAY. APRIL 25 IM.. - in 4 In - on mil Cole i.l.'r- t'iwt ; '. s tlon Serennde - l..itin Amer. Rhlhui . t ,-(,lft nil A Cli'U-i i imi l iiHtfila Qiuitet ii ;ii I In- Four Knights li. no t .oitnii Baplisi Mintn xhool in 3it"-Mi.ls Modem II on Mt ili. .lit Chun h 1 -i imi t uNtninnity ( luprl 1 2 1 . Sller Sttiiijjs 1 iti liuv 1-oiuhanio no- s.iiif.dil Family 1 :;i0 Melody Five 2 ii" Sunday News Kooiiiiup I Moi M iifeif 2 to Metho-iist H.mr 3 ;oo News CoTiimeiitary 3:05 Slielton Tiio a lt Your New H"lne 3 4."i KeyTmard Intel Itide 4 ,00 Siniilay "'h ell H-nir .(0 Hiincli Tnu ii oo Tomorrow 'i New a Tmight 0 1 V 1'. S. Navy Hand t; .to -Heaven Bound F"iir r. i ., l nsic Styles 7 : it ii liider CinHol I)-inie 7 : 1 .". 1'he Christian Family 7 : iu rjfiin Airs 7 . 4 : linner M iimc (to World of T'iiiorr"v h : 1 - Fiie Tunes a .to Waltz Time S-i.'.-U-Blue Barron Presents t imi Sijfii Off 1400 ON YOUR DIAL ' MONDAY. APRIL 26 I, ltl S It'll I 'M . ,( ii H..WH on the F.iiiii ; mi Town i rirr oil N.-v- Hiirt S..HK Styli-i , Htnni ! Ml 1.,- -Ut-el Itie Hand Ki-inl l';n:e Kditi.ui 0 1 K Ii- - ,.f Hawaii it iU Vlornmtj DeMitmns i, Haywood t'.Kinty Cal tnilar if Kvenls i, ;,, Jne S.dja Trio ll( u Mid -Mornlii Nws I (,..- -To I he Ladies 10 :tu .a. red Heart riogr;tiii ll, 4 Fedt'Ml S.M-ial S.-curity Speaker 11 (ill Cainer Speaker !1 iol.rnny H. iman Quintel II 4.". U.iriial ih l:)Ml World New- R.-imdup j 1 ;, Farm Foruin VroMtiu 1 1 s Clias. M .hhnon V1 K,.,.. r.l Hl.vihii. 1 -Dm eu in Hri-t 1 ,.udv l.ane ! sn ( tush Oft Ite.o- J ) :4.V KiKhty -F.iglit Kej d I .mi- - I line lot 1 ii . -Tt.e snplnsin .ikes ) (ral Vaiie1i. i I Kostcr Fahioin J. 4 ,- I In' F.iur Knights i no -s in tin- Ve ;( ii., SA eet ( orii ;j , s.i !..n st-lfha-le :t ..in - -( .ii,. -i t Hour 4 lill nlhilltf ."ts ( i -f KM-urion- in i i.-in e tn H.i" ""d ('..limy .. , --..itlinht "ii spurts V oi kshop on- - Umid V-tt". Iiiin.ili(i I .fulfill Haitet ;o ' ftepliolie W'lZ i. t . Kid.-i oi Pui.if -!: (; 4.". M iisi.- f-if Hiiiu. 1 f fooCTHBSe AieW6LS5E5ARCV J 1 NO BfrrTCftTHANMVOLDONES-1 I STILL CANT PfiONOUNCE A JS ri oianccuM p V 11 in 11 I.I.H,, ''"k.r, 1,. I liliTIl K'I "l .,1-1. .Ill -On.- M. - iiiiiLii:. -Muilll'- - Mii-i. .1 - T. .in.. 11 -i.j-i nff t (..IllllilTI .li.lihS. Hi IE . .mi. Ui. K.nnritr- II. .l l If a iiR'niber ot a Navajo Indian family ha a ba1 dream, the whole family often will move its home. We Know at RAY'S THAT WUES A MAN OK BOY SLIPS IVTO Munsingvear Underwear lie li.is tlie miil tliiit can be bought in underwear satisfaction . . . :iiul il heranse of the extras built into each garment. . v; U ilf Men's BRIEFS To Size 44 NEW YORK Picture of a form er Police Reporter Scratching His Head: Wonder what ever happened to the delicate, lovely, lonely old lady who hop'ped out a twelfth story window up on 101st Street years ago and got up and walked away . . She d been brooding over the death of her husband, was dis ciuiiMKi'd because of an inability to learn English at her advanced aye and decided to take the dry jump way out when her money started to ebb. She'd come from Europe, had suffered a stretch in a Hitler con centration camp and somehow had managed to get to New York . . . Just when things started looking bright after her years of cruel oppression, they got black over on this side . . . When she climbed out tin- window of her apartment houe. she hadn't taken into con sideration a deep fall of snow, or a hish chicken wire fence in the churchyard which backed up against her apart mrnt house, where kids played hnl all summer , . , She leaped, struck the wire fence, fell into deep snow and got up and walked away, looking for a doc tor. She suffered a cracked hip, and possibly a pelvis injury, but 1 he doctor in the clinic into which she wandered, and where I subsequent ly talked to her through an inter . prefer, said she'd be up on her feet ! in a month or so . . . I've wondered I many times what happened to her, I if she resolved her fears and hundred, maybe a thousand, little mysteries which piled up in the hurly-burly of a New York report er's hysterical workaday world. Then there was a short, red-faced, curly-topped lad named Bobby Stapt. who had run away from home so many times that a juvenile court judge look him into his chambers and had a real Judge Hardy man-lo-man joust with him. . . He turned up a strange insist ence on a seagoing career, and with the best judicial intelligence made arrangements for the boy, well under the entrance age. to attend a Merchant Marine Acad emy. 1 talked to Bobby again a year later . . . He'd been taken into the academy with no extra molly coddling except to ignore his age. . nd from a flighty, untidy, ap- j pareiilh aimless runaway he had j become a natty, amazingly well- j disc iplined and surprisingly ma- j tur and courteous hVyear-old . . .' That judge had performed a mil- 1 acle of judicial insight, straighten ing out a life which easily might have wandered through boxcars and railroad "jungles'' into reform school . . . That was well before the war and Bobby must have become quite a dashing young officer of the wartime merchant fleets . . . I've mused. Waller - Mitty - style, many times over this freckle-faced 'potential skipper of an ocean ship, j. . . I've hoped, loo. that he came jthrtiugh I he fracas intact. But most of the time in these l ij miiiiii j mum ) ,1 1 J ;n Jv'p j til Shirts to 48 troubles, and if she's any better off thoughtful trips back to the myriad today, or whether she tried the ; police blotters of my salad days, I leap again . . . (think of folks like the little Fi'li- She was a sweet, soft-voiced lit- pino girl who picked up a gun in a tie lady of quiet culture and re- 1 home where she was a servant and strained refinement, whose story , accidentally shot herself in the undoubtedly never will have a fin- heart and lived! . . . And of t'hf ale in my memory, just one of a simple, wonderful operation in Jeanette MacDonald and singing starlet Jane Powell as mother and daughter i n MGM's technicolor musical ro mance, "Three Daring Daugh ters," opening at the Strand theatre Sunday, April 25. which the doctor took one single stitch and saved the girl's life . . . The little and the big things, fool ish and wonderful, tragic and happy-ending, just memories. Stanford Jolley Has Died 77 Times In 109 Movies HOLLYWOOD (UP) I. Stan ford Jolley, veteran villain, has died 77 times in 109 movies by 40 i different and ingenious methods, j "Dying comes naturally to me I now," he says. "I have more lives j than a roomful of cats." ! One death Jolley will never for get was that in "The Ape." j "I was standing outside the ape's Icage, smoking a cigar," he said, i "The ape, played by Jim Corrigan, I reached between the ' bars and started to strangle me. In doing so, he jammed my cigar up my rose. "1 couldn't smell anything for a month.'' Jolley, currently the heavy of Columbia's serial "Tex Granger," stopped off one day to see himself at a small town Saturday matinee. "The kids booed me when I came to the screen," he said. "A little later I was killed and the en tire audience stood up and cheered. Sure glad I'm not sensi tive. Diabolical Death The most diabolical device for disposing of Jolley was a Spanish Inquisition stretching machine. He once was tossed down a well, but lived to be dropped down an ele vator shaft. A director and a producer once got into an argument about which of the 40 ways to use to kill him ofT in a western serial. "Finally they asked rne for my opinion." Jolley said. "I said why didn't they let trie get the girl. Then I'd drop dead." Jollev has been trampled to 'death by horses, poisoned, tin-own ; over cliffs, drowned and hanged ! lie's been bitten to death by .logs, 1 bled to death, slabbed, speared and choked. He's been shot in bed, in prison, in a bar, on horse back. 'T in about the deadest man in I lolly wood," he said proudly. "My crowning ambition," he added, "is to die with my boots oil." Sunday Speaker i 'n.i,., r - .... j ''''I'MlS ft,. - I'l-"'. V Vfctt ' "'"'('JlUi '""''tS I f 1-' lun(k prs If .A Ii- M.. t.; ;,M mi ti,i. .(rttp, iM m MMMromiri I)R. ROY H. SHORT, editor of I h, Upper Room, the worlds hi,,m widely circulated devotional maga zine, will be the speaker on ih, Methodist Hour, Sunday im.i inn;', April 25. He will use as his subj, ( I "A Kingdom for Every .Man . Of the record 1947 U. S. wheat crop of 1.3 billions bushels. Kan .. produced more than one-fill h. Now at RA A line of blouses for I lie "little mi' 14 age grouii iiirluciiiit; two little j o'clock iSaDQEDElL V s. V. I 2-Way Stretch Built Into The Shorts. BOYS' SIZES FROM AGE 4 UP STOCK IN THE SECOND FLOOR BOYS' DEPT. And the Boys' Brief is just as superior as the men's. Make It MUNSINGWEAR - Make It RAY'S Dept. Store PARE! THEATRE PROGRAM Thursday - Friday. April 22-23 You Were Meant For Me Starring JEANNE CHAIN and DAN DAILEY Saturday, April 24 Song Of The Drifter Starring JAMES WAKELY Sunday, April 25 Waynesville, N. C. ADMISSION PRICES Children Under 12 9c Adults Federal Tax Included 35c Friday-Saturday. April 23-24 Double Feature ll TM Tk- 1 TT II mae ine rinK norse Starring ROBERT MONTGOMERY and WANDA IIENDRIX Monday, Tuesday, April 26-27 "Call Northside 777" Starring JAMES STEWART and HELEN WALKER Plus Second Big Hit! k'SECOUD GHAMCt 1 1- UIl UTIW- 10BBE KOUIE HUB MH a . j i.. -ni i nw rw 1 IV J SUNDAY. MONDAY. TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 26, 27 i.r..M's TKHNfCOlOB mnsiCt AflCTUH JTH04SOWWYN.MYili; Starting Sunday Theatre Will Open at 8:30 Remainder of Week Opening Hours Same As Usual Gaily tailored with a "school's out" ait'- I' K your pet collar . . d '' a short or lonK sIhm - ' 11 1USUUUD mercerized a' '"' Famous SHIP'n SM" ) !' Watch them wasl, ' Mt,,"ru candy colors. Girl-' - ' j,. Same styles in k-n -"'-' ALSO - CHECKS J Just what she ncds dungarees. See tl.cn- 01 Hott n.i film " 'Ul lb , ,, r 10 j, tl 'ill SI !"ilCYH 'Mi t'l'lKr, i lure, 13 trt '' lei 4"' !' :i fned 'in. mi- filmed l-i i k-iiii H l" itli!n itn Ti.ImI tuja ',i;iju Indm n in-1 I'm i' cast 7C
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 23, 1948, edition 1
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