Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 30, 1948, edition 1 / Page 2
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FRIDAY. tiua THE OLD HOME TOWN "-"; By STANLEY WITNESSED COLOMBIA UPRISING HACK V ' IN.U CHOICE BRIEFS OF HI tMM A. 1-.IPV. to-W if.. I IT TO THE MCSIIcft-J THEYf? COMING CAROLINA NEWS From The Wires of Associated Press and United Press BACKTTOI-rTH'SDUTH klCVT UWCM I Hi.. ., : -tSrSl.. II ' U? TIIE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER 1 ARtiZl MARTHA, WE HAD A CLOSE ( CALL-' ANOTHE SAtOW STORM 1 i AND Web HAP TO BOOSCM A ' A SHOVEL V U 1- -v"V V KI CK Sl'RVIVORS FILE SI TI AGAINST RAILROAD tl.. the survivors of a ii u( k-ti am crash near Henderson Mile last December 24. They are ,'. i!Mii (! ;i- Mrv Annie Mae Hen- WANT "ADS Baby Week Lasts 52 Weeks Per Year - AT RAY'S - r mist font Kcc&J ...TO FIRST STEPS V L - i. V:J in I) UJ r n f -t ryih cLvs until that imyvm.int firt ;ncsa I umti xt B.ibv 1 A-cr Sin ,c i ...M. I iimt'-xvt n p.iUiut'ti "C lakilt 1 - Mrin.ti-n lct lit;U icct cLiJ.llo -In bed ruiur.ilK .nut -in v ltli nut tiht, . i.M ny. In white fc'je I. u:.,. : -.uo 0 ti 4. AY'S Shoe Department SHORTEN THE WAIT, REFRESH THE MAN sley. three relative and member iif her .. niiU, and Melvin Kit u ard-. Five damage Mil's totaling mere Dial, S3U.UHU have been Hied in K H FOR FARMER A ne.ille couit- aralllM the M.ulll- MISSM; 0VFR TWO WFFKS ci n K.iilvt a , lie per.,..: who have brought A )ntenMvt, .arch being conducted h police in North and South Carolina tor a vomit; Cleve land countv tanner who disap peared two ai d a Hall weeks ago Shorn! Until A. 1-og.ii:. .If., oi Shelby snv s that '8-year-old Ray .It nkai- It'll In.- home April S to .: W.uilitiil Muthtis ill iv e t n G i e. in illc S I' and sell !. ,. , ,n1i!iii,. :. l Ins ear The -lienll add- thai . leli- i .. 1 Ueok Ko.m. ever kins was tiatfd to the used car , , .,, l uin .ieni Wavnes- lot without trouble hut that the i Ap: :tu-Ma apparently vanished l ight " "" " A COIOMWA Oil MAGNATE, Jesus Mor (right) t shown with his secre tary Juan Lga. ,s he Eave New York newsmen a first hand account oi the revolt which swept Uie South American country. Mora, who man aged to get out by plane, was in BarranquiUa when the orgy of shooting, burning and looting broke out. He saw mob, put the torch j tc . radk urta Hons, churches and other buildings, he said. (ten.t.onrt) t t here. His wile, a former school teaeh- savs she cannot explain ner least 200 hours of anti-submarine patrol during World War II. disappearance. The Jen- STUDENTS URGE STRONG U. N. ii sevcn-months-old baby. . , .... , , A chartered bus will leave from Greensboro Sunday bound for Washington. On it will be 40 col lege students from North Carolina. They will confer with President Truman to urge that the United Nations be transformed into a with enough husband's kins have HOLD CARNIVAL MAN IN Ml RDLR CASE Hickory police are holding a car nival worker. John P. Cooper, in the death of another carnival worker. W. E. Taylor. Taylor was world government found latallv wounded on the car nival grounds at Lenoir Friday. Cooper was arrested in Whiteville and has been taken to Hickorv pending further investigation. power to prevent war. NATIONAL GUARD CAMP Adjutant General J. Van IV Metis has announced that the STATE DENTISTS RECOMMEND SCHOOL AT UNC The North Carolina Dental So ciety has unanimously recom mended the establishment of a dental school at the University of North Carolina. The dental so- Norih Carolina National Guard ciety took the action Wednesday will hold its first encampment this summer -.nice 1940. Some four tho'isrif! cuard members will go tn encampment between July 11 and .lulv 2V They will train at Fort i'.rig. .in-l at Camp Stewart, night at a meeting in Asheville. The dentists urge that the school provide tor an enrollment of 150 students. The plan calls for the training of at least 50 Negro dental students in a regional school to be established at a suitable location. MOTOR CARRIER CHARGES CO I I' .'0 PERCENT MAY 1 Ar. additional 10 per cent niak- mg 2" .ft- cent in all rate in- i crease i n fi eight hauled by motor i carriers will go into effect May L; Earlier ibis monih motor carriers and shippers agreed to a fiat 10 per cent hike. They agreed that another HI per cent could be charged it the Interstate Com merce Commission granted the, raise for interstate shipments. The ICC boost goes into effect Satur day. RESERVE AIR UNIT AT CHARLOTTE IS APPROVED Approval has been announced of a Navv air installation at Morris , Field. Charlotte, as a secondary unit of the Atlanta Naval Air Sta tion. Lt. Comdr. Scott Blanton says that the volunteer air reserve unit 6-2 is the first of its kind in the nation to be associated with an air station and be assigned planes. From six to ten single-engine I fiehter-trainers. and one twin-en- g'ine plane will he based at Morris Field, expected to arrived in a couple of weeks. UTILITIES COMMISSION SCORES BREVARD SERVICE The State Utilities Coromissian has cracked down' on the "Citizens Telephone company. The com mission says the company's service at Brevard is not up to par and it must be improved. The company has been ordered to submit a prog ress report every 30 days until the commission thinks service is ade : quale at Brevard. TEACHER LOAD IS REDUCED North Carolina school teachers next fall will open classes with at least one step in their battle for better teaching conditions won. The state board of education in Ra I leigh has reduced the teacher load I from 3.1 pupils to 33. ; CHERRY TO ATTEND MEET i Governor Cherry says he will at tend a national conference of gov ernors in June. The three-day af fair will begin June 13th in Ports mouth. N. H. CAP PILOTS DECORATED Seventy-four pilots of the N. C. i Civ il Air Patrol have received air j medals. Decoration ceremoniies i were held this week at Charlotte. The civilian pilots each flew at MORE INDUSTRIAL WORKERS The State Labor department says there were about 5.500 more per sons working in North Carolina industries last month than in Feb ruary. The figure was about 10, 000 higher than the employment figure for March, 1947. The big- AP Newsfeatures If you're looking, for a party idea consider that flower party is a lovely idea for Spring. Girls of the Kappa Deita Theta sorority in Nashville, Tenm., held a rose party recently, and unique decoration carried out the rose theme. Doors were decorated with greens and caught among these were roses. The mantle held a large bouquet of the same flower, Roses may not be Blooming in your backyard yet, but other flow ers can be used instead. The girls can wear corsages of whatever your ' flower for tonight" happens to be, the boys can wear one in their lapels. A flower party makes a lovely setting no matter what the occasion is for your party. Now that Denver school boys and girls have popularized the "steady date" sweater (girl and boy chums wear matching sweaters to indicate their crush on each other) there is talk that girls will wear argyle socks to match their dates' foot gear. Gwen Packard of Clarksburg, W, Va. has a suggestion for teen age girls. Gwen says that if they will take advantage of outdoor (exercise walking, tennis or vol ley ball they won't need to resort to girdles to keep their hips down. If kids who like gooey sundaes and eight-layer sandwich snacks keep exreising, they will stay trim in spite of bending their elbows at the snack bar. The "new look" has been around a long time though not as long and matronly as first expected bxt short skirt crusaders are still trying. Penny Edwards, Hollywood movie star, formed a "short skirt ers club". She says: "American wo men have good reasons two to each girl for preferring short skirts. And no man has yet been found who really is in tuvor of the calf-covering longer skirts. Let's please ourselves and our boy friends. Not the skirt manufactur ers who are plotting to destroy our wardrobes." In five New York high schools a survey was made by Junior Achievement workers recently to determine how many kids who at- ftend school are fairly independent. Of a student body of 12,759 boys, 879 were interviewed and it was found that 95 percent have an in come, through either employment or allowance. The average amount each gets per week is $10.31. The majority buy their own shirts, ties, shoes, pants, overcoats, sweaters, socks and sporting goods. Maybe kids who are willing to work for their education will make better use of it than those who keep plug ging away merely to please their families. A new billfold making a hit with teen aeers has a change nurse on the outside so that" they can board buses, shop or buy sodas without fumbling for coins, ft has onen windows for pictures and the win dows can be added to, or subtract ed from, by pulling out a pin. Some of the kids write their these with a flxitive they buy in a hobby shop; Then they sprinkle soarkle dtlst over the name let dry and wipe off the excess. CHBB-CHEErP-CHEET ' I m..ww. wtit twf iitrim -mimm rm wwm . ' -"' turf. Ik. I at I,,-, ,. 'Hi ; 'kH"'' Mt!vB r '"" '--uipi'a .1 flltMf.l 1 ;'"kine ..i-j , -..ti. N spect. Mary, who has been asso ciated with Dick Stabile, Bob Ches ter, Russ Morgan, Joe Venutl, Louis Armstrong, Coleman Haw kins, and Dizzy Gillespie, says the boys with saxes listen first and look second. Along with Mary Lou WllliamSi' Margie Hyams, Beryl Booker, Viv ien Garry and others, Mary ap pears in the new record album. "Girls in Jazz" (RCA Victor). These girls have managed to wedge a spearhead into the hither to exclusive male hot music world. Many A Slip . . . Fortunately for the sub-deb set, petticoats with ruffles are in style. Kids wboa slips- aro toe short to wea with.Ufft "new look" dresses are addlnr, mfflea to. the bottom of slip A white slip can take two or three row of plaid or black raffles. Large borders of laee era be sewed around the bottom. Insertions ..also can be made at- the waist to lengthen Up. 4 flfj You Can .Too . . . Evangeline Boenig, loi. of Braekenridge high school, San Antonio, Tex., has a record- in 4-H- club activities that would be .hard to beat. A few months aga-Eangellne won an all expense paid5-day trip to the 4-H Club-ingress' held in Chicago, Polr n - Announc NR REFUEL d candidate (w , tiepresentativN the Dtmwrjii, tf "uy I'D. y. influence will J Giok RATS SALE Of Men's Every Skirt lit The Store Included In Dress and Sport Iji Beginning Today and Continuing Through May! 'SstS ' (L-a Hi II )i I s u Aikfar it either way . . . loth trade-marks mean the Jame thing. sorruo uno AUTMowrr Of the coca-cou compaky iy COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.jpFASHEVlUJE.:N..C.j O Th Cm-Cola Cuitiiy For Immediate Delivery Norge DeLuxe Refrigerators Norge DeLuxe Electric Ranges Norge DeLuxe Gas Ranges Norge Home Freezers Norge Washing Machines Norge Electric Water Heaters Hot Point Electric Water Heaters Bendix Automatic Washers Apartment Size Electric Ranges "SeeNorge Before You Buy" Sogers Electric Phone 461 Main Street ;Qompl( comes IMtllKMJ, VkililK . ?Wb share bt stu dent disyhese days. A re cent poll, conducted by a magazine (Scholastic) showed that 65 per cent of high school boys and 62 per cent -of. the girls are in favor of compulsory military training for boys between the ages of 16 and 21. This is a marked increase over the 1943 poll when less than 39 per cent of the students polled were in'favor of' compulsory mili tary training. Girls wrfo have been considering the music world as a career may take a few tips from Mary Osborne, talented guitarist and one of the prettiest girl musicians in the busi ness. Mary gays it is strictly tal ent that counts and a girl shouldn't expect to. get by on her looks alone. There's really no battle of the sexes in the music world and if a -girl ventures into the jazz field prepared with a good musical background, she-has reached musi cal maturity? that even the most proficient malt musicians- will re- gest increase was in the lumber industry. NEW DEAN SECURED FOR WINOATB COLLBGE Wingste junior. College will have a new academic dean on June 1. The Rev. Ai C, Lovelace of Black Mountain. ha been. elected to suc ceed Mrs, SazniH; Gaddy in the of fice Lovelace at one time served as president) Aft foiling. Springs, col lege, . which is- how Gardnep-Webb college. He also waa a professor, of English at Coker college in Harts. vtlle; S. C.,. and. assistant profes sor of education at High Point col. lege. .i JXr V - A.-" u . A ' pf rm I llite fel Wfym f ff i t .Sri I A v-- I Found At REatlT.AR SPECk $2.89 Shirts yours at SJ $2.95 Shirts yours at 5 jj $3.19 Shirts yours at Jjj $3.50 Shirts yours dSJ $3.95 Shirts yours at$3 $4.19 Shirts yours atJj $4,50 Shirta... yours aty FEATURING WINGS- E & W And QUADR Our styles and patterns are tho latest'-Our siovk i t vt, l,sle . . . White shirts are included In-the offering. Your Opportunity to Buy The Best In RAY'S Dept. Si -This Is AiKittier bt (hit Department I'r0"1
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 30, 1948, edition 1
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