Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 18, 1948, edition 1 / Page 15
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
A:. The Waynesville Mountaineer THIED SECTION 18, fOne of These Be 'First Lady9 for Next Four Years i 1 . ii. said t li1' let 0f In dent . ii"' ie most imper- Imbents of Hit' Lid health ami Use of humor fcpboots of the daughter. Mai - herself . in the second to tan led Bess le from school tried .Hi no 28, was horn six fciil) has lived r five gciiera Wv there calls lies the rounds lie hairdresser, market, with- &m Will Public Siianailer ol t Mr Main Si reel , lias has volunteer Mit and 1-ady Ai he "ill give it thai ) rsii lis plants c;i for - s V , MRS. THOMAS E. DEWEY The closest Mrs. Dewey gets to politics is to sit next to her hus band at Republican banquets . . . She was in thne chorus of George While's Scandals during the 20 s mi made a nationw ide theater tour . At 45 she is still goodlooking with her brown coillure streaked with silver. The governor's lady was born Frances Hutt in Sherman, Texas She was raised in Sapulpa, Okla. . . . Her father was a- rail road conductor . . . Her nioUfer comes from a long line of Metho dist and Baptist ministers. Dewey met her in Chicago in 1923 where she was a secretary and studying music . . . Married in 1928, they have two sons, 13 and 16 Newsmen say she is hard to interview. Seems It Takes More Than A Court Order HOUSTON, Tex. UP Judge John Snell, Jr., listened to a cou ple air their domestic troubles for a half hour, then ordered the hus band to kiss his wife in the court room and make up. The husband was willing but not the wife. "I don't want to," she said, walking from the courtroom. She was followed by her hus- f V -i s X r- 3k 1 m MRS. DOUGLAS MacARTHUR Mrs .lean Marie Faircloth Mac Ailluir. alter 11 ears of marriage to the famous general, never has been interviewed . . . she is a daughter of a Murfreesboro, Tenn , banker-business man. On a trip to the Orient in the 1930 s Miss Faircloth met Mrs. Ar thur MacArthur, the general's mother, who introduced her to the general. She was born in Nashville, went Id Soule College and the 'VVard lielmonl school . . . Her most no table friend is Mis. Charles A. Lindbergh . . . She became the second wife of Gen. MacArthur in the Municipal Building of New York City in 1937 . . . She remained with her husband during the siege of Corregidor and went with him to Australia in a speedboat and plane. Free Skin Bank Started For Grafting Purposes ALBUQUERQUE, N. Mex. (UP) Albuquerque has a "skin bank." University of New Mexico stu dents offered skin for a grafting operation when an 11-year-old girl band, who said he couldn't under stand how she could get away with not obeying court orders. V4; ' :.! ft ? 1 P MRS. HAROLD E. STASSEN Mrs. Stassen was a childhood friend of her husband . . . Before their marriage in 1929 she was a law secretary . . ,She helped Stas sen open his first law office . . . Her maiden name was Esther Glewwe . . . her parents were na tives of Alsace-Lorraine. She rarely makes campaign trips . . . Her stand is a brick house on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River . . . The Stassens have two children, Glenn, 12, and Kathleen, 6 . . . Mrs. Stassen belongs to the League of Women Voters and is on the board of St. Paul's Children's Hospital Association. After the San Francisco confer ence she made speeches about the United Nations to St. Paul civic groups . . . She says her husband asks her advice "but doesn't al ways take it." was badly burned. The skin was not needed in that case, but it led to setting up a "bank" for future emergencies. The skin bank consists of the names of persons willing to donate skin for graftings. In feed value for livestock, 100 pounds of potatoes equals 100 pounds of corn silage, 22 pounds of shelled corn or 35 pounds of alfalfa hay. . J v 4 . s -6- J r h MRS. ROBERT A. TAFT Mrs Talt talks niore about her husband than has Ihe wile of any other candidate in history . . . She is trained in politics, has strong opinions, a sense of humor and an uninhibited platform personality. . . . As Martha Whoaton Bowers of Winona. Minn., she went to a fash ionable girls' school in Connecti cut and the Snrhnnnc in Paris. Martha met Bob Tall at a school (Continued on page two) OUR 16TII SEASON IN WAYNESVILLE .A QJW . U -V ft. ft. Jt V'lr; SHOWING 50 PER CENT MORE STOCK THAN EVER MRS. ARTHUR H. VANDENBERG ! Before her marriage to Arthur Vandenberg, Hazel Whilaker was an advertising woman in Detroit She had been on the staff of the Chicago Tribune, a social worker and had taught school in Saginaw,! Mich. . . , She is the senator's sec ond wife and stepmother of his three children. j They married when Vandenberg was a newspaper publisher in (Continued on page Iwo) MRS. EARL WARREN Mrs. Warren was brought to the I S Horn Sweden when she was eiKhl months old . . Her falher was a Baptist minister . . . She was a widow with a little boy, Jim rn. when she married Warren in 192T while he was district atlor ney . . Her name had been Mrs. Nina I'almqtiisl Meyers. "We had live children in six years." she once said "You don't elo much cnlertainnig then -except i Cunt inued on page Iwo) MRS. HENRY A. WALLACE Mrs. Wallace officiated at the White House when her husband was vice president, Ho Browne Wallace occasionally would pinch hit for Mrs. Roosevelt , . . She was once chosen the "best dressed wo man in public life" . . . She is, however, primarily a homebody. Mrs. Wallace Is a native of In dianola, Iowa . . . The Wallaces romance began when Ilo was study ing voice at Drake University and (Continued on page two) Make Dad the Picture of Contentment Imperial Burns Washable Rayon Sporishirt ' 'y- . This"cooircorrntaWe7u luxury-rayon sport shirt was styled by McGregor America's top sportswear stylists. Dad will wear it all summer long with or without a tie to office and resort. To make Dad the picture of contentment, come in today for the Imperial Burns by McGregor the perfect gift for father Long Sleeve From $3,95 Short Sleeve From $3.95 long or Short SUtvts ' Coof Summer Color Vat-Dyd Coor-Foff ' Vo'rotel Shrunk innr WAYNESVILLE, N. C. 'I iV,
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 18, 1948, edition 1
15
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75