Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 23, 1948, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE WAYNESfffiLE MOUNTAINEES Transactions In Real Estate Waynesville Township Federal Land Bank, to J. Newton Brendle and wife. Varnel Swanger and wife to John L. Giles and wife. R. V. Welch and wife to Elzy Caldwell and wife. Lake Junaluska Assembly. Inc , to Rev. W. M. Seymour and wife. Elmer T. Clark and wife to Wil liam N. Thomas and wife. Robert Gillett and wife to Mar tin Vaughn Bramlett and wife. Evelyn Clark to Pearl Nelson. Roy J Chady and wife to Sara Harrell Johnson and Pauline Har rell. J. Newton Brendle and wife to James E. Smith and wife. H. M. Allen and wife to H. M Allen, Jr. George H. Ward and wife to Elaine J. M. Hudson Julian Rathe and wife to R. L. Prevost, Sr. C. H. Scruggs and wife to Jack Felmet and wife Rufus Siler and wife to C H. Scruggs and wife. Beaverdam Township Virge McClure and wife to Ralph E. Gibson and wife Ralph E Gibson and wife to F. A. Gibson and wife Harley V. Mann, Jr. and wife to Cora Saunders. L. C McDowell and wife to J. M. Rhine!. ait and wife VXgtoH Township George W. Cat hey and wife to Clarence Cathey. Marie C. Taylor and husband to W. R. Rhinehart and wife. Lawrence Chambers and wife to R. O. Chambers and wife. Ollle Laymon to M. C. Nix and wife. East Fork Township J. Marvin Pless and wife to Mrs Hattie C. Burnette. J Marvin Pless and wife to T Medford Pressley and wife. Nancy C. Reed and husband, et als to Bert Cagle and wife. J. Marvin Pless and wife to Bert Cagle and wife. UNBALANCED CARGO DIPS SHIP A Jonathan Township J. S. Harrell and wife to Douglas C. Davis and wife. Ivy H1H TonTiship Charles Underwood and wife to Alfred T. Green and wife. Clyde Township Mattie Hipps to Arthur Robin son. Bon-A-Venture, Inc., to Mrs. Fannie Morgan. In the Los Angeles area, there are publle booths where anybody can get his blood pressure reading for 25 cents. r BP if THE CREEK FREIGHTER MaHafcoi Ilea with a dangeroui list In Upper New York Bay after her cargo of coal shifted and almost caused, her to cap size. A lighter and a tu( later helped reload the cargi and the chip righteo. The captain and the crew were taken oil. (International) Vilson Beauty SALON NOW OPEN East Waynesville. Next Door to Owen Grocery As an opening offer every tenth permanent given in our shop will be free and name of lucky ones printed in the paper. You may be one of those lucky customers. Try our deep curl machine permanent wave also stand ard cold waves and machineless waves individually styled, deep curl setting. "Specializing in Hair Styling and the New Carved Curl Cut" Lula Belle Wilson - Sammy Wilson Operators PARK THEATRE PROGRAM II Friday, July 23 Give My Regards to Broadway' In Color it :!'! Starring DAN DALEY Saturday, July 24 DOUBLE FEATURE "The Last Roundup Starring GENE AUTRY His Latest and Best "Bury Me Dead" Starring MARK DANIELS and JUNE LOCKHAHT Late Show "The Challenge" Starring TOM CONWAY and JUNE VINCENT 11 Sunday, July 25 "Always Together" Starring JOYCE REYNOLDS and BOB HUTTON Monday-Tuesday, July 26-27 "Duel In The Sun" ;' 1 In Color Brought Back at Popular Prices So That All Can See It AP Newsfeatures ANYBODY can be popular! So say teen-agers Martha Ann Kenley and Earl Cunningham of Memphis, Tenn., and they really oiiRht to know In New York to appear oil Dick Jiugt-ns radio program, as the re sult of winning popularity con tests in their respective teen-age carileens, h Mart ha and Earl had something to say on the popu larity subject. Football, basketball and track "bring a fellow out." Earl says, and make him popular with both boys and girls. After Earl en gaged in athletics he was much more popular than before, he says. Martha think girls should join I high sc hool clubs or sororities; j be smart about their grooming and work in teen-age canteens to he j popular. She adds: I "Canteens really have been I hraven-sent for the boys and j girls. It does your heart (rood j to see the youngsters dancing, singing and engaging in good, I clean fun as they do at our , Dixieland canteen. We all take turns behind the coke bar which helps make the eanteen pay." There are f canteens in Mem phis. Martha says her Dixieland canteen i- the largest and once a year all the cantepns gpt to gether and have a "Coke Ball" vhirh thty hold at Dixieland. f Martha and Earl, the first two teen-agers to appear on Dick's show which will feature two teeners each week, visited the ice show, the Empire State Build ing, did soiiH' roof garden danc ing and saw a- few baseball games. Martha, who plans to study music in the fall ,is a real baseball Ian Ont of the Music Box , . . Spike Jones' "I Kiss Your Hand Madame." Frankie Carle's "That Five O'clock Feeling," Louis Prima's "The Sad Cowboy," Beryl Davis' "Don't Blame Mr" Sammy Kaye's "Ain't Doln' Bad Do in' Nolhin'," Jo Stafford's "This is the Moment,' Arthur Godfrey's "Turkish Delight." Tummy Tuck er's "Let Her Go," Roy AeufT's "The World Can't Stand Long." Bing Crosby's "Volume II of Crosby Classics." Buddy Clarke's "Where Flamingos Fly." All Tied Vb . ". . Von can be pretty and cute now while wearing- curlers! You don't have to hide when your best bean comes arallln' unexpectedly. Just put your hair up in some of the new pastel ribbon curlers. If some one catches you in thh rig-, youH look very fashionable Indeed. These new pretty curlers make it possible to wear your hair up while on the beach or enjoy ing your dinner. A Star Rises . . . Sports writers predict that Lab Mathias, 17-year-old Tulare, Calif., ' high srhoi ' siar who became the na.ional A.A.U. decathlon cham pion recently, will be one of the greatest athletes of all time. He will head the U. S. Olympic team of three all-around athletes in London this summer; rolled up 7,224 points in the' 110 meter hurdles, discus, javflin, pole vault, 1500 meter run to make the grade. NEW YORK Two of our lead ing Irish crooners are at the feud ing stage . . . Two of our leading producers threaten to knock the other's block ulT . . . Backstage at one of the town's leading hits, the leading lady and her leading man ain't talking . . . Half a dozen of our luney saioonKeepers euuer won't enter their rivals' clubs or are barred . . . Which is a lot of venom for these hot days. First reports from the summer theaters indicate a bonania season' . There's a move on to put the life of Comic Bobby Clark into a musical comedy for the Fall, based on a recent New Yorker mag pro file . . . But Bobby can't play in- it, having been previously eommit- ed to Mike Todd for a tune show with a cute twist to its story . . . Watch for one of the biggest musi cals to fold before Fall, losing a barrel of dough. Of 20 productions on the boards as ot this scribbling, uniucny la may be the number to shutter, leav ing Broadway with fewer legit items than any Summer in a de cade . . . Rube Bernstein, a Broad way sage, made a bet a year ago that "Annie Get Your Gun" would outlast both "Brigadoon" and "Fin ian's Rainbow" on Broadway . . . "Annie" might even last another year ... It made more money in Its second season on Broadway than any new musical running in competition! "Howdy. Mr. Ice," at the Center Theater, won better reviews than any of its gliding predecessors and is the newest Broadway hit . . . Freddie Trenkler Is wearing a gar land of fancy notices for his comic antics . . . And Eileen Selgh, a, sprite who learned her stuff on her native Brooklyn fiords, was pro nounced a possible contender for La Heme's skating glamor emin ence. Lou Walters isn't making his cafe rivals any happier during! these dog days by offering Abbott and Costcllo $15,000 a week to play his Latin Quarter . . . John Alex ander, now of "Born Yesterday," will turn producer in the Fall if he can find a good script ... I know a bundled others who will do the same . . . Good scripts are scarcer than the traditional lady-chickens' teeth . . . Eddie Cantor stopping traffic in the Waldorf lobby while gawkers entirely ignore another famous gent, our only living ex president, Herbert Hoover. Hofed Speakers Heard On Lake Missionary Program I Lake Junaluska On the week-end schedule of Lake Junaluska are a series of mis sionary programs featuring sped-1 . rci.J.-l-ers prominent in the mission field j DqUY SClieaUie both at pome ana aoroaa t week's programs are held in con junction with the School of Mis sions and Christian Service in ses sion July 20-28. Miss Dorothy McConnell. Editor Friday, July 238 p.m. Address: Miss Dorothy McConnell. Saturday, July 248 p.m. Movies: Beyond Our Own". rmv 1!5 ll:00 a.m. of the World Outlook, the official I fhurch service. Dr. C. W. Ramson. 8 p.m. Church service, ui. ju Ad- misslonarv paper of the Board of Missions and Church Extension of j KeI gUSOn the Methodist Church, will be the Monday, July principal speaker at Friday night s ,jless: Mi s service, and Dr. C. W. Hanson, Sec retary of the International Mis sionary Council from Ireland will speak Sunday morning. Miss McConnell who will speak on the subject "Employed Women and the Church." began her church work at the Church of All Nations on the lower East Side of New 68 p.m. Paul Garber. 'Dream Girl' Shows at Strand York City. Later she went into editorial work in which capacity she has traveled extensively in for eign fields, including Europe. North Africa, India, the Orient. South America, Mexico, and the Carib bean. Dr. John Ferguson, pastor of Bel- Dream Girl." a convulsing stage play which Paramount converted to the screen, will open at the Strand on August 1st. The play was written by Prize winning Elmer Rice and stacked up 347 performances on Broadway and 011 the road. It played to packed auditoriums from coast to coast for 21 weeks. It will be a new role for Betty iiniinn 1 lie blonde tigress who Revival Starts At Maggie Church The annual revival is und.ru a at the Maggie Methodist church with the pastor. Rev. J. E. IV Huu er, bringing the messages. The theme of the sermon for Hi. 10 o'clock service will be "Wheii to Remember God". The sermoi, subject for the 8 o'clock service will be "Asking Is The Law ui God's Kingdom". "Living the Golden Rule" w,:i be the theme of the message n Maple Grove at 11 o'clock. A guest speaker will be in charge of the services at Dellwood at 1 1 o'clock on Sunday morning. I':.ji,.I , t- r ... - Jill n .. r'. -tri..-.. it., 1 air , , 1 i-uiPiy,! -MAW5IA0I (J Nble Wan (; -'1 16 fcdt The country has between 3 ,000 ( J1 1 A Ann Alvn llrD, -lr. , r. HUU l.uuu uim. juvncja, YlllUSt in- niil.ji, L,. j I g (OS o rrtr, 1 'Ulllttg ftfl comes lauge nuin iu j auu a 'o and H ui ifl sJiiriiiaa X y m'ont Methodist Church, Nashville, : ,w,. iamied comedy roles before Tenn., will be the speaker Sunday evening. Dr. Ferguson was at' one time associated with the General Board of Missions and is one of the outstanding ministers in the Ten nessee Conference. Other features of the program of the Mission School include movies "Beyond Our Own," which will be shown Saturday night in the audi torium and an address Monday at 8 p.m.. by Mrs. Paul Garber. of the Geneva, Switzerland area. The daily schedule of the Mis sion School in addition to the eve ning programs includes classes, workshops, planned conferences, and vesper services. The School is an annual event 011 the Lake Juna luska Calendar and Is under the auspices of the Woman's Society of Christian Service of the Southeast- 1 ern Jurisdiction of the Methodist Church. Bishop Fred H. Corson of the Philadelphia area spoke Tuesda;, night and each morning during ibis week on the general theme of the relationship of the world to the church. He spoke to one of the largest crowds of the season Tues day night. "There is more opportunity for Christian service in the world to day than ever before in its I11--tary," he said. This time Miss llutton win poiira an idealistic society beauty, whose naive notions about love and life get her into some merry mix-ups. Macdonald Carey, handsome ex Marine, will play opposite Miss llutton in his first starling role. Gold Still the McCoy In Deadwood Gulch DEADWOOD. S. Dak. Since the days of '76 when Wild Hill Hic kok gave his spare gold nuggets to Calamity Jane, the men of this mining town have rewarded their women with gold. In their "clean-up, paint-up" 1 campaign mis yeai, '" ; Deadwood Gulch made the lowly ! kitchen broom their symbol of af- lection and ordered some solid gold brooms made up to give to their women. The brooms, designed as size able lapel pins, were given femi nine members of the committees which did the best job during the campaign. WAYNESVILLE, X. (. Cont. Shows Mon. Thru Fri. 3 p. m. Till It p. m. Sat. Cont. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sl'ND.W siims i ju TODAY AND SATURDAY. Jl .V 23 BIG DOUBLE FEATURE BUSTER CRABHK in OUTLAW OF THE PLAINS i'ih fin y ill' IMIN.uq in ' I'l KM) VI.ITlj 1 K11 Sirijl anj VISITING FIREMEN LEARN nilRKBUHNETT, Tex. 1HP1 Delegates to the West Firemen's Association convention here got a practical demonstration of how it's done The Hurhburnett volunteer "The Church is confronted with re department put the fire out as 130 visiting firemen looked on and cheered. a world of appalling scarcities a scarcity of food, medicine, edu cational facilities, and moral con victions." With particular emphasis on this last point he declared that we would not have been in the two world wars if the foundations of our moral convictions had not be gun to rot away. "The great prob lem of this hour is the problem of religious supply to our people." "This is a world of uncertain horizons," Bishop Corson con tinued. "We are living at the dawn of a new day, but there is thunder as well as dawn on that horizon." He concluded with a challenge to those persons interested in the mis sionary movement to see possibili ties in the desolation of the world to make it a world where a new .heaven and a new earth dominate. One of the outstanding church men and educators of Methodism. Bishop Corson is the author of at least seven books and is the con tributor of religious and education- ai arucies 10 magazines. The open-hearth furnace for making steel was invented by Wil liam and Frederich Siemens in England in 1856. NO SALE IS RIGHT FORT WORTH. Tex. lUI'i Two men held up a service station at tendant here and escaped with $89 after ringing up a "no sale" on the cash register. IT'S HERE! STARTS Sl'ND.W for :t mi; I1AVS Sunday Monday Tuesday Jiih "STATE OF THE UNION' SPENCER TRACY Willi ami KATHARINE Ml WEDNESDAY and Till RSflVV, JUV JAMES MASON ami KOBF.UT NFWTj "ODD MAN OUT" THESE BRAND NKW HITS COMB "DREAM GIKI," with Briu Hull ru All Kl 4MI1 WITH VOI'" with fill"" 1 LAFF-A-DAY GOODBYE CAR ROCHESTER, N. H. (UP) Fined $73 In municipal court for drivine an unregistered automobile, Ray mond Beauiieu sold his car to raise money to pay the line. "Believe me; dear, I'warut-nuty with the other driver) ' tryou wotild hav frtgLy MASSIE'S DEPT. STORE Ready-to-Wear Reduc for ran If DM e Dresses 6& Coals STOCKS INCLUDE MAKES BY Justin McCarthy Kay Dunhill Stvlart Georgiana Mayflower Four Star Lampl WeMover Doris I (orison Jonathan Logan Summer Shoes REDUCED SOME STYLES T.pcc Than Half Price DEPABTltf ST(P Belter Brands Mean Better Buys
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 23, 1948, edition 1
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