Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 12, 1948, edition 1 / Page 3
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UCTOBEK 12, 1948 " Engages I Local Church Sets Visual Institute Meet Wednesday THE WAYNESV1LLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE i cuvers , , ('!., -i Joe i r .it til Mr. MOIJK IU)l r Hunting Season a 1 e-.ville. .,.r Squad ,i force l uiiihine v.v.d Air Ala. , i .irK f n W ii in- unit i, i,l being Wr.il her I t I'lc. , , . .!.; the .mi Navy 1 1 if per- A meeting of particular interest to all Sunday School workers will bt held at the U'aynesville l'res byterian C'huri ti Wednesday nighi following the Laymen's Supper ineeting at 7 00 o'clock. j The meeting will.be under the j direction of the Kev. Jame M Carr, Regional Director of Heli gious Education for the Synod of jAppalachia. Sunday School officers ' and teachers and pastors from a I number of neaiby churches in the Presbytery of Asheville have been invited to the meeting. A number of film-strips will he shown as well as a sound film Of such is-the Kinpdom ". The meeting will be held in the Church auditorium ami will begin about 7:30. All intererled members oi me Lnurcn congregation a-, we as those of other churches are in vited to come. '''ontinued lrom Highway 1-9-23 S. One I Hav- the MORE ABOUT Sidelights Of The News (Continued from Page One) much speculation, whether if he' I President, the people of South Car olina will refuse to recognize their I relatives in North Carolina, and things like that. But, us some may know, the Carolina candidate is just a brash young man. of r wood Wild boar - October 15 to Janu ary 1; bag limit 1, season bag limit t Opi-ssuin and raccoon - October IS to February 15; with dog ard gun, no limit Squirrel October 15 to January 10. day bag limit 8. Season bag limit 100 This applies to all except led squirrel or boomer. The official abstract of game laws recently published list following as illegal: To hunt migratory wildfowl, up hold game birds, squirrel and rab hits wilh an auto-loading or repeat. jing shelf on capable of holding more than throe shells in the i ham- oec aim magaine combined unless iich nuns have the magazine plug ged to reduce the total capacity of the gun to three shells. Five-shell guns are permitted in hunting deei and hear. Shotguns larger than 10 gauge aie not permitted. To kill doe deer Minimum pen alty, $50. To shoot at deer in water of depth above its knees. To run deer with dogs during the closed season. To hunt deer at night with arti ficial light. Minimum penalty, $100. To sell or buy name birds taken in the field Minimum penalty, $50 or 30 days imprisonment. To bait upland game birds or migratory wildfowl. I o shoot from or across way or public road To cut down den trees in taking game or fur-bearing animals. To take hen turkeys. All persons must be at least 1(3 years of age to hunt in wildlife management areas in National For csts. Any person acting for lure as a hunting guide and receiving com pensation as such, is required to ob tain a guide's license in additon to his hunting, or trapping license. All guides are responsible for the be havior of their parties and are li able for cancellation of license and conviction for v iolators of the law. Brake Co. Holds Experiments Here The brake block division of the American Brake Shoe company of Detroit are experimenting in the Western part of North Carolina with different types of brake mech anism!!. The brake company is seeking a suitable combination for trucks, buses and automobiles for moun tain travel. A representative of the company said the experiment will continue tor approximately three weeks. GUY BEARD GETS PROMOTION WITH WESTERN ELECTRIC J. i;. "Guy" Beard has been pro moted to senior engineer, supervis ing all air force engineers in the field, for Western Electric Com pany. His headquarters will be in New York but his territory covers the entire field for the Western Klectric Company. Guy is well known in Waynes ville where he formerly resided, and was employed by the Martin Klectric Company while here. DEATHS high- game EYS m .-, ; i . ',:;, in kidney ii . . j rjitke yoa ifiU : r Lt-.idren m L j, i fvu, inder ta i Mom: lira iIP$ FOR HELPFUL " COURTESY 1 a . Come to Curtis for helpful i J 1 1 f courtesy and efficient serv- fil'Lvt) ico' ()ur i,,uu'mac's,s t;,k I JU I pains to see that you are I pleased and happy with the I 5 I purchases you make here. OV ' PRESCRIPTIONS J INT JWlNSl I x I Home Owned and Operated mums I w w tmm m mw i j DRUG STORE I lj I I Your Walfjreen ARencr j Sttf I fi , IjUPP 11 Mil IOl 1 At J I I I i ii 11 I 11 JW :tlmeyu'" I I WAYNESVil.I.K. N. C. ' I ra lur youf j CONTINUOUS SHOWS I I , ,.,,., I I MS -'Ve, IJ Monday Thru Friday U SUNDAY SHOWS I .f"t! Serve fj I 3:00 p. m. Cont. Showing ,. ...... Q-ft., i jP wi I sa- Fr" i,:0 m-' n i h Ij I ' 11 m" ' I J, 'timped j - 1 cfQuihry.1 l TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY, October 12-13 ocam.. r trv--s. rREX Harrison - peggy cdmmins' 'nJJcliate Tfl Tfif ' JpN - COMEDY NEWS IOfings" I THUS. - FRJ. OCT 14 15TH ! Cream is I 1 I With Bl'RGESS MEREDITH gr i SAT., OCT. 16TH (One Day Only) i DOUBLE FEATURE Jr-l-vrtK PLl'S HIT No. 2 Fresh Water Tapped On Sea Bottom Ol.YMI'l.V Wash.' ll'I'l-Workmen li iving eonciete pilings lit the I'nit oi Olympia are drinking pure w.iler. piped directly from the hot tinii ii" the h;iy. The (id-ton piles have a pipe down the center through which water is sluiced to cut away mud at the lioltom. One piling was set in place and a few days later was found to have pure water flowing out at the top of the pipe. The uoikmen decided they must hav e Mi tick an artesian well They aie keepiim the pipe open and help ing themselves to the wafer. SPEECH DEFECTS TABULATED WICHITA. Kan. illl'i If the 4,0110,000 speech-handicapped Am ericans were concentrated in one area, it would have a larger popu lation than Montana. Idaho, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona rniii- hined. according to a study made here h the Institute o." l.ogo- pedics The study pointed out that of the :U)00.000 hahies who on ttie basis of the estimated birth rate will In born during 1H4B, appro! mutely 180,000, or live per cent will have speech defects. JACK l MAY ! Funeral services for Jack Krank j tin May, SO. for L'7 years an em ploye of tfie ( hampion Paper and Fibre Company, who died Friday morning of a heart attack at the plant, were held Saturday at the Wells Funeral llor'ue chapel in Canton. The Rev. C. W. Kirov, pastor of the Central Methodist Church of ficiated and burial was in llon-A-Venture cemetery. Members of the "Old Timers' Club" of the plant served as pall bearers: Paul Robinson, Frank Smathers. Clyde Hlythe. Joyce Owen. Floyd Webster. W. S. Price. T. L. Jamison, ami W. W. Mitch chell. Mr. May. pipe eoverer. was changing his clothes preparatory to beginning work when he suffered the attuck. A native of Greenville, S. C, he was a 32nd degree Mason, being a member of Pigeon River lodge No 386, Canton. He was a member of Champion's Old Timers club whose membership is limited lo employes with 25 years or more with the company. Surviving are the widow; three children. Miss Linda May of Green ville; Jack Jr.. of Winston-Salem, and Harry, serving with the Marino corps at Pearl Harbor. Hawaii; the mother, Mrs. F. K May of Colum bia. S. C, and one sister. Mrs. John j Bunch of Columbia. Burping Lake Erie Stumps Engineers CLEVELAND UP For the want of a better solid ion, city on gineers have decided Lake Erie will just have to go on burping un til it gets tired and slops. It started when drillers poked into Hie lake () feet off shore here to sink test holes before erecting a steel bulkhead. Gas bubbled up. Then it stopped. Then it staited again with a burst that threw water and little chunks of clay all over. Then it settled down to a slow, periodic patler of burps. RO.MHED CONSTAI1LE ESCAPES HYDERABAD CITY lU.I'l - Residents of nearby Kulali claim thafono of their police constables is the luckiest man in the village As he lay asleep on the village railroad platform, he was struck by a one-pound dynamited filled bomb which someone hurled from a passing train. The bumh did not explode. The History Of Burley In This Area Ky W. W. BERNARD Greeneville. Tenn. The following is a record of the pounds and average price paid for the 1920 to 1926 crops inclusive: Oops Of 1920 (3 Markets) Abingdon. 1.325.430 pounds; av erage $12.35. Greeneville, 7,884,321) pounds; average $13 31. Johnson City. 1.469.21)4 pounds average of 17 cents per pound The following year's crop i19I7i con sisted of more than 3.000.000 pounds that sold at a still higher j average. An increased planting of acreage resulted. .The 1918 crop total was 7.236.769 pounds. That year the Johnson City market open ed and sold 1.480.050 pounds at an I average of $32.20, while Hie 1 Greeneville sales totaled 5,756,719 that brought an average of $35.87 per 100 pounds. The total sales of both the Greeneville and Johnson City mar kets for the 1919 crop were 9.675. 014 pounds wilh an average of $40. Growers w ho marketed I heir crop the first of the sale season averaged $80 to $100 per 100 but later in the season there was a drastic price de cline which reduced the average of . the entire crop lo $40. j Prior to the price decline (here was. because of the high prices, much excitement and confusion 'among traders and pinhookers, some of whom had little regard for honesty or business ethics. Losses I were sustained by the warehouse, tin one particular instance a large basket of over 400 pounds, which sold for $100 per 100. disappeared 'during the dinner hour. At that lime the baskets were not num bered anil its disappearance was never solved. 1 he price decline which took place the middle of the sale season discouraged (lie plant ing ol a further ince.-ascd acreage of Hie 1920 crop. It is fortunate that it did for despite the increased cost of production caused by World War 1. the crop throughout Ken tucky and this territory sold at tin low average of $12.90. The low average of the 1920 crop caused the Hurley growers much distress. It was such as to prompt Kentucky growers to organ te Burley Tobacco Growers As social ion which was followed bv pooling the acreage grown Th result was not only the crop of lttl heing reduced too nullum pounds hut also 70 percent of flu pounds grown over a period of livi years was withheld from the auc tion sales Due lo so large1 a percentage of the crops being withheld from tin market, prices advanced to Hie ad vantage of the growers who retired to Join the pool. This included ihe growers of our territoiy. W SECURITY EGG , 1 MASHJd 3 . . . the NEXrMOVE is YOURS... Thousands of Security feeders" ore producing eggs and lots of them with Security Egg Mash. Yes, Security Egg Mash helps you realize maximum' egg production, because . . .j this superior product offers the right amounts of vitamins, carbohydrates and proteins for egg production and body! maintenance. The next move is yours ... get Security Egg Mash today, i " ' WAYNESVILLE FEED SEED GO. Depot Street, Waynesville and Intersection of Aliens Creek Road, Hazelwood PHONE 724 or 493-J O ft, ft ft ft ft ft ft jlkirbara Francis Heads j Meredith College Club Miss Barbara 1-Yaiuis i 1 W.ivncs . ille heads the sociolcy club a' : Meredith College in .taleigh. The six student clubs are mapping plans for various piojicls di-.pla ing I heir active intere-1 in world af fairs and column nil clfmK. The sociology iluh plans to co operate with the r.oiul.v Service organization in lialcnih in their : clothing drive for needy families j in Wukc county. ' Miss Mary Maigaret Smith, home ; demnosti al uui .uvul. ami her as- jsistant. Miss Kli.c IKI.oner. at-1 ! tended a meeting ol the Home j ! Age ids Association held at the' IVnl.iiul Crall School on Saturdav j Runaway Locomotive I Gets Right OI Way I JOHNSTOWN. Pa 'II" Tower men on Ihe six-mile stretch of the Pennsylvania Railroad main line 'hetween South Fork and Portage j gave a single empty locomotive I right of way over all traffic. The engine roared up the grade be I w et n the two tow ns at a 50 ; null -an-hotir clip and rame to a I stop as it had Mal ted, with 110 one , at the controls. I Officials blamed a leaky throttle i for starting the runaway on its trip. . ; It stopped w hen it ran out of steam. J Camels were first put to work In the desert area of Australia in 1840. PARK THEATRE PROGRAM i t j j Head W'fint V,s i,n- bargains. in? SPECIAL f I r Sl'MHV NTCIir SHOW'S 8:30 WFDM SDAV, October 13 "Rilf-Raff ii Starring l'AT O'HRIKN Superman Serial Radio Quiz Program on Stage ii II You w LA IK SHOW Tap Roots (In Technicolor) Starring SUSAN 1IAYWAR1) anil VAN HKFI.IX II recoi;mo many .scenes m this picture which was partially tilmoil m Western North Carolina. Tlll'RSDA Y - FRIDAY, October 11-15 I ITT T-fc II Tap Roots1 (In Technicolor) Starrine; SUSAN IIAYWARD ami VAN IIF.FLIN Matinre Friday, V. M. Regular Admission BELK - HUDSON'S ONE DAY ONLY Quantify Limited Special Lot 0! Beautiful I 81 x 108 PERCALE EET ONE OF OUR FINEST NATIONAL BRANDS REGULAR $3.39 VALUE SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY $2.59 Hp ' JL Remember, You Always Save At L Eelk-Hudson. Co, "Home Of Better Values" ;..'i 7.'l . -t J':V -is , i 1 i HI I if It , If. HT-. 1 ; ff V: 1: i mil I?;".
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 12, 1948, edition 1
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