IBEB 3, 1M8
PAGE THBBC (TWrd, Scika
THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER
3
Chosen
Itee To
'dictates
Jbv. rrincipal
jux,!, lias been
the Regional
irill select can
4 Carolina for
pL1ke Scholar
fsit.v. fan Committee
JPelnuaiy 21-26
Idatf.s in their
At UUKt
will be
of test-
Jidalt
ro (.':
jcoid- and per-
I $:i.ll(lO if the
tig ill i' for the
jT.'iO per year.
T KID
III!"
Mrs. A.
tlu- boy with
nuts while ne
handlebars of
is. Brugge say
I as he went."
'A Song Is Born'
WHCC Radio Programs
STUDIOS OVER PARK THEATRE
1400
ON YOUR
DIAL
Stars Danny Kaye and Virginia
Mayo find a happy solution to their
Romantic confusion in Samuel
Goldwyn's "A Song Is Bom." which
plays at the Strand Theatre Sun
day and Monday. The musical
drama, in color by technicolor, has
the greatest performers of jazz in
the cast.
lrTrTYTFl,
WAYNESVILLE, N. C.
"HI . Shows
;00 P M
fellOW FROM
X 11:00 P
M
SUNDAY SHOWS
2:00 - 4:00 - 8:30
FRIOAV. DEC. i
6 !0 - Sl(t?i On
fj OO MHl I' New
fi Parmer i Alumnae
lake A Similar
j.. - C milling in t)ie
lirc.r.
N (lit
' ' Tinn ami Tu
tf Hi N.o r,i limn
9 -M"Pi!nr Ltetutiou
V V !iis!-tt siurv
10 t( K. the ! d'iis
1" l.i lli rl and MarB
1" ; t KevtK.jril Mtlodl
1(1 4 d I jr.ftlf
1 I mi Mul It Meh.fl
(id W..rlJ Nes K-undup
I ' 1 hrm K'lnim
1 M -Carolina Mm HhUhm
1 ! 4 Trading Post
I - Carolina Mln rtiivtimi
1 mi- U cUlier l'n-t lire
1 l.i- liiiit-r- I'urplf sgr
I U HvUry Club
'-' imi Reviewing tttfcurtls
imi--i'ditrrt Hur
4 imi M l t.ur On licstra
J U) t ,,Ui Ht-qiifst
no - s,.ulti h( the Hcrrirr
1 .' Tim l lut
m iit. 4i intftiuJc
j ;to Vetemii Kt r!t
.V 4 liur yuslc
h t'untlmu WorM Nrw
i StNit liKtit On Spoils
.tit Humer Musk
; on u,,,, inn
(HI (iuN( st. n
l.V Wi.ll Tin m-
:to siujt T i nu
ll 'j uli -a Hi- ,l Music
1 i Music tn Ituil Rv
II (i ii Sew nnd l.alf K ports
11 1 i If Hn It
1 1 WHCC News
12 mi Sijn Off
SATURDAY. DEC. 4
6 (JO SiffB Oo
t 1(--WHC(J Krwi
6 ("j Farmer Alumnae
7 mi Tmv.ii Crlr
H oy New 6
( l. MouhtdiM 11 riddle
4 5 Time T 4 Time
y tut Initdi, Men l.ivp By
V 13 -Organ M-(dirs
9 Mornittjr lVvutum
y Mou"(aii Mt'rHjics
M ft 7i ! hr I j-itrs
K .jfi Lve'in I tit
1 j 00 Mid Dov Mlwihesi
1.' "(i World Nri huaaitup
1 K Fan Fin!in
l.' 30 C'arvlir Mtn Kluthro
1 OO 1 tldtrr C'jllJ!t '1 !!!!
1 M ,t nturlay iVin't Fartr
1 4 3 l'ynr Htv ( t.jm.
4 SO Nut Han. party
z 00 Cuiiivrt Must
H iu I veiling Fdittcii
ti li- Dinner Music
:0 SpolhgM on Sporti
4 :.
7 00
Hi UO-
11
Muxic K'ir Dining
- 1 400 i Int.
- t a'.jiiiia Mtn Ha
lii!MMlt Ht.uhiluii
WlU't' News
- Satutia Niflit
I'din itig I'tirtv
If W Hair It
I'oinorniw a N
-Sign Off
SUNDAY. DEC. 5
ft 00 Sigu Ofi
8 (10 Country Chur h
Vuartet
Jl 30 1I III) Iff
V yo Hig it Hutir
V HO truth- Men I up Bv
y 4.' .ld Viuilrl
It' 1 1'rt lriu Church
uiida x h'.ml
10 SO Four h!iigt)t!,
11 00 I'rrsb trruu Church
Sen it
12 0 0 Finilfr Cute Gli Cluh
i 2 SO Mid Uav MekMlir
12 4j Lanrf-rth ('hcTi1(-
1 ih N,.HJ Nt-a
1 1 .i S-m gs of H pt and
lllorv
1 . ' o j Mar QuaitM
1 4 'i sihti struijpi
i4t Bibl Viftit" Hix
"i 3tt KpiM'-i)il Hour
3 00 Owccrt Hour
4 (to ( aca'cidr of Miiaic
oo MhJ hif
6 lj He. C V Brcwu
,' "Ui sauntu Ka
0 00 V. niig K JH inn
rt 1 i--lVin.fi Must'
O 30 'Ui Songs Hflmul
H Dinner lliwtc
7 Ott Ctnler Cai.itol Demi
7 I 1 4V( rini
7 SO Vinisity Hoiit
On Musk bv the Miter
M 'in Vucal Varlfti"-
10 00 MifKtr lo Krai Hv
1 1 H0-- Verts. l,ntf Sport
11 I If Mr Hmvp It
1 1 .Vi -TiHiinrri'iv'i Nw
12 m Sign tiff
MONDAY. DEC. 6
6 00
t 00
i O-V
7 00-
V ItO-
y Si
In New Red Move
Transactions In Real Estate
Y - SATURDAY, December 3-4
JBLE FEATURE
i J ' KIOHAPMM AND WLURS ! vjf rS
K.( ";' mix in " mt' JZ
I Plus Hit No. 2
)NTIER SCOUT
With
DRGE HUSTON
Comedy and Serial
r
I
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY, Dec. 7-8-9
m
Waynesville Township
Connie Muse and wife to Ken
neth E. Medford.
I.. Z. Messer und wife lo Troy
.Justice and wife.
Jack Felniet and wife to George
Galloway and wife.
Tom Carver and wife to Dewey
Carver and wife.
Lem Sliepard and wife to Paul
A. Smith and wife.
Walter Woodard and wife to
Jean M. West.
W. B. Noland and wife to Ann
Welch Tutwiler.
C. N. Allen and wife to Houston
Caldwell and wife.
Elzy Caldwell and wife to M. O.
Galloway.
Swan Hendricks and wife to
Charlie Sawyer and wife.
Pierce T. Jones to M. O. Gallo
way. R. L. Bradley to John N. John
son. A. T. Ward, trustee, to James
H. Boyd, Jr.
ITMIT DCCT
YEARS OF
hid i ncrc:
eric March, Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright
THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY!
I
ws at 3:00 p. m. and 8:00 p. in.
4 Office Opens at 4:43 p. m.
Beavrrdam Township
Aurelia S. Seaman and husband
to J. C. Whitaker and wife.
M. C. and Ellen Stanley to How
ard Miller.
W. R. Medford and wife to Frank
A. Hal! and wife.
Virge McClure anil wife to
Simon M. Downs and wife.
Gladys F. Lowe and husband and
others to James T Harris and wife.
Glenn Trull and wife to Eliza
beth P. Hay.
Elizabeth P Hay to Myrtle Mr
Gee Trull.
Virge McClure and wife to Ulis
Christopher and wife.
T. A. Clark and wife to Martha
H. Parton.
Murtha H. Parton to Ada Mil
dred Smith Haynes.
C. A. Parton and wife to T. A.
Clark.
Daisy E. Mann to W. B. Parker
and wife.
Fred Mann and wife to W. H.
Parker and wife.
J. C. Kuykendall and wile to
Charles M. Garrison and wife.
Lucy F. Roberts and husband
and others to Gladys F, Lowe and
husband.
Clyde Township
M. A. Leatherwood and wife to
Claude V. Thompson and wife.
Dock C. Rogers and wife to T.
O. Wood anil wife.
Bon-A-Venture, Inc., to Grovcr
C. Sanford.
Cecil Township
C. W. Moody and wife to Cham
pion Paper and Fibre Company.
East Fork Township
Gene KuykendHll to H. C.
ers.
Rog-
Whlte Oak Township
W. C. Lowe and wife to Melvin
C. Messer and wife.
Capital Letters
huts Otfts
I That Keep On Giving
I CHILDREN'S ALBUMS $
JUNNY MICKEY and the BEANSTALK
,UNCLE REMUS BOZO at the CIRCUS
! SPARKY and the Talking Train &
1 TEX RITTER Songs for Children
CHRISTMAS ALBUMS
ig Crosby Dick Haymes g
rryComo St. Luke's Choristers
iur of Charm Fred Waring
5 CLASSICS I
VEN Symphony No. 1, in C Major J
Waltzes (Op. 18-34-43-64) Volume 1 g
Grand Canyon Suite h
NINOFF Concerto No. 2, in C Minor, Op. 18
RT Symphony No. 8, in B Minor S
("Unfinished")
S Album of Waltzes g
is Record Players Irons, Toasters, Mixers g
Adrjiirai naaios
nes Radio Co.
St . Waynesvill
(Continued From Page Two)
ever, on Monday night two days
later he broadcast from his bed
at Rex Hospital here, and the fol
lowing Saturday was over at Cha
pel Hill announcing I he Duke-Carolina
name to the 40 stations on
the network. Not only does North
Carolina have about the best foot
ball played in the Nation, it has Its
share of the top-flight sports an
nouncers, too.
BOWLS The Orange Bowl and
the Rose Bowl will he broadcast
over the Columbia Broadcasting
System this time, with the Cotton
Howl fioing out over the Mutual
Broadcasting System, Harry Wis
mer, American Broadcasting Com
pany sportscaster, will do the Sug
ar Bowl again. Two years ago right
along now Comptroller Lindsay
Warren got in touch with Wismcr,
who was to do the Georgia-Carolina
battle, and told him if he slur
red the word "Carolina" into
"Ca'lina", he would shoot him, or
words to that effect. So as to be
sure that no ill would befall him at
the hands of Loyal Carolina Alum
nus Warren. Wismer hit those first
two syllables in Carolia like a ton
of bricks, and it was CAROLina.
CAROLina all afternoon. Watch
for it again on January 1.
The Tobacco Sports Network
DON T B A CAREIESS GfVfR
Spend some thought on
arff selections. Moyne Croud.
rzJ"'-
Fanned Alrnmuic
- l ake A Nuiutier
-AoriHtliiig to the
Kecurd
- ' p
-Tunr atil Tuue
vi. rl Ht art
- ttrgjii M lodifs
- MltoIh I?otkiis
4.- huit st on
1 n 00 I o The I i'iws
10 Ij-Mirt aptl Mirge
lo i0 hfxboarJ Mt-!odi-i
10 l.s-ccil Aa-'ftles
1 1 oi Mi.i la iUknlift
1 i -00- Acrli es Rounrlup
1:' Kjrrn Forum Frog
1.' - l ari'!ina Mtn Klnthin
1 4: I la.i-g I'oKt
1 ." t arolma Mtn Khrtlitti
) oo - - U eat ht r 1'K tui
1 I S liilr- of I he I'urplc
i. it f
1 i it Kf ie ing Reronla
8 mi Coik ert Hour
4 imi M I T rti r r iicst ra
4 I .' ( la in
t st. t Wui Kiit-st
.". in simtti .if the Hor.ler
.. 1.. lino fot
.' Mi Dinnti Musir
ti no Ca i l I n World Nw
t. .. siiotlitlit On Sports
i. Mi Diniiei Musi.
). Hh-H. i Ktthinrtia
7 no luMii I n Ik
7 I ,. 1 4in Club
h oo --- line's To Vrlertrm
I ". niirhn Monroe Orcli.
5 :t sin Time
ttn- -CmhI mil1 of VI init
io no Musi to llcuil By
11 (to Npwh ami I.hIc Sp.rt
1 i o U W e lUve It
1 I ; Tomorrow s News
12 0 0 Sign Off
w;'frsM
x
DARK MEETING
j SPRINGFIELD, 111. (UP.) The
'lights went out when 35U eletlrlc
cooperative executives sat down to
hear an address by Claude R.
Wickard, rural electrification ad
ministrator, on development of
electric power They heard him
in the dark.
small nr'nzir ovt
fort woam TJ i';'r
group rf neighborhood nn-e
put on a backyard playlet and do
nated the $21 procoedt to a P1
fund. Honored ruest tT the pujr
was Sandra Caaatevena. f younl
girl who iuftered an attack: of
polio during the'auroiher." ' ;
PARtC THEATRE
PROGRAM
SATURDAY, December 4
DOUBLE FEATURE
Shadow Valley
SPICUIATION hai become rife on
future Red moves in Germany fol
lowing confirmation by American
Intelligence tources that Marshal
Konstantin Rokossovsky (above),
chief of the Soviet western arnls,
has established headquarter! In the
Russian tone. Berlin dispatches
gave the location as Fuerstenberg
in Mecklenburg. (liitertintional)
t
Care Urged With Sulfa
In TrcatiHg Poultry
CHICAGO (IIP) The American
Veterinary Medical Association has
warned poultry growers that ex
cessive use of sulfa drugs in treat
ing diseased chickens may cause a
serious loss of egg production.
The veterinarians' - organization
reported that an experiment in
which sulfa drugs were used to
treat fowl cholera in a 1 .0(l()-bird
flock showed egg production fell
off as much as 50 per cent in one
week.
It was nearly a month before
production was back to normal,
the report said.
hopes to carry the Dixie Bowl
Willie, but as of last Saturday night
final ararngements had not been
made.
Pulls Clothes Apart
To Test Quality
UTICA, N. Y. iU.P. If you
want to lose your shirt, just drop in
at the new textile testing labora
tory of the Utica Institute of Ap
plied Arts and Sciences.
The lab has machines that will
not only rip up shirts, but also
sheets, stockings, tablecloths and
anything else that comes along
The purpose is lo test the strength
and wearing qualities of textiles.
The state-supported institute is
the only technical-level textile
school in the country, officials say.
Starring
KDDIi; DKAN and ROSCOE ATES
Also
Arkansas Swing
With
Till: HOOSIKK HOT SHOTS
LATE SHOW
II
II
Devil Monster
A Thrilling Sea Picture
SUNDAY, December 5
"Ruthless"
ii
Diaiui I. vnn. Louis
Starring
llaywartl and
Sidney Greenstreet
SWIPES FROM SHERIFF
STILLWATER, Okla. i U P. t A
flower-loving' thief showed no fear
when it came to gathering gerani
ums. He picked a choice plant
from a county courthouse flower
pot, right outside the sheriff's office.
II
MONDAY - TUESDAY, December 6-7
On Our Merry Way
All Star Musical
With
JAMES STEWART and HENRY FONDA
ITT 1 Fv7 " CN U
lis i ;f; 7 ( 4 ?r. . .
' XV iW c?Vv
"'o'" Brrryhill, Motor Tank Saletman, 7 his gnmtlinr truck at the Charlotte plant.
What should a man work For?...
Pnl that question to "Pop" Berryhill,
hrre, and he'll answer uhoul like this:
"Well, tjoti could say a man works for
a living, but there's more to it tlum
, just that. A man has his self-respect
to keep. He wants to work at a job he
likes. He wants to dosomethinguseful.
He wants fair pay and steady hours
with some time to himself and his fam
ily. He wants a chance to get ahead
and he wants to sate some money.
And he wants some security in case of
accident or sickness. Then, when his
working years are done, he wants to
know he can retire on an annuity."
Today, in Esso Standard Oil Company,
28,000 men and women have jobs which
offer exactly these things. They have
ESSO STANDARD
such jobs because of a company policy
that was sel up over 30 years ago
and developed side-by-side with our
workers ever since. Il is a policy based
on the belief that the heart of a busi
ness is its people lli.il the best pos
sible jobs attract the best possible
workers.
Workers in this company todav have
everything outlined in the statement
above including vacations with pay,
(fss)
sickness benefits, cash savings in a Thrift
Flan, and the opportunity to retire with
income for life. .
But this policy hasn't grown from "gen
erosity'' alone. It's a practical, common
sense business policy, and a good one. '
Our 28,000 tcorkerg, for inttance,
have now been trith u on the aver
age for almost l-t year $8,400 of
them over 20 yean.
Right now with the demand for oil
products far higher than ever, before, it
means a lot to us and to you to have a
staff of experienced, steady, loyal workers
like these pushing our facilities to the ;
limit to get you the oil products yrwi .-
want - good products at fair prices 1 " .;
0 1 L - C 0 M P A N Y
i '.
.
i
' i
m
is
i
1;,'
",' i!
I
I t: ;
i i:
f
id . i
r r - - s
' I f ':.
A,'
til" i
; v i
f :v
L MS
i'tii
4
i y
. fi:-
'.'3'
'',!..
i
!
: 4i
I .
ii
i
hi
m
I ) I
!'-:'
..
! t