'A .4 TUESDAY, JANUARY I! PAGE EIGHT THE WAYNESVTLLR MOUNTAINEER The electrically - operated roll call system would permit legisla tor, to vote yea and nay by fl P S switches on their desks, in stead of by answering to an oral roll call. . (, The voting would show up at the front of the legislative chamber ,, a large Mfihled board similar to a paii-mutucl odds board. Six similar systems are in use HELPFll. Boosters Club Will Meet Thursday The Hazelwood Boosters Club will in' it at 7 i 'clock Thursday at the Presbyterian church, for the tegular monthly si ;pcr meeting. M. II. Bowles is president, and D. E. Ticlienor is secreiary. Legislature Considers Push-Button Voting OLYMPIA. Wash. .UP-Wasli-ington State is considering provid ing push-button voting for mvm bers of the stale legislature. IhTTnTorican Federation of recently, fieitii.K about (if, per rn of the vote of ;i)mxim;iltl.v 7.) eligible employes now at the plan! Pigeon Valley Civic Club Meets Thursday The Pigeon Valley Civic club will meet at the Cecil school house Thursday evening, January 13, at 7 o'clock. All members of the club are urged to attend as this meeting promises to be very important. Canton V.F.W, Sponsors Valentine Dance, Feb. 12 The Canton Veterans of Foreign Wars and Auxiliary will sponsor a Valentine Dance Saturday, Feb ruary 12, :n the Canton Armory. The danc will start at 9 o'clock. Tickets to'- the dance are now on sale in Canton. Enka Negotiates With CIO Union At Lowland American Enka Corporation offi cials are In process of negotiations with the Textile Workers Unior. of America (CIO) as bargaining agent for employes of Lowland, Tenn., plant of Enka, it was learned to day from Enka officials. CIO won the election against U I I L riA.r. . . boro offices a. It souis mey u d ,() -the city couiimi -r, ' dered t h 1, ' H n'lrkcAx fmm.l . mobile wind-llrlKtr Park! too much aim , ,,i ,l a1 in other stale capitals. " Hit1 "AM smni - i : V; ft Library Notes MARGARET JOHNSTON County Librarian RECENT ADDITIONS IN NON-FICTION Baumann Old Man Crow's Boy. -A boyhood in Idaho is the basis of . . . this outdoor book. Cowboy work and play, trapping, hunting, fishing, ranching. thoroughbred horses, rodeos, tracking are pic tured and shared. Cohen Science, Servant of Man. A view of science, describing the practical consequences of scientific research through selected casr his tories. Explanation is made of the way in which practical result., are obtained from scientific reseanh; of the true relation of science to society. Eckstein Evcr day Miracle Through intimate and sym pathetic observation of animals, a brilliant scientist illuminates the miracle of all life. Subjects covered are: Time: Old Age: Hunger. Touch: Space; Vision; Personality: Life: Bath; Exercise; Smell: Hearing; Fight; Evolution: Chemotaxis; Sleep; Endocrine: Pos ture; Sex; Death: Blood; Speech: Reproduction; April. Garcia Granados Birth of Israel: The Drama As I Saw It. This is a detailed, eyewitness ac count of what the United Nations Special committee on Palestine found in the Holy Land, how it de cided in favor of partition, and how Israel was burn. Hamlin Pine. Potatoes and Peo ple; the Story of Aroostook. The author captures the flavor of Aroostook County in Maine, where timber used to be king, where the largest potato crop in the world is grown and where the people are individualists. MacDonald Plague and I. The author has drawn a sympa thetic picture of the patients, nurses, and well-meaning outsid ers that came her way when she was going through the crisis of tuberculosis in a sanatorium called "The Pines". Menninser You and Psychiatry. , Simplified statement of what psychoanalysts think are the com ponents of the personality and the way it develops and performs. Helpful in developing the mental health of small children, since the psychoanalyst believes most diffi culties lie in parent-child relation ships, and this book considers men tal habits carelessly inflicted from birth. Skiuier Family Circle. Primarily, this is the story of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Skinner, their early i lives and first struggles toward sue cess in the theater; it is also the story of Cornelia's own childhood ' and the life of the familv unit i Sleeper House for You to "Build. or Rent. House-hunters unable to decide whether to build, buy, or rent are given the opportunity to solve the problem through this complete guide. Each of the procedures is explained thoroughly and imparti ally in plain language, and illus trated with plans, charts, and car toons. Lenoir County Farmer Wins Corn Contest A Lenoir County farmer who produced an official yield of 148.26 bushels p.-r acre has been declared winner of the North Carolina Com Growing Contest tor 1948. Ho ls F- L. Albritton, La Grange, Route 3. who spent $61.05 for fertilizer and S40 for power and labor on the one acre. Since he sold the corn on the dav it was harvested for $192, his net' income was $86 more than double the gross income from the average acre of corn in the State. Runner-up in the State competi tion was H. F. Hudson, who farms land owned by F. Hunter Pope near Enfield, Halifax Countv. His yield was 142.83 bushels per acre. J. R. Simpson, Waxhaw, Route 2, Union County, took top' honors i the Piedmont region with a yield of 136.42'bushels per acre. In the mountain region the champion was a Macon County 4-H Club boy. Fred Deal, of Franklin, who pro duced 133 bushels per acre. Dr. K. R. Collins, in charge of agronomy extension work at State College, served as chairman of the State Corn Contest Committee. In announcing the results. Dr. Col lins emphasized that the winning yields were not necessarily the highest in the State. Other farm ers, he said, may have equalled or exceeded these yields but were not eligible because they had not entered the contest or because their production was not checked by an official committee. I ' Saute onions, green pepper, mushrooms, tomatoes and cubed eggplant together for a fall vege table dish. Season with a dash of sugar and allspice and salt and pepper, . ... . L II I L-fa. ... I I '.fen t . -lift I I II , I. $ a Jj" Snowy Slay- White Enamel ,1 foa 5 i ft' ' ' If ' Finiih cleonj easily! M rl 1 Ifey ' f 1 I Liyl ' An Efficiently Organized iJlii i "Kitchen Helper" thj t.i I ' jj ' speedi your meal prep- i in"' iniiii i u i i ii ,'. " r' " " orglion Sovej your timet g Jrl i L toT2K' --'- -f-j Red I,i, Black Trim Are The Only Cabinets In The World With Flour sifter that can't grind roaches, insects, worms or foreign matter into your food! Flour sifter that can't wear out the screen from friction to make Famous TILT - A sonic roll front no binding, no sticking no roach nest cracks! Famous Sellers JJakcd-On Knamcl a real beau ty finish! Non-jamming three-point suspension drawer action that is fingertip controlled! Strong, semi-concealed hinges that won't break so strong we have a cabinet hung by its hinges it our store! Metal covered bread box that keeps contents FKESH! crurQ rare rrmmm fpTTj im . r.firr-. An you cat screen particles! - WAY front instead of bother- Plus Minimum trade-in for your Plus Minimum trade-in for your old 5-piece Breakfast Suite on a New Sellers $10-00 ADDING UP TO TOTAL SAVINGS DURING SALE $4690 OA TmTTftTPHPnr? Sellers Porcelain Chrome Dinetie-$1.25 a Week Sellers O GA. FURNITURE CO MPANY old Kitchen Cabinet on S3 No springs to pull leaves, pinch 3 - - hi cud WIT. No hinges, hooks or mechanism to get out of order! No set screws to level the leaves over and over again! No "struggle" to open or close leaves "little finger action"! mmrm- u 1 mm mm EACH $10.93 S21.90 a New Sellers $15.00 - as low as No scratching of porceloj Wood bearing protects pQfn aim Large utensil drawer df down for access under tended leaf! Famous Sellers Baked0' Enamel, a real beauty A"11' - as lowflSI 05 Wdynesville V .j.