Newspapers / The Waynesville mountaineer. / Feb. 11, 1949, edition 1 / Page 18
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FRIDAY , FtTln.. I PAGE FOUR (Fourth Section) :ITE WAYNES VILUE MOUNTAINEER Three Mars Hill Sweet Potatoes Won Them A Trip Haywood Students ; fV ; JflpT On Dean's List Three students from Haywood iout'i Appear or. the current !vdp- !t i Mar Hill college i-i,-h rtx;iiin .it lea-t tortv qual- ' c r r i ; t . tor ..ceeptance. i B.iibara Ethel Hale. M: Mr.- Hcnrs C i". Margaret Janu'. : V: and Mrs J C '. Wi rvt and . Sr. :: . . .:.:.- .: r ot - H r ., mi: Car- f itdrrKp Mnvist Gone Suit Yourself... If you're looking for 1?M the suit that will give 1 i&jt ' you that smart look, l- buy PHOENIX. Its 'cbric and s'yle is li .' $ full of the tailoring quality you want of $L-$ thp pnce you like to W -4 pcy Come m ond rfca M, u't tourself today. ,f l Hi T I -CMwr rl1 !:.n:i N'ui'th Carolina and South Carolina arrive in ainple of their prize sweet potaloo that voii in 'he capital, and to Philadelphia and New Yolk as P Food company. The are Keith Blount. Pons. 'I I. on:..- Mayes, Taber City. N. C: Bill Ai.dei miii, fair Sam Strickland, Taber Cit : Jimmie Andi-rson, Fair i Strickland. Taber City. With them is Don Htnton. j-eist Horr county. South Carolina The lius are .1.4 le.-itn which grew the greatest ield ot eet pia- n 1 1 I' i guidance of the V S. Department of Atnicul--i"i. S. rvice. The are mernbirs ot 4-11 (Tubs. AP BelJz-Jludlan IJeef Stew Out In Front As Travelers' Favorite i H U ' i I I1 The head of i1'. Fii-il chain of railroad i. ; -1,111.1! : i--t : ant - tinds trains .if .! .cx modern but the aei:e.'.- tr-ive-.-i - appetite remains ;,' j ,i i.d-ui : Hi- -nil wants beef -tew 11' : 1 ' r. ll.i! . , . .Ir pre-ldetil of " i ii. i iat ii in. -aid women pre- i:lw-i!-he- and salads while i. 1 1 ' i . r ' i ---n in want hamburger. I i' -' .i- f variou- types beat :n -' . ' :! -alev At d 'V ,'i'ii il. -irlmn has given tij n- No -put on the sales chart '" ' 1 k. 1 ; i .i perennial favor- t ; vi .in-.- ijteakfa.-t for trav el' t- i- -.;.;t .-ir.tl t-uus, Harvey said. Tti" un it nu-rieai) breakfast alw.n- h,'- hei n ;in out in front," he r- put ' - puninc on THE DOC... in a real Rob Roy cowboy special ... wh authentic collar, cuff and pocfcef designs. You needn't worry about washing this stOrdy cotton shirt, either . . . because it won't ever fade or shrink out of lrt , i v WW shifts for boys Belk-J whan "Home Of Better Values' j Mayor Finds Out Why Mothers Turn Gray BALTl.MOKK LP- - The mayor 'of Baltimore has a clear under I standing of the problems I'acins a mother who must get a hunch of children oil' to x-hool each mor n ' ing. Mayor Thomas P Ale-andro took : the role of breakfast cook for his I six children while Mrs. D Alesan l dro recuperated in Florida for a ! feu weeks after an i!li.e-s When she returned this wa the I mayor's report in part : "One wanted egss boiled; an other scrambled; the third would I not eat eggs at all. Then some I wanted ham and others bacon and some wanted toast and others just' plain bread. Some wanted molas i ses. some jelly and some butter, j Some wanted cereal and others gave it a Bronx cheer. "What a headache: " State College Hints To Farm Ilomemakers By Ruth Current Slate Home Demonstration Agent . It often pays to shop around tor different makes of patterns, cloth ing specialists say. If the kind . iiu have been using needs many changes for a good fit, try other makes to find one that more near ly meets our individual specifi- i cations. Long experience in fitting pat j terns to people has led our spec ialists to conclude that because of figure irregularities there are about 43 different ways that pat terns may need to be altered. How best to make these changes is des cribed with illustrations in a bulle tin entitled, "Pattern Alteration," F. B 1948 1 which may be pur chased for 10 cents in coin inot stamps" from the Government Printing Office. Washington 25, D C. Probably the most useful "must" when it comes to ironing all of the children's school things isn't actually a hint but a suggestion that starching will cut the ironing time in half. It means that dress es, shirts, skirts and blouses stay cleaner longer, shed dirt and dust more easily and keep that crisp look two days instead of one. Occasionally starch stsicks to our iron. A very fine non-abrasive cleaner or some fine steel wool rubbed lightly over the shoe will remove all of the starch. If you have trouble with starch sticking on the iron from regular cotton garments, it may be due to the fact thaj the water was not boil ing rapidly before pouring it into the starch This is very impor tant as starch not thoroughly cook ed before going into the fabric will cook when it comes in contact with I he heat of the iron and then peel off the clothes and cling to the hot shoe. Sprinkling starched clothes for ironing is very important if you want the finished garment to look right. Heavily starched clothes should be much damper than light ly starched or unstarched clothes. It is also important to sprinkle the starched pieces at least four to six hours ahead of ironing. j Lawmaker Trims The Governor Robot Pilot Developed For Light Airplanes CLEVELAND (UP) Small air planes may become almost fool proof with the new automatic prlot developed here by Bert Carlson, noted inventor of aircraft instru ments. During the war the automatic pilot developed by Carlson for Sperry Gyroscope and Jack & Heinlz Industries were too heavy and loo costly for use on small pri- va,(' Planos C'Hl.S.)riI Pver w,.:,. to I he l;.,.. iH'i'cl, ,!,,, ( sell h yM w hn-li ... .. I l''i Hi. I 1 ':"'. .MMi beating s. son. T mi 'iit'ji "li. Although the first wallpaper us- ed in America was imported, by 1750 a Philadelphia manufacturer had established a good business in making them. EF3W ..fl & ..'SWS RED CAMEL DUNGAREES FOR MEN Cow. Age 29, Expecting Her 28th Offspring BETHEL. O. i UP' Goldie. one of the oldest Jersey cows in the country, is expecting her 281 h off spring this spring, shortly before her 29th birthday. Goldie is owned by John Nestor, Clermont County farmer. Charles I Boss, southern Ohio cattle breeder. j said cows are old when they reach 12 and that a few live to be 19 or i 20. Goldie's age. he added, is "re- markable." I An official of the American Jer sey Cattle Club in Columbus. O . said he had never heard of a Jer ; sey cow which had produced at such an advanced age. RED CAMEL DUNGAREES FOR DOYS A: 2.45 1 BEST MADE RIVETED FOR STRENGTH , CUT TO FIT DO NOT SHRINK . BECAUSE THEY ARE SANFORIZED! Belk-JludUan best made riveted for strength cut to fit do not shrink because they are sanforized: Rep. Dennis Massey ileft'. North Carolina legislator who is a bar ber bv trade, gives Gov. Kerr Scott a trimming in a hotel barbel shop at Raleigh. Massey works at his trade during spare time while in Raleigh for the Legislature. 'AP Wirephotoi. How To Be An Alumnus ST. LOUIS tl'.P. -Students at New Luxury Liners Comine SAN FRANCISCO (U.P.) American President Lilies announc- Washington University have long v( that construction on the first complained about the dangers of crossing nearby Millbrook Road. One summed it up in a letter to the university student publication. "Crossing this boulevard." the let ter said, "represents an obstacle to of their three post-war round-the-world luxury liners will begin early in March The three ships will cost approximately $11,000,000 each. They will have an overall length of 536 feet, cruise at 19 any student desiring to become an knots an(i cari-y 228 first-class pas alumnus of Washington U." sengers. P.M. A. (A. A. A.) SEED ORDERS Fill! WHITE DUTCH CL0i KENTUCKY BLUEGRi LADINO CLOVER ORCHARD GRASS KOREAN LESPEDEm rALTA FESCUE FARMERS, FEDERATION PHONE 344 Alt Congratulations. . . Beilz-cMadAxm On The Completion Of Your New Store THE NEW HOME OF BELK - HUDSON IN WAYNESVILLE IS A SOURCE OF PRIDE AND SATISFACTION TO ALL WHO SHARED IN ITS CONSTRUCTION - MOD ERN IN EVERY RESPECT. IT IS ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL STORES IN THIS AREA. WE ARE HAPPY TO HAVE SHARED IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF THIS NEW HOME FOR BELK-HUDSON AND IT IS WITH A GREAT DEAL OF PRIDE THAT WE EXTEND OUR CONGRATULATIONS ON THE OCCASION OF YOUR FORMAL OPENING. thanks for calling on us Grennel Sprinkle) Company Charlotte, N. C. in (n id- hat fess 6! ill pr I' r Belk-alfudlOH
Feb. 11, 1949, edition 1
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