Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 18, 1949, edition 1 / Page 5
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Wary-is, imz THE WAYNE S VTLLE MOUNTAINEER M AFTER MOTHER'S DEATH t I LL . Speaking Of HOMEMAKING 1RNABAS HOSPITAl, Newark, N. J., carefully watches !jrl delivered by a Caesarean operation two minutes ed. The infant was the first child of Mrs. Louise Jones, was being used to feed the child. (International) Composes Hit I- 'IVii -.-.ear-old hl heroine Tin Igc.l mihi; hit nin r.cinii lux- id ' II ini;;hl In lie ,1 Cornell )l-oLI lliolhrr. in ,i'n mil in r.n iu :;ir H. ill. serious pieces" suni;s in Don- Store Owner's Walkout Con(oftls Holdup Man BOSTON iU.I'. -George Nicco lopulos. Storekeeper, has his own effective flnlfdole for holdup men. lie .iiisf aeJks out on Ihem. : WherLa l&ridil confronted liim in his lienor since, Niccolopulos trolled past I he gunman and into i I he street," i '.Slop! Slop!" commanded the j joldiip man. Hut ..Niccolopulos kept walking, riie 'hand It finally left, empty h.'lldi d Will Find Them lavs ing In Quality - and Value tifte j mil NEWYO R K ; 10, N, Y, i Ti:tr-o-'ar'wor1e pante r sold all m-er th? world! Tuer-o'Wari ga Sweet-Orr Its famous tradsowu-kl Tugr-o-Wars hsvs nver bn tueees fully imitated! TVvlfly - ask ynvr dealer for thi jxmif f men mn't rip ' Chir offer still, stands: a pair nf tvpo-WarffWffi to f any ft men trha mit ten '$m epartt 3 GENERATIONS MUST BE RIGHT: SWEET-ORR IS TOPS FOR TOUGHNESS! ?9 tor orchard use-construc- I and other places requiring snag-resistantelothing. ept. Store sD Many a housewife has an eager interest in collecting new recipes. Some surveys indicate that the average housewife is more Inter ested in now recipes than in the basic principles of cookery or the foundation recipes developed from them. Yet a knowledge of these relatively few foundations may make her a better cook than a whole library of cookbooks and recipe clippings, cookery scientists suggest . Any cook with imagination can devjelop innumerable new dishes frotn the simple basic recipes with out leaning heavily on cookbooks. In feeding the family on a budget, where skillful use of all leftovers is Important, cookbooks may be less helpful than the cook's own knowledge of how to use what she has according to good cookery principles. Even if she takes time lo leaf through all her books, she may not find a recipe that fits that half cup of meat, bit of cheese, or other leftover on hand. From the simple basic recipe for white sauce, hundreds of "new" sauces can be developed. Add to this basic sauce chopped hard cooked eggs and a little lemon juice for an egg sauce for fish. Put in a chopped green pepper, onion or parsley for extra color or flavor. Add cheese to the white sauce for a cheese sauce. In place of some of the fat in the recipe, use peanut butter for a peanut flavored sauce. All the variations go back to the simple principles of combining and cooking fat, flour and liquid into a smooth sauce of the right thickness. Again, a vast number of hot breads have come from t he stand ard recipe for baking powder bis cuits. Add to that rccine chonoed nuts, grated cheese, grated orange rind, egg or a little sweetening -and there's a different biscuit for the family. "Once familiar with the basic principles of recipes, you are set to take it from there," the cookery scientists say. Hats And Hairdos Make Spring Fashion News; They Are Pretty As A Picture MADE FOR EACH OTHER . . . Hat and hairdo form a perfect union here. John Hall designed the swirl hairdo, with side part, to complement Sally Victor's side-tilted cartwheel of green straw with red velvet ribbon, red roses and while (lowers. $7,000,000 OPA Claim Settled For $50,000 LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UP) The now-defunct Office of Price Ad ministration took a beating in court here. A $7,000,000 OPA suit against the Cummins Distilleries Corpora tion was settled for $50,000 by the government. The federal action was fded in 1943, asking treble damages for an alleged sale of 51,094 barrels of bourbon whiskey above the ceiling price. The case never came to trial. It could have been settled for $1,500,000 at one time, but OPA attorneys turned down the offer, said Matthew Henchley. assistant U. S. attorney handling the case at its final disposal. By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Fashion Editor Whether your hair is short, long or medium, whether it's curly or straight, whether you're a glamor ;irl or the executive type, milliners are ready to make you look pretty as a picture this spring. Hats and hairdos have achieved a happy marriage this year, as hairdressers and hat designers work hand in hand, all for the greater glory of Miss and Mrs. U. S. A. The hats that will bloom in the Easter parade are Voting and gay. yet with definitely a ladylike quality, in keeping with the season's feminine styles in suits and coats. Most of them fit on the head without benefit of elastics, guy wires or hat pins. Most popu lar will be small sculptured felt suit hats, usually un Irimmed, and the gay straws with restrained flower trimming. The old-fashioned straw .skimmer is present in a number of versions, as are all varieties of sailors. Flower trimming is likely lo be different this season, the flowers often applied in flat applique or embroidered in raffia. You won't see so many outsize cabbage roses, but the millinery Mower garden is still blooming, in a modest way. You'll see calico trim on some of the youthful straws, such as Sally Victor's calico-faced straw "Honeyhivc" with matching ruffled calico stole. You'll see black patent leather sailors, such as that introduced by Lilly Dache. You'll find the hat you're looking for the hat thai will suit your hairdo, your personality and your mood. And this year it will be easy. H BETTY C LARKE Al Newsl'eatures Beauty Editor You can look for the "soft and natural look" in hairdos this spring. Kul if you think the robins also will be harbingers of a long bob, you are mis taken, says New York hairdresser John Hall. lie predicts that spring is going to bring a shorter trend, .judging by the numbers of women who visit his shop. Most of these women, now cutting their hair, have been holdouts, he says. It all begins when they can't find a ter their longer tresses, or when they sta shortening process. One day when the particularly straggly they say, "Oh it a good cut." Mr. Hall would rather sec the or five inches in length. He thinks could really call his imagination into play and de sign coiffures befitting I he features of the subject. But with this very short hob "it leaves him little alternative". No matter what you do with the very short bob it still will look close to the head. You will need lo gel that extra lift a the forehead here or that pouf at the sides there, by wearing the right hat. The youthful oll-lhe-laee roller can be worn with the very short hairdo, says Mr. Hall. The extra large straws, always popular in the spring, will be more flattering to the girl with longer hair unless of course the very short bob can be prettily arranged with hair back over the oars on the hat side that tilts up. go hair the hat to flat it a gradual hair looks ahead, give worn four hairdresser $10 Investment Pays Handsome Dividend PORT ANGELES, Wash. (UP) Andre Dechance of Kalispell. Mont., realized a 2400 per cent Profit on an investment of less '.ban $10 28 years ago. In 1921, Dechance bought some 'jroperty here for $9.7!!. After pay ing taxes for 27 years, he decided to see what he had acquired. He discovered his four lots were now the southwest runway of the Clallam County airport, built in 1936. The county commissioners paid him $250 for the lots. , , t&v id! .., i , i iimrnffl w nn amj' wm-iM1rrinJff'i m ). .iV i i n mmmtiit 1 illltTrTH IIAT-AND-HAIRDO HARMONY . . . The halo cut here is John Hall's prescription for Sally Vic tor's white straw roller faced in dotted voile, with apple blossoms. The first successful platform scales, to weigh heavy, massive objects, were produced in 1830 at St. Johnsbury, Vt. U.S.FARM TENANCY HITS NEW LOW IN 1948 An Af Nwfaturtl Pirtogroph s, ? " . y (iNsriwrr ofiiriiHs.fiGDK.s) A I rStnf 65o 1 900- ZZ TODAY 30 FULL OR PART OWNEDA t ITEs) J FARMS V FULL R PART OWNED V- -A 10 V TENANT y'TENANT RUNV 100 f VrUNFARMS f FARMS LAFF-A-DAY fofr 199 Kin Fwto.it Sndn.e, W.U njtrti twi "Here's a shot of her charging me .. . shortly after I married her, you know." LAFF-A-DAY v I Pi THE BEGINNINGS OF WRITTEN NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY Prior to 1782, North Carolina had been mak'iig! history, but bad not written much. The whole of our colonial history had been made, but it was scattered over the State In the several towns in which the seats of Government happened to be at the time the events took place. In that year, a very talented and well educated man came to our State and made his home in New Bern. His name, Francis Xavief Martin, was educated at one of the universities of England and went to France to complete his education. Unlike immigrants of those days, Mr. Martin knew what he came for. He was looking for a certain job. He preferred school teaching and began teaching school almost as soon as he reached New Bern". While teaching, he studied law, and in a few years he became one of the best lawyers in the State, and in 1809, he was appointed District Judge of the Federal Court of the district of Mississippi and Louisiana. Between 1782 and 1809, he had written the first history of North Carolina ever printed, and that event is one of the most extraordinary things that ever took place In our State. In 1786, Mr. Martin was ap pointed by the State Legislature to collect and correlate the scattered fragments of colonial history of every county or precinct in the State or colony. In doing this job, he had the best opportunity any man ever had to write a history of facts gathered at first hand. He did that. While stationed in Raleigh working on the gathered records from the counties and precincts, he gathered facts for his history. He met with many of the survivors of the 26 members of the famous convention that met in Charlotte on May 19-20, 1775, and got first hand informa tion, not only from the members of the convention, but the wording of the resolutions. Does anybody think that Martin was trying to falsify the facts? What could have been a purpose like that? Most historians of the present who want the truth about the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence turn to Martin, if they can find a ropy, or to Lossing's Field Notes of the -American Revolution which he got by a personal visit to Charlotte and talked with some of the survivors of that convention and prints in his book the resolutions and the pen signatures of the signers as they appear on the page, or to the great book printed and published by PeW'r Force and M. St. Clair Clark, of Washington, D. C, who searched the Archives of the Continental Congress under orders by a special actr fcfrCongrese passed on Second day of March, 1833, and their book gi&s;the true and full story of the Mecklenburg Declaration. ' If you want the facts, you can get them. f.-V W, C. All op, Waynesvilfe, N. C. The Boys' Dept. hi Ray's Can Dress 'Em Up Or Down Fix 'Em For Work - Sport - Play jjudt Received Mew.--- GABARDINE SLACKS - JACKETS And Numerous Other Items SPECIALS THIS WEEK Sizes 8 to 1G $1.89 Sanforized Overalls $ JJJQ Sizes 4 to l(i $1.89 Sanforized Dungarees - $ J H)0 Sizes 8 to 1G $1.89 Plaid Cotton Shirts $ CJQ Boys' 8 to 14 "T" Shirts up ffifjetv s V Copr. 1948. Kir.f Futures S)i;J,catc. Inc , World rtgh'.s tescrvca. "If you get right down, darling, we'll have papa make; vyou a real nice tire swing. 'J' BOY'S JUNIOR DEPARTMENT 2nd Floor ay's Dept. Store "Your Best Place To Trade'' U v 'it . i ' i I ' if-. I ' it V 4 t IS-.,.!' - i i If. ' !-V. : i. A in V- '5 s , fc' 14 " H'"'l'illlil.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1949, edition 1
5
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