Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 22, 1949, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE T E Jotes JINSTON rian SOME NEW ds And Over n Boy. Jak. le Red odlawn. jirage. y Cake. jrgan Had i Fox. a Jck Gun. jme Home. Mutton Bone look. k of Tom Saw I Bambi's Chil tage at Bantry IJtton. Spry. tog Arthur and 'The new law allows an addi tional exemption or $600 (like ,an extra dependent) for taxpay er or wives who are 65 or over. It also allows a $600 extra ex emption for a blind taxpayer or blind Wife of taxpayer. These extra -exemptions apply ONLY to taxpayers and wives, NOT to their, dependents." PKVICE ISIIING tudio Die Bldg. jMle Pyle Story of Hobin Hood. Lenski Strawberry Girl. Weber Beany Ma lone. Henry King of the Wind. Goudge Little White Horse DuBois Twenty-One Balloons. Bell Watch For a Tall White Sail. Foster Augustus Caesar's World. Graham Dr. George Washing ton Carver. Cavanna A Girl Can Dream. Farley Island Stallion. Forbes Johnny Tremain. Vance Martha, Daughter of Vir ginia. Henry Misty of Chincoteague. Allen Red Heritage. Bosworth Sancho of the Long- long Horns. Rawlings Yearling. Dike Stories From The Great Metropolitan Operas. Lewis Young Fu of The Upper Yangtze. Ransome Great Northern. Crawford Hello the Boat. Daly Seventeenth Summer. Estes Rufus M. Stong Honk the Moose. Shepard Paul Bunyan. Grahame Wind In The Willow t tion-Mr. Farmer IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER VE ON HAND A GOOD SUPPLY OF STER FERTILIZERS tter Brands Are Premium Quality REASONABLY PRICED I !AA SEED orders FILLED I AYNESVILLE RDWABE CO. s-'-Lf warn mmmm$ helpTyoub ettery o uijj BOXTSCORE! i IB YrtirwnTTrhialTlivabNity' wellidevelopedpule,slfoil future layers out or .naijw of chicksWijh jtsprovedj high level of itaminsandj . . . . I c uJ paiaraDie ion is just the U ..' you need to give your chi minerals, paiarauie jv... Chick Ration is ust me iccu the right start. Put Security Chick Ration in your feeders. k In attractive dress prjntbggsj 1948 Fire Losses Of $800,000,000 At All-Tirhe High BOSTON (UP)-The greatest fire loss in United States history oc curred last year, enough to pay nearly $5.50 to every man, woman and fluid in the country. Ninety per cent of the record $800,000,000 that went up in flames in the U. S. and Canada could have been saved by common sense and adherence to existing fire codes, the National Fire Pro tection Association reported. Some 11.000 persons perished, with twice that number injured and maimed for life. The No. 1 hazard as usual was careless smoking. In addition, the money lost would pay a full 13- months' salary to every factory worker in Roches ter, N. v., and San Francisco. Cal. California Troubled The greatest single death blow was the crash and explosion of a passenger plbne at Mt. Carmel, Pa. last July 17 in which 43 died among them the showman Earl Carroll. But California was the nation's "hot spot," with nearly 10 per cent of the country's record number of 268 large fires, each causing more than $250,000 damage, centered there. The state also had 33 fires costing more than $1,000,000 apiece, the association said. Several new hazards have come up in the past year to plague fire lighters. The report said they in clude self-service gasoline stations nd television installations now mushrooming over the country side. 17 Die In One Fire The largest building fire loss was in the uracil canay uo. piant in Chicago, where an explosive starch dust mixture in the air touched off $5,000,000 blast and killed 17 workers. The biggest dollar loss of all oc curred on the ocean, however, when the Army transport Joseph T. Con nolly caught fire last winter en route to Europe with coffins to bring home American war dead. Though the ship was taken in tow several times, it finally broke away and drifted the seas, a ghost hulk Both vessel and cargo were written off as complete losses amounting to $6,000,000. Second only to the Chicago can dy company fire in dollar loss on land was the blaze in a Durham, N. C, food and grocery warehouse Oct. 8. Firemen fought to put dut the flames smoldering in thousands of cereal sacks for days. Insurance companies paid the owners $2,260,- 000. DOG RE-ENACTS LIFE-SAVING ACT j Tf 53 II -y - . " . iiiij.,.,fe-t:, Ks . i K - 1 Liquor Referendum Taking Spotlight In Legislature DEMONSTRATING HOW HE SAVED his master's life, Vic, a Spitz, re-enacts his life-saving technique. Illuminating gaa wag filling the Los An geles home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Delvers when the dog managed to arouse Delvers with vigorous face licking. Delvers awoke, groggy, but strong enough to drag his wife to safety. (International Soundphoto) Experiment Stations Of State Make Annual Report This afternoon a large number of opponents ot a reterenuum on iquor in North Carolina, will gather in Raleigh to present tneir views before the joint committees of the General Assembly. Last Thursday some 2,000 peo ple flocked to the Capitol to de mand that the Legislature give tne people of the stale a chance to vote on liquor. At noon Wednesday, Governor Scott, will make his third appear ance before the Legislature. This time to address the Legislature on the liquor referendum issue. He announced that his address on Wednesday will be just like his inaugural address on January oth. He pledged himself for a refer endum in the election last spring. proposed election on a $200,000, 000 rural road bond issue met mixed reaction in the committee last week. The House roads committee okayed the bill providing for an election after a lengthy discussion, and then referred it to the Finance Committee. The Senate roads committee de- i onnsider the bill further and later present it to tlie senate without referring it to another committee. The group nopes iu report the bill out of the commit tee Wednesday. Waisav, became the capital of the newly formed kingdom of r- land in 1550, but it was a centuries-old 'city even then. Don't Neglect Them! . j i.A that kirinevfl to do ft m.rvelou job? Their task i. to keep tb. "owing blood stream lre ot .n excess of imparities. The art of l'vmg-1.. ill-is constantly producing waste matter the kidneys must remove from m"u, .:j :i 4 heath is to endure. When the kidneys fail to function as Nature lntenaea, mere - waste that may cause body-wioe a,.. -, differ nuiumt backache persistent headache, attacks of diMineu, ik,. aool inff. Dumnesi setting uw u, under the eyes feel tired. D Frequent, scanty or burning Passage are sometlniKi further evidence of kid ney or bladder disturbance. o(m . fpK. ni.d and oroper treatment .j:.'. ,i. ,Hi.-inp to help the kidney irpt rid ot excess pyiauu-- -w-j tfse Uoan; fills. They have had more than forty years of public approval. Are indorsed the country over. Insist on Poan . sma at "'"c The North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, this week re- eased its Seventieth Annual Re port, carrying a brief description and results of more than 100 dii fercnt lines of farm research. Many of the research projects were carried out on the State Test Farm near Waynesville. A feature of this latest report is its increased use of photographs and charts portraying the research results. Appearing on the cover is an unusual picture showing the location of phosphorus in tobacco leaves. The picture was taken by pressing an X-ray film against to bacco leaves which had been grown in soil fertilized with radioactive phosphorus. Another interesting write-up tells how Station workers have used chemicals to prevent the growth of suckers on tobacco. An interesting report in the live stock section compares me new Brahman-Hereford cross beet cat ii ..,in !,,,., I Hereford. The UC Willi i v i rnsshreri animals ate less hay andN grain per 100 pounds of gain than did the Herefords. The largest clock In the world was built for a Jersy City, N. J., factory in 1924 and measures 50 feet across the dial. The minute and hour hands alone weigh nearly four tons. HOUSE VOTES TO ABOLISH INSPECTION LAW The House of Representatives voted almost unanimously to kill the motor vehicle inspection law. Supporters of the present law are hopeful that the Senate will modi fy the bill with amendments and return it to the house. Governor Scott said he felt too much empha sis was put on broken glass and not enough on brakes. He said the fanners complained more about the glass than anything else. Some observers predicted the Senate would keep the bill from being written entirely off the law books. ELECTION" FOR ROAD BONDS MEETS FAVOR Another controversial issue a HOUSE FAVORS VIFTX MILLIONS FOR SCHOOLS The House Education commit tee approved a measure that would appropriate $50,000,000 for aiding counties in building school--. The bill carried the names of 85 out of 120 representatives. Clyde Seaman Is On World Cruise Audry Earl Ferguson, seaman ap prentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ferguson ol Clyde, recently visited Athens, Greece, and Istan bul, Turkey, while serving aboard the aircraft carrier USS Tarawa with the Eastern Atlantic and Med iterranean Forces, under the com mand of Admiral Richard L. Con olly. The Tarawa is currently on a world cruise and has received vis iting dignitaries of various foreign countries. THE BINDING UP OF WOUNDS Today's sterile gauze and an tiseptics are a far cry from the old sheet once kept in every cupboard for emergen cies. Insure an up-to-date medicine cabinet by stocking Curtis Drug Store's first-aid supplies. Home Owned and Operated CURTIS DRUG STORE Your Walgreen Agency ft i n Income Tax Man ! At Clyde On 25th Fred I. Walston will be at the Clyde Pharmacy Friday lo assist anyone with their income tax re ports. Mr. Walston will he at the Canton Drug .-.lore on February 28, as well as March 1, 2, 3 and 4th. He will be at the court house from March 7th to the lf.th. He i; to be in Sylva on February ?3 and 24th. Want Ads brinff quick results. KIDNEYS Do yon suffer from burnin, Itchtnt, loud putase! Have to got up aithtsl Do you hiv. buck or let paiul Do you havs colds that hant onl Xf so, rot MEF TEX. Pink, Antiseptic Tablets, whioh contaia a modern miracle ilrus. used by epecisliitt la kidney troubles. Ton days' treatment makes yo feel like s new person. Bafs for children U bed wettine;. Clip tbis ad as a reminder ba t MEX-TEX Tablets at your drug Iter SMITH'S DRlKi STORK WATCH 1 THE ir SPOTLIGHT IN - OUR k CENTER WINDOW HI LiJV" 1 Our YOUR SHOPPING GUIDE IN WAYNESVILLE IS SPOTLIGHT VALUES JVILLE .FEED & SEED CO. Depot Street, Waynesville and ion of Aliens Creek Road, Hazelwood PHONE T24 or 493-J ft ft ft ICE CliEM ITS A TRADITION Cherrie-in-Vanilla Ice Cream 'during the month of JrVashington' Birthday. If you have ever tasted it, you'll be calling your Biltmore Ice Cream dealer often this entire month for WHITE HOUSE Ice Cream. It's ready now. Call now. BILTMORE DAIRY FARMS "Supreme In Quality Since 1897" Distributed In Waynesville By Curtis Drug Store In Hazelwood By Hazelwood Pharmacy In Lake Junaluska By Potts Service Station WE RECOMMEND FOR THIS WEEK THE FOLLOWING SPOTLIGHT VALUES Nylon HOSE 51 Gauge - 15 Denier. Sizes 8' to KU-i All New Spring Shades WAS $1.59 s 92 Ladies' Crepe SLIPS Lace Trim Top and Bottom Blue All Sizes In White, Tea Rose, Slightly Soiled WAS $3.95 N W $1.55 MEN' ALL WOOL ;:suits WITH 2 PAIR PANTS $34 Sizes 36 to 44 These Suits Regularly Sell For $56.50 "Home of Better Values
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 22, 1949, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75