TUESDAY THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE TWO i North Carolina News From The Wires of Associated Press and United Press Choir Members Robbed Several women members ot SI Saviour's church went to choir practice in Raleigh They lefl Itieir coats and pocket books up stairs near a fire escape. Police reported while they were singing a thief pi I IV red their bags ct about S30. It was another in a series of louberies at Raleigh churches in mnit weeks. 7(2 (Jul. Liquor Caught ftdtral agents reported seizure el 7t-J f-'.illon.- of bootleg whiske j.i a -ingle raid at Charlotte. Ailing on a tip. the Charlotte Akohul Tax lint oil ice said, agents uncovered 1.534 half-gallon jar i.i iil.et liquor in a Wilkes County home Don't We All . . . J A lies! Wayne siiperintend-t-i.l ol welfare, says he's heard ivtntlung now A v. an called on his depart ment find asked for mone with v. huh to pay her State income tax. "i in in il bad lix. 1 am just not piiphied to pay thl tax." Best i.iiUed the unemployed woman as sjy ing Bt-t explained that welfare :t)i,d well' for the indigent and l oi tin "un-prepared." Farley To Charlotte Nunc of America' authorities ,n tin lield ol salesmanship will lie in Charlotte April T2 to lead a cm -day Piedmont sale conference. Aihuiig these is former Pixtmas tei Ceneral James A Farley, who ha- accepted an invitation to speak al the conference the first of it kind ever held in the Piedmont Calul!' is. Production Cut Xuicrican Enka Corporation h.i"e rayon plant, plan to curtail production. The firm s;iid in a statement. "On account of" the decieat in de mand for rayon yarn, and in keep ing with our polio not to accumulate- any inventory under present conditions of high cot. wc are starting immediately a program of fuitailment. which contemplated pioducing only the yarn neces .rv to meet the requirement of okir customer. " Karlier in the wick. Amcricen Bemberg Corp.. announced a cur tailment at it. rayon plant at Liiahet bton. Tenn. A Lot Of Parts A Duke Power Company em ploye is (barged with stealing $10. bOO worth of auto part from his employer in Charlotte. To Reluvt Afttty of UWH Oft 'AHITi - MMf MST HUH The Haywood County Farmers Co-op S it today! The greatest new Ffee2er in history Amana Model 18. Designed for better living holds 630 pounds frozen foods, takes less floor space. 5 year insurance against food spoil age included and 5 jear free re placement warranty on sealed-in mechanism. ASK AiOUT OUt CONVINIINT PAYMfNT 'HAW Be Sure To See Our Display tit The REA HOME APPLIANCE SHOW. Friday and Saturday dtThe Armory. Haywood Gouhiy Farmers Go-operative, Inc. Phorr722 More Pay At Bryson Wase increases for U2 workers al the Carolina Wood Turning Com pany were announced at Bryson City by a CIO official Oliver lioutte. representative ot United Kurniture Workers ot America iCiO. said management and the union had agreed on a six-cent an hour increase. The con trad agreement, concluded Tues day, is retroactive to March 3. tSoutte said He said Thanksgiv ing had been added as an addi l mnal paid holiday Half Million Contract A S500.000 furniture contract has been awarded to Morgan Manu facturing Company. Black Moun tain for Standard Oil Company subsidiary' employes in Venezuela, it was announced by President David B Morgan. Jr. The company will begin April 1 to manufacture wardrobes and kitchen cabinets for 700 homes in Yeneuola. Catches Pistol Is Shot Deputy Sheriff J E. Jones. 24, ol Asheville, was accidentally shot in the right leg as he (hitched at a tailing automatic pistol. The deputy was ending a night's tour of duty and was alighting I rum a patrol car w hen his ."45 caliber automatic twisted and start ed to slip from its holster. Jones st aimed at it and shoved bard into the holster In some manner the iar discharged the weapon and the heavy bullet cours ed down the leg just under the pants. It entered the leg just under the knee and emerged at the ankle. 1.078 Prisoners The Prison Department, during Krhruary. played host to 1 07H new inhabitants. At the same time. '.Vifi prisoners wire released. The figures were released in a report issued by the Stale High way and Public Works Commis sion, which supervises the Prison Department. Of the total received last month. 3H-day prisoners totaled 330. while 3iM,v prisoner released affiled up te 326. William M. Plott Is Taking Special Training With Army At Ft. Bragg William M. Plott ol Waynesville. now a sergeant in I hi Organized Resei vt Corps, has been accepted by the Department of the Army for 73 days active duty training with the 82nd Airborne Division, it was announced by Col Norman McNeill. Senior Instructor for the Organized Reserve Corps in North Carolina. Upon completion of the training at Fort Bragg. Sgt. Plott will revert to an inactive status. Wasp eggs, laid by the queen, hatch in about eight days. Announces NEWEST. FINEST FREE2ER FOR .TO UR HOME TASY ON HOMIMAKER 'Reach-fn for 'all foods "without stooping,, groping. r asy on lutxm tern vny families My food savings py for Aman Tttetet. TASY'ON THlTttS Gleaming, glistening ill "whife DuPont Dulux finish! Depot Street j- 1 P ABC-5EE AN1 WlMe AND WNE ONLYv. NORTH CAROLINA This map shows the present I icountv system of alcoholic bev- I terage sales in North Carolina, j Thirty counties are completely ry-y, gust. Only one Cumberland coun- of liquor and Ashevlk-, in min 25 counties have legal ABC stores I ty town. Fayetteville, has voted to j combe county,, also has ABC stores. and beer-and-wine sales, and 44 ! permit the sale of beer and wine Plumpness Back Into Style, Says Paulette Goddard HOI.LVVVOOD "Plumpness is back in fashion," says Paulette Cioddard. "All I he popular girls ' have it." She cited Kita Hay wort It and l.ana Turner as examples, "and Hetty Grable is no skin and bones." Paulette joyously eats five times a day. Five feet four and a hall ! inches tali, she now weighs 1211 1 pounds. That's 10 pounds heavier !than she used to let herself be. She was playing Lucrcziu Borgia 'when the director told her to eat all she wanted because nothing would show but her face. "1 feel better and photograph better." Paulette reported. She has morning bacon. i";s. and milk at home and codec at the studio. At II a.m. she has cot tage cheese and fruit. Her lunch, - brought from home, includes tur- key. bam or baloney, and cheese, hot soup, and a pint of milk. 1 saw her midafternoon snack on her dressing table; a mound of purple grapes and a two-bit chocolate bar. At dinner she Itkes a roa-t with ' lots of vegetables. Paillette's now playing "a tart with a heart" in 'Anna I-ucasta" Spokesmen like to say her dress is three sizes too small, so all her curves will show, but Paulette says it's only two sizes too small. She i-opied her wild hairdo from a shake-dancer in Mexico City, where, she points out, (he girls are all pleasingly plump. Your guide will also disclose that "Paulette wears nothing under her dress ex cept a thin chemise." 'T'ain't none of my business, but 1 think she ought to wear a girdle." Quickies: Lum and Abner have been invited to appear before the American Dialect Society in Palo Alto. Calif., next September to prove their contention that Arkan sas, not Oklahoma, is the cradle of American folk speech. The soci ety's vice-president. F. H. Cris well, arts and sciences dean of the University of Tulsa, telegraphed: "I seen in the local Bugle where ! you-uns claims the Mayflower ' landed on Mount Idy with Dan Chaucer on board and all Ameri can dialect trussed up in his wal let." Lum and Abner say they'll : debate the issue only on their i Hollywood home ground ... j Laraine Day will assemble her i clan for a square dance next Dec. 27 to celebrate her folks' golden i wedding anniversary . . . Shh: the i "California tan" that Janet Leigh 1 plans to show ofT in New York is , being put on with a sun lamp . . . Robert Young demanded a tool box so he could fix things around the ' house, i "A man can't work with lout the proper tools, etc.) He got 'the kit for Christmas but hasn't ; repaired a single loose hinge . . . i Cafe sign: "Through these portals , pass some of the most peculiar peo ; pie - but you're welcome." j New Chemical Selected j To Age White Flour j j Minneapolis aTP Most j large flour mills are installing pew j machinery to aid the aping pro ; cess of white bread flour. A new chemical chlorine di oxide is sued to age the flour. It replaces agrne. used the past 25 years Agene, a gas, occasionally ave lo?s and cats running fits, i although it apparently never harm ed humans. i To b on tflc 84fe side, however, ; the millers and the federal food j and drug adniinlslrafion agreed en the use Of chlorine dioxide. This ! chemical.. physiologists report, does I not tend to make the human nerv-1 our, as may be the ease xHth a" gene. I ItOME TOO Vt'CNKKAI!Lft MAIHETTA, O. UP) Mr. and j Mrs. hOve Martin are thinking about moving regardless of the housing shortage. They like their home but it Is on a sharp bend in a hlgtrway. Ywlcte Jn the past month cars have missed the curve ind trashed wto Hie house, eaus ing $1,200 damage. Map Ol ABC, Beer - sai'-'i .'.y f,.-- f W7AIK scr t W50WILL V-O. - I zzal 1. only. The only other county, Cumberland, has ABO stores but voted out beer-wine sales last, Au- c re'tiH-fl-bepr and wine sales. Two Columbus pojinty voted to go all ot the. beer-wine counties contain ' dry last summer. But in January. ON THE LONG ROAD fO FREEDOM s twit ' h - l EN ROUTE TO ISRAfL AND EUROPE, refugees file from train which brought them from the Pacific Coast to Jersey City, N. J. The displaced persons, who found refuge in Shanghai during the war, were taken to Ellis Island, from where they will continue their long trek to freedom. Note 'expressions on frees of the crowd as the DPs walk past. (HtcrnntionQ!) Use Oi Certified Seed Is Stressed Only by purchasing certified seed can a farmer make certain that he is getting the best product available, says Dr. It. P. Moore, director in charge ol the Ninth Carolina Crop Improvement Asso ciation at State College. Dr. Moore says seed are uniitie in that their breeding cannot be determined from appearance alone. To determine in advance the type of crop which a particular lot of seed can produce, it is neces ar to know the history of the seed and the conditions under which they were grown. In the production. ef hybrid corn, the plant breeder probably will know much about the performance of the proposed hybrid before it fs actually produced. After it is produced, it is put through a se ries of tests to determine how its performance compares with that '"Spring mtJjyeljcrheTji Wine And All-Dry Counties In N. C. . r : v m tMiiiti ' mm raw " y-wr-i .f0WA ALL DRY towns with legal ABC stoics, Ki ankHnton. and I.ouisburg in Fraiikliit fiij(ity permit the sale ol commonly grown varieties or hvbrids. This type of information. Dr. Moore points out. is accumulated, summarized, and made available for al! growers who wish to take advantage of it. On open-formula hybrids, similar information is available to reveal what the hybrid is. what it will do, and what it will not do. Farmers wishing to take advan tage of this- type of protection, says the Crop Improvement direc tors, are urge"d to make use of cer tified seed, . : Once In 10 Years llARMANy. Va. ifl'i-Harper Long missed . school one day in Harman. but he doesn't expect any trouble from the truant officer. It was the first, time he had missed in ten years and it was for illness. Ilis sister bs(san even better rec ord. Keitseba has not missed a dav nor been tardin her eltveri years of schooj, I . --- -CT, .1 i i.- MrS -s. .3 B S. I ijj Ik 'trrfll , II the town of Whiteville in Columbus ! county elected to continue beer and wine sales. Two counties in the west. Mitchell and Yancey, outlawed beer and wine sales in 1937 statutes. Since February, 1948. there htfve been 27 counties Clyde Beta Club To Sponsor Talent Show March 25th (Special to The Mountaineer I The Beta Club of Clyde school wiil sponsor a talent show March 2fi in the school auditorium, it has been announced by club officers. Students from the different grades will sing, dance and do other performances, A prize will he offered to the person whose act is chosen best. Proceeds are to go toward pay ing for the new time clock recently installed in the school gymnasium. Crabtree Citizens To Meet On 16th Community leaders in Crabtree Township have asked that all peo ple in CraWree attend a meeting at the Crabt roe-Iron Dulf School on Wednesday night, March 16, at 7:30 o'clock. At this time discussions will be held on the Community Develop iinent Program as it pertains to the Crabtree community and to organize under thts program. "All people within the Crabtree communities are urged to attend this ,very important meeting, so that this program can get under way." said Wayne Corpcning, County agent. Thomas Alexander, Jr., At Asheville School Thomas W. Alexander. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Alex ander of Cataloochee Kamli. hat been elected to serve on the Class iJay Committee at Asheville School according to a recent announce ment by Headmaster David P.. Fall of this North Carolina Prepar atory School. Young Alexander will serve on this committee for the remainder ol the school year which wiil end June 2(1 at the 9th Annual Com mencement Exercises. Waits 28 Years To Use College Scholarship MOHGANTOWN. W. Va ilJPi Turia Rinehart won a scholar ship for her exhibit at Charleston State Fair but waited 28 years to use it. Other studies, marriage and sun dry activities took up all her time during the past quarter century but she finally got around to en rolling in the West Virginia Uni versity's extension course. Turia now Mrs. King) will use the scholarship to complete work for a bachelor's degree in education. FOR SALE 4 room house and bath, lights and water. Also store building with three room apart ment above, lights and water. Henry Beck. Route 1, Camp Branch Road. M 15-18-22 FOR SALE One standard cabinet Philco radio. 9 tubes, good con dition, $25. Call Canton 2547 or $25. Call Canton 2547 or see see at 73 Poplar Street. M 15 Don't Nefelect Them I Nature designed the ktdaejra to 4a mtrvrloua job. Their tttk to keep the flowing blood it ream fie of an eioeas of tonic impurities. The act of living lift ft If it eonitntiy producing waate matter the kidneys raiut remove frota the blood if good heath la to endure. When the kidneys fail to function ka Nature Intended, there ta retention of mate that may cause body-wide dis tress. One may suffer nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of diutneas, getting np eights, awaiting, puDtaeee under the eyes feel tired, nervous, all worn out. Frequent, scanty or burning passages are soroctir.ia further evidence of kid ney or bladder disturbance. The recognised and proper treatment la a diuretic medicine to balp the kidneya get rid of excess poisouC'j body waste, use foon's fills. They bava had more than forty yeans of public approval. Are endorsed the couutry over. Insist on Uoe s. -bold at all drug stores. V HMHMWlfl hich held elections on whether to permit beer-wine sales on a county-wide basis. The drys have won every election. (AP Photo 'Map Old-Fashioned Spelling Match Slated At Clyde Clyde School Parent-Teachers Association will not hold its meet- ing this Thursday as scheduled, j but will observe Father's Night 01 ' March 24 at 7:30 p.m. j The main attraction of the event , in the school auditorium will be an-;-old fashioned spelling bee with t he Mas and Grandmas spelling'"against the Pas and Grandpas from the Blue Back Speller. Persons interested i n entering the contest may contact Mrs. Bill J Morgan or G rover Haynes. . 1 Thief Likes Stoves IKONTON. O. 1 L'Pi Police are looking for an unusually cold thief who took three old-fashioned pot bellied stoves from two rural schools in just a few days despite mild winter weather. PI OT 6 Miles From Waynesville Oj SOGO GAP ROW Thursday, March i FREE I 4 P.I-L lo 12 MiW Public Cordially Invite(i orviceS i HeldSatJ tor Mrs.C I'um-r, er C ( 'Vitu "X 51. u 'oum, iimi iim, 1. " Ij.l J 1.! ' I'll' .. ,r- "ft. mem u.,. orial l'-.in.. . . 111 , , ' U. - ( ait ... C,,,,.,. ... adlJll I I luuil, ai,t wii,. 1 .,. eai - dau-1,1,, Wawn-uii, unf' Cla.k i H lig,M( tble. Iji,,!!,,.,, Morrott i Wa!tt,. ami Julin Mno ano uiiv,- siNters. u 01 vv ay iifsvaii- Wr: Ol lilillK-MIL T.J I r rank lli jd, 1 Houle 2 I Crauli.ul Fura-r, 1 t'hargi j Mrs. Albert B 1 Of Canton, Hj Mis Albert Burn is 111 iini); oed id Urtliop.dic Hospin where she i: P'j.". Dr. Ruben ! 1 h-s Hurncttf itJ with the disease ata has lieen i-iu ployed oil ice Inr siime tin. Kels live in Irst but go in the S; spau n KIDN Z yB tuff or fron toJ nave lbci or Ur vtuu) that kmr ot ' ir u miravle iini. uwi kr Iruubles. Ten dm' fM)l like t new pwm, bed wettme. Clip Urn t Mtt TO XibUtiili THE OPEN! of the r?