Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 25, 1949, edition 1 / Page 14
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4 1 5 4 i'A PAGE SIX (Second Section) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER FRIDAY -j Rebukes O'Dwyer Library Notes MARGAKKT JOH N 'TON County Liluaii.in Some Of Our Most IntriTstiiii; Non-Fiction lion I. Bernard t'olicn Science, Scrv unt Of Man. This is a new kind of lion science for the layman. Ir. ( takes the reader into 1 1 tory with the scicnti'i .iod i .'io duces him for t he lit t tone to i:. many steps, the per -i-.il nt einie.r. ors, and tin- men behind nine o' the achievements ol our are. George Wooiilnny John (.olle's Mill. Ten years ago Gcmm Vooillnir was an archeologist in llarv.ird'. Peabody Museum: today lu i- e" ti er, manager and entire laho; tone of a waterpower saw and f-'i i-lini originally built by his great, sivai. great grandfather two centuries ago. John Goffe's Mill is the .-ton of his adventure in turning an ob solete rural industry into a di -i:;i for happy living Robert Emmet Sherw ood - Koosc- vclt and Hopkins. The inside story about the Set -ond World war and the critieal years 1941 - 1945. "Tin-, i- the story Harry Hopkins would have told had he lived . . . the lull -Inn . . . told from the point ol i". of one who stood at t he i eel i r with Roosevelt and saw it whole. Fulton Oursler (ire.it 'st Mmy Ever Told; a tale of the r.teai. 1 life ever lived. This is the story of Jem.. i i a" chronology of event- Irotn H betrothal of Mary and .lo ph to the days after the nc.iirn i t mo and the episodes are taken I nun the four Gospels. This is ih- I k on which the radio program, p., Greatest Story Ever Told, ' i I... -I Eleanor Lothrop Throw Me Bone; what happen1; when ou marry an archaeologi -t I 11 ifWw- 1 i to - ! Freakish Winter Said Usual Weather Balance GOING to the New York City Hall before appearing before the Grand J ury in connection with the investi gation of an nlleged wire-tapping pl.it, Clendenin J. Ryan, million aire, political reformer, learns that Mayor O'Dwycr isn't in. According to reporters, Ryan demanded to know if Uio "mayor was too lazy to be on the job." International), I INI I! I!V (.ROUS I AST n li M ' V V. 'LP' -Cornell i 'i hhran now has 1,350,- ; t u I llll'. clll ; p.. i "l . d diii in 1)1 M inehidiim 5i),t)00 nc : I'm- la-l year, re phen V McCarthy, i i;oi i d i i: H i All, ti. hi tde WET le first seven packed I hrew r tl of I ), ti oil I! ,o i haeoln;;i-t's li ai lied to like By ROBEftT G. .FIEDLER United Press Staff Correspondent ST XOUljf (UP) Unusual cold j uiai DrmgSrOiu snowuiows ana res cue squaf&'aso means that people somewhere else are ' spading a winter.-tiine garden. It's a fact, weatherman William J. Hartnett said here, that when ! it's overly; frigid in one area, it's overly warm in another, near or far. That, he said, is due to "con servation of energy," a principle that says the total amount of en ergy in the world remains un changed. Hartnett, president of Weather casts of America, which makes forecasts to fit the particular needs of utility and pipeline companies, among others, explained that the earth loses heat, a form of energy, into space at the same rate it gets heat from the sun. Otherwise we'd all burn up or. if the sun fizzled out, we'd freeze to death. Average the Same So the average temperature over the whole face of the earth is the same from minute to minute, he said. Abnormally cold spots are getting an excess of cold winds while other places are getting the warm ones and an overall balance is always maintained. That balance, Hartnett said, is the reason for the new high tem perature records set in the eastern United States this winter while the west shivered In one of its worst cold spells on record. It also ex plains the crocuses blooming in London, the early Cuban water melons and the earliest return of robins and bluebirds to the north east in decades, as reported in Connecticut. It's the same for rainfall, Hart nett continued. If you're getting too little, someone else is getting too much. There's just so much water on the earth and in the atmosphere. Most of it is on earth and it has been estimated that if the atmos phere gave up all its water vapor as rain, the world would have less than a two-inch fall. Rainfall Constant At Peace Talks ICELAND'S Foreign Minister Bjarnl Benediktsson (above) arrives at Washington lo participate in con cluding (li.,russiinis of the North Atlantic Pact and Alliance. Several Scandinavian countries have al ready sent representatives to the American capital to take pari in similar disc issions, (international) Thu phere I hu t in 1 1 said, t he atmos inrcs comparatively little water ul.n h it gels at the rate of around 1 li.OtMl .000 tons per second over the eat lit as a whole. That is by evaporation from oceans, rivers, creeks and other storage places. II return- to earth at approxi mately I lie ante rale so that about as much ram falls one day as the next. .1 1 1 -t in dilleient places, usu ally. The balance makes il impossible for the nil ire world to suffer drought or lo he rained or snowed under. 1 1 ai i nil l aid. Which allow, lolks lo go hack to garden spade:, or snow shovels u ilhoiil that won y 'TS The sure Sign or Spring iSlS -fir yourauto needs! ;' f :?''r425S- Your car's first two needs for Spring are: m!? Drain out dirty winter-grade oil. Refill with fresh summer-grade Eeso Motor Oil ! A tlior- ; j US , 'r?z.' f? ' i" ( . -v ough lubrication job by Esso lubrication ex- I I ( A " perts with 9 Specialized Esso Lubricant!) IfW&k f j -vC, 4"' J each one applied according to manufacturer's I It! rdT I instructions for your car. W V J When you drive in at the famous red. white 'jlb- W I and blue Esso Sign, you're sure of hvjh-qunl- '' iV itlJ automotive products . . . sure, too, of r,r jCtT 4'r mtftjrMi. pcrf service' See your Esso Dealer regularly! gigg W- ' " -HI" I A ''$0!3" dE& HSOUNI! Hich - I I , -ON.T RISK the expense of faulty lubri- "Jc,SO 1 smooth power . . tr.Ee-r I ?r'"rxv''',;' rszJ si-o; I great protection ',,hed by I 1 I Jl'i. II r--j ri-ht' on rugged, sate I I ' mmjt 'r;:, rtr-f;;r backed by a 12-month COVHS - Sprue .in your I W 'J.v-at 35.000 dealers In U. 8. and "th a set of a;ra-t oMh- I neW SHingn-n-iaii'n 1'' p!"- ural rubber! I I "f '7rli fgrjg. your "Happy Motoring" starts at I ' r3 i dlpndent business man in I I ' lliSC-J sy yu' eommun''y- j I I '' too SftFI ORIVINO Atlao Sun Glaei I 1 ' 1 "angerou. road and sun 1 He r Atlas Wiper Blades and Arm I rnniING SYSIMS ivtd .-rr-n-.- ''r- ; . b d gather visibility . .. Atiaa J 1 j I se? ; ; yCb2yy Fibber McGce And Molly Sponsoring Basketball Team HOLLYWOOD (UP) Instead of worrying about their Hooper rat ing, Fibber McGee and Molly wor ry these days about their basket ball team's AAU standing. The folks from Wistful Visla are sponsoring a basketball team, and they coddle those players the way most radio comics coddle a spon sor. The Fibber McGee and Molly five, organized only last December, has already won an Invitational tournament at nearby Birmingham veterans hospital. Now it's training its sights on the southern Califor nia AAU basketball championship and the right to compete in the national AAU championships in Oklahoma City. Coach and manager of the Fib ber and Mollys is Charlie Morse, a former all-state forward in Iowa and now head nurseryman at the couple's small Encino, Cat., ranch. His three sons, Charles, 22, Harold. 20, and Richard, 19, are mainstays of the team. Stars Go Alone Fibber and Molly travel every where they can with the team, darning their socks, patching cuts and offering encouragement. This sometimes surprises other fans who hear Molly's familiar voice urging her boys on. When the radio show keeps them from seeing games, Fibber hurries to the telephone to find out how his boys are feeling, if the game hasn't started; how they are doing, if it has; who won, if it's over. He carries his basketball schedule right along with his script. "Himself here," commented Mol ly, "hasn't been so excited about anything since he signed his first contract for the show." And while Fihber and Molly sel dom travel from the NBC studios, if their team gets in the national championships, Wistful Vista will headquarter In Oklahoma City. Crude oil production 'n the Mid dle East started" In 1911. 'Well, Son?' Mother Cocker sterns concerned because junior seems concerned. But then, cockers look concerned all the time. This photo, by Jack Wright of San Joe, Calif., appeared in a national photography Uncle Sam Has Many Ways Of Catching Tax Dodgers WASHINGTON While most of the nation's 55,000,000 taxpayers are honest and try to file accurate income tax returns, every year finds a quota of crooks and chisel ers who try to cheat Uncle Sam. The Internal Revenue Bureau has many ways of tracking down tax dodgers. These include: 1. Tills from informers, who get rewards from 2 to 3 percent up to 20 percent of the tax col lected from cheaters. 2. Regular reports from banks throughout the country on unusual cash transactions. 3. Investigations of persons flashing big folding money at re sorts and night spots. 4. The close check-ups on tax returns by expert auditors in the bureau. The tips, thousands of them, usu ally come from grudge-bearing dis charged or disgruntled employees, from feuding husbands and wives, spite-motivated relatives, neigh bors, and acquaintances and sun dry citizens with a zeal for law enforcement. The identity of in formers is kept secret by the bu reau. This year Congress has appropri ated $500,000 for payment of re wards for information leading to the conviction in court or recovery of delinquent taxes. The largest re ward to date in a single case was $80,000 paid a few years ago to four persons. II was paid on recov ery of about $1,000,000 from a cor poration which had been evading taxes through manipulation of for eign subsidiaries. Two other individuals were joint ly paid a reward of $7,500 when they exposed their tax - dodging former employer. The taxpayer really maintained a home in an eastern city but kept himself in a travel status. He falsely charged to Iron Dull g, - scussK v-" "ogre,,,, Citi?e 1 "" 11 "mi program i night at IK r.l l ' iron i mum, J rem,, J. I( r.,u. "7lC committ,.,. , 'S(J are Mr, c 0 v Dots,,,, V alls From AjJ out iot Very FJ A T I -.,.. get curious ,m: QUes Icitk u ;.k usl " 1 1 113 n. ( I tl "Oh He not dent but "" survivJ 'biln't knn. J li n I . I II, , . " 1 T ",l "Plater showed l,. 1....1.. ' " "r details, d "".lull n tacular ii i.l. Richard is 11. Q f I'lln ii l,.l,. . , 1 """- Piaymg j. was an abandons pai-lceUm the 6rouJ business expense expenses and those ol w,,u uavetedwiihhit, uuu was recovered U "on i titink youcj, ing as an informer, J oiun in a urge dtv west conceived the idj "K persons eonnecW racing, such as stable, makers, bettors jK eventually niing m claims. When invevtigation much ot the informatti taken from the raoi Hons or newspapers on hearsay and rumon refused lo investigate 1 He man got nothing Also don't forget ttJ must pay tax on the receive as rewards, litis elfec! actompam ward checks. Rogers Electric Co Mas For Dminniediate Pelive; NORGE 8 CU. FT. REFRIGERATORS (Deluxe, Nif,-ht Self Defroster) NORGE 8 CU. FT. REFRIGERATORS (Standard Models) NORGE ELECTRIC RANGES (Standard and Deluxe) NORGE WASHING MACHINES (With or Without Tump) HOME FREEZERS (6-10-18 cu. ft. Capacity) GAS RANGES (Apartment Size) ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS (10 Year Warranty) ROGERS ELECTRIC CO. is an authorized dealer for BEK AUTOMATIC WASHERS A best buy is a BENDIX! Use! more women liked best by women - wanted by morew than any other washer 5 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM - See It Demonstrated Daily I I At ROGERS , ELECTRIC CO. 'See Norge Before You Buy" We have on display the famous Morion Kitchen Sinks & CabinC 54 & 66 Inch Sinks in Stock Come In - We'll Trade - Small Down PaY11 Balancn On Easv Terms. Be Sure To See Our Display of Modern Household and ComfleI Lighting Fixtures TTt Electric Co sogers Main Phone 461 Electrical Contractors IS SO STANDARD - OIL COMPANY
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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March 25, 1949, edition 1
14
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