Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 7, 1949, edition 1 / Page 15
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THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER (Third Section) 7, 199 )Y' Poultry Project Hearing Completion Near Here Strand Sunday mm , his best role to date gives a powerful portrayal u-AKF OF THE RED WITCH. The stirring sea I Wayne with OWi. "t" " bnd Theatre Sunday. aywood Teachers Ld NCEA Meeting h. ncwiy eiuui- Haywood unit bn Association, legation altend- issocialion con- Ihis week end. lenpd today. elected at the iting March 17 inty Slamey as pw school year fiibcr. ninK. principal mtary School, tcsident; Mrs. of Hazelwood secretary; and Miss Edna Boyd of Central Elem entary, Waynesville, treasurer. Elected delegates to the 65th annual state convention were Mrs. Grace Stanley, Mrs. Lucy Jones, Miss Jackson, Mrs. Sam Knight, Claud Rogers, Mrs. Corpening, Charles H. Duckett, Stanly Livings ton, Homer Henry, Mrs. Pearl F. Yates, Mrs. Lela K. Messer, Mrs. Clem Cogdill, Paul T. Grogan, Mrs. Cuini Stanley, and alternates J. Dudley Moore and' Miss Hattie Siler Freeman. Cardiff, Wales, is Britain's big gest coal export port. v DAY - SATURDAY, April 8-9 OUBLE FEATURE PLUS SECOND1HTT! i i SHED NO TEARS" timing WALLACE FORD -JUNE VINCENT urn Robert Scott Frtnk Albtrtwn Pnduewiby WnetwtW ROBERT FROST JEAN YARBROUGH ScnfRplii by Brawn HohMS ml Vlrflnli Caot fm 0 Howl t, D Ihttm Ail Equity Picture An Eagle lion Films RelMst WO COLOR CARTOON AND A EW SERIAL - CHAPTER 1 HOST OF ZORRO' PAY . MONDAY. Anril in.11 Si?" 4E WERE HIS PASSION... a woman and the sea determined bis fate! " II w till lyyu C"atne. GAIL RUSSELL i mi ""w 'LuintB ABLER ..... "OTHERS . HFHDV h.U.r. . , I JEFFCORFV mm Hilliard D. Moody Building House For 40,000 Chicks That five-story barn with the round roof on the Dellwood Road will be a home for 40,000 prospec tive broilers when it is finished some time late this spring. And it will be something of a high spot in the 20 years Hilliard D. Moody has been in the poultry business. "I started off 20 years ago with just 500 chickens in that house down there," he said pointing out the second floor window to a weather-worn little shack in the yard. "I didn't know much about chick ens then. A man who starts off with a lot of chickens will go broke." There'll be room for 10,000 chick ens on each of the 90 by 54 foot concrete floors when the work is done, and they'll go in on a stag gered schedule. About two or three weeks after the 10 000 go in on the first floor, the second floor will be filled. Then about three veeks lat er, he'll put 10,000 broilers on the third floor, and, after the same in terval of time, he'll fill the fourth floor. By that time, the chickens on the first floor will be ready for the market, and the rotation of filling the vacancies in ' the house will start over again. "This place is going to cost me a lot more than I figured it would. Got 30,000 feet of lumber alone in the new part." But if the prices are right and his luck holds up, Mr. Moody fig ures the building will pay for itself in about a year. 'I'll sell an average of five thous and chickens a month after the house gets running," he estimated. The first two floors are enclosed by stone. "That was built back in WPA days, when you could get a mason for three dollars a day, and com mon labor for a dollar," he said. The work on the addition and the remodeling started the first of the year. 'First I was going to lay cement on this second floor, tear off the roof and then make a third floor. 'But after we got started, I just decided we ought to go ahead and make it five stories." Mr. Moody is doing his own car pentry -to- help save on -the costs. and he's supplying his own pipe. There will be 590 feet of pipe in the four rooms to provide the hot water heat for the chickens. Helping him now is Ben Fisher, who lives on the farm, and Charles Hanes, brother-in-law to one of Mr. Moody's daughters. Since he started the work in January, Mr. Moody had five men, including himself, on the job at one time, out auer me rooi was put on, he let two of them off. Getting the roof on was slow work, Because of the spells of cold weather. But the work went on pretty steady after the top was finished. In raising his broilers before, Mr. Moody would change them to another floor of the old house af ter they were four weeks old. "But when you change them like that, everything is strange to them. They don't know where to roost for one thing. I'm going to keep .the cnickens on one floor all the time till they are ready to be sold." The 40,000 chickens will be the most Mr. Moody has ever handled. He ran the flock of 500 he start ed with up to 20,000 about five years ago. By then he had a lot of experi ence with chickens. "But it's pretty much of a gam ble," Mr. Moody said. He went broke. "Got some bad chickens, lost $8,000 that year, and went broke But "I started off again, and last summer I had 10.000 chickens.' That barn is beginning to shape up as something more than a resi dence for 40,000 birds. It will be a monument to a man's faith. Youncjtamp Enthusiast """ II it ill i 1 1 in ii ii jiiiiyiyiiijimiiiiijuiiiuj ft -i-::..fiJ the 6ffi- Bill To Change Term Of Clyde Officials Nears Ratification A bill which woutd cut terms of Clyde government cials in half is up for ratification into law in the state legislature. Representative Grover Davis' measure, which would set the terms of mayor, aldermen, and police court judge at two years, passed second and third readings in the Senate last Saturday. If the bill is enacted, current terms of these officials would ex pire June 7, when an election would be held. The Haywood representative's bill was introduced March 28, got a favorable report the next day from the Houj.se Committee on Counties, Cities and Towns. Two days after it was introduced, the measure was given second and third readings in the House and sent to the Senate, which sent it to committee. The senate passed it on second and third readings after the bill was reported favorably by the sen ate committee. PARK THEATRE PROGRAM SATURDAY, April 9 DOUBLE FEATURE - "Fighting Rangers" Starring jbllNNY MACK BROWN and RAYMOND IIATTON ALSO This young delegate at last year's ramp convention apparently found the garlic-like vegetable tasty. This year's ramp convention at Black Camp Gap is expected to attract thousands of connois seurs again as it did last year. Typhoid Clinics Are Set Up For This County hal explained y?at these tiots are hi ore effective Dr. Mary Michal, district health officer, announced today that the 1949 typhoid clinics will be held soon in schools throughout the county. These clinics, which are open to adults, are for the administration of "booster" typhoid shots, which should be taken once a year, slit- added. Dr. Mich booster sh and simpler than the alternative of taking a series of three doses every three years. Such inoculations are necessary in addition to the initial vaccina tions because, she explained, the protection after the vaccination does not last long. "The clinics are held in the schools each year," she explained, "since it is difficult to get every one together at clinics held in a community in the summer and everyone, young and old, needs this protection if we are to con tine to be free of typhoid fever in our communities." The health officer advised that, besides the annual clinics at the schools, the regular immunization clinics are held every Friday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the District Health office in WaynesviUc, and every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the Health Department of fice in Canton. Typhoid fever, Dr. Michal warn ed, "is a serious, infectious disease caused by the typhoid baccilus." The germs, she explained, arc present in the intestines and urin ary tract of an infected person or of a carrier. They are spread chief ly through drinking water polluted with infected bodily waste matter. For example, she said, "water may be infected with typhoid fever germs if a water supply is polluted with drainage from poorly built or improperly located privy vaults" in districts that have no sewers. In regard to the school clinics, Dr. Michal said persons who do not want their children lo take the vac cine when the clinic is held should send a note by the child to his Using The Want Ads teacher so that I ho Health Depart ment may have the information. "Otherwise." the health officer said, "we understand that you want your child given the dose." "Bowery Blitz Kreig' Starring THE BOWERY BOYS LATE SHOW "Boston Blackie's Chinos Venture' Starring CHESTER MORRIS Appalachian Band To Give 2 Concerts In Haywood Soon Appalachian State Teachers' Col lege's 46-piece band will give two of its nine concerts in Haywood County during a seven-day tour of North Carolina and Tennessee next week. The band will appear at Canton April 14 for a concert at 10 a.m., then will give its second Haywood concert at eight o'clock that night at the Waynesville High School. The featured soloists are Helen Winkler, marimba player, and Wil liam Robinson, bass. II Americans are credited with venting iced tea. SUNDAY, April 10 A Night at the Opera Starring The MARX BROTHERS ii MONDAY - TUESDAY, April 11-12 "Strike It Rich ii ROD CAMERON Starring and BON1TA GRANVILLE I Sell B.V iiL . Vil i Tlt-fJ-tltk VOftt IRON SHOIS , LIKED THEM fKli PA.IR wnftt eu AND MoBot) &U ftVPAIft' Vti r siu doRSESttoE CRAB IS K KlN; CRA3. 4 fj ELtPHAM-f full crjow ? Ol LESS. fur eivre. most sou-fMtRty OF Kt CEA EASTERN TRlBU-fAMtS OF KE. NILE. . tME WATER IS Wttllt DUR'NlJ FlOfD SEASOH, Mtem Morale MANY AT NEW LOW PRICES A FULL ASSORTMENT FROM A TO Z AT Haywood Builders Supply A. D. C. I). F. G. Ii. K. L. M. N. Asphalt Roof Shingles 210-lb. thick butt. Aluminum Roofing. Brixnipnt. Boards, rough, surfaced or center, matched. Building Blocks. Machine and Car riage Boards V x 1 to x 16". Cement. Casement Windows. Cabinets. Cus tom Millwork. Doors, interior, standard sizes $8.00 and up. Door Frames. Metal Garage Doors. Door Sets, and Drain Tile. Lnamcl Faints, Enamel tile boards, Expanded metal lath and corner bead. Fence Pickets. Fire place heaterlators. Oak and Pine Flooring. Floor sanding machine for rent. Felt. Framing all sizes beginning with 2x4-8 at $(7.50 S4S dry. Glass, all sizes, plain, double strength and crys tal sheets. Gypson Products. Hardware, a full line of builders items, insulation, rock wool, glass and cotton. Just finished panel display room. See this for ideas on interior decorating. Kiln dried hardwoods, Pine, Fir and Ponderosa. Kitchen cabinets made to order. Custom kiln drying. White finish lime. Lintels in all sizes. Locks by Vimcar. Louvers made to order. Masonite doors at very low prices. Masonite tempered boards. Mortor mix and mouldings. Nails, common, coated and cut. O. Q R. S. u. V. w. X. Y. Z. Oil stains and linseed oil. Oak flooring in all grades. Plywood. Also available for wall paneling, Ma hogany, Walnut, Maple, Oak and White Pine plywood sheets. Full line of Gliddens Climatic Paints. Pipe, galvanized, to 2". Red Top Plaster. Floor Polish. CUPR1NOL (Wood Pre servative). Quickest delivery service. Rock lath. Roofing in aluminum, galvanized and asphalt. Roof coating and carpenters' rules. Sidings Asphalt, German Siding, Select 119 wood siding. Screen doors. Screen Cloth gal vanized, bronze and lumite. Shellac. Sheet rock. Gypson Sheathing. Shingles in asphalt, cedar and asbestos. Stairways and store fronts made to specifications. Disappearing stairways for attics. Tile board in popular pastel colors, for same. Trellis made to order, in all sizes 4 to 24". Underground septic tile. Varnish remover. Ventilators. Vimcar locks. Wall board. Wall coping. Windows, frames. Wire cloth. Metal trim Terra Cotta Valley tin. Window X-tra low prices on an assortment of paint, in side and out. Yellow Pine trim, boards and framing. Zippy service four trucks. We Can Assist You In Financing Loans To Cover Remodeling 1 1 .i . . When You Think of BUILDING, Think of Haywood Builders Supply Co. Phones 82-83 Waynesville, N. C. Ci Mi '
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 7, 1949, edition 1
15
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