.rooon, April 1949 nd House-Keeper Latures L Miners is 18, f .' teen- K. breadwin- all ier-B--responsibility, the future and she say. Ikie seems " rKI , ,k. little c;hp goes 101i..i. aP',earS . i ..Lfonpv Miouei "6l"Y ick up in""" nds ie eve- brds, msn-i-limbs into ,4.,es exef- ,p in pincrls. not. Jackie The $40 to ;i model .ment to the Aimers re visions up to family oi Jackie s lis pen- Jackie month Then lac pic ipcll mi she UP us a Ipple llr pc lr the lud Sinie. thenever $!5 a Mv does! It's Thi tY iiur..'. mike a refund to at baby sitting nt him to go .school job, such in a iuni-iicu- held recently mnl'e important Sncentrate on hi? ling, as "a boy inn these days. lined to help out nli'ies his eduea- iusses unglamor- 1h as rent, tood paiinn allowance; lids discuss false icrcstcd in dates have a chance tc When she doe; prefers boys whc sports. ime for hobbies lie used for home- Biold clmres. Hei ly paralyzed. months she has lackie has learned t; has no illusions odt'l for the rest Bays: ttinc. but I've got I'm suing: to be job: that's why forctarial course, nd a job in one hie studios when ivs are over." ifii she began to lover advised her should be only a lo a career. Too lime disappointed arity wanes; they iraged they never else." f has made up her lot happen to her. Pplement the fam- more when she fh 18, as much of pension (Veterans' nlyi comes to a f is doing photo fion show model- f size 9, has a 32 32 hips and lc fe makes $10 per PWKS. f a eood figure f can model in says Jackie. But f'. H is more im- one well-cut suit N can make do 1 ccessories than lf ''inky looking slt Is the best - W Jackie. I i mm t Mrm 1 4 A I ; 11 ) Ill II I li TT T "-'"-''" ffc Local Red Cross Chapter To Start Blood Program A meeting of the Haywood Chapter committee, for the Ameri can Red Cross Blood Bank Pro cram was held in the Court Room nere today Mi J..V, el Graves uf Aln regional director of the blood pro-' Bi am. win tie the principal speak er and plans will be made for the establishment of a blood center here. The program will be financed through contributions made in the annual. Red Cross fund Junathan Woody is serving as eueidi i nairman lor the program with Wayne Coroenin ment chairman, Miss Betsy Lane wuuiun as volunteer service chair man, and Mrs. William Norris as publicity chairman. JACKIE AIMERS . . . . Medel daughter This year she thinks It would be ."un to have a vacation, but she can't afford it. The one and only vacation she ever had was with a cousin at Lake Carmel several ears ago. It was wonderful and Jackie hopes she can do it again sometime. She says: 'Eve a week off would be fine." MORE ABOUT Ramps (Continued from page one) j re expected to perform. But above all, ramps will be eaten. In charge of arrangements for his year's convention are Mr. Sryson, William Medford, secre tary; and A. W. Parker, treasurer. F. W. Woody, Claude Williams, ind Dewey Sutton staged the first amp convention in 1932 at the Gap, after planning it during a 'coon hunt. Ramps were known before then, however, to the mountaineers who found them in the buckeye flats. nd to children who found them useful when they wanted to get out of school early. To the housewife, they are just another challenge to cooking skill. Some people eat ramps raw. Hut many a delegate at the ramp con vention prefers more refined meth ods, like making a salad out of the I he leaves, or frying the roots, diced, in scrambled eggs, with or without ham. But no matter what the cooks do to them, they still can't keep them from smelling like ramps. MORE ABOUT " Mrs. Allison (Continued from Page 1) Addie Winchester Anderson; four daughters, Mrs. Allison, Mrs. Hen ry R. Knight of Raleigh, Mrs. Frank Bova of Indianapolis, and Mrs. W. P. Taylor of Asheville; three sons, William Guy Anderson of Brass town, Harold E. Anderson of Hayes ville, and Wynton H. Anderson of Wendell; one sister, Mrs. Carrie Johnston of Hayesville; two broth ers, Earl L. and Weaver L. Ander son of Hayesville. and 13 eranrf- children. The coaxial cable between New York City and Albany, N. y., which is no thicker than a man's wrist, can handle 1800 teleDhone conversations at the same time DON'T TRY TO WEAR OUT A COLD lmtu wlu wear you out first- Don,t rlrir'T yUr find ff ' ' ' n come to us- Here Our , . - 4 0ld remedies tor instant PrecSy. PharmadstS fo" AKE THIS YOUR PHARMACY ,0ME OWNED AND OPERATED URTIS drug mm Walgreen Agency j MORE ABOUT Sgt. Jackson Continued from page one) the Cullowhee High School before entered the service with SSgt. ducted in the Army Air Corps at Fort Bragg on February II, 1943, and received training in St. Peters burg, Fla.; Amarillo, Tex.; Las Ve gas, Nev.; Sioux City, la.; Lincoln, Neb.; and Salt Lake City, Utah. He served in the European Theatre and received the Purple Heart, the European Theatre Ribbon, a Presi dential Citation, and the Air Corps Citation of Honor. He was killed on his ninth mission as an engineer on a B-17. Survving are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Jackson of East La Porte; two brothers, T. A. and Olin Boone Jackson of East La Porte, and a number of rela tives in Haywood Cdunty. Arrangements are under the di rection of Crawford Funeral Home of Waynesville. MORE ABOUT Students (Continued from page one) flaws in delivery of newscasts, teaching them how to write radio programs. When the radio school started, he sent the students showing me chanical aptitude to the station's technicians for training in radio engineering. The training extended to every department of the station, includ ing the library, where Vivian Wat kins presided last Saturday, and the front office, where Joan Morris, another student, was on duty. For the initial student operation, the staff was selected at tryouts the preceding Tuesday and Wed nesday afternoons. Every Saturday, says Mr. Knutti, high school students will run the station, presenting a variety of programs. The staff will change each month, he added, to give as many stu dents as possible experience in "live" radio work. MORE ABOUT Concert (Continued from page one) contract with them. Her professional career started in the fall of 1946 when she ap peared as star vocalist of the Straus Festival. Admission to the concert will be by membership in the Concert Se ries or by single tickets which will be available at the door. Season tickets for next year's concert se ries will also be on sale at the door. Stop Worrying And Keep Teeth, Dentist Advises SALT LAKE CITY (UP) Mod ern dentists are now warning: don't worry about losing teeth, or you probably will. In fact, dont worry! Many persons are losing teeth because of excess worry. Dr. Merrill Sweiwon, professor of dentistry at the University of Oregon, told the Salt Lake dis trict dental society to take it easy. -The dental professor explained when people worry they grit and clench teeth. That, he said, weak ens surrounding bone and leaves space for decay. But Swenson said he wasn't go ing to worry about other people losing their teeth. He wants to keep his. j - DEAr?AIOAH-WOULB A BABV SITTER JUST AUTOMATtCAUWT tOSE HIS -JOB IF HE SLOPED WITH -fWEB AST ? . e ff.tf. LEHHStmW.PBAiA yhbm iwrr kAroM MBS HOlS-mA'SOMCrTy-' IOWA".. SENO -1bC9 "OTtOAI$ 1b(0iH THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Ready For Easter PAGE THREE !t: 7rr -- TT K 7" r I if f . - I -- . j 6 I j , f A V ?.V? It I J f x" K " 1 s V.. jJ lr Ql !M4S:iUx.yMim These girls are ready for the Easter Bunny. The young lady at the left is wearing a sturdy Dunegal tweed coat with leather buttons. Her companion is dressed in a shepherd check worsted. Both coats are Bambury designs. Trout Season Opens On April 15; Limit Is 10 Thousands of trout anglers who have been waiting since last Aug ust to resume their favorite sport will be given the go-ahead on April 15 when the season on trout opens in the mountain section of the State, according to Clyde "P. Pat ton, Executive Director of the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. Spring stocking of trout has been under way for some time, and stocking operations should In completed or nearly completed hv the time the season opens. Dates and creel limits for trout fishing in National Forest area streams are expected to he an nounced soon. This year's trout season extends from April 15 through August 31, with a daily creel limit of 10, and a possession limit of 20. In Ashe, Alleghany, and Watauga County Ihe trout season closes July 31. Trout fishermen are reminded that night fishing will not be per mitled this jVear in designated I rout watersfThe night fishing rul ing was passed by the Wildlife Re sources Commission as a protection measure for night-feeding brown trout. Actress Finds Hard Work Kills Wrinkles HOLLYWOOD UP Beauty shop owners and masseurs do a million dollar a year business keeping that nasty word "wrinkles" out of Hollywood vocabularies. But they never make a cent from Elsa Lanehester. who has her own recipe for defeating the inroads of time. Miss Lanehester works in one movie after another eight hours a day, then works every night at the Turnabout Theater. She has kept up her grueling schedule for more than 20 years, "but her energy, com plexion and lively eyes would do credit to a starlet in her 20s. I A lot of Hollywood ladies keep j lovely by spending hours each day I up to their elbows in lemon juice. "I spend time each day up to my elbows in soup suds washing my lingerie and stockings," says Miss Lanehester. "Wonderful for the muscles and the mind both. "And great for the lingerie " Works In Garden Some stars take mud packs. Miss Lanehester once fell flat on her lace in the garden at her Palos Verdes home. "I work out in the open at least six or seven houii a week," she said. "It's more' relaxing than 12 massages. And cheaper. And It keeps the garden looking nice." You wouldn't describe Miss Lan ehester as emaciated, but she does keep her figure as she puts it. "within reasonable bounds." "It doesn't take jumping rope or going through gym calisthenics at $10 an hour," she added. "I make my own beds and 1 run up stairs and walk when I can instead of riding." Her husband. Charles Laughton, doesn't share Miss Lanchester's enthusiasm for the active life. "Obviously," she said, "he has no concern for his figure." He keeps mentally young, she ailed, by meeting three to five nights a week with young actors he is training in Shakespeare. IN ITALY IT'S THE 'LIE-DOWN 1 vV t.ftfiilsi TMtKZ. Dishwasher's Legacy Costs Him His Job CHICAGO (UP) A 73-year-old dishwasher complains that his $13, 000 inheritance cost him his job. "I wanted to keep on washing dishes," said Henry Sidenfaden. He told his lawyer that when news of his legacy got around, his employer let him go. "And I can't get another dish washing job, either, because they The barn owl, which feeds chief-! say I'd be in the public eye and ly on rodents, eats his own weight ' people would be coming in trying in one night, the National Wildlifeto sell me things," Sidenfaden said. "WW" lfl "rA.i'', tj &'t . - . : v54s:iJ ITAUAN WORK IRS in Rome read copies of "LTJnita," the Communist newspaper, as they practice their own version of the "sit-down" strike. Under leaderhip of the Red-controlled Confederation of Labor, the men mov in and occupy a factory where any sizable number of workers are laid oft and gtay until the employer gives in. (International). State College Answers Questions It Pays To Pay More For Hybrid Corn Question: Why should a farmer pay V9 or more per bushel for hybrid com seed when he can get other kinds f corn seed for much less? Answer: A little figuring will show that extra money spent for hybrid seed is one of the best in vestments which a farmer can make. A bushel of corn will plant about eight acres. At a price of $10.50 per bushel, seed for one acre would cost approximately $1.30. So just one extra bushel of corn grown on that acre will pay for the seed cost. Hybrids generally yield about 20 to 25 per cent more than the best sources of open-pollinated corn. A field which normally produced about 50 bushels of open-pollinated corn will yield about 60 bushels when planted to a hybrid. The ex tra 10 bushels should convince even the most skeptical that buy ing good seed is an investment which pays well at harvest time. In terms of results, it is the open-pollinated corn rather than hybrid seed which is expensive to buy. Question: Should DDT be used on dairy cows for insect control? Answer: No, says the U. S. De partment of Agriculture. Studies over a period of several years show that the application of DDT direct ly to milk cows for controlling in sects results in the presence of small quantities of the insecticide in the milk. Even small amounts of DDT in a food of this type might prove harmful in time, par ticularly for infants and small chil dren. It is recommended that meth oxychlor, another effective insec ticide, be substituted for DDT in controlling insect pests on dairy cows. Farmers also are urged to make every effort to reduce fly breeding sources by proper clean up and other sanitary measures. . HERE ARE MORE OF BELK - HUDSON i Big Savings on Easter Needs ! m m ' ' ' 39-Inch Spring Men's 69c Sanforized Men's 49c Prints : . : 29c Shorls : : : 48c Undershirts 39c These Are Our 45c Grade In Fancies and Solids All Sizes Men's 25c Value Children's Easter One Table of Ladies' Dress Jn " " Wk SandaIs : $2L'98 Shoes : $2.-" 00 All Sizes - In Brown and Tb -w w - wjwaw w. Per Pair. Buy Several Pairs White (First Floor) I I Men's and Boys' Dress Shoes : : $3.67 jge-cWW These are regular $5.95 Shoes-You SAVE "Home of Better Values" Over $2.00 per pair. (First Floor) " 111 11 " ' 1 J 1 ill 3 it

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