Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / April 28, 1949, edition 1 / Page 15
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THE W A YNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER (Tlyrd Section) . Tr Named Chairman itcka Program (d Tuesday Night The Rhythm Bands Of Maggie School lizens of the . J organic jopinent pro- as chair- nr C. N. Lh' district lience f the iie program. Wi William VVajoesville also pointed ,flts of the iion of thc ,chers Asso lity. At Pres iuska School ,nal meeting v a P-TA. ie Corpening he objectives lopment pro irganizational howed a film nprovement. was elected illard Moody. Howell, treas aul H. Duck- icipal of the ool, presided first program m set for 7 Je executive r community Chapel Meth- Swipes My (UP) This mts say, is no a little. But with crows Is a taste for We. h morning on vagabond bird feps and drinks to,uch homog- Ilunan hid the ' found them. milkman can fellveries with Itons. , . .-. Local Girls Keeping House In Germany (Special to Tlie Mountaineer) FRANKFURT, Germany Two Wayncsville girls have a couple of importani iiuawm- - Dana lvfnCSPr Whn The lormei - married George Carpenter, and the former Wlnnnrea nauiuui n, who married George's brother, Bill, are keeping house near me xwiem Main Air Force Base. This is one of the four bases .. . hnmo for the American mat airlift planes which supply Berlin with coal ana 100a 4 nuuis- a uay. r...nree and Bill Carpenter, who call Roanoke, Va., their home, work at the Swanneim transmitter ,hinh handles thi base's siauuu code messages, radio teletype and weather maps. The station also handles part ot the tranic irom Frankfurt. "The smooth operation and high standards of the Swanneim station ' i.iv Hno n thp skill of Staff are wb'j - Sgt. George Carpenter and Staff Sgt. William carpenter, an rtir Base Public Relations dispatch de clares. The brothers both saw action overseas in World War II but in opposite theaters. Bill established portable radio ranges awing me invasions a Africa, Sicily and Italy. George, after starting his ovcr Ufa In Australia tnnk nart in acao 111c 1 " - ' i the campaigns in New Guinea, New Britain, wie rmi'i"113' uu Halmahera Islands off Dutch New George was among the first Am- ci nana i " ovt i- niv. u-wv-MfM".. Japan. He helped set up mobile weather units ana control towers at Atsugl Air Field, where the oc cupation planes first landed. POOCHIE LIKES COMPANY' FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) Poochie, the peregrinating pup, nearly drives her owners, Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Pearson, out of house and home. She has a habit of bringing home dog friends. In the past five years, the brown and white rat terrier has brought home 32 stray dpgs ,., ...... ill.. ,,. St. John's Students To Present Play Friday Night St. John's School students will give a three-act comedy "Double Trouble" at 8 p.m. Friday in the School auditorium. The play opens with three girls rehearsing another play. They de cide to put their -acting to the test of reality. They also decide to find out how a real-life hero would react to the screaming of a girl being attacked by a burglar. That's where the action and the comedy start. The cast includes: Sally Wages as Glad Bliss; Bon nie Walker as Sandra Soon, Beta Grant as Helen Wintergreen; Virginia Kernan as Mae, a maid; Jack Willis as Duke, an ex-boxer; Hallett Ward as Lace Davis. Max Colo as Bruce McFaSiin; Walter Taliaferro as Lord Delemater; Doris McCrarey as Pert Bliss, Anne I Mormino as Auntie; Hayes Hall as a policeman, Bette Hannah as Mil dred Massingale. Nancy Furtado as Mrs. Stratford-Smith, a dramatics coach; Dolf Kienast as Dorothy Barringer. Sister Mary Cordea and Sister Mary Lucilda are directing the production. ' St. John's students are selling the tickets 50 cents each for adults and 35 cents for children. The boys and girls in these two pictures make up the two rhythm bands of Magi-ii- School. The bands, consisting of 28 musicians each, were organized only this year. But the ymiii'Mi-vs v.vro t'.iven honor able mention at the Fiddlers Convention the night of April 15---though they had nui mniialK entered. FFA Livestock Judging Event Set For Friday Eighty-four Western North Caro lina hoys will exercise their judg ment 'tomorrow. The occasion is the annual Live stock Judging Contest of the Nant ahala Future Farmers of America Federation at the Mountain Kx periment Station and M. (). Gallo way's farm. Boys from 14 FFA chapters in Haywood, Jackson, Macon, Clay, Cherokee, and Mitchell Counties will match their talents as judges of dairy and beef cattle. The three-nujuiber dairy cattle judging teams will demonstrate their talents at the Experiment Station, while the beef judging teams, also of three boys each, will compete at Mr. Galloway's John Nesbitl, Wayncsville High School vocational agriculture teach er who made the announcement, said the contest would start at 10 a.m. The teams finishing first and second in this event will compete in the district contest at Stales- judging learn ol Jerome Boyd. Jon athan Creek; Jimmy Farmer of Nineveh, and Linton Palmer of Dcllwood will try lo improve on I hp l!14!i performance when the chapter finished second behind Franklin's keen-eyed gentlemen. In the dairy compel il ion, Waynes ville's standard hearers will be Bill Arlington of Saunook. Boh Kvans of Maggie, and Brown Ross of Jonat han Creek. These hoys will he out to grab the honors that Clyde's learn won last year. 1 The judges will he Assistant County Agent Herb Singlelary, J. D. Kliod, Southern Dailies, of Asheville; and Cecil Wells of the WHALE HARPOONING HIT AS CRUELLY WASTEFUL OTTAWA, Ont. UPl Sufiicien! whale meat to feed Europe for more than three months on present rations is wasted every year in the Antarctic, a Scottish whaling au thority said in a report published in the Canadian Geographical Journal. Dr. Harry E. Little said the waste amounted to "hundreds of millions of dollars of red-blooded meat, as tender and flavorsome as prime heef." and could be eliminated if whalers forsook the explosive har- ooon in favor of more humane electrocution. , Little said he was opposed lo the present use of explosive harpoons for killing whales since harpoons were "the most cruel and wasteful weapons possible.'' ..:n it c Vl,,t m" "' . . 'Skyline Dairies, Asheville. Keep Your Radio Tuned To MOT Nineteen thousand accidental deaths occur annually on Ameri can farms. "Your Radio Station WHCC THE VOICE OF HAYWOOD Speaking For Everything Worth While In This Area. 1480 On Your Dial Say, "I Saw It In The Mountaineer. inner Ladies' Spring Suits All Wool Gabardine and Worsteds h Price $45.00 g. Price $49.95 g. Price $55.00 )IES' Ladies Dresses SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE Sold To $7.95 All Colors All Sizes New Spring Dresses by Carlylc, Reg. Price $9.95 and $10.95 Reg. Price $12.95 and $14.95 Reg. Price $14.95 and $17.95 Reg. Price $17.95 and $22.95 Reg. Price $22.95 and $29.95 Paula Brooks, Gay Gibson and Others. SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $ 7.00 $ 9.00 $ 3.2,00 $1L4.oo $aaoo Ladies boats ALL SPRING COATS AND TOPPERS ON SALS Fine All Wool Gabardines, Coverts and Tweeds, by Ken Whitmore, Dry Manhattcn and Others. Reg. Price $29.95 Reg. Price $35.00 and $39.95 Reg. Price $45.00 and $49.95 SALE PRICE $3, SALE PRICE SALE 2 PRICE 1P3 1 Lot Ladies' $2'88 Blouses 1-3 Off Men's 85c Value T-Shirts 50c $3.00 Value Men's Overalls 8oz. Sanforized SALE PRICE $2.i9 Regular $1.50 Men's Work Shirts Sanforized full cut Chatnbray with 2 pockets-Sizes IV 2 to 17. SALE PRICE $1.19 1 Lot Childrens Dresses Sold to $3.95 SALE PRICE $-.77 winner Waynesville, N. C.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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April 28, 1949, edition 1
15
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