Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 13, 1949, edition 1 / Page 10
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THE WAYNES WLLE hiOUlixAui r 'ulM iJviwun o4r Many People Arriving At Lake Junaluska For Season; Big Year Seen Webb And Gray At University" Commencement With advancing summer, new ar rivals are enlivening the scene at Lake Junaluska Assen.oly and many vacationists are rcsisterinjs at hotels and cottage owners are opening homes tor the season. The J B. Iveys of Charlotte have opened their summer home, Iveycrest, and Mr. Key W huy putting his famous dahlia garden in order. Mrs. I.udd M Spivey and fon William, of Souiem College. Lake land, Fla., are c tahli-hed in their summer home, a- are the C C Norton family of WofTnrd Collepe. Spartanburg. The Dr Elmer T. Clarks are occupying their home. Amen Corner, and Or. and Mr H. M. Hawkins. Hi-hop Haul B Kern and fanuh of a-hville have opened their hon e- Re Kugene Purcell and tainiU. Kurhnpion. N. C, are at Cheerio Collate until November, Arriving for the -ea-oii Mr- Hen M. I'ulliain and d.im'l.lt -r and grandson. Mr-- Sain C liauk- and Sam Banks, .li . ot Lakeland. Fla . are registered at the 'I . nan lin tel. Ml'-.. Grady Haulm anil -on James, also of Lakeland, are in Mr. Farmer and Gardener Don't Let Insects And Blight Destroy Your Crops ! ! We Have a Spray or Dust For Your Every Need Special Prices For Bulk Orders Farmers Exchange Asheville Road Phone 130-M Iheir home. "Golden Hours." Or. ai Mrs. Holand Hill. St. Louis, Mo., are registered at Sunset. Mr- Walter Herbert, Sr., and members of the Herbert clan are settled for the summer at the Her bert home, Carlisle Cottage, on me second terrace Mrs. Herbert ' as the surprised person the other ' morning when H W. Lowery of I lireenville, S. C , salesman for the ' Easterly Motor Company, drove up ,n a new Dodge four-door sedan, a gift to Mrs. Herbert, 84. from her Drother, Alliston G. Furman, Sr., 01 Greenville Dr and Mrs B. R. Wilbur of Orlando, Fla, have ; opened their summer home, as have also Dr and Mrs Nat Harri--oti of High Point The various permanent organi zations on the grounds are get ting under way. Bert Ishee of High I'uint. recreation director, has ar lived and is supervising the set ting up of athletic fields and swim ming Lailities. Assisting him are iiichard Crowder and Jerry Craw ford of High Point, life guards. The gate force has been organ ized with the following young men in charge: James Hamilton, Or lando. Kla.; Nat Harrison. High Point: Kidman Palmore, Duke I nivei'sity: Howard Norton, Spar lanburp. S C. Walter Noel of .Nashville. Tenn. has charge of moving picture machine and pub lic address system, and David Her bert of Roanoke Rapids, N. C, of boating. James and Joe Hart of Abingdom, Va., are running the Soda Shop; i. E. Crenell, Day tona Beach, Fla.. has opened the Kodak Shop, and Mrs. M. Leo Hippy and Mrs. Wilbur Young of N'shvillp Tenn are manseim the Gift Shop in the Boat House. Daily new arrivals and new ac tivities indicate a banner season. "Busy" is the word for Lake Junaluska at this time. ft.- v f J 0 r 3 - V I if 1 IT J i ' i m . -w ";: &.J) Ant wafer's I iW I - - -jjtil. .. Dr. Blackard To Speak Tonight At Junaluska Dr Kmbree H. Blackard, Gas ,,,, Methodist pastor, will address an audience .. ., ('. ii Acting Secretary of State James E. Webb .extreme right, and Acting Sec,,, a u Gray .second from right, participate in commencement ceremonies a. the Una, their alma mater. Both received honorary decrees. '1 hey are seen . the n, u u to right Judge Henry L. Stevens, Jr., of Warsaw, retiring president oi the (uiuial Alun i ChanceHor Robt B. House of the un.versity; William 1. lUUVin of , -ha.,, new ,..e, - ,. h a.umni assoeiat. on; Control. W. D. Carmi. liael. chairman o. the Conun.,.,,- ot , s ' . lors; Mr. Gray and Mr. Webb. On Tuesday IV- ideal 'muiia,. no.u.naU, (..av o - , ol h. U publisher of the Wuiston-Salein journal aim neinu,. ,. ..., 11 26 People To Leave Ranch Tomorrow 1 4 Diseases On First Post-War Pack Trip Through j Take Lives Ot NrrHrmrrl Park: To Ride 10 Days 4,502 Tar Heels Library Notes NO PROFIT FOR CITY SAN FRANCISCO iUP Muni cipal Judge Matthew Brady rilled Charles Cross $50 for drunken driving ixit the city ended up $3 in the red. After the fine was paid, $53 was received by a witness, Bert Harris, as his fee, which included travelinu expenses. County Librarian MARGARET JOHNSTON ATHLETES FOOT GERM SMITH'S DRUG STORE TELLS I HOW TO KILL IT The germ grows DEEPLY. You must REACH tt to make the kilL Us a Islioni PENETRATING fungicide TE-OL, made with 90 per cent alcohol, reaches MORE germs. If not pleased IN 1 ONE HOUR your 35c back from any druggist. (plenty of h0t waterj Of course - it's ' The auomatic ELECTRIC wcrtr healer i a marvel of fficiency. Af ter you install it you cein just forge! it and enjoy abundant hot water for all family need at the mere turn of a faucet anytime of the day or night. There is no bother no ashes nothing to cdjust. & your elec trical dealer and find out morel I " C CAROLINA POWER LIGHT COMPANY) HAMILTON Steel Mirror Chemist John F.mmett quickly learns that his pick-up, Ann Nicti olson with whom he is hitching a ride 'west, presents an irritating mystery for she is either the vic tim of unrelenting persecution or a treacherous maniac and defin itely not the companion for a safe drive. DUNLAP And Ride Forth Singing Postwar France with its conflicts and readjustments is background for a love story set in the same lit tle village featured in the author s "Once There Was a Village". r.itTHRR Dauble Muscadine In the mid 1800's in Mississippi, Syke Berry, son of a poor farmer, was conducting his Brst law case in defense of a young kitchen slave accused of poisoning the McLean family at Waverly Plantation. His lucky hunch had won an appeal. and in the six months between tri als, the novelist reveals the whole fearsome background of life on the plantation to show up the real kil ler and the motive tor the crime. WARE Wonderful Mrs. Ingram The exposure of human frailties of beautiful Mary Ingram by Dv. Gertrude Hanna. psychiatrist. Maiy, the writer of best sellers, and Pulitzer pri?e winner is thought by all. including her family and her self, to be a perfect wife and moth er. The eye-opening reveals neg lected children. husband and home, and a vain selfish ambitious Mary. BERNSTF.1N From the City, From the Plough. The story of a British infantry battalion before and during the in vasion of Normandy. EVANS Gunman's Leeacy Rancher Tom Martin had seven sons. Six of them were hard work ing conscientious cowmen, but the seventh was a restless devil-may-care adventurer called Flash. When Martin was shot, his lands were divided into hix parts. And the seventh part of his legacy was a six-gun and a charge that Flash should use to avenge his death. HALLERAN -Rustler's Cany Larrv McCall. returning to home teritory on the border to investi gate som inexplicable incidents for a mining company, is kept from his ranch, attacked anet amousnea -finally lands on the trail of a rustler's outfit and sheots his way to a successful conclusion. Twenty-six people will leave Cutuloociice Ranch I onion mv morn ing for a 10-day pack trip into the Great Smukies. This is the first time since the war that the Trail Riders of the Wilderness have made their trip into the Park. Tom Alexander is in charge of the arrangements and details of the trio, which will cover 125 miles during the 10 days. About 15 miles a day will be made, with two days of complete rest. The event is sponsored by the American Forestry Association, and riders will be from New York, Louisiana. Pennsylvania, Florida, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, Rhode Island, and Ohio. The group will meet at the Ranch Tuesday and leave from there for Flat Creek for the first stop. J. Howard Mendenhall will rep resent the American Forestry As sociation, and Dr. C. I... Hobaugh, -of New Kensington, Pa., is the medical officer in charge. The trip will take the riders through the Park and into Ten nessee and over several peaks more than b',000 feet high. The State Hoard ol Health re ports that more than hall the peo ple who died in North Carolina during the lost three months ol bed to oiih lour diseases. These top killers, which claimed 4,502 victims, are heart trouble, apoplexy, cancer and nephritis. These victims were among a to tal 8 dill who died liom one cause I.... ..,-,,.11,,. i- ilmiiiL' the lirsl ouar- ter of 194". The total was 4:i under the figure for the same period ot 19411. Auto accidents killed 22 peo ple in North Carolina -- an in crease ot 4ti over the highway death toll of the same period lasl year. One blight note in the report, however, was that heart disease claimed fewer people during the 1949 quarter than ill the corres ponding period last year. Also down was the death rate from nephritis and strokes. However, the cancer mortality rate conlinued to show an increase i.,oi,iht at the Lake junaluska Methodist Assembly aud itorium. - , ,. Guest minister at yesie.ua, morning services was Wade Weldon of Henderson, Ky. More than 101) young men " women are attending the week-long youth Caravan Training School which opened Saturday and will run through this haturuay. Thev came to the Assembly as more than .' cuhcec leaders ended a Regional Student Conference sponsored by the Meth- odct general education hoaia. 1 ast week Bishop Paul B. Kern ol Na hville, Tenn . made the con vocation address, saying that the task of building a world Christian church is up to the younger gener ation He advised his audience to accept the responsibility, in the field of religion, as trained, educat ed oung men and women are com ing' to the forefront in the realm ot the social older. The new conference which con tinued its sessions today is to train ! the voung people in preparation for the participation of Youth Caravan teams in promoting Christian life ' and work in local communities. ::i li,s program is held in coupera 'lioii with pastors and other organ ! m, (I s out li movements. Representatives from states ihroiighoul the South are attend ing the school. Scheduled later this month is a heduled to be held June 27 through July 2 for ! young people from 17 to 23 .s ears of age. This and other youth conferences j 0 be held next month will be con ducted by the Rev Carl II. King of Salisbury, executive secretary of vouth work for the Western North Carolina Methodist Coiiler ence. On the night of June 14. the Rev. Mr. Weldon will speak again in the auditorium. During the remainder of Ibis week, religious movies will be shown in the auditorium. Capital Letters (Continued from page twoi everybody was beino; innL; . Scott's luck Willi the l.cni-,1,, Let all those individuals .u ur, tneir tears, ino i.overnur in Noiii, Carolina's history has ai'( uiiiiiKul ' so much in so little time n,,. 'it c 'cpai ii,,,.,,. I ha nti 'Plllfill. give much o ft he credit t (;t, Roris new head of the I) of Conservation and l)e,l,, George come oi i odio d.um ,.u ducts in Lexington, Ham u , well of Greensboro, ina-iei l; ult, State Grange, the iiulnH. l A and Observer, Stanford .M.ui,n , the Winston-Salem Joun,.,i ,,,,,, P. McLendon ot Green-hum. OFF THE CUFF II. I. of Asheville, head of th, Farmers Cooperative, i- leave this connection and , , , . , come the new director ,, Prison Farms. A State Coll, ,. he is former county agein m and Halifax and before gom the new cooperative a hair two years ago was inarla iniv cialist at State College. ,. up on the Piedmont !.ji. Station at Statesville. whn father, F. T. Meacham wa. inlendent for many years. . . . A. B. Harless, who is the Albemarle Peanut Coinp. Edentou, has been olVorcd a porlant post in the .stale Ay ture Department, lie is expei refuse it. 'i h:mi i ll In BETTER THAN THEY THOUGHT 1NDIANOLA. Miss, t U I ' One of Uncle Sams good $1,000 bills changed hands at least half a dozen times before any of ils own ers realized its value. They all thought it was a $100 bill. DE LUXE BUT RESTRICTED MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) Mrs. I R. J. Barber decided not to take the furnished room in a "de luxe" j rooming hou e. even though ill ili j ties were furnished. A sign in Ihe bathroom read: "Baths on Mon days. Wednesdays and Fridas only " WON'T LET HIM RETIRE HENDERSON. Tenn iL'P) Dr. I. C. Smith's patients put an end to his desire to retire after half a century of medical practice The patients swamped Ins office and Ihe country doctor changed his mind. Smith has delivered 4.000 Ii3hii"-. including 52 'els of twins, in West Tennessee communities. TRAFFIC HAS TO WAIT MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) A young student policeman at St. Mary's School made the most of his au thority when he was directing traf fic at a busy intersection. He blew his whistle and tied up traffic sev I eral mnnites while his puppy frol icked to the other side. The State News Bureau has for tree distribution 15-mmute prints of a color-sound, Hi nun. movie on Wiln, ington's A.alea Festival. KIDNEYS Io 70a suffer from burning, Itching, puufil Ha fea st up sifhtil Tk rm b&ve back or )ms paiual Do yon hav oatfc that kaac oof If m, t SJ-1Z. Pink, ActiftvDtic TabUta, wbioh oontaia a modara AiixcW drug, BMd by pcia.lit fca kids ay traubtrt. Tb tjUys' treatment makaa yoa ImI life a nw 9 arson. Sai for cMldxeB im bed wtttinj. Clip tbl id u t rooiiiidvr to wiM BiH yor arms SMITH'S DRUG STORE &mc in ad THH FIUEST REFRIG THIY RI HERII 1'be wonderful new 1949 Crosleys with the mar velous Shelvador that gives you twice a much "front-ruw" space! Come in and see these haiidsume, quality-built refrigeraturs tht bring new beauty, new conven ience, and new economy to your kitchen. Do it today! CAGLE FURNITURE Your Credit Is Good With PHONE 3379 LAFF:A-DAY mm Boon to Busy Housewives Kng fHtwa Srmfio he. VMM (ifhet lMl You're not even breking yourclul jigttjj WORM IIA9 TWO TAILS LaGRANGE, Ga. (UP) G. P. Satierwhite. who raises worms as a hobby, has grown specimen which should interest nsn. it s a little red English worm with two tails. SLEEP TONIGHT! TABLETS cu Mp bris ali nWl tmt when narroua ttatkm &tmm efV te NORMAL IN XAHJTj 1 "7 bnil . . ml to im. Tka Get Fast Cains and Top Quality Birds with jf.UL-0-PEp UnUILEK KIHSn Thousands of successful lng on vltamin-rich Ful-O-4 Pep Broiler Mash to give theas fast, economical gains and f ull-meated, well- birds. lul-O-Pep Broiler Mask is fortified with spe cial ttBUB sources and srovides choice proteias and organic-source minerals to help build big frames souna oones ana meatr birds. See us today for tout supply f Ful-O-Pep BroUei Mash. ' FARMERS FEDERATION iXfri V' - 'i tt: St -v ?? ' fc". tfsf J sit A i onv nif ril Extension Tm " r. at . ax I i An extension telephone within easy reach makes your household run more smoothly makes your telephone service more valuable hy increasing its usefulness. ' ' One or more extension telephones can now be installed in your home at surprisingly low cot You don't need to write us or come to the office. Just call the Telephone Business Office d order your, today. SRI 1 PHONE 344 AT THE DEPOT southern nu 'mPniHw-i
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 13, 1949, edition 1
10
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