Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 13, 1949, edition 1 / Page 3
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! THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEES PAGE THREE H li'll'"' c!,,pincnt the Ji C Hau nted i"L" the l'xV ,,' ('"vt' III'C 1 m vt, hroact-lait'i- i hi' i'ldl" pjrri t''':'; k0(i OlIltT lunii to r.r aid ii'l"11'1- Tuliarco il II HilOtK' Mi's Ccrai'icD C I ran- K'l.u eh uaile priiviiii'iii (Tinrli'i') h3 cleanup Id b nil11'1' L prnir.ini. Gal!"a. sun; l) a V 1 Mi 1 1 1 1 1 -. Ihr-fi li.it- (ni!Iiu ;i . tin- I'laiin ol.inil .mil tunned a P Well oGET Hals, vila- pnxliuls lest iihlain- iistance . . . ' . order armury. lAscni'y IS Operated Flimi7c LLHIIlIf r F Us For I " At Lake I -1 I vv , -Vt sis REV. E. II. BLACKARD 2 Noted Pastors Heard At Lake; To Preach Tuesday Tin- Hi'V. Dr. Wade Weldon. of Henderson. Ky., and Embrcc H. Klaekard. of Gaslonia, were feat uml preachers Sunday at 11 a.m. ,ni(l H p.m.. respectively, speaking iimler the auspices of the Lake Junaluska Assembly. Dr. blackard, who flew to Ber lin on one of the Airlift planes In attend the World Council of ( linrehes at Amsterdam, also got into Poland and spent some time in Prague. His sermon theme Sun day night was "The Challenge of the World Council of Churches." Dr. Blackard will speak again from the auditorium platform Monday umlit . and Dr. Weldon is program med lor a second address on Tues day night. noes It Matter What We Be lieve'.'" was the theme of Dr. Wel dnn's sermon, Sunday morning. De claring that true doctrine is the liiidi objective of all Christian gos pel. Dr. Weldon said that people air apt to say that it doesn't mat ter what one believes if he is only '-ulcere as an argument for toler ance. "However," continued the speaker, to accept such an idea is to tail in recognizing the difference between fact and fiction. It fails In sec that belief is the determin inc. factor of personality. It fails to recognize that many of the peo ple to whom Jesus ministered acted risht and were sincere, but did not believe the right ideas. HANDY DEVICE INVENTED TO DETECT BAD AIR SAN I'liANCISCO (UP) Small communities can track down the source of air pollution by using an inexpensive device developed for coal mines. A midget impinger apparatus draws dirty air through an alcohol solution, which traps the dust and reveals its source. Invented by' the U. S. Bureau of Mines, the device was described to the national meeting of the Ameri can Chemical Society here. contest. Miss Nancy Jane won over Zimmery Messer by eating her three cVackers faster and then whistling when she was finished. The next meeting was set for 8 p. m Jully 14 at the Elizabeth Chapel Methodist Church. - II Mil your car liuif 'KCB J 'lllhL 11 JMMHI AHD Mil YOUUSmi llTf MitosiMUTmiiutotimtOAK r rt"n mW your car k...rtS(..l I. I-. I. Ui? ptHth th, fmilh int( f. WMri,.. Nmi, -J PS"-nHna VftprM I. .I---, j . 4 in forfoy and ask us tor a tRgBl !' Ujfre Ten on yovr own corf RCOATING ,0b,hat Protects Your Car F WATER. DUST and NOISE Mner Motor Sales Waynesville Miss Massie Is Presented At Coronation Miss Mary Ann Massie. repre senting the "province" of Kenwood County, attended the Coronation Ceremony and Khododendron Ball of the mythical kingdom of rhodo dendron in Abbeville Saturday night. Her niaishall, were Charles Way and Wingaie Hannah. Miss Massie with I'dVou sponsors from other western North Carolina Counties was presented to Queen Jane Morrison and King .lames Haidy Lee follovvim: the corona tion. Preceding the coronal ion the wives of the officers of the Rhodo dendron Royal Brigade of Guards gave a tea for the sponsors, mem bers of ihe court and their chaper ons in the Uiltmnrc forest Coun try Club. The brigade entertained with a reception and dinner partv in the Battery Hark Hotel. miss Massie s chaperons her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Massie. were ; Hugh ; Mr. and Mrs. Itay Shoal and i young daughter. Hetty, have ie turned to their home after a vara- ! tion trip to Myrtle Beach. S. C. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hill and daughter, Mary Klizabelh. of Low land, Tenn., were week end guests of Mrs. Hill's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Tom Stringlicld. Miss Louise Hot ha. w ho is regis trar and head of the Chemistry De partment at St. Mary's Seminary in St. Mary's City, Maryland, i expected today lor a visit to lu r mother. Mrs. Harry Hot ha. The Itcv. li. clirle Cove is recent illness. N. llor.ers recovering of Kal lioni a Little Miss Carey Howell. l.nir li ter of Mr. and Mrs, ,1. II Howell. Jr., is visiting relatives in York. South Carolina. James Wilson Died Early This Morning James Jim Wilson. 110. formerly of Jackson county, was found (lend in bed at approximately .ri a in today at the lioine of Ins con .in. Mrs. May Lcallierwood. on Sinai It ers Street. A brother. Thad Wilson of llry son City, survives. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow from the Church of God on Smut hers Street, with the Hev. Mr. Murphy of Canton officiating. Burial will be' in Uoekv liranch venieicry in ine Aliens creek sec tion. Crawford Funeral Home of Way nesville, is in charge of the ar rangements. Serving as active pallbearers will be Alvin Dills. Hugh Caldwell, James Mauldin. Carl Stanley. Jerry Smith and Luther Kwarl. Mr. Wilson's wife died several years ago. MORE ABOUT Clyde Lions (Continued from Pace 1) group songs led by Jack Medford. selections by a quintet comprising Jewel and Mildred Hhineharl. Dale and Nancy Medford. and Geraldine Fish, with Alice Finchrr of Waynesville appearing as soloist accompanied by Mrs Clayton Me haffcy. Serving as toastmaster was Hie Rev. W. T. Medlin, pastor of the Clvde Methodist Church and first vice-president of the club, which was organized April 25. When the guests arrived, they found the tables colorfully decor ated with floral pieces contributed by one of the club's charter mem bers. Jack Medford. a florist. He also presented each of the women of the audience with flow ers. Remains of stone-age cakes, made of coarsely - ground grain, were found in the Swiss lake-dwellings. SUMMl ETIQUETTE . bad fe o weor a bare opped sun dress to the office, oven in hot weathor. ModwJy it the best folitf. Two Top Tar Heels In Washington Vf- ' ..'.aV f -K a s-s Ciiiigrcssnian Thurmond Chatham (lefD of Elkin and Acting Secre t.n ol Slate James Webb of Oxford get together for a chat m Washington. Those two leading members of the North Carolina delegal ion in the capital met at a hearing of the House Foreign Helations Committee. Webb appeared before the committee to sup port a proposed aid program for the Republic of Korea. i.P Photo'. Buttonholes Are Good Guides In Buying Dresses When . hopping lor a house dress I, 'ike a good look at Ihe buttonholes. iiiImm' clothing specialists. The dress will wear belter and look belter it buttonholes are well-made and right ly placed. Sonic buttonhole features to look tin are An ample number of com pletely fnniied slitehes. well-finished edges, and buttonholes made on a dool ie Ihnl ness of the fabric and on the grain the "straight" of the ;;ood- all making for firmness and long wear Buttonholes also should h" evenly spaced and an even distance from edge to closing, ttetore Inning a dress, cheek to be -lire buttons and buttonholes are lined up together. I A recent study showed biilton ' hole delects were a common oc , eurrence in 4( cotton house dresses -examined. Of these dresses, HI) had I i i in one to 111 defective button holes. The best liiiltonholes were not necessarily on I be highest priced (Hi sses one dress ai .;.ui had slurd.N. well-placed buttonholes v bile and her dress costing $a, la had laulH buttonholes. A dress villi one or two inferior buttonholes slid may be a satis laclon purchase provided the de lect can lie corrected with needle and I bread. For example, billion boles vvtib too lew stitches can be strengthened by stitching over I belli hv band. Ilul a wise shopper won't buy a dn ', it buttonholes are badly olf giain. or if buttonholes are spaced uneven distances from the edge. She will al'-o avoid a dress with buttonholes thai run oil Ihe double thickness into single thickness of the material. I linisci! beiore lb el- I ban I linens often wear out lone Ironi abuse ralh Insiead ol yanking sheets oil Ihe bed or the clothes Inn and ramming tbein into ham per or basket, save them by remov ing them carclully and folding neat ly. When preparing washing to send out, use a regular laundry bag in stead of toning soiled clothes into a pillow slip or tying them up in a sheet. When sheets and pillow slips art used as laundry bags they sutler I111111 unnecessary wear, and olltn smi which may require more streiiuoo- washing. Soiled towels should never he used a- 1 leaning rags to wipe up around bathroom or kitchen before I hey go tnt" 'be w ash. Tin ma nv tropical hi ead-fruit tree has u-i - Its Irint is a dietary av ; ii - w ood is used for ea maiiist, not"-, i failure glue. rn r hark, for the manu (loth; and its juice for Mr. Farmer! For A Late Hay Crop r Have Virginia Krown. Mack Wilson and Hnbrrlant SOYBEANS CANE SEED MILLET Farmers Exchange Ashcvillc Koad Phone 130-M WNC Welfare Officials To Meet June 24 iiffieinls of Western iorln ( .110 lina counties will meet in the Hay wood County Court House June 24 to discuss administration of welfare programs. Dr. Ellen Winston, slate wel fare commissioner who announced the meeting recently, said the discussions will center around "recent legislation, administration, and questions of mutual interest with reRard to Hie total public welfare program." County commissioners, county V Dress Shirts Sport Shirts 195-295. Ties Mfimira.ttiiu Wheat Pest Attacked By Canadians KFC.1NA. Sask. (UPi A never ending battle is being fought on government experimental farms here and in other parts of western Canada against the wheat-destroying '.awfly. The flight lias been going on for 12 year, and so far the sawfly has more I ban held his own. But the experts are hopeful that out of one of the tens ol thousands of wheat hybrids now under lest will come victory. The saw My attacks all common varieties of red spring wheat which have hollow stems. In 1947 it de stroyed 7 4 per cent of the Sas katchewan wheat crop, or 17.550, (100 bushels, worth about $26,000,-000. The tiny insect is hard to attack directly because it spends all but one or two weeks of the year in the wheat .-tcm. The adult fly bores a bole in the stem in summer and lays eggs in the plant The eggs hatch into grubs, which eventually topple the plant by eating completely around the stem. Grubs spend the winter below ground inside the crown of the wheat plant. The next year they hatch into flies and the cycle repeats. 11 the grubs batch all at once, the saw flies might be poisoned by DDT or another insecticide. But the hatching period extends over several weeks, making the poison approach impractical. So Ihe next best thing is to try to develop a high quality wheat with .olid stems. About 10 years ago an experimenter developed "rescue" wheal with a solid stem. It was saw I Iv -resistant and grown by fanners ill soul bel li Saskatchewan. ISul it had the low grade of three. The experimenters job now is to raise this quality and at the same lime keep Hie wheat Dot 11 sawny and rust-resistant. Men working on the project are confident that sooner or later they will come upon one variety of wheal that will fill the bill and I heir long fight against the sawfly will be over. ar and . & 150 'Home of , iT y& V finest i mm m mmm imm hl&m Held in Slaying iv,' vf VP HELEN MERLE Pi' ?fM; RICHARD T. MERLE A COLLEGE sophomore at Evans ville, Ind, Richard Thomas Merle (bottom) Is held in connection with th slaying of his ex-wife, Helen (top). 25, Evansville College Home coming Queen and campus beauty. Police quoted Merle as saying that the fatal shooting followed her re jection of hi attempts at recon ciliation (International), I i) Cuff Links Shirts & Ties prefers the practical gift and we have the selection of gift items anywhere. Sea our outstanding selection of Archdale shirts with widespread collars in newest colors patterns - also whites. Just arrived - Archdale in new Summer designs. Don't miss these ties . . ihey are really beautiful and tie just right his relaxing hours Dad will treasure a colorful Give with good taste in good dress for a good guy. Better Values' MORE ABOUT Flag Day (Continued from Pace 1 mated that some 200 marchers will take part in the parade. In the flag ceremonies, each banner will be escorted by a National Guard color guard to the steps of the Court House. Simultaneously, Mr. Casabella explained, similar ceremonies will be held by Elks lodges throughout the nation Cooperating in the observance are the Legion. VFW, Boy Scouts, high school, and National Guard company. The practice of kneading dough with the feel originated in Egypt and continued into modern days in Scotland. Handkerchiefs Shorts & Undershirts; coa re- SPECIAL I I M LSocks :f
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 13, 1949, edition 1
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