Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 22, 1949, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER (Second Section) 1949 Pigeon Community Fair Set For Next Week-End 55th Wedding Anniversary And a Buggy Ride Passenger Train Derails At Newton Canton's Cheer Leaders Face Stiff Season r, DAN MATTHKWS Mountaineer Special Sports Writer The boys and girls of (.'anion lliuh School, who make up the pe indent i for 11"' I it,.. West JcUipiiK'iU 1 I st-pt- 3" J jvilk- unJ ! (OpclMH i already l ffevciy as- i m homo Lrii-ulture I hi- ar ii his an- L of the kid crops, fad iH"111'- fiommunit.v fer nse". 1 Mr. Nix Ls which and the krs of the of Amer- 1 students lining at of Rights. fcommunily ftl Ithel home be in i exhibits, 'economics Icrs of the lure Home and other ;ram of en- tog planned Fair opens, fent Turner fently. there jhl program. oners infer tile show I agent, who Haywood Development leking solo- choruses, ilenlcd por- I the event. f may enter. its will be loulside the while the kwill he held M f j ; 1 dill w .4!! ' lift If J if&M Aerial view shows Southern Railway passenger train which jumped a track and crashed down an em bankment at Newton killing two men and injuring about SO persons. Seven ears and the locomol n e went off as the train No. 15. was approaching the Newton station Horn Slatosv.llo. Police mad,, an emergency call for welding equipment and oxygen in an effort to release trapped passengers. Two Negro cooks trapped in the crushed diner were found dead. iAl Wirephotoi. State-Wide Crackdown On Bootleggers Scott's Plan State College Grads To Hold Ladies' Night :ifk commit- Publicity and firs. Joe Bev Jleton. Jerry ht. Mrs. Vir- . Guy Wells; kne Stamev. Kelly; Wells. Jack rrill; tlinson, Gene Li'iiiy West, flcss, Wavne Mark Cath- Chambers: t-Lynn Cham- Nf. Howard fckman, Mrs. York: Jackson Full- George Cog- P-Mrs. Kate !ss, Mrs Pe.iH fathers. Mm Jiomas Krwin, Mrs. Flm- dwards. Mrs. 'lnrrt Mease M. Edgar RALEIGH (API Plans for a slate-wide crackdown on bootleg gers were drafted at a meeting in Governor Scott's office today. After the session. State ABC Board R. W. Winston. Jr.. said Gov ernor Scott had agreed to call a meeting here of .all the state's sher iffs and police chiefs for "a full discussion of bootlegging in the state." The governor is expected to issue thin the next 10 days Winston said. The meeting prob-! ably will be held in October. Both Scott and Winston have an nounced in the past their determin ation to do everything possible to see that the prohibition laws are enforced in the stale's dry counties. So far as could be ascertained, a meeting of all the states sheiills and chiefs of police would be com pletely without precedent. One state official said he did not think that all the stale's local law enforcement officers had ever been called together at one time before for any purpose. Ask Crackdown At the meeting the governor is expected to ask the shenfTs and to crack down on Burnette; Home arts and craflr;- Mrs. ( oni Wnlrh Mrt fWil MlllTaV. Mi's. M. C. Nix, Mrs. David Edwards, I Mrs. Bell Sales. chiefs of police hoot ledgers. Winston said he was planning lo prepare certain information for tin Governor to relay to the law en foieenit'lit officers. I'm going to Rive the Governor :i ikl ot the individuals in the slati who have had tax liens filed against 1 1. ...ii I'.. i- ii.iii-navmcnt of taxes on bootleg whiskey together with a list furnished us bv the states of Mary land and Illinois of individuals who have purchased liquor in loose stales presumably for sale m North Carolina. " Winston said. Me declared he expects the Gov ernor lo ursc the ollicers to maki us,, nl these lists in enforcing tin prohibition laws. Winson said the meeling was hi inc called bv Hie Governor becaus the ABC hoard has no powers to en torce the prohibition laws in ill enn nt ies. 'Mm- nlVii-ers can't go into dry , nties " he said. "Kntorcement o llv prohibition laws in dry com lies is ui) lo local officers entirely . To He I'ollow-l p The meeting will serva as a lol-low-up to a drive Winston has been making to di up sources of boot le:I hooch. Several moid lis ago he succeeded i rolling 'he Stale of Maryland to adopl a regulation prohibiting twelfth player on the football team - Moral Support- have been I working this week as hard as the most ambitious scrub. ! They are the seven cheer leaders. who have the job of seeing to it j that the bovs in black and red know j they've got plenty of friends in the stands They have to see to it that the boys on the lieldean hear il--and hear it loud and long. They have to show their spirit when ii's easy, when Canton is a couple of touchdowns ahead. But they've gol to show it particularly when it's hardest, when the Black Bears are behind and the outlook is darkest. In short, they've got to be up when the Bears are up. and they have to tie even higher when the Bears are down Though it's a tougher job than it looks. :) students competed lot places in the i beer-leading lineup recent ly. The field was cut to 12 by elim inations, and then five were elect ed to join last season's cheerlead ers. Aleeu llaynie and Anita Brooks, With the veterans are Joan Reno, Sarah B. Rhea, l'loyd King, (Tamil. Aleen a tirelessly n.n-kaec of energy who weathered the dismal 1!4H season, leads the squad as head cheerleader. So far. she and her colleagues have plenty to (beer about But there are tough tests ahead. Going into the third game on a murderous schedule, the Black Bears have a spotless record. tmd. and bring their wives. Henry Seaman, of Canton, president of the Haywood unit m mf&m, 3&?Jz:mi. mmm& .f-Aw r... .a-..... t.viu.-.mi..w -v' : if rf.i. v n-v.-iiM I this season Cannon. J and Clifton enthusiasts . . . , i a u- ( l.is wife of !i! 1 Salisbury, celebrate their wedding in liieir join veai oi in"i',ihi. . anniversary with a buggy ride jus. as Ibey have done . very year since 1SM5. They began the custom ,, tbeir firsl anniversary . He i, 73 ami she ,s till. Tliey have 10 children and still live in the same house in which he was born. i.M Pboloi Mysterious Disease Is Killing Deer In Pisgah By The Associated Press A mystery disease has killed hun dreds of deer in the East and along the Southern Appalachian system. Maryland conservation officials said more than 200 died on the Army's Aberdeen Proving Ground in Marvland. About 100 carcasses have been found in the eastern I panhandle of West Virginia. j The Maryland experts said they also heard of dur deaths in the Pisi'all National Forest in North Carolina and in Alabama. There were unconfirmed reports of deaths in Kentucky also. A herd of about 2,500 deer roam the vast Army reservation at Aber ,i.,.. i,t officials there said the iin,niH K Gilbert, who is in deer and Md., rose; l'Y-h and Gilbert assistant I reported ipiarters charge of deer flapping in Aber deen and Hie Army's Kdgewood Arsenal, said he bad found a sick sent it to the Patuxent, ireh refuge of the U.S Wildlife Service. and l)urward I.. Allen, director of the refuge, that the animal's hind were weak, it walked around in circles and appeareu da.ed. 'i-h deer died within a few days. Allen said an autopsy showed that death was due to lesions of the in testines. What caused the lesions, he said, was not determmed. Gilbert said the disease appeared smilar to one known as "blackleg," which affects domestic cattle. John Shanholtz, a West Virginia game protector, said a carcass had been scut to pathologists at West Virginia University, tliey reported the deer had died of a disease jsimilar to one that wiped out whole herds of cattle in the moun tains of West Virginia many years ago. At that time, the cattle deaths were attributed to ferns they had eaten. Rogers Family To Hold Reunion The annual reunion of the R. N. Rogers Family will be held Sun day, October 2, at the home oi ivir. and Mrs. R. L. Russell in me upper Fines Creek section. All friends and relatives are in vited to attend and bring a picnic lunch. The Haywood unit of the Slate College Alumni Association will have ladies night at hake Logan Lodge tonight, starling at six o'clock, it was announced this week by Howard Clapp. secretary. nr U' (-. Van Note director of the engineering research depart ment of the college will be the principal speaker. 11. W. Taylor, executive secretary of the Alumni Association, yvill also attend. There are about 75 Slate Col i i Alumni in Haywood, and a large number are expected to at- ils lupinr dealers Horn supplying liquor lo North Carolinians ill dry ai i as. hater, lie said, he learned thai Tar Heel bootleggers were being supplied by dealers in Illinois and Hie District of Columbia. As a result. Wurlon wrote to dis tillers last week urging them lo make their distributors and jobbers ill Illinois and Washington cease sidling in the stale's dry areas. W inston warned the di -tillers ii, .,1 it ilns wi re not done be would not be surprised lo see the stale yule mil comnlctely lis ABC liquor stores in 1 !i."il In addition, Winston said today be was making an ello't tu gel the Slale ol Illinois In adopt a regula tion similar to Hie one adopted in Mai land. ' -- Qfomiir Furniture Values ikJvJvA" feges-, I 1 STRONG NICE FINISH Look At The PRICE $1.25 END TABLE We have just received our third ship ment of these End-Tables. Truly this is an outstanding value Mm . . . 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Fully Guaranteed. 5 pieces as shown $)5 Table has Chrome Legs, Plastic Top in Red or Beige Reflector leaf on either side 4 Plastic covered chairs. MASSIE FURNITURE CO. SEVILLE, N. C. 2
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Sept. 22, 1949, edition 1
7
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