Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 13, 1949, edition 1 / Page 6
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'1 ' 9 . I! ii Tj alA TRANSACTIONS IN ftea Estate W ay ni'sv i 1 U- Township Lawrence IV l.eathei wood Wile to Thomas Stt Ini-lU Id. " Eduaid .1 l.iliur. and.vufe and tc. Ra E Cm li- am! ite Aiary L Meaies to rh.beit J Green ami v ue Pearl l.t-hc .)i.hn-on to l.ula (. Queen and J I' .saioei L. H.iilci (Juet n .mil Wile ti Pearl Le.-le. John-on. Jdiues Sin i ll.. ii .ii. il a lie to li N. John nil. V. I. ol.illd .illii wile III Mill i'l ('oihi an. A. T .h il Rom i - H I. I'lcwi I othei- In I Natli.ni HiH TrcmeK CfuiK', l V I'aiui (in! 'I own ol V. . Kllaht Hi I !.... Klialu 1 li i Monpi ' H.-a. .1 M I I :. Si 1 II (ll 11!'. il: ... Jill- lii I. .1 llll il- In I!. ihl dill T I-. U i .... loi . Ihlll.l Ii .! .1 li 1 1 1 : ; i.-.p- I II In I l.illk I Il .III I I'l ..ill iii.ti: il.it Mile ii. il I.. ill 1 ( l.v I.'o- l'i i .i!iip ,i !: .'.l.C'r. :.,,d wile 1r: ji.il u i: U-l'.lMl! ki o Kov wiin.Tiimiwni mn WE HAVE RECENTLY INSTALLED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE A RADIATOR VAT Which Enables Us To BOIL OUT & REPAIR RADIATORS Also Doing BODY & FENDER WORK, CAR PAINTING, and Any MECHANICAL REPAIRS DAVII Phone 402-M fa Dry Cleaning Service In Building Presently Occupied By Harrell's Automatic Laundry featuring Outstanding Dry Cleaning Service By EXPERIENCED OPERATORS At POPULAR PRICES The Launderite Phone 695 Rev. J. Doyle Miller To Preach Sunday Members of the Green Valley Raptist Church are glail to report that their pastor. the Rev. J. Dovle Miller, is improving from his" illness and w ill p.-u'h Sunday it 11 a ni. Hi-- suhjeet will be Whv I Am a Baptist." dusts at the service wilt he BU Boy Hooper and hi-, quartet. Due to the work and time guen Dv some ot the men of the coinnui .nt, the church now ha? eight 7iiida School room-' completed ni.l in use. with 111! pi'e ent at , -,-ioi.s last Sund.iv A war n weliome awaits all wla llul i Ii and w lie. Iw Kill Township i Ualui l' Ka ami wit'e to Jari MnM-l and wle. U .ill.'i (' !(.. i 'iit w il to (' I ' i'.o- e and w ile .1 1. I ei fin oil .Mid . Hi- and ulh ! , , . lo Jaliu-s Sullnl. I ines ( n ek I ounship Dii- loo.e and wit'- In C C l-'i I . il- nil al d W it. ,1 I , , : ,i iiii lo D. . Moon- am ill Ta-.t loi'.. Town' hip 1) 1.. I'll s and will- In II C Ti nil ami w ife. I) I.. I'U-- and wile In Vn:i U ll nil .li d . it.-. Cecil Township Ira MasMi and v lie to U'iMian Mor;..n .'i d Jolif. .Moi .,.in. Crabtree Township Susie Nolanil and other.: ti . Charles Noland. GARAGE Hazelwood I THE OPENING oi HARRELL', CLIFFORD HARRELL, Owner Condition Serious li ! &. - . m- . - - - i j ...i '.i REPORTED In a serious condition. Associate Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas Is attended by an orderly at St Elizabeth Hospital in Yakima, Wash Preliminary X rays showed the Justice had suf fered 13 broken ribs when throw n from his horse near the summit i f Chinuok Pass, (lute niotioiai! ) ilesignation of Harry VltiVliillan Expected 1 S)i ci.il t '01 ri's)iiiidi. lu e 1 HA! .KIC!! - - Attorney Cem 1 .1! ..i!i Mcdullmi, who has held l!n 1 1 1 ' loii ir.i' lieu: appointed 1 1 1 f. , I ' e ,. .1. (', li. Kl.l ili:;balls !o ,ll Mi,. 1 1 -: x J 11 id lerni ol Cran 1II1 Coiiiii 's Driinis C Hi uiiiinil I . . 1 11 eled lo it- i-'ii as ol .l.oiii.iiv . lo .1-1 liter t praelii-e ol law . i-.Miil!aii I a luemhi r ol llie - -.. I i v laiiii.iis MiMiiiian fanulv .! Iln- I';, .pio'ank - I'.-i (piiiiian -'liowan .11 .1. Iiul ua pi-.iel Ii-iiij" av in a liliii l'in. N ('. when In 'I'rrivi'il llu- appointment and ll.liM'il 111 Kllllll 'l lu re oi I is thai lie will he ome a- .11-1.1t t ii u it h ,1 , ( '. H l-.h ini'h.iii , Jr., in tin- practice of l.lll hen ill hrtlei;'ll. Drain on L S. Forests Ii 1 1S--I9-18 the forest service says v:e t,. .k cut f the f.. rests M'.se 1 i ! : 1 . 1 i until ally bix Units as r.i.i.'h e.n h year as v.-e grew tn re e it. Bui in 194G. it says, lin-dr.-iu v...s ..r.ly i.ne an.1-a li..lt I..., .id feit It every one font gr..w We moved from a drain six times as great bs new growth to where the drain today is only hll f ot greottr than each ikw b.-ard f.v.t gi a n. Want Ads biing ((iiick resulls. 122 Depot Street THE WAYNESVUXE Library Notes MARGARET JOHNSTON COUNTY LIBRARIAN WAN'I Kl INFORMATION 1 have been very much interested in kiiuwiie-'irioie about the Bronze Tablet loom! in tlie Library. It bans:-, over the mantle. Bet you iavi n I e.i-n 1 1 ot iced it! I luii' a: Ued a number of peo ile ho.v il came to be at the Li i. .ii . and i .i oik- seems to be sure. ,t-i i'ii a huh- Kiiesuing and may- -...in. i--.- Kill be able to ?traight- r.ul We U)po::e tnat ll was n b l';-i I. Verguson, since il ol lYii.ii ii i lal Recovered from I SS M.iiin . I' loin what I un ,:,ml h i ai ed tha! :.liir" from Piii.n.i l..nlior. i !m won) ol Hie tablet Jim Mi nioriam iii liiAcd in Havana SS M i-.li. 1. 7 IridM. I ihlil i- cast from metal is 1 o.t i. 1! no: 1 llu I SS Maine." . :,. 1 1 , h.u-l; il f.ives the tablet No ',"( 1 . i: Ii Charles Keck as I .. h.-iii cast by J no. Wil li.;:, ii ; . al tlie Bronze l'oundry. Ni ,. Vol I. ill lillii. is.,! do sou know about il? lllti:.UIS COME TKl'K 'i : n..-. week 1 threw away the 1 ,,u :..i '.In talks 1 made in the I ;. 1:,' . iuii-K 1:1 194-1. If you reniem hi i ,1 ..,i win 11 we were beginning in.- ('.ni.: wi.lc library service. ' 1 1 1 1 ) ,. 1 1 ,;!k were about Ihinss lb, : -o; 'id i..- done til lleveloo a II , iiisi,-,, sen ice. What a won-ii,-, :-i 11 'e, il i-. lo he able lo I, I ,,l;Mi! I ;:li: S I III. I llVe bt'l'll Ol' I 1 do; 1 iii our county . Yes. llu- 1. 1. ,. of i i'e verb has been Siaie Protected Against Recession !'. 11 1 i-il Correspondence! I f A I I ' 1 f ; 1 1 Alihoiifh business in No, Hi '.n i.liii.i duriri!.! Ihe first nine i,iimi' 1 1 il tlii- ear showed a sharp drop Ii-.ni 1 li.it ol a iniilar period in I!)!" Ir..:!e i now on the up v. in--' and I here Is little likelihood id a 11 -- ion vllhiii the next two oi' I I.i . e veai :, 1 'Ihe - ihe opinion of Allison .laioes ol l .1 eeiisboro, director of I ihe i;. S !'.. lUnys Bond program i in i.e. 1I1 Carolina. Wii'int, in the current issue of li lailer". olfiiial publicalion of ! tin- '- C Mi-rehants Association. I laine- poinls out thai citizens of j this Slate now have more than Jiifili 111)11 uOU hivtsted in savings I la, ml- . I Wliiie Ihe savings bonds pur- ih.. e- in i e lied lo the war effort, lin y li:r. ,.. let ill) very little in 01111 ;.n. 1 of Ihe State, and scores j ol 1 . ' .. 1 1 1 and linns of all kinds lill hiv. mole than 7fi per cent of tlie.r 1 uiployee-; buying bonds re iuiai I., on I lie payi oil-deduction I plan. I Wale C'nuiilv, for instance, has million in ravines bonds which jpav in miere 1 STM.VJ.ii annually; fiuilloiil County residents have 43 minion dollars invested in these j Iji. ml ; I 'a ipiol.ink, 10 million; j Buncombe, '.'li million; Mecklen- I huri'. (;u milliim; and Forsyth, 34 ! iiiillii.n. ! J.11111- . !oo!;ini! to the enormous Wonder Drug ' I 1 j i Is Grown In Hawaii By ROY ESSOYAN AP Ni-Wsfi-.-itiin-s HO.NOLULI.' A rare plant that has brought hope to 7,000,000 ailliiilic paiiints in the. United States has been cultivated in Hawaii for t In- ):' I 17 years. A pi-i ies of African vine called strophanthus, this plant contains ingredients for relief of arthritis and rheumatic fever. But -total pro duction in the islands so far doesn't add up to enough to help one patient one day. ' li s still in the experimental stage," says Dr. H. L. Lyon, director emeritus of the experiment station, Hawaii Sugar Planters Association. Itesearcbers have reported that a chemical obtained from seeds of the strophanthus is identical with one of the intermediate chemicals now involved in the laborious process of producing cortisone. Main obstacle to production of cortisone from the plant is the same as that presently hampering its production from ox bile you need a 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ;i i n of seeds for a few ounces of cortisone. To be exact, one ton nf 'i rfls to relieve one patient one year. r GROWING DRUG Dr. H. L. r X k 1) I , f t if UC, tin I MOUNTAINEER Blues Need Not Be Blue Says Singer NEW YORK (AP) She is a blues singer who even succeeds sometimes into getting ' happy talk" into those low and melancholy notes which characterize her songt ot wails and spirituals. Juanita Hall, who scores such a success with her romantic "Bali Ha l" ("Here I Am 'i balfcd in the Broadway musical, "South Pacific", says that blues don't have to be sad. She was sitting in a nooK at one of producer Jean Dalrymple's tea-and-crumpet shindigs. Her eyes cmuj raflAtf'tiv' AX She Said. "I Ihink the late Bessie Smith was the greatest singiflg artist who ever lived and I learned so much from her. She taught me that blues don't have to be sad, that is necessarily so sad. There can be happy blues. There can be 'no money' blues. There can be comedy blues lo the point of slapstick, and what else is Open The Door, Richard ? "In fact the street cries of. Ihe fishermen end peddlers you hear in 1 lie winding streets of the south or in the Canibean Islands also are blurs, such as the street cries and melody prayers you heard in Tor ey' and "I'orgy and Bess'." Miss Hall, who recently also be came a starring recording artist for KCA Victor, plucked a tuneful pair of songs for her debut in this new held. One is "Love's A Precious Thing" in which she combines blues and spiritual emotions against Beiinie Morion's provocative tram phrases. "It's a song in spiritual fashion with jump." Miss Hall succinctly described the tunc. The other song is "Don't Cry Joe Let Her Go. Let Her Go. Let Her Goi", a plaintive song by the popu lar ja.z musician, Joe Marsala. The score is moody wiih blues horns and l'ade out notes, as Miss Hall ings it in her sweet hut tearful tones. Asked il' she evi r gol moody and got Ihe blues hecau. e she sings I so many melancholy song.:. Miss Hall indignantly denied this and ays she is never anything except a happy person. "Bill if these two songs aren't bits, I'll just coinpiit suicide," she said happily. Just coming into her own as a star. Miss Hall is no newcomer lo Broadway. As a teen-ager she sang on Broadway a quarlrr century ago in Flo Ziegfeld's produclon of "Show Boat". Too. she vnng in "The Green I'aslures" in 1930, and for many seasons in Ihe Hull Johnson choir. She sang the lole of the mango woman in the Alfred I. mil and Lynn Fontaine production nf "The Pirate" in 1942 and later .sang ihe watermelon cry in "Swing Out, Sweet Land". Boost in Schools Follows Baby Boom CHICAGO HIP) The post war boom in babies will make it neces sary to provide school facilities fin al least 8.000,000 more children within the next years, a survey shows. ' A study by the Council of State Governments on school systems across the nation shows that at least 250,000 new schoolrooms will be needed to accommodate these children. backlog of purchasing power, says; "banks and merchants did not fail in 1930-31; it was the communities that failed." He says that the 32 billion in Series E bonds held in the United States is greater than the entire national income in 1932. Plant - yon examines the strophanthus. - 1 Radio In Camera Cas AP Newsfeatures HAMBURG Is it a camera? No, it's Germany's smallest radio, the builder claims. Housed in a camera case, the tiny three tube radio weighs two pounds. According to Herr Wil helm Hereog, of Kiel, it's just what John Q. Public needs. What would it jost? The inventor estimates about $42 Herzog has been building radios for 15 years. His present employer a local radio firm, is considering the radio for distribution in Germany. A Swiss firm has already written, asking to be given the distribution rights in Switzerland, Herzug said. Herzog is now working 011 a bat lery to go with the radio. "It's often inconvenient to be bound 10 a light plug," he says. A Itutherford County farmer. A L. Haynes of Bills Creek comnui-j nity,' expects to gross approximate-' ly $1,000 from two acres oi .snap SECTIONAL USE IT AS A beans this year. I ija.se. . ,hi ,- f .1 1 1 .mmnmmm-mmmihiViS Living Room YAL ItXT w.'-. : j, 'I' n ' '"'" 7..-.- S'V ..;...:...'.... ' . MMf' 'W. 'X ' Z. iSv -t'XwU in,n urn 'i i'11-"1-" t. .J All you have to do is look around your room am the many effective ways in which the sectionals used. Come in and see this modern sectional. ta 1 fS WOOL RUGS REDUCED -Size 5 Beautiful Floral designs Hooked and Leaf V quality. Mada by Leading Manuiacturers. Rpmilar m m Runs . NOW $ Regular 79.00 Regular 55.00 MASSIE Furnitur I 1 hW 9 .W&.iX'X... " Isi Sin h , ,i;:-: riekling the clouds feel Mt. the 1. 11 -ninth McKinh y ha . line at only 3.000 1, 7r" ': .-'J i7; --.'I 1 1 1.1 , 7 1 OFA . Only $ SOFA A LOVE SCAT : NOW $ Bugs Rugs . NOW H ""SOi et :H at! n I
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 13, 1949, edition 1
6
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