Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Dec. 8, 1949, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER ' J EB 8, 1949 SECOND SECTION Outstanding Hereford Bull Comes To Haywood THE OLD HOME TOWN By STANLEY Let's Stop Monkeying With Santa; Be A Good THE GER SET ' By ED MEDFORD School Senior the Waynes jinly deserve f work they past football it the weath . always been he Mountain irian Watkins, has used a ist two years. spirit any to be a num- Vivian is a plans to at ge next fall, imey, identi ii some good never seen ell the much NTS this college C. (j A Glitter Gifts all about t lie and the turned which were so year. The new sloppy-jo f Uj) saddle ui much in style look which way pep. year next to be cordurary, short sleeve As for Joan .Moris she think cordurory and short sleeve ers are the tiling of the c; high school girls. Have you taken time to look the window at Burgin's Dip; ment Store on Main Street" !l haven i you ought to take Every month a iiiilcr i ! school models picture i the window of Bui 'Jii: month you will see Miss Floyd modeling pajamas dress. The picture will pui a Christmas mood, it w. already in one. " :h''' ! i I -;i Tit t I i 1 1;.-..- yP" sVvv, in I V ' pe. T N .11 ;.iul tjettc. who has . is Mary Sue ;ot her finger f season while eerleaders, but tTom tumbling : other things 'a good eheer iale cheerlead- they are just fli't find better went to a big onny Leather in, and Frank te this year, jf junior, will next year and a cheerleader. r ncil of W. T. Just last work fmy Whitman, fey's homeroom the most quali fiers, the hoine t, received the aeroom.) Every Resented to the he most points. 4- working hard i'hard to decide Mr. Islcy, for homeroom. b "blossomed" Bowl game In made a very ng when the at the game' trysanthemums k megaphones, fas lettered on megaphone in I member was for a football ! lave lots of fun. ame time, you TA, if you are a j) you are a girl, i having parties John Nesbill as U should glance ise parlies you see every one iund dancing or id of a game, tiers and Home now how to have if nothing else is if have forgotten Kalhryn Hyatt deserves n-co. lo tion for her five years ol l.uthliil service, as a inajoi elle eilh the W. T. II. S. hand'. She pla.seel III. clarinet time jears and the nirie for two years. Kalliiryn first h'--came a majoi elte in I he i i lit li grade and has marched in the hand for the last five years She was voted the orcltiest eirl in lie! class and .dsn the inn, I talented Kathcryn will enter Virginia Inter num! next fall a., a freshman. The editor has given me this column to devote to the younger set, and I want t cover all the high school news. I expect to visit all the high schools in the county in the near future. I would appreciate any "Tips" that you would pass my way to use in writing this column about the 'younger set'. ( t:t : mh.i; on. i.Ait . . . iiit el' I he r.:r m pearls and K'del imks h (Yin I Last Rites Are Held In Whittier For Mrs. Childers Funeral services were held in the Whittier Uuplisi church es ter lay afternoon for Mrs. M.-irg.nvi Kimscy didders. 77, who died here Tuesday at the home of a daughter. Mrs. .larvis Palmer, alter a long iMness. The Rev. John I.. Hyatt olliciated and interment v.,.s in I'nioii Hill Cemetery. Grandsons served as pallbearer and granddaughters were in charge of flowers Mrs. Childers u as I lie vv nlovv o! A. P. Childers a native ot .lack son county and a lib'h'im resident of the Whittier section Surviving in addition to Mi's Palmer are four daiiuhtcrv Mrs Mr.rv Kinslanrl and Mrs N'H Ma1- thews of Whittier. Mrs. Bulla! Vm-H ol Candler, and Mis H-niij Caldwell sons. Lee Whittier. of Rural children children. Crawford Funeral Honu charge of arrangements. My- 1., i, Wavnesville: mice and Candler Childers ol and Theodore Chdder Retreat. Va.; :i0 grand and eight great grand was ii kre To LISTEN onight At 7 O'clock VER WHCC 'Mutual Broadcasting System) I TO ION LEVIS, JB. I America's Greatest News Analysts io set the details on the Shippi-E f Alon,,r information to Rua! WtcB Tonishl ''' ; BROUGHT TO YOU BY all Furniture Co. BUR Helmsman A. 18th 5211773 is the name of the $7,000 Hereford bull recently purchased by Mr. M. O Galloway, owner of Gracolaud Farms near Waynesville. This out standing animal was the highest selling animal in the Bianchi Sale which was held in October at Ma : con. Missouri. j "Helmsman 18th" has shown at1 many of the largest fairs and j shows in the United States and is always one of the top winners He was grand champion bull in Mis- souri State Fair and in the group that won first place get-of-sire. He ' wmi third place in his class at the j International Livestock Show re- j cently held in Chicago where all i the outstanding herds of the na- j lion were shown. He was also one 1 of Ihe top winners at the Illinois Stale Fair, Iowa State Fair, the I American Royal which was held at j Kansas City, South Dakota State j Fair, and at Timonium, Md.. and j in Baltimore. "Helmsman 18th" comes lrom ai family of herefords which were outstanding from way back. His j sire is a register-ol-nu'i il hull Also his grandsire. WHR Proud I'rin ceps 9th. which WHR refused a $100.0(10 for. There are also regis- i lor-ol-inerit animals on his dam's I side, "Helmsman Ittlh" can he seen at ; the First National Hank in Waynes- ville from 9:00 till 2:00 on Satur day, December 10. Mr Galloway would like to have all the people t in Western North Carolina who are interested in better beef cattle to come in and see the bull at the First National Hank. 'i&QPfHOSN THAT MAKE s rpTHFSCOeE A TIE- L I ( SEVEN FOP? EACH LSr 1 WlsE COM & J THE PENALTIES - fT1".6,.. :.TJ One, Or None At All Crawford Funeral Home In Canton To Hold Open House This Week-end The Crawford Funeral Home, lo cated at No. I Norl h Main St., in Canton, is having open house Sat Dee. 10th from 10 a.m. I Ml I1"' Mill from i In li and Sunday. Dee p.m. The piihlie This piopcrtv from Fleetwood cember of last lii-;;im nnver KscapinR dp'ec'iioe is becoming pn increasl-.s!;- did" '. It task for hit-and-run motorists due to im proved police methods. Police now have a steptrophotometc- that can tell more than 2.000,000 colors apart so that a speck of automo hile paint, fneriri at the necident scene, can b eompr.rcd with paint on various ma!:cs and models as nn aid in finding the car involved. In addition, a photograph of tiro marks generally enables police to learn the make and size of tire. is im lied was purchased Smalhers in Do year and began W1NC.HACK FARMINGS . . . Huge harn(iie pearls set in gold and budgi pi iced. Read the Want Ads for bargains operation in January of this year Much woi k fins been done to con vert the building into a modern funeral home. Partitions have been removed to provide ample chapel space for funerals On Ihe second door a display, preparation and slumber rooms have been added A hall and corridor cuniiei ting the new addition to the garages, stor age room and to the two aparl mi ills which were erected in the early part of 1949. There arc I wo 'main entrances trom North Main SI. and one from School SI. enter ing the first floor of I ho funeral home, and one cut ranee from Hal lew St. entering second Hour. Mr and Mrs. Ralph M. Craw- lord reside ill the funeral borne In ('anion and Mr and Mrs. Howell W Crawford, partners in the llrm reside in Ihe Waynesville division nl Ihe luneral homo. Holh funeral 1 ics ooi iale under the same name, the same owners and em ployees. Ralph M. Crawford is a licensed eiiih.iliner for Ihe past 2!) years and has had experience with some of the leading funeral homes in ! North Carolina and other states, jlle is a past director of the 12lh : dish iet of the N. C. Funeral Direc ! tors and Burial Association of N. C. holding Ihe office for 2 years. ! Mrs. Crawford, the former Miss Dorothy Boyd of Cuntoii. is secre- lai y-treasui-er of the Crawford i Mutual Hurial Association, and as Isists in the funeral work. She has j received much rcoofiiiilion in flow er arrangement in homes and churches and has won many prizes By CYNTHIA LOWRY AH Newsfeatures Writer There are more people around today doing bad imitations of Santa Claus than there are people doinp bad imitations of Hildegarde, AI Jolson and Belle Davis. This is a very serious situation, as can easily be seen, which is making it difficult even for adults to believe in Santa Claus. Personally, through long prac tice, I am able to spot a phony Santa Claus from a distance of two blocks or the length of a de partment store. Hut even before I was an expert in the field. I was never taken in by skinny characters in dirty cotton beards and outside suits soliciting Christmas alms on street corners. The tip-off, of course, is that they stand on pieces of board or wear regulation galoshes. Santa Claus wears boots and his feet never gel cold. I have known people, however, who believed anyone in a red suit trimmed with fur was Santa, no matter what he was doing. Of course, I have met the good Saint Nick in stores many times, but I have also encountered some bad actors pretending they were Santa. I m poster usually run be detected by a bored at titude and a certain lack of In terest in the whole subject of toys. Some people are even making a profitable business out of imita ting Santa, which is pretty re prehensible when you realize that this is his busy season and he can't lake time out to protect him self. One man has opened a school to train oconle lo become better imitation Santa Clauses. He has ( lasses on how to paste a beard on properly, and how to stroke it thoughtfully without its becoming loose. He warns them not to smoke anything but a hookah be cause of the fire hazard. He in Mower shows and garden clubs. The public is invited to visit and inspect the new home this week end. teaches '.hem how to laugh so their abdomens "shake like a bowl full of jelly," but what's more im portant he teaches them how to counterfeit Santa's laugh. The proper guffaw, as I understand it, is "Ho-ho-ho-ha-ha," Seems unr trained Santas are ant to go just "Ha-ha-ha-ha." I'm against this trend. But I ra more opposed to the way certain enterprises arc implying that Santa Claus has changed his tr.-dU tional methods of operation. Santa Claus has made no changes these many years except that in cities he will enter apartment dwellings without fireplaces by coming in a handy door or window. I also un derstand he had a bad time re cently by landing in the middle of an oil burner, and is being a bit more careful about all types of chimneys these days. Any time you see a purported picture of Santa ridinc in an air plane or automobile of any type, It Is an unauthorized portrait and the central figure probably is one of the Santa imitators. Santa Claus is an ageless, good humored man who wears an un usual costume, lives at the North Hole, travels by sled and reindeer through the skies and brings toys on Christmas eve to good children. The teletype, modern telegraph transmitting typewriter, had its beginnings as far back as 1846. TIM F. I-or cv li ON 11K1I HANDS i purse and taste. ur models here Kabul, the capital of Afghanislai recently paved its streets tor the first time. are , .. 1. .-:":: PINT - SI.F CLAMOR . . . Necklace, bracelet and ring of daln'y gold loses. iv T1MR With nt. f these watches chosen by the .lew dry Council. lips on Ironing rav be detrimental to , '' ''-Hr,' such as rlasticized ';.,,.-,' of JW:'. wa- wi'h w.'(!, rubber or IL r. v.'uch may melt fZ dvT.bcNofruco article, P , n f.'r iro-vng instructions. .t r'-ts rnaybe pulled ST f "h J- bv ironing. Don't iron out of snap- D h as cnc. -hable ';'e,; ; because ironing KSb. 'when t!v"Sh'.v dry. tV1 lft".'-'5r'. MA 1 fi p , B&fezd This Champion Bull NOW OWNED BY Graceland Farms M. O. Galloway Dwight Williams See Utid, QhamfUaH the. MtiAowU fyaii At ' The First National Bank on Saturday 9 A. M. to NOON THE FRIENDLY BANK This institution is happy to have as our "dis play guest" on Saturday, the grand champion Hereford bull of the Missouri State Fair. We are also happy that this fine bull has been bought by Graceland Farms, and is now a member of the in creasing Haywood Hereford family. It is going to take animals like this to renew interest in the beef cattle industry of Haywood county. We have every natural advantage for raising the best cattle in Eastern America. All we need is to just take advantage of these advantages. The First National Bank is keenly interested in seeing better and larger beef cattle herds in this county. If we can be of service to you, come in and see us. THE First National Bank i Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 8, 1949, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75