Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Jan. 12, 1950, edition 1 / Page 5
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urs day Afternoon, January 12, TIIE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER TACZ II',.: L-e Hons Cw3 lay Benefit ,rv to the main prt" r;mps bene- here niuia- the otw" e,.....cviilP Hich Z l biier tattle ties. Comierfe ..... i inn; (fie onijf including Alas- junior Cham- will face the flub in this etwee" the cxtra-conunc""" th-it are unuciwu, i.-in1d on. u-anu owe , . nr(is somcwnai w ie ' ..her nas imijm . is is a purely second- so worried ver, in jr.;' ;. . " i.ams were . .r fhnli nivn nin he eneci m .-. cHne strengm that they have agreed under a 'distinctive handi- tvei rt the necessity of using t A boon trarlr nf maciiiiii's w in-"-!- - Lie hp Dlavers - on Dotr ,. .... . - kill wear WOOien unuti wem 11 length sleeves ana tegs lavers' legs, of course, are kill'lcngth. it is alleged. the agreement means is Je legs of the uniforms will length also. :" . uniforms are an adapta the familiar male under t known as the long John, interesting state of -affairs en, Willi an apyiuiui.au: and gnashing of teeth, at Ashevillc Waste Paper s find Underwood's wil' P floor idler it has beer of the broken bodies and il 0 blood in an effort to re diimage. lis main bout is anything I year's, il will be a lulu. hionibcrs edged UnderwoodV general proceedings were $200 in donations to the irch of Dimes campaign, pineups for the Jaycee-Lions institute to date a closely Id secret. ilnen, the 'names' themselves inii'clv academic interest int great British song-writ iiam Shapcsspeare, put irs or so ago.. sr. by any other name would uiyway. . : Kids Reform Film Papas Life HOLLYWOOD (UP) In the mansions of the new, noble Holly wood; does Papa come home from i hard day before the cameras, ight up a mar.-jana cigarette and ;et out for a 10-round brawl at giro's? ' No. He plants himself in front Df the fireside and spends the eve ning with the Encyclopedia Bri tannica. Reading it, too. A fellow .earns more things that way. Since this appears even duller than the way th unglamorous half spends its evenings, we called Cor an explanation from Burt Lan- ;aster, who is up to the "D's". De bussy to Dermatitis. "I want to be able to. answer my kids' questions' aid Lancaster, Jather of three. "I can't let them hink their old man is. just a dumb movie star." When William, now age 2, digs up a sand crab at the beach and isps, "What's this?" Lancaster will be ready to reply: Answer Ready ; That is a decapod, a member ji the order of malacostracous crustaceans in which the fourth o eighth pairs of thoracic appen- iages form uniramous walking limbs." If a Lancaster daughter should .-un home from play crying, "Tell He all about the decapolis," her iiother can take her up in her irms and murmur: "It was a Greek federation of dties east of the River Jordan." I want our children to ask us for -the, answers when ' problems irise," Lancaster said. "It's up ,o my wife and me to have the cnowledge with which to reply. The LaYicastcrs sometimes vary their evening's reading of the en yclopedia with Grimm's fairy tales. ''.:.'' When he gets around to telling hem to his children, he says, he'll put all the acting into them he aut ' into the swaggering costume irama "The Hawk and the Arrow he made at Warners. "It'll be a toss-up," he grinned "which of us will enjoy them more." . " For Starting Tho Day On Tho Right Foot - i - ujjiiiiiiirr-rrmirr- "imiinimkiirwnwmiiiMii r r-r r wtt-1"K - V Haywood luld Give PERSONALS Mrs. William Hannah returned Sunday after a week's visit in Dur ham tnd Chapel Hill. Miss Barbara Frarcis of Danbury spent last week end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Francis. She came to see her mother, who is ill. Mrs. Lane Arrington, who has been confined to her home on ac covnt of illness, is imported to be improving, Mr. and Mrs. C, C Francis are visiting in the r.ome of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Francis, In Ratcliffe Cove. Mrs. C. C. Francis is recuperating from a recent Illness. John C. Allen and son, Johnny, left Tuesday for their home ia Burlington, Vermont after a vLiit to Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Stringfield Mrs. Allen and another son. Tom my, are remaining for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Clayton and the former's sister. Miss Mamie Clayton, left Monday for visit to Miami and other Florida cities. AFTER-SKI ; Favorite foot gear for fireside lounging is a ballet slipper such as this in light blue leather with soft SOleS. '.';"..-:" '. . :' STRICTLY GLAMOROUS , . . Green satin wedgies give the proper touch of elegance to a negligee. Pink embroidered rose on toe. NYLON SCUFFS . . . These luxurious footnotes look fragile as all get -out, but can be washed easily, as they're ny lon satin. ; ' Keeps Slim By Petting Her Poodle Versatile Table Eases Problems of Invalid 000 For Polio should Haywood cOuntv ule $15,000 to the lffSO of Dimes Drive? i F. Fullam, superintendent Ashevillc Orthopedic Home. d the answer in a letter this o David Hyatt, Waynesville hairman for the National ftion for Infantile Paralysis. answer was in figures. lie epidemic of 1948, the admitted between June 19 kcember 31. some 305 rjat- iiiffenng acute cases of polio. een ot tncm died, but this is the lowest of any institu te stale. ilie cases, 34 were of the res- type, 35 of the bulbar tvne. e ret were spinal. approximate cost for treat lespirator rasp in tho nnnta . . . . MVMKW to ?b0 every 24 hours of lent. ' I cost for others in the acute MU, smallest expense for rehabi- f any patient sufferine even 1 1 f-'iaie attack: $1,000 F January. 1948. the Nation. indation has sent the home 10.03 ten times the amount 1 the Foundation in the last SAN DIEGO, Cal. (UP) When Daniel C. Robbins was confined to bed for several months he had trouble reaching all the things he wanted. v . So Robbins designed what he calls the "'utilitable." It is a handsome, strudy piece of furniture which acts as a table and will raise to fit any hospital bed. and lower to' any couch. AH three of its handy shelves can be used at the same time and the top, equip ped with a mirror for shaving or primping, tilts to any angle. The unit can ba, dismantled in a min ute, folded and packed in a case. HOLLYWOOD (UP) Ellen Drew is a lovely lady who never gets farther from her easy chair than the closest box of chocolates. She keeps her figure by stretch ing to pet the poodle. Exercise, Miss Drew believes, is unlovely and also downright dan gerous. Movie 'stars who ride saddle horses get charley-horses. Stars who ski break legs. Stars ho play tennis collapse from exhaustion, But who ever got hurt in an easy chair? Miss Drew believes that nothing keeps a woman so soft, so cuddle some, so helplessly feminine as no exercise. "In my first picture," she said, "I played opposite Bing Crosby and he complained that I bruised him in the clinches. He said I was too strong for a woman." Too Much Exercise "Other, stars who have been ex ercising meanwhile," she said sage ly, ."are now taking exercises to get rid of the muscles they got from taking exerfclses." Instead of romping oft for game of golf or a brisk set of ten nis on her days off from her last picture, "Stars in My Crown," Miss Drew sat in her' easy chair and thought, occasionally, about excr cise. "After a few hours," she said, "I'd find myself panting with ex haustion." , :. - . , ? Next day. she propped up the N. C. State Men To Head New Weed Section 5 Oeu Chemicals To Hid En Fight Against Weeds SIOUX FALLS, S. D. (UP) American agriculture learned of two major developments of great importance to its future at a meet ing here of the north central weed control conference. One is a plan of the U. S. Agri culture Department to establish a new weed division. The other Is the development of five new chemi cals which experts say will "open up a new field of weed control. It has been estimated weeds are responsible for an annual reduc tion in American farm production of 10 oer cent. Their damage is exceeded only by that of soil ero sion. New Division Planned rr R M. Salter, chief of the bureau of nlant industry at Belts ville, Md., announced Plans tor a new weed dlviswn. Salter said he will appoint ur athletic actors while they limped before the. camera. The only type of exercise miss Drew tolerates can be accompllsn ed in the easy chair. She takes out a pair of old fashioned, hlgh-lactd shoes, and while reclining in the chair laces them up. Then she unlaces them, and tucks them back in the shoe bag for another week. "It suits me fine," she says, "and I 'feel bright and healthy;'' :; hi T 1 I READ ' BOTH THESE STATEMENTS o Roy Lovvern of North Carolina State College to head the new weed division. ' The five new chemicals are sel ectlve herbicides. That is, they select their prey and lea"ve other plants unharmed. Dr. L. M. Stah ler of South Dakota Agricultural College, who announced their de velopment, said the time i com ing when specific chemicals will be used on weeds in each particular crop. The new chemicals are a stepiin that direction, he said. Cost to Be Low The chemicals, which have high ly technical names, are hot yet ready for market because of a need ; for further experimentation but Stahlcr said when they do go on sale, it will be at a relatively low cost to the farmer. Smaller quan tities will be needed per acre than are needed with chemicals now In use. . ' Speakers at the conference em phasized one major theme: the need for more uniform weed con trol laws among the various states. They cautioned farmers not to be led astray by the spectacular devel opments in chemical warfare on plants, such as the war-time de velopment of 2,4-D, at the cost of regular good farming practices. Proper cultivation, they , said in effect, is the base on which weed control rests" All citizens of Waynesville owning and operating motor vehicles, are required by . '."'' : law to have 1950 Town license tags on said vehicles by February 1, 1950. Person failing to comply with this regulation will be subject to fine, and costs in the matter. Tags available at the City Hall for One Dollar Each. WARNING i All persons who have received a citation for violation of traffic taws, and overpark, and have not paid their fine of $1, should do so im mediately. This is to give notice, that all persons failing ta pay imme diately, will be looked up by the police, and brought into court,' where court costs of $10 will be added to the fine of $1. If you have a traffic ticket, we advise immediate payment at the City Hall. .'I ORVILLE NOLAND Chief Of Police. ,'Kil7iiHi,lnui r. nit tin. i ten years. During 1949, the Home received 13 patients from Haywood county eight from Canton, two from Clyde, the rest from Waynesville.,! These patients were treated a total of 905 days. The cost of treating them for 398 days was $15 per day a total of $1,990. ' - But the cost of treatment went up later. " To treat the patients for 334 days, the increased cost amounted to $10 Der day. The entire bill came to $3,340 for that period. The remaining 173 days of treat' ment were paid for by the Crip Dled Childrens Service of North Carolina, at a total cost of $1,730. During all of last year, a total of $7,060 was paid for treating Haywood county polio patients. LAFF-A-DAY TtrO Men's $25.00 - Leather Coats ON SALE $6o95 Men's $39.50 All Wool Top Coals ON SALE $15 Men's All Wool $10.00 Dress Pants ON SALE O HV .' ... v ' " $4.95 Boys' $10.95 Leather Jackets - ; ON SALE $4.95 Ladies' Beautiful GoatScuitsDioessea TO) DUCED 3 lie Buy These Famous Makes and Save 50 Swansdown Jaunty Junior Betty Rose Nelly Don Carol King Sacony
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1950, edition 1
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