AG I EIGHT THE T7AYNE3VILLE MOUNTAIN Thursday Afternoon, February 2" J Thrash, State Highway Chief to Appear Here , Officials and directors of the Hay wood County Community Develop ment Program committee yester day at a luncheon session discussed plan' for-Wie couhty?-w;ide awards - meeting ; and 'the visit of Governor Kertf Scott. i Tile governor is scheduled to; prespnt the cash awards to the win ning communities s for the 1949 Community' Development Program and deliver the principal address at the session which will open at 10:30 a.m. March 4. The main court room of the Haywood County Court House will , be the scene of the presentations. Also scheduled to appear on the prograrn with the governor are District Highway Commissioner Dale. Thrash and Dr. Everett Jor dan, (chairman of the State High way and Public Works Commission. The communities which finished first, second, and third in the county-wide improvement competition during the first year the Program was in effect will not be known un til they are announced at the meet ing. At the luncheon session, , which was held In the Towne House here, the county CDP officials, meeting with county Extension leaders, went over suggested details for the meeting. The details will be an nounced later In full. Under current plans, Governor Scott is to arrive with his official party prior to the meeting to be conducted on an inspection tour of several of the organized commun ities. The governor will come to Waynesville from Bryson City, where he is scheduled to address a meeting of district highway em ployees and spend the night. Following his address and pre sentation of awards here, Scott IS scheduled to proceed to Asheville where he will appear at a Farm Bureau meeting. R. C. Francis, chairman of the County Community Development Program Committee, presided over yesterdays luncheon meeting. Attending, the session were Dick Barber, Saunook community chair man; William Osborne, South Clyde community chairman; Coun ty Agent Wayne Corpe'ning, County Home Demonstration Agent Mary vornweu, and Assistant County Agent Turner Cathey, supervisor of the Community Development rrogram. Corn Borers Multif lying In Minnesota's Fields ST. PAUL. Minn- (UP) En tomologist A W. Buzicky says com borers probably will multiply this year beyond their five-fold increase during 1949. The southern; two-thirds ot the state, where the , principal corn producing counties are located, can expect to feee extremely heavy In festations, he said. The corn borer population in 1949 was five times that in 1948, he said, an increase from 70 borers per 100 stalks to 340. Women Given Credit : For Paved Roads SANTA FE, N.M. (UP) An offi cial of the federal government be lieves that women are responsible for the nation's paved roads. Testifying here before a Senate public roads sub-committee, L. I. . Hughts, ll-state Bureau of Public Roads director from San Franc cisco said, "It's the women who kick about gravel roads. "They don't like the dust in their headgear." - LAFF - i upu. iim. mm; run ik 1 V.'. M-.. - , . 1 . "Now if only another blonde passes on the left, you'll " be done w'th your neck exercises for the day." m Made For Governor Td Malm A wards Men High Point College's New Proxy L Dr. Dennis Hargrove Cooke (above), a native of Maiden, will be Inaugurated as the third president of High Point College Thurs day. He succeeded Dr. Gideon I. Humphreys who resigned last sum mer. Dr. Cooke formerly was head of the Department of Educa tion at the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina in Greensboro. (AP Photo). A ; A&P Points Out Anti-trust Lawyers 'Kill Own Case" , , -' The Anti-Trust Lawyers' previ ously defeated three times in dif ferent Federal Courts, "Killed Their Own Case" against the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company at Dallas, A&P says in advertisements appearing in newspapers through out the country this weekend. But this did not end the 10-year campaign against A&P, according to the fourth advertisement In a series discussing previous unsuc cessful' attacks on the pioneer food chain by Anti-Trust Lawyers. "The Anti-Trust Lawyers were not" satisfied with decisions against them by three Federal Judges," the ad says. "They still wanted to de stroy A&P." The advertisement tells how in 1944 the Dallas case, based on al legations similar to those In the current suit to put A&P out of business, had been thrown out of court by Federal Judge W. H. At well. ..-U; - On appeal, the ad says, the Cir cuit Court at New Orleans, al though reinstating the Indictment, agreed that it was "vague and con tained many allegations which were inflammatory." The Court decided Judge Atwell "Should protect A&P from these Inflammatory allega tions by striking them; out." Judge Atwell struck these state ments, the ad says, and instructed the Anti-Trust Lawyers to furnish him "Specific Charges instead of vague generalities." "On February 26th while the Judge was still waiting for his an swer in Dallas, and without any previous notice to him," the ad states, "''The Anti-Trust Lawyers gave a story to the newspapers in Washington, announcing that they were dropping the case in Dallas." In dropping the case, the Anti Trust lawyers were quoted as say- A - DAY rr miatk. iiiiki.ii kh.iit k.kku MORE ABOUT Siler (Continued from Page 1) ing his discharge in 1943 he re turned here to assume manage ment of The Food Store, the posi tion he still holds. He 'is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Slier, Sr., of this county. He is a member of the board of Deacons of the, First Baptist church, a member of the Lions Club.' - Mr. and Mrs. . Siler have two sons. ' " Ing", they intended "To file a sub stantially similar- suit In an appro priate jurisdiction at an early date."- The "Early Date" proved to be the same day, A&P says in the ad vertisement. "As soon as one Anti-Trust Law yer killed the case in Dallas, an other Anti-Trust Lawyer filed a new case in Danville, 111." The ad continues, "This . new case made most of the same allegations that had been made and dropped In Dal las and that are being made against us today." ' Summarizing previous court ac tions in the Anti-Trust Lawyers' 10-year Attack on A&P, the ad vertisement observes: "Three times the Anti-Trust Lawyers went into Federal Courts and made serious and - damaging charges against A&P. Three times Federal Judges said the Anti-Trust Lawyers were wrong and rendered decisions against them.'' .' After they failed In Washington, D. C, Wilson, and Dallas, Texas, ,the ad concludes, they "moved on" to Danville. 111. "They were still determined to destroy this Company which had brought more and better food at lower cost to millions of American families." . - jcotf. im, Ufa riATVjtu ivkoicati, Im, t oils X'This picture doesn't need a plot!"- Iron Duff Man Gives Laurels To LadincteCrop One of Haywood County's most loyal supporters of Ladlno clov er Is D. J. Boyd, Jonathan Creek farmer. ' But we'll let Mr. Boyd tell you in his own words exactly what he thinks of it: I sowed my Ladino clover the last of June or the first of July when the corn was laid by. Then I started pasturing it in the spring of 1947 and have pas tured it ever since. I sowed eight art-es in Ladino and have found that it will graze about one head of cattle per acre. I sowed about two pounds of Lad ino to the acre,, with 12 pounds of orchard grass. That was a dry sum mer, hence I didn't get a very good stand of the orchard grass. But still there was a good growth of Ladino. I have fpund that Ladino clover will grow through the hot summer months much better than white clover, that it makes a much larg er growth and consequently it will graze better. Judging from the results obtain ed I would say that Ladino clover pasture Is the cheapest and best pasture we can grow here in Hay wood County. WORE ABOUT Ramps (Continued from Pare 1) One thousand dollars in labor and materials went Into making the spot more beautiful and provid ing enough space for at least 1,000 automobiles and trucks twice as many as could be accommodated last year and the years before. The growth of the Convention also sent the officials seeking ac tive cooperation from other agen cies, particularly Haywood's cham bers of commerce. , Meanwhile, letters will be mailed out soon to all the out-of-state Visit ors who attended the convention last year, Inviting them to come back for the 1950 session. Mr. Medford said the date has not yet been set, though the time will be in the latter part of April, when the ramps reach . the stage of ideal development in short, just before they become too strong to eat. ' He added other details are also getting attention, and that efforts are being made to line up"pfomiil ent speakers for the session. ' HCL Cafe Doesn't Mean Fhat Its Name Implies MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UP) Earl i) ly, evangelist of the Church of Christ at Friendship, Tenn.. re ports what probably is the biggest mei lor the smallest amount any where. He and a friend stopped at the HCL cafe In Arlington. Ky.. and ordered sausage and eggs. The eggs came on a platter alone, but on the table the owner placed a plate ful of sausage, a plate of biscuits, a pound of country butter, and three large jars of jams and pre serves. A second plate of biscuits replaced the first when they were eaten.'- The cost? One dollar for the two of them. CAUGHT IN OWN NET JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (UP) Mayor Howard Patrick grinned sheepishly when he paid a $3 fine In City Court for violating a new regulation restricting parking to five minutes in certain downtown zones. Patrick had sponsored the regulation. ,'. kjcmti hcouvxb. Vis MORE ABOI Underwood (Continued irom rate 1) business, and several years later opened his building supply, hard ware, and feed store. He Is also a general construction contractor. , He has been active in the affairs of the Democratic party, and for several years president of the East Waynesville PTA. He is former director of the Chamber of Com merce, and headed the roads com mittee last year. v He is an Elk, and member of the First Baptist church. In 1937 he married Miss Helen Gardner of Bryson City. They have two chil dren, a daughter arid a son, 5-LB. BAG I ' n 'i " You don't have to chop kv4 a ch J I LjDCS tree get the cherries -and you ; . gf y"' r SrfJ ' I V-r i .TJSr don't have to serve less foods to cut 1 11$$$ -;; f ''yj: , U : mm0r , down food -bills. No Ma'am'. not f.'? ''.',7' "'Vt'i SUGAR 40c DOZ. FRESH I EGGS 37c PIE CHERRIES PIE CRUST RED CHERRIES ... CHOC. CHERRIES R. A. CHERRIES ... 1 Pork Shoulder PORK SAUSAGE 29clb- I JC) "I :JZ?..:.; ?m SHOP SAVE I Says One Disease Yields To "Atomic Medicine" BERKELEY, Cal. (UP) A Uni versity of California scientist re ports that it is possible to say that "at least one disease can be con trolled by 'atomic medicine'." Dr. John M. Lawrence, director of the Donner Laboratory, said the use of radioactive phosphorus now gives victims of polycythemia, a disease in which there is an ex cessive accumulation of red cells in the blood, as good a chance of life as that enjoyed by diabetics who use insulin. Lawrence said radiations from the radioactive phosphorus reduce this excess and keep polycythemia, once considered fatal, under con MACABRE LOOT PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UP) A thief who looted the parked auto mobile of a casket salesman 'here escaped with 12 shrouds. ; have to chop get the cherries -and you to serve less down food bills. No Ma'am'. not when you shop here because at HAY'S SUPER MARKET every price, is a low price every day and that's the kind of sure savings that chops down food bills to budget size. It's the truth and these BEST BUYS of the week prove it. . . prove that you serve more saVe more when you buy all your food needs at this complete market that offers you all the advantages of quick, easy, economical shopping. . .. No. 2 Can Red Sour Pillsbury i Mix 8-oz. Jar Maraschino Pound -Brocks No. 303 D. Monte .. Si LBS. SCOCO SSk 25 LBS. S. DAISY VV - v vn r LUUit GAL. MY SONS SYRUP ... t?lE?ZVL SALMON -- MiRin v whip . MIRACLE WHIP- DRESSING HERSHEY'S COCOA ss I LARGE RINSO .xx . tllliKtH a S SHORTENING .. ... 77c GRAPE JUICE Fruit Flies, Suggest Clue To Cancer Discovery PROVIDENCE. R. I. (UP) A Rhode Island State College zoology professor believes his experiments with fruit flics possibly suggests that humans may inherit a weak ness for cancer. .Dr. Ernest Hartung has devel oped a strain of flies, 80 per cent of whom develop cancer. In an other strain he has bred, less than one per cent get tumors. He hopes his continuing experi ments will discover the single fac tor in the fruit fly's genetic back ground which makes'jt susceptible to cancer. Then he could apply, the knowledge to the study of human cancer. HOPPING MAIL MEMPHIS (UP) Eve Eraden has a neighbor who took her mail from her box with a pair of ice tongs. The reason; she's afraid of grasshoppers. : down a foods to cut SPINACH CARROTS APPLES" Tomatoes 21 ROSEDALE l.W PEARS ......... . 303 LIBBY 63c PEACHES GERBERS 39c BABY FOOD ...... 3 . . . . . CELLO 2 LB Qt 55c .: ' , ' DEL MAIZE SS 23c CORN 2 33c 8-oz. 25c I SUPER MABlll) 'Is this a cold audienctiivl Want Ads frit o r w $zi.75. Terms; rator. I Marti. J trie Co., phone 31. . LETTUCE POTATOES Jo i. t ! 27c 2 lbs. 15t 13c -2 Bunches lb. clb. 41c Qt. PINTO BEANS 23c I IVORY SOAP 225

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