Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 11, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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Thursday Afternoon, (W r PAGE TWO ' TliE WAYNE3YILLE MOUNTAINFE?. .ii It r .' . y 'tu :ff T.f Selling Scrap Is Good Business Says Ferguson Hounding up farm scrap and Rolling it is good farm manage ment as well as helpful in the es sential production of new steel. Says A. W. Ferguson, Chairman of the Haywood County Agricultural Mobilization Committee. ' Cash return from selling scrap is better than no return at all When farm machinery or equipment rusts away, the chairman asserts. Prices now being paid for scrap are high er than those offered during World .War II, He emphasizes that the fall sea son'is a good time of year to check all the machinery and equipment on the farm to determine what re pairs are needed and what, items need to be scrapped and replaced. The search for farm scrap is thus part of getting farm production tools ready for another planting season. Keeping scrap picked up and put of the way makes the farm a more efficient place to work, Chairman Ferguson adds. Safety is another reason for cleaning out scrap, es pecially small pieces which may en danger farm workers, as well as Ready At RAY'S With "Richie" And Chippewa Woolens Duxbak Hunting Clothes And all items needed for Winter. MS mm 'W ' Wlfs: I ii Wool Shirts By Botany Chippewa Woolrich "Richie" In beautiful solids and rich plaids. DUXBAK Coats and pants in all sizes and there's nothing better Everything T for .hunting timl-gcTretal' Winter wear. 7 r S Local Boy Scouts Visit Donaldson Air Force Base 8y George Dewey Stovall, Jr. On. Friday morning, October 5, six excited Boy Scouts left for a week-end stay at Donaldson Air Force Base in Greenville, S. C. They were Charlton Davis, Dewey Stovali, Jr.. Ted Rogers, Jerrv ! Brandt, David Felmet, and Arnold Hannah. I They joined other Scouts in Asheville where two special buses awaited them. On arrival at the base, the Scouts were housed in two barracks and meals were served in the mess hall. On Saturday morning a tour of the base was started under the iJtr rection of Captain Allborn. The first stop was the Link Trainer Department where each Scout was given an opportunity to fly the Link. Next was the base hangar where the motor, propeller, hy draulic and electric departments were visited. After this the Scouts were taken across the base to in spect a real airplane, All the boys were allowed to sit in the cockpit where an officer explained some of the instruments. During the afternoon, films were shown, after which the Scouts were free to go to the post exchange. ' On Sunday morning all Scouts went to churcfi. After lunch the special buses met the Scouts at the main gate. About 5:30 o'clock In the afternoon the group of tired boys arrived back in Asheville, having had a wonder ful week-end. The trip was sponsored by the Army Air Force and one hundred and fifty Boy Scouts were enter tained. ... Frank Shernll of Hayesville is I here for a visit to his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Al bert Gibson. r The Question of Iron The American Iron and Steel In stitute reports that the United States has access to an estimated iron ore reserve of 8,096,000,000 (ross tons, including deposits as fajr away as Brazil, Venezuela and Labrador. Estimated ore reserves available to Russia amount to 6, 060.000,000 cross tons and include only those deposits behind the iron curtain. The institute notes in the interest of complete clarity that the iron curtain, itself, is not In cluded among Russia's iron ore reserves. Arrives In Tokyo RAY'S DEPT. STORE livestock. Broken metal, for ex ample, may get into hay and other forage crops fed to animals. Cooperating with the current farm scrap drive has one further benefit for farmers. Sufficient scrap supplies ,at steel mills help guar antee more adequate production of new steel which in turn helps as sure more adequate production oi new farm machinery and equip ment. Steel is a number one raw material in the manufacture of mechanized farm equipment. h - Sheppe's 100 WOOL COVERT il 1 Use Our Convenient Lay-Away ' Plan 6 COATS O Belted, Boxy and Fitted Styles Yoke Backs, Pleat Backs, Gored Backs Smart New Detailing V Shop Early for V "H Best Selections 19 95 SHEEN GABARDINE COATS : : 12)95 Brand New Versatile Styles O Perfect Tailoring Perfect Quality Sizes 9-44. Pvt. Oliver H. Allen, who work ed at Dayton Rubber here for two years before joining " the army, has arrived in Tokyo. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Al len of Franklin, and is engaged to Miss June Bond of Waynes- viiie.. Atomic Energy lit Sun Scientists i-.tlievt that the sun dike other stars' Keeps oing by a process : in which four nuclei of hydrogri atoms combing to form one iMt,icM.o! a hcliuin atom, and by 'whici. 'ifn;)S;c energy is released near the Sun's center. This energy reaches the solar surface and is radiated as light and heat, some reaching the earth. All the energy we use originates m this way. Drunken Drivers Biggest; Group To Lose License .''i' - Drunken' drivers last month t99 of them comprised the state's third highest total of driver license revocations since the first of the year. The September summary of tipsy drivers, all of whom were re quired to surrender their license, climbed from the 654 persons con victed of similar charges in August. It topped every previous month since March by a substantial mar gin the Department of Motor Ve hicles reported today, In March 723 North Carolinians lost their li censes for drunken driving and 791 in January foe the same offense. , Speeding over 75 miles per hour cost the driving' privileges of 56 persons, up 18 over the 38 persons convicted of the same charge in August, Thirty-five were convicted of two counts, of reckless driving, automatically cancelling their legal right to drive . '; Other offenses, including larceny of automobile, . driving after li cense suspended, transporting li quor, .improper use of driver li certse, habitual, violator and fail ure to maintain proof of financial responsibility resulted in 1,117 re vocations and 394 suspensions dur ing September President Truman To Be Tar Heel Visitor On 15th : Accident Causes The three principal causes of ac cidents are' said to be speed, liquor, and faulty vision on the part of drivers. '. President Truman will speak in Winston-Salem on October 15 at the Wake Forest College ground breaking ceremonies. The public is invited to attend the ceremonies which will be held at 2:0O"p.m. on the Reynolds site for the new col lege. The President is expected to fly down from Washington in time un n.iimAniac cnoalr nn H flv back shortly afterwards. - ' A number of other governmental officials from Washington are ex pected to attend the groundbreak ing ceremonies also, together with a battery of press photographers ! and reporters. . ' The groundbreaking ceremonies will sienal the start of building on the Wake Forest College campus in Winston-Salem. The basic units for the campus will be built first including, the chapel, the administration-student center, a library, the humanities and science build ings, a gymnasium, and dormitories for men and women. Enough of the $17,000,000 building program is ex pected to be completed by the fall of 1954 for the college to be'moV ed here, The campus is planned ini tially for two thousand students and later will be expanded to take care of five thousand. These initial exercises bring into realization the plans begun In 1946 when the $11,000,000 Z. Smith Rey nolds Foundation income was of fered to the college in perpetuity Piano Classes Are Held at Cruso - tu-rM F Bovell. pianist, of WAstprn Carolina Teachers Col lege, is conducting piano classes at the Cruso Elementary School each Wednesday. Groups have been organized under trie leadership of Mrs. Marshall Beddingfield. Real Es!! Theorl Lizzie Hill 11 t,J"k Smith and w to Jloyd Baldwin ! Paint-Up Programs In Tall-l-Bakun, an excavated settlement near the Persian Gulf, some houses had as many as seven rooms. This was unusual for such early times about 2800 B.C. In some cases, house walls were painted with red and yellow bands, Others, a solid red or yellow. Ap parently, the color was kept fresh by frequent coats of paint. ; . on condition that, the Baptist insti tution be moved to Winston-Salem The new campus in Winston Salem is planned t be one of the finest in the United States, The largest committee selected by Wake Forest College officials is the Committee Overall, which is to be composed of every mart, woman, and child in Winston-Salem, For syth Countyi North Carolina, and areas beyond who can be present for this momentous' .occasion of greeting and hearing speak the President of the United States of America. v Beaverdam tJ W. E. Hyde and Hyde and wife 1 . Charles Hugh , toHamw.Camp p Joseph Cagle and , Rhodes and wife... oomsm and Meadows and wife; . Jonathan loJ A. Moody, Jr.. . Ivy lmTlw, ; A. V. fie and w. Cagle. , .. . WANT FOR RENt-Oncaps per wei'k for tw0 Lilacs, 50! Cbureh ,-' LCDil AT THSE EXCITING I f mrPHM frtc'To) A STBe m -mw sr i k -mm m -n-" w w w m m m ' j nam am b a irn innrir v A OS MllT MUVLlAiFA U Wy r mj mum mitrr LOWER PRICES! Strand Theatre Building; . . 123 Main Street : E.JV I ill I - 1 -: U1 1 ii j i ,v : Btff, ntderii riUlct fulfr leneth refrigerator , , , 1 1 cu. ft. capacity . with full-width horizontal freezing compartment Ij low price! Every famous Philco feature i includ ed in the construction! Amtrica't grtot.tt volut . . . ond Phito Hnf ne feature! Here is a b g ' cu Philco with d horizontal freezing compel" lowest price ever! Has double utility self-closing door lotch rigid full-width 'steel shelves ond the famous Philco Super Power system! See it today! A kihM PUk vilne , , , U cu. ft rcfrirtor-trMicr eombln tion with PMlco'i fxrblv fnturti ... md H' priced within mch of tvtronc'i budget Set thti Ug-vtlu Philco todart REG. J rmci !334!! LIBERAL TRADE - IN ALLOWANCE V2 YEARS TO PAY! KCU. fiS PRICE A PhllM Eiclul ... A ' U cu. n Rcfrifcrotof U the ipc ol M t ' . lesa than the prico . of a 10. A huge fiJl width t cu. ft Zero Zone freezer and extra larxo J itoraiie area; quick Chlller with Meat Compart fcient Adjustable anclves: ' Double Crimen and butter atorase, Cagle . ; F weitare Larry Cagle, Owner
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1951, edition 1
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