Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 3, 1953, edition 1 / Page 3
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. Lennon Is jntial Match McCarthy Lr'? Not*: The followin jb\ David Kounce appeare I Washing'on iD.C.) Suuda Irt-spoken. small-town lav L: to the Senate last wee! ?urth Carolina has found L Senator McCarthy's Go\ It Operations Commute | that while he's not took la scrap with the Wisconsi Iran, he certainly won't bad loni one. lot Alton Lennon, Demo ?pointed to the vacancy ere | the death of Senator Willi ? sounded as if he mean hold at his first appearanc Inator McCarthy's full com I When the chairman aske< imittee io vote a contemp I for a reluctant witnes (his investigating subcom ?Senator Lennon refused t Iher wa>. J he very maiter-of-factly Iy to wait, of course, to vot< I until I've read the man' my." Asked about this later I It would be_ ridiculous fo I to vote for a contempt ci Othout having read ever' the testimony." ie previous day. Senato only a few hours in town d at his first press con that he would ask to servi itor McCarthys investiga Jtoinmittee^now being boy V the Democratic minority '< -'zing un the explosivi i. he was prepared only t( he'd like to serve if th< i return to the committee tat job can be done by tha i" tee. he said, "and with ting such unnecessary pub <r thing, he doesn't wan 1 > committee he's on taki advantage of Witnesses. | t lie would tackle Senator iv on this score, he said he ? lot looking for Ta fight, but ? I'd be derelict in my duty not insist on any and every 1 being accorded the' full , )n of our Constitutfon and U under the Bill of Rights. ' id will clash with any one lifTer with my views" on the I American citizens. Those ire just fundamental with sards as preposterous the it Congressional witnesses not be given the same s witnesses in a court of low Senator's background some insight into' his 'ecling^ regarding his re r the rights of witnesses, n judge, prosecuting attor practicing attorney in a Dunty courtroom in Wil , N, C.. for 23 years. More an not. defendants in that m have been farm work rers and Negroes. They say Wilmington that "Judge" always made a fetish of whether prosecuting, de or judging. Even as far his college days at Wake bllege. he took a dim view ne At Wake Forest, he led ifu! movement against haz teshmen. practicing attorney, most fwc were of the who-hit th-the-beer-bottle kind (at 'lient). But there were also ips both civil and criminal, 'e lucrative fees. Then, in I 1951, he was elected to Senate. There, he became td as a pretty 'fair parlia n 'though he is quick to hat he'd be no match Joe McCarthy on that o 'rrms in the State Sen ' him well-known in his ion of the. State, but he 'ual political unknown to Heels when Gov. Umstead him. Political pundits at had suggested several mps. but Alton Lennon n 'heir list. 5 not likely he'll be un r long if he does wind up thv's subcommittee. When k<'d nnint-blank if he was td by Senator McCarthy, fed to be both hurt and in I'm not afraid of him her man, physically or in 'Witness' Meal Time ? V - BILL SATTERLEE, of Kansas City, Mo., eats one of Ihe meals pro s'. vlded by the Jehovah's Witnesses 3 in New York while his son, David, s contentedly sucks on a nipple. Satterlee is among the 100,000 t members of the religious sect at tending their eight-day conven tion. Huge kitchens were set up to feed the members at low prices. t j ? - I ^mm mm m Uhiidren Must Have Inoculations Board Says Parents were reminded today by Lhe County Health Department and ay the Board of Education that the time is growing short for required Immunization of children who will enter school for the first time this fall. School opens August 25. Chil dren who have not already receiv ed their inoculations for dipther ia, whooping cough and smallpox are rea.uired by state law to have these "shots" before they are ad mitted to any school. At the same time the children may receive inoculations for ty phoid and tetanus. Inoculations may be given by the family physician or by the Health Department. Pre-school Immunization clinics ire scheduled by the Health De partment on Wednesday from B.30 to 12 and from 1:30 to 4:*0 p.m. Other Health Department clinics are as follows: Mondays, general :linic for food handlers and others requiring blood tests; Mondays uid Thursdays. X-ray clinic for food handlers and persons refer red by physicians or welfare yorkers the second Tuesday of ?ach month, 1-3 p. m., "well-baby" rlinic for persons referred by ahysicians or welfare workers; ?nd at Canton on Tuesdays, a gen ?ral clinic. Hours at all clinics are 5:30 a. m. to noon and 1:30 to 4:30 j. m. unless otherwise stated. Actually A Hot Car ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. (API? V heat wave cooked a car to such i high temperature that the rear window blew out. Albert Black left his car parked in the street for two apd a half lours In 90-degree heat. When he lot back a crowd told him that the window had burst like a balloon rom the effect of Heat inside the sr. ellectually. Like I said. I'm not tere lookinf for a fight, but I've tever been known to run from ,? _ ?? me. WEEN^f Walk I M V, BY VIVIAN MOWN J A girl has just so many youth ful summers. Why waste one? But lots of times we do. And then when the summer is over and ro mances have been counted, it is amazing to And that the summer | was expendable. Many a girl sees Dan Cupid in the bronzed brawn, smooth speech ' and gallant manners of a summer Romeo, only to And that her dreams are chilled by the autumn air. So ?? before you give up good pals, an interesting and lucrative summer job and perhaps an edu I cational form of recreation for a new heartthrob, give yourself this C Q. (Cupid Quiz* to see if you are wasting time: 1. Are you impressed with his moonlight manners and sun-soaked veneer and will it stand up under a fall shower? 2. Does he disagree with your theories about family, religion. | politics and make an issue of it? Or does he try to understand your point of view? 3. Has he said he really cares | or have you been sniffing orange i blossoms from his sweet and glib talk? 4. Does he rave about his, 1 mother's cooking, and criticize 1 everything lie eats away from home? 5. Is he tolerant of your lack of know-how when it conies to' 1 such sports as swimming, golf. Ashing, tennis? Or does he criti cize your honest efforts? b Uo you lot-1 mat you coum improve him. esperially those ghastly ties and suits he wears, and the way he drops his "g's" and "r's." 7. Do you have more education than he does and would this give you an inferiority complex? 8. Do you have mutual enjoy ment of a few things or does he i scorn your interest in music and | you his enthusiasm for baseball? 9. Do you like his parenis1 And | could you live under the same roof with them if you were com ' | pelled to? ? 10. Do your parents like him1 j If not what are their objections j and are their criticisms Justified? J Perhaps these pointers seem unimportant to you now. But the swain who pitches the best woo j doesn't always make the most de sirable husband and most times doesn't even pronose. While it does ; seem to be rushing the orange blossoms to look at your date as a '; future husband, it really isn't when '? you consider how slim present-day pickings are. and how short-lived a girl's romantic life is. The goal of most girls is to mar ry. So why waste your time with bad prospects while prize fish are i i being hooked by more alert dam i sels? One out of every three girls i between 17 and 19 years of age Is married, so you have a busy brig ade out with their fishnets while you idle away your time. If every girl dated a boy think ing of him as a marriage prospect, there would be fewer bachelor girls. Every smart girl would discard the boy who did not suit ? her requirements for a husband at I once and precious years, months, weeks and days woudl be saved. It is silly totdate any boy Just j to pass the'time away, unless he invites you to a large soiree where you can meet other young men. But some girls aren't happy unless they can dangle one man until they find bnother. VSt irtflLm-. You Can't ^Vin WARREN. Ark 'API ? Harrv i Wllfong. owner of a fishing lodge , on the Ouachita River, left his car j parked on high land, safely away j from the flooded river. The vehicle escaped the over flow. all right, but the next dav Wilfong found thieves had stripped it of tires, wheels and the starter. rd Locomotive Heads For Museum B"11?F,n*ine No. 4, once the prWe of the Hnna. head* oat of the Buffalo yards on ? ride. The railroad aayo the 51-year-old Vu '-an 1*1 If la N ?an hoar. For press. Now It is owned by the Roilroad Locomo tive Historical Society and will be displayed in the St. l-ouis Mnseum of Science. At richt Is a modern diesel streamliner, six times the weight ' nHir'lllHti?*I # ELDER IN POLYGAMOUS RAIDS ' Television Tremors (j POMONA, Calif. tAP) - A Pomona family got an extra thrill as it watched the TV show, Drag net, recently. The show featured the story of j a young salesman who knocked at the door of a home. When the lady j of the house opened the door, the salesman promptly shot her to death. t As the televiewers were watch ing the police close in on the TV* killer, thev heard a knock on their own door. Opening it, they saw a salesman. The lady of the house slammed the door shut and called for the ' police. They arrived on the double. The real salesman, baffled by the commotion, was found to be of ' non-criminal intentions. The lady happily returned to her TV set. Popular Pedagogue NEW CANAAN, Conn. i.APt ? Connecticut's only remaining one room "little red schoolhouse" is in New Canaan, one of the state's wealthier communities. New Can aan also has a million-dollar gram- . mar school, but residents of the Carter Street area won't give up the 93-year-old one-room school as long as Mary Kelley remains to 1 teach the kindergarten and Ave lower grades accommodated there. She's been on the job 41 years. ti SOLDIERS George (left) and Tom Jessop hold an affectionate reunion with their father, Joseph, 84, a town elder in Short Creek, Ariz., the polygamous community raided by law officers. The Gb returned to Short Creek after a tour In Korea only two hours before the raid took place: Some patriarchs of the strange cult living in the remote town have as many as gix wives, the state charges. (international) Private Billy K Jenkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Jenkins. Waynesville. completed basic train ing recently at the Medical Re placement Training Center at Camp Pickett, Va. At MRTC, the Army's basic -aining school for medical enlist Shades Of Solomon SANTA MONICA. Calif. <AP>? A judge and two attorneys turned architects when a divorce j|kil came up in court. Pending a decision. Supreme Court Judge Orlando H. Rhortss and the attorneys for the couple decided to split the home in half, as both the husband and wife wish ed to live there. The husband was allotted one side of the swimming pool. Us wife the other She got six rooms, and he allowed the use of the others. He could use the kitchen only while his wife was away from home. Recent measurements have indi cated that the universe outside the earth's own galaxy is twice as old and eight times as big as science formerly believed it to be. ?.J men. he has received eight weeks of basic ipfantry training and eight weeks of medical train ing. The infantry training covered subjects given to all new soldiers Medical subjects studied included: Anatomy, physiology, military sani tation, method of evacuation, emer gency medical treatment, adminis tration of medicines, ward manage ment. hypodermic injection, and operating room technique. ENTIRE STOCK HOODS ? LEISURE WASHABLE SANDALS ^ Regular $ O O m 2oo Boys' Unlined Water Repellent Poplin JACKETS *288 Men's S-M-L Knit Jockey Rcr. $1.00 Plastic Kitchen SHORTS CURTAINS and nniprc Regular Price 39c RJMImM AIM 3 for 88c H 88c 1 V 15 x 2GTurkish Face TOWELS , Solids and Plaids p 5188c Men's Short Sleeve " Skip I)en( Sport V /\ SHIRTS) "J Regularly r Priced To . Men's Sizes *?2 (o 40, 8 oz. Red Camel OVERALL PANTSJ 1 Ks'r fl ?Q ? I $1.98 <P 1 .JO I PANTIES 5 Pairs 88c Sizes 24 to 36 in. wide > ^ 64 Inches Long VENETIAN i blinds w ?? t SHOP EARLY FOR BACK - TO - SCHOOL BARGAINS t You Always Save When You Shop At... Children's Reg. 25c Rayon ai\d Cotton Belk-Hudson
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 3, 1953, edition 1
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