Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Nov. 5, 1953, edition 1 / Page 13
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THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER I [flESDAY, NOV. 5, 1953 right J. Thomson Address S.W.A. Canton lith UH; v-iia^ttr OX juuctj ^uy?uccAueiu at ltd IncCUil* uli li " t#*?l#Ul ?|. A.UOUI IttX-fHWuCUt ail a i/ucttur muainai oAiu ruuuf XVcAotiOiio ?c xaf/vi ana jlaoac w fluua w, Uuwl i^cifcUooio, ^uuw a tour ox me caxauipioxi fault A Witt CO. pidllt dt call* ilia AIM/ uinuer dt me pidHi efuu * tuar will begin shortly after jj.iu. n is lemoned tiidi uie puy jinn. lue snowing ui luj ,t uuou uusincs*' aiitr usun a suitress. i. luuuisuu ? uiiice is hi Hara , uiiiu i<ere ms Company aains its Headquarters. lie n, ruiutr ei lue eu.iu oi uirec la iuQuion io ins oilier posi i .nil ine corporation. tiite Oak CDP i Meet baturday I MKS. GEORGE BORING community rveporier K regular meeting of the * community Deveiop i Meeting win oe this balur Bignt. iNuveniDer 7, U o ciock, k community nouse. cnair i league v* imams is in charge, me isaies are asaed to bring aes lor refreshments. empathy of the Community is poed to Mr. and Mrs. league |iams and other relatives of f carron Best who died last t. aiter a long illness. lere has been many more racie Maid" parties tnis past I with more scheduled for the ng weeks. On October 27th,' George Boring entertained 21 persons present; October , Mrs. Sam Ledford held a successful party; and one Sat j night, October 31, the party held at the home of Mrs. e Morrow with a good crowd tnl Mrs. Morrow was pleas surprised during the party i her brother and wife from iisulle, North Carolina, ar for the week-end. iansactions In EAL ESTATE Wjynesville Township niton Messer and wife to i Battle and wife i Woody and wife and others opold Feichter and wife i Beaverdam Township D Gaddis and wife to Ben i and wife ivy Hill Township rv Medford and wife to B. tdford and wife wry Medford and wife to rd T. Medford and wife, n'd Leatherwood and wife to *th Gibson and husband Pigeon Township E Evans to Virgil Wilson ife East Fork Township tori Henderson and wife to A. McCoy and wife W Wilson and wife to L. J n and wife URRIAGE LICENSES as Hoover Conard and Nel wgess, both of Route 4, sville. David King and Ger ftessley, both of Canton. ^ generations of Hohenzol ntled over Prussia across a ' 500 years. beal ?western ?barbecue I Visit ?edellwood ?lbs court ?^PECUUZE IN ? S'ARF, KIBS ? PORK ?^'01' can eat" ? dinners millwood hills H Highway gl 6-6669 FOB 48 YEARS Dewey Ross has been a subscriber to The Moun | taineer. He is shown here renewing his subscription in the office, and being waited on by Mrs. Larry Cagle, in charge of circulation. imoumainerr riiuiu;. i Dewey Ross, 57, Never Missed Minute From Work Because Of Any Illness Liewey noss nas several recoras of which he is justly proud: ?a consistent reader of The Mountaineer for 48 years., ?never been delayed, or missed any time from work due to sick ness. Mr. Ross, a fireman at Unagus ta Manufacturing Company, has been on that job for 28 years, ex cept for, years which he fired for Dayton Rubber Company. He missed an hour's work once at Day ton, and that is the only absentee I blemish on his long record. In addition to his industrial job, he operates a 10-acre farm and grows alt the basic food for the family, including meat, and a little tobacco for extra cash. The 57-year-old man has enjoyed good liealth and does not know what it is to be sick. There are eight in his famUy^and seve^ are married. There are' 'now tight grandchildren, who have added to his joyS. He works shifts in firing the boil ers at the furniture plant, and when working on the night shift, pulls ^he whistle cord*at six in the mornings, then again at 6:50 and 7:00. "I know when I pull that six o'clock whistle that It means many families get up to start a new day." Mr. Ross keeps pretty busy with his dual job of farming and fir ing, and explained that while he did not get to go around too much, he knew what was going on by con sttantly reading The Mountaineer. He keeps up with all activities, and follows the football team through the columns of this newspaper. He has good reason; several of his sons were stars of the past on the team. Oversized Trunk MECHAtflCSBURG, Pa. (API Mr. and Mrs. A. V. MacQuarrie have arrived in Mechanicsburg with their three children and a 670-cubic-foot box of home belong ings. The family, which came to the United States recently from the Isle of Man near England, said they had managed to squeeze a living room suite, three bedroom suites and "some odds and ends" into the huge box. It took three men 30 hours each to pack, Mac | Quarrie explained. Paint Can Disappear NEWTON, N. J. (API?Farmers have been told to be on the look out for barn and roof painting gyps who apply inferior paint that washes off with the first heavy rain fall. Stop Taking Harsh Drugs for Constipation Avoid Intestinal Upset! Get Relief This Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way! For constipation, ?/irr take harsh drugs. They ciuse brutal cramps and griping, disrupt normal bowel action, make re peated doses seem needed. Get sure but gentle relief when you are temporarily constipated. Take Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative contained in Syrup Pepsin. No salts, no harsh drugs. Dr. Caldwell's contains an extract of Senna, om of the finest natural vegetable laxatives known to medicine. Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative tastes good, gives gentle, comfortable, satis fying relief for every member of the family. Helps you get "on schedule" without repeated doses. Even relieves stomach sourness that constipation often brings. Buy Dr. Caldwell's iM size today. Money back if not satisfied. Mail bottle to Box 280, New Yozk 18, N. Y. 8 Explosive Well OLIVIA. Min. (AP) ? The Francis Tisdell family is waiting for its water well to blow its top again. The well has been "exploding" about once a month since Janu ary. Some of the first blasts all buj wrecked the wellhouse. Dr. George A. Thiel, chairman of the University of Minesota geo logy department, says the explos ions are from marsh gas that bub bles up from peat beds locked in the ground. In the early days of New Mex ico, vintage French wines were im ported at high prices for military receptions although New Mexican wines were considered excellent. A new hand-size not-metallic Uind mjpc costs the army onlj $2.50. Mrs. Berry, Son Leave Nov. 11 For Germany Mrs. Polly Gaddis Berry and her 5-year-oia son, Kenneth, will leave here November 11 lor Augsburg, Germany, wnere they will join Mrs. Berry s uusoand, sKC James If. berry, 01 me looih intaniry Kegt meni, 2bih Division. They will ily trom Henderson vilie to New York, wnere they will board a KLM noyal Liutcn airlin er for Amsterdam, Holland and Munich, Germany. Mrs. Berry ana her son plan to make tneir nome with sgl. Berry in AiigsDurg tor 2Va years. The sergeant, who Is the son of Mrs. Roy Berry of Waynesville, Route 1, has been in the Army lor lOVa years and served in bom the Pacific and European theatres dur ing Vvorid War it. Mrs. Berry is the daughter ol Clarence Gaddis ot Waynesville. Bookmobile Schedule Friday, Nov. 6 ALLENS CREEK - BALSAM RD. - HYATT CREEK Aliens Creek School 9:15-10:00 E. K. Chambers 10:15-10:30 Paul Browning 10:45-11:00 Kay Allen 11:15-11:30 Harry Middleton 11:45-12:05 Thelhia Arrington 12:20-12:40 Guy Queen's Store 12?55- 1:10 Saunook School 1:15- 1:45 Barber's Orchard 2:00- 2:15 Allen Hyatt 2:30- 2:45 Monday, Nov. 9 BEAVERDAM J. T, Smith ...._ 9:30- 9:45 Williamson Grocery .... 10:00-10:20 Mrs. T. G. Murray 10:30-10:45 Allen's Grocery 11:00-11:20 Beaverdam School 11:30- 1:00 Harris Grocery 1:15- 1:30 Ed Queen 1:45- 2:00 Roland Osborne 2:15- 2:30 Tuesday, Nov. 10 MORNING STAR - CLYDE RD. Quay Smathers ...._. 9:30- 9:50 i Jack Chambers 10:00-10:15 Geo. Wilson Store 10:30-10:50 Morning Star School 11:00-12:3( B. M. Stanley 12:45- 1:0( Smathers Dairy 1:15- 1:3( ' Sam Rathbone 2:00- 2M.1 L. E. McGowan . 2:30- 2:4! 9 Rational t>arh founber'e ? I GBRT1FIG?TE | o?Ao Aojcontributed withe At ? Purchase and Promotion Fund *3f Great Smoky Mountains National Park m S is hereby acknowledged to be S A NATIONAL PARK FOUNDER ? S and as such is entitled to the particular respect and Jgfc gratitude of visitors who through the years and m ages will benefit by the vision and generosity of 8 those who have made possible the preservation of $3 iffl| the virgin forests and varied flora of the choicest <0| ? ? section of the Southern Appalachian Mountains. ** - ? 1 g The Interstate National Park Committee jg | || fs\ f.OS^bv- g fs .? chairman sccrvtarv ^iy -HM- thV yt jr <tUM> i&Me jig -* ? BACK IN 1926, Mrs. W, T. Crawford, along with many others, made a cash contribution towards the purchase of land for the tireat Smoky Moun tains National Hark, to be turned over to the National Park Service for development. This certificate is the one issued to Mrs. Crawford at the time ot the contribution. The certificate is, signed by D. J. Chapman, chairman, and P. D. Ebbs, secretary. This week, representatives of Western North Carolina are in Washington try * _ _ ? ing to persuade the federal government of the urgent need of fuller development of the Park. Twenty-seven years have passed, and very little has been done towards developing the Park. It was hundreds of people like Mrs. Crawford who put their cash into the project, who are still wait ing. In addition, the states of North Carolina and Tennessee made sizeable appropriations for the purchase of the land* for the Park. ? . ? w? Trouble On The Lawn TOLEDO, Ohio (AP>?A taxpay er telephoned police and said he | wanted written permission to mow his lawn in his underwear. i I Sorry, said Desk Sgt. Vincent I Kwapich, you'd better wear a I swimming suit. |io. answered the j nature lover. lt^ a free country j and it's shorts i?r au>. 5 The sergeant's phone rang again.1 (Ik- man was wearing his abbrevi. teds and the neighbors didn't Jit* it. A police squad scurried to tt scene. They made a short case o* of it. They " ordered htm in something longer than shorts. At the police have had no complain since. ' Dm Want Ada for quick resul Women School Police BEVERLY, Mass. (API ? Police ic Jt Chief Edward Aucone wants six (q new special olficers?all women? id to handle school traffic. ls He told Mayor Clarence S. Wil kinson that he hasn't enough mer to provide protection for childret "* going to school. Fugate Brothers Traveling Far In Services Robert D. Fugatefi H/N. with a Naval medical group, la presently on a Mediterranean cruise of six months. He has already completed cruises which took him to Africa, and Turkey, and he also spent a year in Korean waters. His brother, Pfc. James H. Fu gate has just completed training at a Marine supply school at Camp Lejeuene and is spending a fur lough with his parents at their home on Dellwood Road. Later he is to report to Cdmp Pendleton, Calif. Pfc. Fugate took his basic training at Parris Island, S. C. Both men are the sons of the Rev. and Mrs, B. C. Fugate. - . Marrying Justice Ousted 1 ELIZABETH. N. J. <AP)?An old institution, the marrying police Justice, is one step furtheg out of the official door and almost com pletely a matter of history. The city and three men holding the of fice have consented to a judgment which eliminates the office entire ly. A state law passed this year list ed persons authorized to perform marriages. Police justices were not included. The judgment resulted from a suit instituted by the state after the new law was passed and asked the courts to declare the of fice illegal. Melon Mystery DUNCAN, Okla. (AP)?Here's a switch on watermelon stealing stories: Clifford Green called police to report a melon raid?someone had left his front yard "covered with watermelons." Police hurried to the scene but could find no clue to the identity of Green's bene factor. Green told the officers to forget the matter, he was happy with his free watermelon patch. KERN EL row You're in the u rivers sear It's your money, of course?but we'd like to see you make the most of it. That's why we publish the price of the big Buick Special here?to make Point # 1: you can buy this great performer for just a few dollars more than the so-called "low-price three."1 But Point #2?the smart point?is this: When you put up those few extra dollars for the Buick pictured here, you're in the driver's seat of a lot more automobile. You boss extra power ? more satisfying power ? walloping Buick Fireball 8 power ? highest ever found in a Buick Special. You get extra room?a lot more comfortable room ?real, man-sized, 6-passenger room?as much room as you get in cars costing hundreds of dollars more. You enjoy extra satisfaction ?more solid satisfac tion ? in the ride of this big, broad, road-steady traveler that's cushioned by coil springs on all four for only $ wheels, and engineered with all the other costly features of the Million Dollar Ride. And, speaking of extras?here you get, at no extra cost, a long list of standard equipment that most other cars at or near the price of this Buick charge you for, as "extras" on the bill of sale. So, as we said ? it's your money ? and it's your move. If you're aiming for the driver's seat of a hard-to beat buy?for a lot less than you think?come in and see us soon. THE GREATEST BUICK Today's local delivered price of the BUICK SPECIAL 2-Door, 6-Passenger Sedan Model 48D (illustrated) ^Optional equipment, accessories s'o'e and local faxes. If any, odd Hanoi, facet may vary tightly in adjoining communities due (. to shipping charges. All prices sub/ect to change without notice. IT'S TRADE-IN TIME FOR A BETTER DEAL Want the top allowance on your present car ?ar\d a great buy in the bargain? Come in and see us for the happy news ?now. MILTON BIRll Ua/i for tUICK-ln fix U/ICK-URU SHOW on TV Tuetday evening!. Alia, every Saturday, tune In The TV Football Game of the Week -a "GM" Kay Ivan* WHIN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK Win ?"0 THEM i - TAYLOR MOTOR CO. _ | HAYWOOD STREET DIAL GL 6'1685 ? ? - ' f-- -i ) ^ m f ? - - - ... .. . .i. u.. . ... - ^ , , ? >I*I
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1953, edition 1
13
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