Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 24, 1955, edition 1 / Page 10
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PlThe Younger Sef By PEGGY RZEVES And SUZANNE CURRY At long last, we have the ver dict! We know most of you have been wondering just who the Class of '55 would have in the honored positions of valedictorian and sa lutatorian. Last week each mem ber of the Seiiior class was given his permanent record and allowed to average his grades. The aver ages were based on points: an "A" being 4.0, and "B" being 3.0. Dur ing the following week the class could challenge any one's average if they thought maybe it was in correct. So now we are prepared to give you the results. On the very top with a 3,933 average is Ted Rogers, valedictorian. Netx j is Don Shaw, salutatorian. ? To celebrate George Washing- j ton's birthday, the DAR sponsored their annual declamation contest at W.T.H.S. The program was opened by the entire student body singing "America." "The Star Spangled Banner," and joining in the Pledge of Allegiance. Boys entering the contest were Terrell Teague giving "The Black Horse and Its Rider;" Joel Rothermel giving "American Independence;" T. L. Francis giving "My Country. My Mother, My God;" Gary Evans giving "American Way of Life;" and George Williamson giving "Call To Arms." The first place award went to George Williamson, second place to T. L. Francis and Joel Rothermel received honorable mention. All the boys deserve hearty congratulations for their fine speeches. S < The Student Council held a meeting Tuesday morning right after chapel. The main discussion was the planning of the May Dance. A good many ideas were brought up which we think will bring May in with a "bang!" The election of the queen and her court will be sometime in March so start scout in' around and find us some pretty girls. For the past two years we haven't been electing any attendants from the seventh and eighth grade girls but we de cided to change it again so we could have a bigger choice of cute gals! Transactions In REAL ESTATE Wayesville Township James W. Michaels to W. R. Francis. Herbert W. Lester and wife and others.to Jo? N. Tate, Jr. and wife. Sam L. Queen, Jr. and wife to Samuel Wilson and wife. Samuel Wilson and wife to Hardy Liner, Jr. E. M. Rothermel and wife to Anton Leibscher and wife. Beaverdam Township Clarence C. Medford and wife to Minnie S. RaifT. R. L. Wells and wife to Paul Burnctte. Crabtree Township Mollie Allison and husband to Joseph H. Walker and wife. Legal Restraint FO?T WAYNE, Ind. CAP) ? Fred C. Ward oot a Suoerior Court order restraining his first wife, Frma, from telline his second wife, Marie, about her marriage to Ward. Wasn't complimentary. Ward said. The coal mines of Spitsbergen, Norway,s arctic outpost, are only 800 tniles from the North Pole. Old-Fashioned Trio Saves Budgets WINTER SUPPER DISH?Sauerkraut, frankfurters, potatoes. By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor EVER GET a craving for that old-fashioned combination?frank furters, sauerkraut and potatoes? When we do, our food budget fully approves! When we prepare this dish, we add a few tablespoons of darK brown sugar to the sauerkraut be cause we like the suspicion "of sweetness it gives. Usually we put kraut, frankfurters and small pota toes into a large skillet; cover the pan tightly and let the flavors min gle gloriously until the spuds are cooked through. But the last few times we were in the mood for this supper dish, we tried baking it. This method met with the approval of our severest critics?our family. If you would like to try it on yours, the recipe follows: Preface this main dish, if you like, with a thick peasant-style soup. For dessert we're likely to whip up an airy souffle and put it in the oven when the sauerkraut, frankfurters and potatoes come out. If we choose to serve a van illa souffle, we accompany it with a fruit sauce. With a chocolate souffle, we usually serve whipped cream. SAUERKRAUT, FRANKFURTER AND POTATO CASSEROLE ' Ingredients: One No. 2V4 can (1 pound and 3 ounces) sauerkraut, 1 cup finely chopped onion, 2 table spoons dark brown sugar, 4 to 8 frankfurters, 4 medium-size (about IVi pounds) potatoes, a tablespoon butter or margarine (melted), salt, paprika. Method: Turn sauerkraut, with out draining it. into a baking dish (about 11 by 7 by 2 inches is a good size). Toss with onion and brown sugar. Bury frankfurters in the kraut. Pee) potatoes and cut in half lengthwise: arrange on top. Brush with butter and sprinkle with salt and paprika. Bake in hot (425 degrees) oven, uncovered, for 20 to 30 minutes, or just until some of the top ends of the kraut brown a bit; tightly cover ? with alundl- t num foil if desired?and bake un til potatoes are cooked through ? 20 to 30 minutes longer. Serve at once from baking dish. Makes 4 servings?1 to 2 frankfurters for each portion, depending on how many were used. . Note: If desired, you may use an j apple corer to make a hole through ) each potato lengthwise; draw a frankfurter through each hole ! Bake as directed above. ?: i Democratic Chairman's Wife Does Own Cooking i By JANE EADS NEW ORLEANS ? Mrs. Paul Butler, wife of the flew chairman of the Democratic National Com mittee keeps the family happy, her husband says, by "doing all her own cooking." Friends of Mi's. Butler describe her as an attractive, girlish-look ing mother of Ave, a model home maker and as charming and ag- j gressive a politician as her hus band. "She chauffeured Butler some i 50,000 miles last year on his com- j paigns for the party and is avidly j interested in what's going on in ! the world of politics anywhere, said Mrs. Inez Scholl, national com- 1 mitteewoman from Indiana, who ! introduced Butler after his election here. Mrs. Scholl, defeated in her j own campaign fbr Congress in November, is a long-time friend of the Butlers. "They live in South Bend in a gorgeous house." went on Mrs. Scholl. "It's a modern two-story brick. Mrs. Butler'has a flair for decorating. She carried her color schemes out to the Nth degree; even to the telephones. The girls' room is rose and so is the tele phone.'' Butler, slim, white-haired, 49 year-old lawyer who looks more like a teacher than a politician, married the former Anne S. Bris coe of West Hatfield, Mass., in 1934. "The children," he told me. "are Maureen Anne. 19, a sophomore at St. Mary's College, Notre Dame; Paul, Jr., 18, a freshman at Notre Dame, and Karen Anne, 16, a junior at St. Mary's Academy, South Bend." Both the girls bear their moth er's name, Anne?"spelled with an e?" he said. "Then there's Kevin James, 15, a sophomore at Champion In Prairie du Chien, Wis., and Brian S.. 13. in tjie eighth grade at St. Joseph's school. He's the one who | wants to go to Washington." Butler said he did not think the family would be moving there, though he expected to be at Demo cratic national headquarters as often as necessary. Music From The Grave KNOXV1LLE, Tenn. (AP)-John DeMarcus was sent by the Knox ville Utilities Board to the New Grey cemetery to find a water le*k. Placing his sensitive amplifier among the tombstones, he picked \ up not the gurgle of escaping water . but music, music, music. | . Ghostly hepcats? No. said De Marcus, Just a friek of radio recep tion. But he added: ' "I'll tell you this, if the front of one of those tombstones had light ed up with a television picture, I'd have been long gone." The Savannah River project where the United States makes H-bombs has an electric power system about the size of that for the state of Delaware and a water supply system about the size of that for Philadelphia. When light bills run about three | cents a kilowatt hour, a pound of coal can produce 13 cents worth i of energy. Science estimates the earth's atmosphere weighs, 5,000,000.000, 000,000 tons. A speed of seven miles per sec ond.or more would be required for escape from the earth's gravitation. There are about 30000*, Plants in the United si the National Geograp^ pi 9 I I v ?? i~ I >< / B HPfcr< %-ziBkr^J Jftnertffci ? ,-i ?p _ ii so many \^^^!g0rk thousands \^HaA enloy it ?>_ ^ ?, , 1400 WHCC 1400 SPECIAL BROADCASTS WESTERN CAROLINA COLLEGE BAND CLINIC Western Carolina College Band Clink with Haywood County students, Sunday. Feb. 27 ? S:05 - 3:t0 P. M." ROTARY*S GOLDEN ANNIVBRSARY 3* rears of Rotary In Wayuesvtlle Thursday. Feb. M ? 7:45 P. M. Highlight* of Rotary Banquet with Admiral W. N. Thomas Saturday. Feb. X ? 7:00 P. M. I SPECIAL SUNDAY PROGRAMS Remember those wonderful Sunday Concert Programs on WBCO at ?:M P. M., 5:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M. and 8:9* P. M. 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Ivory Snow IT.- ;avv Camay Soap 3 1 25c i Camay Soap k? 12c Duz J Lg 00* Gt coJ e 4vC Dv| Oxydol I ?. IOC J Dreft I ?a 30c j Spry I 1-Lb- 00* 3 Lb. W Tin VVU Tin ' 1 Facial Snap I W o o d b u rfl 3 Bars 2&J , Cerber's Boby ^jj Junior Jar W Strained 3 For Colored Tifso" Angel Son r, 23c Sheets V*9
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 24, 1955, edition 1
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