Thursday, August 29,1946. Bedroom Suite Walnut Verneer $89.50 Up NORTON FURNITURE CO. OLD FORT, N. C. PHONE 66 f 'mmmmmmmmmammmammi ji. ■■'■■whbhhmh 5 POINT LOOKOUT 3 COME! SEE! 3 NORTH CAROLINA’S BEST VIEW jj 3 AND I 1 TASTE NORTH CAROLINA’S S 3 BEST FOOD S i N 3 Henry Ragle, Prop. S 3 « ! STOP IN for a Snack * ■KL AT JIM ’ S 5 \A CHICKEN * iVyTT V' SHACK l OLD FORT, N. C. ■ i “ “ I ! HARDWARE I ELECTRIC CHURNS ! Standard $15.04 • Deluxe $18.19 Step-on Garbage Cans $2.75 s TRAPS:—Trapping Season Is Here Get Them Now Hammers! Hammers! Plenty Os Hammers ! N. &N. HARDWARE CO. j OLD FORT, NORTH CAROLINA **» |T „ „ t| - H 11 U M T - ■■■■■■■■■ I*, GRADE “A” RATING I£ m MEANS i GRADE “A” MEALS I CRYSTAL CAFE I South Main Street 01d Fort ’ N * C ’ I ' AUTO REPAIRS j ■ When we repair any part of your ar ’ AV< ! | I Make it just as it was when originally built. J I That’s why our repair work is always so enduring. * I C & W MOTOR COMPANY j | % K Old Fort, N.C. OLD FORT NEWS BY MRS. D. T. HOUGHTON Mrs. D. T. Roughton the cor respondent for the Black Moun tain News in Old Fort is away on a two weeks vacation. ——o 1 Elwyn Weld arrived in Old Fort after a trip to the Pacific coast to spend a few days before re turning to Greenfield, Mass. He is guest of his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Mauney. Other guests in Old Fort are: Prof, and Mrs. S. A. McDuffie of Paw Creek school near Charlotte, and Dr. Jenkins of Walhalla, S. C. o— — Mr. Clyde Norton and Mr. Ash by Robinson made a business trip to Charlotte, N. C., Monday. OLD FORT CITIZENS O Notice Last week we printed an error concerning the Old Fort All Star Basket Ball Team. We stated that one business man in Old Fort was buying the outfit for the boys. This was a sad mistake and we want to retract the article. All the merchants gave toward the buying of the outfits for the boys. We do not say that we do not make errors but we do say that we do NOT make deliberate er rors. So, if you folks will forgive us for this error we will try to be more careful in the future. Editor. Jim’s Chicken Shack’s First Ten Customers When Jim Byrd first started in business he advertised that he would serve free dinners to the first ten customers, and the names of these follows: 1. Juanita Williams; 2. Mrs. I. A. Williams; 3. Bobby Hunt; 4. Roy Griggs; 5. Arthur Brown; 6. Jimmy Gibbs; 7. Jess Lewis; 8. George Lewis; 9. Willard Thomas; 10. Cleo Byrd. Pleasant Garden Social Notes Rev. and Mrs. T. B. Ruff, of Elwood, visited friends in the Pleasant Gardens community last week end. Rev. Ruff is a former pastor of the Siloam Presbyterian church. o Miss Faye Davis visited her sister, Miss Pauline Davis, in Asheville last week end. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Duncan of Spruce Pine visited Mrs. Dun can’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Biddix, last Sunday. o Mrs. Y'ates Hemphill, of Chapel Hill, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Williams. Handling Insecticides For safe handling of insecticides used in the garden, take extra pre cautions in handling and using the arsenicals, calcium arsenate, lead arsenate and paris green; fluorine compounds, such as sodium fluoride and sodium fluosilicate; and nico tine compounds. When mixing or applying insecticides, take extreme care to keep ingredients out of the mouth and eyes. Wash face and hands thoroughly after using any insecticide. Don’t keep sodium fluoride or other household insecti cides where foods are stored and see that they are distinctly marked. Plainly mark all containers in which insecticides are stored with date of purchase. Keep these tightly closed and in a specially selected place, preferably under lock and well out of reach of children. Strawberry Strains Among the department of agri culture’s prominent strawberry creations of recent years, Blake more and Brightmore are superior for preserving: the Redheart for canning; the Redheart and Mid land for slicing and freezing. For dessert purposes there are half a dozen Fairpeake, Fairfax, Dor sett, Fairmore, Midland, Redstar— you’d select as outstanding. Foi Flapping, Fairmore, Fairpeake. Redheart and Blab, more would probably head your list. WANTED —News for The New* SEND IN YOUR NEWS THE BLACK MOUNTAIN NEWS Poets Comer THE WILD BIRDS DO Little birds fly and play_ In the sunshine bright and gay. But, when the winter comes I around All the birds fly out of town. CHILDREN’S PLAY o All the children play and sing, And take turns in ther eswings. But, whe nthe sun goes way down deep, All the children go to sleep. LITTLE FLOWERS o Little flowers grow everywhere Different colors, too. When you go to pick them, They always nod to you. WRIGHT AND WRONG o Little baby go to sleep, And you will not fear with me And when you grow up big and strong I hope you will be nice and won’t do wrong. DEW DROPS If we claim citizen of heaven why not be better citizens of this world. o It’s a crime any time for a man to be a little man. o Seems to me more men are try ing to be monkeys than vice versa. o Plan Uolor Scheme to Match Home Furnishings Harmony in colors of home fur nishings is being assured to buyers by a label on products put out by co-operating manufacturers of car pets, draperies, upholstery fabrics, wall paper, paints, lighting equip ment and other furnishings. The manufacturers are agreed on a plan for labeling goods B.H.F. for basic home furnishings that will match because all colors are co-ordinated. Their aim is volume sales of these matched goods, which simplifies the work of the buyer and consumer greatly. Nine basic colors are in the new color program, with eight gradu ated values for each of these colors to give a variety of choice. The color groups include tan or Alamo, rose or Grand Canyon, burgundy or Adirondack, mauve or Prairie, green or Shenandoah, beige or Cape Cod, blue or Great Lakes, cedar or Santa Fe, and gray or Great Smoky. The standard colors and their combinations will be exhibited in stores with the merchandise labeled B.H.F. and the name of the color group. The homemaker can select her favorite combination and then buy with assurance that colors will match or harmonize. Discover Ancient Sculptures Five colossal stone heads were among the remains of a prehistoric Indian ceremonial center excavated in the jungles of southern Mexico by an expedition of the National Geographic society and the Smith sonian institution. Although the gigantic basalt heads were similar to others found in previous seasons, the newly-uncovered ones are bet ter preserved and have finer carv ings. Two of them, standing near ly 10 feet high, are larger than any heretofore brought to light. Each of the two is estimated to weigh more than 20 tons. Adding mystery to the sculptures was the fact that the basalt from which they were carved must have been quarried at least 75 miles to the north. From pottery and other discoveries it ap pears that the community existed between 500 and 800 A. D. Mussel Diggers There are boats that have no masts but depend on sails under water to carry them along. They’re called “mussel diggers” and ply along the Ohio and Kentucky riv ers, collecting the fish from whose shells shirt buttons and cheap jew elry are made. The boats “dig” for the mussels with a brail, a long rod having two dozen or more hooks hanging from it. The brail is trailed behind the boat, and to counteract the drag of its weight, a sheet of muslin or canvas is dropped win dow-shade fashion over the bow. It sinks, fills with water and the riv er current “sails” boat and brail along downstream at just the speed required for "digging” mus sels. Hanging Table Cloths Fold freshly washed table cloths selvage to selvage, putting the sel vage edges over the line with plenty of clothes pins, and you’ll find they are much easier to iron. ! Say You Saw It In The News rj B.; ' ' • .<$ DA PREEM BACK , . . Giant Primo Camera, once heavyweight boxing champion of the world, is back in the United States ... as a wrestler. He claims to be cham pion wrestler of Italy. The 6 foot 6 inch, 250 pound grappler is in Los Angeles. Science Points Way To Eradicating Rabies More cases of rabies are reported in the United States in summer than in winter, not because the hot weather has any effect on the dis ease itself, but because people and animals move about more freely then. Dogs stray farther from home, and people travel more ex tensively. The term “dog days,” scientists of the department of agri culture point out, is just one of sev eral myths associated with rabies. Modern science, which has dis proved the rabies folklore, has brought to light facts on which ef fective control measures can be based and has pointed the way to the eradication of the disease in any country. Several foreign countries and our own Territory of Hawaii have wiped out rabies within their boundaries. Continental United States, however, continues to suffer from the controllable disease, with around 8,000 cases a year. Some times the number rises to 10,540, as in 1944, and sometimes it drops to 7,165, as in 1942, but not yet has it shown a definite tapering off. In 1945 the cases reported totaled 9,963. Rabies is primarily a disease of logs, though many other animals, in sluding man, are susceptible to it. Dnce it has been controlled in the dog, now its chief disseminator, it ceases to be of any great eco romic or public health importance. Control of rabies in the United States lies within the authority of die states. Aggressive control cam paigns by some have eradicated the disease from some areas. Chopin and Rodgers Songs Were Favorite Hits of ’45 The two most popular composers in the United States during 1945 were Frederic Chopin and Richard Rodgers, according to the 1946 En cyclopaedia Britannica Book of the Year. “Till the End of Time” was hailed as the outstanding hit of 1945, with sales of more than a million copies claimed as well as two mil lion phonograph recordings. The song, which was derived from Cho pin’s “Polonaise in A-flat,” made the Hit Parade every week for 19 consecutive weeks and was in first place seven times. “Polonaise” it self, as originally composed, ranked as No. 15, with an apparently in exhaustible demand for its piano re cordings. Chopin’s transcendent popularity was attributed to the motion pic ture “A Song to Remember," the stage musical “Polonaise,” and the publication of a number of simpli fied versions of Chopin compositions. The revival of “I’m Always Chas ing Rainbows,” adapted from Cho pin’s “Fantasie Impromptu in C- Sharp Minor,” was another factor. Naming “State Fair” as “unques tionably the best film musical of the year,” the Britannica Book of the Year reports that the Rodgers- Hammerstein team set a new rec ord when three of its songs—“lt Might As Well Be Spring,” “That’s For Me” and “If I Loved You”— appeared simultaneously on the Hit Parade. Science of Ballistics Ballistics is an all-embracing term that designates the science of motion and Impact of projectiles. In the small arms or sporting am munition field, it relates to the sci ence of a bullet or shot in flight and those things starting and af fecting it. Analysis of bullet effect is also included. The study of bal listics from the technical stand point is divided into two catego ries: interior and exterior ballistics. Interior ballistics covers bullet or shot travel within the barrel and includes the study of subjects such as primer ignition, breach pressure, types of powder, rifling, twist, lands and grooves. Exterior ballistics covers the flight of the bullet or shot after leaving the barrel. This Includes energy of the projectile, velocity, trajectory, penetration and accuracy. North Carolina Had Net Gain Os Industry And Workers Last Year o Raleigh, August—North Carolina had a net gain of 1,460 industrial and commercial firms and 14,746 workers during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1946, roughly, the first reconversion year, as mea sured by the net increase of firms covered by the Unemployment Compensation Law, it is revealed by Henry E. Kendall, chairman of the State Unemployment Compen sation Commission. During that year 1,216 firme with 53,090 covered workers re tired from UC law coverage, while 2,676 new firms with 67,836 cov ered workers were brought under coverage. S. F. Campbell, director of Research and Statistics, re minds that retirement may mean that firms consolidated, and that new coverage may be old or con solidated firms, or firms with few er than eight workers which may have come under coverage, volun tarily or involuntarily, due to re lationship with other firms. These figures, however, bear out the known condition that many small firms have started business or industry in the State since the war ended and those covered by the UC law as a rule have eight or more workers. The one - year development Chairman Kendall points out, is in contrast to activities in the three principal war years, fiscal 1942-45. During those years the State had a net loss of 114 cover ed firms, but a net gain of 18,811 protected workers. The record shows that 2,989 firms with 101,- 566 workers retired from coverage and that 2,875 firms with 120,377 workers were brought under UC law coverage. By combining the figures for the four fiscal years ended June 30, last, it is found that 4,205 firms with 164,719 workers re tired from coverage, while 5,551 firms with 188,213 workers were brought under coverage. This is a net gain in the four-year period of 1,346 covered firms and 23,494 workers. While not given to prophecy, Chairman Kendall firmly believes that the present fiscal year will show an even greater increase than the past year in the numbers of firms coming under the UC law, particularly small firms with 8 to 50 or more workers, as well as numerous firms with fewer than eight workers, which gener ally do not come under the UC law. I/"-' FINEST | AND . I PRICES RIGHT I LYTLE & WILLIS j OLD FORT, N. C. : i JUST LIKE WHEN IT WAS BUILT When we repair any part of your car, we work from the basic sturcture out, just as it was put together when originally built in the maker’s factory. That’s why our repair work is always ! so enduring—and well w orth the cost. ROCKETT MOTORS OLD FORT, N. C. Page Five !■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ COLOR FINISH 'J'lew 'Pvxktct for WALLS, WOODWORK, FURNITURE, TOYS There's nothing like i*. This new post-war product brings a superb finish right into the home. Plicote Color Finish withstands repeated scrub bing ... and hardest usage. Will not chip, crack or peel from ordinary wear. Re sists boiling water, heat, fruit juices, stains, alcohol, burns, scratches and abra sions. Its high, mirror-like finish and attractive colors are ideal for Bathrooms, Kitchens and Furpiture. 18 Btautifiil Celsrs THE * HAROLD DYSART COMPANY OLD FORT, N. C. !■■■■■■■■■■■ »■■■■. SEND IN YOUR NEWS