LAVJIARCHU THE WAtNESViLLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE FIVE Secow! Section? 2 janist al Genius Concert L. K mad Pianist, M P. ,...t sou uf the na- luar"- uiipH last .musicians . u Lm.dV.-uu I e,pressionless, the ar t f the Wayne Coun frw" 01 ,v nsivchiatric I';,,! 'left the unnuned by the ljrtl"' . ,.,.,t fallowed ""Lop,., Mozart and in Q P0Ul " , '. ,h nianist'S It. stou.l ai ' . athon- explained lh hi have plaveu u- - and over. L,. nine years since ht.d nnisieian. a m. -ill ie concert. Lai asKed that the art- not be maue pum.. earaiue was arranged by MtM-huler. hospital psy t0 ili'inonstrate to a con- ,r Teachers' Na- ,1'iatiuii Hie value of mu- t the mentally in. Gi'uebr, hospital super- saicl the pianist lias Deen ureiRht years, unable or ho converse, or rcaa even t hingiuige. His present n music, the pnysician L sii-n of improvement. L-huler described the art- ,Ilt as a "lonn ot nega ii k :i result, he said, personality which causes to seek withdrawal lrom Sut 1 a sutl'erer, the laincd. is unable to think to form mental associa- lack a capacity to asso othi'i' persons. The con- aused by the musician s inability to face real- Aluluiler added. first was uiven an op to return to the piano, said, he just "poked at High-toned Sweep ii'v. .... . iipFi9HMMai " -". CI ?"' .iHwiiiii).iiwiM(,ia KINSMAN of the Duke of Suther land and regarded -as heir to a vast British fortune, G. A. S. Leveson GoWer has -started in business for himself as a chimney sweep at Slough, England. (International) bevan to play a little. know if he enjoys it say. But we hope music him out of himself," the lulciit added. Hanson, noted conduc- imposcr of the Eastern Music at Rochester, N. Bearing the concert, term- ticnt "a genius." n Maryland and Con- liave indicated intention ig curved row practices food advantage in North for the control of erosion. Id Your Strength and !nergy Is Below Par iy be caused by disorder of kld- iction that permits poisonous 0 sccumulate. For truly many (eel tired, weak and miserable IP kidneys fail to remove excess id other waste matter from the may suffer napping backache, tic pains, headaches, dizziness, P nights, leg pains, swelling, nes frequent and scanty urina b smarting and burning is an m that something is wrong with Wfs or bladder. should be no doubt that prompt "if.'" Wr than neglect. Use ''ills. It is better to rely on a ftnat has won countrywide ap Jan on something less favorably "oon have been tried and test- 1 years. Are at all drug .tore, in today. 13,000 Veterans Named John Smith WASHINGTON This will ex plain to John Smith why the Vet erans Administration is slow in an swering his pension query. There are 13,000 John Smiths on the Veterans Administration ros ters, Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Ad ministrator, told the National Com mittee of the American Veterans of World War Two Feb. 23, and 8,000 of them have no middle initial 8,000 veterans named just plain John Smith. General Brad ley told about the Smith problem in relating difficulties of his agency and added: "We are beginning to see the light of day now." He said the agency had been unprepared to handle peacetime veterans' problems when he be came Administrator last year. Noting that proprotionately there are about three times as many unemployed veterans as civilians, General Bradley said former sol diers do not wish to accept employ ment in factories where strikes are likely since a veteran on strike is not . guaranteed employment in surance. Support to General Bradley was pledged by the National Executive Committee. The resolution, adopted at the close of a meeting of the Commt tee and state commanders, said that the indorsement of General Bradley and the Veterans Admin istration was "contrary to the American Legion stand." B. C. Case Among Enlistments In AAF Among the recent enlistments at the Recruiting station in Asheville is listed B- C. Case, who voluntered in the Army Air Corps on Febru ary 7 . He is the son of Mrs. Mar tha I. Case of Canton. During 1945 collections of used kitchen fats made up about one tenth of all this country's produc tion of inedible tallow and grease. f 1 it's money need to give your home a need- anting, or if it needs repairs, or p want to build, see us for a: pE LOAN. Our specialty is Nor and to homeowners. HAYWOOD HOME gilding and Loan M7 ASSOCIATION Waynesville Army To Use fcilotless Planes To Probe Secrets Of Storms ORLANDO, Fla. Pilotless air-1 craft newest development of the Army Air Forces are going to be ! sent up at the Air Forces Center here to discover the "flyability" of thunderstorms. In most cases the standard in junction to pilots of all except the very largest aircraft, in the case of thunderstorms, has been "stay away!" But with their radio-controlled aircraft, the military forces now can send up unmanned planes into "nasty" weather into which they would never advise a pilot to fly. The project, which is to be car ried out beginning about March 1 jointly by the Army, Navy, and Weather Bureau, will get unde way at Army and Navy bases in Florida. The Air Forces part will concentrate at the Air Forces Cen ter at Orlando and the Air Forces Board at Eglund Field, Fla. A portion of the actual flying project awaits the beginning of 1 the thunderstorm period, which, according to Center weather fore casters here, starts about April 1. The maximum thunderstorm ac tivity in the United States, ac cording to the Center, occurs in an area some miles to the south west of here. In the meantime, installation of the project equip ment is proceeding. A square mile is to be set off as the test .area, Center weather offi cers said. At intervals through out the area micro-barographs are to be installed These instru ments will record the minute pressure changes that occur dur ing a thunderst6rm. During thundershower periods aircraft from the Center, equipped with barographic and turbulence recording devices, will be sent up to study the structure of clouds and the types of winds occurring during storms. Then ground and air barographic data will be cor related. Radar Forecasts Meanwhile, by use of one of the war's great electronic develop ments, radar, the Center offers a unique forecasting service in ad dition to its continuing observa tions of storms, hurricanes, and cloud formations. Radar observa tions provide information on the areas, height aitd the tops of clouds. This information is.turned over to the Center weather bureau where it is posted as a "RAREP" (radar report) at the operations office. There, pilots can tell at a glance where the maximum thunderstorm activity lies and forecast flights to avoid it. An elaborate radar . network is used to compile these storm and cloud statistics. Eight airborne radar sets which used to be aboard B-29 Superforts are scattered at ground installations at various fields in Florida and along the Gulf Coast. More are being in stalled, it was learned, and the number will be augmented from time to time. At each of these radar stations the opertUT looks at his scope hourly r cid sends in a reoort to the Centev indicating the range and extent of cloud areas. Ellipses are, in la;t. drawn around the most imponant areas and the carefully plotted location, direction, and speed of these areas are sent to the Center weather bureau. Tracking of Hurricanes After an inaugural test six months ago, Center weather of ficers now are set also to locate and track the next hurricane that comes sweeping up the Florida peninsula. From favorable reac tions received from their reDort- ing last September of a hurri cane, Center officers foresee that a ntlmber of these radar reoortine sets in the Florida and Gulf area may revolutionize mefliods of forecasting and plotting these storms, and possibly minimze damage. To track and follow the hurri cane the radar employed is a microwave "early warning" set similar to that used by the British in the days of the German blitz. A set at Orlo Vista is recorded by the Center Officers as an ideal location. The station lies midway in Florida and scans an area ex tending from just a few miles north of Miami to slightly north of the Georgia-Florida boundary. Weather officers here dramatic ally related the first radar track ing of a hurricane on Sept. 15, 1945. On that morning three AAF weather men and a radar crew huddled around their scopes when reports came that a hurricane was bound north in the general direc tion of Orlando. The radar equipment consisted of a 30-foot revolving antenna mounted on a tower with two AAF radar sets coupled to it. One radar scope, in which a wiggly blue line oscillated from top to bottom, was a cloud height finder. The other was the early warning set whose electrical fingers could reach out about 220 miles In every direction. During the day the radar scopes began to get the first "echoes" from the storm. Then, at eight o'clock in the evening, the scope showed that the storm consisted of succeeding concentric arcs each with a smaller radius of curvature. U. S. Ships May Be Chartered By Other Countries WASHINGTON The Commerce Department has suggested charter ing of United States ships to other countries. It said that taking a "substantial volume" of United States merchant shipping out of operation now would result in "a scarcity of world tonnage and higher freight rates." Because of record ship construc tion from 1939 through July, 1945, the department said, this country now has 40 per cent of the world's merchant tonnage, without taking into account 8,000,000 tons oper ated by the Army and Navy. The department, in an article prepared for its Foreign Commerce Weekly, suggested chartering U. S. vessels for operation in trade among other countries as well as in trade with this country. "A liberal supply of tonnage, reasonably low freight rates and diversified service will result in a larger volume of international trade and wider employment both within and outside of the shipping industry," it said. British At Standstill On Atomic Research LONDON The Daily Express reports that the United States army has "stopped the flow of atom re search results to Britain" because the British "have nothing new to offer" in exchange. 'The British atomic project al most Is at a standstill," the Daily Express said. "Progress in build ing and equipping the experimental station in Didcot, Berkshire, is deadlocked for lack of staff. "For more than four months our scientists have heard virtually nothing of the activities of nuclear physicists in the United States." The newspaper said lack of Plutonium or Uranium 235, which Britain was said to be unable to get from America, also had delayed the experiments here, for which $6, 000,000 had been earmarked. Read the Classified Advertisements Emphasis will be placed upon food production by the state's 92, 000 4-H boys and girls in projects this year, says State 4-H Leader L. R. Harrill. Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ, laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Couehs, Chest Colds, B ronchiris e Inlaveiii't all the catrce Items, but we SdDBie . d . No Matter How Small or Large Your Needs, Always Try Us First Seing Hid of the High Rent Dis tricts, We Sell For Less" Now fn Stock . . . The Famous Bright Burley Tobcrcco Knoxvilte Fertilizer This Is The Old Original We Have in Stock Bright Shredded Shucks By the Bale or the Truck Load See Us For Number One Timothy Hay 'By the Bale or Truck Load Junaluska Supply Co. Phone 88 JERRY LINER, Owner Lake Junaluska DDT's Cousin Is Really Tough On Pesky House Flies WASHINGTON Congress has been told of a new insecticide seven times as effective against flies as DDT but lacking any such 'popular still is known by its full labo ratory name, benzene hcxachloride. Disclosure of the new material was made to the House Appropriations committee during hearings on the 1947 Agriculture department sup ply bill which went to the House floor. Preliminary .tests, department experts told the committee showed benezene hcxachloride to be seven times more toxic to flies than its war-famed cousin, DDT, and ef fective against many insects not bothered at all by DDT. "It has shown the most encour aging results on ihe whole group of cotton insects of any materials we have found," the department reported. But not all the news about ben zene hcxachloride is good, the de partment admitted. It j "extreme ly toxic" to bees, while DDT is not. ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of VV. A. Noland. de ceased, late of Haywood county. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Way nesville, North Carolina, on or he fore the (ith day of March, 1947, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the (ith day of March, 1940. W. II. NOLAND, Administrator of the Estate ' of W, A. Noland, deceased. 1493 Mar. 7-14-21-28 Apr, 4-11 DR. W. KERMIT CHAPMAN DENTIST OFFICE IN BOYD BUILDING PHONE 363 WAYNESVILLE. N. C. 1 Monuments Available Regardless of the price you pay for one of our memorials, beauty, dignity and fine work manship will be assured. MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION HAYWOOD MONUMENT CO. Near Farmers Exchange Asheville Road . . . Waynesville, N. C. II. 15. Angel, Gen. Mgr. Phone 277-M Use The Classified Advertisements This Spring Happy Motoring's the thing! You've got plans for this spring and summer . . . like everyone else! And whether it's just a run out to the lake on pleasant week-ends or a long jaunt on your vacation, don't over look the most important "must" in your plans . . . your Esso Dealer's expert car care for the enjoyable days ahead! If your car's pre-war, it has never needed more careful attention and lubrication! And if yours is a new car, you'll surely want to keep it in tip-top condition. Your neighborhood Esso Dealer's ready' now to give your car expert care for spring and summer . . . with thorough engine protec tion . . . with proper chassis lubrication . . . with high quality Esso products that are right for your car! Make today "Esso Dealer" Day. Do it now . . . and enjoy the days of "Happy Motoring" that lie ahead! Tho Sign of "Happy Motoring" SEE YOUR ESSO DEALER NOW... PROTECT YOUR "HAPPY MOTORING" SWITCH TODAY. 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