r pa VHE WAYN-SVILLE MOUNTAIN- Asheville Flyer Makes New World Record In P-80R MtTROC ABMY AIR BASE, CaBf. (AP) Col. Albert Boyd of Asheville recaptured the nrli airplane speed record Thursday for the United States flying a Lockheed Shooting Star at an average speed of 623. X miles an hour. This exceeded the mark of 616 l tin- British in a Gtosti-r Meteor. September 8. 1946. If the record goes on the hooks by receiving certification from the Federal Airouautiquc Inter nationale, world body of sport ing aviation, it would return to America for the lirst lime in 24 years. Col. Boyd of the Hit; lit test division at the A At material cammandl Wright Field, flew the modified jet fighter. dt-MK-nated the P-HOK. on its, record run about 50 feet ahove the flat, hard stretrhes of Rogers dry lake in the desert 6(1 miles from Los Angeles. An army flyer for 20 years. Col. Boyd was raised on a small farm on the old Macedonia road near Asheville. where his parents Mr, and Mrs. (Jester Rorri. still live. CARI) OF THANKS We wish to thank (un friends and relatives for the many kiml- lH'ss and sympathy shown us at the recent death ol our beloved bus band and son Mrs. Florence Hrooks Warren Mr and Mrs John Warren Juno 24 Moth Proof Bags NOW is the time to have your winter clothes stored away in our convenient moth-proof buns. Don't take chances on having your clothes ruined by moths . . . Let us store them for you and your worries are over. CENTRAL CLEANERS Phone 1 1 3 Church Street art galleries Auction Sales Daily I(k30 A. M. A large collection of line Oriental rugs, antiques, linens, jewelry, diamonds, watches, clocks, silver, china, crystal, figurines, pictures, and gifts from es tates and consignees will be offered at auction to the highest bidder. A DRAWING DAVIS-SMITH ART GALLERIES Our Name and Service Here Survive In Haywood County Since '85 TRANSACTIONS IN Real Estate Beaverdam Township John A. Hoogle, et ux Peggy Hoogle to Albert F. Moore, et ux. Beulah Moore Ray M. Davis, et ux to Garland 1. Trantham, et ux. William Milne to Edward Fairer, et ux. K. G .lay-lies, et ux l.yda Jaynes to Howard G. Jaynes. Cecil Township GeoiMe Rogers, et ux Margaret Trull to Richard Trull. Clyde Township llael K Kidd. el vir K I.. Kitld to James Jenkins, et ux Grace R. Jenkins. Robert F. Jones, et ux to James 1 Thompson, et ux. H 1) Medford. et ux Lura Med ford, J F.. Ferguson, et ux A let ha G. Ferguson to Mora Justice. Fines Creek Township Mora Jujstiee. llobart Justice. Lucy Justice, Alvin Justice, M. Justice and Billy Justice to Francis 'Irani ham et ux i'earl Trantham. Ivy Hill Township I) M. C arpenter to Ed Davis W. K. Smith, et ux Anna Smith to C. li llsiillook, el u Mollie I losallook. rigeon Township Minnie Terrell to F. H. Rickman. et ux Jessie B. Ricknmn. Svlla Davis to Charles Osborne. to 12:30 P. M. Evenings 7:30 FOR FREE PRIZES DURING Frank Rathbone With 1st Cavalry Occupying Tokyo Private Frank Rathbone of Mag gie is with the Eifhth Army in Japan He is serving with the famed fighting First Cavalry divi sion in its occupation of the ten prefectures in the Tokyo-Yokohama area. The First Cavalry division, commanded by Mai. Gen. William C. Chase, is a part of th F.ighthj Army ( K ersea since December of 194b'. Private Rathbone is assigned to headquarters troop, first squad ron. Seventh Cavalry regiment, which is stationed near the the heart of Tokyo. Recently Private Rathbone was chosen as an out standing man in his troop for his devotion to duty. As a civilian he attended Waynes ville high sc hool. Prior to his en listment in the regular Army he worked on a farm. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. O Rathbone. who reside in aMggie. it ux Betty Sue Osborne. Betty Sue Osborne, et vir Charles Osborne to Sylla Davis. Wayncsville Township Fannie Welch to James Earl Massey. et ux Gertrude Massey. Fred Jackson, et ux Nora Jack son to Huston Jackson, et ux Hermit- Jackson. Gahie Jackson, el ux Ruth Jack son to Fred Jackson, et ux Nora Jackson Fred Jackson, et ux, Nora Jack son to Cahic Jackson, et ux Ruth Jackson. 11. I.. Liner. Sr., et ux and H. N Johnson, et ux to Melvin Smith. Khabeth A. Reeves to John K. Reeves and Rebecca E. Carver. Cosby Frady, et ux Hazel Frady to George O West, el ux Ethel It." West. William R. Taylor, et ux Ruby Taylor to II. B. Moody, et ux Ollie B. Moody. White Oak Township M. R. Ferguson to .1. C. guson. IN MEMORY OF DR. S. STR1NGFIELD Fer L. His chair in the home is vacant now And in his office, too; We'll see Dr. Sam on that Klad morn, When our work on earth through. God will so richly reward him For the many good deeds he has done; He would go if you had plenty of money, He would fio If he knew you had none. He has left his dear companion I And his children kind and true; They were always at his bedside, I Ready, anything to do. I Dr. Sam was always listening For his telephone to ling; I He would go and see his patients I Even tho' in snow or rain. The very last call, Dr. Sam had In a voice so sweet and low; Dr. Sam, you must be weary, It is time for you to go. The glittering stars are shining brightly. Wild flowers bloom and fade; Away Doctor Sam's only sleeping Until the resurrection day. I MRS. CLARENCE GADDIS. to 11 P. M. Our sales galleries offer unsurpassed fa cilities for quick disposal of fine objects and precious jewelry. See us for eon verting your surplus diamonds and art goods into cash. EACH SALE A LAUGHING MATTER Men Know How to Enjoy Life . More Than Women, Says Prexy By ADELAIDE KERR AP Newsfeatum Writer Wondering why men seem to get more fun out of life than women? Or why women often seem to get less satisfaction out of their work than men-' A lot of people have bogged down on those questions. But Br ! Harry Moore, president of Skid more college, Saratoga springs, N. Y., has sonie interesting answers Savs six-foot, bronzed Dr. Moore, who taught at Dartmouth college and the University of Minnesota before becoming head of a worn an's college 22 years ago: "Men and women come at the business of living in completely different ways and men come out better. In the first place men know they are going to have to earn their own living, so they try to choose a field of livelihood which they like and for which they have aptitude. "Most women, on the other hand. are likely to take what's offered. Hundreds of thousands teeter be tween the idea of marriage and a career. They regard the job as a temporary expedient, and they don't get ready for it with the care that men do. So many fail to get the satisfaction from their work that millions of men do. and if they fail to marry they are doubly unhappy. "In the second place, as soon as the day's work is finished, a man has some place he is dying to go and he goes there. To the club rooms, the stamp album. the chess table, the photographic dark room, the golf links or some place. In one of these or in music perhaps be finds an emotional outlet that releases him from strain and makes him forget his worries for a while. More women need more outlets like this." President Moore practices his theory as well as preaches it. After a hard day's work he relaxes at the piano with Chopin, Beethoven and Brahms. His wife, the former concert singer, Marie Blain, likes Most of the kids these days are pretty good swimmers, but the ob servation of one lifeguard on the Atlantic Coast is that the heps are getting friskier in the ocean all of which worries the lifeguards very much. It's fun to ride the waves, agrees this hep-saver, but before you wiggle your toes in the surf you should understand the waters in your area. He advises the kids to be on their guard every second; not to go in where there are known riptides and undertows and to wait several hours alter eating before swimming. Speaking of lifeguards, the girls who go ga-ga about these high school and college Adonises are only making spectacles of themselves. A girl who is a regu lar goon about crowding the life guard station earns herself a bad reputation even though she may think she Is the most popular pigeon on the beach. . And about regular' beach eti quette, as in everything else, the kids should understand there is a time and place for evertyhing. Here are some pet beach gripes gleaned from two Jacksons aged 15 and 19: Boys don't enjoy seeing public demonstrations of affection, least of all at the beach. They think a girl who makes an obvious play for a boy at the beach lacks dig nity. They enjoy playing games on the beach but they don't admire a girl who is rough and tumble scorrs scrap book 1 hi is n , u w-a n i r if AP Newsfeatiires i ( nnu seta augHti, iijMrnidi an V urcause snc ireis me ue 01 rv- I IfWl itf I hti It iflc I Huc.i rl nta urn v v afs-M VHA 1 f Art 4t fOU nIM KMC AU.-mUHJN.' wc TU mi m to do the same thing, so they have two pianos. Although the college president thinks that women do not run their private lives as well a men and get much less satisfaction out of them, he believes they are much better citizens than men both as students and as adults. "But women would be much happier in their private lives," he says, "if. when they are young, they prepared for both home and a Job they liked and let the chips fall where they may. Besides this I think they should choose some bobby. "What kind of hobby- Well, once I made an extensive survey of conversations in w hich only men took part and those in which only women took part. In the all-men conversations the favorite topic was business deals and the profit that resulted. In the all-women conversations the first topic was men and the second was anything based on decoration generally of the person or the house. So I think that the hobbies women would en- Joy, most would be based on mixed society or decoration say dancing. the theater, drawing, painting, sculpture, pottery or woodwork. 'Sports? No, I'm convinced sports are not a major interest with most women. I've tried for 25 years to interest my wife in baseball and got nowhere, though she's a very intelligent woman. To this day she even does things like this. She thinks Greenberg's play ing with the Pirates." (Women please note: Greenberg does play with the Pirates.) freedom the outdoors affords. Too sranty bathing suits don't intrigue either of these gentle men, who say the prettiest suit a girl can wear is a one-piece job with straps in the right places. While we're on the subject of bathing suits, a 15-year-old gal from Malvern, Ark., writes: "My boyfriend, who has been walking me home from school, is now get ting very anxious to see me in shorts and bathing suits." Any smart teen-ager would know bet ter than to encourage such an outspoKen young man. Maybe some teten-age boys don't have By R. J. SCOTT, TOTKL OCE.AM MAMY Stotrfl KA-Vt KIM SUM OVEA. LAKES MP RWLRS Library Notes MARGARET JOHNSTON County Librarian "O PIONEERS" W1LLA CATHER'S is such a hallowed name, and she herself was such an almost legendary fig ure within her own time, that it was a shock to learn, with her death, that she had long been liv ing in New York. If posterity ever localizes Wilda Cather it will be as a Middle Westerner, because of My Antbnia and The Lost Lady and O Pioneers and The Song of the Lark. She grew up in Nebraska, and as a girl used to visit among the foreignborn farmers who were the Cathers' nearest neighbors. It was their stories of the old coun try that first set fire to her imagi nation: "I have never found any intellectual excitement more in tense," she said in later days. But she lived in New York for forty years a quiet life with no fanfare. She loved music and doubtless went to many concerts. But she rarely, if ever, appeared at literary func tions, and her name was never bandied about in columns. Her beautiful prose was her glory, and she came by that only by dint of hard work and self-abnegation. Like Flaubert she toiled for clarity and exactness, and like him, achiev ed timelessness. Other novels of Miss Cather's are Death Comes to the Archbishop U927), and Shadows on the Rock (1931). Best known of her novels is My Antonla (1918), which is considered the authors most com plete and rounded work, although iLost Lady) is regarded by many critics as her masterpiece. One of Ours received the Plitzer Prize in 1922. Last of Miss Cather's books to appear was Sapphera and the Slave Gh-1 (1941). The Tour de Beurre of Rouen Cathedral was so named because funds for its construction were giv en in return for permission to eat butter in Lent. tact but most of them can avoid talking like goons. If you want to be a beauty at the beach, avoid trying to get too much sun at once; don't Use powder which will cake when yohr face perspires. Use a good lotion and rub it over your skin every time you think of it on the beach; wash i your hair frequently after a session jof wind, sun, surf and sand. If you think you lieea an extra bit of color on the beach, use a nice bright pink lipstick and let tyour face glow with the color it will acquire in the outdoors. rara clearrer motor Here'i why we recommend Havoline for your car: The cxc'us', j of New and Improved Havoline Motor Oil is designed to keep ) i free of carbon and and power it brings! be clad VOU made the HEW AMD Carolina Due For Attention In Fall Publications RALEIGHT North Carolina due for some autumnal attention from the magazines this year, in addition to a 26-page October spread in Holiday, most of it jn color, and with text by Jonathan Daniels, the State Advertising di vision said National Geograplin had an extensive article on tin North Carolina coast due during the fall. The last article on North Carolina in Geographic- was Jn 1941, when the state was treatul as a whole. Ford Times will haw a North Carolina bear hunting yarn this fall. Saturday Evening Post rec-i-iiil-. iMay 241 had a fictional piic, based on Ocracoke Island, and I.ii, last week carried a Hatteras la, out, the third North Carolina pm Life has had this year. Associated Press is releasing a full page "Picture Show" on l.o-i AND YOU'LL NEVER BE SATISFIED RE-VERSO-ROL More thorough washing ROTO-DRIER Damp dries, dripeis, ready tor the lino. TOP-FIL-DOR No bending or stooping it t wabl high. SAFTl-LATCH rofacf corefoss fingers and hands. HYDRO-PEL DRIVE $lentifically time wash -ing and rinsing cycle, LARGER CAPACITY JO full pounds dry weight. GREATER ECONOMY 5aves use of hot wafer, soap, electricity. m Just put clothes in Launders)! . . . atfJ soap . . . Hip the switch . . . and vour washday work is done. Launderall takes over from there walies, double rinses and spin dries clothe t r$ sr Av Guaranteed by 'A I Good Housekeeping J g fWHttl THE COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC HOME LAUNI GARRETT FURNITURE ST Phone 1-J sludge. Havoline cleans as it lub 12- frni CTvX More gas and oil mileage, too. Stop m to ! chanire to Havoline. IMPROVED HAVOLINE MOT0 j as if uj&m Charlie's Place ii ... . i . :::: ' i I',.... 1 1 -M,rribj "' ' 'crafts. , ' ":' 'Hi!, , : :i" lw d K..-ha. India's lompare BETTER BUILT TO D dewy freh rcy dot's it till duloniti tlirall even cleim ( .ii nic in for i del f luce ou've etn II finer bt m iricates .4 Wr(A t0C5 . MCAM I &(. ANs SiriMlafiY Main Street Waynesville. N. C. fAftADtit tM4LY' t 3 I T: r I f-A. M f