THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE F6UR (Third Section) it- 4 m 4 The younger cliiiiir.'n will enjoy the piciuies ai.d the stones on thtsc books. Appleseed taini - Douglas. Big isu.san Junes. Biggest tamily in the ;own Stti ling. Blovaway Hal Adelsoli. Kl.-li in tin1 An Wcicsc Grey lot k ami the Kouui-- Hol 1ICH1 Health ( .11 He Kin. Leaf. .Ui k Kind- Gold T"U-e Johni!' ami Hi- Mule- Credit. kO'rll S-t:i!!.l C iMt-Wl'ltll l.t-Il' 1 ! M 1 I' 'k N Licit ! ii.:ini that Could - Piper Mljhiv Hunter Iladci. Mjuii..:i! II. I5:i Ur.t .'-'i in.; I iddic Kern . Hi, , H.n Ik.kc h.h. in, - li,,u! I til City -CllUle. lorn .'. i In ".i - 1't lei shaili ;.ur LiH.r Lloll Hit) II ;-nr,'t'. Siiapp Sntiir ami tilt' C mi i e: . ,ul 1., iidman Mo: t imi.t Pn.fi Flack. . -( . .j m J..kir Brunhotl. I i n i ' 1 1 Tim.e Graham m Youni: el m Geismcr. ;,: 1-tui Wh.i- ::i:iiu. i- 1' PiMoriu-. li. I I ' K.nned C and Dog- I lift 1 hi'- Sun". Blight Snovc Tres- -..II fur the M iddlt-jged ( hildrt-n . . '; i l i.fit-iuKU-. Ho - v ..l.i, i..,. '.'i.i Darniii r )i,ii. i; ui i . Sim-t JUuli. I'. I'm ( uiiif - Through -Fclsci, Klin Knigt Bui --Ur.ski B"i ii'- - Buy Kt-i hnilzi-r l ' a 1 1 1 ' c Ha: hoi Hi rd I . . j i . i I'nii' - Mcl'loskcy .loin; n J in i in Zw ilcmey er K- ! Kid- Turn I i..r. - P.,u While "I'M THE LITTLE GIRL WHO HAD NO APPETITE" i 4-. , ;)KBIK J FAN ESTF.S Mr- Mail ha Kste. 709 East Ct-n-t'.'.' tr I .aFol lettc Tenn . writes. For mil ;. war ill little daugh lir Cnlihie, who ttas lour years old had lie en MtlltTltlg ll'lllll loss of ..rptiil In tact, we liacl to forte l'ir 'o i , it. ( on-a.qu.ent ly, she look id I'ai.' tt;i- f;ir tinderwcighl, and i . .ii i 1 1 ncit mix ;md irrifahle all of (In linn w,. tttrc deimhled to see ly." ijiinUlt Scall's put her to eat in; In, o lilt tiih no coaxing. Her color i. one hack, her disposition improved, and she hegan to regain tt eight She is growing tast and Inoking lint' now." The Inst hottle of Stall's is guar anteed to please or tour money hack. Tr it toriat . Not hum Re places Stall's Years Of L'se. On tale at all goo'd drug stores. Hear Scalf's Harnioneers Quar tet ..ver IVH'NC. Dial 570. at 6:15 A M Monday through Friday. adv. IT HI BUSY? i. 20 Trips To The Waynesville Laundry and Never Been Separated! Lver send your favorite pillow cases to a laundry and have "miss-mates" returned? Then you'll appreciate the pains we take to double check vour bundle. We make sure every garment is returned to it's proper owner. DON'T CALL ANY LAUNDRY (All Waynesville Laundry (Incorporated) J. W. KILLIAN, Owner WE CALL AND DELIVER Phone 205 Library Notes By MARGARET JOHNSTON County Mhrartaa Martha. Daughter of Virginia Vance Meggy Matlntosh Gray. Middle Button Worth. Misty of Chincoteague Henry. The i Mitchells Van Stockum. Fit Pony Banning. Rings On Her Fingers Lowre.v. Kulus M Estes. Son of the Black Stallion Far lev Son of the Walrus King Mc C'ratken Strikeout Story Feller. These Happy Golden Years Wilder Trusty, the Story of a Polite Horse- Hechdolt. Tw enty -one Balloons - DuBois. L'p Hill and Down Coatsworth. Washington: City of Destiny Hager Where the Kedhird Flies Har per Wonderful Years Barnes. Good Reading to Children of Various Agra Bambi s Children Salten. Cloyerfield Farm Stories Orton. Chuckle bait Scoggin. Enchanted Book Dalgliesh Five Chinese Brothers Bishop. Freddy the Magician Brooks. Happy Lutle Family Caudill. Jibhy. The Cat Salten. Just So Stories Kipling. Little House in the Big Woods Wilder. Lutle Austin. McF.lligot's pool Cleisel. r Magical Melons Brink. Many Mansions from the Bible Bible Nobody's Doll DeLeeuw Peter Churchmouse Austin. Princesses and Peasant Hoys Fen ner Quiz Kids Hook of Stones and Poems. Read-To-.Me Sort Book Child Study Assn'. Told Cnder the Stars and Stripes As-'n Ch Ed Treasury of Dog Stories Cava- na.'i Lncle Kemus--Harris. Wihl Lit,, of the South Kut- ledge Vou:,g Americans Peck. Pearling aloud is good for both children and parents A few simple -ugfestiuiis may he useful: ill The reader must enjoy the book ht. is reading aloud if the others are to enjoy n 2i Children can under stand hooks which are beyond their reading ability -3 Dramatizing is .'un. Borrow books from the public or school library or write to the North Carlina Library Commis sion. Raleigh This all-too-short list of recom mended titles was prepared by Miss Dorothy Dickey, Head of the Chil dren's Department of the Olivia Raney Library. Raleigh, and Ihe North Carolina Library Commis sion EAR-PULL FAUCETS RIGGED FOR KITCHEN SINK EVANSVILLE. Ind. (UP) Victor Barnett thinks kitchen plumbing j needs novelty treatment, j Harnett has a patent pending on 'a water tap for the kitchen sink. The faucet is metal cast in the j shape of an animal's head. Pull down the left ear. you get hot i water. Yank the right, cold water. You can have most any kind of animal you want. Barnett says. I But the ones with the biggest ears are the handiest, such as the jack rahhit and the donkey. Ducks have an almost telescopic eyesight. They can focus their eyes for near or far vision. Boyd Avenue (3 M0I i s. I 'tSy 1 Improved Variety Of Cotton Shown DEERING, Mo. (UP) A new cot ton variety of .jieat possibilities has been developed in this south eastern Missouri cotton town of 150 population and is being shown to growers. It is early-maturing, of above average lint turn-out. excellent in fiber strength and suitable for mechanical picking. Tests over a 12-year period from cotton experimental stations in many states show that the variety, known as "Paula.'' has a wide range and is adaptable for any . cotton section. Deering Farms officials said that about 20,000 acres ol land was planted with the Paula aruty this year. Hutchens started in 1936 to find a cotton variety which would hold up in any climate and ur.ocr any weather conditions. He estimated conservatively that he had worked with as many as 15,000 cotton selections in the search for what he wauled In 1940, one of the selections appeared to be the one he sought. For the last six years Paula cotton has been under close obser vation in experimental stations in many cotton states, to determine what the variety would do year after year. Paula ranked at the top season after season in every climate. Perfume Alone Won't Trap Wary Male, Expert Claims CHICAGO i L P i There s noth ing to worrv about, men. Perfume can t trap a man against his will. Maurice Talmage, who has been concocting devastating w luffs for 1 2d years, made the admission. "We've been ttying for years and years to develop a perfume that will make men tall in love at first sniir, he said, "but our best efforts have been in vain." Talmage suggested delicately that one ol the major stumbling blocks has been, the lact that mod ern males just don't have a good sense of smell. Eton the most tantalizing aroma is powerless, he said, unless a man is more than casually interested in a girl, in the first plate. At best, perfumes just rate an assist in romance, he said. Millions Spent Women have been dabbing them selves with perfume ever since Cleopatra wore 10 scented oils in her hair. They spend millions lor perfumes in the United States every year, Talinadge said. "Woiiitu buy perfumes to make themselves attractive to men," Tal mage said. But the lunny thing is they're so interested in pretty bot tles and exotic names they're rarely aware ol how attractive or unattractive a perfume actual'y B0R DAY 19 As we observe this 1948 Labor Day. it is fitting that we make it a period of Thanksgiving for the many blessings that have been bestowed upon this community we have been spared of floods, storms, crop failures, and serious disease epidemics. To live in such a splendid place affords us a lot of satisfaction, and enjoyment in going about our daily tasks. For this Labor Day, let's make it a day of Thanksgiving and rcjoieimr. iiiiiinuii..-ii.uuii.m 1 11 ' " ' ' T"' '-j, ' - " ' ') Irni.'j 'i ...1 1 ii rum 1 ! may be." j Putting it bluntly, Talmage de clared women knew little about 'perfumes, and men a great deal less. There isn t one woman in a thousand who can tell the differ ence between her favorite perfume and another similar brand, he said. Prices Vary Widely There are more than 5,000 Amer ican and 1,000 French brands to choose from, Talmage said. The prices range from 50 cents to $400 an ounce. The bottles come in all sizes, shapes and colors and, Tal mage admitted, the names are "simply lanldstie." "Bui none of those things really ! counts," he said. tVomt u should choose perfumes by how they smell and nothing else And then they should apply them very sparingly." A woman who uses good perfume carefully. Talmage said, can give hersell a big romantic lift. But if she expects the perfume to do it all, she's in lor a setback. "Perfume just doesn't have what it takes." he feels. LOST LEG AWAITS OWNER GREENSBURG. Pa. ili.F.i St. Clair park attendants found an artificial leg, complete with shoe and sock, on the ark lawn. The owner can claim it at city hall. iniiiiiitiiiiiiiMirBiteOTrit,i.-m-'''-'iaiiiiii GREETINGS Goes To Show What People Do To Get Out Of Work CINCINNATI, O. (U.P.) Capt. Leo Simon, who makes his living by twice daily crawling into a pack ing case with a stick of dynamite set to go off, has the Coney Island amusement park tuperintendent worried. Twice in one week Capt. Simmon blew himself unconscious. Each of the episodes was fol lowed by the sight of stretcher bearers and thats' bad publicity, the park superintendent believes. Simon says it's not the concus sion which knocks him cold. He works on a platform and occasion ally the blast rips a board loose and he gets hit. The captain doesn't see anything particularly dangerous about his stunt and freely gives away its secret. "My head," he says, "is only six inches from the dynamite. That's why I 'm safe. I'm in the center of a vacuum. If I were three feet away, the blast would maim me.' Afler six months of playing around with explosive dynamite, i he says the blast is still a "terrific 1 shock." Simon, who is deaf and never ' hears the explosions, is also an ! accomplished high diver, para chutist and wing-walker. They Live Longer In The Midwest, Records Show NEW YORK-V- J llL . for long lue in iiie Liutej are best in the Midwest. u ,iu''' death rates shows. j u u record tor longevity m J, lm u f...,.,.l w ivuuu iii wie west Aun) Ural stales Minnesota. lUl, souri, the Dakous, .V i)iJ u I. Kansas," says the Mati-in u! bu'' tin of the Metropolitan l ,h surance Co. ' tneie i, Ul(lj1 ' length of lile lexpectaiion u: birth) in l3y-4i was ii , j.j " lor while males, ana u;1- "v'i' lor white females These hie expccUncic liu til,lt to four years longer t,lull , j, Mountain States, which h,,,, 1K least favorable record 1 h, ;,i,jU;a. tain States include Slontjiu' u. oming, Idano, Colorado, .lu llt co, Arizona, Nevada and L l 1 j ',',', high death rate anion-.; n , Spanish-speaking popuLn,,,, Arizona and New n x , , ' ly responsible for tin - nui, between the tuo t'"0idi'h, areas. At the age of 4a, nu n .,,,i , of the West North lYi,ii., .-,.' :,, still can look forward in u est life. The exuect.it mi. n 27.56 more years of 1 1 1 . - i and 30.23 for women. Ai -i., n lowest expectation ol hie i- m n. highly industrialized nuiilicj-t. uK Bulletin finds. In the .Middle At- S!Hev ' imSi)Kra$.. " 1 48 ' HAYWOOD COUNTY A GOOD PLACE TO LIVE 11 " 'J1 U n J 'iJ cm "' 'anaaid '' ' aTOol '"' '""SlltJ "''" ,J 'oio lo , "" ''. of tai J 1