"iy Aftnoon,3ian " i Zich, Pcbriilll Dress Milie : In Arizona i RESCUED AT SEA III FLOATING COAT PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP) Arizona is a risky place for an eastern gold digger to go prospecting sr , A gtrl just can't tell who Is a millionaire and who isa sowhand and iurvnn will ft ITlvX"! nilf't hpf k is quite difference. ' Out here where cattle kings are a dime a dozen, a lot of the richest t men dres as though they were poor, the poorest dress as though they were rich and a gin never knows which stickpins are dia monds and which are only paste- I learned my lesson, all right. I snuuDca a grimy-ioosing gem m; dirty old blue jeans, scuffed boots and a mended shirt. He was smoK ing cigarettes he rolled himself. , Dress for Easterners Alas, I learned too late he was one of the richest men in Arizona. The dolled-up feller on whose arm I was clinging worked for the chamber of commerce. Many of the men who wear 10 gallon hats, boots and skin-tight blue jeans admit that the only time they dress that way Is when east erners come west to look them over. The rest of the time they look just like anybody else. When 70 mid-western and east ern newspaper writers arrived in Phoenix on American Airlines' in augural $110 cross-coutry air coach flight; they were greeted by as tough-looking a bunch of horn bres as ever walked across a Holly wood "western" set. Reporter "Strung Up" In Tucson, the deputy sheriffs arrived in a posse, shooting off re volvers (blanks) and they strung up' one defenseless, muscleless newsman with a noose. (He escaped.) porters on the backs of their; tr motorcycles the way Koy Kogers; carries cowgirls on his horse's' rump, ; ' It was revealed at a barbecue in a barn (the barn having been re cently constructed for feeding hu mans, not horses) that all the big doings were strictly chamber of commerce. The instructions that went out to the entertainment committee had said: "Dress western". But it didn't matter. AU'the east erners wound up in 10-gallon hats, too, and even reporters began look ing like Arizona millionaires. FOUND UNCONSCIOUS in a drifting motorboat near Los Angeles Harbor, San Pedro, Calit, Mn. Karl Pelka, 38, was saved from possible death by Sea Scouts who overtook the craft Police hope to get an explanation of the mystery when the comes out of the coma. Mrs. Pelka Is the wife X a doctor, now In Anchorage, Alaska. (International Soundphoto) Many U. S. Bridge Found Unsafe for Trucks WASHINGTON (UP) Only 1,- 607 of the 12,048 bridges on the na tion's five miir highways are de signed or rated to sustain the weight of a 20-ton truck, according to a new Congressional report on "highway needs of the national de fense." i j However, there isn't a stale In the nation which has a, truck weight limitation of 20 tors or less. Thirty-three states allow trucks weighing 30 tons or more and one state allows trucks weighing 68 tons. ..... Recently at Little Falls, N. J., a wooden bridge oostcd with a weight limit of eigiit tons collapsed after a trailer-truck weighing 44 tons passed over it. The state's legal limit is 30 tons. ' An increasing number of bridge failures is reported by most states and in Ohio 70 bridges have failed completely in the past two years. Guggenheim Fellow n --- jinrnnnmin , V"1"! t t . II ' . : 1 f I I II ! Library Notes m i n -J exi 1Mb kb MARGARET JOHNSTON COUNTY LIBRARIAN STAtE'S NEW ALCOHOLICS' REHABILITATION CENTER TO OPEN SOON North Carolina's new center at Camp Butner for the treatment of alcoholics will open within the next 60 days. The program will use the latest methods in the rehabili tation of alcohol victims. . The Guggenheim Foundation has awarded a fellowship to Dr. George Wlllard Wharton, Jr. (above), associate professor of Zoology at Duke University. Un der the fellowship, his project will be a systematic study of the chlggers of Mexico and their relationship to the North Ameri can fauna, (AP Photo), Now thtmoii wauu. eyj?c aievew BELlEVfD IT IF EV MAXt seen it wnrt rir ... IP- DEAR'AIOAK- DID 1UB PIKE SET" WALL. EYEO FROM WATCH (NO THE CAT FISH"!" E. BECK, ALLEAtT&VglM PA UfcfAF?KAH DOES A chiropractor use . A LOT OFBACK TALK JN DtACA49SA4 A ' SPINAL AILMENT a CHEXSTEFU PONTIAC,A1l'gH ' . tnntwtrt y Kin, rwtum lvkau Free Beer for Watchman Solves Sweater Thefts PHILADELPHIA (UP) K nltting mill owners suspected more than moths lay behind the disappear ance of !f2,500 worth of sweaters. Detectives found the sweaters had been disappearing in driblets for nearly three months, but could not figure out how. They settled down to a policy of watchful wait ing and were rewarded! when they stopped a man leaving' the plant with a package containing eight Sweaters.:''-,.,- .' .,: .y.: ; . The "mystery" cleared up then. He explained he and some friends had been' buying tfie sweaters by trading beers to a thirsty night watchman. The watchman, 61 - year - old James RafTerty, was charged with larceny and removed from further temptation. DUKE PLANT TO ' ........ :-,:t OPEN IN JUNE . .The hew $17,000,000 pan River plant of the Duke Power. Company at Leaksville will open formally June 8. -The new two-unit outfit $ti generate a total 140,000,000 witts of . power. . w HEADQUARTERS FOR new oc KannvtsMWp m . IF TTv 4IU. J,dl,, See Us For All Types of Garden Seed Seed Potatoes U. S. 282 Seed Cornr " 50 MURIATE OF POTASH 33 AMONIUM NITRATE NITRATE OF SODA - U, 20 & 48 SUPER PHOSPHATE -FERTILIZERS 4-iO-C 6-8-6, 5-10-10, 2-12-12 -3-9-6 tobacco Special . HAYWOOD COUNTY FARMERS CO-OP, Inc. Phone 722 ! WA " Depot St. SOME OF OUR NEWEST ' . . FICTION , . FENISONG ll Wind; Limnrt Cnvl .ln . thpr, riaWhinas seemed an earthly 'pariaise tpiits owner who was ' a millioiviir.e sportsman, until he brought a dil apidated night club troupe down for a holiday. Ancient voodoo com bined with modern racketeering brought eye-opening results, AMORY Home Town A novel of modern metropolitan manners. New York is the scene for the story of a writer from Arizona who refused to be glam orized by the big-city promoters and celebrity hunters. STREET Mineo Dabney Mingo Dabney was the last of the gallant clan a black-browed giant high-spirited and full of his love for Rafaela Galban, the beautiful Cuban girl who had become a syirf bol of her countrymen's ." revolt against Spanish tyranny. , Yet Min go Dilbney, his, head held high as he rode his white horse from Le banon that frosty night Iri 1895, lit tie dreamed that 'he had seen the last of his. homo, .and that his .quest for Rafaela was to plummet him into the midst of Cuban revolt. STEELE-rDebby "; f - ! I This novel; is a character study fpcussed upon the title character a! child-tnmded t woman bpought from a Home1 for Delinquent Wo men irt a southern state to bec'ome a loved member of the Merrill fam ily for many years Until her death in her sixties. SEIFERT Homccominc The General comes-home after World War II and is interviewed bv the press. His publicised story is quite different from his actual life told in flashbacks. The steady ing influence of the small town near which he was born and the power of a disciplined life are glor- Ihed in this short novel. LANCASTER Phantom Fortress lne background is Francis Marion's brilliant guerilla cam paign against the British in the Carolinas. Young American officer Ross, veteran of. the fighting in the north, serves under the Swamp Fox (Marion) , . and a French girl joins them as a secret agent. t See Our Want Ads For Bargains No Acrobat rv V THERE was no net to catch William Atterbar, 14, of the Bronx, New York, when he tried to imitate a circus feat Attempting to cross from a neighboring window to his home, the youngster fell SO feet Painfully hurt, he is carried away MOVES IN ON COURT RUMFORD, Me. UP) Opening their weekly meeting in the muni cipal courtroom, Boy Scouts turned on the lights and found John Bayeras sleeping beneath the Judge's desk. The Scouts called po lice, who removed Bayeras and brought him back to the courtroom next day on a drunkenness charge. AUTOS TO BE CHECKED State Highway Patrolmen this month are watching particularly for mechanical defects in automo biles. The State Motor Vehicles De partment says its May program of traffic education will concentrate on the "bugs" in cars and trucks. Mechanical defects were Involved in 47 fatal accidents last year. j , , 1 Aerial Patrol Speeds Power Lino Inspection I 4 5r in a know with $10 As course. 1 1 K Patrolmen of the Carolina Power -and Light Company are taking to the air for inspection of far-flung transmission lines. The aerial inspection has eliminated three fourths of the foot patrol work form erly required. One plane in three hours can check as much lineage as eight men afoot in three days. Left; Inspector Charles Pack observes the condition of lines and poles in a flight near Florence,' S. C. . His pilot is H. A. Moorer. Right: The small patrol plane flies low beside a transmission line tagive Pack a close-up view of wires and poles. The company has headquarters in Raleigh. (AP - REALLY LIKE THEIR SCHOOL . HOLT, Mich. (UP) Students of the Holt high school are So proud of their school they spent part of their sprlnfe vacation- ' scrubbing and painting it. The students went to work in two shifts and finished the major part of the job in two days... : .. JUST AN OLD CYNIC SOUTH MIAMI, Fla. (UP) A voter here said a proposal to re duce South Miami's city commis sion from seven to five members seemed very sensible to him. "That means there'll be only five-sevenths as much confusion," he pointed out. . WIFIE CHECKS UP MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) The eld erly, well-dressed marf went into a cafe and hastily ordered something to eat. He seemed harried and probably had a right to be his wife was outside in their car, watching his every move through a telescope. MAKE MINW ITHACA, Jf. y irjp ' at Cnrn., .. what ifS .it;rcu, a lot nf r:'0 00toinvestbZ part of ii rse. thpv Cora Exchange, Curb e0 bond ma.ir. . X'fc"-r: they are good inVes5 wna.es nuri,,. their ,, milk,asdo0therman 1 IT'S EMBARRASS sucna rabid ba fan that van with your noisy coJ .V.N.S s ..J...... x . ! l I I - fords the -first m rvttb rccclvQlhe covtkd t'zvf York Fashion Acadmy ipeda in fivo consccufto years , ' V.;. m '. "iJv'S'X .-',: All the world of Fasfiionloks"to New York's ', . : "- . ,r famed Fashion Academy as' aj authofl01" ''v" . ' style. So it's no . wonder Ford. i prou. foe- - ", i ceive their,rjoedals.'TashjorjCariof the 'Year" ," - ',rxu7daljs.Tashjona for the second straight yaft .eer,fefor was a car honored by two rashion Academy ; Awards in a row! Here's prooi; jhat, Ford has r succeeded in bringing style to -(Hpfuw'-'piice- field-that even far costlier can cah'L.hiirtch v Aamed fashion Car off he Year second year in a row And handsome is as handsome does. A "Test Drive" will show you the quality that makes the '50 Ford the one fine car in its field. You'll feel the smooth, quiet getaway power of Ford's new V-8 engine (or Advanced "Six" if you prefer). You'll feel the 35 easier acting King Size Brakes. You'll feel the "Mid Ship" comfort of Ford's 13-way stronger "Lifeguard" Body . . . now "sound conditioned." Yes, here's quality you'll see, hear and fed when you "Test Drive" the '50 Ford. (JOWL FORD 9&T1S-LIQEB I Phono 52 CHECK YOUR GAR 31 mm shlis inc. Waynesvillo cfjeerr ACCIDENTS on a stretcher, (International)