a, r T. y , 1-. 3
f jtfiernoc
on Horse?
fVncertain
(ypTex Van
to "modernize"
i ortS inh may hit
rite on
his
hn makes
i rubber-shod
fwhe sheriff's office
-.ntoin"" -----
flight, he explained,
s. r..,, hittine him
.f5 II"1" "
Broughton turned
u hp county at-
Pr.'..:.' hoat
hi
finai decision. : ,.
SEi.. case of this
-i1" . w.o and I'm
K..b.with.
.betner -
-the sheriff said.
0 Organ Shakes
ent House
v Wis, (uri-""
, .h.irs move in an a-
. L. ...ho Frt
bouse nere -
real estate salesman,
131.000 .organ,
a bought the mam-
Uaent from a church
Q shifting "Jf-.,18
for it and installed it in
nt of the building hous-
ijjent house tennants
in,, bass notes in their
L Hermes gets down to
l i the keyboard. So far
Lrflmolained but Hermes
1 playing uie at
WrOSSERS TRIP UP
FIELD, N. C. (UP) - A
bootleggers double-crossed
a into jail here. Pretend
It revenue agents, , they
A their partners away
.it They were making off
( illegal liquor when real
dosed in.
, . -,7- ;, -. . ... .rs, . ... - ,...,.ndi
: - --... " c: V '5 I
j 'immmmmm.-mll. ....r , ri... )rw rrrnni i mi iinuii ijuuji i. i , J
j 1 " "' " ' ft i
U I I GARDEN
1 B(.BAA1. oSl DINING ROOM XPAT,
I BEDROOM ovnl rt
I 16-6 X U.2 g 12,10 X12-2 J
I ... "ST" " I
1 LIVING ROOM ft" R j
m fMp m 27.2 X 15-0 i:
II BAH I "V-l-f . -3 KITCHEN; GARAGE ;
1 D ml I LIN I? S14 .8 X 9 .0 1
-i LC J TERRACE t '
- 1 TERRACE 1 plan'B-SOOB
BEDROOM BEDROOM
13 -2 x 12 -0 13 -2 X 10 -2
Trail Oi Million Dollar Firo In North Carolina
1
Itree-penny
" nail is 1U
Commissioner
m
Ml. HENDERSON
tor member of the
f Commissioners; a man
'wnence on the board: a
Wfied for the place, and
will appreciate vour
N May 27th. ' (adv.)
I
r
IriJi VnizA Ir.u .'. .i
By British Filni Tniit
DUBLIN (UP) Iri,h film ir.ter
ests are pretesting the cominuln
absorption of movie theaters in
this country by J. Arthur Rank's
giant British film organization.
They charge that the Irish
branch of the Rank organization
now constitutes art "undesirable
monopoly" and have called on the
government to safeguard national
film interests.
The Irish subsidiary, launched
some five yean ago to ensue Irish
showings of the products of Rank's
British studio, now owns five of
Dublin s first-oui cwi!as4 Jeavir.t
only two undeJ?; Irish: pwntrship.
It also controls sme50 prr cent
of Dublin's .secKl-VCii b1 sub
urban cineirif,- and -ha largest
third cities. ojk jNa!XiMTrick,.
In all. only about Jtf irte capi
tal's 30-odd' cinemas yrenudn out
side the corporation. '". j'Xfi
This scene of ruins marks the path of a million dollar fire through an industrial section of North
Wilkesboro, The flames broke out in a lumber plant, one of the biggest in the state, and spread
rapidly with high wind. Four million feet of lumber was destroyed, along with a lumber mill, an
ice and fuel plant, flour and feed mill and a trucking terminal. (AP Photo).
AP Newsfeaturca
MID-CENTURy HOUSE , is the architect's description of
this one-story rambler with an unusually large living area
that includes two 12-foot floor to celling windows on the
rear garden side and another large window in front. Three
bedrooms and two baths are among other features of this
Plan B-5006 by Alwin Casscns, Jr., 116-55 Queens Boule
vard, Forest Hills, N. Y. This plan has been construction tested by Stackler & Frank, Long Island builders,
who used the house shown here as a pilot model In building 44 "personalized" variations on plots of an acre
and larger in the $25,000 class. Variations included a higher roof pitch with expansion attic and dormers,
an outside door from the kitchen, two car garages, standard size windows In some bedrooms and other
changes. The plan has an area of 1,684 square feet without garage "and the house Is 58 feet wide and 44
ieei, iu incnes deep.
By DAVID G. BAREUTHER
AP Real Estate Editor
What became of the back door?
This question is being asked
more and more frequently as archi
tects plan rambling one story
houses with kitchens opening from
front entrance foyers.
It seems that modern equipment
has robbed the back door of much
of its old utilitarian role.
Oil burning and gas fired heating
plants and gas or electric stoves in
kitchens make it no longer neces
sary to carry ashes out the. back
door. . - -. ' ... '
Garbage disposal machines built
into sink drains have eliminated
the need to carry garbage out to
back yard incinerators or to front
curb collection points.
Automatic washing machines and
electric driers have replaced the
clothes lines of the laundry yard
in many cases.
Rear garden terraces and patios
and the popularity of outdoor liv
ing have made it more attractive
to have a rear door open from din
ing room or living' room( rather
than from the kitchen.
The result is that couples and
ELECT
Fred Y. Campbell
As Your
SHERIFF
mmumtmrnmumnimm
Fred Y. Campbell
H'francis
Vote For
CHAS. C. FRANCIS
For
CHAIRMAN
Board of Commissioners
May 27 Democratic Primary
small families find a back door
from a kitchen of little use. By
omitting it they gain wall space in
the kitchen for more cubboards and
more equipment. The space saved
may accommodate a largo refriger
ator, food freezer, dishwasher or
washing machine.
Some in $25,000 Class
Although houses being planned
along these lines are still excep
tions, the number being built with
out the old fashioned back door is
steadily growing. .'
An interesting example is offered
on the north shore of Long Island,
N, Y.-where the building firm of
Stackler & Frank is erecting houses
in the $25,000 class on wooded hill
side sites of an acre and larger.
Among 44 homes sold from plans,
the majority are being built with
out traditional back doors.
Leonard Frank, member of the
firm and head of the Long Island
Institute of Home Builders, traces
the trend to city apartment dwell
ers moving to suburban houses.
"These home buyers," Frank
said in an interview, "not only
prefer one-story houses with all
rooms on one floor, apartment
style, but they readily accept kit-
Ex-Skid Row Denizens
In Happy Reunion
PHILADELPHIA (UP) Ex-alcoholics
from as far away as Cleve
land, O., returned with their
families to the Salvation Army's
men's social service center here
for the institution's annual dinner.
Ninety of the "alumni" returned
to the rehabilitation center to re
view old times and give words of
encouragement to the nearly 200
"undergraduates". The 00 men,
representing all walks of life, en
tered the Salvation Army's trade
school after they had skidded as
far as they could on Philadelphia's
"skid row".
They started at 95 cents a week
and when they straightened out,
with the aid of an alcoholics
anonymous chapter at the center,
they gradually were advanced to
$10 a week.
chens without direct outside access.
They are used to receiving dellv
cries at the front and only door
of their apartments and choose to
continue that practice father than
sacrifice kitchen wall space."
This factor of wall space becomes
Important when kitchens are plaC'
ed at the front of a house in order
to reserve the rear for window
walls facing tha garden or wood
land of deep lots. In such cases a
kitchen may have a door opening
from the front vestibule, another
leading to the basement, a 'third
swinging into the dining room or
dining area and. to add a fourth
door means a serious handicap for
the average size kitchen.
Building Costs a Factor
Modern building costs also are
a factor. In one case where the side
wall of a kitchen adjoined the at
tached garage, the cutting through
and placing of a service door from
kitchen into garage cost $75. Wid
ening the garage by three feet to
relocate the basement stairs and
to give them direct access to a
service vestibule cost $1,000 addi
tional.
Paradoxically, however, there
is a new apartment project in
New York City where kitchens
have separate service entrances
from the public corridors. This
is a restoration of a feature once
identified with luxury apartments,
and the "back doors" serve double
function since these new kitchens
have no windows. Interior rooms,
they are electrically ventilated. J
Apparently these extra doors can
be afforded, for rents for two bed
room apartmnts in this project
range from $135 on the first floor
to $171 on the 15th or 16th floors.
In contrastcarrying charges for
the $25,000 houses where so many
back doors are being eliminated
are $135.
VOTE FOR
5AL L. YATES
FOR
1..
I'epresentative
'lJKZ
Vote For
R. L. JUSTICE
FOR
COMMISSIONER
A qualified man who will
appreciate your support
Pacific Coast Reviving
Air Raid Patrols 0
HAMILTON FIELD, Cal, (UP)
Maj. Gen. Hugo P. Rush, com
manding officer of the Western Air
Defense Command, announced
that the Pacific coast wartime air
raid warning system Is being reactivated.
The move was asked by the fed
eral government "because of the
possibilities of conflict," he aid.
Rush added there was no need for
public hysteria that the step was
Just a "good insurance policy."
During World War II volunteers
manned observation posts and air
craft position plotting centers
Specific arrangements for recruit
ing the volunteer workers were not
immediately announced, but It wus
estimated the set-up would re
quire 30,000 workers In California,
Oregon and Washington.
Hen Picks Car's Motor
For Her Egg-Laying
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UP) For
three days W. H. Ellis had endured
the burning smell, coming from the
hood of his automobile. He thought
It was spilled oil.
Then Ellis lifted the hood to
check. He found a white leghorn
hen atop the motor and two white
eggs on the manifold, one nroKcn
the other perfect,
Ellis described the hen as
"singed and pretty bedraggled."
He calculated that he had driven
about 90 miles with the hen under
the hood.
"And did that hen drink water
after we caught her," Ellis said.
Scouts Too Strenuous j
For Business Man
MILWAUKEE (UP) Marvin
Lemkuhl, advertising executive,
has attended his last Boy Scout
meeting.
"It's just too dangerous," he said
ruefully.
Lemkuhl was hit on the head
by a mis-directed basketball when
he , accompanied his 11-year-old
son to a Scout meeting in a school
gymnasium.
But that was all right. He picked
up his shattered glasses, shrugged
and said, "Accidents will happen."
Lemkuhl and the ; Scouts re
tired to an Ice rink at the end of
the meeting for a fast game of tag.
When he dodged to escape being
"Itj his skates went out from
under and he landed on his chin,
Ills chin and one cnerk were
slashed to the bone, a few teeth
were loosened and a wrist was
sprained.
Annual spring training tours for
Michigan State baseball teams have
been made since 1926, except for
tnc war years.
Fred Johnson, Michigan State's
all-around track star, piled up more
points in the Central Collegiate
Conference indoor meet than five
competing schools.
- i
4
FOR COMMISSIONER
I am a candidate for the Demo
cratle nomination for the board of
commissioners, a place I have pre
viousiy held. It is on my past re
cord in this office, and my under
standing of the needs of Haywood
rnuiity that 1 am a candidate.
I will appreciate your support.
Jarvis II. Allison
:'
f (,
n v
Ai
if
' VOTE FOR ' '
Frank M. Davis
FOR
Board OI
Commissioners
Read the Want Ads for bargains
DINNER DELAYED
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) Mrs.
E. G. Ballenger has learned that
silence from her 2V-year-old
daughter Nora usually means trou
ble. The ominous silence set In as
the first of a series of dinner guests
arrived at the Ballenger home.
When Mrs. Ballenger found' Nora,
the child was busily feeding the
dinner to the family dogs.
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
By RJ. SCOTT
'''Willi " Wffps&.L SPRtAW moost V
'':'tvL- vvrfrf WHICH 4b SAIL
fA SNVMAMfitBtfOll U-VrfnM YUB.WAS
iKiiT VVVCKItFIS 'fKt U.S. AlRLiHlS
j, A I Jf I OVLft. K LOWEi- IM KlS-fQBV
VsCr ?.' WOODE.N 1 Y
Bttflt
lAi BACOrt
How Tent Caterpillars ,
Build Silk Highways
STAMFORD, Conn. (UP) Tent
caterpillars build "their , own high
ways, ;each taking tCs turn In lay
lrg down ;B roadway as fine is
gossamer, a scientist reports.
A gray web or tent caterpillar
nest in the crotch of a tree In
spring contains as many as 300
little black wriggling worms, ac
cording to Dr. S. W. Bromley, ento
mologist of the Ba'rtlctt Tree Re
search Laboratories,
"When they become hungry," he
said, "one will emerge 8id scoot
out to the end of a limb, weaving
a silken strand as It goes. The
other worms will follow along this
highway. Indian file.
"After feasting on tender new
leaves, the caterpillars return to
their web, backtracking along the
silken highway." ;
FUN ON GOLF COURSE
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP)
Two1 youths drove tractors wildly
over fairways and greens at Jliver-
slde Golf Course, doing more dam
age than a drunk with a No. 5, iron.
Offlelals. however, stopped the
boys before they had gone nine
holes
Camp Fire Girls, Inc., was found
ed in 1910. i
FOR COMMISSIONER
I wish to announce that I am a
candidate for the nomination as a
member of the Haywood County
Board of Commissioners, subject
to the will of the voters in the p-
pioaehlng Democratic primary,
May 27,- , . . . , , - . ,
Gaston Burnet tc
VOTE FOR
VOTE FOR
E. R. COGDILL
For
CONSTABLE
(Waynesville Township)
DKMOCRATIC PRIMARY, MAY 27
VOTE FOR
--Awmsr
t J
v4 ' ' !1
we" ' i
ft K' - : J
Til
M. E. "TONY
DAVIS
for
TAX COLLECTOR
Listen To
Senator Frank
Graham "
Discuss His
Platform
OVER
tT'i",, i,
f. r '.
v - f ' '
f 1
( ? f
SENATOR GRAHAM
Radio Station WHCC
WEDNESDAY, MAY. 10
6:35 TO, 6:45 P.M.
This political adv. paid for by R. L. Prevoti, Haywood campaiga
manager. .
IULE NOLAND
FOR
Register of Deeds
Democratic Primary, May 27
Julc NoUnd .f,
VOTE FOR
DAVID UNI5ERWOOD, JR.
The Champion of The Working Man
Candidate For
Chairman Board Of
Commissioners
... i
UNDERWOOD
ELECT
BILL
MILNER
Your
SHERIFF
FOR A CLEAN ADMINISTRATION
A LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
... NOT A POLITICIAN!
HE'LL BRING TO THIS VITAL OFFICE;
Administrative Efficiency
, A High Quality of Police Work
fc The Same Drive, Energy, Personal
Courage, and Unselfish Sense of
Service That Made Him an AH
American.
FOR A RESPONSIBLE PUBLIC OFFICE YOU NEED
A MAN WITH HIS DEEP SENSE OF PUBLIC RE-SPONSIBILITY.