fieruooa, June 8, 1233
3, Knights 'Collect'
flk's Vacation Prize
THE WAYNES VILLE M 0 UN T AINTETt ;
P.
rarile K- Boydea
Dtor' Fontana
the most unusual contri
1950 March of Dimes
'I, this part of the eoun
StV -grader,
$425 on
pro-help
1 earned
ial money-making
j, ourpose was o
" ha Polio ouota.
iffr of the drive found
f Live their teacher. Mrs.
''" m the free, one-week's
.Fontana Village, which
offered as a prize for the
.persons bringing in the
lunt of money by contest
L. Hazelwood Elementary
'riots went to work on
m and luck to you" sig
principal. Their first
,l. tuiiini of randv
L.3S UK " -
r i. Arvwttviiiriifvr
jdugnout me iu"j.
'. collected old rags and
to a furniture plant. The
jWjrag sales brought In a
51 of $125. , t
n nroject was the presenta-
jfiobers oi me nc,"uuu
flub participated. Door
totaled $180. The Waynes-
l anas men ODserveo. me ci-
the fifth-graaers ai nei.
a,) invited them to bring
v to Waynesvllle for a re-
ormance. They took part
oerformance. ana nanaea
mr to the director-produc-
mill of $425 for me Marcn
a Campaign in that county
Lied over to radio station
it ffaynesville, sponsoring
-lest, and the prize was
sver to Mrs. Sam Knight,
jade teacher at Hazelwood
Knight was accompanied to
i Village by Mr. Knight,
f employed at the Unagusta
riurin Company. Mr.
kwho was drafted as special
:jer. The winners spent last
it Fontana Village as spec-
hs of the resort. ,
Slays Husband
ptw"ni--nixiwW'lw. ! i pr-nr-i n mtii ..,
- '
- Li
G POLITICIAN LEARNS
ks OF THE TRADE
PAUL (UP) It doesn't take
ts long to learn.
iSwenson was a member of a
! Sate legislature sponsored
(TMCA in the state capltol.
Jslened to a youthful fellow
Uative argue the merits of
tared. . . 1, . .. . '
s giving it the kiss of death,"
. i muttered. He sent a note
ung debater that caused
brie from the chamber.
wder," Swenson asked,
i k will say when he finds
tenor didn't really send for
A HOTEL chambermaid, Mrs. Anna
Bornholdt, 58, has been arraigned
In New York on a homicide charge
in the death of her 64-year-old hus
band, Fred. Helplessly paralyzed
and bedridden, the former restau
rant waiter was dropped to his
death from the sixth floor window
; of their apartment. (International)
Actress
Draws Plans
For House
HOLLYWOOD (UP) June Haver
says that if movies don't treat her
right she"s going to become an
architect. !
The beautiful blonde drew up
her own plans for a 16-unit apart
ment house she is building in sub
urban Brentwood. The architect
found only "a few minor flaws."
"I forgot to put a door into the
bedroom," she said. "Just a minor
thing."
The 20th Century-Fox star got
up to her neck in plans and permits
While she was waiting to start her
next musical, "I'll Get By." She
put In her best efforts on the de
sign. "The man pointed out that I for
got to leave space for a bathtub in
the bathroom," she admitted. "And
I didn't have enough clear footage
In the kitchen to meet the city re
quirements. "There were a few other little
things, too. I didn't' think about
putting that door to the bedroom.
LUCKY THIRTEEN SAFE AS PLANE SKiDS ON RUNWAY
I r7
uun bnot is
Screen Test
For Horses
HOLLYWOOD (UP) A screen
test for a horse, it seems, con
sists of finding out what he does
when a gun goes off.
Two - legged actors emote in
makeup, costume and with attrac
tive partners to show whether
they'll make 2od in movies. An
rmtine actor has Rot' to prove he
can act as though he's been lis
tening to bullets since he was
knee-high to the sherilfs daughter.
If he doesn't Binch, he's in.
This intelligence comes from
Harry Tempieton, who's rounding
up a stable of inexperienced cowboy-carriers
for Nat Hull's Para
mount horse opera, 'The Great.
Missouri Raid."
Before the picture start', Tem
pieton will fly to the location area
at Sonora, Calif., to give the local
talent some equine entrance examinations.
"The toughest test is Kunshot
flinching1," he said, 'i fire a gun
two feet from their heads. They're
suposed to belong to Jesse Jam is.
so they've got vto act bored by
guns." ' . '
Mustn't Rear
Another test is facing luC cal
cium glare of the arc lifihts ued
Vor color filming. They aren't sup
ttid to rtar.
Ail rearir.g in western rMtw.f i
rione on cue, and the riore r ;
paid extra for it.
.A successful movie horse Ca.i't
shy at the camera bocm or micro
phone or stranje movie stars who
don't know w hat to do.
And it can't get bored. Like the
people, it has to "io through take
after take of the same scene with
nary a whiuny In prutest.
If the Sonora horses flunk these
tests, they'll have to turn In theif
movie scripts. . " "
"There are plenty of horses In
Hollywood w ho can pass them,
TempU ton said. "And just to be
safe, we're taking eight of them up
there to stand by if the country
cousins cu up."
SUDDEN TRAGEDY was averted when the landing gear of this Colonial four-engined airliner collapsed, sending
the giant plane plowing hundreds of yards off the runway at LaGuardia Field, N. Y. The nine passengers and
a crew of four escaped uninjured, maintaining the airline's 20-year record without a fatality. The transport
was arriving from Montreal on routine flight when the accident occurred. ' (International)
NO GOOD TO HIM
CLARKSDALE, Miss. VP) A
thief took $1,000 worth of bonds
from the San Spilles home the
same day they were purchased,
but quietly returned them a day
later when he found they couldn't
be cashed.
CAUSE FOR DIVORCE
DETROIT (UP) William Wood
was granted a divorce because his
wife preferred a career as a fan
dancer to that of a housewife.
The architect said did I expect the
tenants to climb in and out of the !
window into a helicopter?
No Flood Precaution
"I had to figure out the drain
age, but the architect said I had
arranged things so a flood would
sweep through the place every
November. And when I suggested
knocking out a wall for more space
in the living room, he said that
would make the place collapse,
"It seems every building has to
have certain walls to keep it from
falling flat on its face."
Miss Haver finally agreed that
the architect shouldn't bother to
correct her plans but should start
from scratch with a new set of his
own.-: ;
"I got' the impression," she
added, "that he thought I should
stick to my own business before he
went out of his mind."'
She was glad to turn over the
problem of getting permits, how
ever. She said: ; ,
"I was going six ways at once
trying to get permits for plumbing,
electrical work, Water, sewer con
nection and I .'.'don't . know what
else. He can have that worry and
welcome to it."
t'S
0 0 0
JffiJ!fjfffllZ
The Greatest Selections In .
r
rlitzi Sun Dresses and Sneers
Films Show
U.S, Woman
In New Role
HOLLYWOOD (UP) The mov-
les used to show American career
women as smart, wisecracking and
brittle. That's changing now.
Today's career woman is soft
and sympathetic "but still pulling
her own oar, That's because she's
discovered men like her better that
way.
The war, and a lot of other
things, have brought the change,"
Larry Parks said. "Men don't want
wisecracks when they're faced
with problems."
The new kind of career woman Is
portrayed by Barbara Hale in
"That Bedside Manner." Parks
thinks she's going to be a model
for women all over the world.
'American professional women
used to be depicted as mildly
balmy, sort of suffragette types,"
Parks said. "When movies came a-
long, stars like Rosalind Russellt
Myrna Loy and Joan Crawford
made themselves known in typical
career women roles. They were
wisecracking and a little brittle.
Changed By War
"The war changed all that, Bar
bara played a nurse with me in
'Jolson Sings Again.' Everybody
praised the soft, sympathetic but
completely firm way she played the
role. ' :. ;: --:';".v
"That to my way of thinking
makes her the typical American
career woman today, accepted
everywhere as the equal and often
as the superior of men, strong and
sure of herself, but softer, more
sympathetic, more the kind of
woman you can put your arms a-round."
Men don't want to go back to the
clineine vine kind of woman, Parks
said, They need someone who will
help them as well as cook for them
and raise their children.
Bue he added that men want a
helpmate, not a two-legged Joke
book.
"I don't think the girls who were
more concerned with a quick retort
than with trying to help their men
are going to be as popular today
and tomorrow as the girls who can
Dull their own oar, help along with
mutual problems and still be sweet,
not brittle," he said.
Raps Oil Imports
Ml
V
DEClARINOVImportation of foreign
oil la "gravely disturbing" the na
tional economy, Thomas Kennedy,
vice president of the United Mine
Workers Union, testifies in Wash
ington before the Senate Labor .
Committee. The group la investi
gating growing unemployment in
the coal fields. (International),
Other Sun Qothes from 59c up
" 1 . .... .. ; , : :; ' '.. , j.: x'i
Hundreds Of Pairs Of Children's Sandals
Although no streams flow into
Colorado from outside, it is the
mother of four great rivers the
Arkansas and Platte in the cast,
the Colorado and Rio Grande in
the west. .
Lake i Baikal, Siberia, believed
the ' vijorld's ' deepest,1 has been
plumbed at 4,982 feet, t
Lake Tanganyika, Africa, has
been sounded to a depth of 4,708
feet.
ft mi as
W 'iVL.ai hw
II tl 'Zl 'H.snnf
'PaAV 'S3nI 'U0IV 'ns
aMYHIS
4
m flmi9lt
C ' for
hit i
j4
A thought that really
Isn't right,
Should not be harbored
over night;
An impure thought to
reach its goal,
Would mean the capture
of a soul. '
A thought that would
BELK-HUDSON Has lust Received A Big Assortment
For This
WPS
U3
V OEab yard C
n nfi AND MANY Jmml
fi V;. OTHERS 4? '
7 Huge Tables Largest y lU irVr.l
Assortment Ever Shown! jK3i "S . .
O Print Piques . K. 1
6 Print Waffle Pique. O ! , 1
Mtf 'Dimity 1
O Printed Taladeo '
0 Fashonera '
Regular $1.00 Per Yard PJ
Come In And
See This
Complete
Assortment
NOW SHOWING 10 Different Colors and LOVELY 200 DOTTED
Patterns of
abc Tinrao ABC S17SSS -
A Beautiful Sheer Gorgeous Assorted Colors s
Regular 69c Yard Regular $1.39 Yrard
ON 5(3 ON (5)
SALE )C)C , SALE U