Liberace Stars
In Str&nd Film
'Sincerely Yours'
Liberace will be seen Wednes
day and Thursday In his first star
ring motion ?icture, "Sincerely
Yours". Filmed in WarnerColor.
the drama-with-music co-stars Lib
erace and Joanne Dru, Dorothy
Malone and Alex Nicol.
"Sincerely Yours," is said to be
the story of a man who finds hap
piness for himself by bringing hap
piness to others, Liberace is seen
as a concert pianist and in that
role he is reported to play every
thing from Chopin to Chopsticks
including his own composition,
"Sincerely Yours," with lyrics by
Paul Francis Webster.
Joanne Dru is seen as Liberace's
secretary who is in love with her
boss, and Dorothy Malone is the
lady Liberace loves. Miss Malone
will be remembered by screen fans
for her portrayal of the lonely
hostess in Warner pros.' "Battle
Cry".
Dr. Yost Undergoes Surgery
Dr. Robert Yost is a patient in
the Haywood County Hospital
where he underwent surgery. He
expects to return to his home in
Clyde at the end of this week. Dr.
' Yost's office is in Canton.
STRAND
THEATRE
PHONE 6-8551
MON. & TUES.,
JAN. 23 & 24
STARMirsiO
Gary
Cooper
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WED. & THURS.,
JAN. 25 &26
HIS FIRST STARRING
MOTION PICTURE!>%
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FRI. & SAT.,
JAN. 27 & 28
DOUBLE FEATUREI
1st HIT
Pi w
2nd HIT
*Trr? ii\
I')1;' Ba
U' ??
Starring
- SEAN McLORY
JOANNE JORDAN
?ALSO?
Cartoon and Chap. 13 el
"ADV. OF CAPT. AFRICA"
MISS DOROTHY LEAH HANEY
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Haney of Clyde announce the engagement
of their daughter, Dorothy Leah, to James Cleveland Caldwell,
Jr.. son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Caldwell of Waynesville. Plans for
the wedding are incomplete. (Photo by Paul's Studio).
Art Is Termed Basis
For Global Understanding
Rhododendron Club
To Hear Miss Ballard
Miss Louise Ballard of Lake
Junaluska will be the guest speak
er at the regular meeting of the
Rhododendron Garden Club Tues
day at 10. }>.m. in the home of
Mrs. Frank Vokes on Newfound
Street.
Mi's. Robert Anton will discuss
gardening hints.
* ? ?
Home Specialist
Will Conduct School
Miss Mamie Whisnant. home
management specialist of N. C.
State College, will conduct a school
for home management and house
furnishings leaders of Haywood
County home demonstration clubs
in the REA Kitchen Friday, Janu
ary 27. 1
The program ufill begin at 2 p.m.
Home management leaders and
house furnishings leaders of each
club aretepected to attend. i
??V" * * ;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Massie and
their son, Robert Massie, have re
turned from Hagler Beach, Fla.,
where they spent a vacation.
? * *
H. P. McCarroll is attending the
furniture show in High Point.
* * * I
Virginia was the first permanent ?
English settlement in North
America.
(
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON?The Pan Am
erican Union here which has been
holding exhibit; of the work of art
ists from south of the border, is
varying its program with a showing
of works by North American sculp
tors and painters who find their in
spiration in Central and South
American countries.
"All," says the Pan American
Union, "are evidence of the desire
for understanding among peoples,
an achievement that can be realized
first of all through art."
* * ?
One of exclusive Georgetown's
newest enterprises, thf Door
Store, is operated by Norman
Tolkan and his wife, Connie, who
adhere to the do-some-of-it-your
self" school.
Tolkan says that "more and
more people are learning by pain
ful experience that the will to do
it yourself is not enough. You still
have to find the way."
In addition to flush doors of
domestic and imported wood, they
offer foam rubber cushions, legs of
brass, iron or fcood, paint and var
nish ? a ."starter" for folks who
want to build snazzy furniture for
themselves.
The Tolkans, former book edi
tors. met while studying at Co
lumbia University, after she had
graduated from Chicago University,
and he from Georgetown School of
Foreign Service. They opened the
"Door" after several years in Eur
ope where he worked for the Mar
shall Plan and she was an Army
Special Services hostess.
* ? ?
Mrs. Bessie F. White, who told
entrancing stories for her sister
and brothers, finally began writing
them down when her little grand
daguhter began asking for her
Imaginative tales. She's written
two successful books and has just
published a third, "The Strange
Man and the Storks".
Her first book, "A Bear Named
Srumms." won the New York
Herald Tribune's Spring Festival
\ward in 1953. It's about a bear
in Sweden, that smiles and some
times laughs. Her second book,
'On Your Two Feet," has its set
ting in Norway.
9 ?????___
Want Ada bring quirk results.
PARK
i
Theatre Program ;
MON. & TUES., J
JAN. 23 & 24
"THE LAST
? COMMAND"
(In Color) 1
Starring
STERLING HAYDEN
ANNA MARIA
ALBERGHETTI i
RICHARD CARLSON
?
WED. & THURS.,
JAN. 25 & 26
"THE NIGHT
HOLDS TERROR"
Starring
JACK KELLY '
HILBY PARKS ,
? PLUS ?
Selected Short Subjects
?
FRIDAY. JAN. 27
DOUBLE FEATURE
"BETRAYED
WOMEN"
?ALSO? '
"DOCKS OF '
NEW YORK" '
Starring
THE EAST SIDE KIDS
With
LEO GORCEY
THIS WEEK'S
BEST SELLERS
FICTION
Andersoaviile, MacKinlay Kan
or.
Marjorie Morningstar, Herman
Vouk.
Cash McCall, Cameron Hawley.
Auntie Mame, Patrick Dennis.
The Tontine, Thomas B. Cos
ain.
NONF1CTION
Gift From the Sea, Anne Mor
-ow Lindbergh.
Inside Africa, John Gunther.
The Edge Of The Sea, Rachel
Larson.
A Night To Remember, Walter
-ord.
The Power of Poetttre TMnk
ng, Norman Vincent Peale.
THE
BOOK STORE
Dial GL 6-3691 Mala St
Library Notes
Margaret Johnston
Count; Librarian
MEMORIAL. BOOKS
Brimming Tide by Achibald Rut
ledge given by Mrs. Troy Wyche in
memory of Miss Ida Penney.
Martha Berry?{The Sunday Lady
of Possum-Trot by Byers given by
the Haywood County Library in
memory of Miss Ida Penney.
With Wings as Eagles by Chap
pell White given by the Mission
ary Society of Long's Chapel in
memory of Miss Ida Penney.
Complete Book of Annuals by
Rockwell and Grayson given in
memory of Mrs. Myrtle Smathers
Arlington by Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Barber, Jr.
The following have recently been
given in memory of Mrs. Carolyn
Kaufman:
New Found World given by Dr.
and Mrs. Boyd Owen.
Webster's New World Dictionary
given by Dr. Doris Hammett.
Miniature Flowers and Vases giv
en by De. and Mrs. Boyd Owen.
What You Should Know About
Jewish Religion, History, Ethics
and Culture given by Mrs. James
Atkins, Miss Margaret Johnston
and Miss Marjorie Beal.
Silk Linen
For a Suit
ly VERA WINSTON
SILK linen is due to emerge as
one of the big fabric favorites
of the coming season, having es
tablished itself firmly in the re
sort picture.
fGray silk linen does up smart
ly into an attractive suit, nicely
set off by twelve white buttons
in double-breasted array. White
piping around the collar, down
the front panel, around the scal
loped hem and pockets of the
jacket carries out the good look
ing gray and white color com
bination. ?
'PORtnr pROBLEms
r ?? ? i
Teaching Children
The Fun Of Phonics
ly GAMY CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D.
THERE are many simple meth
ode parents can use to capltallzi
on a small child's Interest li
sounds.
For example, he Is so lntereste<
In the sounds which pets am
other creatures make that hi
often refers to them In terms o
the common sounds they make
as baa-baa, bow-wow, quack
quack, meow-meow, moo-moo.
He likes to hear you read storlei
and rhymes containing sue)
words and sounds. He likes thi
music of the rhymes. He ma;
choose to fill In the rhyming wore
of the line In a couplet when yen
pause.
Find Pictures
Tou can make sounds more at
tractive by finding or drawinj
pictures of words which rhyme
as bat, hat; man, pan; boat, coat
In his early school days, th?
child will like to find, cut anc
paste pictures of words with thi
proper word under each picture
words beginning with slmllai
sounds as boat, ball, bear; ear
can, cow; moon, man, mouse; dog
deer, dolL Later the child Is read]
to more on to pictured words be
ginning with blends like brick
broom, bread; stack, stick, stool;
clock, clown, clip.
After saying the pictured wordi
aloud several times, the child wlL
begin to add more words begin
ning with similar sounds.
? ISM. Kins Fnnl
Later, pictured words which
t end with the same sound will
1 prove interesting, as ring, king;
click, chick.
1 Also, your child should be
1 taught, very early, that many
b words which sound alike are not
f spelled alike and that we Just
i, have to remember how these
- words are spelled and also
pronounced.
? Next, let him see some words
i which rhyme but which are
s spelled differently as two, shoe;
r bear, care; chair, there.
I Then help him see that many
i words which have parts spelled
alike don't sound alike as arm,
warm; stove, love; brow, crow;
doll, roll.
[ Different Meanings
For a child, the most amazing
. words perhaps are those that are
> spelled exactly the same but pro
I nounced differently when they
! have different meanings. For ex
, ample, the girl with a bow in her
r hair made a bow. The dove dove
, from the tree to the fence. How
. does a hunter know bucks from
t does? Close the door and don't
- stand too close to the Are.
Children can have fun with
phonics.
(My bulletin, "Home Helps for
i Poor Readers 1 and II," may be
I had by sending a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to me in care
of this newspaper.)
tun> SxaStMU. In.
Rain Gear Is Featherweight
LUUMNU rUK KA1NT (II
course! who wouldn't with a cov
er-up outHt like this, in light
weight plastic with matching?
hood? Boots are water-repellent
cloth with checked cuR lining,
loop closing.
SMILING IN THE RAIN . . . Warm and dry. these youngster* go
happily off to school in plastic film slickers with corduroy lined col
lars, shiny brass fasteners and matching hats. Hers is red, his
yellow. Their hoots are new platic puddle-jumpers, easy to pull
on, with adjustable strap closure When the rain stops, slickers, hats
and boots can be folded in bag.
Wives Of Foreign Service
Officers-Going To 'School'
By JANE KADS
- WASHINGTON ? Mrs. Monroe
Hilliams Blake is drawing on her
own wide evperienee to help pre
pare wives for the new life they'll
encounter in the countries to which
their State Department husbands
have been posted.
Tho hanrisnm#* Npu/ Vnrkr - hnrn
former school teacher and the
widow of a foreign service officer,
set up housekeeping in nine dif
ferent countries in 16 years and
traveled in at least 27 others. Now
she's passing on her know-how in
the department's foreign service
orientation course for wives.
"Lots of wives are hesitant about
pulling up roots and going to a
strange far-away place," she told
me. "I try to tell them what an
interesting and rewarding life it
can be. f tell them my experiences
?the sad. the unusual, the poig
nant. as well as the many happy
? ones."
But mostly she tells them about
their responsibilities as represen
tatives of their government .abroad
"all the time, every part of the
day, in their home, at the market,
on buses, public functions."
"In no other walk of life, is the
wife so much a part of the team,
and the phrase 'two for the price
of one,' in describing the contri
bution of ti e foreign service per
sonnel, is most apt," .she said
The importance of knowing lan
guages, the social customs and
local protocol, as well as the busi
ness of calling, setting up house
keeping, entertaining and how to
dress are all stressed in Mrs.
Blakes' lectures and classes.
Mrs. Blake met her husband, then
U. S. vice consul in Warsaw, Pol
and, on shipboard when she was
enroute to study at Warsaw Uni
versity in 1938. They were mar
ried several months later. She has
lived in Norway, Switzerland. Mex
ico, Iran, in postwar Poland. Italy,
East Africa and England, where
her husband became ill of a heart
ailment from which tie died last
year.
?? x- ! i
Judicial Waiting
HANOVER, Va. (AP) ? Judge
Leon Bazile was on time (or his
address to the woman's club but
was thirty minutes late in speaking.
He found the ladies grouped
aiound a television set watching
one of their members participate
in a national give-away program. |
and joined in watching the screen.
After the program was over he
spoke and departed.
Look What
Color Can
Do For You
The colors you wear can actually
make you look big or little, short
ur tall.
A bright, intense color, for ex
ample, creates an illusion of size.
And for that reason, a large wo
man is wise to build her wardrobe
around greys and neutral shades,
according to Mary Em Lee, State
College extension specialist in tex
tiles and clothing.
Take a look around you and see
how nature takes care of the rela
tionship of size to color. The tiny
butterfly is sparked with color.
And even if you haven't seen any
elephants lately, yop know they
don't wear red.
Low-key colors are kind to bad
figures just as they're good to over
weight one*: They help to hide?
or at least to minimize?figure de
fects. But the girl in the grey flan
nel suit needn't feel neglected and
drab. She can wear vivid hats,
scarves and accessories.
Tall women can make themselves
appear even taller by choosing
brightly colored hats, according to
Miss Lee. Short girls, on the other
hand, will look taller if they wear
matching hats and dresses;
It's a good idea, however, to
build your wardrobe around neutral
tones regardless of your size or
figure. And if you always want to
look well, wear the fashionably
popular colors only when they're
becoming to you.
? * ?
l'w the Want Ads for results.
FOR RENT
TWO-BEI)ROOM HOUSE,
STOKER HEAT.
LOC ATED IN TOWN.
DIAL
GL 6 - 3972
Here Again - The Famous Belk - Hudson
CHINA
SALE
A FULL TRUCK LOAD!
OVER 12,000 PIECES!
Consisting of
14 PLATES ? PLATTERS
? Cl'PS ? SAUCERS
? CEREALS ? BOWLS
? SUGARS ? CREAMS
FRUITS ? SALADS
Beautiful Patterns!
J J Wide Selection of Colors!
^ So Low In Price!
YES ? only 10c each with each 10c purchase
?and you may buy as many pieces as you i
like. For each dollar you spend for regular I
merchandise you can get 10 pieces of china
ware for only 10c each. In this promotion we
are selling this chinaware at cost and below
-'-you can't afford to miss this opportunity
to save!
?c
EACH
WHAT A BARGAIN!
WHAT AN OFFER!
BelkiHudson
? folks MYEgffgTg-TffffTTOITW*
NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS