' MARSHALL, If. C , : T '.. VI i i -i ECOUD i hi i i i i -1 .V t .s . 4- . : . i . . .1 L.-. ; ' kAiboadi rt hard to knock out fUoular I ,,v ,,,.aV lUL-Vv railroad tarvJca was rtiumaxf through I ' " ' Hm 18 hour aherlU atomic bomb i jcwad on this Jopanasa dry In me Korean War Vo per ceni ot oui iioopi SVJL ft" and freight passing through Pusan-our jSX- X3b?" asjk. I 1 only port -moved by .-- ' - v-in-iUiC KcUi oiipldyea giodi ingenuity in keep- JpJ Jrai - fcvT"v 1 in9 ,ne,f rai' ',nei open To deceive our forces, ihey f removed railroad bridge spans before dawn, hid them in riltiiw. XW camouflaged places during the day, then replaced the ' " fi " Tfn spans and ran their trains after nightfall Stock Cars Race For Third Week Saturday Night In Asheville Ned Jarrett, who drives McCor mick Field Speedway like he owns it, will be seeking his third consec utive victory Saturday night when Promoter Jim Lowe presents a 125 I a sportsman and amateur division stock car racing program. The Newton speedster spurred his Thuncierbird-powered Ford to top money in last Saturday night's fea ture, racking up two wins in as ma ny weeks. He is the only Uriyer to win a sportsman feature race on the new unbanked quarter-mile asphalt") track. jarrett had some stiff competi tion from Tommy Boger of Concord and Junior Johnson of Rhonda last week. Boger, driving a Ford, fin ished second and Johnson piloted his Chevrolet to a third-place finish Both drivers will be back Saturday night to continue the 'fight. Banjo Matthews of Asheville, who stayed in contention last; week until the 28th lap when a , spinoiit killed hi ,bidf i -billed s the man to watch in Saturday nfefct. feature. thews will drive-, powered Ford. a Tbunderbird- Burt Noland of Marion and Bob Gsoree of Hendersonville both have won amateur features at the track and will be back to settle the score Saturday. Time trials will start at 7 p. m. Two 10-Iap heat races, a 15-lap con solation and a 40-lap main event are on tap for the sportsman division drivers. The amateurs will compete in two 10-lap heat races and a 30 feature. , , Some' 20 sportsman division driv- ers and a like number of amateurs are expected for Saturday night's program. LETTER HEADS. rCIRCULARS ! OFFICE t. miirnxtx-puzuzi iing : Enuf; rtsiMisiJsM:, MARVELOUS MILK ISu MRS. JAN IE RAMSEY Horn? De-monslration Agent A fitting recipe for "Dairy Foods Month" is, one Miss Ruth Current, our State Home Demonstration Agent uses. LEMON CHEESE PIE IS CREAMY AND DELICIOUS CREAMY LKMON CHEESE PIE Have you ever tried a creamy lemon cheese pic? It's delicious and you can freeze it, too. Here is the recipe: 4 cup fresh lemon juice 3 packages cream cheese (3 oz. packages) 2 eggs beaten cup sugar. Topping 1 tablespoon lemon peel 1 tablespoon sugar I cup sour cream. Mix well lemon juice and cream cheese. Add beaten eggs and sugar and beat until fluffy. Pour into vanilla wafer crust and bake at 350 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes. Re move from oven and cool for 5 min utes. Topping: Mix lemon peel, sugar and sour cream. Spread over pie. Return to oven and bake 10 minutes longer. Cool. Chill in refrigerator at least 5 hours before serving. Vanilla Wafer Crust 1 cup vanilla wafer , crumbs (about 30 wafers), 2 tablespoons melted margarine or butter, 1 table spoon sugar, 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice, few grains salt. Re serve some crumbs for top, if de sired. Press crumb mixture even ly and firmly on bottom and sides of 8-in pie pan. Pour in filling and bake. Navy sleds br.ng use I in the Ant arctic were made ir Canada while snow flags are mounted on banibi from Panama. STATEMENTS ENVELOPES FORMS mru. heads: I VISITING CARDS . MAnrnAU-.w. -c : This Is The Lar TV ROBERT E. LEE ("For theN. C.Bar Ataoetation) a , (WRITING OF A WILL .V May a minor make a will? No. Only those persons who are of twenty-one years of .age or old er ami of sound mind 'can make a v:ilid will. May a married woman make a valid will without the knowledge or' consent of her husband? es. Although a wife cannot n;" ey her real property by deed v iti.ont i:, written joinder of her hit -'-and. ! her.- is nothing to pre uiu ;i wl'e from disposing f a" of her property by will in any man ner she desires. She doesn't have to hing to her husband. The im.band cannot dissent from the terms of bis wife's will. M-iy a wife dissent from the t. i ins of tier husband's will? Ves. If a widow doesn't MKe tnai which she has received' under the leims of her husband's will she may di.-.sent and take that which she would have received had he died without a will. She may file her written dissent at any time within six months after the probate of the will, following her husband's death. A wife cannot possibly lose by her husband making a will. It is there- tore, to the advantage of tne wue t urge upon him the necessity of aking a valid will. What is a "Holographic" will? A "holographic" will is a will written entirely in the handwriting of the testator. It must be found "after the testator's death among his valuable papers or effects, or in a safe deposit box or other safe place where it was deposited by him or under his authority, or in the pos session or custody of some person with whom, or some firm or corpor ation with which, it was deposited by him or under his authority for safekeeping." The testator's name must be writ ten in or on the will in his own handwriting. No attesting witness es to a holographic will are requir ed. "Holographic" wills are not common. WITNESSES TO WILLS Who is a "testaor"? s The person making a will is re ferred to as the "testator." In the case of females, the expression "testatrix" iaoften VJj How many witnesses are required to sign an aiueswa wn&ten wm ui North Carolina? Two. Lawyers frequently insist on three, because there are a number of states that require this number of witnesses' and the lawyers want their clients to leave wills that will be valid in all states. May a person write his own will? Yes. But he runs a risk in doing i. A non-lawyer may inadequately express his intentions. A will doi?8 not become effective until after the death of the maker. He cannot be present to explain to the court, his relatives, and loved ones his inten tions he had in mind in using the language that he did. His. real in tentions may not be carried out. The entire will may fail because it has not been written in the form required by law. There is much lit igation In our courts dealing wih homeymade wills. Must the attending witnesses read the will or know its contents? No. Must the testator sign his name in the presences of the attesting witnesses? No. In Sorth Carolina it is not necessary that the testator sign, hia will in the presence of the attest ing witnesses, but if he does not do so, he must acknowledge to then Mm signature previously affixed there to. In certain Instance the ac knowledgement has been, held suffi cient by acta or conduct ea the part of the testaor,' bat an express state ment by the testator to the witness es that he has signed is the safest ' method. , J I- There most be a signature to at test before there can bo a attests Hon. In other; words, the attesting witnesses alga after the testator has UNFAIR RACE: ' - ii - , -f Jfaffmio, T. V Seeing a 14- s year oM boy abaaoea a stoiea ear, Paireknaa ' Edward W. Sebnlts, " tried to stop fekn. The bey rn ' failed to-beed two.wriiinf ' ' I T! clisse was a fcr ' r S " howerer, wlso har t 1 ;s shoes e!jr lat fr,.r. I Z bey ' r a r ef - to i - . half U; . 'r V. 1 ' . - ... f J ' 1 Rev Wein Bruyn of Hospers, Iowa preached an interesting ser mon at Bethel Christian Church Sun day night. A large crowd attended. Mr. Hnivn is- the husband of the former M,ss Pauline Wyatt. They are spcndiir- two weeks with her parenU. M . at,d Mrs. Mclvin Wy att, ami Star! a ,1m !he, little daughter, y I : : i Hi' 1 1 nlinrnt at filled his I! e 1 h e I d Si;nda j mo mi Ml .M r . H.in (laidin and 1 vi-iled Mi- Car-llalli- Siiltlen and llu aml Mrs. Mi Th. 1, day. Mi d.y 's! W, t'iV;i i ;. -,r i:!-ii- Mon- .nulla P -ii ! spell '. Sun ii '.'. a Mr. anil Mr-. 1 1 1 i " ..i "it i v i hut lr. Kim l!!i:l T - , ii 1 lie sick list at i th is i ! i i.'l wasn't able to at- tend i-liur h and Sunday Scho , last " ish fur him speedy Suiiihn recover Clct; hu- illcs I'angie, v ho is atteinling a college in Asheville, spent Saturday night and Sunday with his pan nt.s, Mr. and Mrs, Hubert I'an gle. Mr. and Mrs. Tonic l.eilbetter of Knoxville, Tenn., .-pent the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kent. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Fran cis Kent, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wy att and Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Pan gle. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kent spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Rochelle Parker. Ray (iardin took dinner Sunday with Cletis Pangle. Ronnie Messer spent Friday night with Roy Parker. Jim Shelton took dinner Sunday with M''- ""d Mrs. Hubert Pangle. Jacky Parker, Wayne Gardin, Dud Shetley and Bobby Allison were visiting Roy, Jerry and Billy Par ker Sunday afternoon. Mr. Jack Parker, Hubert Pangle and Rochelle Parker called on Dr. Kimiberly of Bluff Sunday, who is ill. Mr. Zeb Ledford of Woodruff, S. C, a brother of Mrs. Robert Kent, spent Saturday night at their home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ledford and two sons of Asheville, spent Satur day night with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Blankenship. Mrs. Inez Sexton, Emma Jean and ,Ulispn called on Mrs. Caroli- nay rangw ano" oaugnter, uavtuiua, Monday. Cecil Pangle,' and Mr. and Mrs. Rube Gunter and sister made a bus iness trip to Marshall Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wyatt and children, Vonda and Glenn, of Bluff, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wyatt. Laveoia Pangle took dinner Sun day with Blanche Wyatt. Rev. and Mrs. Wein Bruyn of Hospers, Iowa spent Sunday night with her brother, Edward Wyatt, of Bluff, i Miss Anna ' Lee Parker and Miss if If you "C LIVE TCaCUGII YOUR VACATION Cne of the results of the mad rush of Americans to vacation spots during the weekends, in summer, is a wholesale slaughter on the high ways and .many unnecessary deaths; it. summer resort areas. Nxperls s-uy the worst traffic jams of vacation weekend- o.iur on Sun day afternoons, and .-o if juii ai' . oiiig away for t lie w eki-ml, 1 1 y U. aio.il the Sunday alt.iriioui tial.c f po-sible ami if V"U a: aii -lit. in M'lcisi' i: of caul i. i Ici est ine: inn I to lloti that .m.isy piople. -oiiio of whom arc on. I swimmers, drown unnecessari ly every summer. Commenting on this aspect of vacation salety, a Maryland police official recently le velled that boats were involved in ',1 of KM! drownings which orcurn'd ,v Maryland ill 1 '.""-"- That is a surprising figure, and :L men. is that about one out of ev er three drownings involves a boat, .'f v"'1 boating, or fishing, and cannot swim, there is absolutely no excuse for being without a seat-type or a chest-type life-preserver. If this article induces one W summer vacationer to take along a life-preserver, and he happens to need it, or induces one driver to stay off the roads on Sunday after noon, or to drive carefully and avoid an accident, it will have served its purpose. We hope you will be the beneficiary of these words of cau tion. Good for the Soul A politician was being interviewed by a reporter. "Do you feel you have influenced public opinion, sir?" ask ed the member of the fourth estate. "No," was the politico's reply. "Public opinion is something like a mule I once owned. In order to keep up the appearance of being the driver, I had to watch the way he was going and follow closely." Linda Rogers of Springport, Ind., called on Laveonia Pangle Friday afternoon. Little Jennings Baldwin spent the day Saturday with his grandmother, Mrs. Lucy Parker while his moth er, Mrs. Dale Baldwin, had some dental work done at Newport, Tenn. Mrs. Carolina Pangle had some dental -work done at Marshall on Thursday. She was accompanied by her son and daughter, Cecil and Laveonia Pangle. Sir." Edgar Parker visited rela tives at Marion Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. Wesley Burnett spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Huibert Kent. They took din ner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Kent. Mrs. Edgar Parker and son, Jim my, called on Mr. and Mrs. Nick Parker Sunday afternoon. Jackv Parker nf Hot Springs is spending his summer vacation with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Jack Parker., J I m: 1 This car saya "GO"Hln Its every linav-lf povered to profit, and the prtee won't stop yout V' f 'i t '. 4 , I One attnt behind its wheel will give you a thrlH GtcezzzzzaA you've hevet' experienced before, its eaer 7 horses are alert, as no horses have ever been, to your whim and the touch of your toe. . - - V .f ". , love action yeuTJ lore Pocclacl i m.' i. ...:: Vit cm says X3 Ano fix t rcf vvcm srr roof , : -' HOT SPM . ; ,..,,, , u Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster and son of Bluff City, Tenn, Visited' their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Troy Harrison and Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Reeves Ricker and .lan ice spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. K. 1!. Summercl. Mr. and Mrs. James Brown and three children of Rome, Ga., spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Har old llaki r. Jackie and Hobby Foster of Ashe ville are spending this week with hi r c.r'-iil..iiciit-. Mr. and Mrs. II. V.. ' o-ti l. ii . Hi i ' ha I ci-c is spend i ng a i . 1 1 . i v. h In r -on in law and l.-r.Tliter. V,! and Mi Hiier I'end aiol, in A - he v. i .' s. l i-s U amla M .mi' of Asheville ponl t i.e v. , . I:. el w 1 Ii her parents, V'. ami Mrs. Je.s Moore. Mr. and II ' George Lippard lu'.'.c a- tlicr -t this week Com mander and Mi .. Arthur S. Morris and daughter, irginia, of Lake hurst. V .J., arid Mrs. William Hoyt 111, of Durham. Rev. William Hoyt I'll is attending conference at Mori treat this week. He expects to join his wife lure for the weekend. Mrs. Hoyt and Mrs. Morris are daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. Lippard. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Short and two children of Chattanooga, Tenn., are spending this week with Mrs. Short's grandmother, Mrs. Charles Murgin. The women of the Presbyterian Church were privileged to have the Rev. Jack Alber, pastor of the Meth odist Church, lead them in the first of a series of Bible studies on the book of Ephesians, when they met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Charles Burgin. The booklet, "The Way and the Wayfarer," pre pared for all P.W.O. groups by Rev. James E. Spivey of Bartsville, Ok lahoma, is being used as a guide and outline. The next discussion will be led by Mr. Allen Line, student pastor of the Presbyterian Church. Sunday evening at the Presbyteri an Church, Dr. and Mrs. Ted Fin ley, missionaries on furlough from Hoocenpich, Yucatan, Mexico, gave a most interesting report on their work, using colored slides, which they had taken, which left you with the feeling that you had personally visited this great work. HANCOCK'S RESTAURANT .8 N. PACK SQUARE ASHEVILLE, TNu C Southern Fried Chicken Roast Turkey DELICIOUS Coffee 5c per cup Home Made Pies EAT WITH US AND TASTE THE , DIFFERENCE t 5 V . ' v jf , 4 X 1 ( u I V ' ' fa A V - J- - -I : it . I .-