;DY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1S37 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page :,;(illv Dead, CTTniovinfi: Life js Joeing "Ul,u v hn'' i so FOREST FIRES DOING BIG DAMAGE IN IDAHO ,.. d,ad, and yet alive, is f'-- ; which Joseph Bibeau, K I-. finds himself. .This ft": ' 'into Manville, and ' V old parents and friends L discharges, medals, and "f'bis world travels. years ago Bibeau left "-"mi joined the army. He ain 1. TV i ' 1 . . - - . - .', he enlisted m anouie. nu,ans f traI1!5,H.t Mph Paqu'"- His conlPan- j tv for all. trance. battles. ! .1,. u'niiniLrl I ... i 1 V ' . ...... nttonslVP MP I'UfM lK. r W l!;n .. irtrilllinr w.... . - - - i-v..v. ." ..... ., lii-u-..-i-- . . .. , .. r a field hospital aim ai ,i,d was sent to his All able bodied men in the mining J illage of Warren. Iiic-io, were fight- ir.fr a forest fire this week that was burning over an area of 1,000 acres, in the form of a large triangle. The forest service rushed more than 650 men recruited from miles around into the fire line?. The women, old nun and children packed their belongings and waited to abandon their homes at a moments notice. No (Sanger of life was feared as the good roads leading f the village, with sufficient tion, insured safe- out he tn to no Alt hi memory )U(rh he suffered from recovered suffi- , ioin nis coni'"".v. h; war ended he became a he army 01 occupation in When discharged he de wanted to see more of the he re-enlisted. His duties j.to places all over tne worm, ,"a finally discharged on the ;; coast. marrieu seiii j-.o ... In an automoDiie ac- igo, a severe head His family he w;s dead th: ir.g on his war memorv and i!y ami f'rii nils, '.'ere so certain that t they had been draw risk insurance and in another eai and a half wi uld collected all of the $10,000. havt P.ll.-.r of HrrcuVi In HlscU'fil u'i'oraiih.v the two p, Iilontoru s. r;:ie fCiliraltarl in Kil rope and A i'. ta in Africa, situated a the eastern extremity of the Strait Ar.feies- ,, flx ninths i j (iiliniltar Here called the l'illars of j Hercules. They are sentinels, as it were, at the outlet from the Mediter ranean intfi the ill. known Atlantic. .Our 10th Year will mark a year of Savings for you. MY SPECIAL TO YOU FOR Friday & Saturday (0d. 1st and 2nd Only) W I L L B E 10 Per Cent DISCOUNT ON ANY NEW FALL COAT or DRESS f;-:?' 'V5 -;-5 ,-'. :- MRS. KOY CAMI'liELL to Deduct Ten Per Cent From The Regular Trite Fur These Two Days. Massie's Dept. Store -a FACTS FROM WASHINGTON (Ccmp.ltd by The United States News) About three million school children n the United States one-eighth of the entire school popu:ation are hand icapped by defective eyesight, accord ing to Lewis H. Cat ris, managing di rector of the National Society for Prevention of Blindness. Forsight- edness is the common visual defect. Railroads in the United States op erate the most extensive car terry system in the world. Thev move mil lion of tons of freight annually on the ferries, and some ferries are in the passenger service. The railroads have more than 2.000 units of tloat ing travel, employing an army of marine workers. More than one hundred babies have been born in the Federal Govern ment's .experimental farm colony at Matanuska, Alaska, since that project was launched in May, ll'lio. The .(deny is composed largely of fami lies moving from submarginal lands f Wisconsin, Minnesota anil Michigan. IN CHARGE OF OFFICE MISS ALU II STKINGF IKl.i) has charge f the detail of tiflice work connected with Massie's Depart ment Store. Miss Stringfield has held this position (rr the iast three Twe:ity-tive Slates, under manda tory laws, provide free text-books to all children in the elementary grades of public schools this month. Twenty other States leave to the discretion of county commissioners or district boards of education whether pupils shall be supplied with free text-books. Three States Indiana, South Caroli na and Tennessee neither require nor authorize the general distribution of text-books at public expense. Tenants are beginning to move inti the "Harlem River Houses," l'VYA's $4,219,000 first low-rent housing pro ject in New York City. The project, not yet completed, will have 574 living units, for which 11,000 families have filed applications. The management of the development has been turned over to the New York City Housing Authority under a one-year experi mental lease the first lease of the kind ever entered into by the Federal Government and a municipality. Our 10th Year will mark a year of Savings for yu. xauiJiie JciuttlatieH FOR Ml FIGURE TYPES WITH (LULL. i CRACEFULE Tat re is always a feel '"l ot being well froomed in one of these tautiful garments and Jet they are always comfortable. This iaim v garment is just ;r'tot manv charmingly youthful designs for !lnder and average TJ:es. Moulds and shapes curves and yet has 'a two-way stretch l'ic back that flexes every movement. AlMadame Grace "scefu'e'te's are sur-'-'STifciy lew priced. r ""-" . '? TTES f "X', - rf iV 'MA ' : - If 1 ;-::i.' -- :;i fm t ' - !-," . - , -' "lit MiiifA'','-v-,;':'';! .A complete line of Foundation (iarments will .be found Ce- ( "me in today and let one of the girls show you. Massie 's Dept. Store Twenty-six multiple unit stream lined passenger trains are now in operation on railroads in the United States and orders have been placed to build nine more. I More than 250,000 celebrations were held throughout the country to sig nalize the 150th birthday of the Con stitution, according to the estimate of Representative Sol Bloom (l)eni.) of New York, director of the Constitu tion Sus(iuicentennia). Goes Nude To Write About Other Nudists fa Our lQth Yar will mark a year of Savings for you. Fall and Winter FASHIONS MASSIE'S Ready-to-Wear Dept. August living costs were a tenth of a per cent higher than in July this year, the National Industrial Confer ence Board's monthly survey indicates. This was 4 per cent' higher-than in August a yeat ago and 24 per cent higher than the lowest depression level of litli.'i- but stilt 12 per cent lower than the boom month of August, K'2!'. All living cost items except food rose last month. The amusement industry in the United Suites, inow constituting a billion-dollar business, promises to ex, pand still further because of returned prosperity and shorter working hours that afford more leisure, according to "The Index" of the New York Trust Company. Internal Revenue receipts on theater and other admissions show ed, for the lOW fiscal year, an increase of 1 1 per cent over the previous year, and radio sales were up 40 per cent. To combat a "growing prejudice" against -employment of persons more than 40 years old. the Foundation for Americans of Mature Age, Inc., anonunces the inauguration of a cam paign against "the tremendous and tragic waste" resulting from "discard ing the experience and training of ma turity." Mrs. Agatha 1. Ward, of Washington, I). C, as spokesman for the Foundation in a statement an nouncing its program voices belief that increasing reluctance of employ ers to hire workers past 40 has re sulted partly from "such well-intentioned legislation as workmen's com pensation and social security measures'." Executive budget-balancing efforts are made more difficult, by the fact, revealed by a Treasury check-up, that the last session of Congress authorized about a quarter billion more of expen ditures that were contemplated in the January and April budget forecasts. Returning prosperity is being re flected in a pick-up in the volume of new life insurance policies issued. The amount of new insurance written during the first eight months of this year was 7.2 per cent greater than for the similar 1'.' period, according to a report to the Department of Com merce by the Association of Life In surance Presidents. The August gain over August, JI'-IS, was 5.2 per cent. James M. MaiKathihd. ussigi.l by the New York Times to cover the con vention of 'the American Sunbathing Association at Mays Landing, N. J tells in Kditor and Publisher how he hung all his clothes on a pine tree and became one of the nudists. The Times gave no orders or advice as to whether he should be clothed or nude when leixirtine; the convention. He made his own choice. He writes that he w;.s i tnbarrassi d at first but soon became used to Lis own and other' people's nudity. Mat-Fat land had persuaded Rev. llsley Bonne, head of the Sunbathing Association, to admit him as the only reporter at the convention, with the understanding that be would pass on information to other reporters. These others hung around the camp en trance ''and waited for him to come out every now and then and tell them what was going on. . Later the nudist 'chief was persuad ed to let all the reporters in. They we're supposed to go in the nude, lull since they had to have sumo place to put their pencils ''and paper, a com promise was reached am) they stripped to the waist. A women reporter re fused to shed her garments and an exception was made in her case. "A visitor at a nudist camp, " .writer MacFarland. "whether he be clothed or not, docs, not know quite what to make of it all. For the first time in his life rinds himself in a so-called Paradise" where naked men, women and children come and go as they please, chat with each other, eat with each other and act just as they would in a conventional city home. When 1 ain asked what I think of the idea, 1 shrug my shoulders and reply '1 don't know.' Somehow it doesn't seem pos sible, but yet I can see that it is. "It is no uncommon sitrht to see a husband and wife walking through the pine-studded colony with two or three little children, tagging along behind them. To an outsider it is an almost incredible sight to behold an elderly woman chatting with her lH-year-old son who is basking himself right be sides her. But at nudist camps the people seem to regard this as nothing at all.. "The delegates at the convention in cluded men and women from all walks of life lawyers, ministers,, doctors, educators and business men all of whom say they are definitely 'sold' on the movement, They say that fat bodies, ugly scars and hairy chests are not repulsive to the true nudist, for the true nudist does not think aesthetically, , According to Dr. Elton R. Shaw of Washington, retiring president of the American Sunbathing Association and former dean at Kansas Weslyan Uni versity, the nudist membership in the United States has growji in the past ten years from a mere handful to well over the 100,000 mark. And, he adds, there are over two million, people' who sympathise with 'the -nudist movement. "The United States, to my mind, is not ready for nudism. But the United States was not. ready' for abbreviated womens bathing suits 15 years ago. Has nudism reached its highest pe-ak? My answer, 'I haven't the slightest idea.' " Annually the Bureau of Fisheries turns-' loose- thousands of fish with metal tags attached reading "Reward Return to the Bureau of Fisheries, Washington. I). C. To enable the bu reau to learn more about fish habits. Government pays 25 cents for return of the tag, and from 50 cents to $1 Spider Big Eater The Worlri'S liiest eatei is thnnr ilinary tiouse spider, nccohling to South fJermati entomologists. It e-its . four times its own weight for breakfast, nine times its wt -ight- for lunch ami Y.i times its weight for dinner. It thus consume a minliurm of 2T times its own weight every day in Insect meals. To equal this ratitn Die average man would have . to eat some 1 ',4 tons of loo a day ! for additional information regarding whereabouts and condition of the taged fish when caught. Discourag ing results in non-return of a large proportion of the tags has led to discovery that many fishermen, in stead of claiming the modest rewards offered, are preferring to convert the tags into cuff links, which ir) form they resemble. I ) ' if" m 4 - ivviikMiis ri Us fv ul tnw? es1 Dresses In ;iil s vs.- Sheer Wottk-ns, Tailor I'd Of pi's. Dressy Afternoon Crepes. They have draped lines. Innume rable details that mark them as part of the new fall season i; 20 Priced $2.98 to $14.95 The Well Known HAPPY HOME and Li GRACE Wash Dresses Hrijrht colors thai are Guaranteed. 98c - $1.98 Dress Coats KRILUANTLY STYLED With pouch and ripple col lars Fitted waist with swing skirl Swagger with the new broad shoulder ef fect of sleeve. Sport Coats In The Hest Shades found, only in Genuine Camel's Hair and Cloth Coat Styl ed in the iio;l Lass and Vassar Coats. Three Piece Suits Plain and Pur Trimmed. A coat that can le worn sepa rately a two-piece suit that you'll wear alone for fall. Coats priced to suit every pocket hook- $4.95 to $69.50 will '"J '4v 'l '': fJiJ A Whiff of White A whisper of white neck wear on your dark dress and you'll look and feel re freshed. Pique, Lace and Organdy. F a 1 1 H a t s Achievement in high fash ion! All the autumn shades that give new tang to your ensemble. Certain to make a Ji it in the smarter wardrobes! Massie's Dept. Store