Preston Foolc Charlie McCarthy t j 1 i i ' mimmi illhdhn - 0MiiArwuma^im* ill? ?y. m i m Miown i i'n Inn, magician anil hynoti t, as lie pulled a rabbit < ill el ('.milic McCarthy', famous lop-hat. Edgar Bergen looks on jii ;iiu i me nl. Pre ion will pie,nil his show ot magic and hyp ii i in .it the Wayne-ville high school auditorium, Aug. R and 0 at R I "> p nip 'J lie how is under the sponsorship of the W'aynesville l.i, it Club Ticket an SO cents for Indents through high school and $1 ti adult iin'v can be purchased at Tul's and Charlie's i)rlyr'-ln a! W.iyia viile and tlie Ifa/elwood Pharmacy and Brad Ii.v' Superinarket in Hazel wood. i soTHIS^I NEW YORK | By NORTH CALLAHAN I always thought the Indians loft Now York when they sold Manhat tan to the white men at the sup posedly.-bargain rate of $25. But thi is a popular fallacy. I learned upon talking to some of the men who build the local skyscrapers, A lot of Indians still live here and they specialize on construction work in the dizzy heights of the tallest buildings. Even then, sev eral Mohawks were working atop the building* on 3d Avenue, oper ating with hammer and tongs and red-hot rivets and moving about the lofty girders like surefooted cats. Why, I asked, did these red skins do this work? It seems that for many years,1 these Indians have been adept at litis working in "high iron." they call it: they took it up generations ago when they found that such height did not bother thein: they get paid well for it, are agile like their mountain-climbing ancestors; and it gives them a chance to work together ? some thing they like. Also, about ton of these Mohawks live 'in an "Indian village" in Brooklyn. The traffic was whizzing by on Madron Avenue when gradually at one point it jammed up and virtually came to a stop In the middle of the street, a dapper lit - and suddenly found himself a shaky human island in a sea of rushing motors. He wavered, started back- 1 ward, then forward, a taxi screech ed to a stop, and a passenger car almost hit him as it shot by. Not ing this obstruction, all traffic stopped, and all eyes?there must have been 200 of us?fastened upon him. Realizing I hat he was the cen ter of attention, but nevertheless, not chagrined, the Httle man straightened up. adjusted the rose in his button-hole, and twirling his cane over his smart w^ll-worn pats, smiled primly at us as he took his time and walked briskly Magician Will Hypnotize By Radio Friday One ot the most interesting per i I'ormanccs that Preston, the magi cian and hypnotist, will give during Ins visit to Waynesville this week ?.end will be the hypnotizing of a person by radio Friday afternoon. The subject will be at the Mas sie Furniture Company at 4 p.m. while Preston will hypnotize him by radio from the studio of WHCC. Remaining under the power of Preston, the hypnotized subject will be taken to the high school in an ambulance and vwakened dur ing the evening performance. Preston is scheduled to appear in Waynesville for two public per formance.. Friday and Saturday at 8:15 p.m. at the high school. His appearance is being sponsored by the Lions Club for whom the magi cian will give a private exhibition Thursday night at a ladies' night meeting of the organization. I i ? mmmmm am ??? i ? ?i to the other aide of the atreet. , 3 There's romethipg mighty nice' tie old man had beed eauvht be i to ecu (lie red and gieeu lights, ?bout clean clothea. Of course I can speak only from the masculine viewpoint, but a clean shirt, a new ly-pressed suit and shoes neatly shined surely make a person feel just a little more important in this life. The laundry and dry cleaners can often do as mueh for a man is his lawyer and doctor, it seems to me. Turned out on a bright morning with clean, nice-fitting Mothes, a man just feels more self reliant, more acceptable in soci ety, enough confidence in himself i to be President ? end there's no i doubt, he looks better. 3 A prominent executive and his wife were passing through Grand Central Station and she stopped a minute to make a phone call in a booth. He waited politely outside. When she came out, her face work a look that was very pleasant?ex cept it seemed to be a little lie.' that of the cat who swallowed the mouse. "You know," she said to him in a low voice which I could barely hear, "that telephone made a mistake, and when I got through calling, six dimes came out." He' raised his eyebrows. "I hope you j put them .back?" he said. She chortled as she took his arm, "I certainly did not!" FaiSTGr^ lMtodUp. Ready To Resume PiJ . By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD _ Betty Grable ?ays she's all rested up and feels great after her year's recess (rum picture ? making, including nine months' suspension. "It was so wonderful," she re ported. "to wake up in the morn ing and think, '1 have no appoint ments today.' It wasn't that I was so tired, just that 1 was sick of the routine. Up at 5:30 every inorning, shooting, wardrobe fittings, record ing. You do different scenes, but fundamentally it's the same rout ine." The layoff cost her salary, but, J her race-horse. Big Noise, co-oper atively earned more than $100,000 in the year. Since she's gone back to work, in "The Farmer Takes a Wife," the horse hasn't earned a dime. Incidentally, 1 thought horsetail hairdos were something new. But > Miss Grable, hillowingly costumed in the finery of a century ago. wears a horsetail. It's not her own hair but an extra length deceptive ly added to her poodle rut ... . Another illusion of mine went glimmering the other day, too. Clif-' ton Webb, as John Philip Sousa, -was leading his band on a sort of county-fair outdoor set. The props included several fascinating old-tiine peanut wagons with steam cylinders and puppets turning cranks. Envisioning a painstaking search of museums and musty warehouses, 1 asked the prop man where he'd found them. "In the prop shop," he said. But the people. Where had these wonderful types been*, located to portray a turn - of - the - century, small-town crowd. Why. I was told, a call had simply been rluced to Central 'Casting for a certain num ber of children and a larger group of adults 22 to 60 years old. The wardrobe department* had done the rest ... 1 Kathryn Grayac J other it.. ? "the r? ? the reman "Koberla ?Lovely .ook^H "The Desert Sona 1 on loan Iruin Ma,.J Brothers I Kathryn 1 1 be more ol this rnttJ ping of stai iJ specialist ? "mB other sludaii unnj that are right tor tlM plained. 1 .. >_ ? j^grj [f ETIQUET | A DEODORANT CREAM 1 I gR 39c Compact, Folding (' J HANDY STERN ? j COOK STOVE > t "US' 47c f fFROSTlLLAt i LOTION [ < Attractive A 7 A \ r^i Bring? Quick Headache Belief Tabl#t? or 1 Q _ TINTAIR HOME \HAIfl COLORING 'Affile AYDS REDUCING CANDY l MON7VS SUPPLY j k*2??4 DOWN GO FRICESjJ .. V. . .,ss//4Z8Hmiuam-?m4&lM*. ....sytrtstttisP jsoS'iiisoR |nMwwE$ I 1 I 39c to *y? || I 2!SL.,?_ .?< I ?33? |! 1 SI'm'oo.? :>5c I '?"""'?"??t - 49 < | I 59< j 16< | jPAPER MflPKIHS 2 pkgs 15cj cross ' g 1 ?? ADHESIVE TAPE I //tt\ in the new a a 1 ' CUT-QUICK 33c I m adhesive t*? THAI K MAHK ? Package '/?"*?'/? y?i* ?| Williams Shave Cream, 4 oz. 43< I Palmolive Lathel- Shave, lg... 35( 1 I Hm9|F^H Mennen Skin Bracer, S oz 59< ? ? Gillefte Blue Blades, 10s 49< | B Burma Shave, 4 oz. tube 40< I ItJ \ry^v----?A $ wash A 47j i ^apTKS _fcforJIC| Here's your chance of the "summer-time" to buy play time accessories at realty big savings. Scores of things you'll need and enjoy in the sun-filled, fun-filled weeks ahead arc priced 'way down low to give you SUN-sa tional values in top-quality summer goods. Buy for your immediate needs. Buy for Labor Day outings. Buy for next summer. You'll save on everything you buy because every price is a low price at our height >f-the-season CLEARANCE SALE. SfSffiRKR?SRMWQWflSS}WOWQWQQCQQ00000006MoogooooonoPoooofwwHnw?KMooaocao?BnriMBBw 4 Cakes Ivory Soap 23c HfY Blue-Jay Callus Plasters........... 331 ifll All 5c Gum & Mints 3 (or 10c \ff Co-Ets Cotton Squares, 40s?19< Anatin Tablets, 30s 39c r--L/-^SPICIAl INTRODUCTORY SAISIJ CHjOROPHYU ROUTING $969 8 Full gallon & I J ? skoli in unbreakable plastic bottle [S_j9cf PHOTO FINISHING Any 6 or 8 F.xpofnire Roll Developed & Printed JUMBO SIZE Only 35C jifi ^ Dorothy Gray Paint Box $1.25 |: Desert Flower Stk. Cologne $1.00 V EiEQR Seven Odors Coty Perfume $2.(Ml f; Sun Sports Lotion $1.00 4 Odors Bufthle Bath ..... $1.00 sjj jl'jj Halo Shampoo 29c ?| rBROMTT BMo9sK SELTZER | | 3 That's right ... and Py to pass the good J to you. Our modenl stockings are styled aj ted fcfr beauty as wet J for ting support |?r vUrtlJ cose veins. And they're J fully cool. too. because! thousands of tiny HjJ let your skin "breath?! wearing, easy-to-luJ elastic stockings romTJ and garter lengths. As tJ $5.00 Per M N^]jVPR0V^l Bardroff Remivtr I SHAMPOO gj^^tvfree Hair 14 ? 59c] ptcoBiml EXCITING NEW I jg $ BEAUTY LOTION I I ; SILK ,n J I r IPtj ^MARCM W' HAIR lll| Six Treatment!I ^Dr. V7esf'J'| j a- Miracle-iu^l I S J00THBRMII Lunch fif Kit If With S Pint Bottle A si89 j^ll ii ? ?I..V-.VVI ? * - ? *>? y Wir rnata re4j^^E^Kx>atr*d Mri I>rher J0? i^Vrtr foT ^*?\ V Ihirt M?he# ? fPinA \ new land heepa n? fnlhjrel 1 fat K # V A The lost is found, and the found is reclaimed through the Mountaineer want ad columns. The rates arfc so low, yet ef fective. Just Try It And See. ? I