Packages For Mail No Longer Require A Printed Label House wives will be delighted with a new regulation of the Fust Office Department now in effect permitting theiu to seal all their packages wilhput using a printed label. Seat I hem hereafter, and seal them as lightly as you w ish, Post master' J. II. Howell advises his 4 patrons. All thai is now necessary is lo write "May be opened for postal inspection ' above or below the sender's return address, he said. This ri'w order by Fostmastcr Gcneial Suniinorfteld lias been greeted enthusiastically by the public and postal employees alike. In the past, Postmaster Howell explained, it \?as necessary to have a Friiited permission on seal ed packages. Typewritten or hand written instructions wete not ac ceptable, and the package wa; either rated u? to first-class rates or Ihe sendci often had lo hunt up a printed label. The old requirement was seldom understood bv Fost Office patron and it was the cause ot much lost time at parcel txtst windows, pan-, tieularly during the hoikiay rush es. Mailers would seal their pack ages with scotch tape or seals, only to discovei with dismay thai it was not permitted. Of course, cautioned Fostniaster IloWell. the inscription should he legible if it is handwritten. The Post Office still prefers the printed or typed form, but is waiving the point as a convenience to its patrons. Flowers Beat Asphalt NORFOLK, Va. ? Twenty years ago, Mrs. H. O. Crumpler said, she wanted to plant a garden and the city-owned plot next to her house looked like a good spot. "Go ahead" the city officials told her. The cfty had charted Ever green Street to run through the plot, "but that street never will be opened in your lifetime." So. Mrs. Crumpler hauled in rocks, fertilizer, peat moss and started planting flowers. Soon the flower garden became a neighbor hood showplace. Then last month, came a notice from the city public works department that Evergreen Street would be opened. Mrs. Crumpler would have to move that part of her garden which came within limits of the proposed streel. the notice said. At the next city council meeting | she told her story and then gave all the councilmen some flowers from her garden. The councilmen tossed the problem to the Public Works Department. On a second look, the Public Works department found that Champion Street? ] another non-existent street on the other side of Mrs. Crumpler's flow er bed?would serve the city's pur poses just as well as Evergreen Street. The Roman goddess Venus orig- \ inally represented growth in na ture and beauty and only in later times did she acquire the traits of the Greek Aphrodite and come to represent human love. Hospital Could Not Function Without Sterile Equipment _ ? Sterilization of equipment is absolutely necessary and this department is one of the most important at the hospital. It is something that is now taken pretty much for granted and patients hardly ever give the matter a thought, in fact "Hospital" and "cleanliness" are practically synonymous. I My Favorite Stories By CARL GOERCH One Of the most dignified wo men I've ever met is Mrs. Ander son of Greensboro. Mrs, Anderson had her book club meeting at her house several years ago. There are very few women who can entertain their book club without going out and borrowing silver from the neighbors, and Mrs. Anderson proved to be no excep tion. She borrowed several pieces from a neighbor, Mrs. Holbrook. Next day Mrs. Anderson wrapped ; up Mrs. Molbrook's silver in a neat j little package and started down I town. She had some shopping to j do and. after that was attended to, she planned to stop by Mrs. Hoi brook's house anil leave the silver. While in Meyer's Department Store, whom should she meet but Mrs. Holbrook. "Why, hello. Emma'." "How are you, Minnie? I de clare; your meeting yesterday was perfectly lovely." "Do you really think so?" "I most assuredly do." And then Mrs Anderson said; "By the way. I've got your silver ware here with me. I was planning on stopping by your house on the way back home and leaving it there." "Oh, 110 need to be in a hurry, about it." "But I like, to get these things' out of the way. Are you eating lunch down town?" Mrs. Ilolbrook said she was. "Let's eat together," said Mrs. Anderson. So they went to the nearest restaurant. Mrs. Anderson put her umbrella on a vacant chair and placed the small package of silver inside the umbrella. Then they ordered lunch. A very nice lunch, too, according to what Mrs. Anderson told me. They lin gered awhile over the meal, as women will do. Finally, they called for their check, and, after paying it, proceeded to leave the establish ment. Mrs. Holbrook got up. Mrs. Anderson got up too and, as she did so, grabbed her umbrel la. She had forgotten all about the silver. As she lifted the umbrella, the silver dropped out and landed on the floor. The package busted wide open and silver spoons, knives and forks flew in all directions. Twenty-seven customers and six waitresses turned around and gaz ed with intense interest. The manager who was acting as ? cashier at the time, left his post j and came toward the ladies with ! a dangerous glint in his eye. "Ooooooh!" said Mrs. Anderson. Mrs. Holbrook didn't do any thing but turn pale. "Couple of crooks," someone commented as a buzz of whispered convi rsation could be heard all 'over the restaurant. The manager stopped in front of them. "So!" he exclaimed, then waited for the ladies to say some thing. "It's perfectly all right." said the helpful Mrs. Holbrook. The manager laughed mirthless ly. "So it's your silver, is it?" he demanded. "Yes," said Mrs. Holbrook. "Look?it's got my initial engrav ed on it." She held up several pieces for his inspection and finally satisfied him that the silver didn't belong to him. "All right," he finally said, as he left them. Mrs. Holbrook and Mrs. Ander son picked up all the pieces and left the restaurant to the ac companiment of such remarks as: "Bet they stole it somewhere else." "Look right respectable, too. don't they?" and other comments of that type. It took them a couple of days to get over it. Lake Victoria is the largest lake in Africa and the chief reservoir of the NUc. We Extend Our Most Sincere CONGRATULATIONS To The Officials And Staff Of The New Haywood County Hospital , . i skcppe'8 123 Main Street t Strand Th'eatre BIdg. Injections Better Than Pills? Some Think So by CARL HARTMAN (For Jane F.adst WASHINGTON ? Some people like injections better than pills, a London surgeon believes, because they hurt more. "It should be noted," says Dr. Richard Robert Willcox of St. Mary's Hospital, "that the majority of patients prefer to undergo in jections, sometimes painful ones, rather than swallow other remedies such as pills and so forth, perhaps in accordance with the theory that 'something that doesn't hurt can't do any good'." Dr. Wijcox was talking about yaws, a dirt-spread tropical disease that looks like syphilis but isn't. He attended a conference recently at Bangkok, Siam, where there were discusisons of the battle against it in Haiti. Columbia. Ecua tor, Indonesia. Thailand, the Philip pines and other areas. His state ment of encouraging results was issued here by the Pan American Sanitary Bureau. The conviction grew among the conferees, he said, that one to three injections of phenicillin at inter vals of a few days can definitely cure a patient. In addition to his liking it better, the treatment seems to be more effective and less dangerous than pill-swallowing. The pills take longer, too. and the patient sometimes forgets them. Total cost of the injectidn is about $3 per person. Up to the end of last year nearly ft million people had been examin ed in Haiti. Indonesia. Thailand and the Philippines under a pro gram of the World Health Organi zation. U. S.-assisted Point Four teams have been working in Ecua dor and Columbia. One of the doctqrs' main prob lems. Dr. Wilcox reported, is sup erstition. One primitive remedy is to make the patient swallow a med icine brewed from a certain kind of snake?apparently becaues the snake's markings resemble those of the disease on the human skin. In some places there is a belief that "the men will not lie strong and able to face life successfully unless they have contracted some very spectacular form of yawst" Children are sometimes delibe rately infected at an early age, he found, so that their bodies are mutilated by the time they are 12. "The face," he said, "may lose all human aspect and become noth ing more than a nightmarish mask worthy of the legends of the Mid dle Ages." Thirst For Knowledge LINCOLN, Neb. ?Max Den i ney, administrative assistant to j Nebraska Gov. Robert Crosby, faces 1 an assignment that could keep him | busy quite some time. Denney wound up in possession ! of a letter from an Omaha student | which asked: "Please send me, as quickly as possible, all information i on the state of Nebraska. Particular Robber DENVER 'API?A man carrying a pistol went into a North Denver florist's shop, took a look inside the cash register, muttered "this isn't enough" and walked out. Groundhogs are marmots. il Texas Bird Shelter GALVESTON. Te*. ?One of few places in North America where the roseate spoonbill will nest is a small island which would have disappeared years ago had not Texas saved It. it is Vington Island in Galves ton Bay. When members of the | Outdoor Nature Club of Houston t discovered the exotic bird nesting on the island in 1830. they also saw that the Island was eroding away. Club members planted oleanders, hackberries and other shrubs and trees to hold the soil. The plants also furnished the birds with more shade and nesting sites. Now the roseate spoonbill is often joined >y Louisiana herons, black-crowned night t. toi rw 1 sno? 1 ? 1 sanciuai \ u ? "1 Isevi . 'Wr tmafM ! and in ' J sigmV. . J Bigger and Better Is Our Fine Haywood County Hospital An institution with a splendid record of 25 years of service to this section of WNC Waynesville Wholesale Co. At The Depot Ed Glavich, Manager Waynesville. X. C. ... 25 TEARS Or SERVICE 3 Registered neighbors in congratulating the staff of the Haj?<>oH t Pharmacists Hospital during the observance of your 25th Anniversary. W?" 111 1 1 ?Jq 3erVe You 'a"y Prout' ?' the new addition and the many new and mod'111 ^ , offered by this fine hospital . . . one of the most modern and >'|? 1 institutions of its kind in the entire area. I I SMITH'S DRUG STORE Phone 25 Main Street