I ? THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Iitecl Lindsey Gudger Given Job esigning The New Hospital Winq ^^construction is concern is usually the first E, job and one of the fast ^Lcrriied solely with draw for the building and ^L| the specifications are ? earned out. In the case Hpwood County Hospital. Kidger. the 20-year-old Eral firm of Asheville. was ? submit plans soon after I issue was passed and rep He. of the company have Epu? a close eye on the ^?10:; ?ct> do not. as many people ? perform actual construc H? job is to draft the plans K-artmg firms carry out these plans is no easy ? the case of the Haywood Hospital, the architects had I the requirements of the Hblir Health Service, the Commission. ? stale Board of Health in I to the hospital Board of ? Board ot County Com Hs and the hospital ad ?or Finally, they have to ^?uo the allocation as much Hie Three dillcrent sets of Hd to be drawn up before ^?r Then the ae ^Hstruction drawings were ^Rrhirh amounted to 33 sepa Htv Twenty-five sets of ^R sheets had to be made ?set-. of the four different ^Rion for the plumbing, I electrical, and g?neral ^?ion plans. ^Ball this required the work draftsmen at least 12 Band along with the con ^R supervision, some 10,000 ^Rrs were needed by the ?s to complete the job. H in the winter of 1947 that ?pdrnce regarding the hos Hs started between Gudger ? Hoard of Commissioners. ? two years before the bond Hs passed. After the money ^Rrcd and Gudger given the ? igning. tne actual draw ^Re started in February, 1950 ^Rpleted 13 months later. Htmplfted hospital is in the Hf a "T" and will be easy ?to if the county ever de Hrxpand the building again. Hiistrator Lee Davis had this ^Bbout the architect's work: He been impressed with the Hiness and attention to de B Mr. Gudger has given this ^Rte design and layout as are much better than I ^Reined they would be." ^Rieh it was long believed ^Rosaurs became extinct be ? world suddenly got cool Ex scientists now believe ?natures were accustomed I weather and disappeared ? oi id warmed up. Much Traveled Writer Now Living In Capitol By JANE EADS WASHINGTON (API ? The un predictable Caresse Crosby, who has polished off the memoirs of her exciting and unorthodox existence here and abroad, came back to! Washington for an "autograph. party" and to announce her next bid for the headlines. In her book, "The Passionate Years," the chic, shapely and soci- j ally prominent New York-born Caresse describes herself as one "who always said yes to anything that would bring joy and excite ment." This pleasant acquiesence led her through a kaleidoscopic journey during the hectic '20s and '30s. Most of that time she lived among the literati and the news makers on the continent. In the past few years Mrs. Cros by has turned to more sober pur suits. In 1950 she returned from a sojourn abroad to register as a lob byist on Capitol Hill, seeking co operation from Congress and the "women of America" to do some thing "realistic about peace and! progress in 1950." This project | didn't get very far. Then Caresse said yes to another idea. She went back to Europe, where she became a founder of the Wo men's World Center of Non-Gov ernmental Organizations. Current ly the Center is proposing a world exchange of women's home handi craft objects. Out of the Women's organization has grown a plan for "world citi zens'* to meet this May on the slopes of Mount Parnasus at Del phi, Greece, where Mrs. Crosby finished her book and suggests that the cornerstone of a free world order be laid and a "Common wealth of World Citizens" be built. Mrs. Crosby was first married to 'Richard Rogers Peabody of Boston and Peabody. Mass. They had two children. Mrs. Crosby was divorced in 1922 and in Paris married Harry Crosby, a poet and a Bohemian "in the best sense of the word," she says?and together they "roamed the continent and Africa in search of all things elusive," They set up the Black Sun Press in Paris and brought out first editions of the works of James Joyce, Marcel Proust, D. H. Lawrence, Kay Boyle, Hart Crane and their own poetry. Crosby died in 1930. but Caresse remained abroad until 1937. when she came back to "settle" briefly on a plantation near Bowling Green. Va.. where she entertained such notables as Salvador Dali, the painter, and Henry Miller, the writ er. In 1941, "as a war effort," she opened the Crosby Gallery of Mod ern Art here for new young and stranded artists she had known in Europe. The belief is common that it is possible to make an image of a person and by destroying the im age, to destroy the person. I Former Dayton Rubber Worker Now Stationed With Army In Germany WITH THE 1st INFANTRY DIV. IN GERMANY?Pvt. Lucis E Kuy kendall. whose wife, Lois, and par ents. Mr. and Mrs, H. M. Kuyken dall, live on Rt. 1. Canton, is now serving in Germany with the 1st Infantry Division. Stationed in the southern part of Germany the 1st is undergoing constant Held training as part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiz ation Army. A security platoon man in Head quarters Company of the 16th In fantry Regiment, KuykendalT en tered the Army last October and received basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. In civilian life he was employed by the Dayton Rubber Co. in Waynesville. Get this OnlY * $2335?^ ? IIUICH?" Ho ave you shopped the new cars? Looked at prices, noted Dc checked the room? Brother! ?this bigger b v"ti i sweeter-riding '53 Buick Special Sedan is the or?>?.C -8 year' hands down! Come in, try it?it's the ? Special in all Buick history. nger Sedan Model 450. il'vilroted. Optional equip? state and local taxes, ft any, additional. Prices / -"''y m adjoining communities due to shipping charges, r<"o change without not.ee. 'AYLOB MOTOR CO. ^?t Str*?t Waynesville, N. C. 0 Bulldozer Starts Moving Dirt For New Wing Of Hospital This picture was made on July 17, 1951, when the first dirt for the new wing of the Hospital was moved. A large group of civic lead ers and officials were on hand for the occasion. They can he seen back of the bulldozer. The former rear entrance to the hospital is shown at the top of the picture. (Mountaineer Photo). Hours Set Aside For Trucks Going Through Park Beginning May IS. the National Park Service will enforce the regu lations regarding trucking within the Great Smoky Mountains Na tional Park, as set out below. On September 23, 1952, the As sistant Secretary of the Interior approved a special regulation con cerning the operation of trucks within the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This regulation was published in the Federal Register on October 1, 1952. and is quoted below: "From May 15 to October 15, in clusive. between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m., trucks over one and one-half ton rapacity, and trucks of one and one-half capacity carrying a load in excess of 5.000 pounds shall not be operated or moved over any road in Great Smoky Mountains National Park." One Of Those Guys PITTSBURGH (APi?The wife of an attorney tells how she escaped receiving a traffic ticket by telling the truth about her husband. "If 1 know these attorneys, he'll have this fixed up. so don't worry about it," said the policeman who stopped her speeding car. "That's where you're wrong." she said. "If I get a ticket, he won't try to fix it. I'll have to pay it out of my own money." The woman said the cop stopped writing and declared: "Oh, he's one of those guys, eh.' Well, if he won't take care of it, I will," and he tore up the ticket. as hostesses^ ' The Members Oi The Home Demonsiralion Clubs Of Haywood County, Invite You To Attend The OPEN HOUSE PROGRAM Of The HAYWOOD COUNTY HOSPITAL ?? t w f ^ Tuesday, May 12 ? - 1 until 5 p. m. A Guided Tour Of ________________ Every Member Of ? REFRESHMENTS mi ? The Fine New The Family SERVED Building Invited