Kjist Groups ?ct Tuesday I (tH, \> oinan s Society ? , r" 1 Bf fc meet in the home m m . ,.i ? the V ? , ,,,, M. K ^B una r raiici ?> ? liooeson Hi cua P-'n, ? "? the ? ,u, ? I I?? tseKoat *?"? ***? " as co-in?siess at 'f.M , will meet in the home ul> -.uou* at .:o0 p.m. w,n meet in tne nou.e h Love at Case juna Lit-v an Serivce Guild fm i ne home ol Mrs. Luarris WH11 MISS fcuiw L-iu)su--.s at c-iU p ul l's Pastor bn Pilgrimage | pean bnrines I Lawrence Newman, [ St. John's Catholic Lini yesterday from J?,. a Marian Year i>il H | | e \ at lean. He w ill ^B;, Shrine of Our l.ady ? Portugal, l.ourdes. ? and other shrines in H will be away about two , r Newman's ah ? h, ii David Waters will B. . cluirc h here H.;r H Goold, sr. expect# Hi- weekend tor Towson, He she will make her and daughter H and Mrs Edgar H. B Flapper Hairdo Comes Back .1 \/./. .Hit tiT . . . This is one of the latest fall hair styles, reminiscent of the flapper shin- 1 gle Dob. AP Newsfeatures Everybody Hints about the Roar- j ing Twenties?now everyone will look tne part it tlie tail iashion and hairdo experts have their way. A new coif, designed by Charles of the Kitz to match the casual, no waist, hip-hugging styles, is a modernization ot the flapper bob. One style is off the face with skek. deep waves bordering on the lace and dipping behind the ear. Worn a half-inch longer than the summer shingles, this simple style looks well with the berets and tight-fitting hats being shown. Other styles feature short, | fringed bangs reminiscent of the | Twenties. Wave lotion is used to set the dip. HDC Schedule Friday, September 3. 9:30 a.m., j Center Pigeon. Mrs. M. V. Bram- I Jette. Friday, September 3. 7:30 p.m.,1 Jonathan?Mr-s Hardy Nelson. Tuesday, Sept. 7. 2:00 p.m. ?? j Beaverdam?Mrs. George Wright iMrs. Charles Jacobs). * ? . . | Want ads bring qutrl: result* BLACK'S Iall I at first sight! 5998 ; I patU 111 >bow Is up un' ?dd ? thl full length coat ? lub collM , ? buttons Inrli against wind* . . Irmm d by d?eP J, I .11 pears on cuffs, in bodies eccdt I at?d on back yoke. Storm cuffs underline deep cuff- I ? -lt'CU B Wa> nesville and ( anion _ ? Personals Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Hudson of Winter leaven, Florida ana Mr. ina Airs. H. L. Fora 01 Aiuiislon, ? 'Viuuama wui arrive luniuirow lo usii Air. and Mrs. S. C. Pvie 01 Laae Hamilton. Florida, who are spending tne summer here. ? * * Mr. and Mrs. George Dickson and tneir children leu yesterday tor their home in Manning, i?. C. ? ? ? Dr. and Mrs. John J. Chapman 1 md children, Martha Ann ano UuUisa, are leaving today tor then nome in Magnolia. Arkansas where , Dr. Cliapnian will resume his duties as an instructor at Soutn state College. The Chapmans ! spent the month of August wim Mrs, Chapman's parents, Mr. ana Mrs. Nathan Vt aiker, in Clyde. * * * Mr. and Mrs. N. Hyatt Walker and children, Nathan and Martha have returned to tneir home in Newport isews, Va., alter visiting the former's parents, Mr. anu Airs. Nathan Walker, at Clyde. * * * Mr. and Mrs. William Jensen of Detroit will arrive tomorrow to visit Mrs. Jensen's aunt, Mrs. j Eric Clauson, and Mr. Clauson. | Airs. Jensen is the former Miss i Catherine Mattson and served as i a counselor at Camp Junatuska For Girls prior to her marriage. * * * Charles Alley left yesterday to resume his studies at the Okla home City University School ol i Aiusic alter spending the summer with his mother, Mrs. Doyle Alley. * * * Woodson Purcell of Largo. Flori da. a former summer resident of Waynesville, is spending this week in town. He is accompanied by Bob Mack and Robert Humer of St. Petersburg and the three men are guests of M. W. Reed at his summer home on the Pigeon Road. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ware left Wednesday for their home in Washington. D. C., after visiting the latter's sister, Mrs. Lois Briggs Hendry. + * * Pvt. Lowell Edwards, who has been visiting his mother, Mrs. El' tie Barton, left Friday for Parris Island. He has been assigned duty at the Marine Base at Camp Le Jeune in Radio and Communica tions. * * * Mrs. William I. Lee has returned j from a visit with her brother and I sister-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Harry Crawford, in San Francisco, Calif. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Homer Riley and j three children of Durham are vis iting Mr. and Mrs. Harry Whisen hunt. * * * Miss Stephanie Moore, who has j spent the summer at* her home at I Lake Junaluska. will leave tomor- j "ow for Warrenton where she has! i position on the faculty of the j :ity schools. * " * * j Dan SteinhofTer left yesterday for his home in Miami, Fla., after | ^pending a month with Mr. and Vlrs. Harry Whisenhunt. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Ray O'Neal and heir daughter have returned to heir home in Dallas, Texas after (pending two weeks with Mrs, 3'Neal's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. 3. Leatherwood. * * * Mrs. John Mauta and daughters, Mary Ann and Doris Elaine, have eturned to San Antonio, Tex., af er visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. G. 1 -eatherwood. 1 T/Sgt. and Mrs. David Leather- j "pod are visiting Mr, and Mrs. G , J. Leatherwood. Sgt. Leatherwood >xpects to leave for duty in Ene and the latter part of September >nd his wife will join him there ater. * * * * * * Mrs. R. H. Owen. 111. of Rich nond, Va . is spending this week vith her parents. Dr. and Mrs. C. j' g, Clark at Lake Junaluska. Her on, Richard Owen, IV, who has >een with his grandparents all ummer, will return home with his , nothcr at the end of the week. i * * * | Mitchell Patton has returned to lis home in Greenville. S. C. after i visit with Ilallett Ward, Jr., at ^akc Junaluska. * * * Mr. and Mrs. John Parrish of St. j Petersburg, Fla., annual visitors to A'aynesville, arc guests at the lome of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Long. ? * * * Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Yount, Jr., i lad as guests for the weekend the ' atter's cousins. Mr. and Mr% Hen-! ey Wilbur and their daughter, Kathcy, of Atlanta, Georgia. * * * DO-Voi I ? us * a micrometer for precision accuracy. rm - ? r l-itfr ^ My Favorite Recipe MRS. A. A. Sill MOLJS Bethel Home Demonstration Club BUDGET STEAK 1 lb. ground beet \ii cup bread crumbs toasted 12 cup sweet milk 1 t. salt Dash of black pepper 1 ij teasp. Worehestershire Sauce 1 a medium onion diced mix wen ana snape oki joui lavot tie siea k, piace on unmet raeis and broil 10 - 12 minutes, turn and brown on other side. Garnish Witt pimento slices and parsley. Washington Won't Talk Of New Fall Fashions By JANE EADS WASHINGTON ?Believe it or' not, the boys on Capitol Hill won't talk about the newest "new 1 look'' of the fashion world's pace setter, French designer Dior, which is rocking the rest of the world. Deadlier to the anions perhaps than the H-bomb is (he subject of the 11-line, so-called because that's what Dior's new style is supposed to make a woman looke like. Yes. an If. says Dior The Dior crea tions, much like American flapper j styles of the early '20s. straight, flat, bustless, with waist-line at the hips-?are to my mind, pretty ; frightening. Senators and Congressmen, or- j dinarilj willing to talk about any thing they think their constitu ents are interested in. take a firm ; stand privately but don't want to1 st*k their necks publicly out on j this one. Sen. Flanders tH-Vt.i, who's had a great deal to say about Sen. Joe McCarthy of Wisconsin, says that "for the moment I'm concen trating on other matters" and "I ! don't know whether I'm competent ! to comment on this style." Sen. Ellender (D-La.i went a bit further: "Why women fail for any fashion started some place else I don't know. Those designers are just trying to get women to buy more clothes. Some women will wear anything to draw attention. Take the hat fashions. They're hideous, absurd. I doubt if they'll ever get a Whistle with this flat look." Rep. Bender iR-CM, who used to be in the ladies ready-to-wear bus iness back in Cleveland, says he used to be concerned about Dior but found that women make up ? their own minds about fashion "And listen, lady. I'm running foi the Senate, and there are more wo men voters than men," he said "Also I have a wife, two daughter; and two granddaughters, and 1 know when to keep my big moult shut." Congress' youngest member Rep. Wampler (D-Va.) is "defin itely against" the new look, hope nobody he knows ever gets rigged up like tMat and can't imagine wh> any women would want to,-"except for a job". He probably won't have to worry. His pretty wife, daugh ter of Rod. Baker iR-Tenn.) studied art and designs her own clothes. Rep, Javitz (D-N.YJ "believes u the greatest friendship with tin French" but hopes American wo men will stay the way they are "1 don't want to change them at all." he said * ,* y Besides limbering up on the ten nis court on his 11 _< acre place in nearby Alexandria, and walking his dogs. Whiskey and Soda and Jigger. Supreme Coin t Justice Hugo Black can keep further in trim chopping wood: The nine fireplaces in his rambling historic mansion must need a lot of logs, though the place is airconditioned. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, a good one himself, was asked at a Washington lunch eon what makes a good hiker. "The best way is to just put one foot ahead of the other," he re plied. Never Can Tell OCEAN VIEW, Va (API?When Martha Shaw Thompson was 3 she was lost for four hours from a beach hotel here. Her mother said she would never bring her daugh ter to Ocean View again. In the next 13 years Martha Shaw grew into a mighty pretty young lady at Windsor. N. C., and the folks wanted to send her here for a beauty contest. Mamma relent ed and broke her promise. Martin won the title Miss Ocean View Centennial. LAFF-A-DAY ' - ''jren-c v. ? ? CO*-* IfM. KING rtATUgK* SYNDICATE. In-, WOULD tlLHIS SI. It'OTA "Oh-h, I just remembered . . . your mother telephoned this morning." ' Snake Uptets Trip CLIFTON FORGE. V?. (AP> ? ' Mr. and Mrs. Roy K. Dotson were en route bv auto to some grocery shopping when Mrs Dotson noted a four-foot -nuke under her feet. Wlule Dotson tried to swing oft the highway to park Mrs. Dotson ! hurriedly transferred to the reai I seat only to find the snake had ! beat a retreat underneath the 'front seat while she went over it i Dotson cut his hand trying to kill the snake, whieh finally took refuge under the back seat A re i lurtant Mrs. Dotson entered the ! front seat and kept a keen eve 011 the back while Dotson drove into i town. He got medical treatment 1 for the cut hand and help in dis i lodging the reptile. It was identified as a harmles j variety. .CARD OF THANKS We wisli to express our appreei atioi^ for the lovely lloral tributes also expressions of sympathy anc kindness shown during the illnes and death of J. W Shelby. Johnny & Natalie Shelby. BETTY SUE * i IP' wvnm V l.k J* ACCORDING V OUO JUNuLl 4NCLTKKS r** WTU. w?=?< to SCIlNflSfS,-- ) .< SPRANG rxJOM IONS. *? I / vyvo WOULDN'T' J ^ ?? fiGtRS and errata i . '^A < / \ rtoociouv- IV ^Z.z?" 3 *j :l ?. Well it won't tie lone before that old School Itell is going to be ring ing! Have you done that RACK-TO-SCHOOL shopping for your youngsters? Itetter drop by ELLEN'S. today. We feature such quality lines as euats h> Toddler Craft and Coat Craft, linen suits and dresses by (>len of Michigan. Shop With Ease And Confidence ? ?BIS5S1I8' m m ?ijyfjfrV - l mtr.TTKnwStf I flpuu^'yi //Twl mBSSML/Je ^ ?f a Lifetime for Her/ . m ^vU/eof a Lifetime for You/ m ' fmiiSbM vXcARATll oiDIAMONDS|l |ggy| >/2 CARAT I o|DIAMONDS|l n ONE CARAT ll .1 DIAMONDS || pM5J Q^convenient credit/ k tingt and Diamond* #nlargtd to ?ht?w detail Serving Haywood Since 1939 ? Haywood's Oldest Jewelers PI4 ! I 1