fional Study Is Sought I Shortage Of Nurses jy JANE EADS ?jgT0N ? Congresswo p Bolton has asked ,0 authorize a National j .n 0f Nursing Services the growing nursing d seck out ways and ; providing adequate care , ition's sick. .joriv informed." Mrs ys. the public will be j J to action on all levels and will accept with more under standing the increasing costs of nursing education." ? ? ? Mrs. de Valle, Peruvian-born wife of the Honduras ambassador who has written books on the his tory of her own country, is now helping her husband with his forthcoming volume "Political Ideas of Central America During the 20th Century." This book 1 which ought to be of great Interest to historians will be published by the Fondo de Culture F.conomon ? ica. * * ? Frieda Hennoek, only woman member of the Federal Communi cations Commission, is sporting the handsomest fur stole in town. It's sable, Mabel. ? * + Tiny Mrs. Wellington Koo, wife of the Chinese ambassador, and Sir Percy Spender, the handsome Australian ambassador, were seen doing a mean jitterbug together at a recent shindig. Hulian Koo al so does a breathtaking hula. * * ? One of the most beautiful blondes on the local social circuit is the lovely wife of the financial counselor of the Panama Embassy. Julio Heurtematte. She is also one of the best dressed of the diplo matic wives. At a recent dinner dance she was wearing white tulle banded in gold sequins and made after the style of her country's national dress. * * ? "Three black sheep" was the way a trio of bigwigs described themselves when they appeared at a white-tie party wearing black ties. They were Baron Silvercruys, Belgian ambassador; Sir Percy Spender, Australian ambassador, and Attorney General Herbert Brown ell. Hjl^^n^l ^k j-- Wf Give your good judgment *n other opportunity to exercise BKSS 2when you choose the ring for the girl you chose so well. '' t'?ne ^ ch??s'nfE 'he m 12-diamoho duitte kSp $150?? PAY A LITTLE AT A TIME! ^ J E W ELER I gs<&sa@BST^ bbb~?9rr#y ..PRACTICAL SUNBEAM APPLIANCES It COFFEE |-ra / SATURDAY X KMASTER coffee / \ Kesentative \ is day 1 P * iwwMtfate Sun- / J I AT MARTIN ELECTRIC / ?Nan bbtr av?rs. I / , ?REMASTER B-wnrmow cSunbeam MIXMASTER New, exclusive BOWL-FIT beater* for lighter, higher, finer-textured cakes?creamier, fluffier masked pots toes, etc. AU the batter goes into and through them for more even mixing, greater aeration. Mixmaster does the perfect mixing job. Has the famous Mix Finde/ Dial, automatic Bowl-Speed control, auto matic Beater Ejector, and other exclusive features that make cooking and baking so font and easy. Mixes, mashes, whips, beats, stirs, blends, juices, folds, etc. I Sunbeam TOASTER Siabeam IRONMASTER Swbeam IAIY BOTTU WARMER IlAPTIN FREE COFFEE I "?I* ? II? All Day Saturday? ECTRTP PA Panukis will be served in the Mom ^ ink and up-side-down cakes in the i afternoon Main Street , Brie - a - Brae Should Sparkle With Cleanliness By RUTH CURRENT State Home Demonstration Agent i BRIGHTEN BRIC-A-BRAC ? Glass or china vases, bric-a-brac, figurines and decorative pieces of : a similar nature add their own in imitable touch of home to the rooms in which they are used if i they sparkle and glow with im maculate cleanliness. A dusty film , almost inevitably gathers on all such articles. To remove it, the use of baking soda as a cleansing agent helps save time and work. To clean decorative objects of I glass, china or pottery, dissolve three tablespoonfuls of baking soda in each quart of warm water used. Then dip a clean soft cloth into this solution and carefully clean Rinse with a second cloth wrung out of clear warm water; wipe dry. MR. AND MRS. HARRY T. STEWART of Maggie Valley, former ly of Florence, S. C., announce the engagement of their daughter, Kappy, to Ronald Jordan, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Ellis Jordan, also of Florence. The wedding will take place June 5 at St. Paul Metho disst Church in Florence. Marriage Or Not Girls Urged To Learn A Job By JANE EADS WASHINGTON?Alice K. Leo pold, director of the U. S. Wo ; men's Bureau, advises American high school girls to prepare for a job even if they expect to marry soon. Mrs. Leopold says that while four out of every five U. S. women who are 14 or older are married, nearly one third of the nation's workers are women. They work for the same reason that men work: i to support themselves and to help support themselves and to help support the family, surveys show. I In a new Women's Bureau leaf let. "After High School What?" she discusses the problem of 1 | If the piece is carved or embossed, use a soft brush; dip in moistened baking soda and brush gently, j Rinse with cloth wrung out of flear water. Dry. CLEANING COOKING UTEN SI1S?Cooking utensils and bever age makers of various kinds are subject to stain formation. Thus, dried-on-foods form hard-to-re move rings on baking dishes and easseroles. Coffee and tea leave brown stains in the pot or in cups in which the beverage is brewed or served. In the same way, con tainers used for growing ivy or house plants in water often acquire stubborn green rings and discolor ations. The use of the basic bak'gg soda cleaning solution <3 table spoonfuls of soda to 1 quart warm water) is a safe, simple, easy-to use remedy. To remove dried-on stains from casseroles, baking dishes or glass or enameled ware cooking utensils in which food has been cooked, put three tablespoonfuls of baking soda into the dish, fill with hot water%nd let stand a few minutest Then wipe off the stain, wash and rinse. choosing a career and suggests practical ways of thinking about it, while a girl is still in high school. These include sizing up your qualifications "by taking a look at your interests and talents." The leaflet, purchasable for 10 cents from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington 26, D. C., makes it easy for young girls to analyze the situation. There are blanks for them to fill out , . . "What can you do best?in school, at home, in the community, etc." They are also told how to get im portant job information, how to get expert advice, financial aid and training. Mrs. Leopold warns those who toy with the idea o! quitting school to take a job that "no matter what kind of work you plan to do, a high school education will pay oil in the long run." ? ? ? The story-go-round has it that Haitian President Paul Magoire's byfTet dinner for 2,000 at the Pan American Union here recently cost his government $6 a plate, not including the fire water! And to think I didn't eveq eat a nickel's worth. * ? * Sen. S. L. Holland <D.-Fla.) good naturedly helped Mrs. Harry Cain, wife of the former Washington Republican senator, when she momentarily forgot his name while Introducing him to a luncheon group recently. "That will get you In Dutch," the Florldian prompted. Experts estimate that commer cial air transport in the United States uses about 1,400 planes com pared with 20,000 planes oMnted by businesses and executo^M*' and] 10,000 used by farmers an55 ran chers. Want ads bring quick results And oi* her special day you'll want to jfive her Gifts She Will Like! MAY WE SUGGEST ( ? COATS ? TOPPERS ? SUITS ? DRESSES ? HOSE * LINGERIE I t Remember We Have HALF - SIZES TOO! We Have A Wonderful Selection of 000L COTTONS THE SMART SHOP 109 N. Main Dial GL 9-4210 ? i 'i' .umwji. i". :i ? i ( t yfjB. _ <?XMEW YOMC5] ^Pj|[By North Callahan | A lot of us, when growing up and first hearing of the Stock Ex change, thought It was some place where comely cows and handsome horses were bought an<i sold. Some folks still think It is such a place? and are more than ever convinced of the presence there of animals when they hear of the "bulls" and "bears" who operate on the Ex ?hange. In recent years, the local organization has gone to a lot of rouble to explain to people just "hat II does. 3 Being in the neighborhood of he New York Stock Exchange, 1 ? ent in to see what was going on. Of course this was not my first "isit there but with so much gen eral interest nowadays in the stock market, it seemed important to ~tve an up-to-date report on it. Tnside was the usual confusion. A -rent room resembling a huge "vmnasium was filled with men milling about the floor, shouting i^ke tobacco auctioneers, grabhin" little bits of paper and making marks on them, chattering into telephones and watching numbers on a board like children looking ,at a puppet show. Now and then a flurry occurred at one of the pens, and I was told that a big bunch of some well-known stock had just changed hands. 3? Whether you think of it as a 1 gambling den or the core of our nation's econoinv. the stock ex chanee is imoortant. Remember 1929? Or would vou. like most oth ers. rather foreet? A friendly offi cial told me that of the thousands of visitors to the exchange everv day. some asked such uuestions as "Where is the counter at which one can buv General Motors stock? The answer: there is no such counter. No stock certificates are houeht on the trading floor, not does cash chance hands there. A huver oavs his broker outside wht handles the transaction. "Can I e? down on the trading floor and hin a share?" No. only members of th? Exchange and their emnloves cai do this, for onlv thev are allowei on the floor. "Where are the scat I hear about on the stock ex change?" There are no seats Everybody stands up. Anyway those "seats" you hear about are memberships on the Exchange anc cost many thousands of dollar# "Who sets the price of stocks?' The people who buy them?anc usually this is determined by sup ply and demand. I mentioned 1 had heard that manipulation bj "profit-taking stock-market play ers" often caused the prices to gc up and down. The reply was that the Stock Exchange encourages In vestment, but not In any partlcu I lar stock. 3 The New York Stock Exchange began in 1793 when two dozen brokers decided to meet daily under a buttonwood tree in Wall Street to handle the stocks which George Washington's government issued to help pay for the Revo lutionary War. Later money had to be raised to build canals, rail ! roads etc. With the development of our nation, the stock market has grown too, sometimes In a boom, sometimes in panic, but al ways active and influential. It ie now housed in a fine, big building, with almost 2.000 member Arms across the country. The Exchange defines a share of stock as an in terest in a business or property Purchased by a buyer, who then becomes one of the owners of the corporation. In a way. the bic stock exchange here might be called a supermarket of the nation's main commodities, successor to the old time trading post. 3 In regard to the unprecedented high prices which stocks are bring ing today, 1 asked my old friend and expert, Joe Docter, whose of fice is near the big exchange. He replied with skepticism, reminded me that he had told me some time ago that a boom caused by "pro fessional manipulators'' always re sulted in a boomerang. But, I ask ed him, aren't the stocks wort! what they sell for today? What shall I tell my readers about how to know good stock from bad? H? quickly responded, "The answer b , in the Bible, as most other answer i are. The man who builds his houM , upon a rock, will withstand thi , storms, but he who builds it 01 . the sand, will probably be awep away. Before anyone buys stock a , anything else," Joe concluded, "h , should, above all. investigate, t ,1 see if it is on solid ground." ?? | Light On Parking ' 1 JOL1ET. III. fAPV-Oriver tfcrr s Kavanaugh, 19, backed into a park ' ing place aqd a $5 fine. Officer Jerome Kern said he sat ? Kavanaugh spot a parking placi - on the left aide of an intersectioi 1 which had a no-left-turn waralni sign. Kavanaugh didn't turn left He turned right and backed aero* I the intersection and into the park - place. But be backed through a ret I light. r Kern said the law on red light) ? applies whether you're going for ) ward or backward. ijtwfo MX, hjum mmty/ a patiWt/ ^to [ J" , 4H You will be thrilled to see Syracuse China's Bridal Chorus line which has been de Calaitw signed especially for I llj* you?the modern bride. Yes! your discriminate jj ' ing taste and your particular needs wert the I 1/ inspiration for an entirely new shape and a tJ variety of new patterns! II Yon are invited to pay us a friendly J visit to see this fine Syracuse China. 9 Piece Place Setting $10 75 fffSa " - GIFT SHOP-/ 202 N. Main St. Waynarrilla Shepp?'s___J] fi *??/? ? s Mb? Gilts MOTHER... V 1 COTTON ! DRESSES Mom can always use an extra cotton dress. Some with Jackets. Sixes 10 to 24Mi ?m QC Specially 3d Priced! +0 OTHERS TO 19.95 f Lovely New HATS 0 / \ For ( v Mother ? i ?" ? ? ' ' ' : s' * Smart, New Spring y And Summer StyloB > X 2" OTHERS TO 5-95 ; : >? ? NO IRON - - QUICK DRY j NYLON BRUNCHIE Mom's closest friend around the boose and garden is a branch coat. These quick-dry d% QQ nylons are lovely K 33 and only IP CLUTCH BAGS Fashion taken in hand - . ? plain Or fancy .. . tuned to taste .. . our catchy costume-cord In e?d dutch v . a lovely gtft that help but adore. 1 00 Come see! A UP | Steppe's 1U Mala Street 3Lo - ? M"*- -.ess

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