NEW BOOKS AT REGIONAL LIBRARIES V By: Ashton Chapman FATHERS AND DREAMERS. This novel by Dallas Miller is about the impact of global con flict on the conflicts of a small town, especially on two Ameri can familes. SISTERS AND BROTHERS. This novel by Janet Stevenson is a powerful story of the les sons learned today when north ern whites venture into the South to "help’' the Negro. BAY LEAVES. Reprints of the prlze-winn ng poems submitted in the annual contests sponsored by the Poetry Council of North Cacolna, 1950-1961. PRIZE STORIES 1967: THE O. HENRY AWARDS. This is the 47th annual volume in thitf dst ngu<shed series. Like its predecessors, the present collec tion includes work by establish ed writers and relative un knowns. HELMETS AND WASPS. Tn s novel by Michael Mort is the story of the dramatic events which reveal to a German sold ier in World War 11 what kind of man he truly is. SOLDIERS' REVOLT by Hans Hellmut Hirst. An extraordinary novel about the officers' attempt on H tier’s life. The pace is re lentless, the tension extraordi nary, the characterization in c'sive. THE HERETIC by Alison Mac leod is the story of Anne Askew as it m : ght have been told by the maid who was w'th her at the I me she met death at the stake. It is English history under the reign 202 f Henry VIII, illumined by imagination. TRUMPETS OF JUBILEE by Constance Roarke is a colorful witty study of five of the most popular figures of the mid-nine teenth century. Henry Ward Beecher, Harr'et Beecher Stowe, Lvman Beecher, Horace Greeley and P E. Bamum. THE COURTESY OF DEATH. This gripp'ng novel by Geoffrey Household pits one man’s ingen uity aga'nrt superior numbers, dedication and cunning. THE VIRGIN OF SAN GIL. In this novel by Paul Olsen men of innocence and nature are set aea nst the corrupted over civi lized forces of the c'ty, bringing new ins ght to the natural man’s incredible simplicty and purity. Plain talk about a complete package of home insurance Your Nationwide agent has it l CECIL G. ANGLIN Burnsville , Tel. NHJ 2-2170 / NATIONWIDE INSURANCE Th* men from Nationwide is on your olds V . 1.11-i: • 111 AI.TII • 111 »M K • « Alt • lil XINKSS V N ili..,iwi,|. Mutual In-urai... “I' ''l ki" In ' llM ' Oln^ THE YANCEY RECORD THE SEASONS HEREAFTER This haunting novel by Elizabeth Ogilvie is the story of Vanessa and Owen Bennett's love, accent ed by accidents of nature storms and almost m'raculoos runs of fish—on the Ma : ne coast. INSIDE SOUTH AMERICA by John Gunther. Here in one rich, eye-opening book are all the majesty, muddle, romance and misery of a great continent; al together new; a firsthand report. THE SUM AND TOTAL OF NOW. This novel by Don Rob ertson is nostalgic, funny, full of warmtr and power and an abid ng rightness. THE HIGH COMMISSIONER by Jon Cleary. With action at every turn, this novel moves with complete assurance from sa’.-n to conference table to furt ve meeting place. A superb entertainment, it is also a know ing picture of the contemporary world—and underworld. THE JEWEL IN THE CROWN. Tb s novel by Paul Scott is laid in India. The large cast of char acters bring an entire heterog eneous society to life, and the technique of the narrator is such that the reader to know that society in the context of both 1942 and today. WYATT’S HURRICANE. The scene of th ! s novel by Desmond Bag’ey is a lush Caribbean is land, whose rebel leader, una ware of its approach, is mass r ng his forces for an attack on the city. As the wmd and the war increase Wyatt becomes the one w*io <-an save the island from destruction, the inhabitants from death. THIRTEEN STORIES BY BU DORA WELTY. Memorable stor ies selected by Ruth M. van de Kleft, who also wrote the infro duction. THE MODERN RESEARCH ER by Jacques Barsun and Hen ry F. Graft, An instructive and urbane manual on liow to gath er and organize facts, check their accuracy and report the f ndings, simply, clearly and gracefully. THE GOLD IN THE SEA. Thirteen short stories by Bryan Friel about .the young and the old, the gay and the sad, the hopeful and the disillusioned, set in present-day Ireland. DON QUIXOTE, U. S. A. Un- der its comic and. satire dis gu:ses this novel by Richard Powell ,invest'gates the ways in which good intentions can be come thwarted in th’s bad old fascinathg world, and the ways in which right can triumph in a rather wrong way. SATURDAY THE RABBI WENT HUNGRY by Harry Kem elman is more than a superb mystery story; i» is a fully structured novel filed with de lightful characterizations and penetrat'ng ins'ghts into compar ative religious attitudes toward suicide, drunkenness, civil rights —even what to name a baby; THE TEMPER OF OUR TIME by Eric Hoffer dissects the chief forces work'ng to remake our world. It is a vigorous, provoca tive statement by a man willing to grapple with the painful pro cesses of original thought. LABAN’S WILL. Dealing, liter ally, with the matter of death and death-:n-life, this is an in vigorating and thougrtful novel, by albert Lebowitz. THE FOURTH GIFT. An h!s torical novel, by El zabeth Bor ton de Trevino, set in the state of Jalisco, Mexico, in a time when decrees designed to de stroy the Catholic church drove We salute you, grads ... with deep pride in your present achievements, high hopes and heartiest wishes for a future full of accomplishment. As you "take off" toward new 2 goals, may Commencement truly be just the beginning of exciting opportunity and attainment, and may you soar to ever-greater heights of success. The sky's the ■ J limit... the future is yours! YOUM AUTO STIISJNC: WANTT Craftsmen And Leaders Distuss Co-op The craftsmen of the W.A.M. Y. area moved a step closer to the formation of a Co-op at a meeting at which Mrs. Jarnce V.’hitener, Crafts Specialist, pre sided in Newland on May 11. Mrs. Whitener expla’ned that a Board of Directors should be appointed so that Incentive Grants for incorporation cos's, fees, operating expenses, etc., could be sought; also for inves tigating capital needs' and su't able craft assembly points in the four count’es. The craftsmen then divided into groups by counties to elect three members of a temporary Board of Directors from each county. Those elected were, Wa tauga; Mrs. Asa Reece, Mrs. Iva Lee Harmon and Mrs. WII Cook; Avery; Mrs. Ann McCoury, Mrs. Pearl Norwood and Mr. Dewey Harmon, with Mrs. Sm ; th Hannon as alternate; men, women and children to violent guerilla warfare *n de fense of their faith. THURSDAY, MAY 25. 1967 Mitchell: Mr. Robert S'.atz, with two others to be named later; Yancey: Mr. Lloyd Wilson, Mrs. Lo's McKinney and Mrs. Betty McMahan, with Mrs. Cora Mc- Whirter as alternate. <- Mrs. Whitener then introduced Mr. Ruffin Tucker, W.A.M.Y. Marketing Specialist, who ad vised that he would be working with the Board of Directors in its task of making proposals to the membershiD Ur t u ® "rpani- Eational structure in making rg. ccmmendat.ons for capital needs to the Co-op. ARTHRITIS-RHEUMATISM Do claims and double talk make you doubt you can get any relief from arthritic and rheumatic pains? Get 100 STAN BACK tablets or 50 STANB*ACK powders, use as direct ed. If you do not get relief, return the unused part and your purchase price will be refunded. Stanback Company, Salisbury, N. C.

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