Page Six New Shipment Os TOOLS ! LOOK FOR THE NEW SUPPLY IN THE WINDOW OF THE BLACK MTN. HARDWARE CO. Black Mountain, N. C. Phone 3481 : TTXTxxxxxxxxxrxxxiiixxxxxxxxxxxixxixxiixxxxxxxxy GIVE FATHER THE BEST «ittw tux ■AM OMttIMC ■ «MH> WOTOTiPT | • / COOLIR...TW § I w M j JltiNH |l(l f*r • I i M I Mm •/NmMim* l H iufifknlk«t« MiM, BnhM« T* aa4 Aiunket* UMto thii >»■< • tamtam to ait kortal rj» When Uun in MfW Itfkti . wk«n dim it Kisk *»< tai|M« .. int tm wMI bal .. TWO ON TIIK AISI.K Man of Manhattan Stpttb w and Men'* Cologne in 9 Uupnllm p.rk.,. •! .ophillleallm jQf .JjV'JtH/ Masculine »oii.tri.» Tillilrit* a colorful Thy let I ti*»**»i*ii**iii**»^ Black Mountain Drug Company 1 PHONE 4121 BLACK MOUNTAIN NEW RECORDS IN STOCK o Yon baton? to my heart Mexico Charka Wolcott Night and Day Just One Os Those Things Bing Crosby Arp Maria Bchubert Axe Maria-Bach Gounod Los Angeles Philharmonic Andy's Boogie Baby Yon Can Count On Me Charlie Barnet Hasta Manana Siboney Bing Crosby and Xavier Cugat You belong to my heart Baia Bing Crosby and Xavier Cagat There’s a new moon over my shoulder The precious jewel Carolina Playboys Have I told you lately that I love you Mama I’m Sick Whitey and Hogan Home on the range Is the range still the same back home. .Red River Dave Gold on the rainbow Be my darlin’ Carolina Playboys We have a bargain RECORD COUNTER. Old and new tunes. 56 cent records for only 35 cents. Mail orders accepted. u > COME AND VISIT. THE HOME STORE Phone 2751 Black Mountain, N. C. THE BUCK MOUNTAIN NEWS DOES ALL KINDS OF ' JOB PRINTING SEE US FOR AN ESTIMATE ON YOUR NEXT JOB PRINTING NEEDS See Us For BUSINESS STATIONERY PERSONALIZED STATIONERY CALLING CARDS MENUS PROGRAMS NOTICE OF MEETINGS TICKETS (Numbered if you wish) STATEMENTS HANDBILLS OF ALL KINDS o Hut is only a partial list—ask us about your next printing job. THE BUCK MOUNTAIN NEWS Operated by J. C. CORNELIUS and JOHN W. EALY PHONE 4101 NATIONAL GRANGE Legislative Program The existing unrest on the growing prevalence of strikes is a matter of grave concern to every thinking American. Group sel fishness and greed for power should be held in abeyance and subordinated to the general wel fare. We believe that Congress with the support of all national groups, should enact legislation which requires both labor and management place the public wel fare above the selfish demands for power and preferential treat ment. Farm Group Discusses Food And Feed Plans x An accelerated food and feed program to meet famine demands and a threatened food crisis at home is being discussed here by Western North Carolina Farm Security administration representi tives at the George Vanderbilt hotel. P. M. Jackson of Raleigh, re gional information adviser for the FSA, spoke at the opening session yesterday and urged farmers to do the utmost to make their farms self-sufficient and self-sustaining. Paul Laughrun of Asheville, dis trict supervisor, is directing the two-day meeting. A NEW WELFARE OFFICIAL TO BE SELECTED SOON 0 A successor to the late E. E. Conner as superintendent of wel fare in Buncombe county is ex pected to be chosen in the near future, County Commissioner John C. Vance said Thursday. The new head of the depart ment is to be named, or commend ed, at a joint meeting of the county board of commisioners and the members of the county welfare committee he said. Confirmation of the nominee is then made by the state authorities, according to the usual routine. A welfare worker yesterday said the board members would probably meet several times to consider various men who might ments for the post. Ht FATHERS DAY ... this SUNDAY .. and there is just time to pick up a... lovely gift for him - from a belt buckle to a watch - -at The Quality Jewelers. Asheville THE BLACK MOUNTAIN NEWS “Fly” Says Bill LANDINGS x The basic principal involved in j landing an airplane with power off i is to bring it close to the ground and keep it in the air as long as possible. Sit in the plane while it is on the ground, and note the position of the nose with respect to the hori zon. This is the position the plane should be in at the instant before it touches the ground in landing. To make a landing, first assume a normal glide. Continue this nor mal glide until you are approxi mately 15 or 20 feet above the ground. Look ahead and to the sides of the plane to judge your altitude; never look straight down. When you are about 20 feet from the ground, start the leveling off process. This is called breaking the glide. Gradually raise the nose as the plane settles so that by the time you are about 5 feet above the ground the plane will be in level flight position. From here on try to keep the plane in the air. To do this, it will be necessary to keep raising the nose progressively farther as the plane loses speed and begins to settle. By the time the plane touches the ground the stick should have been eased all the way back, and the plane should be in “three point” position. Throughout the landing process, be sure the wings are level and the plane keeps in a straight path The landing is not complete un til the plane stops rolling. There fore, be very careful to keep the stick fully back and the plane rolling in a straight path on the ground, into the wind. Vision is the most important sense used in landing. Keep your eyes level and look far enough ahead so as to keep objects from blurring. If you notice something in your path as you are landing, open the throttle, attain proper altitude and circle the field again. If you make a bad bounce in land ing, open the throttle at once with a smooth motion, attain proper altitude, and circle the field again. (Your instructor will enlarge on this aspect of landing. o Helpful Rules For Landing. o 1. Keep one hand on the throttle at all times 2. Keep the airplane headed di rectly in the wind. 3. Maintain a normal glide at all times; altitude cannot effectively be lost or dissipated by diving, nor can a normal glide be “Stretched.” 4. Dont stare at the nose of the plane, don’t look staight down to judge your altitude. 5. on the “lookout” for other aircraft, field hazards, obstructions, etc. 6. Get the tail down just before the wheels touch. 7. NEVER push the stick forward to correct for an error, either use the throttle or ease off the press ure. 8. When in doubt, open the thro ttle and go around again. 9. After the landing, keep the stick back as far as possible as firmly as possible, until the plane stops rolling. Remember that a landing is not completed until the plane stops rolling. 10. Do not. become “tense” or I “stiff” on the controls. I o I The plane will not land “three point” tuilese it is in a complete stall condition at the instant the wheels contact the ground. :: • S ;! ii ii «> " Guaranteed Radio Serriee !! ;; Also repairs on Toast- ;; ! • ers, irons and small ; • !: appliances. |i -GOFF- ii j: RADIO SERVICE \\ :: Opposite Pest Office L PHONE 4MI Talcs of the Town: In Sardi’s a wise guy was com menting upon the way in which a news weekly picture of some nota bles looked dwarfed compared to Mrs. Roosevelt in their midst. “That’s nothing,” said Merry Mac McMichael, “to the way she dwarfs some people who aren’t even in the picture.” When Queen Wilhelmlna was in the United States during the war she made a tour of inspection at West Point. ... The boys had been drilled for days, and every de tail of protocol was earefully stud ied except one. ... No one informed the band which number to play for Her Majesty’s entrance, and toe leader chose one of his favorite numbers without thinking of the oc casion. ... So, as toe signal was given for the Queen’s entrance (with every soldier standing rigid ly at attention), the band broke into: “The Old Gray Mare, She Ain’t What She Used to Be.” A group of editors were discuss ing the pros and cons of the OPA. “The NAM is right,” said one. “After all, they’ve got business ex perience that money can’t buy.” "They've also got lobbies,” snapped a cynic, “that money can. The Intelligentsia: The career of Booth Tarkington is a lesson to page-struck neophytes. In th* first five years of his writing apprentice ship, the two-time Pulitzer Award winner earned the vast sum of $22.50. . . . Dorothy Thompson will also col’m for a weekly. . . . Louis Fisher, who auth’d “A Week with Gandhi," is flying to India to visit him. . . . There’s a sizzling feud on between novelist James T. Far rell and book critic Sterling North. ... Dr. Harold Urey, atom bomb •dentist (one of the Important ones), will betcha we have an atom bomb war in less than 5 years, if the powers don't agree soon. ... Well, goom-bye-bye, all! S’been nize columning about you. The OPA situation summed up: If s a question of whether the prices will be held down—or the people held up. The Funnies: Alex Woollcott and Heywood Broun walked out on a new flop one night. ... As he left kta row "A” pew, Alex bent over to pick up a lower that had fallen from a bouquet on the stage. . . . “Don’t you know It is bad luck,” ehided Broun, “to take flowers from a grave?” . . . Percy Ham mond once critiqued of a big show failure: “It is toe first time in the atre history that an audience ever suffered from atage-frlght.” Author Somerset Maugham points out: “All is grist for a writer’s mill. I don't create from the whole cloth either of reality or of fancy. I have in my literary kit items In the newspapers, stray encounters in the street, stories I hear, no matter where. Eventually out they grind, either as a story or a play.” The way a columnist grinds it ev ery day—not every year. The Story Tellers: Gene Fowler told Irving Berlin: “You are one of the very few immortals who is still mortal!” Quotation Marksmanship; 0. Henry: Her dress fitted her with fidelity and discretion. . . . Beth Brown; Up In toe skyscrapers old women were filling their bucket* with footprints. . . . Phil Baker; A gal looking for a guy who could make hag dough-dreamt coma true. . . . Anon: He sat at his typewriter tenderly diapering his brain child with neatiy folded phrases. . . Mark Twain: Man was made at th* and of tho weak’* work, when God was tired. . , . Anon: When a girl winks It means one of two things: She haa something in her eye or •he has somebody in it. . . . Ben Hecht: He ate like a man with • stowaway under his vest . . , Olive Schreiner: We talk so much of in tolled and knowledge but what are they? After all. the heart can’t live on them. One would barter all one’s knowledge for one kiss and all one's intellect for one tender touch—Just one! The Times’ Berlin newsboy, Ray Daniell, reported that the Germans live in hope that there will be a war between America and Russia. They believe that such • war will give th«n an opportunity to revive Hazl lsm. , . . In short, when the Allies knock each other-it’s only oppor tunity knocking for Nazis. WUI Rogers went to e dinner but didn’t know It waa a political af e»ir. The speakers were unanimous In peddling bigotry and hatred of tha foreign bom. ... As Rogers roae to leave (in disgust) he heard himself announced as the next speaker who would give his views on the crying needs of the netion Rogers turned and drawled: “After listening to those who preceded me I have come to the conclusion that {rhat this country need* l* f* egh load aad what I need—is fre-h air.” With that he left. BE SURE TO SEND IN YOUR SOCIAL EVenJ Subscribe now for The Black Mountain Ne\ Vs "Service Is Our Motto" - —— ——i , ' ' /' &»**** -*&&&&&&z* t:, j mmmmrn v Vtonmumn ■ WCITY FRENCH BROAD CLEANERS . Phone 2021 Laundry Phone 4881 Cleaners Black Mountain, N. C. EiVOOD! WOOD! LOCKS —FIREPLACE INDLING S. BETTS Black Mountain, N. C. j jon Übico Feeds, JK Seeds and - GBpr Fertilizers * Übico Horse, Steer and * Hog Feeds, Poultry and Turkey Rations Life j BABY Guard Dog Food. i * CHICKS | « DR. 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