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Times-News •r lant Ad Rates fittn*—Cash in Advance) , »vr: ' •'- size type, fat ir - • ^n: half price pahsoq :--"t r.sertiona. ra > ■ a line (th'!s type*; rr.ir; :»um of five j won! this size type first ir.sertion, half ,e {,,r s ; seqTTent in ions. a word for type this for first insertion; tprice for each addi j consecutive inser charge, 25c. ISIFIED DISPLAY RATE 60c P«r inch mb of Thanks and Trib of Respect are accepted a word. not ask for information Mini: "keyed" ads, a3 they Itrictlv confidential. error is made. The Times i is responsible for only incorrect insertion. The mer is responsible for sub »nt insertions. The adver should notify immediately iv corrections needed, classified ads taken over lone. mt ad department closes ion. and classification posi will not be guaranteed that hour. jit ads are always cash in rce except to business men ncerns having accounts this newspaper. When Ads are charged the rate r and 5c per line, 20c and iet line, and 30c and 15c ne. ,FOK SALE kites and Accessories (SALE—Cadillac »ed*n, in I coml.v a. Will sacrifice cash or will trade for dia Brunsun Furniture Co.* louses and Real Estate 'SALE—Seven-room, beauti Ifc...... -rner lot. furnace, e paved road, out side city, t ?7000. Best buy in Hen son county. For tiuiek sale >0. J. D. Solley, Phone RN SIX-ROOM HOUSE. water ht-at. Street assess it oaid in full. One block Main. Center of town, it >1T >0. Terms. Anders & tw. American Bank. * SALE — Shorty'i Pig 'N ix with 10-year lease, k $1750 cash, balance li a month. The lease and 1 will is well worth what * asking as it will net 50 tern, un investment yearly. i-ROOM BUNGALOW for . If vou don't believe this | it. H. G. Love, Wool building:. * tock and Poultry 1»1TE ROCK PULLETS, 3 onths old. priced right for iiate sale. C. H. Magoon, Inev Rock road. • ALE OR TRADE—White I K*>at. trained to work, 1127. Hendersonville. ids and Plant* RYE FOR SALE. $1 . cash. Five acres pro 107 bu-heis. R. K. Stepp, ■*. Hendersonville, N.C. [BUSHELS FULCASTER ■or sale. $2 per bushel, Ten acres produced 249 .u R. K. Stepp, Route pdersonville, N. C. * ^k~~Cabbaije and collard '' "> ready. Davis company. Route 1, Oak 111 a. Htn i- rsonville, N. C. m RENT 13—Room? tl) BOARU'.RS *t °*^ I balanced I u. - week. V a Mcl.a , 412 I t St 115—Houses InT FOR WINTER, fur I h"'i , ,in»oms, J room, kitcfe* and dining •ton Cloae in. laable. !'. O. Box 733. * T%T -Seven-roor- r a^"" . \xre I KaiMtf* 1 view. :v>. —Transportation TRANSPORTATION to bnviUe this week or next, fci'- be: V'r 'lay of this 1 7 buncombe street.^ jecial Notices |H I N G- Rev. N. CoUin p will receive a few Pu" pr the school year at mo<l l'hone 102S^J« jlNTHE WORLD witfc « 1'. \ . ■ New m 1) 120 an<V up. Kasy tevin^ pw Furniture Company. ALLEY OOP Discouraged! - - By HAMLIN TtfEKEf I CLAIM THAT'S TM* WAY T'GIT RIO OF BIG, FOUR-LEGGED PC5TS. C'MON, LES GIT BACK ON DOOTSY BO BO'S TRAIL DON'T SEWAILj BUT, WHAT TRAIL? rw vv 3a kVaO Well, per — ff that dig BA& o' BONES SURE MADE A WCECK OF DOOT5V, BO BO'S .TCAJL/ FWOOSHfNOW. / WE'LL NEVER FIND *IM / J (OH WELL, I'LL MEET \ YEAH, SO FAE. UP WITH THAT CLUCK. / HE'S GOT US SOMEDAY AW y BEAT/ FORGET WHEN 1 DO y HIM. AN LE'S } V'KNOW/ FOOZYj J IF IT WASN'T FER DINNY, I WOULDN'T G-IVE A VvHOOP IF I NEVER SAW MOO I ^ A6AIN NOW TMAT TH' EXCITEMENT IS ALL OVER AN' THROUG-M, I GUESS WE'D BETTER. &E ON OUR WAY BACK TO M00 f J/V-r. I jy © 1934 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. RELIEF NOTES High Spots of Welfare Activi ties as Prepared by Hender ion County Emergency Relief Administration. The public will probably be in terested in the results* of a change in plans of the relief of fice in the manner of paying re lief help. Some counties have paid foi; work in the form of re lief orders and others have used cash. Where the cash method is used it bars the client from ask ing for further aid from the of fice in the way of doctor's bill, medicine, food, clothing? e*e. We gave the 201 workers on various projects last week their choice of a cash or relief order plan and only 40 accepted the cash plan. Whether they work for cash or relief orders, a large per cent of it goes to refund the office for goods and credits thus far ex tended. Miss Mary Betts, who has been acting as clerk for the in formation bureau at the Cham ber of Commerce, has accepted work as teacher in the Seventh Day Adventist school in Colum bia, S. C. The relief projects on which she has been working was discontinued last Friday. I Opportunities are opening for fall work on the farms and the ; relief office always welcomes 1 complaints when relief clients re fuse to work in their neighbor hood, feeling that they have a soft graft at the relief office. The minimum scale of wages is > 30c an hour at the relief office, but this does not fix the scale for individual enterprises. The rate of $1.00 a day prevails gen erally over Henderson county for 'common labor, or 15c an nour when less than a full day. The relief office is expecting its events to accept such wages whenj offered in cash or in the way 6f necessary produce. When such »is offered to relief clients and they refuse to work and are able-bodied so as to be able to follow regular work, the report of such condition would be very MISS SARAH MILLER, teacher of piano. Rates on application. .Phone 1374-W. I'LL PAY YOUR iaals—coun ty and citv and street assess ments with bonds at a great discount. I have 'em. Ring 82. O. Roy Keith, Real Estate.* SAFETY DRAIN 5V galvanized roofinj* in all lengths. Rijrby Morrow Company, Lumber, Builders' Supplies, Mill Work. Phone y7. Fourth avenue E.* RADIO SALES AND SERVICE. Tubes tested free. Complete stock on hand. Midcity Tire Co., 210 Fourth avenue west. Phone 121. • SCHOOL FOR LITTLE FOLKS. Kindergarten and primary, will beffin September 10. Elizabeth Hughes, 323 Sixth avenue west, Phone 1028-J. ■* - »* BEAUTIFUL PERMANENTS with ringlet ends, $5.00 and up. DeLuxe Beauty Snop. Phone 916, next to Carolina theatre, * COOLEY'S OFFERING men', *11 j wool suits, including lC-ounce blup serge from. $3.95 up. Men's felt hats 75c to $1.00. Cooley's Secondhand store, 130 North Main street. * ORR'S CAMP — Two miles e««t of Hendersonville, One to four room cabins for rent. Thi3 camD for sale. TUNE IN the WORLD with • new 1955 Philco. A .compete of all-wave sets:, too itiOJ display. Brunson Furniture Company. ♦ much appreciated if given to any of our case workers, canning leaders, farm inspectors or any lone else connected with this of i fice. i I The relief office is preparing now for a big reduction in its re lief load and the type of people | who feel that the government owes them something will be in cluded among those from whom I relief must be withdrawn. These I reductions are absolutely neces sary because the appropriation [ for the month of September was I only $5750. This is but little more than half of the appropria tion of $10,000 a month when our requirements were heavy for seeds, fertilizer and fruit jars. This means that all expense of I the relief office, regardiess of nature, must be taken care of otrt of this appropriation. Wins Trapshoot Participating in the Grand Amer ; ican Handicap trapshoot at Van dalia, 0., for the first time, Law rence C. Dana, 58-year-old oil man of Derrick City, Pa., won the tournament. Dana, abov?, broke 2 4of 25 clay targets to win a shoot-off with H. F. Pace of Marietta, 0. Chief cause of dangerous blow outs: "She's thin, but I can get another thousand out of 'er.*' ; WHOw FIRST? IN AMERICA / By Joseph Nathan Kane Author of "Famous First Facts" Where did the first Sunday newspaper appear? "Who invented the mail box? "When was the first census enumerated? Answers In next issue. r | 'IOWASTATE ' COLLEGE i ESTABLISHED FIRST STATE VETERINARY / 1 SCHOOL I MAY 23. y/j i ie>79. (&& FIRST ARBOR DAY CELEBRATION HELD IN NEBRASKA APRIL IO, 1672. FIR5T OCEAN MAIL CONTRACT ' AWARDED BY CONGRESS IN 184-5. Answers to Previous Questions T'HE Iowa institution was the first veterinary school in the I United States with a four-year course and the first to require as prerequisite for entrance a high school and college course. Gov I J. Sterling Morton of Nebraska suggested the Arbor Day holiday. The first ocean mail contract was for transport of mail once a month between New York, South ampton and Bremen. Service be gan June 1, 1S47. and compensa tion was 316.666 for each round trio. - ! Beach Club t • ' "3: JT BEGIN HERE TODAY Boots~Raeburn, 18, and pretty, is sni&tied bv wealthy SytViS 'Riv ers. Humiliated, Boots accepts the attentions :vsf Rus* A.u*»d, handsome swimming infractor, and impuUively e&Pf».vWth. 'bitm: Almost immediately ine r"eal • izes the marriage .i». a , niistake. I Russ gets a job in Miami and leaves, promising to send for her. j He does not write. Honths pass i and then cotnes word that Russ! has been killed in a motorboat I accident. !, Boots gets a job in a depart | raent store She is lonely until | she meets Denis Fenway, young ( author. He introduces her ,,to some of his friends, including beauiful Kay Chillingford. One Sunday he appears unex pectedly and takes Boots to visit j cousins of his at Easthampton. Boots has a gorgeous time until Kay appears. Then, hurt and jealous, she insists on returning , to town alone. | Next day Denis telephones to tell Boots he has a job for her in a book shop. She goes to see the owner. , NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAl'TKK XXXV The heat wave broke next ! morning in a torrent of rain. Gutters ran copper rivers and •torients sluiced in the streets. 1 Along Sixth avjenue under the (elevated structure pedestrians were bent double in the effort of holding umbrellas over their heads. The steady sheets slanted and feli. In t#e Square where the, fountain gashed muddy Ni agaras trees wef/e bowed under the onslaught. ( Boots, rushing aloncr toward the "May Tree Shoppe," felt the title of excitement rising within her. At eight o'clock a telegram had been delivered to her. It had read: "Report Pay Tree for Work at nine. Job I if. Yours. Hooray. Denis." I It had remained only to tele phone Lacy's, to explain to a somewhat affronted personnel manager that she would not re turn. Her bridges now were def initely burned. She turned in at the swinging sign. "Bay Tree Shoppe. Hooks. Art Objects." A neat, dark young woman, with a green smock over her j printed wilk frock turned her I head inquiringly. She was ar-; ranging delphinium in a vase of j bubbled glass. Behind her on one of the recessed shelves was a copper kettle. There were bits of china on the srnail tables, scattered among the books Fai-1 ence. Delft. Copenhagen ware, j There were gray-blue penguins. There were swans of Bohemian I glass. And . everywhere—in the recesses, ' on the high shelves, Reaming behind the leaded panes of the old, high-shouldered secre tary—there were books, hooks, books. Their jackets were gilt, scarlet, blue and siiver, orange and black. They made a tapes try of color along the falls and in the deep embrasures. . . . "Good morning." said the young woman in the smock. "I am Barbara Lund. Did Mr. Mastetson send word. . . ." The other smiled. "Oh, yes. | Sorry, 1 thought you were an early customer. Will you put | your things here?'' She led the< way to a back room. "Thif\ is where' we come and! brood, Barbara when business is bad or we want a good cry. If you're to be one of us you might as well get used to it. Hang your coat here. Horrid day. isn't it? I came in from Summit on what was practically a dawn train and I'm dead already. After j I've told you a few choice bits about shoppe I'm going to drop i down on this couch and have a j She went on, her soft, unac cented voice rippling lightly over the words. She was Frances Gawtrye. She had been here for simply ages—six years really; straight out .of college. She loved it. Boots woulfl, too. It wouldn't be hard, getting broken in. The prices were just as marked on thje jackets; no cut rates at the Bay Tree. And the china was plainly labelled, too.! Oh, if anyone should happen to! inquire about the secretary—peo- j f>ip always wore although nothing seterned to come of it—it was $235'. • 'And a bargain, too. Pure Chippendale. .Ww she was <roin;> to flop on the' couch and Boots call her if anything vital hap pened. ■ <!<{..' It was simple as that. In 15 minutes Boots •. Lund- was in charge of the, Bay Tree. She was a little dazed by the suddenness of it. This pleasant," book-lined room, smelling of wood smoke from the deep" old fireplace, would surely melt away and she would find herself iri Lacy's frantically running from one task to another on burning, ach insr feet. . . . Meantime the big door opened and closed once or twice and an elderly man and two serious, be-spectaded women went away with neat packages under their arms, and Frances Gawtrye slumbered in the little back room with the gas ring. At noon she emerged with one cheek rosier than the other and bright, birdlike eyes half-open, like a child who has slept long and well. "Now you run out and have a bite," she instructed. "The tea rooms aiound here are passable, I'll say that for them. Try Helen Dupuy's, two doors up. Tuesday's lamb curry. You'll adore that. Burt Masterson said he would be in around 1:30. He'll want to see you." Boots obediently went to Helen Dupuy's, liking it instantly with its scrubbed deal tables and white-coated Japanese waiters hurrying back and forth with smoking dishes. She couldn't, she reminded herself, afford a 50-cent luncheon every day. But it was fun to celebrate today.... * >5 * ^She had taken "Anthony Ad verse" with her and now, with the blue bowl of soup steaming in front of her, she propped it up and began hungrily to read. This was life as she had dreamed it should be and as it had eluded her through the years; books and work that suited one and pleas ant people to know. . . . Pleasant people! Through the type, Denis' daik, brooding face with its slanting eyes, looked at her. She had to he grateful to Denis for giving her this oppor tunity. Grudgingly she admitted it. . But never, never, would she forgive him for the slight he had put upon her <>n Sunday. ... | "Heilo!" Edward Van Server, big, hi own. prosperous l*W<flsonj«piH, \vo|l--j fitting dark tweeds," siiyjyu dowrr at her. fi >(:.• ) </' She moved pside on the o;;l>en bench, cloj&lff the hoolcJJfHtf-lo!" "I rang you up Sunday night but you weren't in. Nobody was,'' Edward said, taking the chair op posite. "Where you been keeping! youiself anyway? Haven't seen,' you since i got back from the i cruise?" She had been avoided Edward t and she had been stupid to do it. j He was a friend to cling to, bin-1 £st and good and dependable. | Not thrilling, maybe. Hut then i you couldn't expect thrills ai-! ways. You couldn't expect that i painful constriction of the heart I land chest—you didn't want to experience it. every time a man | | spoke to you. She told him about the new I job and Edward was a satisfac-i jtory audience. ' "No kidding?" Edward marvel-; ed. "That's great. You'll be a knockout in the shop. Suits you." His praise, his enthusiasm! warmed her. She hadn't half-ap preciated Edward before. She was always expecting him to live ' up to some impossible ideal; to be clever and gay and exciting, all at once. Now she found his obvious admiration very soothing. Something in her wounded pride rose to meet it^i "Look, why don't, we dine to gether tonight?" Edward wanted to know. "And do a show—I something like thai?" She had avoided him before be cause he had shown signs of a 1 deeper interest. Now Mie wel-1 coined Ibis. Anything to make her forget that mocking gaze of Denis Fenway. * * * Hurt Mastcrson came into the shop just after slie returned from luncheon and spoke to her briefly. Would $30 a week he all right, he wanted to know? It was what the other girl had got. Thirty dollars was all right, Moots told him demurely, with her eyes veiled to hide the in voluntary sparkle of delight. He went away and Frances (Jawtrye said to her, "He likes you. Not many people Hurt likes. He's lather a bear. I know him so well; he went to college with my older brother, Kill." "Hp's very nice," Hoots said. Hut it was not of Hurt Master son she v.as thinking. He had ( said, "Fenway says you havfe the poods. I hope he's nght." f He had smiled, and so the • ' words hadn't sounded harsh. I So the day went by on*winged feet. Hoots flew back j to her •• roonvjkt six* o'clock to^drdss. The J Hjav Tre4' stayed opefT until nine , 6'cloc'* t)rilj" oV Saturdays. Ed wai'd was coming for her a; seven. Hut ' first she . must write to ■' Denis. , However she might feel about his'treatment of her, there were the decencies to consider. Denis had got her this job and she owed him acknowledgement, at least. "Dear Denis," her pen falter ed. "Thank you ever so much for speaking to Mr. Masterson about me. I started at the Hay Tree today. I like it." She signed her name. What a stiff little note! She stared at it in dissatisfaction, beginning an- . ' other. "Dear Denis: P. S. 1 got the job. Thanks a lot." , ,, No. that wouldn't do. That was , • too flippant. Denis hated flip- • pancy. His perceptions were so „ delicate. He would frown over ,. , that one. This was the letter she might not write, might never send to him: "My dearest: Everything I did today was colored with thoughts of you. Every time a mart ap- tlj.. proached me on the street my heart leaped because I thought it lt was you. I was angry at you Sunday. You hurt me verv deeply. Hut I know it wasn't you, really. It was somethihg ■outside vourself. 1 am working f at the shop and liking it. Thank you and bless you for that... ." ' She tore the sheet in little strips, tore them across once more. What utter madness! Mrs. Moonev nut her head In ' the door. "Your young man's here." Hoots started to her feet. Poor Edward! She had completely for gotten him! (To be continued) SHE FINALLY VOTED MARSHALL, Mich., Sept. 17.— . (UP).—Mrs. Ruth Cross, 88, who never had stepped into a ballot booth because she disbelieved in """ woman suffrage, exercised a pre- ' rogativo the other day. She cast i her first vote in the special elfec- • tion. .j. | USE THE WANT ADS Out Our Way I THBt'S KINDER I DIFFICULT FER \ VOL), ICk- LEAVE \ ME DO; IT FER ^4 THANK VO ALL, MIST* CLJRLy, BUT AM'LL DO L>IS FO MAMScFF By Williams WHY, ICK I I CAIMT SAWV T^AT ! VO'RE allers C.ad TO HAVE SOM6 BOOV RELIEVE VOU FROM ANJV \ KIND O' WORk. 4-^ A STICKER * I e 1«34BYHCASCWVICt.lNC. — — The Newf angles (Mom'n Pop) Old Dan s Daily Chore: By COWAN WELL, DAN HE.'S GOT A WEALTHY uncle,AND HC3 THE ONLY HE\P TO HiS M^LLK^S^SO PAN j J4E_ vTELUN' H\ti THE QPOP 1TIT M -*)■; mi Freckles and His Friends IggHARLIE AND THE BOYS HIKED INTO A NEARBY OUTPOST TO GET SUPPLIES... j HEY, NUTTY.. LOOK.' IT'S f |MIDDLE OF SEPTEMBER SEE...WHERE DIP THE TIME I .'^URE-.-WElL HAVE "TO Hop THE FIR^T R^TTLE^ QOT Olf HERE AND GO,BACK TO +h<3HER . EDUCATION-. ^dfcEITS J Gt*lNA BE, T "I&UeH, SETTING BACK TO SCHOOL BOOKS AND THINGS , i ess DO YbO KNOW WHAT WE'RE GONNA HAVE TO DO ^ Excitement JWEVE SEEN IT'S / SOlWG TO BE j HARO to get 'worked up OVER GEOMETRY /i I f -rr By Blosser . Y 1 n i I THAT HAY LOOk QOOO QN « » PAPER BUT *MEN SOMMOO* i | CUTS LOOSE Afc>bU WOW A .'( 1 1 SHOT5UW/ OR SoWETWlto,, ;i * J •^OO CAN HAVE Y^UR .i ! I STRAKSHT LINES...I'LL |! 4 '