Page 2 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 utye iHnuntatnrrr Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO. Phone 137 Main Street Waynesvillfc, N. C. W. C. RUSS Editor W. C. Kuss and M. T. Bridges, Publishers Published Every Thursday SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Year, In County $1-00 G Months, In County 50c 1 Year, Outside of Haywood County $1.50 Subscriptions payable in advance Entered at the post office at Waynesville, N. C, as Second Class Mail Matter, as provided un der the Act of March 3,1879, November 20, 1914. THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 EXPECT TEACHERS TO GET MONEY There have been many complaints against the sales tax for the support of the schools, but there is one group that should make no com. plaints. That group is the school teachers. If the sales tax produces enough money to pay the teachers, and we are sure it will, the teach ers will get their money and will not have to wait as they have in past years for the people to pay their taxes. The sales tax is on a cash basis. When the merchant sells an item that is taxable, he collects the tax in cash and will send it on to the state department of revenue by the middle of the following month. This will give the teachers their money a fast as they can earn it and there should be no waiting on their part. For this we are glad. We know thai it has been a breat burden on the teachers to wait on their pay for months, lint the counties did not have the money until the taxpayers' made their payments, and the counties were not able to borrow against collec tions as they have in past years. The taxes on all the lands will be paid some time but there is no way of knowing just when this will be. The salaries for the teachers may be less this year than in. the past, but it is all the legis, lature thought the state could pay, 'and the fact that they will get the money when it is due should be good news to them at this , time. Mecklenburg Times. There is a reason why the average age of criminals,' or those supposed to be, is between 17 and 21. It i a well known I act that children born into the world are at first devoid of evil thoughts. As they are taught .0 they grow up. If they drift it is evidently the guiding hand that is most at fault. Consequently, indifference and laxity on the part of parents and teachers for many years lias had a lot to do with the ever increasing number of children drifting away from Sunday School and into the Reform School. Prison News. A COW IS MOKE' PROFITABLE THAN A STILL Judge Wilson Warlick argued in his conn in JMorganton last week that milking a good Jersey cow is., more profit able than tending a still. We are very frank to admit that the figures given by His Honor were a revelation to us. For a long time we had imagined that manufacturing hooch was a very profitable en terprise and any arguments to the contrary coming from a less authoritave source would have been hooted at by us. Put after reading what the judge has to say upon the subject we are convinced that the dairy industry should have many new converts before the winter snow Hies and looking after a still becomes still more uncomfortable. -These-, arc Judge WarlickV words : "A good Jersey cow will give between three and four gallons of milk a day, if she is prop erly fed. Milk sells for -40 cents a gallon and liquor, brings only $1.50 or thereabouts. Noth ing has decreased in price so much as liquor. If anyone expects to make a living out of the manufacture and sale of liquor, he w-ill soon find that court fines and jail sentences eat up all the profits. A good cow can produce in a day about the same amount made for which a gallon of liquor might be sold, and milking cows is a perfectly legal and honorable business Polk County News. The instructor leads to the door, but apti tude rests with the individuals Selected. A moonshiner in Kentucky recently an nounced he had given up distilling and would become a spiritualist. No doubt he had worked with spirits so long he'll make good at -his .new-vocation. The young man was a failure as an archi tect, so he went on the stage, but he isn't draw ing any better houses. A New York scientist is trying to find if fish gain weight rapidly. According to some fishermen, minnows get to be whales overnight, ODD THINGS AND NEW By Lame Bode A local store is displaying toilet soap shaped like fruit, animals, toys etc. Even at that, the small boy knows that it is still soap. From April 7th to June 30th 277,105 per sons paid to the United States-$6,290,530 for the privilege of making or selling beer. Wonder if the treasury officials termed that sum as liquid assets? A visitor in Waynesville recently remark. ed, "why you can grow anything here in Hay wood county." Beg pardon sir, mosquitoes won't. We were told this story last week for the truth. Perhaps it was a joke. Anyway it has a thought in it. "Two men were found on Love's Lane looking for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, as the sign on Main street point, ed in that direction." At least the sign caused them to spend some time in Waynesville. .y AM EXPANSION 'Z A u'SiC inch OF -VATE.R Expands to be CPMt A CUdIC COOT OP STEAM. If some people waited until they had some thing worth saying before they spoke, how quiet some would be. WHEN WINTER COMES The Summer vacation season soon will meet its end. Thereafter dates next to be anticipat ed will be Thanksgiving Day and Christmas, then New Year's day, with its turning of new pages to reveal new hopes, new prospects and new difficulties for men and nations. The American nation has had a pleasant summer, comparatively, so far as economics are concerned. Prospects fo r the autumn are tint ed with bright hues that will appear in business and industry as well as in the leaves. The many millions of new found wealth for persons al ready receiving, and those who soon will be re ceiving, the immediate financial benefits of in dustrial codes will "take hold" Within a short time as an influential economic factor. After the autumn, then the winter. When winter comes the powers of the N. P. A. indeed will be put to the test. Conditions of the winter season inevitably cause a slowing up of industrial and commercial activities hi normal times. The present is not a normal time neither is there any prospect that the approach ing winter will be a normal time. In the next three months much can and probably will come to pass, and the odds at least favor the hope that these events in the main will be greatly beneficial to the nation as a whole. Consequent . ly, it now appears the American people will have more than the Usual number of good reasons for devoutly observing the first Thanksgiving of the "new deal" era. Christmas and its giving of gifts should be influenced by the fact of minimum wages for many millions of persons. As usual, Ney Year's day probably will be accepted as the appropriate time for mental relignments and appraisals of the future. More strength 1o the prophets on that day and may they be able to read the signs aright ! It is advisable always to give some thought to the, future the near term,: the, mid-term and the long-term. Just now the near term is worthy of contemplation.. As concerns that period, here is one thought: During the days of returning thanks, of-giving good cheer and of turning new leaves in the pages of history, as will be done in this near term, we will have with us ye unemployed manpower ami money power. Wit;:, will they, especially the former which cannot wait, do? Till; LITTLE FELLOW PAYS The little fellow never broke a bank, but on the other hand he, is the one who pays. In variably investigations of closed banks bring to light the fact that at the crack of the whip the small borrower stepped up to the window and paid his loan. It was the big borrower who broke the banks in the recent crash of financial institutions over the nation. It appears from reports now coming to light that in most cases it was the inability of the banks to collect on .1 relatively small number of large loans that pull ed them down into the mire of financial death. The so-called financiers who required large sums of the other fellow's money to carry on their operations, were the ones who left the banks in the lurch. The whole condition was a part of the frenzied era of finance, with its un warranted expansions and big deals for which the depositors are now paying and paying heavily. ; " .-.-' These revelations should point the. way for bankers in the future. It should show them plainly that the little fellow is by far the. better risk. It is hardly possible, however, that they will follow this, becauce the tendency now seems to be to f reezs out the small depositor and cater to the big boys. It is doubted if they have learned anything from the crash that t6ok its toll in dollars untold. -Burlington Times-News. 1 1 s . 1 . i 11 1 -J SMI f r."i m IIdm No COA-Ofi TO CATS: ,11 Jfy7 ALL CATS Afl COLOR W jIrIje ton camera- S ;l 1 L, The U.S. Typographical if ;j tdr Survey has developed a &it?w rJf'A 3-TON camera, giving PrcTuttWiy .4" 7 ! 200 TIMES AS LARGE AS ri W - 1 ORDINARY PHOTOGRAPHS. q 1 1 1 1 Decline in Suicides By LEONARD A. BARRETT In one of the loading financial jour nals recently appeared an article en titled, "Suicides De cline ns Trade Im proves !" the .sug gestion beiiiK that because of the im p rove d economic c o n d i t i o 11 men round it unneces sary to resort to suicide in order to end their troubles. Insurance compa nies in loii-.'t.'l paid 11 n 11 re c e d ented lar'e sums to fam ilies because of the suicide of n holder ol a pobcy in which the members of II. i.iinily were the benelicia ries. .Some I""1"!' funned that suicide was not an lict of cowardice, but on the con-lr;ii-. was indicative ol a certain si r. .. ah of character which -provided the lamil.v With all necessary income. It seems vassj ri f strange that in a c-.nli'y which oilers so much of free dom, opportunity-ami advantage, that the l.-inip ol courage could burn so low - that I he only retime was in Scl!' dctniction. Perhaps one ep.lanatioii for suicide can be tound in the lack Of revert -!.. for home and all that it should mean to a head of a family. If lie home has lost ifs charm and the en: plact issiu'ned to the head of the family is that ;t a bread win ner, naturally lie will find little to support hini 111 his- sl.remious efforts to provide- extravagant luxuries, (in the other hand, doubtless many a dis couraged mail found jjreut strength mid an lii-e to t'mht the battle through because those dependent upin him were helping hi sacrificing the unnec cssary lhin-,'s in life and were content with a reduced income. Many fam ilies were thus kej.it intact an! brought hearer to one another because they mutually, shared a common ''.burden and helped to solve it.. The ipiestion naturally arises, have we profited from this depression?.- Have we learned anything., that will make life more livable and more worth while? As we look hack upon the suf ferine of the last three years, one fact must impress itself Upon every think in;: . person -.that many things in -life are far more valuable than money and that many of the' dearest ..things can Hot be bought with nioney. The per manent ideals upon which every civ ilization 'must rest arc frankly not for sale. They must be toiled for. and when acquired, wifely guarded against the wiles of that crass: materialism which argues that trade improvement jnstilies the decline in suicides. , , 1933; W.-Bt.ra Xi'wspiii'-r t.'rion AXD IF NOT? A certain professor wore si'o whis kers, mucli to the discomfort of some members of his family. One day he appeared before them, razor' in hand, with one check, shaven smooth. "How do you like it " he asked. "If you think it looks well I'll shave the other side, too.'' Use Burlap Bands To Trap Apple Worms TraDDintr and destroying the worms of the Codling moth as they leave the infested apple and crawl down the tree around harvest time will greatly reduce this pest next spring. "The pests can be trapped by fas tening layer,, of burlap from four to six inches wide around the trunk of each bearing tree.'' says H. R.Nis wonirer. extension horticulturist at State College. "Many of the worms that leave the-fruit before ripening time will also hide behind these bands and can then be desltroy -?d." The bands are -placed, around 'the tree from eighteen to twenty-four inches above the ground and held in place by nails run through the ends of the burlap. Before putting on the bands loose bark should be scraped from the trunk in order to eliminate any hiding place other than the bands. After the harvest season is over the bands are removed and the worms destroyed by boiling them' in an iron kettle or similar container. . The bands can then bo dried and puft away for use another year. This method of worm, control is be ing practiced by apple growers throughout the country and many growers in this State . have banded their ttc---i. '.in.ee the middle of June. "The r- "olleeted through this early bw..,img have been destroyed each week and this practice has saved growers much money in reducing the number of poison sprays to be appled," says Niswonger. 24 Years Ago' in HAYWOOD - " - - - .j (From the file of September 3, 1U09j Miss Jessie Woodall and L:zz;e Morgan of Clyde left Tuesday i'.r Raleigh to enter Meredith College as students. Mr. A. C. Cagle has moved his fam ily ito town and is now living at his old place at the corner of RichLcd and Short streets. He is better pre pared than ever before to do all work in the wagon repairing and carriase manufacturing. Mr. Cleveland Welch entertained on Wednesday at an elegant dinner party at his country home, Welch Farm, in honor of Miss Hilda Way's guests. The table had for its center piece a beautiful arrangement of dahlias in a cut glass bowl- 22 YEARS AGO IX HAYWOOD (From the file of Sept. 1, 1911) i ne paiauai nome 01 oisnop avuiu was again open to their many friends Thursday evening, the occasion be ing a reception itendered Dr. and Mrs. James Cannon. When the Southern train pulled out from the Shelby station this morning at 9:45 those who knew the secret were alllowed to tell their friends that Mr. and Mrs. Josh Mauney were aboard. The bride was Miss Eevlyn Howell, the attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Howell. Miss Margaret Stringfield is ttie guest of relative, in Charleston, S. C ithis week. Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Plott have re turned from a week's visit to Mr. and and Mrs. R. H- Plott at Jonathan. Miss Edith Pou who has been the house guest of Miss Josephine Gilmer for several weeks, left Tuesday for her home in Raleigh, The recent rains in MomhoMMioi-n Xoitb Carolina -have vastly improved (Widens and the corn crops. PROOF The man entered the country post office and asked: "Have you a parcel for Mr. Jones?" "I have," replied the postmaster, "but how do I know you're the man?'' The man produced a photograph of himself- "Have a look at that " he said. "That looks like me. doesn't it?" "So it does," exclaimed the post master, and handed over the parcel without another word. New i ork Morning Telegraph. BE XOW ARITHMETIC MUST CHANGED Teacher: "If a man worked 11 hours in one day how much " Johnny (interrupting): "Teacher, he can't do that, you know the code won't allow it!" 66 6 LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE Checks Malara in 3 days. Colds first day, Headaches or Neuralgia in 'W minutes. FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC Mosf Speedy Remedies Known. SAFETY'S SAKE "Does your father know I write poetry?" asked ithe suitor. "Not yet. dear." replied his wife-to-be. "I've told him all about your other faults; hut I wanted to see how he took them before I mentioned that."'-.- .-' THE DESCRIPTION Mrs. Clupe: "Did you see the Smith twins0" Blupe: "Yes." The Mrs-: "Don't you think the boy is a picture of his father?" Blupe: "I sure do and the girl is a talkie of her mother." Mutual Magazine. WE ARE NOT PREACHERS but Vh SAVE SOLES THE CHAMPION SHOE SHOP E. T. Duckett, Prop. MAIN ST. NEXT WESTERN UNION Mrs. Wiggs: "Is Billy sick, Mrs. Skinner?" Mrs. Skinner: "Well, 'e ain't ex actly sick, but no stummick can stand thirteen apples! It's an un lucky number." FREE C siRicM In nearly every Hospital, free clinics are maintained for those sufferers w.ho are unable to pay for medical and hospital service. Doctors of experience and many years' practice give these patients the same care and treatment as they do their private patients. Doctors do not receive remuneration for this service. Every true physician deems it a duty and an honor to make this contribution of time and talent to the needy who go to Free Clinjcs, City and County Hospitals, Baby and various other hospitals. YOUR DOCTOR WANTS TO' KEEP YOU WELL ALEXANDER'S DRUGSTORE Phones 53 & 54 Opposite Post Office