Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 20, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER I), tu. alir iHmmtainm Published By THE WAVNKSVILLE PRINTING CO. Phone 137 Main Street Wavnesvi'le, N J. W. C. RL'SS Editor V. ('. Hu- and M. T. Br; Jses. Publishers Published Every Thursday SI KS KII'l ION KATKS 1 Year, In County -. 11.00 6 Month, In County . .- .50 1 Year Outside of Haywood County $1.50 Subscription payable in advance Entered at the post office at Waynesville, N. C, ai Second ('lass Mail Matter, as provided under o.e Act of March 3, 1879, November 20, 1914. Nonh (.'.irul.na i PPESS ASSOCIAtlON , III KY'S PERFORMANCE CHEAPENED THINGS It i- amazing juM what some pernio will rosorl to when in the public eye, as tiki Ilui'y LoiiK in tin- Sciia'i' last week when he spoke Tor lil'ttrii ami a halt' hours covering everv subject I'roni opposing the NRA to how to cook turnip greens -wearing himself out as well as I hose forceif to listen to him. As could he expected, the Senate voted just i ( j ; . -i t to his plan. And w hen the whole I hiiiy is hulled down, he not only "cheapened himself" by his silly over-drawn tonjriie-'waji'triiijr talkathon, but. tended to throw an air of disgust over the na t ion and ( ".ouress. Vet . for his l-")1 j-hour performance, the taxpayers of the country had to pay out over 1,'ioo, according to govern iiicut ollicials figures. It. seems that the country lost heavilv on thai (leal. , ' HE ATE. V PATHS TODAY 1 he sentence which was uttered is recalled as tolliAvs: 'II a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse trap than his neighbor, though he build his house in the woods, the world will make a beat en path to his door." Today these beaten paths are bein made in every community. Probably it is not due to a ; sermon, a book, or mouse trap. It is being applied every day to general merchandising Advertising in newspapers today has turn ed many a beaten path into a broad highway. Mei chants. Jive, wide awake men, are calling at tention to that (act everv dav though the nied-' mm ol advertising. The public does not have time to seek out the better mouse traps or other merchandise as it may be, but turn to the ad vertising to find out where and when to go Ami. they buy these advertised products in preference to others because they know thev are good else the glare of publicity that shows them up would discover discrepancies t hat would soon drive them from the market The merchant who advertises is telling the public that the path to his door is a broad high way. Ex. ( IA I5S DECLARE WAR ON ROADSIDE sh;s A boycott ot products advertised on un sightU roadside signs m North Carolina wa-, recommended the other day at a meeting' of heme demonstration club members in Pinehurst. In a resolution adopted, the member'? ap pealed to farmers, merchants, chambers of com-meic-e, woman's clubs, and other organizations to enlist m the w ir afranist signboards Many of the signboards not only mar the landscape, but they are also a source of danger inasmuch as they divert the drivers' attention from the road, the resolution stated. ' Fundamentally, the youths of today are just as idealistic, just as courageous, just as loyal as they ever were. What they heed, though they are not always aware of that fact! is. wise leadership, and one of the main causes of their unrest is that upon looking around the world they do not find enough of that type of leadership. If we of the older generation are wise, we will not waste time in deploring youth's spirit of adventure and change; we will sympa thize with it, cooperate with it, and seek to guide it. Walter D. Head, in the Rotarian Magazine. There are some who said it couldn't be done, and others who felt that it wouldn't be done yet it opened Friday afternoon to the public Waynesville's Public Library. TIH'RSl) AY, .11 NE 20, WXh A GROWING PROBLEM The Rotary Club Friday "viewed with alarm" the number of things here that need to be changed and regulated regarding trarlic violations and the monopoly during the summer season of peddling trucks" on the congested corners ol' town. This tan be said of the Club, the members were looking at the matter from a civic stand p in! and not from a personal or selfish one. Recommendations are to be made to the board" i ol . aldermen and mayor soon, and u is neheved ! that -onie definite plans will be satisfactorily worked out. It hardly seems fair to the merchants of the town that the "peddling trucks" be allowed to .ark for days in the heart of town and sell produce which many of them buy just as the merchants. The merchants lemain open throughout the year, pay taxes, license, rent light and water bills and clerk hire in fact ' hey contribute to the support of the community in general yet the truckers just get the cream, leave, and take the money with them. A timely suggestion has been made that a lot he provided for all truckers, thus doing away with the usual amount of peelings and rinds that surround many of the trucks. By providing such a space, those wanting to pur chase from the trucks would have ample park ing facilities and also have all the trucks in a group which would make selection of produce ci'sier. 1 24 Years A HAYWOOD Sol Random SIDE G LANCES By W, CURTIS RLSS Two-Minute Sermon By Thomas Hast well I; a THE STATE'S RESORTS rsorin ( arolintis resort centers are set for a fructifying business this summer, both at the beaches and in the mountains. It is a reasonable expectation that resort ing will pick up at' these' splendid emporium.--' (luring the season t hat is now in its infant days. With improved business conditions gener ally reported and with the '.people tired id' be ing tied down to the restrictions and economies they were compelled to practice during the past live summers, there is very likely to lie a mightv outflow of recreational impulses. And North ( arolina is prepared to take care of such aspirations, not only of its own people and those ol the South, but it abounds in attractive and m many cases luxurious abodes lor summering colonies from the great distance The State is making capital out of what Nature has laid in its lap to this end, but there is yet room for greater developments With the building of the Scenic Highway across our mountain tops, Western North Caro lina has a right to anticipate a resort business that will eclipse even that of which it has been dreaming. We are only at the threshold of our possi bilities in North Carolina tor this type of de elopment. With our seashore resorts contin ually being developed m their attractiveness and our mountain fineries of scenery increas ingly inviting, the State is getting itself set for an expansion along this line far m advance of all past or present achievements rhoHnH Observer I Orw ol tile be happened to ! be ing away with win: out on the . ,-t ining.- that ever me meivnaiiL who e.e vuok and pulled custom.1, - into ill- p. ace of bu.sme.ss by the a in arm ;.l!i)...-t jammed stuff '. n :i. .1 .i. , a .. I Hut type of merchant is a tinny of the past, And We'ie all le'.ter oil because of it. Stand- i. lew I'.a -l u ek, Mi . Hull', of the aoi Oil ( 'imip.iiic, aim i ne.il .-biii't jumps over the county logwUi iT itnd if you please, it isn't tilling station- any longer--it's service sta : imi.-. I" ii . rs ,s another business that ha- changed eniisidei ably. 1 founrl tin- out .hat operating a service station i- iot- more than jtist putting V ' ''' it alii'o-! a profession. Hit on the a bo u t ilea,. Vam llellwooo ten smmlj UM' tlleV u ., In 'I hanl...-gi :t-K ,.r, as-unieii ill. atti: a line l a in it v I v(. :hn rainier' road a iieii t .a e) - they ' iu.y right aboil !: : be road and udc . "(uok what ooesn t bmk it was pain l.i ame This ina.-t ... clieuvii la t week u o youiiK in red hoon-.kiitv m, i e ' ne they nut with a st mile-. and th" slogan: And in Saturday's mail a torn- I potitive eomnanv sent ..ot !hr... t;..L of dill'erent Ibi'enrs II. l,...,i.,,.. the third company hears about the campaign, 'cause most (.f mm,, u all the tlavor out by now .... and gum chewed the second time is seldom astv. The reason the I'llllrt . I. ....... . ' i..'it.-i. ,l.U! s are closed in the afternoon is that i; keeps the interior cooler than if thev were loft onen. LET'S FACE THE WIND:. When an airplane takes off it always faces the wind. The resistance furnished by the wind calls for more nower to he put forth by the planes engines and as a result lifts the plane higher and more raDid.y. How like life. After ail it is the obstacles and re sistance that confronts a man that calls upon him to put forth more ef toit arid thereby enaoles him to' rise higher and to accomplish more. The more diliicult the lessons at school the more training the student receiv es who masters them, The more trials and obstacles and opposition a man encounters the more sure and self reliant and strong he is and the bi tter prepared he is for the next opposition. As the air plane pilot mounts into the air his horizon be comes wider and wider and when he reaches his elevation a new scene lays spread before him on all sides. He has a new perspective of the world about him, a larger, broader view. In the same nnasure the in dividual who meets the opposition an i ine e-.-'.'. les that beset him in i ace l'''s hfe and by peisevereiice and w'iiii I 'h'igenci and - irlceie effort overcomes , look h''m who corrects his own faults,' l,out;i improves his mind and adds to his stoic hi knowledge and culture lifts j himself in;o a new plane of living. I lie makes for himself new horizons and a new outlook upon life. He creates for himself a new world, with new contacts, new experiences, npw ce siiue j opportunities, d'argiir possibilities. I The aviator must return to the earth ard to old scenes when his fuel tank '(.comes empty,' but the: man who D-0 pares himself hv overcominor the Mr. an, I ! Asheville, spent last week. Miss Jessie ,K, m town sevi Mr. Weaver M tree, visited frier Mrs. Henrv M ville on Wedne visit friends. Miss Meta Ada arrive tomorrow Miss Helen' It,.,.,.' '."." is the guest 0f ,,. 'V;': Mr. and Mrs. j. v Mr. Troy Vvc: day, from Trini:-, . "'.,;;'" the summer vaca: : . " Or. J. R. MeCrrv. ., C. Plott went to A-.uv a day, lcturning Thursday"' Mr. Cleveland D. We''h worth, is visiting rcla-i've-' Misses Annie, X IV. 'Mi tiere. visited friend, in ,",'i -r "a. The me m be i Sunday school K'illian's Island on' . Mrs. E. B. Cun.i Wednesday Bridge The highest score i won by Miss Nan K Our aecomnio.lv Mr. T. L. Green, hie tablishing a sub - wood. The people are to be eongranb.. improvement in ti.,. vMrs. Thomas .1. j the great ContV Hier'a' Stonewall Jackson. (.'., and her m ii., and little daughter, grandaughter and : ter.) arrived, in We, iray to spend the - ;e ville, in this de'-: : stopning at the Sulphur Spring 11 ..; herself as being :n; AUtynesville and i .- Bishop and 'Mr-. .1 eeived this week ar. present -at- the cel-e! dent and Mis. Taf'' anniversary which White House on . Atkins will attend, hono,. bestowed, win. consideration the fev included. f tin- iav. Presbyteriu :r- 1 " :h. 'i-.air.ei'-h, ' '.'- ttk. "-'u..; '"-li it '' ih'j itsi; widow sf I V!, lirfiJl 'a:- .::e. . I'l't-M "it la ' Wavnes- ';...! m !ea-("i wS :o k Presi- v Biihop site' ac gum sea.-oii ailies dressed ented every-I . -t; c!cs id' life and the world need :k of gum i never rei'.um to his old -plane of liv 'It s refresh- j ; n ..... ... ., ..'..,.. , . ... , he iirefeis to live and hold his plane there as long as he desires. I!l,l l,o; tiii: skvi.im; A business magaYiY lightenmenf of a X, fgent, arrested for , without a license. T said: . "Don't you kivv life insurance witn.ni The darkv: replied: "1 said a mouthful: I km sell any, but I didiv": 1 !i- if the en insurance ti ir business magistrate yu ean't sell s, you Jow I f(i'J,.tn. Read The Ads piece Ua' Aceonliiitf to the I niyersity News Letter, there has been an increase m 'farms in Hay wood County of f t per cent ilurinp; the last ten years. The farms listed in l'llM totaled 2,17-'),' while today's total is !.27(? All this clearly shows the trend towards apt u ult ure in thi county, and et possibilities have just been touched lipon. Haywood ranked fourth m the state in the increase in the farm units. The average for the state being only eight and a fraction per cent. If .VOU Want to see a or, lie of work, drive our to l-WI,,,,', r il.ll. ion lannerv an. oot- ,1,., o that have been planted on the lawn there . . . the bovs ,.nt ,h..,- ; ,.i, pndy in two things -the appearance ot the plant and the fact that thev wear all-leather shoes fTgliaflMgjBWWKWXWjjeoow .m i 1 4awK f N ' s- I " I -a"iii rn- N'ot, that it, matters, but it was U'lesting to learn of two local your oen wno went into a certain swanky avern in a large city reeently for unch. After being, pnsented '. with the menu ot the day. they' found that neither could tell what was to be served, so not to. take any chances one of them faked a 'phone call while the other to h tl,Q ;,..:... . ,.... '. business necessitated them lenvim- medately." They both, thanked, the wvuttess ami scooted around the cor ner to a '-2.)c smvinl li,,.u ).,;, a plate of roast pork, and baked bean? for steaoy smoking i choose camels, they are so mild they never get my WIND! . I SMOKE THE SAME MilD CIGARETTE THAT LOU GEHRIG DOES-... CAMELS. I'D WALK A MILE FOR A CAMEL! 1 fit The side roads are always more interest ing than the highways with their traflic, coji jestion, noise and confusion. It is a treat, when out for a pleasure drive, to turn of the' high way into a side road. The overhanging trees and closely bordering fields furnish a pano rama of scenery and pictures that are a refresh ing change. They make of a drive, instead of a marathon, a journey of exploration into un discovered country. For example, the one to Sunburst. CONGRATULATIONS This week will mark the opening of the Massie, Funeral yllorne, which represents' an expenditure of $20,000. Several who are authorities on funeral homes have stated that the place would be a credit" to a town twice the size of this. That within itself is sufficient to merit hearty con gratulations. , ' It is that spirit of building for the future, as well as for today, that makes towns like Waynesville become cities. Overheard Mr in a local store: newspaper man- i siv." u . C . Allen remark "Lookout, there's a e eaietul what- vou &ven on the streets Saturdav: - hi1"0"" !rni: MMn shewing and blowing Bio gum . two voung men pouring the last of s,x banana. . . he usual congregation listening to the salvation Arnu senae on the cou.t hou-e step, . . Uo no(rroe ail --nines, carrying watermelons to wards home . . y.fa.mei, gamg a the steop roof of the new station o.v , he office . . . CCC boys having a good time throwing remarks at girls who constantly walked up and down lemark!" vCe,mn' for mo.e . Tn'ngs I never knew before lUr f a'thouand tons of papeV" a H- Lliike postaKe stamps V:.M. a en r V'a" ea niore chien than a .Methodist preacher . . bricks have tobe,etbfforebntklaverothem .I! ni. he nl that s' It. AO All runiM t . Vin"l" iron Man ot Baseball" SO MUD .'...YOU CAN SMOKE ALL YOUMjT! i rvi'P) n m costlier fAjliyJib) TOBACCOS' The Effectiveness of a Prescription Depends on the purity, quality and freshness of the in gredients of which it is composed, as well as in the atrt racy with which these ingredients are compounded. -No matter how expert a workman may be, he cannot build a dependable structure out of poor materials. Alexander's patrons receive the benefit of the high est quality drugs obtainable plus the service of two vete ran PHARMACISTS. It's a Jiard combination to beat. ASK YOUR DOCTOH oi.im: UI.AI) THE HIMW Sim; THE -PAGAN WEDDING" lhe account of a curious marriace fceremonjal in a foren wn rnes where tne bnde and -room made no promises to obey anybody or any thang. One of the interesting arti cles in the June 23rd issue 0f the Amenc-an Weekly, the big magaz ne 11. MORE SLNDA AMERICAN On sale near your home. ' un HK.D AfyOG THE SKl'MXK Two LICENSED PHARMACISTS For Your Protection ALEXANDER'S DRUG STORE Phonts 53 & 54 Try At Home First. Opposite post Off .And You'll Never ReS'et
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 20, 1935, edition 1
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