Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1 / Page 12
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THURSDAY, AUCUSToo l9,. THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Life Of Bruno In Death House Not Uneventful Has Helped Direct Fight For Life and At Same Time Seen I Others Walk To Chair Trentun N- ' Six months of life in the stu'u- prin death house have U-en far from uneventful fur Bruno ICk-ianl Hauilm;i nn. From his cell, six paces from the death rhamlier, he has helped direct his tiht for I'f-' and at the :;rM M has seen four others walk to the elc trie chair. He h:is liecn referee In hi attor neys' verbal wars, studied hi d'-fense to many i-lvH .suits, liet-un ;t0 inten sive .study of the Bible and written a book. , Soinetiriics tie is fulUn anl nat. His wife, Anna, who flW misses one of her :.llott-i tw. visit a month, once aid she f;Uf"1 tefir trtekltng down hin f.ioe. Sometimes !i makes the death house rint: with laughter. He did when his wife showed him a picture of their sun. Mtnnfried, in a erlrrs (lress and whn sh described his -x-ploits in uiHottitii! a. cnV pot. lind tutnint; on ;ilt fuuoets in the litth room. t1oo.lin It Sometimes he i deeidy reliitu'iH His spiritual adviser, the Rev. I. t. Werner of N'-w York City, visits him weekly brlnj-'s -huwh mmiazin ami 1 iH mill savs lliiuptmann enjoys hem. Hauptmann'a last words to .his four neiuliloi-!. whose hands he shook a.s Kiev went .. their death, were "pniv to (.iod." His i-. ij1.it visitors, besides his wife am! -pli-itii.il I'U.ser. are the warden find his i-.vyei-s The lawyers, whose visjis if r.ot i.-s;ri:tU. once called tlier'iis.'iv os The Four .Musketeers." There ,ne ,,rily throe now, Kilw'tnl J Kullv, .'chief ,.f 'to- tilitl staff at Flem ing .!.. . 'l.e -n 't eortifc anymore. He .-sent-.i i $ j.voi.y hill and was rtls- ls,.,1 !!.1iit.tw.t(in,-4 ,-.tr. Mrs Kmnin liner, of Iw Atit-eles. crime 'list ,,, hin. tu ir.uiti;; news of ' new Hi !l,M,r." hnl Would eventually him - The h.r:lf il!"i iwne. both tunes, With tul tie-.VS. OtilC h- I'fOUuht nntico of l'.ellly s suit for hlJ fee, und i.noiher lime word ! .1 suit to col le. t i l.,'-l. 1 lin.e.l to be due for .rUre.S i-elillereil I.V .billies M F.'IW-Sett.'- H.4UJMHI tlfl's llt.st ttfii-y, iliiuptiiiniti's i ilb l-s. his wife iri-cluib-it. insist he "looks tine" is Cheerful, and hopeful of gettinp a new ti--i.il l.lo;.d Fi-her, one of the at-tcj-nes. said the prisoner does i-ales-1liei,'.s le-ul ii lv. eats and sleeps well .tnd has K.-niied ten pounds .since he eeeu.ie,l a cell in the county Jail in fishers home town, Fleminyton. The t.ioui-Mphy, which took months write, treats -only incidentally r ciil it .lemim-'toh. Much ot It recounts- Ha u it matin's love tor . ad venture. His early life, even his pris on record' in flcrmuriy, Is discussed iri Oet.ul. One state othcial who head it cille.i it "be:ititiful. nUiy. tf an .author's pen." II iiiptniaiiii is Waitinit now for the answer of prison otficials to his re quest that it be released for publication. to- Hl Ire. t the Home of Perfume The number of llowers used in the mnnufiiclii.rit of perfumes stackers the iniHKlnatloii. In it .single year iu,00, Ouo.ihki jasmine blooms, about 4(MV 0Kl pounds of rosea anil some iiO.imO,. 000 pounds of oriitiKH blossoms lire harvested for tlie great perfumeries. River Boundary Linai The boundary line between Ken tucky find Missouri Is the middle of the Mississippi river, as fied by treaty in 178.1. The Mississippi 'river differs from the Ohio river In this resect as regards stnto boundaries Shoe Repairing It Matters Not How Badly Worn Your Shoes May Be . .. We Can Fix 'em as good as New BRING THEM TO THE CHAMPION SHOE SHOP Next to Western Union New Dollar Bill Is Said To Subtly Advertise New Deal Roosevelt's Own Motto, Trans Iated Into Latin, To Appear On 600,000,000 Bills U't SHI VfiTOV A new deal dol lar bill, subtly advertising the Roose velt administration is in the making. tven now the presses are grinding out 60,000,000 copies of the bill, each with this Rooseveltian motto in Latin prominently displayed: "Novus Ordo Seclorum." Translated that means "a new or der of the aees." It appears on the reverse f the great seal of the United States, but never was used on the nation's currency until a new dealer spotted it. A. W. Hall,director of the bureau of ens? ravins:, said that Secretary of Treasury, Henry Morgetithau, Jr suggested use of both sides of the great seal, on the back of the bill. tv nviiF2. aiHo denicts an eve and a triangular glory, symbolizing an ell-seeing deity, anil an unnnisneo pyramid. The latter indicates strength and the belief of the nesigners- that there is work .still to be done. In addition to "Nov us Ordo Seclor um," the seal carries another motto, "Annuit CooptLs," meaning "God favored our undertakings." Principal difference between the new bills and the old i3 the method of nrin.inr hp sis-nature of the secre tary of the treasury. It used to be that th signature was Dart of the original printing plate. Trf ojfnature ot iJgnen Aims con sequently, appeared on hundreds of thousand of dollar mils, alter me I, administration took office. The late William Woodin's signature appeared on new bills for months after he died. Questions end- : Answers : ?Mf tf ?nf f t ? i. What is the -other name fur Abys sinia? L'. What is the name of the Kmper- or of Abyssinia ? 3. What is the capital of KthiopiaV 4 What is the name -of the unrap- fured suspect in the Weyerhaeuser Kidii.ipini; case? .a. What causes an eclipse of the inoon? I. Ily what name (s the-type nt sov erntiient of Hussia known? 7. What is the name of the woman connected lh the Weyerhaeuser kid n.i piroi case? h Wliat tiosition is held by Huey Ions? ii What is a holdinp: company . -: i It. st which legislation is Iiow be iuc directed? I. f what nationality was the itir veto or of wireless telegraphy? I. Ethiopia. j Halle Selassie, :i Addis Ababa. 4 William Mahan. Te Ah iclipse of the uioon results when the earth conies between the sun and the moon and the earth's shadow falls upon the moon. B. The Russian sustem of govern -merit is known as Soviet. 7. Mrs. Margaret Waley. x. Huey Lonu Is I'nlted States Senator from Louisiana. !. A holding cotniiany is tin orga nization formed for the purpose of loaning money to utility companies for the purpose of extension and en largement. in Italian. Marconi. CHARLESTON MAY GET FIRST LIQUOR PLANT t'Ol.UMEIA. S. C The nossibilitv ".oomol South Carolina's first ::. .-crsed litpjof manufacturing plant uniier the new law would be estab-li.-i-.ed at Charleston. An application, the first for a dis tiller's ieense since the ItiiUor law was .or.acted in May. was filed with the state tax commission today by the Planters Distilling company, Inc., of Charleston. Baby Lacking Drain Lives Twenty-Seven Days NEW YORK A baby boy lived 27 days after birth with only fluid in the cranial cavity instead of developed brain, it was revealed after an au topsy. The child was born July 21, and died Sa'ur'nv morning. It identity was ! not revta'-ed. A member of the St. Vincent's Hos p. ital staff, who declared that ttihe a-e was rare to medical science, said ; that for his first six days of life the infant was aoparently normal. I Despite the belief that behavior is (dictated'.--by the brain, he said the child ate regularly, cried lustily, and ' moved his limbs freely. ODD PLANTS RIVAL FREAKS IN ANIMALS Poached-Egg Tree, Sausage Tree Among Oddities. Washington. Add another plant to the already large collection of botani cal freaks. A Princeton professor re cently found among his experimental plants a new variety of evening prlm rosa Its claim to distinction lies In the faet that Itt buds develop to full size but never open, "Most interesting among peculiar plants are those which bear uncanny r6Seu.blance to something else," iays tie National Geographic society. "Lady slippers, sunflowers, and Jack-lr. t:ie pulplts are obvious examples to st nature lovers. Dozens of othe. re semblances are not eo well known. "Central Africa boasts among Its many nnusual sights a sausage-tree, from whose wldespreadlng crown hang what appear to be bologna sausages. A good accompaniment to It would be the African 'poached-egg tree so called because of its huge white flow ers with golden centers. Australia presents as rivals a tree whose thick based trunk tapers upward like a soda bottle; and the blackboy tree, which thrusts a spear-like shaft sis feet above Us Bhaggy crown of leaves. From a distance, n group of these might be savages on the warpath. Sinister Ui lies. "In South Africa, one may shrink from what seem to be huge red spi ders lying on the ground. They turn out to be lilies. Equally sinister-looking are that region's bloodlines, whose Intense red blossoms and stalks are thrust tip like the heads of dangerous snakes. Similarly, In hot dese can yons of the United States, wanderers have Quickened their pace toward the curling smoke of a friendly camp fire only to discover it the deceptive blulsh-greea branches of a smokebush. In New Zealand, some of the barren mountain sides appear dotted with sheep. Closer examination proves the large rounded gray masses to be Hnas tla plants, or 'vegetable sheep.' "New Zealand claims possession of many remarkable plants, such as but tercups three inches across. Large as these are, they shrink Into Insignifi cance before the rafflesla. There is little to this East Indian parasitic plant except its flower. But It Is the largest single flower In the plant king dom. It sometimes reaches three feet In diameter and weighs as much ns 15 pounds. "An equally weird plant Is the welwltschla, from Africa. Aside from Its cotyledons, or seed leaves, it de velops only two leave"!. But these con tinue to grow for dozens of years, stretching out on each side of the trunk Uke green ribbons several lnche3 wide and over six feet long. Tree That Catches Birds. "Those who have bt& experience with poison-Ivy do not ncea o fte re minded of the venom lurking unsus pected In Innocent-looking plants. From the strophantnus vine of the Tropics Comes strophanthine one of the most powerful poisons known. Natives of West Africa use It to tip their deadly arrows. Juice from oleander shrubs Is so poisonous that even eating the harmless-looking pink or wblte blos soms may kill a person. In the west ern United States grow powerful herbs, locoweeds, which have a weird effect on animals, Cattle, sheep, and horses that eat them soon lose their muscular co-ordination. They Stagger drunkenly around and may eventually die. They lose all sense of proportion and act as if crazy, rearing up to Jump over small sticks as tf they were log barriers. "A tree which grows In Sumatra has an effect on birds equally disastrous. Not poison, but a glue-like gum cov ering Its fruits, Is the cause. When small birds alight near the fruits, their wings become so glued together that rhpy cannot fly and fall to--the ground. "There are many odd plants among those that man eats with impunity. In some sections of Ceylon, the large Ivory-white blossoms of the ngatl tree are eaten as vegetables. Aristocrat among the plant products used In mod ern western cooking Is vanilla, de rived from an orchid.. One of the strangest fruits encountered is the so-called miraculous fruit. After eat ing one. everything, even a lemon tastes sweet. It causes this effect by temporarily paralyzing some of the papillae of the tongue." : Talafrmpfc oa Maa-f-War j As early as 1830 a telegraph set was used on board an American man-of-war. Perry took an outfit with bis I QotiRdron tn .Tnpiin In I'J.li SCHOOL CLOTHES For Boys Girls Teacher SPECIALLY SELECTED FOR Value Quality - Style G.E. Ray's Sons Fewer Farmers Fail in 1934 Despite Drouth Washington. Although the drouth cost farmers plenty fewer were bank rupt in' the fiscal year ended June 30, 1034, than In the corresponding peri ods of 1033 and "34. The bureau of agricultural econom Ics reported a reduction of 20 per cent In the number of farm bankrupt cies In the 1934 period. There were 4,716 bankrupt farmers last year, com pared with 5,917 In 1S33, and 4,849 in 1932. Largest bankruptcy declines were noted in east north central and Pacific areas, while twelve states, mainly In the south Atlantic division, showed increases. Illinois led all states with 527 cases. Texan Favor Farm Fort Worth, Texas. Tarrant county experienced a back-to-the-farm move ment during the past four years. The farm census released here shows that j on April 1, 1930. the county had 3,366 larms. figures last January 1 listed 1,058, a gain of 092. Heavy Newsprint Demand , Depletes U. S. Reserves Newsprint is largely finely ground wood with enough of the fibrous pulp added to make It hold together. In ad dition it contains clay, to give it bvdy, and sizing material, to keep it from soaking up and blurring ink the way blotting paper does. Unfortunately, writes Thomas M. Beck in the Chicago Tribune, paper niad'e from wood pulp Is inferior in certain respects to that made from lin en. For one thing, It deteriorates with age much more rapidly. For this rea son, paper that Is to be used for perma nent records still Is made from rags. The phenomenal growth since the World war of the industrial application of synthetic cellulose derivatives, such as rayon, lackers, plastics, and cello phane, opened np a new field for the use of wood pnlp. Originally about half of the rayon on the market was wood. Since the pulp used for this purpose must be of exceptionally pure Quality to compete with the other source of cellulose, cotton Unters, however, It is hardly likely that this use ever will consume an amount of wood pulp comparable to that required by the paper Industry.. Not all types of wood make good paper. Virtually all of the pulp used comes from spruce. The millions of tons of newsprint required annually by American newspapers have seriously depleted this country's reserves of this timber, with the result that since about 1900 there has been n steady shift of the paper Industry to Canada. Mexican Hairless Dogs Wear Many Odd Designs The dog known ns the Meslcan hair less was brought to the shores of Mex ico from the West Indies by the Con quistadors in the Fifteenth century, and Is closely related to hairless dogs found In such other southern localities as Africa, Spain, South America, India, Manila and Indo-Chlna, says the Ken nel Gazette. Many superstitions and fables sur round the Mexican hairless, and many of these have their focal point in the peculiarly speckled skin of the breed. The speckles and ppnts sometimes de velop Into the most fantastic designs, such as sunbursts, circles and squares, stripes and often pictures. Even letters, ns varied and numer ous as those of our government, ap pear on their skins. It wns an an cient belief that the prophets who could rend these designs and letters could foretell the fates of entire Aztec tribes. Another belief, and one held by many Americans when the Mexican hairless first became popular in the United States many years ago, was to the ef fect that the dog was a panacea for human Ills that It could cure whom ever It slept with. The Bujr Chinch Bug The chinch bug belongs to the group of insects possessing piercing, sucking beaks Instead of chewing mouths. It Is this little beak that does the dam age, and once an army attacks d plant stock It Is a matter of only a few min utes before It wilts and dies. The adult bug winters in the shelter Of farm weeds and field stubble. In spring It produces Its first offspring and these remain In the fields until about hay harvesting time, when they start their food migrations to green cornfields, traveling along the ground like an in vading army. First Automobile Race The first automobile race ever run was on June 22, 1S94, from Paris to Rouen, France. The distance was 78 miles. The pioneer race in the United States was a reliability run In Chicago, under the auspices of the Times-Herald. The date was November 28, 189(3; the distance 54.36 miles, from the heart of Chicago, Into the suburbs and return. It was won by J. F, Duryea, in a Duryea car. The speed average was "a miles per hour. Firit Political Machine The first well organized political machine In this country was the Al bany Regency, made up of a group of Democrats, who, from 1S20 to 1S54, exercised a controlling Influence over New York state politics. Their lead ers Included Van Buren, Marcy, Wright and Dlx. The first national political convention was held In 1627. There were political groups soon after the Revolution, including those led by Hamilton and Jefferson. Firet Earopean De?retiion The first universal European de pression Is associated with the spread of Christianity, the absorption of lands by the monasteries, the blighting ef fect of the crusades, the black plague and the complicated combination of events which brought the Dark ages, which began about BOO A. D. Universal Pottal Union The Universal Postal union was founded by the Convention of Bern which was concluded in 1374 and be came effective July 1, 1875, which con rentlon provided for the admission of single and reply postal cards to Inter national malls. Da4 Sea Chemical. It Is Impossible to state the worth of Dead sea chemicals, it La known to be one of the richest sources la the world, with a concentration perhaps three times as much as German brines and five times as much as the Ameri can brines. First Peruvian Flag Is of Red, White and Green Shortly after landing with his vic torious army in Pnracas bay (since then known as Independence bay) the Liberator San Martin saw the incom patibility of the old Insignia of Spain with the independence of Peru, and thus, on October 21, 1820, he issued In Pisco a decree providing that, pending ihu oatnhiishment of the Independent government, the nag of the country should be white and red, divided by diagonal lliies into four triangular fields, the upper and lower white, and the lateral red; In the center was a innr of arms formed by an oval crown of laurel with a sun within, rising from behind a range of mountains bor dered by a calm sea. This was like wise the first coat of arms of Peru. The first Peruvian flag, states a writ er In the Washington Post, is the re sult of a sublime conception, in which were embodied the local traditions, an Indomitable patriotism and a lofty po litical aspiration. Red symbolized the blood of the patriots, and white right and Justice. The laurel crown was tne mllltnrv reDresentatlon of triumph and glory. The mountains symbolized the new Andean nation, emerged from tne rrnnnnii waters of the Pacific, the green of which expressed the hope of the Peruvians striving for a nome idoaL The sun was the deity of the Incas, awakening from a sleep of three centuries. Bolt Plavc (AA "-jy i incMVith Bar . Were is what J. p p. nving near Soring..: tell you that a re. V' 'lore a large hole a Tiie tin n i sa . t . . ULir--- ieid v. ra' n thc ,1 .i ' - J. D a around the burned hundred of Wa;' ; par as though it ha-i CJ with acid. On top 0f a" 's holt burrowed dep he" -r'.-'5a- i beneath the tires. ' "' ?r'-' o.e 4 Leaning Tower May Stand The campanile of Pisa's cathedral, world famous as the Leaning Tower, has been steadily Incrensing the degree of "lean" in recent years, and the dan ger of collapse was so Imminent that the water was pumped from about Its foundations and cement forced In un der high pressure. It seems likely that the tower, begun by the architect Boa nanus in 1174, will endure for a few more centuries. The question whether the tower's peculiarity was accident or design is frequently asked. Experts generally agree that the south side sank while building operations were In prog ress, and that afterwards the tower was purposely counterbalanced In the other direction from the third story upward. Clever Spy Trick During the World war, secrets leaked constantly from a certain em bassy In Europe. AH persons in It were shadowed and frequently their clothes were examined by experts. But no evidence was found. Finally, says Col lier's Weekly, all were locked in for a month, yet secrets still passed to the enemy. Eventually It was discovered that the spy was the scrubwoman who, when washing the windows, "talked" to her assistant, hidden In a house across the street, through the various strokes she used in drying the glass. Wisconsin'' Mineral Product Principal nonmetallic products of Wisconsin are stone, sand and gravel, Hine and clay, while principal metallic products are Iron ore, lead and zinc. In order of value, leading mineral prod ucts are stone, zinc, sand and gravel, Iron ore, and clay products. Other minerals which make up the mineral resources of the state include dolomite, granite, quartzite, trap, sandstone, min eral wool, talc and soapstone, and marl. Read The Ads NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S s On Monday, SeptemXr - ...I 11 O Clock, A. M. a r ."-M door, in the Town r,f "tv ' tne county of Hav-.v" -e North Carolina T V outcry, to the higheit'b'd p the following lands and pr't ing and being in WaVr.eU-t ship, Haywood Countv. and n", , tkularly bounded a f.viow"".J r ning at a stake in tiw S-w margin of Daisy Averut Z from the intersection of Da-v nue with Gudger S:r.,-e:, ii a deed of trust dattd Dt.- :! Bar the line of said lot South Vu'ii 1928; to the First Xun i,:-J DnrVum X P oni """ ' 1 whlj l mi? tr.ence 1 111 V .. . ! . , W. 64 feet to a stake; thence N West 134 feet to a st-ak in the gin of Daisy Avenue; thtroe I Ben uiaigiu iii a --ur.nt&ste tion 63 feet to the bvgr.r,;. Sale made pursuar.t oi saie contained :r. a n-r.a- i vi iru3i ea.evui,eu ov 1.: y - Harm dated Dec. 18th, 1;2-. ar. i -ecoS in Book 26, page Itorlj1 Deeds of Trust of Hayu Cjj This the 8th day of Auiru-t, 1 J. R. MOEGAf NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SAl 1 On Monday, September- f at eleven o clock A. M. at the tt nouse aoor in w ayntrvu.v, nay County, North Latolma, the a citrnorl trntpi 1V1 e.l lit Tl!l!i.;r cry, to the highest bidder. f.r the following land ana premie to-wit: I BEGINNING at a -'... at!. Southeast margin of State H:jil No. 10, 147 feet in a Wt -ttrly db tion from the West margin oft new street, and runs theru'e with : line between lots No. 2 and 39 30' E. 145 feet to a stake' iai of lot No. 25; thence with saiila 51" W. 42V2 feet to a stake; thf With the line between lots Mm. Si 4, N. 42 30' W. 1411 feet to' a .st thence N. 51 E. with the Souti margin of said Highway, 50 felt the BEGINNING, being lot Nf f iV. Prsi-nil Park Addition t town of Hazelwood, as t s and Mar v.. i. ' , Register of Deeds of Haywooa-.va ty. - : J Sale made pursuan' to ttje.pfl of sale conferred upon me by of that certain deed of-tiut rfe bv Jere Davis and wife. Ui f Davi. dated April 24. MM corded in Book 17, page W. of Deeds of Trust of Haywood C This the djjrofA.g No. 378-Aug. :i5-22.2?.-SePJ n of Hazelwood, as t so I plat of J. W. Seaver, rch, 1925, and recorded m )k "C," Index "P," office of 31.SO ROUND TRIP KNOXVILLE, TEN N. SUNDAY, AUG U ST 2 5, 1 935 Special Train No Stops LvAsheville ' 8:00 am ET ArKnoxville 10:30 am CT Returning SPECIAL TRAIN leave KnoxviUe 3:00 pm C and arrive Asheville 9:30 pm El. r regular tram w n.n- fnn j ir-iii- ift-lfi am CT reiu" I ;vo am Ei k aim iiiiiiius uuuaiius " - - . nn ing, irate miv.Mim; u.iii; yiu 9:15 pm ET. ' ';. Double Header Baseball Game Knoxville vs. New Orleans The Tennessee Coach Company will sell round J tickets, between Knoxville and Norris Dam lor for individuals and 80 cents for parties 25 r . Necessarj- buses will meet train at passenger slat transport those desiring to make the trip, ire s Dam. Seven daily buses between Knoxville and Dam. ; Ample Coach Accomodations For A WHITE AND COLOKbU Purchase tickets in advance. R. II. DeBUTTS, vd Assistant General Passenger - SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTk
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 22, 1935, edition 1
12
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