Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 1, 1939, edition 1 / Page 9
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SECOND SECTION AYNESVILLE "MOUNTAINEER HE Published In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance oj The Great Smoky Mountains National Park YEAR NO. 22 rv- FIFTH WAYXESVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1939 $1.50 In Advance In Haywood and Jackson Counties W U To Have Week Term ui Criminal Court hi Term Will Convene June For One Week; Jury ' Drawn For Service Lcial one-week term of court V trial of criminal cases in R .11 o..i tn CountV Will convene in oji.a t VI The jury drawn for duty i term, as announced Dy tne Ummission,'. wmcn is composeu I i' Sutton, chairman, Dillard Id and H. H, Bryson, are as fol- I. Owens, Wolf Mt.; Carl Cagle, s Creek; C. G. Rogers, Cashiers; Parker. Sylva; Carl Fisher, H. C. Stiles, Barkers Creek; Ferguson, Qualla; A. D. Cow- Ifbster; W. E. Gnndstaff, JSylva; , Cowan, Webster; Walter All nvhster: John Hooper, Cullo- w. T. Cook, Sylva; George L Sylva; C P. Shelton, Qualla; . Cooper, Qualla; Joe H. Dietz, C. W. Hensley, Sylva; Sam ichanan, Gay, Lrgt Hooper, Cowarts; G. W. Sylva High School Teachers Elected The following members of the fac ulty of Sylva high school have been elected for the next year: Principal, Louis Hair; teachers, Mrs. Mary Scott, Miss Edith Buchanan, Mrs. Su'e Allison Bryson, Miss Louise Henson, Leonard Huff. Dan flunk Mi.- Ooii.J May Monteith, Claude Henson, W. Ai natnelu, f . I. Watson. Willets: S. J. Phillips, Mrs. Guy Sutton, Miss Kathleen Sutton. Ashe, Sylva; M. M. Hooper, Glenville; Henry Bumgarner, Barkers -Creek; Wayne Dietz, Greens Creek; H. E. Battle, Cullowhee; Fred Brown, Can ada; R. C, Buchanan, Gay; Ed Bum garner, Barkers Creek; D. D. Cogdill, Sylva; J. E. Pan-is. Sylva; Ed Chil ders, Qualla; K. Howell, Qualla; D. H. Moffitt, Cowarts; D. K. Battle, Qualla; R. L. Wjke, East La Porte; WYT. Ashe, Webster; W. M. Quiett, Qualla; J. J. Hooper, Tuckaseigee; D. L. Shook, Tuckaseigee; Love Dillard, Sylva; H. L. Hensley, Dillsboro; and R. J. Crawford, Sylva. What F. D. R. seems to be saying is resign or become resigned. When Three Freights Pile Up All Persons Begging, Are Asking Alms Required To Have A License Combination Shovel For Work And Rest Here is the tangled wreckage of that Piqua, 0., train pile-up which took the lives of three engine-men and injured four others. Three freight trains piied up after one had stopped to take on coal. It is said that demand for an article creates a supply. By com bining a standard No, 2 coal shovel, with a folding Seat, the Alphabetical Shovel Company, of Mt, Vernon, 111., has recently put on the market a very novel but useful article, with which one can either work, or enjoy mo ments of leisure. It is known as "Wo Please All" or W. P, A. Alphabetical Shovel. It is reported in a re cent business magazine that the shovels are becoming quite- pop ular on the market and are being sold for "more or less serious purposes." Rigid Regulations Now (Jovern All Persons Seeking Contributions May 28 marks the fifth birthday of the famous Dionne quintuplets. The more we study the European situation the more we are convinced that an incident is never an accident. DR. 0. T. ALEXANDER 9t 9d With Pleaiute that We Announce hat Dr. 0. T. Alexander Is Now In Charge Of Sales And Accounts 4. v. k M W. K. CHANDLER CHANDLER & COMPANY Gifts For Every Occasion New Stock Special Gift Department Popular Prices iA AA,MswA lit ir--.K.. : :r1! 1 t ' ' '- Dnricn nnr in 0f 'it i f-iS!f - - - ; . . ..: -;'X-. . - ' " ' . ....... J Jewelry On Credit W a t c h e s Rings Silverware Clocks Musical Instruments The Exterior Of Our Modern Jewelry And Gift Store Our New and Complete SOUVENIR AND GIFT DEPARTMENT OPEN NOW Visit this new department today Waynesville's Oldest Jewelry Store JEWELRY AND WATCH REPAIR DEPARTMENT With the coming of the summer season, and usual influx of individuals who make a living soliciting alms, it might be well to call attention here, to the law passed in the l!),'!lt Legis lature which requires of such persons, or organizations, to have a license. The law is found on page 1 lS and chapter of 144 of the public laws of North Carolina, just recently off the press. The law, which is now in force, reads in part as follows: "It is. un lawful for an individual to engage in the business of soliciting alms or begging charity for his or her own livelihood upon the streets or high ways of this 'sit ate, or through door to door solocittatioii without first se curing a proper license . ! " "Persons desiring to engage in tho business of soliciting alms or beg ging, must file their name, address for fiast live years, and manner in which funds received will be disburs ed. The carrying of merchandise by the individual from soliciting alms or begging charity do not exempt the in dividual from having the required license." Blind persons, or other visually handicapped, are to apply to the State Commission for the Blind for proper license. , Insurance of licenses by the Stale Department of Vocational Rehabili tation for cripple persons will be made. Th,. Bureau of Labor for Deaf will handl,. licenses for the deaf. All other persons desiring to so licit alms publicly ami all organiza tions, institution or associations de siring to ask for alms, shall make ap plication to the State Board of Char ities and Public Welfare. All persons must have this license on them at the tim( of making so licitations, with copy el a recent photograph attached. The law does not apply i'i any ap peal, or solicitation made in a public, religious or charitable or tdueatlonul service or in a meeting of any lodge, or church, Sunday school, or chari table organization or through the public press, American Legion and other paU-iotie organizations. Solicitors -selling books, periodicals, pdvorlisiiig niatter or nurehnndiso for charitable purposes are also obliged to to have a license. And person soliciting alms without first applying for and obtaining a license, or those who shall solicit funds and revert them to some other purpose cither thai! .-flint, for which they were contributed shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon convic tion shall be punished by a fine of hot more than $0iM or six months im prisonment. National Deficit To Fall Short Of Predicted Figure Public Debt Now Over 10 Bil lions, Which Is .'! Billion Over Last Year WASHINGTON.---Ti o.imh eiy offi cials estimate- that, the Federal de ficit this year would fall .r.f)(l,fMIII,l)i)i) short of th,. $1,000,(10(1,(1(10 (,nce ex pected.. - - Expenditures have h en .somewhat smaller and income slightly larger than they expected when they map ped out the $;t,50O,OOO,000 spending program about a year -ago. They hoped the Government bor rowing to finance the deficit would put to work money that would other wise be idle in banks. With six weeks of the fiscal 'year which ended June 30 to go, the fros ury had spent $8,025,790,442 and taken in $4,949,0.11,914, creating a deficit of $3,076,158,528. June 30, expenditures are expected to total $9,500,000,000 and receipt i budgeted $9,500,000,000 and receipts about $2,000,000, making the deficit $3,500,000,000. : This deficit would be about on a par with those in the hfavy spend ing years of 1934 and 1935, but far below the peace-time record of $4,76.3,842,000 in the 1936 fiscal year, when the soldiers' Minus was paid. Next year, the deficit is budgeted for $3,300,000,000, but some Adminis tration advisers both in and out of Congress are informally discussing an enlarged spending program. The public debt now is at a record high of $40,227,673,187, which is $3,063,000,000 more than it was a year ago.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 1, 1939, edition 1
9
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