PAGE TWO (First Section) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER THE MQUN TAINEER By TB TVAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO Main Stwet V v. Phone 137 Wiiynesvflle, North Carolina The County Seat of Haywood County W. CURTIS RUSS Editor MRS. HILDA WAT GWTN Associate Editor W. Curtis' Rusi and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY HAYWOOD COUNTY AND SERVICE MEN One Year $3.00 Six Months .... One Year Six Months ... 1.75 NORTH CAROLINA $4.00 . 2.25 OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year Six Months $4.50 ... 2.50 Entered at the pot office at YFaynrevUle, N. C, as Second Claaa Mali Matter, aa provided under the Art of March 2, 1 s 7 9 , November 20, ltli. Obituary notice, resolutions of respect, card of thanks, ana til notices of entertainment for profit, will be cbarjred for at the rate or o'ne aDd a ' .If ceuta pr word. NATIONAL CDITORIAL- WjjSSOCtATION S North Carolina uiv TUESDAY, DECEMB.. 194C Too Many Parties We may have our political problems, but they are nothing compared to those of France. The siutation in France causes weakness in foreign as well as domestic policies. A gov ernment which is weak at home is certain to be weak abroad. The following resume of the recent French general election, which came a few days after our own should bring home to Americans the immense advantages of the two-party system as practiced in our country. Because it does not follow this system France is doomed to experience weak government at a time when a positive policy is essential to national recovery. A dozen parties contested on November 10 for the 618 seats Which, including 45 seats al lotted to the colonies, and compose the French National Assembly similar to our House of Representatives. No single party won a majority of seats or anything like it. The largest single party, by a very, small margin, will be the Communists. They cast approximately one-third of the total vote and captured 183 seats. Next came the Popular Republicans, with about 25 per cent of the vote and 162 votes seats. In the third place are the Socialists, which polled almost 2 per cent of the total vote and will hold 101 seats. The none remaining parties divide control of the other 172 constituencies. Because of the French elections the Foregin Minister of that country, George Bidault, did not attend the meeting of the Big Four in New York. His deputy cannot commit the French government td anything because he does not know what the policy of his govern ment will be. Congratulations We congratulate the sponsors of the Hay wood county Annual Achievement Day pro gram on the selection of Senator Clyde R. Hoey as the principal speaker for the event. With a fine understanding of the problems of the state, and with a sincere interest Mr. Hbey has much to offer. Added to these his power over the spoken word and his ability to talk made him one of the outstanding public speakers in the state. This annual event is one of the most com prehensive of rural progra.. .., .ield in the county. Since all farm groups are combined and recognition given to the men, the woman, and the boys and girls, each age receives inspiration from the other in their progres sive course toward a better rural life in Hay wood county. In addition to Senator Hoey, a number of official frorri the State Extension Service will be 'present to give a message to the Hay wood farm folk and their families, which is always an attraction on any program of this kind. Vital Role We were interested in the meetings held in Charlotte last week of the REA groups which were attended by the manager and another employe of the Haywood Electric Member ship Corporation. Governor J. Melville Broughton made an illuminating talk on the deveiopment of rural , electricity u'.id brought out the fact that in this lies the greatest economic hope for the South. He asserted, "These small community supported industries will provide an eco nomic nucleus for rural areas and help pave ' the way for a more prosperous South." Mr. Broughton also emphasized that rural electrification will also play an important, part in North Carolina's good health pro-! gram. It will supply the needed power fori small rural hospitals, and will help relieve) much of the drudgery of farm workers, which 1 will promote better health, it was brought out by Mr. Broughton. We know what the REA has done for Hay wood county in the few short years since it was established and its lines strung over our section. We also ralize that had not the war come and restricted its larger development, its service would have been much greater. MAN IN THE MOON 'X ".Tt i. f li' 1. VOICE OF THE PEOPLE Do you think the American m-niile are tettins the habit of taking their problems to the Fed era! government rather than at temutine to solve them in their home towns and states? Noble Garrett "The people cer tainly have been encouraged to do that: in fact almost forced to, dur ing Hip past 14 years." Mrs. Janet Crittenden "I think Mrs. Laurie Arrineton "I think Hint a lot of our problems should be taken to the government." Drive Opens The 40th annual Christmas seal sale spon sored bv the North Carolina Tuberculosis Association was launched locally yesterday, j It would be hard to estimate what the sale of these penny seals has meant toward stamp-j Having recently had some thief ing out one of the most dreaded of diseases. J sacualties in our family we lent a That is one of the fine things about mod- 1 re than sympathetic ear to the ern medicine, the development of preventive j stor' of Mrs- Newton Brendle who measures. Years ago we took no action until had ,0 teU of her Thanksgiving thP nstipnt was down and out. Todav We shopping tour- T,le Friday before . . . .... , , , Thanksgiving Mrs. Brendle came to recognize certain conditions and combat them ; , , ...,., I town early and boueht her Thanks- before they become realities. giving dinner so that she would Each vear the monev derived from these have nothing to worry about the , ' . . , week of the great national day of small Christmas seals is spent on a goodjThanksgivingi she made her pur health campaign. It is aiding in cutting down 1 chases and we all know how money our cases of tuberculosis. j"st melts in a grocery store. Be- fore she knew it she had bought It is something in which we can all help, j $12 worth of accessories to be for the cost of the seals is within the reach served with the festive bird. She of us all. No matter how small our purchase, , 'f er patkagcs w,ith hefr ,nar" '(Plainly written and went to do we have taken part in a grat crusade. j other shopping. When she return- Let us not forget to include in our happy ' Alas her snceries were gone. . , , 'Some customer whose desire for unribimas Miuppniy as idige d nuniuti ui food was not supportcd by tneir HERE and THERE By HILDA WAY GWYN I". It. f ofirdill "Yes, I think they ire t'etting that habit." By JANE EADS A WOMAN IS THE KEEPER OF THE GREAT SEAL OF THE U. S. Paul Davis "When became president during the big t!eire ion the people wanted same 'hint? ('one. The government began takirr; the lead in working towards solutions of our problems, and the tendency has been since that time of looking towards the people in Washington for help in many of the things we undertake. I be lieve we should start depending more upon ourselves." WASHINGTON In an odd-looking cherrywood cabinet in Room 171 of the State Department, the great seal of the United States is kept under lock and key despite the frequent use to which it is put It is affixed to proclamations oi the President, ratifications of trea ties, the commissions of members of the cabinet and of American ambassadors, ministers and foreign service officers and certain other documents. All of these documents must first be signed by ihe President and the secretary of state before the de sign of the seal is impressed upon a paper wafer which has been snor Roosevelt! to tRe document. these seals as we feel we can afford to buy. What Does It Mean? Pleriiy of Corn The farmers of North Carolina have just , completed harvegtihg the largest corn crdp ever produced" in the state, accbrding to the State Depaf trhent of Agriculture. The! yield per acre, was 25 bushels, while in 1S45 it was 2i bushels; and the total over the state vfaf 58,708,000 bushels. ! This year's crop id tepotteli IS "ietwo; per cent larger than tfie i945 crop; and 17 per cent greater than the i(e&yef age.;i : ' Thfo'ugH eiftergencfes'we often learri better ways io "doHhfhgsfihd no dbtibt the urge to iive'tbgetherj but hgreetecl MSloM ih'the help feed the 'drld hilpW tiS here in the back room of the finifcassy with a forced state to "produce 'ftiors! cbrrL'i "',, 'v",';" " v ; ,smile! ;HK :tZ:,,-,i IZ- We live so far away from the high spots of contact with international diplomats that often we folks who reside in the small com munities and crossroads of America don't realize what is actually happening until the curtain is about to rise on the play. Then with a shock we find we are scheduled to take part in the performance, though we had no idea we would be included in the caste. You recall back in 1939 a lot of things were shaping up which we thought did not concern us and that to even suggest that they did, was simply borrowing trouble. As the years went by and each month we saw the buses fill up with our Haywood county men, we knew then that we had been a part of the picture all along, but had not recognized the fact. The following taken from Drew Pearson's column should make every American think, and think hard. A party up in Washington mav not be of special interest to us down here trying to work out our problems, but it might prove to be our business. "The Russian Embassy trotted out Russia's second-best drawing card, Foreign Minister Molotov, for the annual reception celebrating the Soviet Revolution. Even his presence, however, failed to disguise the deterioration of Russian-American relations. "Significant was not who came but who stayed away. For the first time since 1940 the bulk of the Cabinet was absent. So were most members of Congress, even those still in Washington. The Russians knew the freeze was on. For the first time in five years they roped off the third and fourth floors of the Embassy, in previous years loaded down with choice viands, rare cuts of beef and free flowing vodka. The crowd simply didn't show up. The Acting Secretary of State at tended. So did the Undersecretary of the Navy, so did fumbling Secretary of Treasury John Snyder, who loves a party no matter where it is. There were also a few brass hats, but the outpouring of top hats seen in former years failed to materialize. "Molotove's entire visit to Washington was a diplomatically correct but cool performance. He was met at the station by Acting Secre tary of State Acheson, visited the State De partment for i0 minutes, and spent 10 min utes dt the White House just long enough to say hello and pose for photographers. One Cabinet member who did hot show up at Molotov'sr patty Was Secretary of Com merce ' Averell 'Harriman;ex-Ambassador to Moscow. Harrimari recently was dubted as! saymg Russia arid the United States couldn't pocketbook had walked off with her groceries. It is a bad story from a number of angles, and cer tainly the old one about getting ready ahead of time, She was more We read with interest the results of a recent survey by the Ameri can Institute for Family Relations excerpts follow The average man hasn't "gone with" more than six girls before marriage. Among 2,169 naval discharges (aged 17 up) Dr. D. G. Townsend, a chaplain, found many teen-agers who had never had a date. Of these aged 25 (average age of first marriage) and over, no one claimed to have been dateless. But seven per cent of the total had dated only one girl and 10 per cent only two girls. Thirty-two men had gone with 50 girls each, which in the opinion of Dr. Joseph Folsom, sociology professor at Vassar College, is the ideal number. The survey further revealed inai young people who have had many friends usually are more successful in marriage than! inose wun tew menus. The sur-j very further showed that the girls,! the boys do not marry are a vital factor in promoting a successful marriage so we would advise all mothers and sons, not to worrv John Palmer "I think thev are iaki:ii too much to (he govern ment." sion thai Mr. Homer L. Ferguson was born in Waynesville, but this week we found out that he was a nalh.-e of the Crabtree section of I lie county and was born in the ame bouse in which his father first saw Ihe light. The house is owned by M. H. Ferguson, of Waynesville, whose father was a brother of Mr. Homer L. and is located near Ihe old Dr. W. R. Ferguson house, 12 miles from Waynesville. Little Mrs. Clydia Mae Richard son, with an upswept, pompadoured hairdo and a pleasant smile, is in charge of the presidential appoint ments and authentication section o' the department's Division of Pro locol. She is keeper of the seal. Her job and that of her assist ants is a complicated one. When Congress is in session, the section prepares the nomination of government officials on a hand some handwritten (or "engrossed "1 form which is signed by the Presi dent at the Whie House. This form is then given to the chief of records, Herbert L. Miller, a civil service appointee from Mis sissippi, who takes it up to Ihe V. S. Senate. The secretary of the Senate takes the form to the presi dent of the Senate, who cuts in on a IlK-si!':. , H'c Pre-i,l,.,,', . , W1"'" '..,',;!, "''lied, aiM,.r. . "'itestan,,,, damped lr. 11... ,, . -tale d.. ." "'"' I ' :nin, '1 I !(. ' '-'nit Minn 'Per (, te ilrpan A and e(ua., "ii a in , L.: vhich s, ,rj;, I'artiiient 1,, I'l'CMllw.l The Unn ominiv j,,M nent. I,, , ,. 'las io -ii'-Miaiiuv. r S. M-al ,,' ion goes ii,,, ! 1 i (.! ( j ,, , .111(1 files. 'I "as .vhen Hie 1 1 . IVesideni lot III ichard-m .irocedurr ''11. There arc u-i 'PP'iiii; 11K1H s ,,, 1 month U MUM" III !,(, , '"' nun. inai I,,,. . artmeiii n,, , ,. ''he ''ii ra,!) - liMinmn-iii .si! ,,i ike ihe-c ,. ii,,;.,, Hurton and ( ,,.,, -'rossers Thi'ir 'Doi'c I han a huml: he L'niled S-.i'm. -our.se is ni.'A Mrs. Hiclian1-,,-,.' engrosser herself if ": 1- t.o n " t mi ll, v 'ih. -t: : m: I nur.-ss II;: .III' (III I li I lit! I'll til who i- charitable we fear, than we would! about their everlasting dating and have been. We met her on her second shopping rounds and she told us she hoped whoever stole her groceries enjoyed their dinner we might have been tempted to wish that they choked on our cel ery, etc. a new girl every week or so. We have always had the opinion that the larger the field to select from the more opportunity one might have to know what one wanted. We had always had the impres- On our desk we found three copies of the "Fines Creek Reflec tor," the paper of the Fines Creek high school, which is mimeographed and gotten up in a very attractive form. It is "published" monthly 1 by the senior class of the high school and the staff is composed of Editor-in-Chief, Doris Rathbone; Associate Editor. S. T. Swanger; Advertising Managers, Geo. Mc Cracken and Robert Russell; Cir culation Manager, Faye Justice; Sports Editors, Jack Greene and Mary Grey Walker; Feature Edi tors, Marie Early and Mary Jane McCrary; Society Editor, Elva Trantham: Art Editors, Ruth Sut ton and Wilbur Teague; Reporters, Eugene Taylor, Martha Ledford, Dorothy Rathbone, Doris Teague, (Continued on Page Three) feiWASHINGT Schwellenbach to Resign? CIO, AFL Frown on Him t HA 1 Schwellenbach Soviefs Are Trying to "Sell" System to American People Special to Central Press WASHINGTON-Some AFL leaders look for Secretary of Labor Lewis Schwellenbach to resign his cabinet post before long They point out that he is "in bad" with both major union groups his health has been poor for some time, and all of the big labor de cisions are more often than not made at the White House Despite the pleas of Dan Tracy, former assistant secretary of abor and nev. ly-rleeted president of the AFL Electrical Workers the federations executive council refused to invite Schwellenbach.' 10 us nicago convention this year. The CIO also is expected to omit Schwellen bach's name from the list of speakers at its con vention. The CIO has never forgiven Schwellen bach for naming an AFL delegate to the ILO meeting after the post allegedly had been prom ised to the CIO. Schwellenbach has been left out entirely in the current coal-wage case and the recent maritime strikes were handled in a large part at higher levels. Reconversion Director John R. Steelman even announced settlement of the Washington hotel strike after the labor department had wor ried with it for three weeks. THERE IS NO FALSE MODESTY about the official attempts of the Russian government to 'sell ' the Soviet system to the American people. The USSR Information Bulletin, an attractively printed and widely circulated publication distributed by the Soviet embassy in Wash ington, is unblushing in its aggressive presentation of the glories of Communism. The current issue, for instance, includes sueh titles as these: "Soviet Democracy Is a Higher Type of Democracy"; "The Soviet System A System of True Popular Government"; "USSR, Cham pion of Small Nations," and "The October Revolution Saved Civilization." In the last-named article, credit is given the Soviet Union for saving the Allies from atom bombing or worse at the hands of the Nazis. 1 The Soviet propaganda medium reaches not only Americans who are sympathetic to Communism but many thousands of students and others who thus receive an extremely rose-colored picture of life behind the iron curtain. Washington observers agree that it is highly unlikely that a United States publication of similar nature would have a like cir culation in Russia. RUMORS ABOUT Agriculture Secretary Clinton P. Anderson ever-pending "resignation" crop up again in Washington. Anderson, who has said repeatedly be does not want to quit, took the latest rumors up with President Truman. After his talk with the president, Anderson called in newsmen and told them bluntly that he would not quit and would not be "flred." Furthermore, the agriculture secretary-said that the president would back him Up on this statement if Mr, Tru man were asked about his (Anderson's) status in Anderson the cabinet. , , Observers who know the situation have never BcKked by taken the -Anderson resignation rumors seriously. President ' Particularly, they brushed aside reports that Ander son would be "flred." It la regarded as well nigh an impossibility that Mr. Truman would dismiss the man he hand-picked for the big Job of war-time boss of all United States food. - A good bet: Anderson will 4tay as long as the Truman cabinet continues to exist unless his health; which t not too good, maker It necessary for him -voluntarily t seek reslgnatkm Aly,,,H "'"MS , (ained the mm-hnchl n BIGGER THAN EVER dio's number mi- f,,,,,,,,,, IN HEARTS OF FANS lainer, and was Ik,, 1 extra delit'ht over I fie hm NEW YORK In the welter of! is just a cminle l ihIii publicity attending the rapid rise I mals below Bina (wbj, H of the Sinatras, Van Johnsons, Bing's careers siarn il ji Dinah Shores and Danny Kayes, : mately the same lime M... U., 1 1 i 1. . , . int-it- na uet-ii a lenuericy io ig-, neiynis aimosi si in lilt aneoil nore the amazingly sustained pop- on top of evervilnn" else ularity of a young lady whoso lal- one of her l.i'.eiih immp ents are as large as her own matronly facade Kate Smith. Th(, llllks untll, thf in tne last tew months Kate lias classics of slam' and mov streamlined herself, dropping about I'm sure, passing up .1 licit Jo pounds, but her popularity from ignoring the assured talcnll coast to coast has not become lean: tuneful Kale. If somooii in fact, it picked up at the same along with a play siisge time she was slimming her figure, finalities of a "Goinn My ' In the last Hooper rating pub- "The Hells ol Si Man lished as I write this. Kate had at- (Continued on Past' Til TRUE TRAVEL PLEASURE T ""' r rntiwiiig mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmn 1 IS . , MP y I , , ss i Vou'll see this familar ; emblem displayed in cities. towns and hamlets ail over the Nation. It stands for friendly, eco nomical, convenient transportation over the most scenic highways in the world. No other public transportation gives you as" complete and thrilling a picture (of the life and beauty of this land of ours as do buses. They take you to and SMOKY MOUNTAIN TRiULWAV5 Wayne' They pause at colorful Tnm v along the way. They g.ve you , up, first-hand view of piuresq America at "scenery level.' Your friendly Trailways bus agent B gladly help you plan your tr P- familiar Trailways sign.. true uavel pleasure." Depot Street PHONE 136 HATIOU AL T RAI I IV AY 5 0 O S