Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 1, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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Monday Afternoon THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER FACE TWO ' ' 1 ,' I ! . 1 I I si w m m : I;:: '4 :! i M MKI" m f V!; .!! '" vi ... :,'., k m - - I'VV i.J.v'1 THE MOUNTAINEER Waynesville, North Carolina .Main Street " Pnne 700 -Til CttWflty, Sent pf -naywood County Published By THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER, Inc. ,W. CURTIS RUSS.. - Editor W. CurUsj Run and Marion tL Bridges. Publisher .HJblJSIIKD EVERY MONDAY ANU TllURSDAY HAYWOOD COUNTY v One Year,..:. - ...'., ,-, Six MunthR ., NORTH CAROLINA One ., Year . : Six Months - - OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year . -. Six Months ...... - $100 1:75 H $4 00 2.29 $4.50 2.50 Kniered at the Dost olliee at Waynesvl'le, N. C, as See-:. ond Ciass Mall Matter, as provided under the Act ol March 1. 1879, November 20,, 1914. Obituary notices, resolutions of respect, card at thank nd all notices or entertainment tor profit, will be charged Cor at the rate it two cents per word. - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the uo for r -publication uf air the local news printed In Un oewspaner, as well os ollAP news dispatches. A New Farm Income For Haywood The establishment of the Poultry Diagnostic Laboratory here by the State, has proven to be the best stimulant for the comparative new poultry industry in Haywood county. No phase in agriculture has grown quite as fast this year as has the poultry business. The hatching egg business is bringing in hundreds of extra dollars per week, to say nothing of the broiler phase of the industry. More and more farmers are going into the poultry business, in one way or another, and many have said they would not have attemp ted the project had it not been for the open ing of the Laboratory here, where they could get their flocks checked. The details of the working of the laboratory and work of Dr. C. G. Qatz, is carried in an other part of this issue, and in that, one can easily understand the important part it is playing in encouraging this fast growing cash crop here in Haywood. NATIONAL EDITOMIAl I -v ASSOCIATION Monday Afternoon,. October I, 1931 Daily Bread By Rev. A. Purnell Bailey ''All things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose." Dr. Moon, a native of Brighton, England, at the very height of all his mental ability and personal development, became totally blind. At first there was a constant rebellion against God. "What," he asked, "are all my acquisitions, what are all my powers worth now, when I am shut up here and the whole world shut out?'' But soon Dr. Moon began to ask himself if it was possible that he might help blind men read the Word of God; and, while his own eyes were sight less, he invented the Moon System of the alphabet. This system has gone now into twenty different countries, and from four to-five millions of blind people all over the world are reading the Word of God in their native tongues because Mr. Moon's eves became mling under the providence of God. "All things work together for good to them that love God, lo them who are the called according to his purpose." Top Ranks In State The showing of Haywood Hereford cattle men at the recent show and sale in Hender sonville was no more than was expected. And the honors which the growers and their cat tle received indicates once again the rank of Haywood in the Hereford cattle world. It is interesting to note also that the Here ford bull sold by Dr. A. P. Cline . is a 100 per cent Haywood product. The calf was born in the county two years ago, and in layman's language, the bull's parents were also natives of Haywood. This proves that top ranking cattle can be produced here. The records recently attained by Hay wood cattle will create more interest in the ap proaching beef and dairy show 'to be held here this month. With beef cattle adding two millions each year to our agricultural income, it is well that due recognition be given the industry. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Whem milo was drafted iM i?40 WS PET PEEVE VVWb-UoTENINu 1U OLD VETS OF 1917 On BEFORE-,- A NEW SEN'ERATIOM IM iftiRTRM biOWMO WWOS-lHt B16GE.5T EAR-SENDER THElt- EVER MET?L0OKy'' 3T -rurv RAPW Wf nn I EVER TELL 'W FVtXJ GUVS GOT A POiC-VM, WMEMi BUT BACK IM M8 F WERE GM9r4G fWOiO 7 tJaASml Looking Back Over TheYears 15 YEARS AGO : Mack Davis enters Southern Dental College. Atlanta Mrs, Hugh Massie gives two con- j tract parties. Edwin Poteat goes to New York City to spend the winter. Mr, and Mrs. C. F. Kirkpatrick attend the Carolina-Wake Forest game in Chailotte 10 YEARS AGO Bronson Matney.' Jr., 12-y ear-old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bronson Mat ney, sings on Major Bowes "Origin al Amateur Hour". Miss Margaret Hyatt enro'ls n( the Walton School of Commerce in Chicago. Wallace Blaekwell and W. A, Bradley leave for Lexington, Ky to attend the races. Dr. and Mrs. S. P. Gay give par ty for Miss Betsey Lane Quinlan who leaves during the week for Charleston, S, C. ,, 5 YEARS AGO Construction of a 9,000 foot water line from the reservoir up Aliens Creek starts today. Mr. and Mrs. Thad Howell re turn from a 9.000-mile trip through the We.-l. Jimmy Albright enrolls in Bowl ing Green Business College, Bowl ing Green Ky. ' Miss Winifred Rodgers enters the freshman class at. Be.rea : College..'"... Mrs. Ben T. Price and Miss Mer ri.l Green give bridge party and kitchen shower honoring Mrs Walter Hyatt, a recent bride. A Successful Pigeon Valley Fair The citizens of Pigeon Valley have again rlemonstratqcl their ability to stage a success ful community fair. The exhibits were more numerous this year than the last two; the quality better, and the attendance was far ahead. In fact, the 1951 fair can well be put tfowti as very, very successful. The lunchroom was packed with home ex hibits, flowers, canned goods, community dis plays, and art work. Over in the work shop were the many horticulture and crop displays, while in the back were the livestock and poul try exhibits in pens and coops. The program began with a pet show Thurs day night, and even included a good football game Friday afternoon. The people turned out for all events, and enjoyed the sports and entertainment, which was on a par with the exhibits. The citizens of Pigeon Valley have demon strated exactly what The Mountaineer has al ways argued, and that is a decent and suc cessful fair can be staged without the filth of a carnival. ' We, are happy that the Pigeon Valley Fair was such a success, and we see the possibility of it "growing each year; perhaps becoming county-wide in scope, sometime, , but even then,; without a carnival. Trying To Dodge? Weary members of the state board of edu cation have secured only temporary respite from their much wrestling with the small school problems, we believe. The board nam ed a five-man committee to study the prob lem of which school should be consolidated and which school not and this committee is to make recommendations to the full board All during one day this week, the board has listened to one delegation after another. The question in almost every case was the same: to consolidate, abandon or continue a small school. ;. Most delegations were represented by lawyers who sometimes forgot the facts and replaced them with high flown oratory. Toward the fag end of the day the special committee was thought up and although it is not exactly a new idea it was seized upon with alacrity. . We think the complaints in most of these cases will welcome the idea of the special committee because it will allow them to pre sent their cases not once but twice, once be fore the committee and once before the board. The board doesn't think it can dodge a hearing because it was held somewhere else than before the final authority first, does it? The board doesn't think that lawyers, em ployed by interested delegations, are going to be satisfied with testing their lung power be fore a small group when surely, the full board must consider the case some time. Surely the responsibility for adjudicating these cases lies finally and wholly with the board of education. Morever, there isn't a very satisfactory way of sugarcoating what must be very monotonous business. Shelby Daily Star rlMI ' ""L.l..: '' "a ft. Jill IjjL,,-- ft. MIRROR OF YOUR MIND By LAWRENCE GOULD CoiuoItinK Psychologist sirable social order," the mor power a leader acquires or is given, the more sheltered he is from the impacts of reality (for one thing, subordinates incline to tell him only what they believe it will please him to hear.) We must try to find a more effective way of giving men authority without re lieving them from a sense of responsibility. Should a girl "wait for Mr. Right"? THE BEST Whi'.e outstanding footballers will mnrcli In bold headlines across the sports pages of, the papers this fall, there will be hundreds of Co lege students whose nanus you will not see, whose unglamorous exploits in the classrooms will go with scant notice except from the instructors. An instance of this occurred here In Raleigh last week. The law firm of Harris and Poe announced they had a new associ ate. Harris is the son of Superior Court Judge W. ; C, Harris. Poe is a grandson of Gov. Charles B. Aycock and son of Clarence Poe, editor of the Progressive Farmer. This new associate is one Cecil L. Porter, a recent graduate of Wake Forest Law School, His parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Lee Boy Porter of North Wilkesboro. He has mild and unpretentious kinfolks up and down the Yadkin Valley between Elkln and the Wilkesboros. Some of them work in mills, others on the farm, and others are in busi ness. And how did the Yadkin River's Mr, Porter, who received his un dergraduate training at Vanderbilt and Mars Hill, come to be associ ated with such fast company? The answer is simple. Messrs. Harris and Poe wanted the best. They contacted the Wake Forest Law School and found that Porter was at the top in his unglamorous studies. They asked him to come with them. He accepted, And where is Bill Gregus, that hard-running back? And where is Nub Smith, who could rip holes in the oppos ing line? And where are the oth ers who tripped the light fantas tic? Your guess is as good as ours. Another example: Jim Dorsett was a law student at the Univers ity of North Carolina, He was tops in his studies. Doesn't the word 'studies ' sound old-fashioned? That's why we use it here. An at torney here, a Duk alumnus, wanted a young University man In his law office. He chose Dorsett because he was the best. ' The man? Sen. - Willis Smith. The associate, James K. Dorsett, Jr., not only came with Smith as partner but last fall married Smith's daughter. . cement. They said it was wonderful lo watch the officials of the Mexi can Petroleum Company squirm and twist as the Governor said: "Now what wo need in this Slate is-a fine cement plant". Ik talked fqr several minutes alom this line . . . Haw! Voice of the People What kind of football season do you think the Mountaineers will wind up with this year? Mrs. Uoliert C. Hall: "I'm no pre (lictor, and I haven't kept up with the make-iit) of this year's team as well us I miyht, but 1 do feel that with the backs they have the ought lo make a good showing. SERIOUSLY CONSIDERING Hubert Olive of Lexington and Governor were In a little confer ence here last week. Afterward, Olive let the press know that he is "seriously considering" running to succeed the Haw River gentle man. Around here they are sayijig that Scott is hoping that Brandon Hodges will make the race. He figures that Hodges wl'.l take strength away from Bill Umstead, thus permitting Highwayman Hen ry Jordan or Hubert Olive to make the grade.' "Answer: A girl obviously oiujht opt to marry a man she does not loye and respect, but "waiting for Mr. Right" is an unconscious ex cuse in the great majority of cases. Through no fault of their own, many girls grow up with a deep rooted fear of men (or of sex, which is much the same thing) yet do not want to admit this ia why they cannot fall in love and marry. They prefer to say that they "just haven't found the right man which no one can dis prove. The mistaken notion that there is only 6ne "right" man for each woman makes this alibi seem all the more convincing. A girl who is unafraid of marriage rarely fails to find a husband. .,. .1. - 1 ' ' ' 1 - r k f Does power make leaders irresponsible? Answer: It tends to have that effect, writes Dr. Gregory Zil boorg in the Bulletin of the World Federation for Mental Health. One of the chief problems of our time grows out of the fact that al though "only so-called psycho logically normal leaders (are) capable of bringing about a de- Do athletics make a "he-man"? Answer: Not always, ill you ac cept the idea that a man's role in life properly includes being a ' good husband and father. For ath letic: prowess is essentially a Nur - cissistic or self-centered interest, vhich may weaken (or be substi tuted for) the need for feminine love and companionship. The pro verbial "man's man" often has left one side of himself unde veloped possibly because of an unconscious fear of women based on the belief that if he let a woman mean too much to him, he would "lose his freedom." The real test of masculinity is the ability to play a man's role in marriage and to set up and maintain a home. Bookmobile Schedule The Bookmobile will not oper ate on Oct.: 1st , iBeaverdam Trip) or Oct. 2nd 1 Morning-Star trip) be cause Mrs. Fisher will be in Ashe villc" attending a Library Institute. CurJy Whitley: . "I really hop they win from here out, and don't see any reason why they shouldn't." Rambling 'Rouml Bits Of Human ; Interest Ne ws, By Frances Gilbert Frazier The me'ancholy days have come ; . the saddest of the year," so wrote the poet. But to some of us hese days hovering between the elasticity of October and the solid down-to-earth grimness of De cember's dark skies, have a beau ty and heart-warming spontaneity we find at no other time of the year. The crispness and tang in the air are rejuvenating elixirs 10 bodies weakened by the warmth of sunny hours; the eyes and souls are gladdened bv the changing kaleido scopic glory of brilliant scarlets, golds and bronzes against a sap- ph're sky. The leaves reluctantly departing from their parent stems $ive promise tnai mey are umy going away so that otners may rase their places next spring. The fullness of the earth is Autumn's gift to mankind. Self-pity js the salve that In feriority Complex uses on her wounds. Mrs. A had been suffering with a painful, ankle and was a bit wor ried as to the cause and effect. One day while dressing to go out, she gave a horrified scream. "Just look at my leg," she told her daugh ter who came running at her mother's cry of distress, "it's turn ing dark. See how different it looks from the other one." Her daughter looked and then to her mother's astonishment, began to laugh. "Oh, Mother," she said be tween giggles, .""that's ..your stock ing. you haven't put the other one on yet." Her mind was it book... with pages. x iuu, e( n could K. 1 incidence lii tu ?1N "t . Mot- Purchased a nam ... .' been necessary to tain person a.. '"w centlv n . ;,T kindly gave assislance anrl lunk ii,.,i L'"''r"'fii it seems ih! ..n penei1 aeain lookintr ,.,,. 'l 1 , . . "fanny lilC 1UVU1U1 St! VOU think vmi rrtrrt ....... l r every time von Dine How w,f J,m . - uui. dsn 1 j sell you a do?cn ... . 1 P"es: "SI 20, pler? v' ,vc " earn, 45 ,...... .,H1U one dollar b- jusi me routine order 2 J . iuasi, -e v i fine . ... ''" el 1 ?i..J;na 11 y0u ord dinner, you go out and . the farm first. ve had from a friend: who is vir son in Fairbanks, Alaska ouuve piifes are daily etti one wrote .mat the fl0f, still blooming but the wea" as .variable as a woman's' Today a light sweater and row: everything you can pi; keep out the chill, if, uavei . ... nut there' like home. : s :1 .Want ?ds hring quick rrf UAStllfJGIO MARCH OF EYENTS Princess Elizabeth Felix Stovall: "I think we should win all our Conference games that's tho way I want it, anyway!" Bud Whisenhunt. "I think they will win most of their games this year." Georfte William Hill: "I think Waynesville will be in the lead all the way." Friday, Oct. 5th FINES CREEK Mark Ferguson's Store :. 9:45-10:15 Mrs. Frances Rogers .. .. 10:30-10:50 Fines Creek School . ... 11:00-12:30 Harley Rathbone .12:45- 1:15 Sam Ledford 1:30- 1:45 I.'nyd . Messer ., 2:00- 2:15 Mrs. Ann Shelton 3:00- 3:30 IirTF.RSON Afterpussyfoot. ing around with the idea for sev eral months, Conservation and De velopment Director George , Ross last Friday handled his problem like a man, boldly walked into Stale Forester W. K. Beichler's of fice and left a note telling him to move out by October 15. The fir ings and voluntary shifts in per sonnel around here lately have been terrific, CEMENTl-Cement has no use for Upstart Asphalt, which is tak- ing so much business away from it. These industries are among the sharpest competitors. So what hap pened? Gov. Kerr Scott officiated at the formal opening of the new asphalt plant at Wilmington last week and gave a fine talk pn Mrs, Anne Fie; "I haven't got ten to see the team play but one game (his year, but they looked pretty good in that." Ben Phillips; "I'd say Waynes ville should have one of the most successful seasons they've had in well, I can't say how far back. They do have plenty of competi tion this year, but they also have a plenty good team. Not only that, but the team is building all the time. 'Each game shows improve ment in both offensive and de fensive work. To my , mind this should be one of the best teams Waynesville High has ever had." nam ads bring quick results BIRD'S EYE VIEW OF WORLD ARMAMENT RACE V 3 . rHsr?.- A Princess ElizaMh'l I Can Welcomil, Visit Poses Problem I Without Big Fand Special to Central Press TrrASHlNGTON It is going to be hard to keep the visit ben YV month of British Princess Elizabeth and her husband, Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh,, within the limited bounds thty requested. -'.'.'- . Although planned only as a brief side tour after the fuW coast-to-coast state tour that the royal couple will pay toM it somehow always is compared here with the fabulous 1939 vuf IfW.nl the King artd Queen of England. y t serving us nosi 10 vim irum ouroao mi g come a habit which the nation's capital adgtti Ji,J bespangled tour down Pennsylvania avenue til the White House, flanked by motorcycle twenty abreast from curb to curb, now is as a weldoming badge for Uncle Sam as a New ticker tape reception. , .,.:.. Washington's visitors are chiefly political, -1 their calls either are "informal", or state sions. Technically, it decides the way the well 1 mat is rolled out, but actually the magnitude personality determines the hullabaloo, :, Elizabeth's Visit was to be so casual, ( UM speaking, that' President Truman sent her more than a notice mat sne wouia oe weiti which according to diplomatic etiquette, she never accept .officially, lest that be too elabortl The presidential plane, Independence, probably will fetch uw couple to Washington, where they will be Blair House guatt several days beginning Oct. 24. ' TRUMAN DINNER A dinner for only about 20 guesti wJ civen bv the Trumans. followed by a return dinner at the Can embassy. Then there will be a garden party at the British eni which sounds prim, but could assume the proportions of a ciroa that 1939 affair for t'.ie royal family. The next scheduled full-dress state visit will be that of Queen Juliana and her consort, Prince Bernhard, early in 195! the renovated White House with its new suite for national piesii be readv. The atmosphere here usually forecasts when a vnit will be unit ly stirring. The excitement over Elizabeth and Philip augunw createst spontaneous welcome since Gen. Douglas MacAw After visitors arrive on the scene, however, their own person gauge much of the response. French President Vincent Aurioi vivnrinns wft wurp limiKtmllv rliarminfr visitors last spnn2. Auriol exclaimed rapturously over every feature of his'tl including the fact that the ",Vive Le President Aunoi hired him in the very tie he wore that particular day! OTHER VISITORS Hardly having caught its breath fter Washington greeted in quick-succession Chile's samba-canij national supcrsalcsman, President Gonzalez Videla, and stm United Staies born football-playing and bull-nghting tiw" Plft7.a T.n sen : nthAf ioilnro thin Usui- lnlilria1 Crnwrn Prince OW and Pnl Martha of Norway, who made a quiet, dignified impression; Belff Premier Joseph Pholien and his wife, and the Liaqnai Ali Kahn, prime minister of Pakistan. Last year's star, of course, was the Shah of Iran, who as an eligible bachelor wowed the younger social set, although the diplomatic heavy artillery boomed for President Eurico Gaspar Dutra of Brazil and tOIIChV Primp Mintat-M- Wohrn nf Trtrila , The capital's nervous and volatile population never seems M . RritailH I jiauiiig inuiatnminaieiy ea.cn newcomer, uu mj , ifn....i...i n .j r . .,n.,L! rpreiVW 'l a-Kiinuai oeinuru Li, monigomery nas in receni jcoio - ,.,iiv wu uvavnubu na vwi. ... All-in-all. it makes for n npvpr.pnrlinp' nneeant, a kind CI tionul magic carpet that Washington never lets get threadbare. Iron's 1 Ihlt I1 : . 1 !ti "i-V
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1951, edition 1
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