TODAY'S BIBLE VERSB j TODAY'S QUOTATION ; Editorial Page of the Mountaineer a hole burnt offering* and sacrifice*. Come* back into our own. .? ;t ?Mark ?:?. ?Edwta tlarkham. Implications Of Agricultural Program The Ashevrile Citizen Tuesday morning, commenting editorially on the new agricul tural program for Haywood County, said: "Haywood County agricultural leaders are launchfhg a long-range program dMirr?ed to' ncreigt the cash farm incomd of Haywood armerg by $4 million a year. Through bOtter tarming practices, the plan Si* at increases in barley tobacco yields, poultry production, vegetables and I'maJl fruits, commercial apple orchards, dairy farms and sheep and beef cattle pro duction. An intensive farm forestry program also ;?a m of the plan. % The program will be watched with interest by neighboring counties because, if it ifi suc cessful, it would help solve a problem com mon to most rural counties ? low cash in come." t fgM Constitution Week A Timely Reminder In sponsoring Constitution Week this week, the Daughters of the American Revo lution are bringing to the attention of the American people the importance of our Con stitution through our everyday life. Unfortunately, the Constitution is like so many other things which we take for grant Hi. We do not read it and give it the con sideration it rightly deserves. We expect the reading of the Constitution is limited to students who have it on classroom assign ment. We agree with Mrs. Frederic Alquin Groves, President General of the sponsoring organization, when she says: "Know your Constitution and think about it; make it part of your daily thought habits. It is one of the truly great documents of our time, and as liberty loving and loyal Americans it is voor responsibility to know it intimately, and to protect and safeguard it. A direct faith and understanding of the ideals of free dom expressed in patriotic thoughts and ac tion means FREKDOM IS OUR WAY OF UIFE." Patents Must Accept Responsibility We have been impressed by the attitude of Juvenile Judge Richard K. Douglas of Knox - ville, who is holding that parents and guard \ans face fines and possible workhouse terms for permitting juveniles to drive automobiles without licenses. Judge Douglas holds that such persons will be prosecuted under laws applying to "contributing to the delinquency of a minor." The judge seems to be getting to the bot tom of one of our major traffic .problems. Recently he imposed a fine of $25 on n father, and twice that amount on a grand mother, as t>oth defendants entered pleas of guiltv as they were riding in cars driven by children without licenses. Judge Douglas has the jurisdiction to im pose penalties with fines as high as $1,000 and as much as 11 months and 25 days in the workhouse. We have a feeling that violations in the area where Judge Douglas has jurisdiction will be held to a minimum. Every great person has an autobiography and a biography. One tells his side of the story, and the other gives the low down. Yes, They Check Those Tax Returns Chance* thlt youf tax form ? one of 60, 000,000 ? would be picked for checking m If lit seem low, yet the fovemment does a surprising extensive Job of scrutinizing, say the editors of ChangMf Timed, The Kijiinger Magazine. Not all returns get the sarite attention al though every one is checked fof arithmetic. Sorbe 40,000,000 small wage earners' returns have little more on them than notations of total income', tax withheld and dependents. These are subject to only cursory examina tion. fiut about 20,000,000 returns receive greater attention. If you earn betweeh 16,000 and 150,000 or havS a business that doesn't gross over 180,000, it's likely your form will be reviewed. TTie probability is increased if you list unusually large medical deductions, interest payments or contributions. And, if you request a large refund, you can be sure that your return will be audited. Even in thd case of smaller refunds, increasingly greater card Is being exercised in making payments. Cause For Honest Bragging It is always a source of deep pride when a "home town boy makes good" and such is the case of Bill Miller, who is rapidly climb ing the ladder in the news world. Miller has just been made manager of the United Press bureau in the Philippines. He has held the same position in Formosa for the past three years, covering much of the activity of the Korean conflict and the criti cal era immediately following. Miller is destined to "go places" as he con tinues to pursue his profession as a news man in some of the most difficult news cent ers of the globe. Autumn Idyl Between the conditioning of a room's air and a room's "atmosphere" there is a differ ence that not even the engineering mind would be so matter-of-fact as to deny. Fans, refrigerating units, heating units, and hu midifiers can provide almost any flavor of air one may wish to inhale. But an atmos phere that one can really "breathe" may stilt require a moi^e ancient alchemy. The heart of the secret is a living fire ? a fire that burns without mechanical prompt ing. as in the country store wood stove, that venerable, always heated participant in na tion-welding debates. Or as in an open fire in a suburban living room. Building, tending, or just sitting face to face with a fire, a man feels somehow closer to facts. To pick just the right log and to cast it at just the right angle into a bed of hungry coals seems not only an exercise in musclar skill and practical judgment but a reward of character. You can see all this in the way your host settles himself back into his chair. The two of you exchange assured, optimistic glances. And you know it doesn't matter a bit wheth er you can pick up again the severed thread of conversation. Try this ? or, rather, don't ? with the most elaborate mechanical devices for com fort. They should be somewhere in the pic ture, of course. But they should do their job in a properly self-effacing way, while the fire crackles and chirps about life's good old simple pleasures. ?Christian Science Monitof. How To Make The Litterbug Signs Glow The State Highway de >a ment is moving ahead in ita campaign against "lItterbU{ts"-Mho*e thought less motorists who scatter trash along the highways. Signs haste recently appeared along Tar Heel highways announcing: "Unlawful to Throw "trash On Highway. Fine Up to $50." Already the aigns THE MOUNTAINEER ~~ Waynesville. North Carolina Main Street Dial GL 6-5801 , The County Seat of Haywood County Published By the Waynesville mountaineer. Inc. W cORTIS ROTS J Edtt?T W. Curtis Russ and Marion T. Bridges. Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY MONpAY AND THURSDAY BY MAIL IN HAYWOOD COUNTY One ydhr $3.3* Six months 2 00 . BY MAIL ftf NORTH CAROLINA One Year 4 30 Six month* 2.50 OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year 8 W Six months ? 2.00 1 LOCAL CARRIER DELIVERY Per month .40 tffu e-paii for currier delivery 4.50 SscotmI Class mail prlvtHges authorised ?t WtjIISS vttlc. I* C nep*Nf. ? w*B as *11 AP news (inperhw i . ThafiBj Afternoon, Stfrtcmhvr 26, IfW rhave shown up In two sizes, one as large as the windshield of a limousine which shows that the State is not stinting in its efforts to let the public know there Is a good, sound, legal reason for not littering the rijfht of wat. The warning in black and wbtte which cannot escape the eyes of motorists is a step in the right direction, and doubtless many people vttll be re minded to avoid the inconsiderate practice of throw ing out whatever trash thet may have at hand. But the thought arises that sbme form of en forcement may be necessary to heighten the effec tiveness of the campaign?and the law. The sight of an auto. ithlcli had just passed one of these new add Inescapable signs, being emptied of what must have been the wrifcpirtg* of a family picnic created sortie doubt as to what might be expected from signs alone. Large wrappers, some waxed or otherwise treated to make them rematn a Mot on thg highway right of thfy for I loot time, flew out Of the windows at Intervals. i ft mat take personal warnings or citations for offending motorists to let the motoring public know thst the law against litterbugs means some thing. The highways of the State need better house keeping at the hands of North Carolinians who dare been prone to tolerate and contribute to "pit sty" conditions as far is inconsiderate motor A few prosecutions under the llfterbug law will sake tbg new ftgnt gtand out HM they wore bor dered wfch newi Mm And H would ut? money for tbo SUto which hit Co dWti up tfrf litter or leave it h m offenaive right, ? _ ?TTU ffOfg anion News-Herald Looking Back Over The Yean 20 TEAKS AGO Township's new $8,000 stadium to be dedicated Just prior to the Waynesville-Sylva football game. $100,000 asked for S miles of road work oh US M4 between Sprtnfdale and the top of the mountain. , Mr. and Mrs Hugh Massle give dinner party In compliment to the Board of Stewards of the First Methodist Church. Throngs enjoy flower garden of W T. Shelton on Pigeon Street. Dr. Jasper Morgan of Duke hospital, Is the guest of his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Morgan. Id TEAKS AGO Flrat Baptist Church will open revival series Drivers are requested to drive at slow speed near schools; 10 mlle limit set near schools dur ing school hours. Consolidation of Canton and Waynesville draft boards into the Waynesville office to become ef fective Monday. District meeting of Woman's clubs will be hold at Cullowhee tomorrow. Hazelwood receives Industrial League championship trophy. 5 YEARS ACfO Western North Carolina Con ference of the Methodist Church opens tomorrow at Greensboro with 34 local ministers attending. The Rev. Charlotte Bishop and the Rev. Ruth Gruber leave for a week's visit in Atlanta. Plans being made to charter a special bus for the Mountaineer game with Anderson. Fines Creek gets first tele phones. Members of the Haywood Min- ? isterial Association committee check petitions calling for coun ty election on beer and wine. Views of Other Editors IT'LL HAPPEN EVERY TIME "No. Sir," said Eustace Coler idge, "it's all wrong. What with the latest medical discoveries and the newest Inventions, a man dies Just through sheer carelessness. Not for me. I'm going to watch my step and live forever." So? He brashes his teeth twice dally with the right kind of tooth paste He had a complete physical ex amination every three months. He always stayed inside when it rained. He slept with the windows open He stuck to Ms diet ? with plenty of proteins and fresh vegetables. He had Ms tonsils taken out and traded in several wornout glands. He played golf, but never more than 18 holes at a time. He took ocean trips, but only when the weather was good He never smoked, drank or lost his temper. He wore arch pneservers and white socks. He never worked under a strain or drove himself. He never worried. The funeral of the late Eustace Coleridge will be held next Mon day afternoon. He is survived bv 18 specialists, four heaTHi Insti tutes. six gymnasiums and numer ous manufacturers of antiseptic appliances and sanitary foods. ?Wall Street Journal voter or expect titer Every year hundreds of teen agers And thev've overstepped legal bounds and wind up in jail. Many time* the fault lies in im proper rearing. Perhaps Just as often, gullible younwteri are mislead by older youth and the hunger for the promised thrill of lawbrealtlng. Records show that, while Juve nile delinquency may he traced to poor parentage, a roodlv num ber of violators were brought up In guopdStfdlv fdeW homes. The boys and gtrls. giving vent to adolescent restledsnes*. Just don4 abli ite by the coimiel of p'ir enta in many caseo |t ft youngsters In thla category. Llfot CivMson. ft. of tfew fori, THE OLD HOME TOWN ? By STANLEY >/ mm . 1 ? SON,Yfc>U,LL HAVE TO \ ' ?^F/NISH Trt' D?>V*\*AY? \ . frtY SHON/Cl. Ckd rtr CCweX] I OUT EVEN WITH THE TT N SNOWS -THIS TEA* / /??) "^B^Te^TTTTV t?tr'. 9 /. '"O " c LATS SAJOWFALL-AND R*PA HAS A PffcFWCT ALIBI- - Letters to the Editor APPRECIATES ARTICLE, EDITORIAL Editor, The Mountaineer: Upon my return from Eastern Carolina I was delighted to read your excellent article about St. John's School. The article was very well done. I also appreciat ed your editorial comment and I do hope that St. John's School will always play a vital part in the progress of this community. We surely hope that all the citizens of Waynesville will visit our new school and we are happy to say that the afternoon of Oc tober 14th has been set aside as open-house day at St. John's Church. Convent and School. Thanking you again for your kindness, and with warmest wishes, I remain. Sincerely in Christ, Lawrence C. Newman Pastor. WILL RETIRE IN WAYNESVILLE Editor, The Mountaineer: Here is a check for $3.00 to ex tend our subscription to the , Mountaineer for another six months. We hope that not too long after that expiration date, we will be Citizens of Waynes ville. Our plans are shaping up nice ly for us to move to Waynesville sometime next year, after "Re tirement" becomes effective. For years we hunted for the most de sirable place to spend our years of retirement and after three vis its to Waynesville, we are con vinced that it is the most delight ful place to be found. We are greatly enjoying read ing the Mountaineer. Every issue gives us more information about and news of our chosen future home town. We were particularly interested in the Methodist Con ference and the splendid write ups you Cave to the meetings and the speakers And thrilled to read that you and Mr. W. A. Bailey, of the Kan san of this city, had been appoint ed by Bishop Holt to serve on a offers this advice: " Listen to your Mom and Dad. and you'll never get into trouble. Avoid the 'tough guys' on the corner or In the candy store Jails are full of know-it-ails like that "Keep away from liquor. It gives you a phony courage to do things you'll regret. When you have idle time, stick to baseball and other sports. They keep you healthy . , . and out of the deten tion pen." Leroy ought to know. He's spent 27 months in a New York jafl for his role in a series of holdups performed by a gang of youne thugs. ?Jackson (Miss.) State Times. committee together. This is sort of a deep dark secret, but Mr. Bailey was principal of the High School here, when I was a strug gling sophomore. The Bailey family entered into our lives later on, for Rev. Fred Bailey, brother of Wm. A., read our ^arriage service and a few years after that, still another brother, Herbert, and I were both employed by the Edison Phono graph Co. "Many long years ago." It was our joy, when we were in Waynesville this summer, to meet Dr. Elmer Clark over at Juna luska, and to learn that he had been a supply pastor at old Sev enth Street Church here, whene both of us had been baptized, and to find that we knew many of the people whom he remembered from his many years ago service at Seventh Street Church. Thank you for your kindnesses to us and best wishes to you al ways. Sincerely yours, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Browning 1948 North 17th-Street Kansas City, 4, Kansas. LIKED STREET DANCES Editor, The Mountaineeni In one of your past editions I read an article from "A life-long citizen" of Haywood about how happy and grateful that the street dances held on the Court House Parking Lot had been dis continued. I must say that I am disappointed; not in that writer's opinion, for everyone is entitled to an opinion, this writer includ ed, but I am disappointed to hear that the street dance has been dis continued?the street dance that has been a pasttime for citizens of Haywood and surrounding counties and visitors from every where: a pasttime that is synony mous with Waynesville as is the buck dance or Waynesville being "the eastern entrance to the Great Smoky Mountains". My residence in Haywood was for a short three years, but i learned to love the county and claim her as my home. Upon termination of my pres ent tour of duty with the US Army, my wife and I plan to re turn to Haywood County from "sunny" Italy and make our home there. We both enjoyed the street dances when we were in Waynes ville and hope to dance again on the sawdust-covered asphalt of the Court" House Parking Lot up on return "home". Sincerely, Roland B. Houser 510th Field Artillery Rocket Btn. APO 221. New York. N. y. impound cars Editor. The Mountaineer: Fines do not seem to stop traf fic violators. Perhaps better re sults could be obtained by im pounding the car from one to thirty days. If these violators had to walk to work for a few days each time they mieht wise up. William R. Sullivan 720 West Tenth PI Los Angeles T5, Calif. tAfF-A-DAY e \r* KU? feM V* m. tac V?2d ^^ ^ "All right, you cowards, I know you're In here!" Rambling 'Round By Frances Gilbert Frailer * A group of ladies were discussing things in general and finally the conversation rolled around to the discourtesies of the present day. All agreed that the worst offenders were not the young generation (who usually fall heir to all the blame for most everything) but the adults. One lady was quite vehement in her opinion. "What burns me up," she exploded, "is when I expend time, energy and money to gather up, wrap and mail a gift to some one and the recipient hasn't the good grace to even send back a two cent postal saying 'I got It'." Another lady broke in with: "Say, you've got an idea there. Why not enclose a self-addressed, stamped card with the words "It arrived.' and with the lady's name?" Every one joined in the laughter which followed then one of the group had her say. "You don't have to go far afield." she said, "to find discourtesy. In the past six months I have sent three different wedding gifts and I have yet to know whether any of them ever reached the brides." A quiet little lady who had listened attentively asked if she might give her pet peeve. "It irks me plenty," she volunteered, "to have some one walk deliberately in front of me when I'm seated, and not P?Pe even an excuse me'. Do you know." she chucked, "I always have an insane desire to stick out a foot and send them on a short trip." Other discourtesies were brought into the round of discussion, such as interruptions when a person is speaking, contradictior,s and a lot more. Say, let's have a courtesy week. You'll be surprijML how easy it is if you just make up your mind. WIFE: "I shopped from one end to another today." HUSBAND: "From one end of town to the other?" WIFE; "Oh no! Only in one store. I went in to buy a pair of bedroom slippers and came out with a new hat." Little by little summer is drawing down the shades* bringing in the yard furniture and locking the front door. There is always something sad about summer's preparations for leaving and we look on with a slight tightening of the throat muscles. How many of us will be here to welcome our visitors wnen sum mer returns next year? What will be world conditions when the win dows are again raised to let in cool breezes to temper the warm sunny days? Who will be around to enjoy the flowering gardens and the waving plumage of the trees? How many of those we have en joyed will be back to gladden us with their presence? What a kind and thoughtful Provider it is that keeps the cur tain of the future drawn so tightly we cannot see beyond its daily folds! The cruel hand of frost, like the tongue of gossip, shows no mercy. "Miss Lucy' George Has Her Own Plans For Paris By JANE EADS WASHINGTON ? When Mrs. Walter George left for Paris with her husband, the former Georgia senator who Is to be Presidcni Eis enhower's ambassador to NATO, she made it clear she had plans of her own to carry out. "Mr. George is going to work, and I'm going to have a real good time." said "Miss Lucy" as she is known affectionately to her many friends. Miss Lucy, who is mad *or word games, says she's hoping to get her 78-year-old spouse interested in scrabble on their travels. "He tried rummy once, but he always wanted at least one card that be longed to me," she said. "In the end, I said, 'Mr. George, this is a game where people take opposite sides.' That finished it. But scrabble is different. It's the perfect game for husbands and wives." Miss Lucy, who hasn't been abroad for five years was excited over the prospect of seeing Paris again. "Mr. George says that I'll bo perfectly safe to go about the Paris museums, parks and churches on my own?everywhere, he says, except the shops." * * * Amitore Fanfani, diminutive but distinguished secretary general of Italy's liberal Christian Demo cratic Party, confided on an un official visit to this country he likes to paint and had exchanged some of his works with U S Ambassa dor Clare Booth Luce who has add ed painting to her many talents since going to Italy. * * * Carolvn Haener Shaw ? whose list of Washington's who's who with its added counsel on proto col and manners peculiar to the Capital has long been a guide to local hostesses ? offers some timely side advice on conversa tion during the remaining pre-elec tion weeks. The elegant Mrs. Shaw in a local newspaper column savs she's been "rather appalled at the rude ness. the downright belligerence." with which some folks l^^to the forefront in conversation^^roups to express their political opinions." Acnuss 2. Past 18. 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(that) 777 ? ? ? 52 Expression VV ofsom>w K535T" ?' ?" ? *7 r? ? ? ? rf1 ..DOWN ,51 ^3 1. Irony rr/T T f .Kg ^ ^ WVT