Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / April 9, 1936, edition 1 / Page 1
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- c'rtADVAlK? I* *HB OOUKTY SYLVA, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY APRIL 9, 1936 JUt A YBAft Ol ADVANOfc OUTMDB THB OOUIfTT & Baptist Youth Gathers Here CoiiventionSpeakers ...Who They Are pL t. GIBBON DAVIS pr_ pa vis is the poimkr pastor of it first Baptist church, of Aehsville. * * * jflSS BLANCHE EMBLER Is secre .#? of Calory Baptist church, West Ktcrilic. * * * PR. W. H. FITZGERALD Is mis jjwryto the KaiWn Baud of Chcr ae IndilllA * * * 4 MARTIN Ih a student at Wate jirw. Coilcpc. He is presid ent of the jiafit Carolina Baptist Student Unioit ftiilwr.e i1' i>'- Lujnberton. * ? -* kSV.NA'IHAN BROOKS Is v?3toi of:!/ Bry.-on City Baptist church. # HLS. XaNE STAR NFS Is th-e wife of r!y pa.-t^r i-f West Asheville Bap & ekareh. * # # MISS MAi:LL STAUXE8 Is Field Sarrtrj-y of t?u Siut? Uaptiat;-$piii isf Union. , *- ? -1, r RKVl r. L. ELLIOTT la a J>riim fivoriti ihr<.'.^'hout Western North Cvoliitb, rs a man an J ?is a speaker. Ht is a proft ssor at Western Carolina Tewhers College. j * ? * mS WINNIE RTOKETT. / Lwder of th> Young People's Worlc the Baptist State Convention, it w of the best known young women h North Carolina. * * ? REV. S. F. ROGERS Is pastor of 'J* Andrews Baptist ahurch * * # PROF. WOOD Is & professor at Mwj Hill College. ilfe FRRD FORESTER Is tin vite of the new pasr or of Cullowhe? Baptist church. ? * * MSV. SAN'K STARN'KS Is pastoi Wcm Ashoville Baptist church, ii Regional Director of the Bap Training Union. . w 0.1, c. orrras hew cororea Mo.kso, April 6,-Wcstem Oa?' lina Teacher College is pVanwng ^ offer a mvmbir nPW courseS *** \ placing special emphasis on s??*? 0 'V.e old courses in planning ?- oiumcu ?Ina for "A Summer Sehool I'lflcreEt." This summer school is, so p~i?tjflfth\e, to bp directed (toward a ul'.er vndfr-' andinej of "the *or ..W? u;, ?:-,y*-i\7illy of "Western ^orth Caroling Sew courseafWh as Field G?oV>g} Batiuiy, Cultural Geology, and Soil un provement will bo svtppbme^tied l>y1 ftclA trips. Sw c<mr?!H, such as Rural High ^iiiool Administration, Problems '.?ftrn'nxlutn Consirueiion, Problems bounty School Administration, aut^ Problems in School Personnel will be | < ^ig\y suited to the needs of rowl pritn*iyAiS, supervisors, s'-1" I*"iafce^d?Tits. ^hcr new courses to be offered 1,1 liQ8 nevr summer school currunlum tw- American Nat mv Literature, Dra ****, French, and Athletic Coaching required for certificates will ^ ^wnftced in the summer school fao^tam, hat there will be an un lJtoUy rich offering of these. school wiH run for fa? 'his yor.r, consis ting off two terms instead of the usual ""?Uwefa ttrm. McCARL IS SEEN ! AS "DARK HORSE" Washington, April 8, Whenever po litical wiseacres begin to talk about Presidential "dark horses" somebody is sure to bring up t4ve Dame' of John H(. McCarl, Comptroller General of the United States. That suggestion is generally met by a practically unani mous chorus of: "He would make a good President, if hi? could be elected, and he woukl make a fine candidate, if he could be nemina/ted. But has he a chance? 1 v What brings Mr. McCarl into the limelight just at this time is the fac; that his 15 year term of office em pires on the 30th of June this year. That rases, among other questions, tihe question of whom President Roos?,' velt will appoint in his plaite; because the outgoing Comptroller (General is not eligible to re-appointment. If Congress were in session on June 30, the President would have lio make a permanent appointment to be cou tinned by 'the Senate. But Congress will not be in session, and iJuair. leave* t he President free to make an interim appointment of anybody he chooses to nam a, regardless of Senatorial wishes. I'he interim ap|>oLmee will hold office until' the next Congress meets, when {hp next President, either Mr, Roose velt or his successor, "must submit, the name of someltody to fill the ,jol> fo? another 15 years. There are'irheeHwvi'ses in the pn-s put Demora^c administration, as then wore wheel-horses in previous Repub , lieaa.^uiist^tjp^ JB&UCPili takt a more lenient view in the spending of the taxpayers' money. But that is wha* Tol?i McCarl hax always refused t>? d(. He hasn't played ball the way tin politicians who were responsible fo: having him put in the office expected him to play. The idea of hnving a Comptroller General, to Fee that all money spent! by the Federal Government was used in precisely the way Congress pre scribed, that no deserHion should be allowed to any Federal officer or bu reau and thai, he uhonld be responsi ble only to Congress, was originated by the Republican majority in Con gress during 1919-20. It came as a result of the more or less unresfufrh?^ spending of the Wil ton Administration in war time. Pres X. ' ? ident Wilson vetoed the first bill cre ating "the office of Comptroller-Gencr al, bcrtau.se it prohibited the Prsiderc: from removing the incumbent from ufficc and gave the executive no oon '.k?l Op supervision of his activities. ScWor Warren G. Harding was one of (the leading advocates of t he idea of an independent accounting officer. Promptly after Mr. Harding be came President, in 1921, the offici was created by act of Congress, and Mr. Harding picked John McCarl to HI iit, because McCarl had alwayi ')een a staunch Rttptiblican "wheel home. He had been a lawyer in Ne braska, where be eittll maintains a voting residence at MeCookj he had been Secretary of the Republican Congressional Executive Comlmittee through one or two campaigns, and at !(hft time of his appointment was pri vate secretary to Senator Ge?rgfc W. Morris, of Nebraska. McCarl took office July 1, 1921. He had not been in office more tihan a few minutes before his political friends found th?f, the expense ac counts of Republican office-holder-* wero just as much objects of suspic ion as if they had been presented by Democrcvtfl. Fo,. 15 years every dollar spent by or in l?ehalf of the Federal Govern ment' haa Had to be okayed by the Comptroller-General. He has notikine to do \rith preparing the lmdgnt. few? after the wrems of t*he budget have been enacted into law. he has every thing to do with seeing to it t.kr no department, bureau or individual spends mm* thm ba? been sp-eifiral (Please Tom To Pag* 2) Well Known Speaker^ On Contention Program Friday Afternoon Beginning at three o'-cJock: Sang service, Miss Blanche Em bler, Asheville. Bible appreciation, Dr. W. B. ?Fitzgerald, Cherokee. Special music. Address, Mr. A1 Martin, State B. S. U. President, Wake Foreaii Facing our problems with: Seniors, Rev. Nathan Brooks, Bry son City. Intermediates, Mrs. Nane Starnes Asheville. . ) . lGent'r;il Officers, Miss Winnie Kickett, Kalcigty Juniors, , Mi*. Smoat (laker, Enka. Associate Officers ^and Pastors, Miss Mabel Staiitcs, Raleigh. Friday Evening Song serv ice. Bible apprrciation, Dr. Fitzgerald Special music. Faith is the Victory in World - Wide Service, E. Gibson Davis Ashe ville. I Saturday Morning] Sunrise scrvicc: Faithns the Vic tory in otir Witnessing for Christ, SYLVA SENDS HELP TO GAINESVILLE NEIGEBOBS A truck toad of clothing, food, and -ither supplies assembled in SyFw? left yesterday moraine; for CainesfjSSlB, as a. part of Sylv*'s contr* :k r? . t the line-in ..Georgia, /who grevious a disaster, when a tornado struck the main secfron'of the town, i ?< -- killing upwards of two Hundred peo ple, injuring more hundreds, land leav ing hundreds uiOre without hom.rs, food or clothing.. ?" Tlie torsado w?s tol'iwwed by fire, J which was almost as disastrous as the j storm. Many who escaped the fury of the storm with their tves, perished j whim trapped in buiidings that wore soon blazing infernoes. BALSAM (By Mra. IK TI Knight) Mr. Bob Baincs of Maryville, Te?n., spent last week end with his brother. Mr. Walter Baines. Master Billie Knight visited Master Neil fxmg in Addie, last week end. Mrs. K. L. Cope and four children of Abbeville were last week end guesi.-s of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bainea. Tbe following announcements ihiavp been received here, whdeb will be of interest to their many friends: Mil and Mrs. Luther E Bailey an nounce the marriage of l heir daughter, Mildred Joyce to Ml J. Raymond Kork, on Tuesday, the "seventeenth of | .Moreli,one thousand nine hundred and i thirty-six, Memphis, Tenn. " ; Mr. Kork is the grandson of Mrs. J. R. fiork, of Paduoah, Ky., who spends her .summers in h?r cotltnge here, and he has been with her until recent years, when he engaged in busi ness in Memphis. Mr. and Mrs. William Merrell Hutchinson announce the marriage of - ?thcir daughter, Mary EKaabeth to Mr. I Jalnes Gibson Jackson, Junior. on Thursday, the second of April, nine teen hundred and thirty-six, Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. Jai'k^on is the accomplished daughter of the owners of Balsam Mountains Spring* Hotel and is here eveiy snmmvr. We are glad fo have our "'main street" scittped so Tiior-ly last week, mt, alas, the ditches and culverts were not cleaned ,ind the reeent heavy rains have n<-arlv ruined our roads again. j ( 1) .* Y. W. A, WILL SERVE DINNER The' Young Woman's Auxiliary of the Sylvia Baptist horch will eerve dinner, in the basement of the cbmrfc in which the meetings 'are being held, Friday evening. A nominal chaige of 125 cents a plate will1 be mada * * m, ?Ut u. 4 Miss Winnie Rickett. Morning session; Song service Bible appreciation. Dr. Fitzgerald | Symposium: Choosing a fife work, Rev. P. L. EUiofot,. Cullowihee. v. Being a Christian in Economic Order and Liquor Problems, Rev. S. f}. Rogers, Andrews. Poace, War, Race Relations, In ternationalism, Prof. Wood, Mars HiU. Social Life, Moral Problems and I Leisure Time, Mrs. Fred Fores: er,| Culiowhee. Song Servircv Special music. Conference Conclusions, Confer-1 ence leaders. Address, Rev. Naiie Starnes, Ashe| vilK Saturday Afternoon Song service Bible Appreciation, Dr.Fitzgerald Faith is the Victory in our As ^oeiational Endeavors, Mi.ss Mabel ttarne^ Installation of officers. FORTY BAPTIST WORKERS TO BE HERE THIS SUMMER j f Forty trained workers from the Sunday School Division of the Bap tist State Convention vi ! work for eight weeks .in the churches wes|t of I A*heviHe, bepiming June 13 and e'ers TIhe wot fir. L L. Moigsn, and it is that every churoh in the Tuckaseigee, I Lay wood, Macon, Western North Car-1 olina, West Liberty, Tennessee River, Buncoknbe, TramyhanTa, Carolina, and Newfound associations' wild be reached. A worker will be offered to eacii of the chim ii; .;. The work wilT begin in this, the 'Jfiwkaseigee AssoeiMcn, on J-une 21, end close on Ju"?: 28;, Headquarters wil^ be sot up in oyiva, and a wo. ker offered to each of the 41 churches in the Association Classes will be hcid in the local churches, each night, and a central meeting will be held in Sylva each afternoon. A complete religions census of thj corunty will be made and the results tabulated, turned over to the officers, Piisfcors, .and superintendents, as a guide for follow up work. The Staite Division has planned the gigantic task of reaching 600 churches in these associations during the sum mer months. SYLVA'S HONOR STUDENTS ? Miss Opal Lee Buingarn?r lias beta warned valedictorian, and Miss Anne Enloe, sahitatonan of the class Soon to graduate at Sylva Iligh School. Both young ladies are from Dills boro. Miss Bumgarner, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Bomgamer, has j ' a four-year average of 94.5 per <ont.; i Miss Enloc's Average during the four years hi 93-5. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Enloc. Miss Enloe was voted the pr?tti est girl in the class, and Miss Bum ' garner, the most studious. ( I HASS HTTJi GLEE CLUB TO GIVE COJT?EET HERE SUNDAY NIGHT I j The Glee Club from Mars Hill (College, historic and famous RaptUi institution, will give a concert of sac ' red music at the Fii-st Baptist church in Sylva, Eaetoi- Sunday night. The public is invited. EPISCOPAL SERVICES ! < i __ ? ST. JOHN'S CHURCH Rev. George Lemuel Granger, Rector EASTER DA^ 7:30 Af M. Holy communion jtnd ser mnn. All mosit cordially invited to this j sen-iee. B. T. U. Convention Meets Tomorrow Afternoon TODAY and' TOMORROW (By Prank Parker Stockbriuge, INVENTION . American I wont out to Dearborn lost month and, aniony olher things*, took a look at the great museum of American in ventions wliioh Mr. fY?rd bas asstmibl ed in Greenfield ViMapei It is a liber al education in Americanism to study the development, of industrial pro giwfci^i'rofn th> primitive tools of the first settlors, step by step to iho nwr velous machines of today vi kich c'M. ?k> everything but think. It is hard to name an invention oi importance which did not either orig ina?te in America or ge<t its first pna? tical um1 in this country. Nowhere has -the truth been holi tor demons rat - ed of the old proverb "Necessity is the iuother of invention". The pion cors of America had to be inventiw. Starting out with not. much morr than their bare Hands, they had to improvise means of conquering the new world. I think we have done a pretty good job of it so far, but invention has not gtopped yet. PIONEERS . their problem Tho two American inventions which enabled our forefathers to conquex the wildcitaosfl were it,he curved ax?? helve <and the long-barreled Kentucky rifle, The pioneers had to clear and settle a forest country filled with hirkin.'> protected them agai rors of the forest, v wtilej'he free swinging 'axe helve enabled them r<> develop a new and more rffieotfive technique for clearing 'the laud for their farms and building their T03 houses. For the first 250 years Amjeru;?| was han die appeal by a shortage of labor. We had -to invent machine* br.TiU.vf there wa^.i't 011014; jh man power. And, in spito of all of the present unemployment, men engaged in big manufacturing id us tries tell me (there is still a shortage of genu inoly skilled labor. MACHINES . / . operators The greatest contribution America i has made to the world, it seems iU> mc. is our ingenuity in building brains in i to marines. I never go through a modern manufacturing plant withou: seeing some new machine which min ! imizes the need of intelligence on th< part of tfce man who operates it. Tlu engineers who designed and the tool J makers who built it put Mioir brain*1 jand skill into the machine itself, so) i tjhat the niost unintelligent. baborct i ! can run it. One of the most, complicated devices that we had to turn out during the iv^ar was th?* recoil meehan:sm for the French 155-mi!limeter howitzer's. The problem of tanking them was put ui> to a big Pi'tviyit automobile factory It took (three "months to design ami build the automatic machines to do the job. I went through the factory in ]918 and found every one of the-o automatic machines being tended by i chunky Polish girl in a smock. It took no muscle, it took no skill or training, to produce, by aid of the machine which could almost think, an appara % ' ; tus in which every part had to be ac-1 | curate to a thousandth of an inchi ! ! UNEMPLOYMENT . . answer I think the ultimate answer to the j prob!*.m of unemployment will b?> la j trenv-ndftift ir.Tease in fhe number and variety of so-ea.l!e^ "labor sav ; in?" machine-. Only by providing , that cori <yf maishinery can most of ' the unemployed be rrrnloycd profit eh j ly to industry and to themselves, j The machine mab^ it possible to j pay wages which the uuaided, uiLskill ed worker could never earn. One of our great American diaeoverien ha been that the more machines Ktff set j to work making useful goods/ the greater the demand for the good because they can be sold cheap er, and ao the demand for more ma 17 Counties To Be Represented By 700 Delegates Tomorrow Sylva will open her ? rni ami her homes to receive the fvpre scniatives of flu- yountr Baptists ot Western North Caro'ina, who fslthar here for (the Regional Convent- 1.1 i>f the Baptist llaining Union. Biased oil the attendance at ? liff aide, '^i*t year, it is expected ^hat from 300 to 70(1 delegates, from tho seventeen counties of Western North Carolina will be in Sylva. for the con vention, which meets in the Sylva McLhorii^l ehnreh tomorrow after u m>ii. Committees and officers of tli? Syiva and Tnekaseigce Assotiai ionai Unions have .spent much time in re cent weeks in making plans for 1h" ententainnjent of the delegates. The entire town and snrrounling communi ties have lx*en canvassed to s, cun; suitable and adequate accommoda tions for as large a number of dele gates as wi-4 be in Attendance Tho jpeople liave responded most heartily, free'y and hospitably, members (d' tho committee, report. All delegates wiil be guests in the homes of SyVa and nearby communi ties, for lodging Friday night and breakf.isl Saturday morning. Some of tho most pivmineirt re- ''{? Igiop speakers and worflren it) tho ^ wUL #PIP*, on the program" foTllOfPmr/ iftmt S?tunLiv. '? Sessions wi d be held Friday after noon, Friday evening, Saturday at sunrise, Saturday morning and Sat urday afternoon. The '|w:oplc of Sytoa are pieaaed to Lavo this line convention meeting i:t their town. They trust that their stay of those young people here will provo rcost pl'vitut, that, their convention will be :i. profitable. one, and thai they will take with them from Sylva tha most pie-riant recollections of the town and its people. \Ve"Vish that each of them bad tho time to s-M! the marvels that Nature and Nature's God have displayed iii the region about Sylva, thj (Jrw.t Smokies, the Balsami, the CowecJ, up the Tuckaseigee and ite hundreds of tribwtarie*, across tho Blue Ttid^o toward Smith Carolina. But iit woni'J take many (lays to/lo thaft We eun only .say that we aro glnd they emtio, and that we hope earih of them can come back to see <us some time. ASSOCIATIONAL AND LOCAL B. T. U. ORGANIZATION 4 I Lylc Eiuley, of Bct^, Ls Dirc.^r o? the B. T. I*., of the Tucka*eig'<- Ah* soeiatioit. Miss MWrd Cowan, Well ster, m?rela ry. The Director of the B. T. U., <?> l tio Firxf elvnivh, Sylva, is, Mias Margaret Wilson. Leonard AlWi is secretary. Committees, nffeetinp tlio Conven tion are: ASSIGNMENT TO HOMES: Mn, Leonard llnff, Mrs. Alvin Buchanan, Clifford Cug'e, Mrs. It? U. Sutton. On SECURING HOMES: Mn. R. C. A1 dson, Mrs. Joe Dcitz, Mr*. G<*orpe Cope. INFORMATION: Lloyd Brywm, Vinson IIaI% Sue Allison, Mrs. Stytio Monteith, Alvin Buchanan, Mrs. Al vin Buchanan, Ixi'ia Allen, Edna Al len, Leonard Allen, Margaret Wil?ong Sam Billy Parker, Reed Queen. PUBLICITY: A. J. Dills, Mr4 B. E. Brown, Miss Sadie Luck. _ v t?u ciiiws and workers to tond tin- ina-i chine* increases. Willi all th?? talk about the arm,) of unemployed there are frwica as m/my people at work today in the United States as there wer? thirty years ;?tro. Yet our popu lation us far from bcinf? twice what (V was in 1900. J J
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
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April 9, 1936, edition 1
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