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gf/LKOE IN THE OOPWTY
SYLVA, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, NOT
tui A TEAS Ol ADVAJTOE OUTCOME THB OOBATH
WOMAN MW
' L "?c ?f
. **. te. lov, J WO"*" j?
*" " t btr 1>?? ??
?- -
W ;a at tlu ot
^p'UUH)!U8, ;, .
* n, had 1*H U irt
% iiiwu >i""
?"L, 0f tfaU iwurty. ",,J
Li ,***;i fe
J 1|W n?.'j?r !"' ,u'
^ lier lone I." ?"d >?
VA-f** rX
'V?t ?n?*ui Y
,?,w * wbj"
.:??her 2r?' i"'1' s?"' "?
? fillkn, JllH
,*J Mr, Liurctia llryion
An^S wi?l a >"??bei
j^Jrva, -swc^awlebildrt.
qualla
,By Mrs J. K X?*nvll
j L, lionet i, :u*i-stitl b\ H?>
J;,rtlMrs. Vilnti Chamber.
UiiVflmluHiii1; iv\ iv.il jW*
fit,:.uiv!i .'hi* nc.k
^rs'wi fwriin-rSy Mil*
j,Sriw ''i'
[jtiioiOl'ii >!:?!?? Qu.tl'tolt?* <
tol iv'.oi'i st?l;-r M'l?'r*i?')is ?t
j'j i'ii in 11:, ^ifday morn
1 r 'S
f t eh'Jfc'i #.??.? K. v. J. L.
j ijiiily ;i
It ;<.ki':? linii' liome ?x
k Mi*. :??.'! Mi'-. Frank
iln J-1#, i'.'-11 tt. j
C. Hi-y!v- >jw;tu last w? ik ?'
U'. !!.vk Smokcmont.1'
ililr-.Tprn .l?>h:^on aiul son J
*,u?t iiiowil to Chorokotf. I
dlK I/iil er Jloyb liave
lib.
iswtr vi si thy rcla
? ? *
Hujrhtv iiiid Mra Kiurua
fiStmi h:iVf b.t?u Yt?itinjj
tS. i
fc MuiLis or' Wliittior
w'.ay in Qualla.
! llr< P." II Ftrgusop,
f' TrrH! ;u?l I). C'. Hugh??
t?!rij? to Sylva.
iwie Sue Evans, Home
fl'v (Upc.1 on Mrs. Boulah
Cnky.
Ki+noi viaitol at Mr. J.
. *aoda.v.
Mutli. v, has moved to
? *
,r? !?? ii':i Fortiivrti of Bet!)
^?''1 t!.p w. ck end wiMt
GBI-S IN NOVEMBER
M'ii:t.i:|i. rt' filt'DviUi*,
tiuiufij! <iti*iiuWrries
p:?i. ,,n Tiu* -lny. Mr. W.
tl" ' Ii-iii io us.
r H'tlr,: |,,(l .vas j()
dav.
TODAY and
TOMORROW
(By Frank Parker Stockbridge)
PENSIONS . . . for everybody
I am couviuccd that w? are coming,
in America, to u ayaUnu of old iag,.'
pension* for everybody, regardless of
A'ihI. Tlunidoa bas gtxxwa rapidly
^iiu\> Dr. Townscud launched his proj.
ect, and wua givou ?n impotus by
the Sooiul Security Aot. I do not
unagiuo tho ultimate achomo will bo
like cither of thoue.
It 'anybody is going to buve pen
sions, then everybody should haft
them. At present, only certain favor
?h! groups aro pensioned. Paupers
,'ct old pun&iotM, ^ d0 veterann
?f some of our Wats. Railway cm
ptoycoa are peiuiomd, so are employ
es ot the Fedex^a! Government, of
most stato governments aud of raiuuy
aiuiiieipalities.
It Rooms to me i0 be the fair thing
o pension everybody ;it a given age.
tnd tax everybody to pay the pen
siona.
JNEMPLOYED . . . count 'em
I hope the next tiling the Adminu
.ration at Washington does Mill, be
to malcu an accurate count of the
number of persons still unemployed.
Nobody know* how nvmy there ur%
iust as nobody knows how many ot
tlwin ever were employed. A truthful
lansus of unemp'oymeat should tcl'
u3 1k></ many are unemployable, by
reason of physical or mental inc." pa. -
iiy Miul how many are out of work
because they don't want to work.
It is eorlain itu my mind, 'hat w?
have been providing, out of public
funds, for some millions of sHiftta-!.
!;izy atul incom|>eteut |>ersous who
never have worked when they could
avoid it, yet man o god .somehow to
kt*p going.
We bive made llrtse folk into a 1
tavorod sp'.+ial clas:;, which is not
o. d tor them cr for the rust of us.
?tit why not count 'em and Jet us
now whero we stand t
.'ARTIES neceasairy
The two-party syst-ln hits bevm
functioning in America since our na
tion was .1 baby. Theoretioilly, it u
tho wrong way ..to run a nation. In
practice, human naturo being what it
is, it work* better tl?ui any other
system which has ever been tried.
Under cur two party -system the in
lependcnt voters, wh0 <io not w,?wit
,o affiliate permanently with e ther
Kirty, always hold tho balnnoc of
?ower. Tho actual enrolled member
!:ip of either of tho major parties
as never fioniposod a cloar majority
if the it'c^toivta I', 'c the indejien
;!cnt vote which, after 3JI elects our
Vosi dents.
But without tho pirticis and their
?rganiaations, what <a hit 01* miss
:fTair .a Presidential * ejection would
<n! Jddal'y, 1 ?up;x:?o, we all ought
m write in the names of our personal
?lioices for every office, but in th.it,
aso nobody would got a majority and J
I would tako 'all winter to count the
?'tcs I
POLITICIANS . . . useful
It is the fvshiew to denounce po'i
: :ok .n.nxl politicians wholesale. I do
Majority Over 11,000,000
RANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
H33
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Proa i dent Bonmlt'i majority u i.n.nt; and in Vermont li s majority
ho United States reached ubove lh< *'as o-lh' ?lioui three tliourund.
?!evc? million mark with the offtsi.d Iu ?orth ?***&?? the President's
? , V. , . t? majority approached the half rriilliua
abulalioiw woie nude. He earrud 46 , , i ? , .
liwrk, U heui& m round ubBUNttg
)? the 48 states, Gov. London receiv- J473^0, or 74,A) lftMe than Uor?aw
ug majorities o:dy in Maine jnd Vovj t:\>y received,? '? ;
38BS3B8BSW&
WALNUT TREES Df BLOOM
? ?
Mr. A. 'J. Dills ,s?yo that black (By Mrs. D. T. Knight
wah.ut trees in his pasture jurct be The eleotion ju.sso;l off ijniet'y hero
yoifl the town limits wore "in blooir jjr. an<l Mrs. Hubert Enslev, Lois
he liirt of the week. .-.ml Winston, and Mrs.. Sara Bry*>n
? , - motored to HeiulersonvilJe, Sunday,
it my sell' >onioiim.s I dotrt like th-',wi S1>r,t the day with Vhe A. H
methods oi' most {>oSitici;uc3, and I .Mchaffey family.
have known very few in tli'at fla s h ! pl(>v. H. D.Jetsup lias returned
at ion whose vro-.d I would h* willing io Methodist church, and will
o take without finest'.on preach every second and fourth Sun
But government is :i political mal-^nys at 3 o'clock P. M.
!erf -vnd the men who l,!an nm Mrs. W liter Baines sp:st Sunday
nents most effectively must of nores- in: Asheville with relatives
sit j' be endowed with the politica.' AT THE BAPTIST CHURCH
-4!ft. Some of the ablest (men we hive ?:
ever elec^r d to high offtee have been Suixlay School at 9:45 A. M.
failures .is administrators hccUuse Preaching servicc 11'Al M. ?r..d 7:30
they did not underhand politics. And P. M. each Sunday.
some of the most successful nun i;? . Visitors and it 11 those l.ot worshj;j
public office have no;. hid much equip pin? elsewhere are given a oo'dial i?v
ment except -he deep understanding rits.tion to atUsyl all of thene services,
of human nature and how it reacts in K ?y. M. M Hocutt the paster will
the m.iss, which is the usee ice of p>> ivtnrn the b;tter port of this week
!i'.i'".d education. niter attending the sessions of the
Polilcians -u-em to'me, ilu reforest o ILip&t State Convention in Durham
. O lie Uiider Ihe Ha. >i(ie?tio!i of nee- and will preach at ooth services, Sm
?s.-irv evils".
?iCIAL VOTE FOR. JACKSON COUNTY, NOV. 3, 1936
Precinct
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115 I /9 | 112 | 81 1117 i 78 j 157 j 102 j 109
200 J 31 I J 99 j 37 ! 192 | 37 | 192 [ 37 J 192
185*! 2.1*3 | ] 86 | 234 J 18(5 | 233 j "185 1 230 J 187
2.(2 ! 157 ! 237 | 168 | 236 j 157 J, 131 j 161
W I 171 | 260 | 160 | 26^16Gi ^^/i6(rf261
248 I 46 | 242 | 43~) 2^2' 1 ^4-2~T258~j 42 j 261
fnFriO? I 638~Jl63 | 636 | *163 I ?21_j 170 j G26
"" | "V J a" l''/? M m~ 1 ?? JA I r% 0 -Tk I irw 1" nr?r ! l ?? f C\ ia
243 } 150~| 244 f140 [ 242
69 | 82 | 64 | 88 | 64
101 | lfl7 j 102 ! 165 j 101
261* I 239 ! 266 j 238 ] 263
~95 j ;!8 I 97 |~35 j "95
3UT222"i'"320" I 231 I 316
341 [112 [320 {1*14 | 331
303 j 291 ' 290 j 291 | 289
51.0 I 48u I 520, ) 476 | 517
156 ! 104"j 158 I 103 | 157 | 102 | 157 j102 | 155
! 146. j 223 | 145 j 223 ; 145 J 218 J 146 j 221
157 | 235j 147 ! 249
86 [ 67 | 33 ; 36
165 | ~96~| 161/104
238 j 259"J 234 I 272
36 j 99 j~~33 | l01
234 I 303 [.208 | 306
112 ? 324 J l id J 327
290 |~279 | 293"j 295
476 1 501 j 477 | 509
73 | 115 | 75 | 105 | 77
26 | 201 | 20 ; 192 | 26
228 p95~! 222 1_137~|~227"
227 j 103 | 224 | 154 j 227
165" | 265 | 164 \ 263 | 105
" 42 | 255 | 43 \ 2>:? J 42
159 j 6 IS j 166 J 624 j 167
131 I 275 I 126 ! 246 I 138
112
161
63 | 91 [ 64 | 85
106-1161 | 100 (ToT
233 | 270'| 232 i' 273 i 232
32 1 100 | 32 | 101 j " 32
218 | 303 | 218 | W! 218
119 j 336 | 108 i' 327 j 111
286 j 299 | 283 | 279"! 297*
472 | 518 || 469 j SCO I 479"
623 | 167~| 6SS~|T6r;"63i"| 164 J 627
| 251 j 133" | "245" |134| ?33~ | 129~ I 249
~64~ | ~87 CMfaBTM {"91" j" 63
103 | 151 | 106 | 154 I 10 2
143 j 216 | 163 { 218 | 147
71 I 169 1 69 I 163 I 71
109 I 73 i 108 : 73 I 10
190 | 26 | 190 j 26 | 192
26 j 192
188 | 227 | 187 j 228 | l!?2 ; 226~j 184
160 j 228~j 159 | 226 | 159"j 224 fl59
263 j 165 j 263Y165 | "262 I 166~ | 263
260 j 42 J 260 j 42 | 259 j"42^260
rz
110 |108 L 73 I 73
100 I 161 j 101 I 161 i 96 I 161 j 98
271 j 232 j 271 | 232 ) 271 j 232 j 276
101 j 31 j 102 I 31 [ 100 J 31 j 101
308 j' 217 j 306 | 217"| ~306 "j"217 | 3Q3
328 j HT~i~329~fill I 32D j 113 j 316
292" j 289 J 284 | 292' j 289 j 292 | 292
509 I 471 j 502 I 473 f "514 j 465 | 505
154 j 101 ! 153 I 103 j 153 | 101 | 158
219 J 147 I 218 J 148 I 22") j 143 j 220
167 I 71 I 167 I 71 i 167 | 70~ I 167
190 I 26 I 26
186 || 229 j 231 "
159 j 228 I 228 ;
264 j 166 j 165 j
260 'l .42 I 43 !
626 j 164 J 164 j
.250 j 1&3 I 134 :
~64 I 84 I 85 j
_r>8 I 161 I 161 i
271 I 229 i 232
101 I 31 I 31 !
303 I 213 I 214 [
327" I 125 109 ]
285 j 289 I 289 J
502 "(-474 I'476 I
155 I 101 [ 100 J
220 j 147 I 145.
167 f. 71 j 71 I
. 164 ! 70rj 167 I 69 j 167 ; 69 { 165 J 71 j 167 , , , , _.. , ; i
I W'tmws !?W| 447413008 !?39, J2992|4618 |g)62j _?13[30Mj4SS7j979j4534_|2Wg_40M|2965 [4543 j4638 (29S6_[gf> .
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1519J [1520 | |M07 f i 1466| |1647 | |165~6~ | ]1509| [1578 [ [1552 | | 1599| | | | | |
Many Problems Confront f 1
The New Deal Congress
WILL GIVE CONCERT
Miss Virginia Giu-tafst,*, teacher of
violin in the depart ment of niudc of
Western Carolina Teaehens College,
will present ta program of musi:
Sr.wlay afternoon, at 3.15 o'clock
the parlors cf Moore Dormitory,* a*
Jullcv.hee. S!.c will be aeempanied
at the piano by Air. Coarse TVacy.
Mi3s tji1.vt4fr.0n is from Kansas City
Ma, a:jd is a graduate of the Eastman
>c1k>oJ of music in Rochester, N. Y.
The program follows:
Sonc'a in A il'ijo**, Handel: Adagio,
Vllegro. v<*wr.io in E Minor, Conns:
Illegro vi \x>, adagio, Cadenz;.
Ulcgro cw? fuoco. Allegro, Fiooco.
iiebe.ifeiKl, Kreisler. Old Refrain
Crosier. Spanish Dance No. 3, Mos
koswski.
CARNIVAL AT OULLOWHEE
The students of Cullowhee High
j ^hool will hold a carnival at the
! ngh school auditorium at Cullowhce
tomorrow, Friday evening, Nov. 13.
One of the features will be a one
. -t pi ty. 'Squiring it with lh"
Hrws". Thi: out will consist
Ilillie Brysori Edith Seagu, Katherine
Brown, Jennings lacker, Irene Green
Beit Battle. The play is coachad
by Mias Winona Hooper,-teacher of
? : English department.
Other features include the- tellmg of
fori cues, various games ;md a negrt)
minstrel, sponsored by Mr. E. V.
Desna, science teacher of the high
chooL
CUNNINGHAM IMPROVING
Friends of Mr. T. T. CytuiiiJgham,
Sylva m^cliant, who operates a store
xi Cullowhce mad, will be glad to
"awrcr that he is improving, after * se
aw?* I*''
'SQUIRE POTTS ILL
- '.'i''
Esquire R. P. Potts hat? been quite
;i*k at his home, the Sylvia Hotel, for
lie past two weeks.
IS. GLCNN
MBS. GLENN BETTER
Mrv. Kaymond-Glcr.n. who has been
dl, at her home 011 Main Street, is
umiewhal improved, her "friends will
be gbil to learn* *? *'.?
^ ? . v ? ( >
brings down big buck
Mr. Ray". C?gdiU, who was among
lux's d er hiuflijK? week. brought
down a treme:.ilbiis - 'mek, which h?
,hot ia TraaB?lVfcai* ciAmtv.
JOINT MISSION MEETING
All gr.mpl of the Wooma>V Mrwio 1
arv S.vcietv of the Sylvu Methodist
church will meet at the elrorch, 4oml?r
row. Friday evening at 7.30.
With the reeiccliou of President
ivooscvclt the major question which
now iutcrcsis W ashington is whether
the ?\cu" Deal policies will be continu
ed or whether the Aumiuistratcn and
the new Congress will Uikj a iiiorj
COIiSCl\51*1 ? 15 aliunde ill public Mttqjigj
i he general beac-i' iicre is that the
licit lour years constituting Mr*
[Roosevelt's second term, will not bd
-v? tilled with spectacular experiment*
in govi ruuu ut as ihe period just pars
ed. ?
Da.piie the sweeping victory oi the
Democrats, it is the belief here that
Kepublu-.au opposition in Congress
will be mucJi better organized and led
than in tlie past two Congress*^, an<*
that there will be u o wing toward the
conservative side in the Democratic ?
leadership.
An iijtert sting phase of the Congivj
sional situation is the rise to promi
nence in tlie Democratic Party coun
cils of the Texas group. Vice-Presi
dent Garner is the leader of this bloc,
which is moro powerful than most
;>eoplo realize. ??Seven other Texans ii-.
tlie Lower House, including Represo;;
fatives Riayburn, Connolly, Sumner?,
?laniu Jones, Ruchiuian, Laninni,
md Patiu.tu, yield among them a pow
jrfal iniiuenee. They have a doise ti.?
with rhe Administration through an
ither Texan, Jes^e Jones, Chairmi'i
ii' the Reconstruction Finance Corp0 '
ration, who in many respects is th'*
;vo-il powerful figure in the cxecurtiv-'
department. Texas ha-; six conuuitte ?
?b.urmen in tlie House
On the Rcpuplican nde the stage .>>
?:ct for an active :ind aggressive Op
position, looking forwiard to th*
Congressional elections of 1838 an t
the Presidential election of 1940. Th;
foremost Republican leaders are K.p
rescntatives SnclI, Wldsworth, HolLU
ter, Bolton, Martin and Ib^qadwayvki- '*
the
tinue to be the nominal loader by vir
tue of seniority, but as he is regarded
by his associates as distinctly pro
Roosevelt, the actual leadership will
fall to Senator Vandenberg of Michi
gan, who seized the reins laat wiwt.r
and led the only effective opposition
which has developed in the past thre.
and ia half ycai?s.
All the indications, *herefore, poim
to serious and intense political activ
ity on Capitol Hill for tlie next twa
yaara. --
There is some doubt whether Rep
reeenta/tive Bankhepd of Alabama,
the Speaker of the House, will be abb.
o continue in that office. The princi-.
pal candidate for the speakership, i
the event of Mr. Jiankhoud's ret in
meni, are licpre.-jenta.tives O'Conn
f>f New York, Raybura of Texas mi l
McOornrack oi' .Massachusetts. Th.
Kammany influence is expected to >r
stronger in the. new IIou=e, and th 1
Idoo will have the balance of pow-Y
on many issues. ?
Another thing whioh serin? Perky; i
is that there will be moro lobbie?'?in t
imore powerful oiies trying to influ
ence Congress on behalf of special
rroujls and minorities than ar an\
?rovious "iiiie. The hibur lobby wil?
?nnJ/ably- be the most powerful ol
toning as it,-: objective Ihe
iuiley, (':>.d Rill, the Six-holir Day
or r. il:-f>id workers and the 30-hotir
/eck tor all employees. Part of'th;
jabor program is to try to bu'ld :r?
i->troug labor party to play a par?
a the damj^aign of 1940.
The effort of the farm lobby will bt
'o. keep what it has rather than to
n-ge further benefits for farmer':. The
Veterans' lobby, however, having suc
ceeded in getting the prepayment ef
the l?onus over the _ President '??? veto,
has been enconragod to believe tfaht it
?an get anything it wonts. What i?
qnfs now is a general life pension
for veterans and t.V widows and or
>lcliiK.of veterans.
So far ?? Washington. obrierver;
rjt<n!\ t-wo or tbree Cabi
net changes are in prOepect It is th^
gener.U belief that someone will r^
plary? Dan Roper as Secretary of Cor.i
rnerce, though there is no agreement
as f? who is likely to get this pom.
? i ? ". i'J ? .? now Secretary of War
to rcplace Harr\ Woodring. If Mr
Iel^es warjM to retain his job as he;d
of the Department of the Interior let
['.?fin fa it. Mr. Icko.i ha? bni'i i |? a
powerful i>olitical mnchine of his ?? ?
and it would be pditioally inexped ?
ient to replace him if he wanta to
stay. T! ig the general belief that
(Fk-OM Turn To Plage S)