Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 16, 1933, edition 1 / Page 5
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1933 THE WAYKESVILLE MOUNTAINEEK Page 5 Grover C. Davis To Make Titles ' For Loans Here Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation, of Raleigh To Loan Moneyat5'2 Percent r rover C Davis, of Waynesville, ha, been desisted as attorney for H wood countyr Whose certificate of "tie -for liens, chattels and mortgage, l bV accepted by the Regional Ag ricultural Credit Corporation of Ral 3 n. C for loans to be made to i hf people of this couhty John P Stedman executive vice-president and .n-.n-irer announces. fldF for attorneys, paid by the ap , i;,..,, are limited to one-half of " per 'cent of the loan, with , a mm ,' ot $1 and a munimum of $12 50. chattels and liens while the fees . n real property will be governed by "Se amount of work involved m pre narine the abstract and mortgage. Kejs. as well as county farm lKents.- are agreeing to perform the rutk connected with making loans Kreetv for patriotic and community batons, Mr. Stedman states, pointing uthat county agent or cooperating lnrest'on the lonas is at the rate jf per cent and a small inspec tion fee, depending on the size of the Joan, will oe aqyeu, tate?. Loans are not to be made to persons who mav be interested in agriculture ,nd receiving the major part of their nconie from other sources, but they .! be confined to actual "dirt farm- whose main livelihood comes , -r.m funning, poultry, livestock and wry operations. Mr. Steadman states. .- - 'he farm owner, too, and not the ''riant farmer, who will be the bene ..!ary of the Regional Agricultural v rdit Corporation's assistance. Those . Vpagt-ii in producing crops, raising ..it;!,., ..aerating dairies and raising j. ,j!try on their own land will be .xiciHi'e;! loans under the regulations ;he i. rpoiiition. the vice-president :-o nianaee: announces, I ,,; are made direct from the liaieittii. office and do not hay,, to be i d upon in Washington, thus elim ' -.ting time and trouble and permit ;ng the borrowers to get their money rnuch earlier than otherwise would the case. Mr. Stedman state. Judge Alley Makes Talk To Buncombe Bar Association Kd-N'ote The following is the re sponse made by Judge Felix E. Alley recently at the opening of court in Buncombe county. This was intend ed for lastweek.'s paper, but was de layed iirreaching here. The Buncombe Bar Association gave. Judge Alley a formal wejeome at the opening of his first court. ' v ' .My frlendv&nd brethern of the Bar of Bunconjbe county: "No words: of mine will adequately express my appreciation of the kind words that have , een said of me by the gentlemen who have spoken. "Since my appointment to the Bench 1 have been. Overwhelmed by the nu merous ex'pjrjessions of . friendship I have received from every section of 'he state. Let' me assure you that nothing has touched me more deeply than the evidence of confidence and esteem manifested by the Buncombe County Bar. ;;r-"Your attendance here this morn mjr in such large numbers portends, 1 think, the continued success of the spring terms of your Superior Court, if I shall be able to meet the exact ing requirements of this high office. "None of us are born with wisdom .ready made, and if it be true that those only shall reach her lofty heights who have struggled upward along the steep and stony path, I think I may be pardoned if I indulge at least a modicum of hope for my self, as I have more than a passing acquaintance with the boulders that impede the way. ''Never haying contemplated ser vice in this responsible position until now, I approach the discharge of my ..duties with feelings of trepidation and wnspymg. That I shall make many mistakes I have no doubt; but with a md open to conviction I shall have the courage to reverse myself as often s I may be convinced that I have ;Trd. "There are manv men nf v a. juaintanee whom I would like to relate, but there is no man, either '.n .or out of office, whom I desire to imitate. - Therefore, I shall bring to tfie office no false, assumed, oppres sive and unnatural dignity. I have no pet hobbies; no whims ?r n!itral prejudices to foist upon the Bar and the public. Nor do I have in my mind any hard and fast or ironclad rules that I shall seek to enforce, : . ; ";,. "I shall 6e entirely satisfied, as well as highly gratified, if by the combi nation of such little legal knowledge as J have been able to glean through the ?y ears in a rather varied practice, with the plain, every day common sense with which I hope I am blessed, I. can administer the duties of this office in such way as will attain the ends of substantial justice, without ostentation, vain-glory or vain display. u "I have heard it said that a late Bench makes a laggard Bar, I shall, therefore, undertake to be punctual in my attendance upon the duties of the Court, and it is my request thai you likewise be diligent in your at tendance as your varied duties will permit, to the end that we may ac complish a maximum of work. "Believing, as I do, that the right to be fully heard is as sacred as the nght to just decision, i trust I may e able to give definite assurance as the weeks go by that every man, of whatever circumstance or condition in life, and without regard to racj or color or party or creed, shall have in Lincoln Had REAL Problems Compared With His, WE Have NONE ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FOUR years ago in 1809, a famous crop of babies was born. i One of them was Charles Darwin, who was to announce the theory of evolution and start a war between the dovaut and the learned that has not ended yet. Others were Chopin, whose Tennyson, whose "Charge of the to recite in school; Poe, whose creepy stories you have read; Glad stone, who believed in Home Rule for Ireland when other English men did not; Fitzgerald, whose Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam you. of course, know, and ABRAHAM All these babies of 1801) became justly famous, but Lincoln will stand out for many year, as the greatest, for he started with less than any of the others and accomplished more. Lincoln is valuable to men and women, boys and girls of to day because he was an AVERAGE American by birth, by educa tion and by lack of special advantages. Compared with most of us, these respects. It is a poor child that in 1933 does not have vastly greater opportunities than the boy Lincoln had. But it is a rare child that uses these opportunities a used his limited ones. Tell your children: "Lincoln succeded because he "He walked miles to iret a book, and read it eagerly. Reading was not forced upon him. "He had no comfortable table, at all. He had no writing paper. "He took a piece of board the wood fire. Then he shaved it again." If you are a young man, discouraged because success does not come quickly, remember that Lincoln was often discouraged. He once applied for a job in a Government department, witn a small but comfortable salary. He did not get it and was plunged into despondency. Had he got that place he probably would have lived and died an abscure clerk in Washington,. JiacrVYtt. to a few friends as a good story teller, and unheard of by the.Bia.ss of his ' countrymen then or since. ' And as an AMERICAN in these days of doubt and difficulty think often of Lincoln. When he took office he could see from the White House win dows the Confederate flag flying from a staff across the Potomac. He had REAL problems to solve, beside which our problems pale into insignificance. When Calvin Coolidge was President a visitor called to concole with him over some difficulty that looked big at the moment. Mr. Colidge took this friend to the window, pointed out across the river and told him that story. Mr. Coolidge added : "Since Lincoln NO President .has had any problems." And since the Civil War America has had NO problems that could not be solved with but a fraction of Lincoln's honesty, cour age and human understandin. It is well to remember that TODAY and EVERY DAY. Baltimore News. my courts a full, patient, respectful and impartial hearing. I believe it wno tttv T.nrH C!nke who said that a Judge who decides a cause without giving both sides lull opportunity to be heard, although his decis'on may be just, is, himself, unjust. 'It shall be my highest aim always, as I may be able to see the right, to obey no master but the truth, and at her shrine ever offer unswerving de votion. "I feel that I am exceedingly for tunate in that my courts for the first few months of my service will be held in this district and in this county where I will have the assistance of a Bar the equal of the best anywhere, and composed of my personal friends. I shall expect your complete coopera tion, and I crave and shall welcome your suggestions and advice. "I have been honored by the privi lege of membership in this ancient and honorable profession for thirty years; and with unbounded and abid ing faith and confidence in the honor and integrity of the fine type of men who everywhere compose its memDer ship, I have but little patience with those who, without foundation of face, prate and indulge in criticism of our profession as a whole, and with reck less disregard for the truth of their statements, delight in wholesale critt cism of the courts. "I believe that there is an atmos phere near the sun in which the spirits of true and honorable lawyers dwell. They have been the fore-runners of legal and religious liberty; they have been the hand-maidens of freedom in every age and in every clime; and in those sublime moments when oc casions have called for martyrs to the cause of truth and justice, lawyers have ever responded, willing to go to the very gates of death as to a ban quet. "'."'': " ' . "And when we scan the pages of history we find no occasion to blush for our profession. The names of Mansfield and Hale, Burke and Cur ran, Chatham and Erskine, Marshall and Story, Webster, Prentiss, Taft, Davis, Hughes, ana a.pgnij husl.vx others of equal fame, serve as beacon lights that mark tne progress uA vm race in its upward march. Kr,oct Vipro the hie-hest type of freedom yet conceived by man, and our boast is unquestionaDiy uuc, mi it must depend for its existence upon nnnrorfnt arm of an oreanized gov- 'ernment protecting the week against the strong, the innocent against the I vicious, the simple against the crafty, and affording equal opportunity to all. 1 "Such a government must be the jcreature of law, depending ior us u- funeral march you have heard; Light Brigade" you perhaps had LINCOLN. indeed, he was below average in hundredth part as well as Lincoln WANTED to learn. no good reading lamp no lamp and wrote on that by the light ot off with a plane and wrote on it ministration and perpetuation upon a competent and incorruptible Bench, taken from and substained by a learn ed progressive and patriotic Bar. "Whether my tenure in the Judic ial office shall be long or short dura tion, it shall ever be my highest pur pose to protect the integrity and honor of the Bar, and to uphold and preserve the dignity, the purity and traditions of our Judiciary, as it has been main tained inviolate in North Carolina for a century and a half." Mrs. Hattie Haight Passes In N. Y. News was' received only yesterday of the death of Mrs, Hattie E. Haight former Haywood county resident. Mrs. Haight died at the home ov her son in Niagara Falls, New York on January 3. ' Up until ten years ago wlvn she went to live with her daughter. Mrs Swick, in Capitol Heights, Maryland, Mrs. Haight made her home at Bal sam. She is still remembered by a large number of friends who will re grel to learn of her death. Special Services To Be Held At Colored Church In Canton Next Sunday morning; at 11 o'clock members of the African Methodist Ephcopal church, of Carton, and oth ers, will have the opportunity to hear one of the colored workers of the South, Rev; Rf G. Gentry, Baptist Missionary, preach on the subject "Occupy till I Come." ." Rev.. E. J. Johnson is, pastor of the church. Last Sunday,: Supt. A. J. Hutchins of Canton schools gave an address on the life of Abraham Lincoln. , ; . Prof. II. H. Hamilton, of the col ored school, was also hoard in an ad dress. :. .Several visiting white people gave interesting talks (luring the course of the program. ". After Policeman Salvatore Fran ciosa vanished from a hospital in Ro chester. N. Y.. he was found at his home devouring a meal consisting of roast chicken and , a big platter ot spaghetti. I Deaths During the past week several funerals were held for citizens of this county. The Mountaineer was unable to learn much of the details except the ages, and place of burial ; furnished by Massie Funeral Di w. Dis of this city. John L. Davis. (Hi, fell dead while cutting wood last week. He was ouried at Bethel on last Thursday. His wife is Mrs. Louisa lnman Davis. Rosa Viola Warren. ; year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Warren- of this city, died last Wed nesday. Interment was made at Green Hill cemetery. Miss Mary Jane Aldridge. S2, died at her home in Hazelwood. Miss Aldridge had been in ill health for sometime. She had "tlu" at the time of her death. The deceased was bur ied at juinlan Town cemetery. DID YOU KNOW ? That when the thermometer stood around 20 below in Evanston, 111., re cently, a man gave his name as Jack Frost when he applied for admission h the police station for a little heat; 77 That Peter Albert, of JeanneUe, Pa was acquitted of a charge of .stealing !H;0 from a steel company. 1 he cost in the case uf $'JSt.lO were placec on the county of Westmoreland, - ? ? - mat Joseph Manua, torty three, a trudk 'driver, appeared at a police sta tion and b'ld otlicers, the latter said, that he had just killed his wife, Kuth thirty-three, and thrown her body, from his automobile into Tower drove Park. Police a short time later found her body, with ten bullet wounds, laying b'.-id(. a drive in the park. The man blamed her nagging for his act. r That alter being carried 5 miles on horseback and U2 .miles, in an auto mobile, Betty Calloway, age 2, died in a hospital in Lexington, Kentucky after a peanut had been removed from her throat? , ' . 7 7. ' That the brother of General John J. Pershing died recently in a New York hosp'ital of a heart ailment. The deceased, James F. Pershing was 72 years, old, 10 months younger than his brother, the general. General Pershing was too ill in Texas to at tend the funeral. 7 7 That when egg yolks are used in cake or cooky batters it is best to flavor with lemon and orange to pre vent that too "eggy" taste. ;.. : 7 7 That queer things are still happen ing. Read This.. Last week in Chica go Mrs. Allen Rodney F. Allen was to have received a senerate mainten ance decree from her husband whom she charged with cruelty, but her at- Why A Lady Assistant? MESSAGE NO. 3 In our last message we promised to try to explain sonio xif the many im portant duties of a lady assistant in our funeral service. These duties can best be divided into throe groups, as follows: 1. Duties in our Funeral Home, fa) To act as hostess to visitors who are at all times welcome to our home to make inspections, (ii) To see that the home is at all times kept spotlessly clean and in order, '(e) lo assist with the preparation and eni- bnlmine ot all cases, and to batne, dress, apply cosmetics and dress hair of ladies and children, (d) To assist in the selection uf wearing apparel for thP deceased, (e) To keep accurate records of all calls and funeral ser vices for future reference. 2. Duties in the home of deceased. . We could not li.-t all th(, details of the many services rendered in the home of the deceased. Opportunity for service varies with different caves. But, if death has come to mother, father, sister, or brother, it is a great relief to the bereaved family to have in their home the services of our lady assistant, who, by training and ex perience, understands the many op portunities to render such services in every type of home from the hum blest cottage to the finest home. 3. Duties at the time of funeral, (a) Receive flowers, preserve all cards with descriptions of folral tri butes, (b) Under instructions of the family, organize a suitable number of girls or women to carefully handle flowers, (e) If a.churcn xunerai is to be had, see that flowers are taken from the home to the church in time to be nro'nerly arranged, (d) Super vise the earful removal of flowers from home or church and see tnat tncy are taken to the cemetery ahead of the funeral cortege. This, as well as any other feature of our services, is always adjusted by a sincere desire to give the very best possible service. ; Funeral me Phone l-W Main St Waynesville, N. C. torney appeared in court and said: "My client doesn't want a decree. Her hmband came over to her house and shoveled all the snow off her walks. She invited hiru in to warm himself and they patched things' up." t 7 That a saxaphone stood indicted in Chicago as a big discord in the late martial life of the IJebits, and won a divorce. Of her husband, Herman, a musician, Mrs. Debits testified: "He said he loved his saxaphone more than me." ? t Thai two Roanoke, Va., men and a women, were recently charged with attempting to have extorted $50,000 lrom Col. Charles A. Lindbergh by threatening to kidnap his second son. A bonus cheek tor $li,0U0 was sent to I'le "would-be kidnapers" and they were arrested when they presented the check to th, bank for payment. Instead c.f receiving money they were given a ba'ch of blank checks wrapped in brown paper resembling- bills w rap ped and already counted. 7 7 That Ernie Sihaff died Tuesday as the result vf blows said to have been inflicted upon him during a recent boxing match with the giant Primo Carnea. The giant Italian boxer was ordered arrested, being charged with manslaughter. Sehaaf was 24 years old. ) 7 . That police expect Chas. Uoettcher, Denver millionaire,' to be released at an early date from a kidnaping gang which have been holding the rich westerner for $00,000 ransom. Boet tcher's wife and relatives are ready tu pay the demanded ransom, late dispatches, said. ?? That Lloyd Khun, 28-year sales man, ran off the end of the West INAUGURATION: 1 ' H ES 1 1 E N T-K I , K ( T FRANKLIN 1). ROOSEVELT WASHINGTON, I). ('.. MARCH I ROUND TRIP FROM ASHEVILLE Sold March 1 lo '5 Limit March 10 $19.05 Individuals RKDITED ROUND TRIP TI TIAN FARES Proportional e round trip fares from other points. See us about organizing party 25 or more at low total cost. .'' - Call on your local agent or address A. II. ACKER DPA Asheville, N. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM ? rRJIH13 i-F" li I (111 s- r and Your Laundry-Washed Clothes come back as clean and fresh as new! Here at the laundry we do not rub, beat, pound or pumsi your clothes to get them clean. Big V metal-covered cylinders full of live suds gently coax out the dirt. No harsh chemicals. Nothing to injure-fragile materials. No wonder things washed our way have a new-found freshness when you receive them! We make a iusiiess of. washday. And oj: . : b't'rvice is amae'ingly.ine.Aitvive. Lc'. u .' ' Ui the detaiLs a phone ' call w:'- 'ni---i: " SEND US THAT DRY CLEANING WE'LL DO IT LIKE YOU WANT IT 4- i 4- ."' J I- 4' 1? !! I wavnesv! le La rn oner " wii nATIm l?nol" r Asheville Bridge Monday and ws instantly killed. His car was de molished on the railroad tracks below.' Khun is the third person to be killed by autos in Buncombe county since January first. 7 7 That Roy L. Peterman, public utili ties official, was fatally shot Satur day at his home in a fashionable resi dential section of Chariot?. A coro ner's jury found it was suicide. Police who investigated the case immediately after the shooting said Mrs. Peter- man said she had killed her husband. "Witnesses testified that she was high ly nervehous and apparently under the influence of intoxication liquors. 7 7 That the Asheville hurley tobacco market led the state, with an average of $lt!.02. The average for the state was $8.67. 7 That T. P. iMorgan in Shelby slip ped and fell on the ice this week and was fatally injured. He was oil years old and on his way to work. DEPRESSION Why stop to grumble'.' It won't help you any, Stopping to grumble Never earned a penny. Oh, you say, "Depression" Take .out 1, E. and I Then you have "press on" What's left is "Die." -Boys Life A garden rake was discovered im bedded at the center uf a tree which was recently felled at the home of James Dietrich of Stelton, Pa. $9.50 Per capita party fare 25 or more qo rhe Cylinders unary i ii
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 16, 1933, edition 1
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