Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Dec. 14, 1934, edition 1 / Page 13
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THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY, DECEMBER l'i. r X. aC Uk HOPKINS' RELIEF PLAN'S. IM'l'L'ULl1 AN'S IX FH.IIT. NO COMI'KOUISK LIKELY. BORAH LEADS ATTACK OLD (JLARI) HOLDS LINE TWO HOUSING PROGRAMS. By Huiro Sims, The Muunta:nfer Special Washington Coriv.-rKt. Harrv 1 1 ...pk : n.-. Kv'mI A.:m.n:iru. tor, propose.- an expansion ul tne sub sistence h-mwtca.is and rural rehab ilitation promam to ir.clu.le as many families as p--iU. tne large-scale removal uf families from submargi nal or unprotitaie lands to better farming site..-- the advance of funds to equip both groups with tools, live stock and the necessities of farming, a program to give factory work to the idle, a large-scale, low-cost hous ing program to take care of those unable to move, and a social insu rance program to give security in the future. instigated by the Federal Housing AiimMii.-tra'.xm. - -ei-ms t avoid '.h Let ween Secretary Ickc ng program is expected around eight billion i he work relief program as much more although r :s expecteil to reach mat to. a: y-.ar. In presenting its hoU;: fort, the idea is advanced th:it thing is necessary as an ar.'.: Wild uemarnls tor IU Til li'Vu'J -a.- e Lie i on. sopwia o n u w so n ma w.i nr.' I : MEN IN WHITE .' has : ecn .-un-iiie rao'.e a:.u: the Pulitzer prize vear. It i true edi.al niai They tne dis- ! .::V Men in White that It represents t living a life of must ' anie ,me am . at tne servative in order to give !. chance to shvw what it a:; definite recovery. His tentative program is based upon experimental projects now under way and seems to be something along the line of Upton Sinclair's EPIC plan in California. Mr. Hopkins as is well known- is aware of th of the dole and the social pe tended cash relief arid is a: '.iange: ,,f ex. put in! enable to make program a scale tha sume. i--l what ex: push the convenes. A -.par. i i the pr :;ea! d sent re own w 1 nr"i.r: a . e pub'. A imi tern to f relief l 1 v the uttered larger '.! a. een to will ngress :.e the Secretary Ickes unrw a large works program to keep things movng until private enterprise takes up the f'8 and permits the government to pud out. He estimates that a seif-uqui-dating program can get under way within a year and that a housing construction project could be supple mented bv grade erasing elimina tions on a large scale, to be paid for through special taxes on railroad pas. sentrer tickets, freight rates, automo biles or ga.-'o'ine. The Secretary feels that the original puVic works program fell hort be ause the $3,300,000,000 alloted was n -t enough to complete the program. The low cost housing plan may be come involved in problems of land acquisition, and some direct relief will have to be continued until the r.ew work relief program reaches its goal- in. That c exisit.s of clea an little i lution light. par' vithi eraut he Pr oilfe part icat ressives t of a s problem who lizat.on along airman Fletch e to meet the 1 lah'j senator ir'y leadership" . o vein lit-r. lee ot opinion ilong the line "Obl Guard" s plain and .isfactory so has come to Hints For Curing Pork At Home Ml ur n II La.- -June pe h lb..--earc! imei W ke trro his society if he is called , be-bside. But he hurriedly rose from his on his clothes and tne sac- r.fice in tne interest ot nu:r.ar.:: . n . uty to his ft-lk.w men comes first. His pleasure, if he has any at all. jmes last. Even his family e-ive un to alleviate the suffering of a leliow man, though from the standpoint of j sjciety the patient's life rr.av hardly j worth saving anyway. j Is this an ideal picture that the au thor has drawn of the true medical man? Has he painted a true and realistic picture? The writer has only to ask her readers to look back over heir own lives. They may confine themselves to their own com munities to answer this question for themselves. -Let them answer fit honestly and frankly. Do any of you recall any person, no er h'.'W filthy and degraded he' uh- was ever allowed to linger .- i .-ickr.c. unattended by '.sic ar. itrau.-e he had no money? ;.. u ivnieiiiivi- any one in unity v.i'.o .:,: oe.ause lie y : ' pay for a doctor? . aci;. Do any of you know ..: the sen: time s..me man or wo man vhv.-- iite has been worn out in the service of humanity? Maybe he ,;-r she is going dwn toward the sun set -.:ay. H.' isn't rich. Oh. no. he never stopped to ask "Can he pay me? ' when a call for help came. S ir.etimes :he' summons conies ;a the den 1 of night. It was dark anil bittrr cold The doctor perhaps sicker .1-..., he one who summoned him to his rm rew Wf wen out into the cold and darkness at the call , of a suffering human be ing. Maybe, after going ten miles through the night, he found that some body was only fiick with terror and not bodily illness. Leaving peace and content in the heart of the sufferer, the doctor reach ed home after covering twenty miles, to find the gray dawn lighting up the eastern sky. The sufferer may has-e forgotten to pay his bill, either in money or in gratitude. You say. Oh that's human nature. Broad Social Work Program Will Be I Presented Assembly! ! i Continued from page 1) I I e: ate distri . t jails in place of the pres-j I er.t county jails. j . That adequate provision be made I thf-'Usrh the state school machinery 'act i 1 f r restoring to the county welfare i budgets the subsidy allowed in 1931-: j ;;:J for school attendance work. ! y. That ungraded classes and other '. -pe.iai facilities and equipment be provided in the public schools for the sub-normal child- 10. The specialized training be pro-' vided the child with a combination of defects. 11- That provision be made for the f alary and traveling expenses of an additional field agent in the division of institutions and corrections, who shall serve also in the capacity of parole agents for these institutions; for either a clini.al r psychiatric social w ' vision of mental h',v.: ..' tra clerical asi.-:ta:.,.,- . ..' ment- "' Such measure- a publir welfare comnvl--- . would have a far-reach::.L'"t the state's social a : . i v ' . being and would furtr...' national recovery pr -.-, give security to every and child in the nation." Bird.' Visibility All birds except u'.vi, placed 'on eacli siJe r,' . that they can look two u-.-; Owls have eyes si:-: ;ir r,-, human beings So it is, some people's nature, but the doctor is just as human other folks and his lot can be made brighter by receiving fair play just the same as can yours. FINAL APPEAL TO MY FR': ' PLEASE save your t: :e:e '"."! the Asheville Trade J-ii;Z f There are only a few m re . ! days in which tickets wo' -t ; ed. SHOP THIS WEEK, ;; I may benefit from your d'--; Thanking you for your' p.-"' sponse. Bobbie Sloan 1932 Plymouth for sale. . Jim Coman, Phone 2G1-J "a-. a. when the iiartv reor- ganjacd its national 'committee set-up, the Republicans had a ichance to go "liberal" but the powerful influences which have dominated it for a long time continued to control. These conservatives sud.eeded. in securing Mr. Fletcher as chairman.. While never-closely identified with the Old Guard, he was considered "safe." .While the chairman has declared that the party mit-st be- liberalized, he feels that he presented the attitude of the majority of his party in the recent campaign and that his critics weak ened the fight by compromising with the Democrats. He h"s no idea of resigning or call ing a meeting for immediate reorgan ization in line with the liberal demand! 'In this he bas the backing of Charles D. Hilles, who wants .the party to remain conservative. General domi nan e of the National Committee is in the hands .of the Hoover-Mills-Hilles group, which hope, to keep the porti on an. even keel until the Roosevelt policies break down and they can make the issue out of the return along less-radical-. lines'. This seems to be the position of Bertram H. Snell, Republican leader in the House, who recently declared that he would not change his politics or religion as a result of the election, and expressed amusement at the demands for reor ganization under new leadership to expound new policies. With a strong faction of the party insistent upon reorganization, it ap pears. that Senator- Borah, through. his recent speech, has taken the lead. This group is composed, of virtually the same group that was progressive in 1912 and remained aloof from the Republican campaign that. year- Sen ator Borah points out that the Repub lican party has reached its lowest ebb in power and influence in its history, and blamed this condition largely upon the unwillingness of the iparty leaders : to meet present problems upon a broad and humanitarian basis. ; . .He. feels that there are' millions of faithful .Republicans throughout the country who will not go back to its support if the reactionary forces con tinue to control. the party. Pointedlyl he declares that . the effort' of these leaders is to protect the interests "of the few as against those of. the manv The Idaho senator would use the 1 oung. Republican, clubs ail. over the country , as the nucleus of a move ment to reform the, national organi zation-, .- ' '..-. . , No, compromise appears , probable but it is likely that Senator Borah and others . like Senators . McNary Couzens, Vanderburg, Cutting, -Nor- beck.; Nye, and Frazier will be able to use the Senate forum as a sound ing ooarfi to state , ine issues. . mis apparently indicates that the .Repub lican. party '.will, present a-discordant minority in . the coming session of Congress; unless the minority group is. successful iri forcing, the reorganiza tion w:hi:h: it demands. s a rare between the ria and the peret ra the meat, says Earl letley. in charge of livestock : fir the North Carolina Ex. t Station. epiiig the meat cnoieii to check I .vth of barteria, farmers may eriallv aid salt in winning the race, he added. j A temperature of 1!7 degrees. shoull be maintained throughout the curingi period- Meat can be cured at higher' temperatures, he said, but the losses are greater. A temperature lower than 37 degrees will retard curing. A little sugar and saltpeter added to the curing mixture will add flavor and color to the meat. Eight pounds of salt, two pounds of sugar, and two ounces, of saltpeter is a standard recipe for curing 100 pounds of pork. Hostetler continued. The cure may be applied either as a brine or a dry mixture. The brine cure is made by dissolving the salt, sugar, and saltpeter in four and a half gallons of water and submerg ing the-meat in this solution- In the dry method, about one-third of the mixture is rubbed on when the meat is put in cure, another third. three to five days later, and the re mainder about 100 days after the: first application. In tile dry cure-, the time required for bacon st rips and other thin cuts is -about one day per pound; loins about one aild a half days per pound; joint meat, hams, or shoulders., two to three days pt.- pound- Joint meat, hams, and shoulders will brine cure in four days per pound. A mild brine cure for loins, bacon strips, and spare ribs is made by dissolving the mixture, given above in five, gallons .of water. Spare rite should: brine cure in five to seven days, and average weight bellies and loins in two or three weeks. Ancient Bru!TC3 of Belgium Six miles from the -North sea lies Bruges; a modern 1 -.el-nan citv still quietly resting In the middle ages, little changed since it was the com mercial center of the Hanseutic icncue, Hie elnmos of its b. lirv have been "-celebrated from the Thirteenth century, Its town hall Is six hundred years old. i , Its beautiful Gothic churches '.rre built before Columbus discovered America. In Its Hospital St. Jean are Mending's iao;:t impor-. tant paintings'.,'.-. Vistas of. old quays, and canals with many bridges are fringed . with . car'Wis - of ancient houses. Where Salmon Spawn The spawning .habits of salmon de pend on the species. The Pacific sal mon live in salt water during thief adult life and spawn in the fresh wa ter of ' the, .Columbia river.' and other I'aeinV streams, These spawn only-' "lice and die without returning to the st a. . The .'.:::,, n of' the Atlantic also spawn in fresh Vviuor, hilt do not die i.'': or spawning. ., Parliament , The word parliament was first used by Matthew Paris in l-iu. but only gradually -replaced- the names by which the councils of the English kings had previously, been known. Modern par liament . has developed slowly from .WitenagemOt of Anslo-.Saxoii times, i Definite details-. are not yet avana-1 ble- but it seems probable that the I. administration will -propose whole-1 sale building operations by the Gov-i ' ernmer.t , to provide Work for unem- : ployed and that, in an effort to I 'fe ver, t any conflict with the efforts of private capital, the project will be for, the benefit of persons in a class not) ..ordinarily , touched . by . the activities BLACK -DRAUGHT " For CONSTIPATION "J am 71 years oid and have used Thedford's Black-Draught about forty years," wTltes Mr. W. J. Vaa i over, of Rome, Ky. ' We are never without it. I ta:e It as a purga tive wtten, I am bilious, dizzy and have strirj-jning in my head. Black-Drau-h- rclteves this, and beips me la ntar.y ways." . . .-' Keep a paclt-'a:-e of tms old, reUabie, purely vc-rt-tibio laxative in vour home, ar-d take it for prompt relief at the . fust sisii, of constipation. A New Variety and Lowest Prices Will Crowd RAIFF'S OUTL STORE With Thrifty Shoppers Who Will Make Our Store Waynesville's Beautiful New Kayon Bedspreads Full size -C olor s, pink, green and or ange. A $1.98 talue $1.29 Ladies' Coats In sport styles and I'ur trim. o gift is more practical $5.95 BARONET SATIN Slips Lace trimmed. An ideal gift at 79c Wool Dresses -nd silks in new styles and rolors. These are worth $2.98 Now $1.98 CHILDREN'S Zipper Sweaters finished w(m1, Rood colois. These are useful gifts at 98c Ladies Amoskeag B r l trt i. i r I ... . Dazzling Holiday Pajamas Attractive colors and styles. A real value 98c ALL WOOL Baby Sweaters Some silk and wool, lie sure to see these 49c 98c Evening Gowns The pay new models . . . Deftly fashiontci on mod. ish silhouette lines dar ingly cut and styled with metallics and fur ... The new blues, pink, red gTeen, white and tangerine. . These are actual $12.95 values $.95 Gift Hand kerchiefs Hand embroidered, 2 in a box Inexpen sive and useful 25c NEW WOOL Tarn Sets Tarn and Scarf plaids and stripes See these at 98c SPECIAL BOXES OF Larkwood Hose For gifts. I'ure thread silk, full fashioned. Everv pair guaranteed 89c Luncheon Sets In gift boxes, orange blue and green. See these at 98 c Attractive Gift Boxes 5c - 10c. See These WHITE SATIN Evening Sandals A nice quality in a high heel, cross-strap style Now only $0.48 Same style with silver straps , 3.48 Chiffon, Velvet and Beaded Evening Bags A beautiful quality in the wanted colors. Worth more but priced at , $1.98 ' M EN'S BathRobes 100'V all wool. All colors and sizes. A S5.00 value at $3.98 MEN'S FINE Handkerchiefs In gift boxes. These are al ways appreciated. 3 in a box 25c to 79c G 1E;n '".tT .. ' s PPIRS : - rm LADIES' Bedroom Slippers JUST RECEIVED Ladies' Slippers Leatherette and satins with heels. Nicely New brown and black dress stylesShoo trimmed. Me suggest these as ; iearlv for thes at - " P 69c to $1 25 MEN'S Bedroom Slippers hide s( 79c Felt uppers, rawhide soles Inexpensive Gifts at $1.98 MEN'S Dress Oxfords Several $1.98 Black or Tan. Several good styles to scitrii i rum NEW SILK ieciiiit Beautiful Patterns several of these at 4C 7Qr . tut - I t'v - For 3Ien We Suggest S u s pen d er s . - - - - - 2 ""' ' 0 j;' -Belts-.... -,-2'"' Sox .,.. lfe '0 Jackets ii..'$.1.9.t ; Sweaters jnins --,---r" , , ,t Palon.Ho t)Sr and RAIFPS OUTLET -:- ybfr Cm Waynesville J
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Dec. 14, 1934, edition 1
13
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