THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22 Page 2 1936 THE W A. YNES V1LLE MOUNTAINEER The Mountaineer Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO. Main Street , Phone 137 Waynesville, North Carolina The County Seat Of Haywood County W. CURTIS RUSS Editor W. Curtis Rums and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHKD KVERY THURSDAT SUBSCRII'TION RATBIS One Year, In Haywood County J1.00 Six Months, In Haywood County . . 50 One Year Outside Haywood County $1.50 All Subscriptions Payable in Advance Kutere.1 at Uie post office at Waynesville, N. C, as Second Clawt Mail Matter, ax provided under the Act of March 3, 1879, November 39, IS 14. Obituary notices, resolution!! of rtiJlMi. cards of thanks, and all notices of entertainments r profit, will be charged for at the rate of one cent per word. yNoritTcarolina vj PRESS ASSOCIATION ''A THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1936 ACHIEVEMENT AND PROSPERITY FOLLOW COMMUNITY LOYALTY The loyalty and prosperity of a community is only as strong as its weakest link and that link may be the thoughtless habit of sending our dollars to the four winds of out-of-town business establishments sowing seeds on bar ren soil from whence the harvest is far away. You do not reap crops by sowing your seed in a neighbor's field, neither do you build com munities and prosperous sections by spending your money within the confines of that political subdivision which looks to another's good. Live and let live is an adage which may well be con sidered by the people of Waynesville and vicin ity. It is an adage for which The Mountaineer has great respect. To live in Haywood and let other folks who so desire live elsewhere is chari table. To live in and support local institutions is not only charitable but loyalty to those things which are closest to the hearts and lives of us all..' : .'Not even by the wildest stretch of the imagination can one see further growth and welfare for this community and vicinity when dollars takes wings and bid fond farewell for ever to our local community in their flight to distant points arid into distant cash registers. Build your community and you build for yourself. IJuilcl the other man's community and you are creating and erecting material wealth for him. Dad pennies may always re turn, but perfectly good dollars seldom wing their way back home when tossed into the coffers of the out-of .'-town and out-of-state in stitutions. The distant friend is a friend so long ;is your dollars contribute to his well being when they cease to grease, his wheel of prosperity you cease to be a welcome guest. THUMBED RIDE ROBBED OF COLD WIND. PANTS IN (Jiving hitch-hikers rides continues to be a dangerous business, or habit, It is dangerous for both the hiker and the motorist, and usually it is the motorist that gets the worse end of the deal, but only last week two hikers were given a lift, and in the car were four men and a woman. When the car got to a lonely spot in the road, the two hikers were robbed of not only their money, but their clothes even their pants and left shivering in the cold wind. And as we said in the opening sentence, giving hitch-hikers rides is still a dangerous business for all concerned some lose their lives, others lose their money and even some Jose their pants on a cold day. PLOWING AHEAD The locomotive is one of the noblest works of man. It seems to be almost human. We never tire' standing by it, listening to its pulsat ing heart. We love to take our place on the platform of a station and watch it racing along the tracts, drawing an almost endless train of cars after it. ' The giant on tracks of steel seems to say to us, "Never become discouraged." Then to illustrate its own message it plows ahead through heat and cold, day and night, over mountains and through valleys, and hesitates not when it is facing the driving rain and the blinding snow. What else could a human creation like that say to us except "Forge ahead; do not falter before discouragements; never think of giving up; you will reach your goal if you do not allow the obstacles in your way to discourage you. ' Young Folks. ON THE APPROVED LIST, AGAIN When the twenty-sixth annual Clinical Con gress of the American College of Surgeons met in Philadelphia Monday morning and read the list of approved hospitals in this state, the Haywood County Hospital was again on the list, as it has been for the past several years. This distinction for the Haywood Hospital again this year does not come as a surprise. Those who come in contact with the institution readily realize the importance that the insti tution plays in the community. Although crowded beyond capacity, the work is being carried on in the faith that with in a short time larger quarters will be added to the present plant. The fact that the local hospital has out grown itself by almost fifty per cent speaks for the good work that is being done. LATE FALL BEAUTIFUL TREES Old timers, and weather records show that this is an unusually late fall. Thus far this county has had but one noticeable frost, and quite a few fields are still green, while the trees in the woods have turned every color. At no time during recent years have the woods been so full of colorful leaves as this fall. The usual dead appearance that many trees have taken on in early fall are absent from nature's paint box this year. A MIXED UP AFFAIR Even the best of politicians are in a swirl when it comes to predicting the winning party in November third. The Literary Digest straw poll, always a reliable indicator, gives Mr. Lan don a big lead, while Wall Street is betting Z to 1 on the re-election of Mr. Roosevelt. The two just go together. And another upsetting factor, is that many leaders of the Democratic party have recently announced their intention to vote for Mr. Lan don, while those who have made it their busi ness to study elections say that Mr. Roosevelt is as good as elected right now. About all that we are sure of right now is that this nation will welcome with glee, the rising of the sun on the morning of November fourth and shout in unison, "The 1936 election is over, now to get back to work." PARK TRAVEL INCREASING There is a slang expression: "Who would have ever a thought it." And that is what we thought When we re ceived this week a communication from Supe" intendent J. Ross Eakin, of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, saying that from Oc tober, 1935 to September, 1936 over 602,000 people in 194,932 automobiles traveled in the Park.' '' Six hundred and two thousand people. What a crowd. That is a little better than twenty per cent more than visited the park the previous year. Cars were from every state, also Canada and 9 other foreign countries. Just for the sake of comparison, we find that if all the cars visiting the park last year were to. line up, with 12 feet allotted each car, that the line would be about 150 miles long. The largest single day's travel was on Sep tember sixth. This was the Sunday before Labor Day, when 11,974 people entered the park in 3,192 cars. Such records as these should begin to con vince us that travel into the park is really get ting to mean something. PROPHETS OF DOOM Luckily for humanity it still maintains a saving sentse of humor. Were this not so, the wailings of the pessimists would drive us all crazy. For surely there is no lack of pro phets of doom to hurry us with their doleful warnings that the world is going to pot. Each long-faced brother solemnly assures us that unless his particular panacea for sav ing the race shall be speedily adopted there is no hope. Modernism, flapperism, automobiles, hootch, movies, bridge, dancing, and cigarettes, either or in combination, constitute the out standing menace, according to the viewpoint of the particular alarmist who happens to have the ..floor.;.. . Thus, after listening to these apostles of doom, with a more or less pronounced feeling of boredom, unregenerated humanity turns to the funny papers and smiles at the varying fortunes of Jiggs and Andy Gump. This does not mean that the average person is indifferent to the evil of the world. It means that sensible people recognize the inherent weakness and folly of humanity, and refuse to bcome unduly excited about it. They realize the futility of trying to carry the world's bur den on their shoulders, though they seek to be helpful in practical ways. They courageously face the things that are, while sanely striving for the things that ought to be. McDowell News. . THE OLD HOME TOWN by STANLEY KNOW, YOU A STKANCCkN i IN "mCSe PAWT5---NOW. J I I BETS MERE. TELU ' VJEWC IN FOW A LONfi. . s ' C-D WINTER- YOU O Ef?--AM'.', -- ( oAV.'.' 8ETTER DOUBLE YOUR COAL. I ( WEU. YoO ) ORDER NOW- BETJY WAS BETTER MAXS ( S PRACTICALLY BAkP LAST ( THAT lSTaNS) J wNTER AND Vvie HA V m TP I r ICE 17 L 3AL.T chick mea - ti 23 Years Ago in Haywood OLDMANTRICKERS CONAHAIREO CATe R PI lL AW HAS 3ECN A SegAT STIMULANT To HIS SONS COAL BUSMESS THIS FALL HERE and There By HILDA WAY GWYN We saw recently in the head lines of the papers . . , "President Roose velt greatly impressed with his trip through the Park." . . I wish he could have seen it last Sunday . . the bril liant crimsons of the sourwoods and the golden maples side by side with the dark greens of the balsams . . . and above them in the distance like a great protecting boundary, range af ter range of mountains . . , bathed in that intangible blue 0f the Smokies. . . We are a lucky lot in this sec tion . . . while others drive hundred and thousands of miles to view the grandeur of these gorgeous hills . . , in a couple of hours we may park our car on Clingmari's Dome . . . and to either side of us more than likely will be parked ears from distant states . . . maybe to the right will be one from Michigan ... and to the left one from New York, or even California ... at any rate it gives one that cosmopolitan feeling that contacts from a trip far away from home give you , . and often it's a rather nice sensation . . when you feel the need of a thange . . but the cars and their occupants are soon forgetten in the exquisite beauty of the surroundings. . . . At this Keason of the year I always find myself as I am sure you do . . struggling for adequate expressions . . nothing seems quite extravagant enough .... When attempting t0 describe au tumn in the Great Smokies . . . or for that matter from my own front porch . . whether looking down on the flaming maples that border Pigenn street . . or lifting my eyes to the heights of Juna luska Mountain . . one longs for the power of the poets . . or for that superb flow of adjectives always at the command of our townsman. Judge Felix Alley. During a stop at one of the gift shops en route, while I was waiting for my young daughter to find a bask et to meet the content., of her pocket book I walked over to the large fire place, with its huge burning logs . . and talked to one of the Indians near by, whom I had a hunch was there for local color . . we had a very inte esting conversation . . his name was Chiltowskey . . he is an instructor in the government school . . in the arts and crafts department . . I was admiring the cane baskets . . for which I have a decided weakness . . as Clyde Ray, Jr. . . local dealer can testify . . . when the Indian started to tell me about them thinking I was a regular tourist . . I quickly en lightened him . . . he seemed pleased to meet someone from Haywood coun. ty . . because as he explained some of his material with which he worked in his department came from our county . . and when I began to wonder what materials, he gave the following information: ( . . that they used a great deal of copper in the crafts . . . and arrangements had been made through government agencies whereby the school at the reservation got all the stills captured in Haywood. . . In speaking of local products did you gee the exhibit of the TJnagusta Manufacturing Compa ny as shown by C. N". Allen, of Hazelwood . . at the Haywood County Fair? Some of the pieces were particularly lovely , . and I heard a number of per sons express surprise over the , fact that such furniture was made right here at home-.'.". T retailor! an incident that actually hap pened . . there was to be a wed ding in a certain family in this section , . some of the bride's rel atives wished to give the couple a suite of bedroom j'urniture something especially nice .'.'if certainly could not be found lo cally . . perhaps not in Ashe yille : . so they went to Atlanta they were quite pleased with their purchases . . the goods were shipped home . . and when the pieces arrived . . much to the TRANSACTIONS IN Real Estate (As Recorded to Monday Noun of this Week). (From the files of Oct. - un, , MlSs Sari. Sr-;,..:. i nesday" in Ash" it! i Miss Willie Will . . ' .5 .f.ni- and Tuesday in Asheville nda Capt. Alden Howell Wl.'r. , ton this week on business "' ' a Miss Adora Smathers Vf' tK;. tor Atlantic Citv spend several weeks n? Mr. Guy V. Ferguson, f N,w v City, is home for several ,i,,.. !i Mrs. W. C. Allen will . week for Barnesville, S C wh will spend the winter. ' ' Miss Jessie Herren -etu-nel c urday from Knoxville, where sh. Mr. Bill Schaufle has accenv Hotel for tho 4Kia An vpnfr loaf ... i Mrs. C. D, Almond" of W.nder t Miss Sophia Roacho . .cuajr uu iiiursqay in Asheville n- business, Mr. Ira B. Willi; Beaverdam Towiuhip J. L. Rhodarmer to J. E, Branson. Roy Patton, trus., to Canton Build ing and Loan Association. C. M. Smather, et ux, to J. M. Wells. W. W. Mitchell, et ux, to W, J. Hall. James E, Tate, et ux, to J. E. Whit aker. H. A. Osborne & S. H. Miller & F. E. Branson, to John H. Rhodarmer, ward, to B. Rhodarmer. Grover S. Russell, Comm., to E. A. Gaddis. J. L. Westmoreland to Gladys Wright. D. L. Allen, et ux, to W. R. Allen. J. L. Swafford, et ux, to G. Mc- Cracken. Jonathan Creek Township J. S. Harrell, et ux, to Earl Mes ser. Pigeon Township Roy Evans, et ux, to Bert Cagle. Waynesville Township F. W. Miller & J. R. Morgan, et ux, to J. W. & Minnie Ray, Executors, C. E. Ray estate. J. M. Long, et ux, to H. E. Simp son. C. D. Medford, et ux, to Wayne surprise and slight chagrin of the buyers . . . eath article bore a label "Unagusta Manufact uring Company, Hazelwood, N. C." aiu.. riT it i,.t. and Mr. Manson Shook, of Leicer encvir;. Miss Edith Williams left fr home in SnvnnnaU M., ..r. . oner sperm- nic suniiiicr as me guest of name oner. H--. T rr.i mts. james tt. i nomas deliirhtfallv entertained with bridge on Wedne nay aii-ernoon in nonor yf Mrs. Ei Battle. A large number of ?Utsu- were present. At the intermission of the games a salad course was served If fo rmer Governor lllerm sba'.; come to thig section next year it search of votes to send him to tC United States Senate, we wonder if hr would remember his remark 'about "poor mountain whites." Individually the members of the North Carolina legislature are as agreeable and honorable erroup of men that can be found anywhere ir, the state, and this being true wu hart often wondered just what happens to them when they get to Raleigh and get organized as the law niakiv.g body of the state. LLOYD GEORGE SI'KAKS "War -Memories". '-is .trie title of a highly entertaining series of nw!f by Lloyd George, former prime min ister of Great Britain, appearine in the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMER ICAN. Get your copy from your local newsdealer. Evans, et ux, to 1'. P. I'A . A. Randolph, to Mrs, p. ?.. Rogers. J. C. wards. Mrs. J Camak. Frances Louise Secrest to Harry p, Secrest, et al, R. L. Prevost, et ux. to Tru-ttrf Hazelwood Presbyterian Chimb "I am a hearty eater and smoker" milliliUMuKwww ft . yirn "I MAKE SURE to have Camels at mealtime,"saysJohnny Murphy (below), Bowling Champion. The flow of digestive fluids is in creased when you enjoy Camels. SUBWAY MOTOR MAN (above). Clyde Smith, of New York City, likes a big steak then enjoys Camels. He says: "I eat what I want when I want it and then, smoke Camels." COSTLIER TOBACCOS "The Scientist On The Corner" Everyone knows, the great, yet often unappreciated service rendered by the trained and skilled hand of the Pharmacist. He is indeed "the scientist on the corner". Shoulder to shoulder, he battles with the Doctor against disease and death. But his part is often overlooked and forgotten. He makes no headlines. But he has won and holds an everlasting place in the hearts of those whom he has helped when life itself hung on his hands and his lifetime of study. Every day in the year he should be honored and re spected in the minds of everyone who knows what the druggist the scientist on the corner means to everv family in the land. A S K Y O U R DO CTOR ALEXANDER 'S DRUG STORE Phones 53 & 54 Opposite Post Office TWO REGISTERED PHARMACISTS FOR YOl'B PROTECTION