SIXTEEN PAGES TODAY The Waynesville Published In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance oj The Great Smokv Mountains National Park tjyJlFTH YEAR NO. 31 WAYNESVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1939 $1.50 In Advance In Haywood and Jackson Cou ty-One Tons Mountaineers Pages Enlarged By Installing New Press Mountaineer .1 New Glamor Girl? Haywood Count Will Have Tx, Health Nu: lackbernes Are Canned Locally Larger And Faster Press Installed In Mountaineer Plant New Press Enables Publishers To Add Another Column To Each Page lllimnTll1"in'1 i ' mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmuLmmmmmmmmmiim If ( tirood Cannery Getting t Prices For Beans On Southern Markets ,r running fourteen days at it wnnin? fifty-one tons of Mries into 100,000 cans, the ood Mutual Cannery has down temporarily, Waiting. it ban canning season opens Unre than $2,500 has betl Lt to the berry pickers dur- it past two weeks. ill. the beans are being put L market the price is too for canning and they are be- LhiDped to green vegetabU lets in the South. On Monday Tuesday night of this week, lushels were put on the At- market, and served the next Lb the tables of the retail truck stands waiting at the Ltv now to haul 600 bushels lay, if we could get them," Frank M. Davis, manager of (winery. Lv farmers are being misin- Jed about the bean market and Ming them to individuals at lower prices than are being ted by those selling through cooperative, continued Mr. i. Wing to Mr. Davis, the bean et is just opening bp, but that have geen put on the Let ire of superior quality, bringing top prices. ten the drop in bean prices the Haywood cannery will tanning the beans, instead lipping to wholesale markets. Paid For leal Estate Here At Auction Sales b Piece Of Land Put Up br Sale Sold, Farm And Rural Property Sells throne of people followed y Brothers and their brass Tuesday, as they wended their over the streets here and out k Dellwood section, and at the of the day, over $23,000 in real p had been sold. ' Every lot parcel of land put on the block Mi. k 50-acre A. D. Hunter farm lellwood Road was divided into acts and were bought by M. Ialdwel, W. S. Ferguson, Jar- 'almer, and J. R. Boyd. C Galusha bought two of the Mreet lots of the Willis M, and John Boyd bought the wo. The house was sold H. Milner. k lot adjoining the LeFaine was bid m by J. R. Boyd. H. Bramlett boutrht A lots on It Street and 7 lots on Bran- Wnoe. These lots and the wught by Mr. Boyd were the fly of Mrs. M. H. Reeves. l Penny, manager of Penny hfr3, said yesterday that he SIPied a contract to Sell the w House for TV n Pprrv. I tie sale date would be determ- soon. Penny was warm in his r of ahe co-operation given " saies rorce by city officials Police in liinill,'nn ti, ,.,..,)., I" streets here. find investors here eager to l U'Q of proDertv AnA T also ' that newspaper advertising aynesville pays big dividends )nnes results," Mr. Penny said. itre sales force eave today sale of Norwood estates in mS Rock Saturday morning. AlexaniW Mamed Trustee or Chandler Co. T- Alexander has been 'nli trusts fn LT. Jewelers. - The papers . mted July 27th, it was this week. opder tn ;. j J; . Lf; , - -"B iiiimeuiaie casu In,. J creditors, Dr. Alexander, e arrasgeraents to have ueiPul t ns . . .. r - Cincinnati, expen Va auctoneer, to come :T "nauct a public auction VmA he first sale wiU be" j anoay morning at ten o'clock l n econd at 7:30 p. m. Two L1" held daily" I ndler stock consists of lw mercnandise, with the S?Siewe,ery weUrepre lnont the stock. cry 'A" 'tis " ' tT..., .r.tr.r nuanmnm- - - ' - n v 3 This is the new press which was installed in the plant of The Mountaineer this week. It weighs 12 tons, and prints 40 papers a minute, This picture.vas made Monday morning by SherriU's Studio as the press was being given a trial run. The installation of the new and faster press was necessitated by the increased circulation and the demand for more Deed in the mechanical department. Standing on the extreme left is H. C. Waggnor, press erector from factory, who had charge of erecting the new machine. Standing on the press is M. T. Bridges, in charge of the mechanical department of this newspaper, and at the right, is W. Curtis Russ, editor, looking over tie work of the new press. On page five is a picture it the new folder, also installed this week. Community Goes To Bed By Candlelight; Lightning Breaks 'Petticoat' Insulator District Health Staff Discussed Work In Schools Representatives From live Counties In District Held Conference Here Pinna f nr neilth work in the schools in the territory were the main topics under discussion at the staff conference held here on Monday of the district health de noptmpnt. with renresentatives from the five counties included in the district. Plans were also formulated for tho" tiihomiloRis clinic which will open in the district on August the 7th and close on the 26th. The vaccinations in the schools for various communicable diseases were discussed as to the dates to be given. Miss Theodosia lud, superri- nf nnrspa in the district, pre sided. Present for the conference rr C. N. Sisk. district health officer, Dr. Phillip Padgett, of Bryson City Mrs. Doris Hicks, county nurse oi bwain coumy, Miss Margaret Squires, of the rhornVop Indian Reservation, Mrs. Josephine Gaines, nurse of Macon county, Miss Myrtle Cogburn, nurse of Jackson county, and Mis Clara McCall, of Haywood couniy. THEY ARE PASSING THROUGH Lawrence Kerley. of the city N fire department counted cars from twenty-three tates in one hour and 15 minutes be tween 10:45 and 12 o'clock Wednesday morning of this week. License tags from the fol lowing states were noted: Connecticut, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, Alabama, Ohio, Texas, Florida, Missou ri, Louisiana, Mississippi, Illi nois, Maryland, Nevada, New York, Kentucky, Pennsylva nia, Michigan, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and New Jersey. Main Street Lots To Be Auctioned The second auction sale of Main Street property of the month will be held next Wednesday, by the Gossett Realty Company, they an nounced yesterday. The property opposite the Le Faine Hotel, part of the Dr. J. F. Abel estate will be offered. The H. L. Liner property and home on Highway No. 19, between Waynesville and Hazelwood, will be offered, as will the W. Crawford McCracken farm, consisting of 40 acres. ''. Carolina Power Lines Disrupt ed Early Saturday Night For Three Hours Rockwood Methodist Church Dedicated Before Large Crowd Dr. A. C. Early Starts Uetail QhoJ Clinics Dentist From State Board Of Health Will Spend 20 Weeks In County Modern Rural Church Planned, Erected And Paid For In Year's Time r A n TTorlv nf the Oral tt. : r jnortit nf tho State Hygiene ucjjbi v...-... - - Board of Health, arrived in the county during the week and start ed work on Monday morning in the Fines Creek school. Dr. Early, who will hold dental clinic in all the schools of the county, wil be in Haywood for a Deriod of twenty weeks, and will give free dental service to all i children in the county schools un- der tne age oi Last year dental clinics were held over a nine weeks period in the county. Daring that time, the teeth of 2,532 children were ex amined. 1,092 given treatment, 6,491 operations performed, 710 children referred to family dentists (Conunnea op pi -j A large number from various sections of Haywood County, and from distant towns, attended the dedication services at the Rock wood Methodist church near Can ton Sunday. The Rev. W. A. Rollins, pastor of First church, Hickory, who for four years was presiding elder of the Waynesville district, and who assisted in launching plans for the new building, preached at the 11 o'clock hour. Others participat ing in this service were the pastor, the Rev. E. C. Price, and Dr. W. L. Hutchins, district superintendent nf this district. At the opening of this service a telegram, bringing congratulations from the Jtev. jv. O. Cole, a former pastor, and the Rev J. P. Hipps, a native of that community and former member of Clark's Chapel, both of whom are pastor of leading churches in Charlotte, was read. Lunch was served picnic style t totilea in m. Drove near the (Continued on page !) j Since the time of man much of the trouble Of this old world has been blamed on the "woman thou gavvst me." The darkness that wrapped tha towns of Hazelwood, Waynesville, and Lake Junaluska from 8:25 to 12:11 on Saturday night was due to a breaking down of a "petticoat" insulator, accord ing to an employe of the Carolina Power and Light Company. If the headlights from the cars that cast their long shafts of con centered light on the highway be tween Hazelwood and Clyde could have been blotted out that stretch of the county might have given the appearance of an air raid in the night over Haywood -or it might have been some scene back in the gay nineties before electricity had brought its comforts to this vi cinity. When all the lights we n suddenly snuffed out on Saturday night. Without any warning a blanket of darkness decended. The neon signs stopped their everlasting blinking in the night. Main street, which has of recent years, become a blaze of light in the night, was in twilight shadows. Coming at 9:25 it caught the last minute rush of the Saturday night shopping. Business was paralized. Merchandise and groceries being handed over the counters were de layed in the consumation of sales. Pedestrians stopped in their tracks, shocked for a minute by the darkness. Even the motorists slowed up a bit, in the city limits, wondering what had happened. Nature added her bit by a heavy downpour. In the homes and along the cor ridors of the hotels and boarding houses were heard the sound of fumbling feet and the cry every where for matches. Party candles half burned, hidden in forgotten (Continued on page 5) r Over twWve and a half tons of new equipment were added in the plant of The Mountaineer during the past week, and you are now vtHilinir tho new Kile miner seven columns to the page instead of the former sis. Thn iniTi-Hso iii circulation, and the demand for more speed since more pages are being printed ne tu tiii u fuKttr nri'Rs. and before the publishers bought a new press they decided to increase th0 size or the page from six to seven col umns. A snecial nress erector was on hand last Thursday morning just as last week s paper was Demg com nlutori mill in less time than it will take you to read this, the old nr.. whs hi'inu- moved, and tho new twelve-ton press was being unloaded (other new maenme a folder, weighs 1,600 pounds.) Thn now nrpHR was crated UP. and even every little part covered in a thick coating of special grease. These were hurriedly unpacked, checked, and a half dozen men put to work washing the parts which ranged from a small washer the size of a dime up to the base which weighs over a ton and a half.V: , Am tha nnrtu were cleaned, the erector and his five helpers quickly assembled them and started build ing the complicated piece of ma chinery. Monday noon, it was ready for a trial run. The greater part of in making final adjustmenU, some down to several thousandths of an men, ana oy Wednesday mominc, the press was turning out paper at a fast dip on regular schedule of the plant. The new preea hat a speed of 40 .n. a minut and can be slow ed down to a snail's pace VltKthe- special built heavy duty motor, a large control board back ot the operator wta the speed of the press, which also has a reverse on it. " ' Besides the new press, a faster and late model folding machine was installed at the same time. This machine also turns out 40 folded paper a minute, and can take from 4 to twelve pages at the same speed. All of the shafting and gears of the old press and folder have been done away with, and each machine has an individual motor, although special electric lines had to be run to take care of the increased size of the motors over the old ones. Because of the stiffness in both machines this week, neither were run at full capacity, and there re mains some miner adjustments to be made, but in all, both spun liktf a top, while printing and folding the second section of this issue. We hope the same will happen when this is printed. The faster and larger machines will enable the plant to turn out a larger newspaper, and a better printed one in less time. Every measure is being, taken to makc The Mountaineer a bigger and better newspaper, and the proper mechanical requirements are a big factor in achieving this, Soil-Building May Earn County Farmers $48,550 Explanation Made Of How Farmers May Earn More Money J. C. Lynn, county farm agent, has announced that under the 1939 Agricultural Conservation program, Haywood County farm ers can earn $48,550. In 1937 Haywood farmers lost $18,000; in 1938 $17,000 by fail ing to carry out the required soil building practices. This means an average of $7.00 per farm co operating with the program was losi. A special effort is being (Continued on page 5) Owing To Largest Popu' Of Any County In Distil Work Demands 2 Nur MARY STEELE New York society leaders con tend that blond and pretty Mary Steele is the logical successor to Brenda Frazier as the social set's number one "glamor girl." Miss Steele, daughter of Mrs. Nelson Steele, is five feet ten inches in height, wears her blond hair in a long bob, and has hazel eyes. She plays the piano well. Power Company Worker Killed Accidentally Death Occurs While Installing Transformer Near Woodrow Owing to the greater popu! ' in JIaywood, as compared to of other counties in the d. ' health department, Haywood c. ty will be allotted two public 1 nurses instead of the one a.s v formerly the case. Miss Sarah Margaret Qrr, fui ni erly of Andrews, recently of 'Yit Asheville, and daughter of Dr. erl Mrs. C. V. Orr, has been appointed as one of the two public health nurses of the county. Miss Orr will hnve charge of the work in HcHverdam, Bethel, East Fork, and Cecil townships. Miss Clara Mo Call, who has been a county nut covering the entire area dui ii. the past year, will work in the remaining townships. ,'. Miss Orr is a graduate of t c school of nursing of Fort Sun.' n Hospital, of Knoxville, Tenn. : has recently completed a f" ' months course in public hi work at William and Mary ! lege, with two months field vt'-t at Chapel Hill. Haywood Citizc Are Urged To ' On 4th Farm Tc : Several State Agrlct' I Specialists Will Be la County For Event l Mrs. F. A . Lee, of Spartanburg, has joined her husband here for a visjt at DaVista Terrace. TJwen O'Kelly, 30, of Asheville, was instantly killed around 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon when a disconnected transformer touched a low voltage wire stepping up the current from 220 to O.ouo volts, on a pole near Woodrow. Mr. O'Kelly was a lineman for the Carolina Power and Light Company, and was helping some workmen install the transformer when his death occurred. The transformer was being raised from the ground to wires carrying 2,300 volts atop the pole. Mr. O'Kelly had his hand on the connectionon the high voltage side of the transformer and as the transformer passed secondary wires carrying 200 volts the low voltage side accidentally made contact with one of the wires. Fellow workers removed the body which was held to the pole by a safety belt. Surviving are his wife, and two small sons, Jimmie, four and Don ald, 14 months. Mrs. ('has. Spearman and son and daughter-in-law and two chil dren, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Spear man, of Greenville, S. C, were the week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Bridges. Miss Josephine Plott had as her guests over the week-end, Miss Edith Beard, of Concord. Miss Beard and Miss Plott were class mates at Brevard College. Voice off 1ke PeofUe On Tuesday an auction ' sale of real estate was held here by well known auctioneers, and every lot offered for sale wag bought by sub stantial business people... Do you think this ready sale of real estate should be an encouraging sign of better times in Haywood County? J. R. Boyd President First Na tional Bank "It certainly shows that people are expecting some thing better." George A. Brown, Jr- Chairman county board of commissioners "Yes, I think it shows that people are interested in buying property at reasonable prices. I feel max bottom prices have been reached in real estate in this county. I do not expect a boom, but I feel that from now on prices will be steady, and that the demand for real estate will pick up. Good farm and city property are now bringing in fair prices." Ernest J. Hyatt Manager Hyatt and Company "I think a success ful land sale is one of the best In dications that business is swinging back to normal." Jerry Liner Contractor Man ager Junaluska Supply Company "Yes, I feel that we should enjoy much better business for the next several months, as a reflection of this sale. This proves to me that the investing public has come to realize that the safest investment they can make is in real estate, especialy when prices of real es tate are as low as they are today. When real estate is going at a fair price, it means more construction and more money in circulation." Plans are going forward for the fourth annual farm and 1 tour in Haywood County, v- i will be held on Tuesday, t : starting promptly at 9 o'cUx , v cars forming on Depot itr t C. Lynn, county farm agent, W. A. Corpening and J, T. i ' zel, assistant agents, are ui; : not only the farmera and f um women to take this opportunity to see the progress being made t,lr agricultural lines in Haj . but also the business and r 8ional men and women who liv the towns. f V There was some criticism of t length and time these coJTnty-v.1 i tours have taken in the past, t it was decided this year to cov. less ground, and give those takii -the tour more time for observatici of the various project which wi'.l be visited. The plan at present is to mnV;o a tour of one section of the cmr.iy one year and the other hu'.;' t!.e next, giving each part of the equi ty an opportunity to take p;n t i'l the demonstrations. The tour is sponsored" by the Haywiood Mutual Soil Conserva- j tion and Land Use Association, hs sisted by the three county f.M-m agents. Officers of the or' a tion are: president, Albert J . Cracken, of Clyde township; ,oe president, John F. Rogers, of Crab tree; secretary, Mrs. Frank B. Davis, of Beaverdam, and treas urer, T. Weaver Cathey, of FiVon. Much interest is being mani in the Baby Beef Show, with i bers of the 4-H clubs con r which will take place at 2.i the afternoon, and close the t Paul Fletcher, marketin cialist of the Department culture, will serve as a J the show. Twelve calves a groomed and fitted for e. at Bethel, by the young farmers of the county.- Others from Raleigh who wnl take in the tour are: L. I. Case, animal husbandry specialist, of State College, J. F. Criswell, " spe cialist in land planning use, and R. W. Shoffner, assistant "district agent, ' . ; Another feature of the program around which centers the interest of the farmers, is the thrashing demonstration of grass and clover, seed and other small grains, which - (Continued on page 5) ted - m- Singt 1 1 L. N. Davis Real Estate and Insurance Agent "The fact that the property sold here Tuesday was bought to a large extent by local people shows that they have confi dence in the growth and develop ment of this section." JOHN M. QUEEN, JR. ' " BECOMES MEMEEIl HIGHWAY PATROL' Jnhn f OtlPPn Jl- lira a BMnH. : the fifty men who were select! from the training camp recent held at Island Lake near Ilende j sonville, for recruits in the Nor, , Carolina State Highway Patrol The camp started with 108 m l but they were gradually ' wee ! out to 76, from which the 51 n were chosen. The others will taken en for duty sometime i next few months. . , Queen will be assigned for I sometime this month. . r