Page 2 THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY! The Mountaineer Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CQ. Main Street Phone 137 Waynesville, North Carolina The County Seat of Haywood County W. CURTIS EUSS . Editor MRS. HILDA WAY GWYN .... Associate Editor W. Curtis Russ and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, In Haywood County ; fl.60 Six Months, In Haywood County One Year, Outside Haywood County .. 2.00 All Subscriptions Payable in Advance EnUred it the port office at Wajmeerllle, N. 0., ae Beeomd Claaa Hail Mutter, aa provided under the Act of March I, 187, November iO, . Obituary noticee, reeolutiona of reepect. card of thanks, and all notice of entertainment for profit, will be charged for at the rat of one wot per word. North Carolina vSv MIjS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL 6DITORIAl ASSOCIATION THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1941 min w mm sonh3( Clyde II. Ray More than fifty years ago Clyde II. Ray came to Waynesville and established a mer cantile firm. He has exerted a wide influence in business circles both for his sound judg ment and his fair dealings. Always conservative yet progressive and civic minded he was a strong advocate of community improvements, and was one of the members of the old Board of Trade, a fore runner of the Chamber of Commerce. He also served as mayor of the town for a number of years. His retirement a few years ago, took from Main Street a much valued business ; man. He will rank high in local history among those who have played major parts in the development of the community, and he count ed hundreds as his friends. Frank W. Miller In the passing of Frank W. Miller, Way nesville, Haywood County and Western North Carolina have lost one of their most loyal and enthusiastic supporters. No matter where he went or with whom he talked Mr. Miller took keen delight in "selling" this section. It might be a summer visitor or it might be a local resident, it made no difference, Mr. Miller was going to inform him of the many advantages of this section. As a member of the State Highway and Public Works Commission, while having a state wide vision of his duties, he never for got the wishes of his own district and tried in every way to give each community what they wanted in the matter of good roads. He has been active in the men civic orga nizations of the town. His counsel and advice on local affairs will be greatly missed for his views were always constructive with an eye to future needs. "Blessings Brighten" The discontinuance of passenger service on the Murphy Branch was a splendid illus tration of the old familiar quotation, "Bless ings brighten as they take their flight." Day in and day out the trains pass here, but very few people ride them. They usually go to points on the Murphy Branch and to Asheville by motor or bus, but the idea of doing withdut the trains suddenly loomed as an utter impossibility. We have been interested in hearing a num ber of persons say that they hid been plan ning to take the trip to Murphy by train, as they had been told it was a very beautiful and scenic journey. We have heard others pointing out that they intended to use the train going into Asheville more often. While still others were quite alarmed over the fact that Waynesville might be cut off from pas senger train service and left once again, so to speak, isolated as far as train travel was concerned. We would gather that the citizens of Way nesville and surrounding areas appreciated passenger service of the Southern Railway a great deal more than they have either been conscious of, or have indicated by their patronage. Congratulations With Reservations The Citizen congratulates Governor Brou ghton on his appointment of Walter J. Dam toft, Carroll Rogers and Harry Bailey as members of the State Board of Conservation and Development. They are all able and public spirited citizen! and they will render cori spiciously useful service to the state. But despite these excellent appointments, the new Board of Conservation and Develop ment is sadly weak in one salient respect from the standpoint of this section. The industry which means most to Western North Carolina and which the state is doing most to promote is not represented on the new board by any citizen of Western North Caro lina. This is the resort or travel business. This is a serious omission and results in a one-sided board. Happily for Western North Carolina, J. L. Home, Jr., has been reappointed to the Board of Conservation and Development. He has shown a particularly adequate understand ing of the tourist opportunities of this sec tion and he can be trusted to continue to ex hibit thin active and beneficial interest in the resort industry of this region. No comment on the new personnel of the Board of Conservation and Development would be complete if it failed to take account of the competent and active service rendered by a retiring member of the old board, Mr. Charles E. Ray, Jr., of Waynesville. He was alert and progressive in the performance of his duties and as a member of the board added much to his reputation als one of the truly out standing leaders in Western North Carolina. Asheville Citizen. Draft Deferment The boost in the appropriation for voca tional education in North Carolina has brought a problem to the state with the draft taking so many of the young teachers eligible to give instructions in the schools. The increased funds made available through the last legislature would allow a larger number of teachers, whereas without the additional appropriation it was becom ing impossible to supply the demands for more teachers. A large percentage of the young men who are graduating from college after specializ ing in vocational education are holders f draft numbers which make their induction into the army within a comparatively short time, a strong probability. It is said that at least 35 of those so pre pared are graduating from State College this spring. Out of this number only ten or less seem likely to be able to teach out the school year, with the others all having numbers which Will make their call to the colors come before the spring of 1942. Director T. E. Browne, of the state depart ment with the approval of Superintendent of Public Instruction Clyde A. Erwin is trying to work toward a deferment of young voca tional teachers being drafted because of their value in the defense program. Mr, Browne feels that it is far more important for these young teachers to help the boys learn to farm than it is for them to shoulder a gun for Uncle Sam. We heartily agree with Director Browne. We would certainly dislike to see the splendid work done by the agriculture teachers in this county stopped. Their work has been far reaching and has had much to do with mod ernizing farm methods not only among the younger, but the older generations. The present crisis demands not a curtailment but an increase in such instruction. OLD UKttK PLAYWRIGHT - V !j,yKiy!& ttMViriiviT"--ririli'-i rit t . HERE and THERE By HILDA WAY GWYN Picking up the threads of friend- as there is for her granddaughter. ship . . . years after . . . is al- " ways a fascinating experience , . . one of the most unusual ones we have heard about in sometime was that of Mrs. Walter Damtoft ; . , now of Asheville . . . who, as Dorothy Atkinson . . . used to spend a great deal of time here with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Miller . . . for one excellent reason . . . she was very Take the modern married career girl . . . who cooks her husband's breakfast before they start out to work .... leaves her home ready to receive possible guest upon her return ... her clothes must be neat . . . her job requires it . and then take the home maker if she's really modern . , . she has no time left from the corn- popular and had a lot of friends plicated calls of family home and here . . . . recently Dorothy was scanning the New York Times for a book to reveiw at a club meeting ... she wanted something on cur rent events . . . . international af fairs . . ; then she ran across "Win dows on the World" . . from the name and advertisement it sounded very good . . . just about what she neded . . . then she noted the name of the author . . . . Kenneth Gould. . Kitchen Priorities Significant of the degree to which war affects the most intimate details of living is the fact that the first economic measures tak en in the United States, even as a non-participant, extend to the pots and pans on the family cookstove. Rationing, or more ac curately a mandatory priorities system, has been applied to aluminum and to machine tools,."' Priorities are the standard way of putting first things first in a nation's efforts during an emergency. They were applied to a con siderable extent during the last war and have formed the backbone of industrial mo bilization plans since. They help assure sup plies both to American defense and to Great Britain. Essentially; the priority system means, in this instance, that producers of aluminum or of machine tools must give precedence to orders which the Government has certified as being for defense, and that production for the general market must take second place This is to some extent a price control, since it assures defense producers of a supply with out having to overbid other manufacturers, Yet the Office of Production Management evidently will go no faster than is necessary in applying the device, and plainly hopes to keep the need for it limited to only a few commodities. In the case pf aluminum the regulations probably will mean somewhat less of the metal for cooking utensils, radio or automo bile parts, toothpaste tubes, aluminum foil, and streamlined trains. Christian Science Monitor. Time swif ty rolled back . . . to the days of the First World War . . she had known quite well one Kenneth Gold. . . . he had been a patient at the U. S. Government Hosital located here at the Hay wood White Sulphur Springs Hotel . she recalled his pleasing voice , '. and his talent and interest in music . at any rate sne oraerea the book . and when it came found it to be all the title indicated V then she decided to write the author . . . just to satisfy her curiosity . . , , she asked him if he had ever been in Waynesville . and so on . . . recalling instances of those earlier days. . . . among other things she told him a bit about herself and that she now had a son at Yale . . . in answer he wrote that he was the same soldier she had know . . . at the hospital . and had appreciated all the news of his associations here . . . and strange to relate, he also had a son, who was now a student at Yale which brings to mind that while many will remember Kenneth Gould . . for he was stationed here sometime . . . perhaps more people will recall the girl he married . Helen . ... Helen Rue . . . . the Y. M. C. A. secretary . . . who was located here for many months . . . and who ... during the flu epi demic nursed in many of the iso lated homes in the county . giv ing her services to anyone who needed her in those trying days. . . life about her. . . . No, when you seriously consider it ... . Grandma had nothing on us when it comes to work . ; . in place of her drudg ery .. . we will stack the stren uous "every hour accounted for life" of the modern . . . who has learned from sad experience, that if she fails to keep on regular sched ule she finds herself hoplessly in a "jam." . ... And speaking of the girls of today we reprint the following con tribution handed to us . . . (clipped from the Enka Voice.) . . . "Believe me, if all those adhering young charms, Which I view with admiring dis may, '- Are going to rub off on the should ers and arms Of this suit which was cleaned just today, Thou will still be adored with my usual zeal, My sweetheart, my loved one, my own; But I'll sternly suppress the emo tions I feel And love you, but leave you alone. , It is not that the beauty is any Greenland Deal Meets 4Drj e. i if' IT r " rU. On uapiioi nui m WashiJ : I ' ok y CHARLES P, Voice OF THE People If Germany sUrts sinking our ships do you think that the U. S. should declare war at onceT C. F. Kirkpatrick "We should' declare war at once. We could not do otherwise." Mrs. Roy Phillips "I think that we should have declared war sever al months ago." Mrs. Ernest Akers "I think that we should wait for some ex planation. I remember too well the other World War." Mrs. G. F. Boston "I think that we should declare war at once for the sinking of the ships would be only a pretext to get at us, when they had it in their minds to fight us all along." Geo. Bischoff "I think that this country should have already de clared war. If we are going to 'play at it,' we might as well' be in the fight." F. E. Worthington "I think we should declare war at once, the sooner the better, because we are going to have to fight Germany anyway." Thad 0. C'hafin "I think if Germany starts sinking our ships, we will have to take an active hand in the war." W. F. Strange "We are going to have to get in the fight and I think if any of our ships are sunk we should get in at once." E. J. Robeson "If Germany starts sinking our ships, I do not know whether or not we should de clare war, but at least we would be thrust into it." Claud Rogers "I think that we should give England every possi ble aid, short of entering the war ourselves, but I do not feel that we are prepared to fight a war in; a foreign country. I do feel that we should make every preparation to defend our own country at home." the less. Nor thy cheeks unaccustomedly ": gay;. They are lovely indeed, as I gladly confess, And I think I should leave them that way, For the bloom of your youth isn't on very tight, . And the powder rubs off pf your nose, So my love is platonic, my dear for tonight. Since these are my very best clothes." YOU'RE TELLING ME! By WILLIAM EITT Central Press Writer We often have the hardships and bravery of our pioneer ancestors held up to us as a test that the modern woman could not meet . . . the other day we had our at tention called to the fact that some one should take up for the moderns and champion their cause . . . . for contrary to the accepted theory . . the girls of today work just as hard and are just as brave as their grandmothers . . . all in a differ ent way . . . the present era de mands a different kind of courage to carry one . . . and we began to consider the subject from this an gle . . . and it was amazing how easy to convince ourselves that we moderns are actually in the class with grandma . . . . It's true no body cards spins and weaves today, except for art's sake . . . and we often buy our daily bread . . , but when you put our lives along side of the tranquil . . . (though we grant, busy and filled with back breaking grind of other genera tions) . . , . we believe that the modern gal can hold her own . now for instance while grandma worked she had some real rest . . . she may have arisen from her feathery bed in the dusk of early morn . . , but she went back to it by the setting of the sun and she had a decent night's rest . . . and then time for her was not such a definite thing . . . there was no premium on hours and minutes . A BOMBPROOF cottage has been erected In California In 28 minutes. These troubled times have developed another Innova tionthe bungalow btltzbuilder. Italian and British troops have advanced and retreated so frequently in Libya that as tar as. North Africa is concerned .the Road of War is a two-lane Shorougbfare. i i .'!. The Bed sea has been opened to American shipping, but It stJU Is no place for a yachting cruise. ! I I :-'.-(: Astronomers now say light (Isn't as fast as they thought it was. It's still plenty fast, ac cording to those who try to go' through before the green turn to red. ! ! ! The laugh seems to have gone out of those little Balkan n tions which once we might havt regarded as comic opera king doms. ' '!' 1 I Our eyesight Is Improving, ac cording to a news Item. "About time," growls the baseball fan, glaring at the umpire. I ! ! - Today's Fable: Once upon a time an entire month went by without Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis knocking somebody 'it. ' , myif III iMME-tN ill iibtii itfr nrK!iiiBi t-pr Bvfffidi : " . - ' ; x Jm. IIOUP , of KONOLI A. SKI RlP oF 3.500 MILES - TROM EA.STe.im Krffl CAM HOT SPREAD HI otA FLA-f, OHVf WA.Y rit CAM CALK COMFORkBL wJek BUIL-T IK IT64. lSOOD T4 Hi. WA-ftR'S tfXit . ftirt iuw tftt W mom Hak a. miu fROM ftn.r ' Central PS5 k, 3 WITH THE EXCEPrtr tra-wolationist ia minority) congress' ""c oam-s establish' virtually Drot.... controled Greenland VIH able. Even some of 1 UUICIV llHIIlllr.,..- convoy,- J tOO, SUDDOrt nnr A. , II For instant LZH Austin of Vermont p reasons that, although i, J the Monro- n... T 11 ' united Sta ; r ne western hPmic L. cilaWeTVh::, thev would,,', 1 ,reS sibn if they believed fbt' u,r;' 'o,ve- But th uci.cve ii. senator R0b dI nolds, of North that it's a scheme to conynJ ican war supplies half J. tr . L Url a """"'"P'utnt in Briti uoc tae wora i that's- unpopular.'' XT il. i ievenneiess, generally, J --.-c-o HAW tne iaea o land fapiliHoo f:! . ui-iicr conveniences fnv voices, almost within a hi. r . uciiuai.ys proclaimed bJ wax zuiie. T. i. ,L o uai me same, it was i Dargam. Not A Treaty It wasn't entered intn . ish- American treaty. An J iionai treaty, to be validats h""" a iwo-unrus senator! aorsement. Illustratively, years ago, the executive k uui government neeotin treaty with Canada for St. rence waterway developmei mitted it to the senate, and a small majority but not a essary two-thirds; so the fizzled. Now the same th ing attempted again, but the form of a treaty, It's i; .' , .Luna 01 a uargain, to oe rat! the passage of two bills, tively by our congress am da's parliament, Canada's ment will pass ITS bill, it's a And, in our congress, a nel doesn't require two-thirds; majority's sufficient, h the administration can get it. Well, as previously ren; this Greenland arrangement treaty either. It's a plain M Only it s different from Lawrence bargain, in that n't have to be submitted legislative body whatever. It was fixed up between Secretary Cordell Hull and de Kuffmann, Danish mini; Washington. Cordell, of signed with presidential apa but congress hasn't a word about the dicker, except ally. Is It Official? Minister de Kauffmann scribed as having acted "it of the king of Denmark. anybody going to believe ii king of Denmark, virtually prisoner, subscribed to that nact? He probaby leit UK could he have had the nerrt it. and then answer to Hen Phooeyl If not, Henrik m;j oiVnBri nn ftis nwn respon-i nrhitti unmit hhrized. isn't o3 good for anything. In short, it was a deal H Secretary Hull and .Mte Kauffmann, personally Still, we get our Greenlanc Immediately on the neeu Greenland arrangement t the presidential proclamato inr the Red sea and the y Aden, right up to Suez. TV,;., wasn't treaty-work iciotinn nr anything excepH lamation. . u,ro a law barring of American cargoes in A ships to belligerent fonW ai, these , shipmff; i i JnTivpfV IB auez aren t iyi , . rlif in Egypt. Who get J or,fW Rritains forM8 b or oreete "L " . A 1 Jnn,nnriCl't iS 1 funeral. Hence that proclH on it askance, though Tetters To 1 Editor Editor The Mountaineer J Please find encio'.v to The Mountaineer. the news from up ,v and expect to spend and part of Septem ville. To me- the r tnan wesiei" We nave . nd their should be lo; your state this ,.a J ine with you good vKs; mer. West Palm Bea