The WiiilriLLEj Mountaineer Published In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance oj The Great Smoky Mountains National Park . XTHYEAR Nft 37 Twelve Page WAYNESVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1941 I1.S0 In Advanc hi Haywood and Jackson CoubUm ' , ; .. . . - - - . . , - .. , , .. . . r US. Queen Ts Haywood Democrats ..Number Attewfied ial Meeting Held Here kjturday Nignu n.,.n. local attorney, U president of the Young r t..u t Havwood u . t t ..... rDCPiA t succeea wm , .t the annual meeting lj ,t the court house on v night. s elected to serve with Mr. ,,inHe. vice president, Mrs. secretary, Thomas It, treasurer, Clyde Fisher, jwood. . . : father, of AsheviUe, of the evening, was intro , r E. Brown, chairman of (wood County Democratic committee. Judge Cathey the importance of periect- Liations of : young Demo- He referred : to his own Ihio in the group since ten the clubs were being 1 over the state by the D. Alley. He made a appeal for 'unity at this Mine that democracy was Uted as never before b try of tbe world. Im Medford, state organiz- recognized and spoke brief ing all delegates and of fi- iattend the state convention Uld in Whuton-Salero this He pointed out that Hay- ks entitled '.to 14 delegates. licKinney, -president of the ibt county -clubs, also spoke Two Catholic Churches Dedicated With Impressive Ceremonies Wednesday martctd a historical milestone in the history and prog ress of the Catholic church in this section of North Carolina, known for many years as the territory of St. John's Parish. Yesterday St. John's church was dedicated here in a beautiful cere mony conducted by the Most Rev. Eugene J. McGulnness, D. D., bishop of Raleigh, whose Untir ing support of the local pastor, Father Ambrose Rohrbacher, made the church possible. , Here in these mountains more than four centuries -ago, Holy Mass was offered for the first time by a priest tf the church who was one of the company of that intrepid adventurer Hernando TteSoto. The wilderness -closed in upon the path blazed hy these adventuresome Spaniards, and even the memory of V Christian church service was net -retained tor jlong ' by the sav age Indians who roamed the moun tains and who probably stood awe strucTc by the solemnity of this first church rite offered up in the mountain region of "Eastern Amer ica. Centuries later the Catholic church turned its -eyes once more upon this territory and almost as a TOemor'ial to 'this first priest to the church wuose -weary feet beat a Tpath through virgin forests and whose indomitable spirit biased the -way f or a Iknowle'dge of the reli gion of "Christ set up St. John's Parish with ra 'Tectory in Waynes ville. .- For -years servants of the church from this place have ministered to -the peorjle'f the parish and in the absence of the church have held Mass in the rectory here and in -mix 'mission stations in private V i , REV. A. F. ROHRBACHER C R. Palmer Hurt In Automobile Accident Yesterday C R. Palmer, who suffered lacer ations about the forehead and other injuries in an automobile accident about 3:30 o'clock yesterday after noon, was reported to be resting fairly well late last night. . Mr. Palmer, driver of the car, was accompanied by Rufe Harris, and as they made the turn on the Balsam highway near the Hahn apartments the car slipped off the pavement and turned over a couDle of times in the cornneia. Mr. Harris escaped without in jury. The car was considerably damacred. Mr. Palmer was rush ed to Haywood County Hospital for treatment. It was said by those witness inir the accident that no other car was passing and that the accident was due to the car skidding off the pavement onto the shoulder of the highway. Officers Of Cruso Electric Corporation f7 ission was '(Continued on back page) ing. officers were extended Svote of thanks and the ected cSfiet rg were recog- bdsDoke brief; v. .. . ; ittwing towmirp officers J rpmes. .v - , ; pointed, with others to be In 1927 St. John's M: p the neaT future ; Waynes-- resident, iqm umpuea, sident, Sarah Welch ; see- lreasurer, Fred Campbell. township, president, L. H. ice president, Mrs. Worley lecretary-treasurer, Walter Hill township, president, Medford: vice : president. Sueenj secretary-treasurer. Lowe. . irdairi, president, James pee president and secretary f! to be announced later, Duff townshiD. president. fryson, with vice president iretary-treasurer to be an- later. Fn Creek township, presi de Boyd; vice president, fed Allison ; secretary- f'i Kobert Howell. ; Tucker Takes F Duties In loyment Office Tucker has been appoint or in the local office of e employment service here, 1 assumed his dirties, ac ta Mrs. D. D. Alley, mana " office. icier is a former teacher. T he was athletic director "irews schools, and ior the "ears has been assistant teacher in the Canton r?1- He is a graduate of I Urhna Teachers Col- Fwker is the former Miss fracken, daughter of Mr. L7a7r McCracken, and U 2 he Crabtree schools. I Mm. Tucker are resid- Partments of Mrs- Carl f t Lake Junaluska Applications For CCC Camps Taken At Welfare Office Beginning effective the first of this -month any boy wishing to be sent to a OCC camp may make ap plication to the local county wel fare office on Main street. Those :accepte'd will be sent be tween the first and 25th of the month to the -.camp nearest this vi cinity. The boys applying must be between the ages of 17 and 24 years.: library Resumes Winter Schedule After September the 13th, the Waynesville Public'Library will not be open in the -morning except on Saturdays, according to Mrs. James Atkins, Jr., librarian. The usual afternoon hours from 2:30 to 5:30 each 'day will be ob served and on .each Saturday morning from 10:00 to 12:00 o'clock the library will be open. Two Haywood Boys Enlist In the U. S. Marine Corps Fifteen Men Left Yesterday By Bus For Fort Bragg Fifteen men composing the third call In" the ' selective ; draft service from this rea!kft town promptly at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday morn ing for Fort Bragg, where they will be inducted 'into the service. Fred Henry Moody, who has been connected with Garrett Furn iture Company 'for several years, was -made the' leader of the group, and Ned Snyder Davis, who has been Ideated at Buck roe Beach, Vs., assistant ! leader. The hus is due to arrive at Fort Bragg at 6:45 with two stops, one in Charlotte at 12:45 for lunch, and .another .!v?ytsevnie at 6:30 fordinner The government allows 50 cents for lunch and 75 cents for dinner ten :route t camp. Making up the third call from this area (but the 17th by the government) were in addition to the leaders, the following: -Charles Rhinehart, :Lake Junaluska; Hugh Benjamin Messer, Cove Creek; Ernest LeRoy Inman, Waynesville, route 1; Billy McElroy, Clyde, route 1; Gordon Phillips Rabb, Waynesville, route 1; Cecil Blaine Yount, Waynesville. Charles ID. Lance, Hazel wood; Sherman Thad Landon, Waynes ville, ronte 1; iLeonard Lee Leath erwood, Waynesville, route 2; Ed ward Smith, (Clyde, route 1; Earl Monroe Messer, Clyde, route 1; Claude Wilson Underwood, Way nesville, route 1; William Sheffy Gibson, Waynesville. Draft Quota ) ??r 19 Men is Area t ? 0cioher 3rd. i tft6 the oup Waynesville area and men for the ser- yemment. ffom there to other il board ?. s.... W rup composed of I 'east m part. Mi yu' Morgan were i.,"11 week of CWDr',nd Mrs. i at their home in Sixteen Year Old Boy Injured In Fall From Truck Bill Aiken, 16, to -of Mrs Chas. Aiken, of the Howell Mill road, -who suffered a fractured skull Monday morning "while riding on a truck of balled hay, was reported last night to be resting more com fortably at the Haywood County Hospital where he was taken fol lowing the accident. Young Aiken -was working for Hugh Welch at the time of the ac cident. Mr. Welch was said to have been driving the truck load of bay and young Aiken was rid ing on top, When the truck left the highway and centered a side road, in the -.shifting of the gears it is alleged that the vehicle jerked and young Aiken fell flat on his back on the highway. The accident is said to have oc curred on the AsheviUe highway near the Connatser filling station around ten o'clock. James IL Toy Is Now Located With Firm In Allanta James Henry Toy, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Toy, began work last week for , Arthur Anderson and Company, certified public ac- . J Jfu. -M- All-. ' counjants ana auuiuirs m nuana. He recently completed a 30-day coaching course in accountancy at their home office in Chicago, and was assigned to their hranch of fice in Atlanta. It is ne of the x i t4 i ,y CHARLES B. McCRARY I J : V'"'om, wLT t iTMarteat accounting firms in the ana inrs. j. c. iuj, nu jiciiii v. - Swavnerim. son of Mr. and Mrs Raymond Swayngim, have joined the Marine Corps. They reported to AsheviUe on Tuesday and were sent from there to Raleigh, from which place they will go to Paris Island for six weeks intesire train ing.- After the oeriod of training they will be given a ten days furlough world, Young Toy graduated in June from the University of North Car lina after a record of unusual scholarship distinction and partici pation in college activities. As early as 1939 Young Toy's record at the University began to attract prospective employers, I their scouts going to Chapel Hill District Health Department Met Here Monday The regular quarterly meeting of the district health department, of which Haywood county is ' a part, was held here in the offices in the court house Monday, with Dr. C. N. Sisk, (district health of ficer, presiding. Special health work among school children and imaternal wel fare were the topics lunder discus sion. Plana were outlined for both phases of work in the counties comprising this ifiatrict. Attending the meeting were Dr. G. B. Lynch, of Bryson City, as sistant district health (Officer, Miss Alma Kee, district supervisor of nursing, who makes Waynesville headquarters ; Mrs. Myrtle Vrabel and Mrs. Ruby Bryson, both Hay wood county public health nurses. Also Mrs. Josephine- Gaines, of Franklin, health nurse vt Macon county; Miss Jessie Mae Alexan der, of Brevard, nurse of Transyl vania county ; Mrs, Lina Padgett, of Sylva, health nurse of Jackson county; Mrs. Ethel Silvers, public health nurse of the Cherokee Reser. vation; artd Mrs. Doris Hicks, of Bryson City, public health nurse of Swain county. .MRS. E. B, RICKMAN C. B. Atkinson Suffered Stroke Yesterday Morning C. B. ' Atkinson, prominent political and civic leader, suf fered a Stroke at f.:30 o'clock at his home on Bojd avenue yesterday morning. Mr. Atkinson has not been well for the past several weeks hut had been at his office in the court house as usual on ; . Tuesday. ' l r V CARTER OSBORNE Carter Osborne was elected president of the Cruso Electric Membership Corporation last night at the first meeting of the newly elected board of directors. Mr. Osborne succeeds Dewey Pless. Charles B. McCrary, coordina tor and director, was named vice- president, and Mrs. E. B. Hickman was re-elected Becretary-treasurer, Directors of the corporation are Mrs. E. B. Rickman, Mrs. D. L. Pless, Chas. B. McCrary, Carter Osborne, W. Tom Rainer, W. F. Harris, F. A. Justice, Thomas Er win, and Roy B. Medford. Nineteen Cases Of Whiskey Captured Early Monday A car containing about 19 cases wf tax paid liquor was captured at Betsy's Gap on Spring Creek at the Madison-Haywood county lino around 5 o'clock Monday morning by county officers. It was alleged that the -whiskey was being transported into this county from Newport, Tenn. The officers gave the car a chase, but finally captured it on the county line. ; Eugene Wright, driver of the car, was taken into custody and brought to the Haywood county jail. He has made bond for $400.00 and will be tried at the next term of the superior court. ; Building Is Being Remodeled For Electric Group General Expansion Program Prompts Move Of Offices To Waynesville From Clyde. Aa one of the first steps in the expansion program of the Cruso Electric Membership Corporation into Jackson, Swain, Macon and Transylvania counties, the offices are to be moved from Clyde to Waynesville, it was learned yes terday from J. C, Moore, super intendent The corporation will occupy the office next to the cleaning estab lishment in the D. Reeves Noland building on Main street as soon as the renovation of the building is completed, which is thought would be around the first of October. The Office personnel consists of Carlyle Sheffield, bookkeeper; Misa Iris Rogers, stenograpner; jonn Foster, lineman, and J. C. Moore, superintendent. When the corporation first start ed operations two years ago they had offices in the Rickman build ing at Woodrow. At that time the lines covered three townships, Pig eon, East Fork, and Cecil with 87 miles and 175 subscribers. When the corporation began ex pending its lines the offices were moved to Clyde, a more central point of serving the subscribers. " At present every township in the county is served by the lines and there are 600 subscribers. All plans are ready to begin a program of expansion covering covering 300 additional miles into four other counties at a cost of' nearly $300,000. Mr. Moore, superintendent, states that pn his recent visit to Wash ington, D. C, he was assured by the Rural Electrification Admin istration that the money for the expansion is ready when the ma terials are available. Due to the defense program materials are being delayed so that the work will not start as soon as was antici pated when application was made months ago to the RE A adminis: tration. : to come home and will be assigned to interview him. Before taking to duty immediately after, his present position he had offers rrom several corporauons. Special Edition Of The Mountaineer Will Be Published Next Wednesday Next week The Mountaineer will publish a special Live stock and Home Arts Show edition, with many articles of interest, written by authorities. Another feature of the edition will be pictures of Hay wood farms and farm people. Hundreds of extra copies will be printed and complete coverage of Haywood and Jackson counties will be made. Due to the fact that the hundreds of extra copies will take more time in the mechanical department, all advertis ing copy must be in the office by Tuesday at six o clock and no news can be taken after ten o'clock Wednesday morning. v Orders will be taken up to six o'clock Tuesday for extra copies to be mailed. Civilians Urged To Volunteer For Air Post Service Volunteers for the air observa tion posts in the county are being urged by J. C. Lynn, county chair man of defense. While there has been a number of volunteers there are still not a sufficient number to arm the posts, according to in structions received locally. Chairman Lynn received the fol lowing wire from Governor J. M. Broughton on Monday: "Am greatly concerned over possibility that North Carolina may fail to organise in time for aircraft warning maneuvers. I consider this a real emergency. Please contact observation post or ganizers. Urge them to make every effort to complete all or ganization not later than Septem ber the 15th." Those giving their services will work in six hour shifts on a 24- - (Continued on page 7) Judge Bobbitt To Preside Over September Court The September civil term of Hay wood county Superior Court will convene here Monday morning with Judge William H. Bobbitt, of Charlotte, presiding. There are 31 divorce cases on the docket for Monday, with only one contested. Among the cases scheduled for trial during tie term are: Bowson -versus Bowson; Bol den versus Bolden;. Green versus Green; Brandon versus Brandon; Gillette versus Gillette; Rogers versus Rogers; Hawkins versus Hawkins. Chavis versus Chavis; Williams versus Williams; Boone versus Boone; Martin versus Martin, Bur nette versus Burnett ; Toohey versus Toohey; Holland versus Holland; Sharp versus Sharp; Fow ler versus Fowler. Smathers versus Smathers, Jones (Continued on page 7) Draft Board Seeks Whereabouts Of Two County Boys The draft board is trying to locate two men whom they have not been able to contact, and they would appreciate any information of their whereabouts. Clay , Horace Conard gave his address as Clyde, route 1, but com munications sent to this, address hae not been answered. Charles Queen, formerly of Hazelwood, has changed his resi dence since registering- and has failed to answer the last two notices sent out by the board. Both men are now required to take physical examinations. Episcopalians Hold Two Day Convocation Here Around fifty person- attended the fall convocation of AsheviUe of the Episcopal church here at Grace church in a two-day session beginning on Tuesday and closing at noon on Wednesday. The Rev. Rufus Morgan, of Franklin, pre sided. A decision to change the Epis copalian church school presenta tion service from Trinity church AsheviUe to Calvary church at Fletcher was reached at the Tues day afternoon session. This event takes place the week after Easter . ' The Rev. Westwell Greenwood, (Contined on page 7) Weaver McCracken, Jr., left Saturday for the University of Alabama, where he will be a .stu dent and also assistant instructor in geology. ;- 48-Page Book For Livestock Show Is Being Distributed In Haywood Interest in the Livestock and Home Arts Shaw was running at a high pitch here this week, as 4,000 copies of the 48-page cata log was distributed throughout the county and state. All indications are that the show will even exceed all expectations of the officers, and that more en tries will be made than was Ori ginally expected. Last minute details were being cleared this week, according to C. T. Francis, president. The county agents and the home demonstration staff are spending this week in the field completing details of many exhibits. Calves for the 4-H Fat Calf exhibits are being given their final . weight tests. "Everything points to a large and successful show," , President Francis ; said. "No 1 admission charges will be made ; no entrance fees, and the whole show will be without any carnivals or anything to get money. This is an educa tional event, and we will keep it that."..''. Thousands of peopfe are expect ed to attend the two-day show, on Friday and Saturday, Septem ber 19 and 20th. A large number of state special ists will be here for the two-day show, while a number of cattle raisers from over the state and nearby states have indicated they will be on hand. The program for the two-day show has been completed, and will be given in detail next week. Interest Grows In Livestock Contests For Friday Night Keen interest centers in the va rious contests to be staged in the 'high school stadium on Friday night of the second annual Hay wood County Livestock show and home arts exhibition next week. ' "Old Man Read Wilson" of WWNC will serve as master of ceremo nies. . ... Six string bands have already been entered in this class and those j in charge are hoping that the num- Der win reacn ten. umy bands with three or more pieces are eli gible for entry. - Five buck and Wing dancers have signified their intention of compet ing and five more entries in this class may be made. One of the promising features of entertainment is the contest be tween the famous Soco Gap team with Sam Queen calling and the Champion team, of Canton, with Fred Ferguson as leader, when they compete for honors. Another feature of interest will be the parade of livestock winners in order that those who were un able to attend the show in the day time may see the fine entries in these classes. There will be ten dollars offered in door prizes , in addition to the many other prizes given during the evening.