The Waynesville Mountaineer Published In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance oj The Great Smoky Mountains National Park KNTUYEAR NO. 43 Sixteen Pages WAYNESVILLE, N. tX, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1941 $1.50 I Adrance la Haywood and Jackson Countlea Hour Speed Limit Knv On Lookout Laion Of Speed llB.WaynesvUleand Vood. - ! I better watch your speed Lg in Waynesville and rV. .,,. in coinsr to , and if you exceed hour, Ik J-"- limit has been Lee, and officers of both L today issuing oue wm Fthey are going to rigidly he law- . will be arrested and court. . '; ff measure is to curb so idents, and to protect lives rty, the officers pointed L of the streets in the here there is a straigns Lome motorists make a t afreet. le opening of schools there an increased danger in .necially during the hours pupils are en route to school. friendlv warning, you L vmir eve on your speed- tnd step on the gas very else you'll pay a visit Mice court. iodists Meet inston-Salem inference IP. I.. Hutchins. sunerin of the Wavnesville dis- lh Methodist church, with fc.-Huggin, Jr., pastor of Methodist church and a K of Methodist ministers' lit the county, are; attends O Western North w conference in .. in Winston-SalerA? :'' ' m Massie, member of he r smtotos ;oi . tne-iooai it church, was among: the attending the conference section. . ' , 1.000 Methodists from the part of the state are at- I the five-da v conference p Bishop Clare Purcell fcflferenre .will nHinnm on hi new appointments for Mrs will be announced at Dental Conference Here Largest Ever Held In District Dr. David Abernethv. of Hickorv. was named nreairient-elat nf first district of the North Caro lina Dental Society at the con cluding session here on Tuesday morning of the three-day 21st an nual meeting1 nl the irrnnn Dr. Abernethy will take office as president of the district orcaniza- tion at the 1942 annual meeting Li 1 Ml t L1J r . wuicn wiu De neia in Lienoir. : Dr. W. M. Matheson. of Rnone was installed on Tuesday mOrrling ;il . . . ana win serve as president aunng the cominir vear. He vni name1 president-elect at the meeting last year. , Others who will serve with Tir Matheson will be Dr. W. B. Bree- land, who was re-elected vice president, and Dr. F, G; Coffey, of Morganton, who was re-elected secretary-treasurer. The meeting which was attended by more than 200 was said to have been the largest ever held in the district. One of the outstanding features was the meeting held by the assistants, this district serving as a pioneer in the state in the work of organizing the group to siuay proDiems in tneir work. The meeting opened Sunday with a golf tournament and a trip to Beech Gap. The first formal meet ing taking place Monday morning following registration at the Hotel Gordon, headquarters for the meet ing. The Rev. H. G. Hammett, pastor of the First Baptist church, f- e the invocation and the address Warns Japan Planes Fly Over City In "Rail This area got their first taste of put noon. ers flew turned i" the rm post to head Continued on page 8) Shot Members To Calves At In Charlotte 'P f Haywood county 4-H mbers are planning on kt baby beeves next week Jouthern State Fair to be Parlotte. It is expected I Will Virino- bbons to add to the large raay won by the Hay 1 members at the fairs in I"? have exhibited this rs going to the fair will lax James P.t.J MJ. pthan Caldwell, Charles pvin Francis, Margaret i vvya Messer, Ben v Glenn Davis. 'VPS Cntora n4- 0..1. t tL a V UW OVUbU" Fair wfll be sold at the t faynesville Girls Dege Clubs Woman's College at the ? of North Carolina, is nine new members to speakers club of the col ?mbership was made after wline Rotha is a'new the Boot 'n Spur club Wr-01d Negre To Death; of X To News Paper pis, and columns of local P. page 2. C news. Page 3 L and Pictures NeS4andK jnes( page 6. - . . Srn at Fort Jackson jj Sloan, page 7. ns, page g. satisfied customer", UIllty and defense news, T tier's statements, page 5 pictures, page 40 ditor, pge 16, Daifgliters Held Mvrtle Lenoir Cullin, 24, and her sister, Katherine Lenoir, 20, daughters of Oscar Lenoir, 55, negro, who was ' fatally wounded late Sunday afternoon are still being held in jail. Sheriff R. V. Welch. Deputy Noble Ferguson, with Sam Cabe and Norman Caldwell ol tne cuy police department, investigated the nccordiner to them they were called at the Lenoir home on Daisy avenue about 5 :30 o'clock, foaMntr there shortlv beiore o. TVie nfficr stated that when they arrived they found the body nf fWnr Tnoir in the front room in a kneeling position, with his arms outstretched and his neaa Urirtir nn the floor ili A OOOl Of Wood. "J " " - ti.o hnAv ws directlv in front ol a settee, that according to the officers, this would indicate that t the time of the shooting he bad been sitting on the settee and that after the four shots were nrea nis kitr Vio1 slnmned to the floor. rvuj ... . - His two daughters and nis wue were in the house when the offi cers arrived. The wife, Jannie T-onnir whn is emDloved as a cook at the Haywood County Hospital, tated that she had been caueo from her work and told that her husband had been killed. The man had been shot four times, once in. the left jaw, the shot coming out of the opposite side of the face; another went through the head and came out on the upper part of the forehead, one shot was in the left leg above the knee, and another in the back, coming out on the right side. It is said that the shot through the leg might not have been fatal, but that either of the other tnree shots would have caused death. Officers state that three of the bullets were found by the dead man's body and the fourth went -nto the wall. ' The blood arouna the body had started' hardening, according to the- officers, by the 4,e Miow arrived and they juageu To; W been dead about 30 minutes.' The : house gave considerable evidence, so the officers state, of .' (Continued on page 8) rir. S. P. Gav Leaves Today For Houston For Two Dental Conferences Relations between the United States and Japan neared the break ing point following a long confer ence between U. S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew and Japanese Foreign Minister Admiral Teipiro Toyoda in Tokyo. Grew is report ed to have warned Toyoda that American pressure will be intensi fled unless Janan makes fundamen tal changes in her foreign policy, R. T. Messer Is Elected Head WNC School Board Group R. T. Messer. member of the Havwnnd countv board of educa tion for the past eight years, was elected president ol the western district of the North Carolina School Board Association at meeting held in Asheville on Mon day night. A. C. ' Moses, of Sylva, was named vice Dre'sident. and Mrs T. O. Franks, of Hendersonville secretary-treasurer. W. A. Deece, of Goldsboro, pres ident of the state association, made the nrinciDal address. Others speaking included, T. W. Calton, of Bostic, retiring president, Guy Phillips, of Chapel Hill, Judge Hubert C. Jarvis. and A. C. Rev nolds, Jti, et:ABheVille. : Approximately 100 persons at tended the meetintr. The associa tion is cornposed of school board members, city and county superin tendents, principals and Bchool committeemen. The next year's meeting will be held in Waynesville. an 'air raid" Tuesday a when two bi-motored bonl over from the northeas and left here due east. Mrs. Hubert White "sp. raiders from the Welch and nut in the "alarm quarters which is somewhere in the South. The infornihiion was in the hands ol the heactauarters officials in 13 seconds after the "raiders" were spotted. The av em era renort takes SO seconds. Ten nnsts In HSVWOOd Will be manned until Saturday at silt, when the raids are scheduled to cease, ac- i . i . o T t : 1 1 coraing to ivooeri a. iuiur, who is in charee of the five postd in this immediate area. There are five nnsta in the Canton area Those on duty notify headquar ters all information where kwb or more planes are spotted. S Mr. Millar said last nieht that the nnsta are active from tfiix in the morning until six at niglt. The local post ol tne American Legion is Sponsoring the observa tion here Would Arm Ships FBI Find Strychnine In Liquor, 3 Men To Be Given Hearing 27 Spurred by President Roosevelt's suggestion that "arming of our ihips is a matter of immediate ur gency," Representative Sol Bloom .if New York introduced a bill in Congress to permit the arming of merchantmen. His legislation would remove the prohibition of this precaution from the Neu trality Act. Big Bear Killed At Soco Gap Commodity Surplus CorDoration lo Aid Apple Growers A c-roun of local apple growers and the county agent attended a meeting held m Asheville on Jtton dav nieht at which a representa tive of the Commodity surplus Corporation discussed surplus pro duce. . , .' ; T?. Rarber. Jr.. is the member of the committee on surplus com modities for this section, and any one who has not been able to find a sales for their apples are request ed to get in touch either with Mr. Barber or the county agent. There will also be a meeting in the county agent's office at 7:30 o'clock next Monday night for those who have not as yet found buyers for their apple crops. Those attending the meeting in Asheville on Monday night were Wayne Corpening, county agent, Hilliard Moody, Lester Borgia, Robert Boone, Bill Medford, and R. N. Barber, Jr. : . .... ; : A fnnr hundred and fiftv nound bear, the first kill of the season, in this county, was brought in Monday afternoon by local sports men vnn nan snent rne nav huntine on Hornbuckle Mountain on the James A. G Dayny place oh Soco " Gap. j - For a while the bear "lay In state" at th Standard Filling SHmtinn nn Main street and was viewed by a large number ol in terested persons. The bear was killed by Oliver Finger, of the Maggie section, about two hundred yards from the highway leading into Cherokee below the mill owned by Mr. Davey The party took with them 17 Hoes whn cave Old Bruin ouite a chase. Those making up the hunt were Felix Stovall, Lawrence Ker ley, Dill Howell, Vernon Hill, Harry Clay, Bill Kelly, Jim Moody, Elonzi McGaha, Roy Plott, Hub Plott, James Plott, John D. Plott, Zeb Moody, Fred Campbell, W. Medford, M. B. Hannah, John Finger, Ben Massie, Oliver Finger, and James Hall. Two Haywood Boys Win Awards At National FFA Meet Two Haywood county boys Sam Arrinirton. of Waynesville. and Mark Kirkpatriek, of Clyde, were a mon a- the seven North Carolina vouths who won "American Farm er" awards at the 14th annual convention of the national FFA group held in Kansas City during the week. The awards are sriven to mem bers who display outstanding abil ity in actual farming, investments and earnings from their agricul tural projects, school and com munity activities, leadership, co operation and scholarship. Both youtig Arnngton and Kir. Patrick have made unusual rec ords4 ihelr chosen fields. 300 Tourist Acents To Pass Through Town This Morning The nnn members of the Ameri can Steamship and Tourist Agents Association which are holding a five-day meeting in Asheville this week, will pass through Waynes ville this morninir between 10 and 11 o'clock en route to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It is said that many of the per sons, attending the convention will have their first trip to the park this week. In the party will be officials of steamship companies and tourist agencies from all over the united States.',..' Committeemen Of Countv To Hold All Day Meeting Today Will Study Needs Of County In Working Out Defense Program. Today beginning at 10 o'clock this morning an all day meeting will be held at the court house to ofn,W the hest methods of putting on the defense program with in creased farm production in tne county. J. C. Lynn, former county farm aarent. and now district agent, and T. Weaver Cathey, state AAA committeeman, will be the main sneakers. All AAA committee men are expected to attend. The suggested goal for Haywood county is as follows: a 4 per cent increase in milk production, wnicn would mean 870 more pounos oi milk per year with 200 more cows milked: eirnf production is stepped up 11 per cent, with an Increase of 69,210 dozens; soybeans increased inn ner cent, with 10 additional acres to be planted : oats 20 per cent, with 300 more acres planted; barley increased 10U per cent, wnn 50 more acres; nay nve per cent with 9Hi more acres. Every one of the 2,576 Haywood county farmers will be visited by the AAA committeemen during the month of November. Instruction in the defense nroeram is the larg est taBk ever assigned to the AAA committeemen since the time the AAA work was first begun. This contact will have a two fold nhWtive. First, a farm plan for 1942 will be worked out. he ncrna of cover crops needed for map acres of Brasses and clover to be seeded to eonservw the soil and nrevent erosion: any land un fit for farmimr and pasture that should be planted to forest trees; the number'of acres of smallgrass- es and legumes to be turned under; and orders taken for lime and phosphate. Second, a farm defense plan will he worked out for each farm, and this will take un anv increase that can be arranged for the farm for the following crops: livestock and - (Continued on page 8) RE A Officials Attending Meeting in Lake Lure .Tames C. Moore, suoerintend- dent of the Cruso 'Electric Mem hershin Corporation, and Carter Osborne, president, left yesterday for Lake Lure, where tney are attending a two-dav session of superintendents of REA over the state. . 1 50 Come Here to Study Farm Defense Program Pond nrnduets. for defense" was the theme of the all-day meeting held here on Monday with approx imately 150 state, district, and county officials of State AAA dis trict number 10 present. Plans were discussed to determine the best way to carry on the National Farm Defense program in 1942. iElvery one of the 12 counties in the district were represented. : In the group attending were county farm agents and their as sistants, county home demonstra tion agent, and their assistants, home economics teachers, farm se curity agents, superintendents of public welfare, chairmen of wel fare boards, and members of boards of commissioners. ; T. Weaver Cathey, of this coun- Hearing Set For Monday Before Magistrate" Fergu son; Men Out On Bond. ... , .V 1 : Mandel Woodard. Charlie Wood-. ard and Roscoe Messer were releas ed from jail last week on a 50O bond each, where tney naa oeen held following the sudden death of Love Clark. The three win De given a preliminary hearing at 2:30 o'clock Monday afternoon at the court house before Magistrate Frank Ferguson. The three men alleged to have given Clark and Melton Messer a drink of liquor, which is said, they claimed to have found. riorir a snid to hv died short ly after drinking the liquor and attending physicians report that . . ,1111. T - Messer was taKen violently in. ne came to a local doctor's office and was then taken to the Haywooa County Hospital for treatment. Ail flvo men are said to have been friends, and all employed on a logging operation in tne Liiner Cove near Lake Junaluska. the coroners' inquest and autopsy, it is said that Geo A. Brown, Jr., chairman of the county board of commissioners, in structed the county coroner, jji. J. R. Westmoreland, to send a sam ple of the liquor to the govern ment laboratories or tne rm Washington, ". According to the sheriff s de partment, a report has been re ceived from tne r m laoorutuuro stating that the liquor contained z per cent strychnine. " Clark was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, of East Ten nessee. Funeral services were neiu at Panther Creek for Uiarn on Saturday afternoon, Oct. lUn H is survived by a wife .and three children and a number of brother"' HIIU BIOLCIO, ty, state triple A agent for the conservation nrocram. was in charge of the program. Mr. Cathey stated the purpose of the meeting and told of the work that faced the farmers of America in their part of the defense program. ' "We 'are going to produce food for home consumption for the ar mies that are fighting battles for us, and the men and women who are in our camps in training for our own defense," Said Mr. Cathey. "The suggested minimum goals fot national defense in 1942 in clude the following: Increases in milk, milk cows, eggs, soybeans, oats, barley, and hay, all pro ducts of the western part of North - (Continued on page 8) Haywood Lumber Dealers Ready To Serve Builders Lumber dealers of the Carolinas found irood news in the regulations issued bv the Federal Goverment affecting the construction industry referred to as "priorities." M. Garner, secretary of the Car olina Lumber and Building Sup ply Dealers Association, said a bulletin issued this week. The nnlletin is nublished in de tail in this newspaper today be ginning on page 12, The lumber dealers of Haywood have constantly ' maintained com nlete stocks of building materials and according to the individual statements, also on aee ' . . . they are ready to supply the needs in that line for remodeling, repairing or building. - Norman Caldwell Recovers From Illness And Is Back On Job Norman Caldwell, traffic officer, is hack on his iob directing the cars on Main street. He started work on Monday morning after having been confined to his home by ill ness for the past four weeks. Death Claims James C. Richards, Canton Official PuTierni services were held on Wednesday af ternoon at 3 o'clock at the Canton Methodist cnurcn ior James C. Rickards, superintendent of the Canton water department, and oldest employe in point of service of the municipality of Can ton. Mr. Rickards died Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock of a heart attack at his home on Hampton. Heights, Canton. The Rev. Walter R. Kelly, pas tor of the church, and the Rev George B. Hammond, pastor of the Canton Presbyterian church,' of ficiated. Burial was in Green Hill cemetery here. Serving as active pallbearers were: W. E. Sheffield, Carroll J. McCracken, Jordan Neal, J. H. Keener, William Battison, and Mark Auberry. Mr. Rickards was a native of Missouri, but was reared in Flor ida, the son of the late T. M. and Ann Elizabeth Rickards, of Canton. He was a graduate of the Univer sity of Kentucky. H was a mason and a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge. Surviving are his widow, the 'former Miss Ethel Trull, of Can ton; two daughters, Mrs. O. L. Briggs, Jr., of Newport News, Va., and Miss Marian Rickards, of Canton; three sons, James C, Jr., a student at the University of Illi nois, and Raymond and Leonard, of Canton, and three grandchildren, Linda, Marianna, and Raymond Briggs. Cruso School Termed "Haywood Health School" Because Of Interest In Teeth 11 ! 'f 1 t Dr S. P. Gay leaves this morn ing for Houston, Texas, where he will attend a meeting of the American Academy of Periodont onogy this week. , ' He will remain in Houston for the next week and attend the American Dental Association con vention which will be in session. He plans to be out of town around ten days. ', ' ""' 1 1,11 ' Wmm it l " v. . ,; Jl ..." . .1.1 I ' i- V4 - " II ... ... M ' .-.i Every student in the Cruso school has had the necessary dental work done, either by their private den tists or by Dr. A. C. Early, school dentist. Each child has a new tooth brush and powder, and has been taught the proper way to brush their teeth. The teachers, students and their ing fed and cared by the children parents have been keenly interest ed in the health project and now the school has been termed as the "health school" of Haywood, Paul Grogran is principal. Each class room is conducting a health project White rats are be- in order to show the value of prop er foods and what these foods mean to' the school child. " The total amount of dental work done is amazing, it was said, as it was shown that Dr. Early made 139 amalgan fillings, 179 extrac tions, 517 silver nitrated, 203 nronhvlaxis. 23 miscellaneous treat ments for a total of 1,071 opera tions. ' . "The program could not have been accomplished without the health interest and the cooperation of the parents, teachers and stu dents," Dr. Early said. Extension Of Time Granted On Certain Soil Practices hflS VtPPrt 0rant.fWi fY tViA Qaorlini C5 - v . W WVVU14I5 of Austrian winter peas and vetch from November 1 to 30, according to the county farm agents, for practices under the 1941 ACP pro- The agents have also been no tified of an extension nf time nn the seeding of small grain to qualify for the special allotment payments until December 15th. No extension of time has been given for the spreading of lime and phosphate, which was set for October the 31st. MANY VISITORS SEE FOLIAGE This area is experiencing heavy traffic right now as thousands are coming to this area to see the usual beautiful leaves. t.