THURSDAY, ocro Page 2 THE WAYNZSVJLLE MOUNTAINEER The Mountaineer - Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING 00. Main Street Phono 17 Waynesville, North Oanollna The County Seat of Haywood County W. CURTIS BUSS Editor MRS. HILDA WAY GWYN Associate Editor W. Curtia Rosa and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY SUBSCRIPTION BATES One Year, In Haywood County Six Months, In Haywood County One xear, uuwiae uaywooa tjounty We 2.00 All Subscriptions Payable in Advance bind t tbm port pffloi at WantMrUte, M. a. M ji (Sua Mall Matter, aa prorldd ancUr tfaa Act ol lUaak S, 1819, Norambar 10, 1U. ... .,, :; ' Obituary ootteaa, molutiou ol faapaet. Cards ef thanka, ud all not 1cm ol antartainmaiita lot profit, will to ehargW lor at ttaa rata el ona crat par word. VNonh Carolina v4k tlS AStOCUTlOrTt) NATIONAL DITORfAL SSOCIATION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1941 This Is Fire Season All indications point to a bad fire season in the mountains. With last year's open winter, followed by a rather dry spring and drier summer meant a five inch deficiency in rainfall the first of the month. Since the forests are powder-dry, a fire would cause lots of damage in a short time. Practically all forest fires start from two causes & careless smoker or deliberately set. Since both of these causes can be pre vented there is no cause for fire loss in our forests this fire season, which nature . has done little to help keep down, ' Double Duty For Motorists Patrolman 0. R. Roberts hit the nail squarely on the head last week when he told a reporter of this newspaper that the im portant thing to assure safety on the high ways today is to look out for yourself and also the other fellow. The patrolman of this area voiced the sen timent of the people in general, when he said he was "alarmed over the increasing number of highway accidents". Right here in Hay wood there have been more accidents during the past three months than during the first six months of the year. This is enough to cause alarm. ,.: : . ' We recognize the increase in traffic dur ing the summer months, and traffic during the fall has been higher than usual, which tends to bring about an increased number of accidents, but we believe that every motor ist to be safe, will have to heed the advice of Patrolman Roberts, and do double duty in watching that is looking after your car and the other motorists. It will be far better to do that, then have a doctor and staff of nurses watch over us while they restore us to health from an ac cident. ' The Sporting Thing Much interest always centers around the public drawings which are held every fall to determine the hunters who get bear hunts that are aufhorized and staged under super vision of the North Carolina Department of Conservation and Development. This year when the results of the draw ings were made known, it was surprising to learn that all the hunts had gone to Can ton sportsmen. To further add to the sur prise of hunters from Waynesville and Sylva, who were hopeful of getting one or two of the hunts, was the fact that the alternate names were also of Canton sportsmen. It appeared that the ill hand of fate was against all but the huntsmen of Canton. These men from the industrial city were as quick to sense that lady luck had smiled their way as were the men from other sec tions to feel their loss of not being drawn.' The Canton men, being gentlemen and sportsmen, and feeling they had no right to take advantage of less fortunate - ones, quickly offered two of their hunts to Way nesville and Sylva men, and in addition, plan to invite a number from these localities to make up their party for the hunt. That is sportsmanship at its best. It is even better than bagging the biggest bear in the woods. It's fine to live In a section where such a feeling exists. The automobile is a great moral force; It has completely stopped horse stealings Exchange. . ' ' A Stronger Generation All of Haywood is proud of the 100 per cent "clean teeth" record of Cruso school children. " Such a successful program warrants them In adopting the title of "Haywood's Health School", and this newspaper offers congratu lations to teachers patrons and students, as well as the health officers who worked in establishing the worthwhile program in the school -oy.-:--y: : Such programs are what it will take to overcome the ugly record which draft boards of the nation are experiencing when they have to turn down so many young men be cause they are not physically fit for service Certainly this generation doesn't want to go down in history as being a group of weak lings, and the very program that is under way in the Cruso schools will be among those things that will spare us of such a name. Another Step Forward This newsnaner has alwava believed in and supported the movement to have better livestock In Haywood. In fact, we have had so much about it in recent weeks, that at times we were on the verge of feeling that perhaps this was bcoming a livestock jour nal, but we are still a newspaper, but believe such an important movement as better live stock justifies all space given. " We would be doing the cause an injustice if we did not voice an opinion about the grand showing Haywood cattle made at the State Fair last week. The many honors won is just further proof .that Haywood has laid the foundation for becoming the home of the state's best live stock, and to this end, we believe, every citizen of the county will work. "Good Times" . Leon Henderson, price administrator, re cently defined "good times" in terms relating to business activity, but production, distribu tion and consumption of goods are not the whole of existence. We liked the following definition that The Christian Science recently gave of good times much better: ' ... . "Good times" are children skipping happily to school or dancing .;'to the hurdy-gurdy's tunes. "Good times" are the days when you set off to work with a whistle on your lips or a song in your heart. They are express ed in the laughter heard above the subway rush, the good-natured jostling of a football crowd, by the friendly lamp that unafraid waits in your front window to light your late .return. :' ." "Good times" are a united and purposeful people joined in a deep and welling affection for the things of daily democratic living and a devout determination to preserve them. "Good times" are the jokes about the govern ment heard on the very steps of the federal building. "Good times" are periods of repose, full of inner peace the peace of those who have made their decision and made it on the side of right. OLD KING "CANNOT tJ" m v ' 1 - ' Voice OP THE People HERE and THERE HILDA WAY GWYN Ghost Of Virginia Dare Florida has been making many .strides in the past few years, and recently one of her historians, Mrs. Katherine Lawson, claims that "there was a native American by the name of Martin de Arguelles old enough to be married when little Virginia Dare made her appearance." , : But reports indicate that the North Caro lina historians are not a bit worried over the prospect that "Virginia Dare may not have been the first white child born in North America", as we have long been known to claim. Dr. C. C. Crittenden, executive secretary to the State Historical Commission, is said to have declared, "We have no quarrel with Mrs. Lawson's research, because no respon sible person in North Carolina has ever claimed anything other than this: Virginia Dare was the first child of English parent age born in the New World." 'The New World was discovered in 1492 and in less than eight years the Spanish had placed colonists in Florida. It would have been strange indeed if there hadn't been some children born during the 80-odd years before the Roanoke settlement and the birth of Virginia Dare," according to Dr. Critten den.' : : So it looks like we are pretty safe in keep ing this long boasted "first" to our credit in North Carolina. A man recently walked a mile on his toes. Probably his idea was to get as far away from home as possible without waking the baby Humorist. We want to introduce you to one of our native sons . . . who left this county for the "other side of the ridjre" . . . in fact went a long ways from home up in New Eng land j. . . but he is so blooming modest about his success ... that even his best rrienas nesnaie to publicize it . . . we have been threatening for sometime to write about him . . . but when we have ventured to ask him a few ques tions1 . . . ' he would brush them aside with such finality . . . that they invariably spelled "Period" and we stopped . . , but we decid ed that we would have to get the matter off our minds . . for we won't be satisfied until we hand Fred Howell, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Howell, treasurer of the Kile and Morgan Company, of Providence, R, I., a word of con gratulation ... (so if we make mistakes they will, be on the sub ject's head for he refused to help us) , we have known Fred all our lives . . . as a youngster he was no model of perfection . . and often gave his teachers a pain in the neck . but even when they had to match their wits against his, they liked him . . . he has always had a forceful initiative that was bound to earry him out on the road to success ; . after high school he went to work for the Kile and Morgan Company . . . in one of their subsidiary plants here . ; . the old Kessawayne Lum ber Company . . . which operated n the Dell wood Road . . . all you ol d timers will remember . . . the deer plentiful , . for they all brought iivthe bag limit of two each . . . Mr. Plott traveled home with several pounds of the vension .. . . and we were among the lucky ones to get a "roast" . . . we never fasted more delicioas wild meat . . . .you know how folks are about things they are not -in the habit of eating . . . it was a rare occa sion in our family so we said noth ing about the roast . . . it looked like it might have been a piece f choice Haywood beef V , ... until remarks began to pass around the table about how good the roast ... i . . . . was . . . and then we tola tnem what they were eating ... .'. .: . r i Rambling Atom V ; Dw XKT r"TTTrriTn By W. CURTIS EUSS Bits of this, that and tie other picked up here, there and yonder. In view af the increased number of motor accidents, what would yon suggest to improve traffic condi tions? r ' : i- H. B. Atkins "Jail the drunks and put on more patrolmen."; W. Jarvis Campbell "To reduce motor accidents in North Carolina, I would say that every driver in the state should drive at a safe dis tance from the other fellows' car, so that he could stop at a moment s notice without fear of touching or damaging the other vehicles on the highway." Albert Abel "I would say that drivers will have to learn to be more careful. This is not a matter that you can get by the law, but an individual responsibility that must be impressed upon the public." Richard N. Barber, Jr. "I be lieve that all motor vehicles and drivers should be required to pass periodic rigid examinations by well qualified boards of examinees, which would be empowered to re voke the licenses of those unqual ified and require cars not in per feet trim to be removed from the highways." J. W Cole '.'At present there are too many 100 mile automobiles driven by 40 mile brains on the highways. How to improve this, I am powerless to suggest." Then the First World War came on . . . his employers released Fred . . , but they held his job for him the 29 months he was in the ser vice . . . for in a short while he had shown them what he could do . . . and his possibilities . . . he volunteered . . . went to an officers training camp . . . where he re ceived a commission as second lieu tenant . , . then in training at Camp Jackson, now Fort Jackson . . . then overseas to France . where shortly after he was pro moted to first lieutenant . . . then the Armistice , . . followed by six months with the Army of Occupa tion in Germany . . ., then back . . ... the Kessawayne Lumber Company was in the process of closing out operations here . , , and Fred spent his time between Waynes ville and Providence . . . the years went by . . . he was promoted . . . and he has steadily grown . . . with his work ... he is now trea surer of the company . . . for which he started working for 25 years ago . . :. (incidentally his younger brother, Edwin Howell, whom he took to New England with him, after graduating from Brown Uni versity, also went with the com pany and is now vice president) . . . Fred takes success as a mat ter of fact . . . it has come to him by hard work and constant appli cation to business . . . and we are glad that he still retains a soft spot in his heart for this section . . and we wouldn't be surprised if someday he came back here to live ... Haywood hunters are famous marksmen ". . . we have known this to be true a long time . . . and they can get their game not only in these hills but in strange places . . . but it's "a fur piece from here to Colo rado" '. , . to go after deer . but that is what Vaughn Plott, well known local sportsman did . . . he left here on September 25th, for a visit with his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, R. E. Plott . . . and they proceeded up into Colorado on a little "Bide trip" of some 1,600 miles . . . here they joined 4 others on a deer hunt on government lands ." . . they must have been mighty good shots Briefs . . . Mrs. Arthur Meade iust called us up to say she was glad she was not asked about the three books she would take to a desert island . . . because she would have had to take along four . , . with a poem to boot . . . her choice . . . her Episcopal prayer book, a copy ,of James Whitcomb Riley's poems, Vanity Fair, a copy of Hamlet and Kipling's "If' two of the most attractive pictures we have seen in sometime are now in the show case in Sherrill's Studio . , . the small daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Wayne Rogers . . . and Florence Ann Bowles, daugh ter of Buck and Florence Bowles . . . they were good subjects and Mrs. Ensley did her best on both pictures . . . while on the younger set, did you ever see more per fect duplicatioife of the likeness of their good looking mamas than in little Adora Prevost and Mar guerite Russ? . . . , Main Street looks like winter, and feels like summer . . up at Beck's store in Balsam last week we felt very much at home . . . for a couple of placards we saw . . i "Read the Balsam News in the 'Waynesville Mountaineer" . . . we expect to go sometime before we hear anything more impressive than Marian Anderson's voice in "A via ' Maria!' ... Friday night in Asheville . . . the Methodists are in hard luck for their minister has served them the four year Metho dist limit ... (and unless some special problem comes up for the presiding bishop at the conference) . . . and he goes on to other fields . . . the church can't expect Preacher Huggin's equal soon . . . it would be asking too much of the Metho dist bishop . . . Judge Frank Smath ers had a birthday Saturday . . . may he celebrate many' more. The car buyer who picked out a model at the old Madison Square Garden in November of 1900 paid six times as much per pound as today's motorist, whose car costs about 26 cents a pound, or less per pound than butter out of a tub. . :- 4 Lawrence Kerley "Stop all speeding and teach people to be more cautious. I think the speed limit is too high in North Carolina, and reducing this might help." Jerry Rogers "First, ef" every driver of a moto should have a stricter ex ' than they have at present v, each motor vehicle shoulo- .. iuuy inspectea at least every three monthsj third, law enforcement officers should be more strict in dealing with drivers. I think if these three things were put into force : traffic accidents would de crease." - Dr. Sam L. Stringfield "To en force the speed laws." Ned Howell 'More careful driv. ing and a stricter enforcement of the laws we now have." " Norman Caldwell "I would sug gest that the rate of speed be cut down on the highways. Fifty per cent of the accidents are caused from speeding when the motors get out of control of the drivers." Public Yells As New Tax Law Jumps Prices By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Columnist. CONGRESS' governmental money-raising experts are beginning to get a powerful public reaction to the new tax law effective since Oct. 1. . It isn't a favorable one, either. Not that the levies provided for in the law itself are so much adverse ly criticized. It pretty generally is recognized that Uncle Sam has to have the money. The howl is over the extent to which the law has boosted prices, a great deal more than enough to cover the taxes decreed by it. The average consumer undobut edly knew that he'd have to foot the bill for Uncle Samuel's require ments, but he obviously resents having to pay a lot more, too. It's like this: Suppose the tax is'so1 much per ton of something or ner hosrshead- ful, if it's a liquid. The government collects it on that basis. The pro ducer "pays exactly what's called for. Then he passes his stuff along YOU'RE TELLING ME! IT MUST HAVE been a pain ful experience for those proud German generals to have had to fight their battles among the want ads. while the world series was on. I ! ! An area in New Mexico, we read, experienced its ttst rain in 90 ye art. Ruining, no doubt, the perfect record ol many a local weather prophet. 1 ! I Junior, after another sleepless night for the family, thinks Baby Sister should be named at once the season's No. 1 clamor lrL ! I t There is a shortage of razor blades In Japan, according to a news item. However, even a By WILLIAM BTTT ' Central Praia Writer bearded Jap wouldn't look Uki Santa Claua to a Chinaman. ' I I I ..",..'. No aaddet worda ol tongue or pen than these "Plua 10 Ptr Cent Luxury Tax." ill The Turk may bo the "sick man of Europe," but In the Dar danelles he seems to have a cure all that too many of Us MelfV bora would like to have. Ill . Grandpappy Jenkins thinks ho knows what became of old Baro Manchausen, the teller of tall tales. Grandpap figures Munchy must be working for both sidet as official Estimator of Enemy Losses. r . ... . e oi the cl nave seen lately n i 1 automobile ers who would lifc. tegeof sucha.7Z on their car as tion against the rmU crop of careless drfi where we could a .1 ""J DOC When the war . it . wasfrequentl ycZ J of Nerves." Thi nervAa ha . ""t; but drifted to -AsmE here in Haywood women who are daily Q -case of jittery 'J The nerves of him. women are getting right now. We ofta ... ...6 uair ana thror chin down on their chat." re-read letters kmh;.. Orders of necessary outputs essentials to the of their business. Some far-sighted pe J ..mB.c a gooa return oi vestment by starting t farm" to cater tti these o, ed nerves. The humai can just stand so rr.uefc. w...c u.oiantrs li 100KJ if breaking point is x tt , . ' " iarm operated on a scienti and .within reason of the man, would pay. One of the best school J come to our desk this seasJ Lrabtree Hi-Life, a 13-pag eographed paper, brim M 01 the school The J ? j l . . . r-r- eauea ana lar above the school publication. A caption on the fronton "The best school in thebes in the best state," This is two, number two, and the still stands so that's that Jessie Bryson is editor. assisted by M. B. Reeve James, with Dick Lowe manager, uara Dotson ft , itor ; . Billie Bryson socf, , with G. McCracken editlt ports. Reporters are Mi hyllisTBradshaw, Ben Dal 'avis, Leon Shafford, Pail ora, ueraidine Messer, M Hazel Justice, Martha fo Mae Jones, Paul Clari, Presnell and Betty Roger It has been a long til mention was made in the about an election on the el ments of A. B. G. liquor the county. At one time a popular subject, and forth some heated argumer, in the eastern part of four counties that have stores since 1937 have whether or not the store: be kept. The score is ti Johnston and Vance cod voters decided to abolish ti stores, while in Bertie 4 ren counties the stores tinue to operate. In Be advocates of retention of ta won by 27 votes. The business that igsc ern methods is doomed. instance the egg industrf would liavp - ever drear eggs would be taken f shell, thoroughly mixeo "! to be sold by the pouw later? That is what bea flno nnii tWO-dav oi t used, and when thawed, they are actually betters bought in the shell. A .J it tmii nre one 01 tt' who don't like the whiten' you can buy just the ! visa versa. : After being froze" 10 po-irs will keen for motw. method not -only s'!! Hoes awav with w , breakage, which every s must figure in on the Ke lt's a fast changini j for lunch I'U takes? capsules and wait in to eat t - i,icBler. tacki amount that he' PJ haps a trifle wholesaler, in "- rotailer. also most W; 1.1. . jj;;nnol rakeoff. er sells it over to ultimate consumer. , But we icu. ji fui He does it by the pint or maybe V These small of the tax Pro0"1".!, 1, 2 or 3 or P"'"'k u get trani. . j. are inconvenient. nickeroradimegett- PercentaJ Well, just on doesn't mouni w 0 sum of money, W 8entaheckofape increase. , .,., tV For ihnce, rf Kdent n" n.