aY SEPTEMBER 2, 1943 (One Day Nearer Victory)
THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER
Ptg9 1
Medical
'CHonors Late
. C. Johnson
Moving
..fn was re-
,v the Haywood
Society in respeci
Wiley Carroll John
0K'
Ot-
IP
tit 11 "
jr.
f:er i
Jui
. ...... cvfpnd our sin-
tf'r'''" .7... . , ilia hereaved
V'ar.J the multltude of
Jl ',t patients that mourn
f : That a page in our record
dedicated to nis memory,
A . meniui wi ... r
(,,r m'
: L'U
Wiley Carroll
nl0st active and
called from his
., it richly deserv-
. 1943.
. . . i i
Jotinsoii nau
) member of this
:han thirty years,
v most prominent
, aical profession
i : y .
,i, lved by the
of Haywood coun-
Atlanta Journal Carries Column
About Waynesville's Attractions
The following column appeared
in a recent copy of the Atlanta
Journal:
0. O.'s by 0. B. KEELER
At Waynesville
Before trudling out to what we
used to call the Tech Flats to in
spect the blood-sweating behe
moths of Holy Writ now forecast
for positions in the 1943 Tech foot
ball line, I want to write a few
lines about Waynesville, X. C. and
the Waynesville Country Cluh,
where Mom and I spent a few days
of the recent brief vacation. Way
nesville, incidentally has produced
several football stars of right
around All-America caliluv you
probably recall Jack Phillips of
been taking The Journal for a coup
le of decades goes in for football
Fines Creek News
Bv MRS. D. N. RATH BONE
school. Fine work is anticipated! Miss Lorena MeOary, who is a beef carcass last May without
in all departments of the grammer j employed in defense work at Day-1 surrendering ration points.
and high school classes. ton, Ohio, arrived Saturday to Dr. Bryan said
! spend a few days here with her
Anions those appointed to attend parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. B.
a po-
Bennv Green, who holds
sition with the government, is visit
ing his father, Herman Green, at
his home on Fines Creek.
Ration Points Out
As Hungry Are Fed
Tr.at
txpri ss
1 .ss of
our deep
our col-
kin.
a copy sent to me
r, 0f ;he deceased, ana a copy
- i
WO J'lhnSi'll as mini i" vau.
N: c.. on June 16, 1887, the
William and Emma Smathers
.mis of Canton, uie uiukibhj
Chens. Tenn., and the Medical
krtment at luiane univtriaiuy
m years, where ne graauateo.
fethe degree ot Doctor 01 Medi-
,inl!tl2. Atti-r he receivea nis
he retunifd to Canton and
Ued in the practice of general
fecine until the time oi nis aeam.
aftr he received his license
joined the Haywood County
bal Society, the Medical So
li of North Carolina, and the
aican Medical Association. For
past sixteen years he has been
if the physicians of the Cham
; Paper and Fibre Company. A
i years ago he erected an office
Jug in Canton, which is said
uny to be the most complete
lcridual doctor's office in North
Mia. inrougn his energy and
son to his work, and his loy-
m to his patients, Dr. Johnson
k up one of the largest prac-
fe enjoyed by any doctor in this
fc of the state. By no means
ki his activities limited to the
fctice of his profession. He was
lasted in every movement that
mi to the welfare and better
at of his community. H was a
Tech
Duke, in considerable
not so long ago.
And I seem to have missed Wav-
- , , , , 'the Haywood County Baptist Asso-; McCrary.
The Fines Creek school opened ; J . , , , JT ,
A;..;.xn ..-.inr V...U of fallen last
ts in iuL xuuiuaii , . r j t . , mio it . iiauuii nitrating .ui.
o ...oil u u i last .tioiiuay lur me iv-to-t-i itrim. ,
as well as golf and the banking ' . week as representatives from the
business, and his beautiful home-1 Fred L. Safford princtpal of the j Baptjst church wm.
Mrs. Woody is the former Miss Mr. an(i Mrs. Chas. B. McCracken,
Foote, of Atlanta is on a sort of jine Miller, now Mrs. Clyde Raw ICaulev Rogers, M. M. Kirkpatrick,
pinnacle overlooking the golf j wno won the puiitzer Prize 10 years i Miss Maggie Jf mes and Mrs. Wiley
course, so that Mr. Woody when;apo with "Lamb in His Bosom," Green,
not playing can beam down cheer- ...hil living in Wnvrmw r.a
; fully upon his fellow sufferers. : inttr,srine- nlaee. Wavnesville And ' John H. esbitt. now serving
And there was a barn dance Sat-; cool! Maybe you think that's noth- with the Navy, and former agri-1 TULSA. Okla. Dr. Cecil Bryan
urday night: the Saturdav nisrht we inir to eet excited about or do cultural teacher was a visitor at admitted at an Office of Price Ad-
'were there, with at least 500 at- you?
tending, in the Armory, with the j
j Soco Kids putting on a great show!
.between dances, not to mention1
Mrs. Carl Fields, of Atlanta, who
was one of the most popular belles ;
of the ball, which was designed in 1
tho mode of the famous old square
ances.
I fed flood victims in my draff
store. They had neither money nor
ration points."
His home-town folk at Vian,
Okla., had no other food, he ex
plained. The OPA took the case under
advisement.
the Fines Creek school yesterday. ! ministration hearing that he bought
Doubtful
Drought, heat, cutworms, hail,
mortgages wonder if General
Sherman ever did any farming?
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Gazette and
Republican-
an.i l.i.i r- I?... J
"in i icuuic uianiyiu ol ir .
iiiioiiiiai i.uu?
circulation The golf coum, js a v,olUlt.sitrn.
ul affair of t.210 yards with a card
f ,: : - .1,..
. ... . . . !"-.)" 1. . im vnr inuaiiiaiii
:,:"V V 1. aB0. caddies-now. there you have
wiiii ftiucri niii, uuaneroacK oi
that famous Tech team of 191".
with whom I motored all over the
state, visiting 65 golf courses in
six days, and acquiring a lot of
interesting information for a little
book I was writing, on "Golf In
North Carolina."
We found a lot of interesting
circumstances and scenic effects.
at Waynesville.
Tall Golf Course
The Waynesville Country Club,
now, with a course laid out bv
Donald Ross in a bowl in the moun
tains reminiscent of the famous
Ekwanok Golf Club at Manchester,
Vt. the Waynesville replica is
close to 3,000 feet above sea level,
and you may imagine the scenic ef
fect, when you recall that the tow
ering rim of blue mountains on
the Tennessee side is building up
toward Clingman's Dome.
Not only golf in Waynesville, at
that. Jonathan Woody, president
of the First National Bank, and
years ago living in Atlanta he's
tine old American ,
member of the Canton School board,
an active member of the Methodist
church, also a leader in the civic
affairs of the community and coun
ty, having served for several con
secutive terms as president of the
Civitan Club. He was a Mason
and a member of the Knights of
Pythias. He was a devoted hus
band and father, and gave without
stint to the comfort and happiness
of his family. He never turned a
deaf ear to the poor and needy,
but administered freely to the in
digent as well as to those who were
able to pay. His widow, the former
Miss Ora Chalmers Matthews, four
daughters and one son survive him.
survival of the
pioneer spirit!
"They'll be calling you 'O. B.',
before you've played three holes,"
one of the guests told me, with this
ttle story to illustrate the moun
tain attitude.
It seems two Bien and their wives
were playing, and one of the wives
was named May, and her name
naturally had been mentioned two
or three times. And when a couple
of drives went sort of haywire off
the third tee, there was some de
bate as to where they had finally
landed.
"Here's your ball," shouted one
of the caddies, addressing one of
the husbands. "And May's ball is
right over there, in the rough;"
Mountain informality, you might
say.
Bubber' Alfrd
Among those playing golf at
Waynesville were Sir. and Mrs.
Floyd Alford you remember "Bub
ber" Alford, manager at Radium
Springs when the Georgia Women's
Golf Association played its first
championship there; and later at
the famous Charlotte Harbor Hotel
at Punta Gorda, and at Useppa.
He's now a Boca Grande in the
winter season and he and Mrs. Al
ford and their charming daughter,
Mary, were taking a North Caro
lina vacation at "Blink Bonny," in
one of the cottages, perched by
Hugh Sloan, the owner and pro
prietor, right over the golf course,
3,000 feet above sea level. We had
dinner with the Alfords, and it was
something to write home about.
Ed Flynn, of Mobile, and Mrs.
Flynn I wrote something about
the "Walter Hagen of Trapshoot
ing" the other day; and also Caro-
Bonus Offered
For
Manufacturing Milk
To AH Old and New Producers Of Manufacturing
Milk, We Will Pay A Bonus Of 25 Cents Per Hun
dred. Our Price Now Is $2.75 For lcfi Butterfat,
and With the Bonus Will Mean . . .
00 Per Hmidral
We Can Use AU This Territory Can Produce The Country Needs More
Milk Start Now! ,
$3
SEE US FOR DETAILS
Pet Dairy Products Co.
1
"We need an army, the greatest in the world, way
past the comprehension of most of us, and that
army isn't composed only of soldiers and sailors.
No sir, it is an army, too, of men and women who
are working behind the lines ... to give our fight
ing men everything they heed to fight this war.
The draftsman, the skilled machinist, the riveter,
the girl who sews buttons on uniforms, all day
long, these are warriors, too . . . and they belong
to the labor army . . . the army to which we are
dedicating the tribute of today. To all the office
workers, too, who are carrying on the regular,
daily business that we can't let die . . . that like
freedom we must champion against all odds.
Sure, there is another army . . . and we are proud
and glad to bestow the blessings of this day
upon their continued successes."
The Daytoi
Rubber Manufachiring Co.
THOROBRED DIVISION
T7DO YOUR PART
Haywood County Has A War Bond Quota
Of $892,000 To Meet During September.
While The Task Is Gigantic, It Can Be Ac
complished With Everyone Doing Their
Part.
phone io
WAYNESVILLE