UY;N0VEMBER-22,19I5
THE' WAYNES VILLE MOUNTALNEER
By THOMPSON GREENWOOD
To Oppose Bilbo
c.r a minute
If"1 1 , .,vipr Durham,
rl, ra fair. It was
rh.Q1 as hf aa ui ..... -WVa
mat's why you
rc ers think the move
fj. political. It wasnt-
till ten.
,r. several state officials
11 , j rc. and are mov-
13 that age, and they
Lrd the Durham move as
H :....,.f if thev did,
til " " ,
, . v, -jil neht as
But they air -
D o i mprelv the
-j ,hoi ix' 1 1 1 become
h trenu - .
Ltant. a mre inclu'
M goes d.
PRESIDENT - W. Kerr
L m,mmissioner of agri-
L been made vice-presi
de National assoiuuu.i
ssioners of Agriculture,
.will be elevated to the
PI
Stisfi
ithout massage?
lunula! i Nn;".c'..
i.uon.m tml ""
B,ouett whli-D may ba naaded
l " 0u u. lack ol wpiy of
l,.amtlt Croianlc Mb.
MAiSAi.t.. No oiatte what
J 'Iltl,r trlfd Dow try Nan,.
t rm on ruarantea of
. unuUW aatlsfai'tlon or
,y liicJ. 3U-cl7 jar Id
plain wrt lurSf.oo.Pluaiax.
Smith's Drug Store
presidency. In 1947. h,- will br
president. In vjah. in- will run
again as commissioner of agricul
ture, and the fait that he will b
running the National Association
throughout '47 will or should
give him much prestige in the an
nouncement of his candidacy to
succeed himself.
Incidentally, Scott wasn't run
ning for the vice presidency of
the association when he was elect
ed last week in Memphis. Main
reason he got the place is that the
N. C Department of Agriculture
is widely regarded as about tin
strongest agricultural department
on a state basis in the tinted
States. Generally placed in second
position is Louisiana and next.
Wisconsin.
SHARPE Bill Sharpe. who is in
charge of the State News Bureau,
is an excellent racontour. and in
his travels about the state delights
in charming the guests at talk
tests which inevitably follow the
night repast. Whether he is at
the ocean sitting barefooted on the
porch overlooking the beach or in
the mountains around the lire. Hill
Sharpe can spin a merry tale, with
now and then a note of pathos
which might draw a tear from the
faint-hearted. Where reality does
not go the distance necessary.
Sharpe can draw on his fertile
imagination and it's just as much
fun cither way. or so they say.
Some time back, he was sitting
with a group at the Nu-Wray Hotel
at Hurnsville in Yancey eountv.
NOTICE
I have sold my interest in Public Service
Appliance Company to my former partner,
J. U. (ierriner, who is now sole owner and
manager.
Since I am no longer connected with the
firm. I will not be responsible for any obli
gations made by said firm.
Fit AN K L. FIRTH.
i
INFORMED QUARTERS In Washing
ton say that Lt. Comdr. Nelson T.
Levings (above) of Gulfport, Miss.,
formerly of the U.S.S. Missouri,
will oppose Senator Theodore Bilbo
of Mississippi for the latter's seat
in the U. S. Senate in next year's
election. (international)
and oulside Jack Frost was doing
his little bit with the pumpkins
and the fodder whilst inside by
the far sot ol' Bill sounding off.
Like a Chaucer straight from Can
terbury, he was. talking of this
and telling of that. And the fire
crackled away on the night of the
first freeze of the year. Hut Wil
liam Sharpe knows the ocean and
he knows the mountains - and
there is a lot of distance between
in this state.
lie kept talking about Hatteras
and Manioc and Ocracoke. and the
folks from the mountains finally
grew tired of the flat country. Not
knowing that Bill's boss. It. Bruce
Etheridge, is from Dare, and the
effect this situation might have on
Bill's thinkings, one of them bor
ingly moved his chair, spit in the
far, looked Bill straight in the
eye. and said: "Ain't thar nothing
goin' on in the hills any more?"
With that. Kill moved off to
bed or so they say.
BOWL - The Tobacco Howl
moved a step nearer to reality last
Saturday when corporation papers
were filed in Secretary of State
Tliad Lure's office for the Piedmont
Tobacco Howl Classic, Inc.. of Dur
ham. The corporation will deal
in promotion of games of all kinds
and other events.
INFLUENCE The N. C. Citizens
Association, powerful and ambi
tious to acquaint us the people
with state and local government.
will take to the air with its pro
gram before very. long. This
nnouncmg
the opening
of
' Lwiaimiiiwii
F. L. FIRTH
irlh Refrigeration Service
featuring
Commercial and Household
Refrigeration, Air Conditioning
PHONE
465-W
20 Years Experience
ir I h Refrigeration Service
BMai
in
FRANK L. FIRTH, Owner
P. O. Box 321
Waynesville
wijf supplement the) work of -Ihe
m.i.'wine. "W The Peofile." Pres
ent plans, and they re yet very
indefinite, call for a series of more
or less informal round-table tlis-1
c ussions a discussion Mwwn a
typical school principal, a student
and a parent, or a conversation be
tween an average motorist, a pa
trolman, and the head of the State
Patrol System.
Lloyd GiiflRn, able executive sec
retary of the association, careful
and ultra-deliberative, is-not too
familiar with radio know how, so
you may be sure that the program
w ill be on solid ground before you
have an opportunity to hear it
It will likely go Statewide.
Hollander in Dutch .Sgt Grady L. Unwell
! nWrtaTgnWWl-TtaifrW
OKEH One of the brightest and
most prominent young women in
North Carolina will become a
missus on December 22. Yep, that's
when Miss Doris Goerch, daughter
of Carl Goerch, marries Harry P.
Horton, adopted son of former
Lieutenant Governor W. P. Horton
and the late Mrs. Horton of Pitts
boro. And so once again two out
standing North Carolina families
join up. It happens right along.
Carl probably won't admit it, but
Doris does most of the work on
the State Magatine while her pa
is just gadding about awritin' of
books and stalkin" and stalkin'.
Incidentally, Carl's latest book
on North Carolina personalities is
a honey. You couldn't beat it
and we're not kidding for a
Christmas present for your mother-in-law,
your mother, or that boy
overseas.
Now if we can just get National
Committeeman Horton to run for
some office and in some way entice
Doris' daddy to plugging for her
daddy-ln-law. the old Simmons
machine would be forgotten in the
comparison virtually overnight.
r i
if 1
XL itfel !
i i
POST-SEASON As you know.
Wake Forest College is badly in
need of money for a post-war pro
gram of expansion. And all good
Baptists are working to help this
deserving school Some time back
one of the well-wishers suggested
that the Deacons play a post-season
game with some worthwhile team
i possibly Georgia Tech) here in
North Carolina and use the pro
ceeds above expenses for the drive.
Too, the game would advertise the
expansion program on every sports
page in the country, it was point
ed out. Such a contest would also
serve to make tighter the link be
tween the sports department and
the academic division, and it would
permit the football boys to feel
that they had contributed in a
material way to the Wake Forest
of the Future.
The idea was turned down flatly
by Coach Peahead Walker. He said
the last Wake game would come
around December 1 and there
wouldn't be time to schedule the
bowl event, adding that , the ex
penses might not leave much for
the expansion drive. Thurman D.
Kitchen, president, also gave
thumbs down on the proposal, giv
ing the reason that those who paid
to see the game might feel they
had made their contribution and
would not help on the drive itself
so that was that.
COUNCIL The new Slate To
bacco Council will hold its first
big meeting in Raleigh on the
night of November 30. And that
same night the famous Earl Car
roll will present at the Memorial
Auditorium his bang-out fan and
fantasy show, the "Vanities." So
you pay your money and you take
your choice.
CAT J. M. Broughton, former
Governor, is like a cat in that he
lands on his feet wherever he falls.
Within six months after leaving
office he had tucked under his belt
the very nice position as attorney
for the Bright LCaf Tobacco Asso
ciation and this place in all prob
ability pays him more money than
DOWN DRAFT WOOD
BURNING HEATER
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A HIM tUT ONE flU A SCASOU i Rm Ti
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EcDnanrjr CleanBfKM AiMefs art tnrfy
aeiuarMnal Si traeaa riee to nfct
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af roar Bearcat aVaier.
rr?r
3
hi
AUTcr at: c Yctod
cri- r-n""-ivt
I W W - w - t till I
CCLtV.. . C-
4
Iiischargcd Fiom Army
St;t Grady I. ltuiivll husband
ol the former Miss Mai ic Parsons,
of Wax lles ille. has been discharg
ed from llu- sei ice alter three
J ears in the army. During the tolu
ol duty he s.i ser lee with the
coast artih'-ry corps, anti-aircrnft
ailillery in which he worked with
the now famous K.ular and Air
liiis, and was later transferred to
the infantry.
Sgt liiniell was action in France
and Germany and was wounded
in the Heniagen liridge seizure of
March 7th. lie holds the Purple
Heart, the Infantry Combat badge,
the Hood Conduct medal and the
European I healer ribbon with two
battle stars.
Knuw the Type?
H.irrv rilivr;,id u ns l.ile for
limner his brother's iniuse in
llnlhuood one imdit lasl week,
and when he filially .irrived. l-e was
furious. People, lie said. I: id de
tained bun at HIS bouse What
kind of people were I hey .liat de
tained ou"" In- brother asked.
"Tlie were Hie kind ol people,"
ail Mr I- i!.m-r.ild. 'thai when
thc slain! ii !!ie think thev've
oite
IN DUTCH with the U. S. Immigra
tion authorities at Boston, Mass., is
"Horry Cornelius Limberti, 14-year-old
stowaway from Holland, who is
shown here aboard the U.S.S. Lin
;Coln where he told in excellent
English of having become a pal of
GIs during the occupation and de
cided to join them. (lntcruntlo?ia!)
the Governor's ollice. At any rate
he has suddenly emerged as one
of the biggest tobacco figures in
the South. Just like that with the
old quarterback sneak. The suc
cess of the State Tobacco Council
will depend to a very great extent
on the feeling of Governor Itrouglt
lon as to its value to the industry.
30
60
90
And many other
Household Insects
Hi'iVe Htiswcr tu
your pusbk'niol wlut
t, Uau to Hill bugs in
Itic li.imowttlumten.
(l.nin'rtniT cli i til veil, lot8, food or
ymlixi-t!! Ilrt iww, ll.m-lioiaiin-..via
1I1. -Kit. ii.mvlcr. Pprinkle
iih illn-i'li-a. Hues wnlk tlirouuh
ll-.-niwl n;iy-li.'t Uuy 1H.-W.
n.'ii-poh.tiHtiiH I)II.-KII, to,ly.
SMI I H'S CI T It A I
STOKE
1 OKl'G
ilre You Oh il
Mferry -So - Sound -Spending
and Paying
Re n i
tuny seom all right for u few years. Rut when
year after yertr pannes ami one firuls himself
just where he started, lie beirius to rlii tjat
li is yell in? nowhere.
This association otfertt convenient mean of
saviny regularly, and an equally attractive plan
tor Ketting' a home of your own with an eaiily
paid home loan.
Won't von come in and ask for information?
HAYWOOD HOME
uilding and Loan
ASSOCIATION
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DEALER
...s i,-l
STANDARD OIL COMPANY ofnewjersey
Copr. lft45,EioIn.
Howell's Esso
Service
DILL HOWELL, Owner
Washing Greasing Tire
Repairing
Main Street
Leatherwood and
Phillips Esso Sta.
Irving' Leatherwood and Ben
Phillips, Owners
Fast, Courteous Service
Pbone 9172 Asheville Road
Walker's Esso
Station
CLAYTON WALKER, Owner
"Complete One-Stop Service"
Phone 9163
B. H. Holland
Esso Service Station
Hazelwood