Und.rd FHlVITNi. 10 S First St MM'lsvn I r i The Waynesville Mountaineer Published Twice-A-Week In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance Of The Great Smoky Mountains National Park 49,500 Peoplo Live within 20 miles of Waynesville &cir ideal e hopping center 6:30; 32 Hours 63rd YEAR No. 42 TWENTY PAGES United Press and Associated Press News WAYNESVILLE. N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1948 $3.00 In Advance In Haywood and Jackson Counties 6:30 Saturday Lin Places 1 fT'the 12.000 DDDaury Satuiraflay this county. .1 - IMI C fours me ""; their doiiu". .... nchins- ICA1 ft- r Sim For Pmi Lirman said jesu-iua. and Judges Instructions for voting P1'"'1"- Lite Juiialuska Mice has of Ward's store ru Lnd Carver, on in registrars in Beaverdam Inward Smath- Williams as Williams re- I I Ik. fcienioei vi fctions. Calls tonvn that the tele- ln constant use $,, (lection, the did station win o'clock Satur- bruadcast im- i been worked (or each can arid also the lals. L Rules y lo be held on Ibe some close Ions of election to be ques . il is your ie primary is ness and im-1 ords sent by man ot Ihe c! ions hoard, icial in the and citizen . Rogers, "that held accorrl- les and rcgula- City Limit Extension Election Is Called 89 High School Seniors Will Receive Diplomas At Monday tlighi Program Baccalaureate Sermon Will Be Given Sun- I day Night At Auditorium Sunday Speaker Final exercises for Waynesville high school have been planned baccalaureate services will be held Sunday evening at 8 o'clock and the commencement exercises at Ihe same time Monday evening in the school auditorium. The Hev. Malcolm Williamson, pastor of the First Presbyterian church in Waynesville, will ad dress the seniors with the .sermon, "The Charm of the Impossible at the Sunday night services. The Kev. Paul Duckwall, pastor of the Long Chapel at Lake Junaluska, will deliver the invocation and the scripture reading. The baccalaureate service will open with the processional. "God of Our Fathers." The congrega tional hymn, "America, the Beau tiful," will be sung. Fred Calhoun of Waynesville high will sing a t llTU I mrl'r Df'll'Ar " i L0"0' iU hiVJal the high school auditorium here REV. M. H. WILLIAMSON, pastor of the Presbyterian church, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon i.. . ..I-. : ,1,.. e.....t ..i' th. school will sing the anthem. "Send nu""- " Th. n ,. Will L .v.... . - gram will be broadcast over nni-v. Out Thy Light." The services (Continued on Page Eight) Haywood Workers Receive Average $71.72 Weekly State Records Reveal t. A Ie sh lirman charger! I Id follow Ihe i Jtcr especially Ijboxes and the 1 The precinct Haywood County employed 4.004 leach box pub- people in the last quarter of 1947. $tion. ascertain These people received an average pen lock and weekly wage of $71.72 or anoui After the $300 higher than the average tor hould be I North Carolina. e counting of I These figures were complied oy S. F. Campbell, director oi me .uick coverage ! Research and Statistics lor the ng services, it ! state. Mr. Campbell was working in e state ballot j cooperation with the State Em counted first. ; ployment Security Commission. counted as' The average employment for the (closed, with- last quarter of '47 in regard to the postponement I state total was 649,307, or 11 per- fsaid that all cent above the same period of fiywood elec-,1946. This was the highest total of pM or sent to! employment in North Carolina's fee in order 1 history even high than 1942, the radio station 1 peak war year, by 9.8 percent. It was 23 percent over the 1945 total. The average weekly wage in North Carolina for the quarter was $42 03 as compared with $37.81 for the third quarter of the year. This was due to the bonuses re ceived by some employees at the Continued on Page Eight) pes To onight facial political e by some of Jsures in hc- tes, as thev ave been of current earn-1 'arles W. Ed- tlte house of 1 make an- of his cam- j p-minute pro- ft Charles M. I Memorial Day To Be Observed Here The bank and post office in both Waynesville and Hazclwood will be closed Monday to com memorate Memorial Day. No local stores or business of fices have announced that they will close for the event To Honor Dead Pf World War II Canton Woman Is Fatally Injured When Hit By Car Second Highway Fa tality in Haywood This Year; Acci dent on Canton Hill llavwood's second fatal highway accident of l!4il occurred Monday t,iht liell Mrs. Tillie King Shame 28. vva.- struck by a c on the East Canton Hill, accord ing to Patrolman Bill Sawyer. Mrs. Sharpo was brought to the Haywood County Hospital and died late Tuesday afternoon. Officers investigating the acci (lenl said that .lames L. Clerre. of Akron, Ohio, now employed in Can ton, was the driver of the car. It was said that he was passing an other car and that Mrs. Sharpe was in the middle of the highway, and the driver did not see her. Mr. Clerre posted $1,500 bond, and will be givun a hearing before Judge Ralph R. Mease on Monday The funeral services for Mrs. (Continued on Page Eight) Only East Waynesville Voters Will Participate Special Election Has Been Set for Sat urday, July Third A special election has been call ed for July 3rd on the quest ion of extending the corporate limits of Wavnesville to include a territory from F.ast Street, the hospital sec tion and a large portion of what is known as East Waynesville. The special election was ordered ! bv the Haywood Board of F.lec ttions. acting upon a request from I the town board of aldermen. A special petition, bearing the names of fifteen per cent of the qualified voters in Ihe F.ast Waynesville ter ritory, was recently presented to the board of aldermen requesting the election. Some months ago the board of aldermen published a notice of their desire to extend the corporate limits .and held a hearing which was attended by representatives of the voters in the East Waynesville area. After the hearing, the board deferred action on the matter, when the petition was presented, which necessitated the calling of the election. There are between 60 and 100 qualified voters in the area, and they will be the only ones to vote In the election. The Voter's " In Waynesville will not participate. The East Waynesville school has been designated as the polling place, and the board of elections named Horace Duckett as registrar, and the two judges for the election are Guy Messer and Irwin Leath erwood. The official notice points out that (Continued on Page 8) Lake Junaluska Opens Season Sunday, June 6 1 r : ! Ullglllcll upi'lllUg I'Ult Changed To June (5; Bishop Garhcr To Open Season Moore Funeral To Be Conducted This Morning The body of Pfc. Howard J. Moore, native of Madison county and son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Moore, also of Madison county, who was killed in action in France on July 12, 1944. arrived in Way nesville yesterday morning. Funeral services will be held this morning at the Lusk Chapel Baptist church in Madison county with Rev. Forest Ferguson officiat ing. Burial will be in Woody cem etery. Private Moore entered the serv ice October 7. 1941, and was sent overseas in January 1944. Surviving in addition to the par ents are one son, James H. Moore, Jr.; five brothers, Arthur, William, Denver, Junior and R. J., all of Luck; three sisters, Mrs. Annie Ha ney, of Enka; Miss Jettie Moore and Miss Verna Moore, both of Madison county; and the paternal grandmother, Mrs. Jane Moore, of Madison county. Garrett Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Josephus Daniels' Will Filed With Haywood Court The opening of the Lake Juna luska Methodist assembly tor the summer has been positioned from Sunday until June ( because ol the illness ol the featured speaker, it has been announced by l)r Frank S Love, director of the assembly The formal opening of the as sembly will be held at 1 I o'clock Sunday morning. June ti. Dr Love said The service will be led by Dr. (' M Clark, superintendent of the Waynesville district, assisted by selected ministers lioin this community . Bishop Paul Garber. of Geneva. Switzerland, will be Ihe leatured speaker at the service. Dr. Gather has administered Hie Methodist churches in seven nations of Eur ope. He has traveled extensively and studied I lie missions on that confine nt A picnic will be held in the af ternoon following the service. Dr. Elmer T. Clark, editor of Ihe World Outlook, missionary maga zine of Ihe Methodists, will speak to a joint meeting of the young people at 8 o'clock Sunday night. The opening of the assembly grounds will take place in the Lake Junjl.uxk. auditorium.. , - Mrs. Garrett To Be Buried Today Mrs. Alice Moody Garrett died at the home of a daughter. Mis. Glenn McClure, Route I, Waynes ville. Wednesday morning about 9:30 o'clock. Funeral services will be conduct ed this afternoon al 'A o'clock at the First Methodist church in Way nesville with the pastor, Kev. R. I. Young, officiating. Interment will be in Green Mill cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Ihe following grandsons: Fred and George Glance. Spellman and Billy McClure, James and Robert Gar rett. Frederick Nichols and Noble Garrett, Jr. Mrs. Garrett, a native of Hay- The will of the late Josephus Daniels was filed with the clerk of court here this week, as a matter of legal procedure, since Mr. Daniels owned a summer home at Lake Junaluska. Mr. Daniels willed all his property, Including his shares of stock in the News and Ob server, to his four sons. The property at the Lake was sold by Ihe four sons to Mrs. Frank S. Love. The Mint of the will here was handled by J. R. Mor gan, attorney tor both parties. It was exactly a year ago this week that Mr. Daniels made his last trip to Haywood. He ad dressed a large audience at Lake Junaluska on the opening day. Election Chairman Ar - -ft fife. 4! JK.ltltV ROGERS, chairman of the Haywood Board of Elections, yesterday predicted a vole of 6,500 in the county on Saturday, lie is sued final details, together with copies of the elections laws to all precinct officials, and reported "as far as the election hoard, registrars, and judges are concerned, we are all set for a large turnout of vot ers." il'holo by Ingram's Studio). Indications Tend To Show Haywood Highest County In All Eastern America Is Haywood County the highest rotrriTy In North Carolina,' possibly the highest In Eastern America' Charles E. Ray. chairman of the N C. Park. Parkway and Forests Development Commission, thinks it is and he has figures to sup port liis claim. Mr. Ray can point out 72 moun tain peaks on the map of Haywood County which are over 5,000 feet high. That easily outstrips Hay wood's nearest competitor for the "highest county" title Swain county -which only has 47 peaks over that height. T in certain that Haywood is the highest.'' says Chairman Ray, "but il is going to take a lot of work to prove it." The local office of N. C. Park Commission is already at work sub slant lating the fact of Haywood's height A letter has been sent lo the V. S. Geological Survey in Washington asking for Information wood county, was born on June 20, j on the elevation of counties in the 1867. the daughter of Bravo .1 audi (Continued on page eight) j MISS HYATT HONORED Miss Jean Hyatt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hyatt, has, been elected vice president of the Sigma Phi Kappa honor society at Peace College, in Raleigh, for the 1948-49 terms Easlern United States. Said Mr Ray in the letter: ". . . 1 suspect that Haywood County has the highest elevation of any in this state, and I would assume it to be the highest of any in Eastern United States. However this is a conjecture which Is not based on 'Continued on Page Eight) RAILROAD CROSSING PAVED Paving crews have re-surfaced Depot street where the three tracks of the Southern Railway cross the street at the depot. A number of broken places in the pavement on other streets throughout the town have been repaired during the past lew days. Pfc. Sutton Rites To Be Held Saturday Clyde Graduates To Get Diplomas Tonight Ether 1 Press ' irU' cloudy j Micatinn n9 . f-VentUre ! and whose bodies mnnnt hp re- verans 0; turned home for burial. Canton I Members of the Edwards-Clark- . post oi me veterans oi r'8 Hi action lir t Jl . , wais are in ciiarge ui dedication services. The granite memorial is approx imately 13 feet long and 6 feet n'gh. It is said to be the biggest stone of its kind in this section. The Canton chapter of the V. F. W. is sponsoring the project. The 17 veterans whose names appear on the stone are Hoyt Edwards, George Barnes, James F. Coleman. Lewis. Gibson. Paul A. "ed after- Pto showers file The body of Pfc. Charlie W. Sut f ton, who was killed in action in j France on July 18, 1944, arrived in Waynesville yesterday morning. I He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Sutton of the Ninevah sec tion of Haywood county. The body will be taken to the home this morning and funeral ser vices will be conducted by Rev. R. L. Young, chaplain of the American Legion Post, No. 47, at the home, Saturday at 2 p. m. Members of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will be in charge of the graveside service at the Memorial (Continued on Page Eighti WHCC To' Give Saturday Night Election Results Plans have been completed for giving the complete county and state election returns over WHCC Saturday nighl. There will be no returns posted at (he court house as in the past, due lo the fact that all informa tion about the election bofh in Haywood and the slate, will be giv- ten in detail over WHCC. starting as soon as the first precjnet makes ! a report . I Election officials will cooperate ! in getting returns to the court ! house, and I here the news stafT of I The Mountaineer will compile the j returns, and broadcast them over iwilCC ill a matter of a few sec ! ends. In the meant one. United Press has arranged to have a represent ative in every county gathering the returns, and these will be flashed lo a central point, and then on lo WHCC for broadcast- ing. ' WHCC will give H.lywood re ! turns by precincts, and then j county totals and slate totals. Plans are lo remain on Ihe air un til some definite results are known. In order In give the news as quickly as possible, no telephone calls will be accepted by WHCC alter 7 o'clock Saturday night. All information the news staff will have will be broadcast at least every 15 minutes. About Half Registered Voters Are Expected Lack of Heavy County Ticket Cited As The Cause For Light Vote Forecast With fair weather, a vole of 6. 500 was predicted for Saturday by Jerry Rogers, chairman of the Haywood Board of Elections, after a visitation to each of the 22 pre cincts in the county. This will rep resent about half the registered voters in Haywood. The polls will open at 6:30 a.m. and close at 6:30 p. in Mr. Rogers said interest was ris ing in the primary, but the absence of a heavy county ticket had caus ed just "luke warm" interesT in many quarters. The county ticket has only one race that for the house of rep resentatives, with three candidates seeking the nomination. They are Grover C. Davis, Charles W. Ed wards, Jr., and R. E. Sentelle. There are constable races m three townships Beaverdam. Waynesville and Fines Creek. The heaviest is in Beaverdam, where four Democrats, and two Repub licans are seeking the nomination. They are Democrats, Hubert Thompson, W. H, Scott, Billy 11 Mehaffey and J. A. Anderson. The Republicans are J. II. Jones and T. S. Grogan. Th-y. JKAvUitWUUUiUble-.ratta is between A. F. Arrlnglon. and Verlin D. Smith. In Fines Creek the race is between W. C. Price and W. U. Murray. The race for governor, and U S. Senate takes the spotlight in the state' ticket. There aie six can didates for governor, and only two candidates in the race for U. S. Senate. A change was made yesterday in the registrar of the North Ward in Waynesville. Wade II. Noland could not serve because of illness, and Noble Ferguson was named to suc ceed Mr. Noland. A re-print of the ballots to be used in Saturday's primary, togeth er with the registrar and .judges of the 22 percincts In Haywood will be found on page one of the thud section of this issue. Who Is Going To Be Nominated? Thompson Greenwood. Raleigh correspondent for The Moun taineer, and about 20 other North Carolina newspapers, is today making a prediction as to the winner In Saturday's voting. Mr. Greenwood has made a careful study of the present campaign, and from years of ex perience, has learned his way around in North Carolina poll tics. You'll be interested in read ing Mr. Greenwood's predictions as given in his column on the editorial page of this issue. Power Will Be Off Sunday 2 To 5:30 The power will be off Sunday afternoon Irom 2 to 5:30 on all lines west of Canton, as served by Carolina Power and Light Com pany, it was announced by com pany officials. Repair crews will complete the work of transferring high tension lines to new poles along Highway No. 19 and 23. between Canton and Clyde. Court House Parking Lot Gets New Surface The courthouse parking lot has been re-surfaced and parking spaces will soon be marked off. The lot will provide parking space for about 50 cars when properly placed, it was said. The new surface is of asphalt. iph,. the staff o," I Gossett Garland A. Hall, David A. 3 K 78 78 of Min, 48 50 49 Himes, Ray James Hughey. Joel B James, Carl Keylon, Herbert J. Mease, Frank Russell, Phillips Rus sell, Mack Stamey,' Jr., Carroll J. Trantham, Robert Welch and Lo 'Continued on Page 8) PT VDE HIGH SCHOOL'S graduating class is shown here in the traditional cap and gowns whJch fhev wm wear in commencement exercises tonight. From left to right are (first row) Peggy Mann, Carroll Stephenson, Margaret Davis Ruby Thompson Sue Spencer, McClure Mildred Rhinehart, Doris McCracken, Ruby Seay, Nancy Medford, Louise rIpcT Etaer Semore, Sarah Jane Swayngym (back row) Principal Homer Henry, Billy ? t Sloun oXrne Elmer Limbo, Linden Burch, J. W. Graham, Newell Jackson, sUolZ B H Abbott and Miss Martha Sandlin. Mascots in front are PhiUip Wil Ham and C o vn Hendine. A Mountaineer. Photo by Ingram's Studios Graves Of Servicemen Will Be Decorated With Flags Sunday Afternoon Flags will be placed on the graves of some 35 or 40 Haywood county servicemen in Memorial Day services at Green Hill Ceme tery Sunday at 3 o'clock. Adjutant Ernest Edwards of the local American Legion post will place the flags on the graves. The Waynesville high school band will supply appropriate mu sic for the occasion. Fred Camp bell, commander of the Legion post, will call the assembly togeth er. The post chaplain will give the invocation. Dr. John W. Moore of Lake Junaluska will be the principal speaker. He will be introduced by Commander Campbell. The service will close with the national anthem and the playing of taps. Highway Record For 1948 In Haywood (To Date) Injured .... 17 Killed 2 (This information com piled from Records of State Highway Patrol.)