THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER
THE MOUNTAINEER GOP Nominee
Mala Street Phone 700
Waynesville, North Carolina
The County Seat of Haywood County
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
' . Published By
THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO
vr. cimns russ.
Editor
yf. Curtis, Buss and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers
'PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY
HAYWOOD COUNTY
One Year
Six Months
NORTH CAROLINA
One Year
Six Months
OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA
One Year
Six Months -
Entered at the post office at Waynesville, N C . as Sec
ond Clan Mail Matter, as provided under the Act of
March 2. 1S79. November 20. 1914.
obit uary notices, resolutions of respect, card of thanks
efta all notices of entertainment for profit, will be charged
for at the rate of two cents per word
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MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AND THE UNITED PRESS
The Associated Press and United Press ait- entitled ex
clusively to the use for re-pubhoation of .ill the l...-di
news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP ami VP
news dispatches.
NATIONAL 6DITORIAI
in in
IHilrsK
N IU JrcZZZ
tatCiniliMLl
wje ASSociAnoT)
TLESDAY. JI NK 29. 191S
More Pork Urged
Nui'th Carolina farmers art' being urged to
produce more pork. This advice comes from
State Agriculture Commissioner D. S. G1
irane. as he urges a 10 per cent increase in
1311 pig production, and at the same tune
pointing out that the prospects are for iced
prices to be more favorable.
The commissioner says there is every "in
dication that a big corn crop will be pro
duced in the state and nation, and prospects
are good for wheat. With smaller shipments
ot grains scheduled for Europe, it will mean
more for cattle feeding here.
Mr. Coltrane also tells Tar Heel pig rais
ers that there is a prospect of a decreased
supply of beef, which will mean pork prices
will be better.
Haywood does not go too heavy in the hog
raising business, but with such advice as Mr.
Coltrane is giving out, it might be that this
county would do well to add a few pius to
everv farm.
Blame The Textbooks
We have had a sprinkling of conventions
in It.iywood. but nothing to compare to what
Chi jgo's convention bureau just publisher),
attei making a check-up for the past year.
There were 900,000 conventioneers, averag
ing ihree days each, or requiring 8.100.000
meals, if our arithmetic is correct. (Thank
goodness we studied arithmetic before the
present textbooks were put into use. or we
wuul.l not have gotten that answer.)
TfiL' itemized bill ot fare includes 1 1 .065.
0OU pounds of meat. 2,565.000 pounds of fish.
18.000.000 potatoes. 2,025.000 pounds of vege
table 3,312-000 eggs. 9.000.1100 slices of
bread. 5,400,000 pieces of pastry. 3.600.000
tcoo1.s of ice cream. 9.000.000 cups of coffee.
Ai.d did you take notice that the report
ihowed they drank only coffee just nine
million cups. The guy that figured out all
the consumptions" must have studied the
modern textbooks, and could not go beyond
nine million, or either did not know how to
?pell liquor.
Those motorists whose names start with
C Yj D hat! better proceed w ith care after
imdi.ight Wednesday unless they have a
new drivers license.
After a surprising succesion of deals in
which key delegations were delivered like
sacks of potatoes, Thomas E. Dewey of New
York became for the second time the nominee
of the Republican party for President and
confounded the prophets who had predicted
a deadlocked convention from which a dark
horse would emerge as the candidate.
The convention broke one of the cardinal
traditions of the party in selecting a man
who had once been defeated for the presi
dency, for never before have the Republicans
nomii.-ied a man who has lost a previous
election.
But Dewey can come as near, perhaps, to
uniting the dissident wings of the Republi
can party as any of the contenders who were
before the convention. He represents both i
East and West, being a native of Michigan
and a citizen of New York.
He has the international viewpoint, but it j
is tempered with a wariness about too many ,
involvements abroad, for he is a converted
isolationist.
That conversion should not be held too ,
,-tronglv against him. because Senator Van- ;
denbern. one of the architects of the United
Nations and pilot of the bipartisan foreign
policv, was himself an isolationist before the
events of World War II changed his mind, j
Dewey s Secretary of State will almost
certainly be John Foster Dulles, who has ;
been the nominee's adviser on foreign affairs
ami who is himself a strong internationalist.
Senator Vandenberg only a few days ago ;
said that he believed that with Dewev in the
White House. Dulles as Secretary of State.
;.tid himself as chairman of the Senate For
eign Relations Committee, the country would
have a foreign policy team that would be in
full harmonv and would have the support
of Congress.
Vandenberg now has that wish. He did
not care much for the presidency for himself,
though at the last minute he allowed his name
to be put before the convention. He will
probably be happier under the new arrange
ment than he would be as President with
the necessity of naming a new Secretary ot
State and dealing with a new chairman of
the Foreign Relations committee.
With Vandenberg and Dulles as his ad
visers. Dewey is not likely to go off on any
dangerous or isolationist tangents in foreign
policy.
In domestic affairs he should make a good
administrator, for he has given New York
State one of its best administrations in recent
times! He has reorganized manv of the de
partments on a businesslike basis and has cut
red tape almost mercilessly.
If he can bring those administrative abili
ties to the national government, provided he
has the support of a Republican Congress, he
mav be able to relieve the country of some
of its topheavy and expensive bureaucracy.
Dewey, however, will not be so acceptable
to the South as Vandenberg. or even Taft.
would heve been. He is a strong advocate of
a civil rights program resembling President
Truman's and has succeeded in getting a
Fair Employment Practices law enacted in
New York State.
To him. therefore, the civil rights program
will probably be much more than a platform
plank, and he is likely to press for enactment
of such a Drogram by Congress.
The Republican convention could have
done much, worse than to nominate Dewey.
The disaffected Democrats in the South will
believe that it tbuld have done better. But he
will, we believe, on the whole make a good
President, even though he may fall short of
brilliance. The Charlotte Observer.
Yt Al WAVS KNEW
THE CUSHIONS OH VJT',
THE TABLES-AND K'
AU. HERE
I HEM 5UVS ,
ARE HARDER.
T7-) rtPT 1UA.M
CCHLOE
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R 1W8 FF-aTI'BES BYKMC4TE, Inc. WOK Li) BIGHTS RESERVED
625
HAPPY U&HTS AT THE
B6HT-8ALL ACADEMY.
THAKIX AWDATlP CF
THE HATLP HAT T&.
EUGEWE PAWSOl
WTTSBURS,
KANSAS-
Rambling
bus ui inmiaii niien-M , .
-OfTh, Al k,'' ht
If vein ivallv air looking i,.,
easy way Id gel all laneir.i
come ai cm ml and wr I ( , w
an addrcs.s 1 1 ..a ii ,.,
tongue doing a tail piii It ,
Turkey and sues mjuu -i Ii,1u. i,
this . . . Atatuik liulvan, Auk.,
Turkey. One of our Haywood
is on service ever mere and
certainly have some wonder
stories to tell u when he itim
'.ll!
flli
I dl: (I. ,1 . 1
' "lib J
"II -4
in jj
We were intrigued hy a t,..
quest from the Haywood ( ounn
library for irltne posl c.,nK
ton the T ravel IteaditiK (
When we went throup.M some
treasured cards, we spent several
delightful minutes "day dream
ing" as we looked at scenes He
had enjoyed personally and oih-
'""""'-uu t
"mild
......, Wl
'"o hi Ml,
MsJ
Hilts
nut
' 'UUilf
Looking Back Over The Years
!.- YKAKS AGO
S2.7liti i spi'in in Haywood tor
i'rlii I w oi k during .Mat .
C Mrssri' and his brother.
Kail Mrssrr. anniiiinit' the opening
ol Ihr Smoky .'Moiinlaiiis Tire Shop
near 1 iir drpol
-.ii-;- rroMils are alleiKling re
i.i! set vices al First Baptist
Church eoiidiu led h Dr. Kyle
Yale- id l.iiiiisville.
I.rtlers tot loeal ilelivery to be
( al l ied for 2 cent s.
Wnnian' Club observes 25th an
niversary Willi tea al the home of
Mrs H. Haiiiei'.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Messer, Mr. 1 light this year
and Mrs. W. G. Byers. and Mr. and
Mrs. Doyje Alley have pienje and
swimming party on Pigeon.
10 YEARS AGO
Rev. J. S. Hopkins accepts call
to First Baptist Church here.
.1. W. Ray is sworn in as director
of First National Bank.
5 YEARS AGO
,
Rev. R. G. Tatum accepts call to
Grace Episcopal Church.
Engineers begin Survey on Water
Plant enlargement.
Massie Hardware is staging "Big
Fish Contest". Record so far is held
by SarjRice Caldwell of St. Peters
burg for bass caught at Lake.
Rhododendron bloom in park is
Pickers will soon start to work
on Haywood's 1.200 acres of beans.
OPA ruling says loose
stamps are worthless.
shoe
Mrs. Carl Moody returns to her
home in Hazelwood after visit to
her husband in Canton, Ohio.
Three groups of fathers will be
drafted.
WASHINGTON
LETTER
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON The Philip-1 being developed,
pines, i-elebraliim die second an-! Three million youngsters are go-
one third more than
mv eis, try I their independence on
July 4. are now proud of the pro
press they have made as a fledg-
Charles Ray and C, N. Allen at
tend district War Fund meeting.
Letters To Editor
DON'T LIKE "HOUSEWIFE"
Editor The Mountaineer:
Seeing in your Tuesday's paper
your dislike for the word "Tourist"
made me think of one of my dis
likes, and that is the word "house
wife" that is heard so often over
the radio and often in the newspapers,
Some days ago I read in a news-
ing to school
attended before the war. Women,
who have had right to vote lor 10
mm n punnc. i ne.v are prouuesi oi i years, .elected ineir lu st senator paper that a woman Went to the
all that their new government has J last year. There also ate women j jail to pay the bail to get her 1ms
hern able to balance the country's ', members of the House ol Hi pre- j ijand out When she got there she
budget. It started out almost bank- sentatives. The head of the C,ov-jfoun(i that there was another wo
riipt two years ao. An embassy ! ernment's Public Welfare Bureau is j mnn there to do the same thing
spokesman told me he believes, as j a woman. for the same man, and the upshot
do all Filipinos, that this is tht ; In the matter of foreign affairs, j f it was the man was marrted
lale President Manual Koxas' moitjthe Philippines have adopted a j to both Women. The first woman
distinguished accomplishment. (policy based on the principles set ! went awav diseusted and she kwit
up uy trie v. in., oi vvnicn mey are
lone of the original members- and
Imports and exports of the coun
try have tripled their prewar vol-
So(lt), 0(1(1. Olli) if estimates are borne
out The Phifippines export chief
ly copra, a product of the coconut,
which i1- used extensively in the
making ot line soaps-and as an in-
time and will net the country some ; an active participant. They em
phasize the "friendliest of rela
tions" with the United States and
their oriental neighbors. Klpidio
Quirino, just sworn in as the Re
public's new president, has already
gi rdii nt in v egetable oils. The ', announced he will "carry out
United States is the Philippines' I Roxas' policy in regard to the
largest importer of Copra This , island's attitude to the United
year the Philippines hope to ex-I States." Roxas made a firm friend
port some sugar to the United ' ship with this country the iounda
States as w ell Before the war they '. tion stone of his foreign policy,
were the largest exporter of sugar'
shipping us some
MIRROR OF YOUR MIND
t (: iff
A4.y
"7 ) K V
By LAWRENCE GOULD
Consulting Psychologist
whom a girl should hesitate to
marry. For no husband is as un
desirable as a grown-up baby, and
a man who wants to go on living
"at home" (as he calls it) after
marriage is showing strong indi
cations of an immature mind. It's
an old and 'wise rule for a man to
"leave his father and his mother
and cleave unto his wife."
Iliiln
"Ar yew bttr off wearing few clothes In summer?
'Answer: Not unless you can stay
tn the shade and drink plenty of
'water, for 1Ms 1s one case where
your senasVtins tnay deceive you.
.-'r. Adotf is "The Physiology of
Kan ia the Desert" says that in
-extremely hot, dry climates water
4a1be aU-saaportant Hem lor sur--tftaVBd
sweat the auiin route of
m lofefet decrees, a active
rwfll leee qtsert an hour even
ii'tssyiat led partic-
thirsty, sod exposed skin
atartrapora&cfa.l'Be Arabe, who
tssew saOlsiiit Hilt Trinfflmrlrr
lsslise'Hi! m taessi tonttpleteJy.
Should a bride agree to living
with her in-laws?
Answer: Never If the possibly
can help it As things are today,
there may be cases In which
there's no other way to find a
place to live in, but a man who
thinks K would be "nice'' to take
his wife home to bis parents la one
KfiM. IMS, Sim rMara ftnUteattla.)
It a "persecution complex" a
serloos mental illness?
Answer: The idea that we are
being "picked on" or treated un
fairly is one to which all of us are
subject in our weaker moments,
since it is a perfect alibi for our
own failures and shortcomings.
But it is a dangerous idea to dwell
on' even when there's some truth
in it, because a fixed mental habit
of suspicion sets a barrier between
us and our neighbors which there
is no passing. 'And when anyone
gets to the point where he im
agines other people are "conspir
ing'' against him, he is ill and
urgently in need of psychiatric
treatment
to this country
1 .00(1 00(1 tons.
A large public works program is
under way, with priority given to
new hospitals. Bridges. roads,
ports, schools, water systems and
other puhlii
under way.
program has been started, includ
ing the development of water pow
er. Gold, copper and coal mines are
BLUEBIRD HALTS MAILS
MILWAUKEE, Wis. UP A
bluebird established a home in the
mailbox of the Harold Lemke fam
ily here. Until the eggs are hatch
ed and thp vnnnp flv i(V (ho I am.
projects are getting , kps waIk to (heir ncighboI,s
An industrialization , ;, .,
w H'. up men niaii. i ne manman
won't bother the bluebirds.
her money, and the man was held
in jail for bigamy.
That word housewne nas always
suggested to me another meaning:
that the man who speaks of his
housewife, or home wife may have
another wife in some other place.
So I have never been Willing for
my wife to be spoken of as my
housewife, and she lidn't either,
for it might be spoken of in an
other way round. She might speak
of me as her househusband. and I
might have some suspicions.
W C. ALLEN
Waynesville.
VOICE
OF THE
PEOPLE
Do you think the Dewey-Warren
ticket is the strongest vote-getting
combination the Republican party
could have rhosen?
Hallrtt Ward: "No. I think Van
denberg for president would have
been stronger, but I think it's
strong enough to swamp the country."
Dr. J. R. McCracken: "I think it
is the strongest as far as the Re
publican party is concerned but
they would have got more Demo
cratic voles if they had nominated
Vandenberg."
John M. Queen, Sr.: "They are
strong vote-getters in their own
party."
John B. Campbell: "I don't think
so. My opinion is that Stassen
would have been stronger."
Grover C Davis: "No, especially
not in the South. I believe Vanden
berg and Warren would be strong
er in the South."
W. A. Bradley: "I certainly do."
SOME STILL IN HIDING
MANILA (UP Philippine con
stabulary came upon two tattered
Japanese soldiers walking near a
forest and shot one to death. The
other Japanese fled into dense
woods. Constabulary officials theo-
Electric fish soon exhaust their i rized that the two Japanese had
power to generate electricity and ! been hiding in the forest since the
require a short rest to restore it. 'end of the war.
Capital Lett
WILLIAIl KERR SCOTT.
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE
FOR GOVERNOR
i Fry United 1'iessi
Husky, outspoken V. Kerr Semi
put the same vigor inio his cam
paign for Governor that has chat
acterized everything lie has at
tempted from the time he packed
away 13 apple pies at the age oi
14.
Although he held the posi ,,i
Commissioner of Agriculture In
12 years advancement to the stair -highest
political office neverthe
less means one of the biggesi
changes of his life.
For the first time he will have
a city home. From 1!)3( until In
resigned to run for Governor
Seott has commuted the 51) inilrs
from Raleigh to his seven-iniun
farm home in Alamance county llr
will move into the executive man
sion a few blocks from the Capitol
And the few hours a day he has
spent supervising the work on he
1300 acre dairy farm would In in
rendered to his son. Osborne, vilm
for years lias been genera) ovi i
seer.
But the fighting fanner says In
will always follmv llu advin- In
father gave him manv year, at'u.
That advice was to buv -.oinr I. mil
and develop it into a working limi
ness according to I he elder Si ol I
reasoning that security give- a
politician the kind of backbone In
needs to stand up and light In
what lie thinks is right.
That kind ol lighimg pin- doc
trines of his li i" by Iri'ian cliun li
were the kind ol training Sii.il
and his 13 brothers and gin: ui
at home.
Farm cliore. rabbit hunting
church socials, wln .il tin i - Innr.
MIMS (J
" "''. ail
"" '"'"'"a ul the J
'" "' "mil,;,. ea(1J
1 '"W iJ!r,,J
: ''""'S hint
""'"'.'l JS'iratiuns.
Ulu: M-univ
' il.i- I'lildto
'"" -'"UtHls huiduif
;""! -'in 11 u-ars
""'"'-"s comrr,
N,,l 'lii-n went
I '! 1,1 11 In - ariu-d a
1 aitc and ,i
rl.eil Siul! uajlJ
'' 'i. mm.-' Mhuol
' ' In- r-
( I..I1..V N ,m
J"I - ilautlilrr -
I "lute And i HiJ
In Id Ins hi-i public
l h ui agi id lur AlJ
I'l l, m .iis bin
1 ll lll.isl , . SJ
tic lulluui d up by
i ml i iiw si.-r
' I edit Atlli.lnMritinl
'''I Slate l),-,arimJ
; I in Tin' iirvl step
j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 in ui Hi, FJn
in' nl I'm:1! am Kith!
nl : i li llllnn -
I In n Han- mm;;
I !:; ii in, .in l- laii
1 ill i aiiiiait'i, li
i nil in,- ( oiniMs-ioiJ
IIjs in all) II, Dial
I ii iii 1 lii- s 1 1 run? Mil,
Hill h ! II, tile f
i ii ii i rill I111.1111 i-d a
cl In ,iii -i i.i laiiipil
H In n Ml,!! I.nl
Cllllllli' I uililiu"lli!ll
( iiiiliiiui'il un ft
Uudem
,'Wallae letter Fine But'
Declares Soviet Bulletin
Information m
'Weak Point'
"ALL PRESENTAND ACCOUNTED FOR!"
A3 0641--
n.tnn! j i
"" " i iiwswjjmsawsg- -..J
tI!CBfe'r
,
Special to Central Pttss
TTTT ClIIVrrrAT Altlvvuori 1 1 1 H SuVlrt eoVemiTiq
Hunru A Wnllaep's Ifttrr to Pinnlrr J. .S. f Stalin
for "peace" talks between the Umt-J Sla' H
.lr,lt ,.alf lioillt ill tin- WalUir diK-llrt
auiin vu (licit; waa a. i t
A rerent nrtlrlo in the Soviet liifnii.mtii.il Bulletin.
cites the minor Russian objection to tin- Wa'l-MteMj
m.nl ...1 the ...... .IW StM
muav;vw prv.a vsn..".-
versficions.
Mntinp- that Walla. s Ltlrr hB
with great intm by th.'
article says that t,..th nd
mentators consid.-r the ,i, umi-n! "
and encouraging f.-n t m
1 1J, r it A.l'l.S
peouira. ii'i". ,
"There is, however, a P0""!
..- Th- is is Soviet c.
observe, Wallace s attempt to n
ohnv the nohri.s cf twth
I niS leail.s ,.l
. , h must! Ml
he attempts to
. ... . o..... 4 rn an reidi'1"-
nenry A. Wa ace state oi aunr.- , h.lniti
-While the propaganda of latJ
- ... i. c. ,... there is r.o propVH
o typical nir inc uintcu ..."
for the USA in the USSR, and wh'V 'h'' ' (
?4t' '
T '
s'R
bases far away from its frontiers
WHAT PRICE THE CM FOKMM.A' -P;J
public and government acclaim. It '' ''"'' '
) W-.l 1IK"I i" -
illy M"1" '". '
I re
settlement apparently is not to.
Government officials enthusiast"
by the CIO United Auto Workers a
round wage adjustments
However, many union leader? ft" '
CM wages to the Bureau of Lal., a
John L. Lewis' UMW Journal I 1 1
"Little Steel" formula which cm.tr
generally don't like to be tied t.i "
Even CIO Fresident Philip Mnn ''
settlement reached by the Auto V"
get a wage boost from "Big Steel
contract that prevents a steel stt.se
If Lewis wins a coal pay boost ter-vev
grant Murray's Steelworkers an n tea.''
i,r,-,vi:
n .n tt;e y
,ta!l-!.'-- '
t.m the
.. .,, f..rrr,uU
, ,s belM,1
Mirrrty H
Kit:
I j IS tit"
StM
The
.I a
Navv W'
; the jrt fW"
n the eat W
r.r.M r'
THE JET NEEDS THE 'CAT'
problem retarding the development
from aircraft carriers.
The sea force has the carriers f
ducted successful operations on a' '
by a handful of planes
However, until recently no pi
been found to launch a large fori'
aviation "must" jet fighters
A jet plane needs the who! I'
to become airborne, because jets r
low altitude. However, this mett. -J
a large force in the air. The sear i t
pipe prevents rapid-fire launching aiil
The solution is twin catapults, i i ' 1
-cats" can throw a plane off tr.e o -180
miles an hour.
: rh sf
a c-irr.fr
-fl'.i':'t
..f tadei
ClaSt
i tk 1
Ct I'"1
ft