Co The Waynesville people Published Twice-a-Weefc Every Tuesday and Friday OUNTAINEER jfl miles of Ltheir iae"' cente' Published Twice-A-Week In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance Of The Great Smoky Mountains National Park 77 EIGHT PAGES United Press and Associated Press News NO. WAYNESVILLE, N. C. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1948 $3.00 In Advance In Haywood and Jackson Counties Hurt As Car Is Completely Demolished ppDe (Drop Mrftlhi "-.ih!,.-. I I'.-isir.is 220 S Kirst m n rrr IV. Jrhairmaii of the of Elections pre- that Haywood k 14,000 votes in ion on November bod cast over 11,- llections met here and made last (he coming eler- ballnts are here, lots will soon be Ll bp ab.enl from le on November 2 ;et ballot by mak- Sn person to the office Applica- fc by a close rela- said. ludents registered to college and d to vole almost ? coming election, ots are being pre- a short lime, the will be ready for Rogers said, name registrars Bir meeting Mon ition books open ft three following iOth is challenge JfACKWKLls P ENGLAND fckwelt received ot the death of frank Blackburn. ftaown. England. Market ;n Mondav i wtion 52c to 55c 20-28c 15c 10c 32-36c t 2.00 to 2.25 lbs- 235 to 2.65 17,in to 19.25 22.00 to 24.75 2B.n() In 30.00 2301) 0 2g 50 '7 00 to 22.25 240( to 28.00 COOLER f-partly cloudy f'e temper. Ly ,h staff of Max 74 .76 63 63 Min. 50 48 48 42 m " : It miraculously escaped death in this demolished cai. Ighway No. 19-A just east ot me r isn uatcnery. his of the Town Ha" s the car was lowed into town. Shown looking at the wreckage, . .. I.......... .... I mti n- Vr'inlf FIilis in fhilt'Uti i.f urnirlr. r I I .. I . . -, I tri' Jl'!T IOK I s, njia..n. ' ..., ... v .... vc.ilinati'd Hie wreck and Hub KulT, member of liioli.stu'd car at the Davis-Liner garage lot in Kast 5 Predicts Haywood as! 14,000 Votes Clyde Freight Ag'cy Closes Friday, Oct. 1 The Southern Railway freight office at Clyde will be closed ef fective Friday, October 1, A. W. St. Clair, division freight superin tendent, revealed yesterday. C. B. Nelon, Sr , has served as agent in Clyde for the past few years. Mr. St. Clair stated that Clyde will be operated as a pre-pay sta tion for car-load and less car-load shipments in the future. The governmening agency will be located at Canton for account ing purposes only, Mr. St. Clair said. Merchants Will Stage Supper Meeting Friday The merchants of the commun ity will hold an important meeting Friday night at the Towne House at seven o'clock, for the first sup per metting of the organization in several years, Dave Felmet, presi dent, announced. Among the several matters to come before the group will be plans for the second annual To bacco Harvest Festival, to be stag ed the latter part of November. A group of merchants met Thurs day night and discussed tentative plans, and these will be presented to the group on Friday night, Mr. Felmet said. Plans have been made to keep the group informed of the pro gress of the Waynesville-Elizabeth- ton football game, which will be played in Tennessee, and broad cast over WHCC. The tickets are $1.25 and avail I ln "n ,0 22.75 able from Stanley Henry, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce. County Education Association Will Meet Here Wed. The first meeting of the year of the Haywood county unit of the North Carolina Education Associa tion, will be held here Wednesday afternoon at three o'clock at the high school auditorium, with Mrs. M. G. Stamey, president, presiding. Plans for the coming year will be discussed, and Mrs. Stamey will name committees to carry out the work. Among the several com mittees will be the legislative com mittee to work with the state units on proposed legislation to be pre sented before the 1949 General Assembly. A large number of Haywood teachers are expected to attend. Redmond Penland of Waukegan, HI., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Penland, ip Clyde. when it crashed early Saturday picture by Ingram s Studio was w rivr,i, . nuuniiuii uvmiiitr the police force. Hundreds have Waynesville. Three Hurt As Car Leaves Road Near Balsam Hatchery Two men remain in the Hay wood County Hospital, while the third has been dismissed, following a serious accident near Balsam early Saturday morning. Lloyd Cogdill. 25, of Balsam, driver of the car received head injuries, and the Haywood County Hospital re ported Monday noon his condition was good. His nephew, Willard Cogdill, 17, received serious chest wounds, and his condition was re ported as fair. The third occupant. Charles Cogdill, 15, was dismissed from the hospital a,fter receiving treatment. Patrolrnnn Lonnie Bishop, who investigated the accident, said the car ran 218 feet on a steep bank after leaving the highway, struck a rock, which hurled the car in the air high" enough to skin a limb 12-feet off the ground. The car then turned over into a tree. Mechanics In towing the car In said it was the most completely demolished car they had ever seen. The car was pulled down the mid dle of the highway, since no doors could be closed. Funeral Services For Mrs. Cogdill Set For 2 O'Clock Mrs. Ora Wood Cogdill, 29, wife of Steve Cogdill of Waynesville, died Sunday at a local hospital following a short illness. Funeral services will be conduct ed at Rocky Branch Baptist church in Aliens Creek, Tuesday after noon at 2 o'clock. Interment will be in the Buchanan cemetery. Surviving are the husband; two sons, Wade and Robert Hugh; the parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wood of the Aliens Creek section; four brothers. Dallas, Roy, and Lester Wood of Waynesville, R.F.D. No. 1, and Coy Wood of Weaverville; four sisters, Mrs. James Everett Underwood of Waynesville, Mrs. Sam Knight of Hazelwood. Mrs. Harold Keever of California and Miss Merill Wood of the home. 17 Arrested Here For Being Drunk Waynesville police arrested 11 people on charges of public drunk enness Saturday and Saturday night. Chief Orville Noland said. The total number of arrests by the department to date is 71, he said. Wade McDaniel, deputy sheriff, said the sheriff's department, and highway patrol arrested six on charges of being drunk over the week-end. W. Kerr Scott Due Here For Brief Visit Today W. Kerr Scott, Democratic nomi nee for governor, is expected to make a brief visit here this morn ing enroute to Cullowhee, where he is to make an address at 11 o'clock. Mr. Scott spent Monday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Gwyn. Mr. Scott was among the many political leaders attending the 12th ' district rally in Asheville last night. Ferguson Calf Wins In Junior Dairy Show Here A junior Guernsey yearling, own ed by Johnnie Mac Ferguson, was crowned grand champion of the Haywood County Junior Dairy Show staged yesterday morning at the court house parking lot. The reserve championship was won by a junior Guernsey calf ex hibited by Carl Mann. David Nolan, showing an Ayrshire calf, captured the showmanship award. G. D. White, manager of Sky- brook Farms, Hendersonville, serv ed as judge of the calf show which was sponsored by the Haywood County Milk Producers Association and the Waynesville Chamber of Commerce. The ribbon winners in the junior yearling class were Johnnie Mac Ferguson, blue; Massie Os borne, red; and Richard Hannah. white. Rowena Robinson was awarded a red ribbon in the senior yearling class. In the Junior Guernsey calf class Carl Mann, James Williamson, and Harley Caldwell were awarded blue ribbons. Other ribbon winners were Junette Leopard, white; Jack Chas on, red; and Massie Osborne, red In the senior calf Guernsey show the ribbon winners included Blount Osborne, redand white; Jack Rath bone, white; Nancy Paston. white, and James Roy Greene, red. Peggy Noland was awarded blue and red ribbons in the senior Jersey calf class. In the two-year-old Jersey class, Carl Green, Jr., was awarded a red ribbon. Pete Nolan received a white ribbon in the three-year-old Guern sey class. In the Ayrshire show David Noland received two red rib bons. Immediately after the dairy show - There, the 22 calfs participating in the event were taken to Asheville to take part in the District Junior Dairy Show which will be held at Planters Warehouse this morning starting at 10 o'clock. Several members of the Haywood county 4-H and F.F.A. attended a dairy banquet in Asheville last night. Dr. Robert B. House, chan cellor, at the University of North Carolina, addressed the large gath ering. In yesterday's junior dairy show here. Dave Felmet welcomed the contestants on behalf of the Cham ber of Commerce. Howard Clapp. director of the experiment station, represented the Milk Producers As sociation. State Employees Group Headed By Former Local Man Mnson P. Swearingen, formerly of Waynesville, and now of Raleigh, has been re-elected president of the State Employees association. The group just held their annual convention, and decided to present to the 1949 General Assembly a proposal for a separate director of state personnel. Under the bill drafted by an as sociation committee and approved Saturday at its annual convention, state employes would be removed from the administration of the state budget bureau. The proposed personnel director would be in charge of all state employes ex cept teachers. Driver Damages Man's Car; Buys Him Another J. Frank Caldwell was fined $106, and had his drivers lic ense revoked In mayor's court in Hazelwood, on charges of driv ing while drunk. The charges were the outgrowth of a wreck in Hazelwood. In which the Cald well car severely damaged a Model A Ford driven by James Guy Lannlng. Patrolman Lonnie Bishop said that Caldwell bought Lanninr another ear to cover the damag es done. Farm And Cattle Exhibits To Be Shown More than 150 veteran farmers, and members of 4-H clubs and FFA boys are pushing to completion plans for the two-day exhibit of crops and livestock at the high School on Friday and Saturday of this week. The exhibits will be on display at the FFA building, Veterans Shop Feature Writer V WW M f iwnw 'pin MISS LUCILE CATIIKY. of Clyde. is writing a scries of features for The Mountaineer Miss Cat hey is a member of t he Clyde school fa culty this year, and for the last three years has been actively en gaged in newspaper woik. After graduating from the University of North Carolina she was society edi tor of The Daily Record, Hickory, for a year, and then went to The Daily News, Greensboro, for two years, and was a member of the staff when she began leaching at Clyde this fall. She resigned her position in Greensboro in order to be with her mother. Mrs. Thad Cathey, at Clyde. Methodists In High Point For Conference Practically every Melbodist min ister in the county, together with a large group of lay leaders, are in High Point today attending the an nual conference The delegation from Haywood. led by Dr. C. N. Clark, district superintendent, will have a good re port to make In the conference. Several building projects are underway in the county, and one or two churches are building new parsonages Dr. Clark said that he did notjard Inman. Cecil; W. K. Green, expect many changes would he j Tines Creek; C. F. Worley. Beaver, made in t he pastorales in I his coun- I dam: S. W. Chambers. Iron Duff; ty. A number of changes were made !(). M Hampton, Beaverdam; Ar last year, and some of the larger i thur Cagle. Jonathan; G. B. Hogan, churches have bad their present iron DufT; T. T. Noland, Crabtree; pastors only one year ij(x I'less, East Fork; Harry Win- The appointments will be read ! ncr. Beaverdam. Friday afternoon, it was said I , Funeral Services Held Saturday For Mrs. Earl Smith Funeral services for Mrs Cathy Smith. 19. wife of Karl Smith. wbo,ncus raf, killed by bear hunters died of polio Thursday morning in j,s( w,.ek. The hunters, Mr. Jenk an Asheville hospital, were held at jns sajd are training their dogs, 4 p.m. Saturday in Bon-A-Vent ure an(1 np ,j0gs took after the black cemetery, with the Rev. C. 11. ,.alf which was shot in the dark. Green officiating. Mrs. Smith at the tune she was stricken was visiting wiili her sol dier husband at the home of his parents, Mr and Mrs George Smith, in the Hydet Mountain sec- tion, near Clyde the rotiple had;:ne n. noor f a house on the been residing in California. Surviving, in addition to the hus band, are a daiiEliter. Linda Sue. and the mother, Mrs. Ine Nelson of Pasadena. Calif Wells funeral home was in charge of ararngements. Miss Edith Noland left Friday for Knoxville where she will enter the senior class at the University of Tennessee. Two Days and the bus garage, all on the high school grounds Ribbons will be given in each division to the winners, and there will be no admission prices. John Nesbtt, vocational agricul ture teacher, and Carl Ratcliff. spe cial supervisor for the veteran farmers are direct ine the exhibits Harvesting Season Will Soon Be At Maximum By U TILE CATHEY Feature Writer The apple harvest is under way in Haywood County where moun tain orchards are pouring out the red and golden fruit, a crop valued at half a million dollars. Growers, who set this price on the apples which they have nursed from before blossom until picking time, estimate that commercial pro duction for the county this season will reach 300.000 bushels. Haywood apple trees yielded about 200,000 bushels in 1947. which was an income of about $250,000 for the growers, Wayne Corpcning, county farm agent, es timated. Haywood and Henderson Coun ties are recognized as the two prin cipal apple producing counties in North Carolina and in average years have about the same volume of production, according to Mr Corpcning. This county, however, is one of the highest areas in apple produr lion in the entire country and claims the Individual orchard which is allegedly the biggest producer in the state. Most orchards in Haywood arc on an elevation of between 3,000 and 4,000 feet, local orchardists say; whereas, in many North Atlantic states apples arc grown lower than 1.500 feet. Henderson County apples grow at an average elevation of approxi mately 2,000 feet and ripen about two weeks earlier than in Haywood Continued on Page Eight) Second Week Of Civil Court Is Now Underway The second week of civil court convened Monday morning with Judge H. Iloyle Sink presiding A number of cases are scheduled to be tried by a jury. From the docket, it appeared Monday morning that court would continue at least through Wednes day, according to court officials. The jury drawn to serve this week includes the following: Vaughn Palmer, Ivy Hill; Lewis Coghum, East Fork; Thomas L. Michal, Pigeon; Joe C. Howell, Waynesville: John B. Campbell. Ivy Hill; Ray W. Holder. Clyde: C. Newton Ledford. Fines Creek; Carroll K. Long, Beaverdam; How- Hunters Kill Fine Calf - Mistaking It For Black Bear Jesse Jenkins, of White Oak. re- ported Monday the loss of a fine Mr." Jenkins has caught several , , hunters some seeking bear, and others squirrels. The season for both game opens October 15th. Besides losing livestock, Mr. Jen- jpj rt.prted the hunters are burn mountain, where they camp. Another hunt was staged on his property Sunday night, and Mon day he put formal notice in this newspaper of prosecution of all parties now found on his lands, or that of his father. W. C. Jenkins. Two Day Tour Of Forests Starts Wednesday A. M. A two-day tour of the Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests will begin Wednesday, with a group of civic leaders of the area, in cluding Rep. Monroe M. Redden of Hendersonville, and Hep. Joseph R. Bryson, of Greenville, S. C, mak ing the trip. Forestry officials will lead the party on the Inspection tour. The tour will end Thursday at Topton about 3:30. The two forests cover an area of 852.602 acres. Apple Picking -mm This is a typical apple harvest scene in Haywood thrse d.ijs, as the peak is expected to be reached within a few days, as some 300.000 bushels will be harvested This picture was made in Barber's Orchard by Ingram's Studio. Fire Brigade Unit Will Give Demonstration Here Bethel Boy Has Polio; 10th Case The Health Department has re ported the lOtli rase of polio In Haywood, on Route 2, Canton. A 12-year-old hoy, a sludrnt of the Bethel school. The patient was taken ill on September 20, and was sent to the Orthopedic hos pital in Asheville, where his ion ditioc is reported as satisfac tory. Chinese Official Here Studying Welfare Set Up North Carolina is one of four stales whose public welfare pro grams are being studied by Dr Fan Ting-Chiu. commissioner of social and political affairs of the National Planning board of the Chinese Nationalist government. Haywood is one of the six coun ties in North Carolina that Dr. Kan Ting-Chiu is making a study of the set-up. He arrived here Frid:iy and spent the day with Mrs. Sain Qu.'cn. superintendent of Welfare, and Miss Victoria Bell, field representative He was shown the program here in Haywood, and consulted with the eight members of the local staff about different phases of the work Hjywood was selected as one of the six North Carolina counties by slate authorities in Raleigh, as among the counties whose pro- grams together provide a coinpre- hensive picture of welfare work in the state The three other slates that Dr Kan will veil as Massachusetts. Wisconsin and California The four states, Dr I an revealed, were suggested to him for study by off rials of the federal Security Council agency in Washington. North Carolina and Massachusetts are pioneers in the field of ad ministration of welfare work by the states and Wisconsin and Califor nia have programs offering novel and important phases, it was point ed out. The Chinese official who has 1 studied in this country at Yale and Chicago Universities and earn (Continued on Page Eight) Taxi And Sylva Car Hit On Depot Street A taxi of Clyde driven by a Mr. Cooper, and another car of Sylva. driven by James Cogdill, had a col lision on Depot street in front of the Bus station about ten Satur day night. The Cagdill car was damaged, no one injured. Policeman Jerry Rogers investi gated the accident. Season Is Here A large altenrlsnre Ik exppr'rd to witness the Daylon fire In ig.! in action tonight at the high -hoi! stadium as they pul on a de'm.f. tr.it i on on how to combat indus trial fires for Hie program of the Western North Carolina Safp'y Council. The Council is nueim here for the first time in many years. The Dayton Rubber Company, and Royle St Pilkington. Inc. will be co-hosts to the council. and some 300 are expected to attend in addition to a large group of fire men from municipal fire depart ments throughout the area, and in dustrial fire brigades. The local industrial planl brig ade will show the manv difforent ways to combat industrial fires New Tucker will represent Day ton Rubber, while Ben. K Co'k'tt will represent Royle & Pilkington Inc. In the event of rain, the pro gram will be held in the school auditorium, where movie, v ill be shown. The public is invited lo the pro gram. A short business e:-son of the Council will 1m licit) p, 1(r n the meeting with Johnny Baiue-. of Canton, president in chmge. Sparger Delivers Main Talk Before Oil Men Today S Gllmei spairj. executive secretary of the North Carolina Petroleum Industrie- rnmimiffe will deliver the feature adip;s be fore a dinner meeting of nil rren from Haywood, Swain Macon and Jackson counties at The Lnige to day at 12:30 noon C V Bell, chairman of t'-p Hav wood county Petroleum l"rlu.stnes committee, will preside o er the meeting and will introduce the speaker. Highway Record For 1948 (Te Date) In Haywood Killed ..... 4 Injured .... 37 (This Information com piled from Record of I