TUESDAY PAGE TWO THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER u,.i THE MOUNTAINEER Main Street Phone 78 v 1 Waynesville, North Carolina The County Seat of Haywood County Published By I THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO. W. CURTIS RUSS Editor W. Curtis ituss and Marion T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY HAYWOOD COUNTY, One Year Six Months One Year.. $3.0 1.75 NORTH CAROLINA Six Months . OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year Six Months $4.00 2.25 $4 50 2.50 Enterwi at the post office at Waynesville. N C. as Ser ena Class Mail Matter, as provided under the Act ol 4l3rch 2 lB7a. November 20. 1914 Ooitiiaiy notices, resolutions o( respec '.anl ot ttianka, a.ia all notices of entertainment tor proht, will be charged lor i tne rate of two cents pe- word " MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS in Associated Press and I'rited Press are entitled es illusively to tne use for re-publication ot all the too' news printed in tins newspaper, as well as all AP and UP news dispatches TUESDAY. MARCH 29. 1949 These Modern Spellers A revival of speifu matches seems to be underway in Hay wo; -d. And it is a good thint;. because everyday there is a irrowint; evidence ct an increasing "crop" of bad spellers. Yesterday in a letter to the editor, the word phase" was spelled laze." But that did not cap the one where a hi-h school student, in all seriousness wrote "pancv" for "pants'. We have our pet boners, which at times it seems almost impo.Mb'.e to .et correct, but then there is always the feeling that no matter how hard we irv. those typographical errors still creep in to mix up the simplest of words. Printer's note thai is just like an editor to say errors are the fault of the linotype operator. Wonder who he thanks corrects his spelling in the first place'? Editors note there's no use tryinu to have the last word with an operator, as they set the type, while editors merely write the copy. You win. Mr. Printer. They'll Do Ir Every Time TwE IMMWIDDYS LOVED UMMSIF WE WASIUESQ. CWN BUT ONLY A FEW CP TMBG FCIEND5 kWEW TMAT LITTLE SOAKEY WAS AM ADOPTED BABY- A Gross Instill During the recent strikes in the bakeries of New York, the women of that metropolis, helplessly dependent on the mechanisms of a great city, were hard put to it to supply their families with bread. The poor editor of the New York Times stepped gallantly into the breach an,.appar ently with a straight face, informed the be nighted women of the city that corn mufffins were a good substitute for bread. To any true southerner, them's fightin' words. If the food editor of the Times is try ing to start the Civil War all over again,' she could not have selected a bettejr. cause celebre. When ajsoutherner sitsxlown to supper on a cold winter evening, he has reached the desideratum of gastronomic happiness when the maid sets before him dishes of collards properly cooked with remnants of a ham, hock, butter beans, and corn muffins split open, with a slab of butter melting on eachj half, and for dessert a spoonful of honey spread on a buttered muffin. Incidentally, you have never really eaten collards if they were not seasoned with ham hock. If you have a family that won't touch them, just try cooking them with ham hock and watch husband and children gobble with gusto. And those butter beans not baby limas, but the big ones should be cooked in the same pot with the leftovers from the lamb i for best answers in error contest shoulder that you had for the previous day's Psrcd byjrhen.untainou-. dinner. ... , , Miss Ruin Williams wins first But to get back to corn muffins. We are ' place and Miss Curinne Wagenfeld vmt ifninn to 'ot into an armimpnt about h ', wins second place in recitation By Jimmy Hatlo ,, yys- ( YOliB CEFEkENCES HAVE BEEN W WM 1 APPROVED-MOW JUST SIGN THE Ja"" stf"' pSssSL. ADOPTION PAPERS, AND THE J ' .fay fX LITTLE BUNDLE OF JOY IS f' v ' 3 Rambling V j Bits Of Human Interest News Piok.j , Of The Mount,!,. ... I" l UT-THOSE WHO DIDMT KWOW SOMETIMES ALMOST GAME TO BLOWSASTOWWICR r PAGENJT LITTLE : SOAKBV BESEMSLED" Tmawx to 1 A CUIPOPF THE OLD BLOC IP Y RIDICULOUS? WES THE I EVEB SAWOME.' LOOK AT THAT SPITTIM6 IMAfiEOF HIS , NOSE.LOOk; AT THAT BEND IN HIS 7 MOTHER! SAME HEADVDU'D KNOW TWEY WERE SAME LOM6 FINGECS. FATHE AND SOM, IN A DACK R00M tD SAY A LITTLE O BOTW.'GOT HIS MOM'S LOOKS AND HiS 5 6A)5 fPIUNU4 "ft is ' ' COW ulyc Ft.iV1 Vacation days will soon be loom-' li;K , t ing up on the calendar and every j ui,dt.r one will be looking at folders ami a,,., . aavertisins muiil-i. ii " mways sun,,. u( ' "q been a matter of conjecture Whelli-1 'ruuii Th,J er us Waynesville-ltes could find a all, ,n t h ' f "i finer place in which to spend our ; ymi d(mt "( vacatipn time: We haver everything I This dot-rt to offer that we will find in any ;t,-r,)SS " descriptive maiiei ui uura iuea- iuie a as) tions: scenery, cool nights and pleasant days; all the eomtorts (literally) of home! itaii Looking -Back Over The Years Co-operation is the motor that turns the wheels of progress. The lady's frock vas the center of admiration at the parly and the owner proudly said she had made it herself. She said she had used a chain-stitch sewing machine and was delighted. But to the constern ation of all. a friendly hand caught a loose thread and before any one could say a word, the chain stitch had done its worst and the lady had a two-piece dress. Imagination cam make or break our outlook on life. Mrs. 15 YEARS AGO W. C. Medl'ortl wins prize because we know of no contest sponsored by the Commun- Miss Maria Garrett of Greensboro, return to Salem College after spending Easter holidays here. Misses Elizabeth and ErUia Gar rett return to Greensboro College after spending the spring holidays at home. VOICE OF THE PEOPLE "Busy Learning To Live" Judge Frank Smathers gave all of us some thing to think about in his recent article that has been published in two magazines of national circulation. We think Judge Smathers gave a very fit ting climax and ending to his article, by stat ing. "I have been busy learning to live again." Too often, we are prone these days to be come too busy to learn to live. We are busy ti ving to acquire something for a time out yonder when we think we will have time to relax, and live. Not long ago. a Waynesville man was re buked by a person who looks for beautiful landscapes, and other things of beauty in nature, because this man had never noticed" a view from the top of a certain hill. His ex planation for failing to see the view was this: "When I pass that spot. I am usually going 51) miles an hour, and have my eyes on the road, and not views." For ten years he had driven the same route daily, and yet never saw what a stranger ob served the first time. We feel that many of us will find happiness in adopting the 'closing lines of the Judge's article: " busy learning to live." u j ; colli Ol eiiii lfcipf. urvdUM wc ino 01 nv .. ,,,,,h oi..ic in , u., v .,,.,, subject that will stir up as much dissension j viHe High School. as the recipe for corn bread, unless, perhaps, j it is a debate amontf irardeners about the I Miss Babbie Way and guest, proper way to raise tomatoes. For the old rhyme about some like it hot, some like it cold, and some like it in the pot nine days old, applies precisely to corn bread. Some will have no egg in it; others abhor any addition of flour; and no southerner can abide sugar in his corn bread. Some like it In muffins, some in the pan, some cooked in advance in huge pones big enough to last the family a week, and still others dote upon fried corn cakes. Without intending, therefore, to take sides in this perennial controversy, we offer here the recipe of a Negro cook famous for her corn bread: "I takes a cup of meal and a cup of flour, adds a pinch of salt and a dab of baking powd er and sifts 'em together. Then I beats one aig into the dry stuff and adds just enough milk to mix it. If I has buttermilk, I mixes a smidgeon of soda into it. Then I has my sho'tenin already melted and pours it into the batter so hot that it bubbles and sizzles, and I stirs it in fast. Then it's ready to pop into a.blisterin' hot oven. "How much sho'tenin? Well,- befo' it's melted, bout the size of an aig laid by a two-year-old Black Minorca hen." If you know what she means by a pinch, a dab. and a smidgeon, how big an egg is laid by a two-year-old Black Minorca hen, and the temperature of a blistering hot oven, you can't go wrong. When she brings the muffins to the table with the perfect brown of old gold and so hot that you caip't lift them with your fingers but have to harpoon them with your fork, and when you watch the butter melting on the two halves, anybody who calls that delicacy a substitute for bread had better smile when he savs it. Charlotte Obesrver 10 YEARS AGO Work starts on two new stores at the corner of Main and Miller streets. Hugh Mastic is owner of the stores. Forty drivers attempt o laTie cars over the 45 degree-XT foot bank next to I.eatlH'iwood-.laims Esso Station on Main Street. Haywood Candy Company stock is damaged by fire. The morning following the sev- , irient ol lh Community Council at ; ere electrical storm recently, we the organization meeting. ! were Deing teaseo ueeause we Habit am Hie hard, df.V life. , h,r 1 mom " 'kI what t Oil lllf o iH'.al had bf, 'Vfi'al occaska,: JMrMi. and y 11 was ttJ had Urn ul luinuer 0,1 a jb ""( mat iij w- The "STOP" M means humlJ forf the rid Local employment many jobs now open. office has Kurt Weill is named secretary of Sigma Delta I'hi fraternity at Davidson College. Billy Kerley is given surprise party on his sixteenth birthday. T By EULA NIXON CREENM Capital Oscar Briggs resigns as super intendent of Town Water System. Mrs. Hugh A. l.ove is named president of the Waynesville Music Club. Misses Margaret and Edith Hog len visit parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Hoglen at their home in Clyde. Mrs 5 YEARS A;) Rufus Siler is elected pri' UNCLE ABE'S LETTER Do you think the Town Board of Aldermen should finish renovat ing the front of the city hall build injr, or let it remain in its present condition? Elizabeth Leathenvood: "Yes. it should be completed. The other buildings are such a credit to the t'other day town that it is too bad not to fin- j fishermen'.1 ish it. The Chamber of Commerce j and City Hall are so good.'' j fur you this time, awful good news fur all you Waynesville fishermen, seein' as how moast of you air too fernal lazy to dig yore oan wurms. I g'ess the Editur wood a liked to "ave scooped up on this but no, sir-ee! hit's fur this kolyum x-cloo-sive. "Why not le's oppyrate a red wurm-farm." sez Roy Rcece to me an' s'ply all theze "Well, we'de haff f have rite smart track o' Ian' then woodn't we?" I axt; "how about mv Cherrv Chartes Camp: "I certainly think I kee rabtit ranch?'' WHAT A MAN! George Coble, who is the new man on the State Highway and Public 'Works Com mission, can have-the job as chair man if he wishes. But he is a pret ty busy man. Just how busy was U ..... Itmt lii i nnaot'snna a f air Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Moody have " , j.., ..a .n in thP soi-vice days ago before the House Agncul- v.up,.... . ... . i rn.,,iU.,c. in Wachinot.in I The former is Mrs. Hilda Moody lu,c v"" ""' Seutt was ild Leatherwood. yeoman third class, against yenow oieon.a. B me. and the latter is Leslie L. Moody, j Said George in making his ap ,lr.. seaman second class. ! pearancc: "I operate seven dairy ; processing or manufacturing plants. 11 dairy products distributing branches, and 21 milk - receiving plants in the State of Florida, Geor gia, South Carolina, Virginia, West j 0ne time, he m Virginia, Pennsylvania, and North to carry his J Carolina. These dairy - product good housewiii plants employ auoui i,uu persons, This is about Howdy, fokes! I've got good news like he cluz when he starts V journ ruart. then sed, ses he "Well, don't have yore red wurm beds or rows to awful dog-gone fur away frum the hous, so's you can taeh a wire to th' light-switch er sump'm whir thar's current. Now, this wire is tached to a steel rod. 'bout the size of a walkin' cane, sharp so's you can stave it into th' grourr. Then you turn th' jooce on an' ram the rod into th' groun' here, there an' yander an' you jist Nut bad lot And yet so nerve to saykl experitnee, etel as head of ttt SCOTT REQ CunimissioMil some of tie al thought liintiJ devices for kee; before the piu often took tit: himbastings gf nut catch k'i and process the daily milk supply of about-10.000 dairy farmers. "Moreover, I am ar. actual farm er with 2,100 acres and am present ly milking about 250 purebred Guernsey cows. The total purebred animals on my farm 'number ap proximately 600 head ... I will manufacture between 5,000,000 and 6.000,000 pounds of butter per year. At present values, this butter producer $2,310,000 per year." it should be completed." MIRROR OF YOUR MIND j? rzitf?m - v' -1 run n n .i 7 By LAWRENCE GOULD Consulting Psychologist you to feel secure will relief it. Because most of tts have never since felt as secure as we did in mother's arms, the average person finds relief from sleeptcsmess in whatever Makes him ; feel he's back there again: quiet, warmth, food, or the ' presence of some loved and trusted person. ts a "laiy" adolecii mentally ill? Answer: That depends on what he's "lazy" about and why. Lack of interest in school wori, for ex ample, may be due to childishness, poor teaching, " rebellion against authority, or a feeling of not hav ing been accepted by his school mates. But an adolescent who has not found anything at all at which hell- "work his head .off" 4ike -starting a club, or i getting the "gym" read for a dance needs physical or mental treatment. A It rhere cure for Insomnia? " Answer: None that works for everybody. Unless it is due to- or ganie illness, inability te sleep comes from a sense of insecurity Healthy len-ager ought to be bo-. which will not let you "relax" be- full of enersr that his parents' cause 'you 'must' been cuard aais problem is to kelp hiaa d xegainet some' real or imaginary i , depends largely ou how promptly a outlet to It. , . , ::-d";OmageiyaiKi anything tha H helps " they are given. Do people-fudged "intone" ? often gel well? Answer: Much more often than statistics have, appeared -to show, say members of the staff ol War ren State Hospital, Warren, Pa. Figures usually given, out have been misleading because 'they have not distinguished between new and chronic cases. At- Warren Hospital, fifty-eight pe cent-of all "new admissions" improvteoough to be discharged,' evert' though ; they cannot all be called "cured" , ' coir.pletely. An important point is , that -the' success of th newer forms of treatment for' psychosis I). F. Whitman: "I think they should leave that space there for the present, and then eventually tear the whole building down and erect a new Municipal building that would be a credit to Waynes ville and Haywood county." Miss Grace West: "Yes, 1 think it should be completed.'' "Too fur away." sez Roy. "Hit don't perdooce good rabbits an', tharfore, I'de put it in cheep,' I kontinude. Then me an' Roy got down t' bizness de-tales, agrcein' on ever -thing 'cept the matter o' diggin' the wurms. "You're younger an' hole lot more soople than I am, Roy." sez 1. so s pose you dig in wurms. an I I'll ketch 'em an put 'em in tans. Mrs. Lillian Hart: "I do think it , I have a awful week back. Besides should be finished. The city always I that wood be a hole lot eazier on wants to make a good appearance you than trampin' way back, onto and the empty space doesn't look theze mt sides a ter a still. good." Bill Hollingsworth: " It would, certainly improve the looks of the street if the building was completed." Theodore McCracken: "Certainly it should be completed in some way." E. J. Lllius: "If they have the finances, I think the city should complete the building. The Cham ber of Commerce is so splendidly located now that the rest of the building should be in keeping with the Chamber of Commerce and the City Hall." Roy Parkman: "By all means complete the building. The rental income would be quite an item, be sides the attractive appearance of the building." Letters To The Editor "I kaint dig em all." sez Row At this p'inl Shurf Welch slept up. "What is it you fellers kaint agree on?", he axt. "On whooze f dig th' red wurms on our " I got that fur when Roy shuck hiz lied at me I wuz 'bout f let out th' sekrit. "Well if you-uns air tawkin' bout dlggin' red wurms. you don't haff t' do that enny Tnore: thar's a 100 times better way n' that." But the Shurf woodn't tell what the way wuz onless we tol" him our sekrit; so we 'greed f let the Shurf in on th' deal. "Now. x-splain." sez Roy, Shurf sorter frowned a little one. see me wu ... m. o.m. e , from mv company alone returns to gus em in ni. , m Lood me an Roy bowth keep up a-ketchin".'". I axt. "Well, mayby," replide the Shurf. "depen's on whether you have a rale good crop or not. also on kind o' seed." Course this is t' be a close corp'ra-shun. but if thar's enny Mt.neer reedurs what have some rale good red wurni-farm land t' leese, we wood konsider takin' in one more pardner. Yores fur sucksess in ennything an' ever'thing ye ondertake. Uncle Abe. which lie mild li'iliuted over plained that i and her I York and iUiJ (jus hotel tbttl meals at this in were served II cake the Nnl tasted. Dack home, would write fc iContM MARCH OF EVENTS i Firing On Ft. Sumter To Be Re-enacted CHARLESTON, S. C. (UP) The I firing on Ft. Sumter, spark that set off the Civil War, will be re enacted in fireworks April 20 dur- I ing the Charleston azalea festival The display will be staged at ' the point of the famous Batten Models of Fts Sumter and John son will be constructed on small ships and moved in close to shore The actual battle was fought on April 12, 1861. Sponsors hope that the sham battle will develop ulti mately into a pageant such as the Lost Colony show in North Carolina. HARBINGERS OF SPRING SOME FACTS ON RURAL. ELEC TRIFICATION IN HAYWOOD Editor The Mountaineer: Your editorial, "Design For Bet ter Living," which appeared in the March 18 edition of the Waynes ville Mountaineer prompts me to apologize for negligence. Had we kept you abreast with what our Company is doing toward extend ing: electric yService to the rtrral areas of Haywood County, I am sure R.KA. would not have gotten credit for- having done the job singlehandedly. " Immediately "after reading the editorial, I consulted our rural electrification department and found that as of December 31, 1948, 6910 rural residents of . Haywood County Wpre receiving electric service. Of that number, 2,746, or approximately '40 per cent of the (Continued on page three) Truhion May Hove to Take I EittnhM Compromiie On Labor Law I May Bill Special to Cental Puss wrASmNGTON Congressional observers M tt President Truman's lashing of Congress w Taft-Hartley Labor Act sooner, the chief exec accept a compromise law, or veto it. Bettlne: is that the law which conies out oi cry from the administration's original proposal; j to the Taft-Hartley Act. It looks like the House will pass the admia fcnr. It Is a different story in The ultimate product of a may be pretty distasteful ty manded outright repeal of W paigned on such a pledge- One of the top Democratic .. ..... i .... -i.lont 111 aicts- tnai me jjiciu kin naotprt His reason! prefer any act to the present 1itin L. Lewis'" Journal has declared that is tO be consistent with w"! m. rnvrimrIOAL SELF" Pretidsrtt Trumaii Truman's blast at Taft Har ' treti all the otlier major r" program. The president's Senate majority W Illinois, believes he has -a solution of the situao Congress still far front legislative action after of a session. 1 v.. T i. ,rt for u uarv to let th Vnomhm "pet the speeches oil "adjourn for a month and let the committees fi The maforitv leader noints out that many ri stand law-making procedure, which involve i "i viewpoints before various committee m . . L:nt man Cfiva InfurmiiMK nn fill i,l. nf a suui' - .. Lucas said that, In tiew of widespread w J v-ongresstons' SlwvnesS, he cnecneu v ,w1 aii me commmees are ousy. w.- - & .. ....j. ...,i for tw pvaaiuiy can io ges jegiBiauon EISENHOWER- V'DOWSLAS-Some are determined W Seek-ndminStion of G th fifw hi.i,i.tii Muniiti! in 1952 10 ' of five suceessiV:defeatfrom their nfri.J Many Itey JDifimdcratS. cerUin that r." another term, rf ' preparing: to counter Court JusUce. William Oi Douglas Thus the nolitlcat tomtoms are ,, three and at halt years before the nation j i. ...... a ,,nnredictl"' vycii roun an uiiiuni -In hiatnrv .M' j i,rtu'er 0" The -Republicans believe that Bisenho' s Columbia university president while tf military matters, would consent to .-i they point out. if there is no "hot, shoot" t Friends of, Douglas. believe the "mnr than urllKo a k DclllOCrfltl1- , ui , ...... ....... ,s w u r.. 'ceW now, and they contend he would be rtf party. Hs U already the;"darling trtlbi .would ,(nn frm th i0""1-