Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 2, 1949, edition 1 / Page 17
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2, fronts Tirl Of Evils LismBy Heazel conie come i..tinn lions. rancis ley, anishpd entirely and e alone remains. Lawful gov erns have been overthrown and patriotism has become the child of fr. . up ee men who are as ma- whose lives, cuuum-t uu tome I by the , from nto ndatfs- iiberali for fey direct life 01 Ikes para" Lcessitat- K-tion Into 'r" d. trjnsniit- lions the freedom keen "re ft millions jture i dollar' transpire to be fcmenn llieir things jcknow- iuntabilil V e i lough I he kind "1 fircatrned I hut d for the if the h ti de world lull relief. Isipn. roil ed lo 11 dom and ta ElTY TING NO DOW PAYMEJT. mm Bnxdwai C. CIl"" " . nJ ! aKiarntxA ill are comruncu h 1 ho push button of the State. Wl, si., the regimentation of be Hl,m and the incarceration of per sonal lierty- We See .Cl,a0S ; wrought by hate and absolutism. In ur own United States these .Instructive forces are being mobi lized' and though they appear small in number, yet their work goes on with increasing results. Their prcipananda reaches into every community. Materialism is flnd inll it, way into our schools; abso lutist and atheistic theories are fast IxTominS.hest sellers in our litera ls the people are being made class conscious in a country where ., men have equal rights; our 1 homy "I government is being at tacked fro"1 every side; it is openly threatened with destruction. .Marching under a deceptive banner of progressiveness the dis ciples of atheistic communism are demonstrating an almost apostolfc zeal to gain control of the govern ment of the United States. They have had varying degrees of suc cess in some of the departments of our federal government. They would now drive on to greater achievements at the ballot boxes. "Thomas Jefferson warned us that the people of a country are the only safe guardians of their own rights and the only instrument which can be used for their des truction.' The people of the United Stales and they alone shall de lernime if this shall continue to he Cod's Country.' It was offi cially dedicated as such when our forefathers determined to revolt against the tyranny of a despotic government and to seek freedom lor themselves and posterity. "For centuries before the Decla ration of Independence, govern mental authority was generally recognized to be supreme and un limited. But the founding fathers of this government proclaimed the revolutionary and startling prin ciple that government should be a strictly protective agency. "These basic beliefs that have marked the path over which we have traveled in this new world are now under attack. One great European nation consciously and deliberately defies these beliefs and has induced other nations to join it in the effort to liquidate all men who may harbor them. "An artificial and soulless sys tem has surplanted the natural and normal system of human relation ship in Russia and those coun tries that have been overrun by the lied Army, and are now ruled by puppets of Moscow. The Com munists in Russia and other lands realize that the world cannot exist peacefully half slave and half free - half Communist and half Capita listhalf totalitarian and half democratic. The people of the Lni(od Stales must be brought to this same conviction. 'We must surrender the illusion that there can be a common understanding between contradictory systems of THE WAYNESVUJLE MOUNTAINEER I midnight : ; 1 '"ndsomf n. M'fevousl-Pi, :( cutes remain lrg ,(; jant P"""edin,he disturbed. All Kch fek tOllr,J 1 -"'"J in the PHuidefrower. ) n-iced $20.00 Down from $9.00 Monthly Display f Norge tbic Foot Models Kcfr'Rcrat0rs at ELECTRIC CO. Main Street STABBED DURING 'RECONCILIATION' P2 !!"S, " --. (s - V I TOO YOUNG TO UNDERSTAND what has happened to her, little Linda Sue Atkins, 20 months old, lies in a Detroit hospital after she hau been slashed by a knife. According to police, her father, Clifford Atkins, 30, stabbed the tot after an attempted reconciliation with his wife, Lillian, 20, had failed to come about. The wife, her sister, Dorothy, 17, and her mother, Mrs. Dais; Stockton, 60, were also slashed. (International) Record Number To Visit National Parks This Year By JANK EADS (AP Newtfpatures) WASHINGTON Record mil lions of Americans will hie them selves on vacation jaunts to their national parks and forests this year. The National Park System estim ates that more than 30,0(H).00() vis its will be paid to its 174 areas, which cover 20.817,000 acres throughout the country. The Korest Service estimates that the recre ational areas and facilities in the 151 national forests will receive more than 27,000.000 visits. If one of the more widely known national parks is your destination, the National Park Service suggests you would be smart to make reser vations for lodging well in advance or you may have to sleep in your car. In most of the national parks hotel, lodge, housekeeping cabins, cafeterias, bus transportation, sad dle horse and similar services are provided by concessionaires oper ating under contract with the gov ernment and under supervision of the park service. Rates for accommodations in the national parks compare favorably with those charged at other resorts or in the vicinity. This year the Na tional Park Service says motor transportation, saddle horse and lodging rates will not be much more than last year, with the main cost increase in meals. In addition, free public camp grounds are operated by most parks. Visitors may bring their own equipment and camp there. Each camp ground has fireplace, table and benches on individual camp sites. However, if you are uncondition ed to roughing it. hotel rooms are as low as $5.50 a day American plan or as high as $14. As for the national forests, it has been a tradition to provide pub lic recreation free, hut this year small charges will be made for use of about 100 camp and picnic grounds carefully selected from the 4,500 total. For camping, charges of 50 cents per day per car party of not more than six persons, or $3 a week, will be made. Tor parlies of more than six an additional 10 cents per day per person will he made for all TRANSACTIONS IN Real Estate PAGE THREE (Third Section : : r : Library Notes T County Librarian MARGARET JOHNSTON Inc. Wa.vncsviUe Township Lake Junaluska Assembly to E. L. Turbyfill and wife. Bessie S. Atkins lo .1. L. Walker. William C. 1'reiM and wife to Lake Junaluska Assembly. Inc. Stanley Fuller Blading and wife to Herman Francis and wife. Edwin E. Spears and wife Oliver Yount. and wife. Dave Nelson and others to J Medford. Crawford Memorial Park James A. McClure. "RECENT GIFT" Just recently a copy of "Har nessing the Earthworm" by Thom as J. Barrett was sent to us by Dr. E. W. Gudgcr. The fly-leaf he has inscribed with a dedication in hon or of the A. J. McCrackens as the First Farm Family. The volume is filled with fascin ating reading and with exact pro cedures for earthworm cultures and for use of earthworms in gen eral farming and orcharding. Part I discusses "The Earthworm and Its Environment," including the earthworm in nature and in scien tific literature. Part II presents "The Earthworm Under Control", revealing the methods which have enabled the author to turn a bar ren desert hillside into a luxurious paradise. There are good charts, photographs, diagrams, and work ing drawings. Thomas J. Barrett was born in College Grove. Tenn.. in 1884. Edu cated at Ruskin University, North western Academy, American Col lege of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery, and Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery, he has been physician, printer, reporter, editor, soldier, and free lance news pho tographer in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Trained for map reproduction in the field, he served through World War I with U. S. Engineers. In 1936 he began earth worm and .soil-building research, establishing "Earlhinaster Farms," Roscoe, Calif., as an experimental center. Feature articles about "Earth master Farms." with pictures, have appeared in many Irading news papers and magazines throughout the world. He is the author to 13 to Beavcrdam Township Van Lequire and wife to P. H. Rogers. Joe Gold and wife to Preston Phillips. Richard Haney to Willard N. Haney and wife. Clyde Township Edwin Green lo George O. Glance and wife. Fines Creek Township S. L. Redmond and wife to Teague and wife. Joe r to Pigeon Township Walter W. West and will John D. Metcalf, Jr., and wife. Roy A. Phillips and wife to W Ellis Parris. human relationship.' "We may have a real hope that another war may be avoided if the people of the United States continue to demonstrate an abiding faith in the ideals that have made us a great and merciful nation and by their example point the way for the sorely; stricken people of other nations to the re-rstablMimenl of their freedom on the foundation of inalienable God-given rights for God-made men." PUSH VACATIONS ON FARMS NEW YORK, N. Y. API An unusual plan for the coming sum mer months which will increase farm incomes and broaden under standings between urban and rural people has been presented by Grange organizations to members in 12 states from Maine to Vir ginia. The plan encourages farmers who have two or more .spare rooms to take in city vacationers on a paying basis, and thus develop a new type of resort business in ru ral areas. The project was originated by William 1'. Wolfe, New York representative. The compass needle points not to the North Pole hut to the north magnetic pole of the earth, which is in northern Canada, near the Arctic Circle. above six. Picknicking charges are 25 cents to 50 cents per car party of not more than six persons Per day. Five to ten rents extra will be ask ed for each extra person, but no charge will be made for children under 12. Get Fast Gains and Top Quality Birds with fUI-0-PEP BROILER MASH Thousands of successful broiler raisers are depend ing on vltamln-rlch Ful-O- Pep Broiler Mash to give them fast, economical gains and full-meated, well- feathered, yellow-shanked birds. Ful-O-Pep Broiler Mish Is fortified with spe cial vitamin sources and provides choice proteins and organic-source minerals to help build My frames,, sound bones and meaty birds. See as todayjor your supply of Ful-O-Pep Broiler Masn. Paving the Way FOREIGN Minister Raul Fernandes of Brazil arrives in New York from his native country en route . to Washington. Fernandes came in ad vance of his chief. President Eurjco Gaspar Dutra, who is scheduled to pay a state visit to President Tru man in near future. (International) Utah's Great Salt Lake, Utah Lake, and Sevier Lake are tiny remnants of an ancient ice-age in land sea which geologists call Lake Bonneville. It covered what is now western Utah, eastern Nevada, and southern Idaho. TELLS HOW WOMAN WAS JINX LONDON ;AP) She became known as the Femine Fata'e of the bomber squadron. Dr. D. Stafford-Clark, wartime medical officer with the Royal Air Force, told her story in an article on "Flying Stress" in the Journal of Mental Science. An attractive young officer in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) got dates with many of the fliers in the squadron. Then one day they stopped. Two men she'd been out with had got killed on an operation Otliers told her "you're a jinx. Vuu carry (he kiss of death." The doctor wrote: "One captain went so far as lo forbid any member of his crew to take her out on pain of expulsion from the crew. 'There was no point in adding to the risk,' be said." Haywood Sailors On Same Ship For Cruise Two Haywood Countv 'mr-n are making a six-months cruise iu the Mediterranean as shipmates aboard the Aircraft Carrier Coral Sea. They are Chief "Navy; Machinist Male Dallas R. Clark of jffajsnes ville and Seaman Charles' R. 6fity ford of Hazel wood. ' ",' Tin y rear tied Gibraltar on May 14 lor a three-day vi?it. then con tinued lo Augusta, Sicily. : Mi . ( lark and his wife have their residence on Boundary Street. - Their ship will concentrate on Heel exercises during the cruise, and will make stops at European and Ninth African polls. The art of making openings in the skull trepanning was known to the ancients. "Unripe gold," Indians of the Andes highlands scornfully called plalinum in the days of the Span ish Conquistadores. They threw the supposedly inferior metal back into the streams to ripen, says the National Geographic Society. "Earthworms: Their Intensive Pro pagation and Use in Biological Soil Building." "The Pruning Knife." and other scientific and popular of writings. MR. FARMER . . . Be Sure Your MILK BARN CHICKEN HOUSES AND ALL BUILDINGS ARK BUILT OF OUIt QUALITY BLOCK Ask (he man that has used our BLOCK . . .and you will buy a Western Carolina product. All Sizes Of Concrete Pipe See your contractor or material Healer or cull us collect. DIAL 3-:21 Concrete Products Co. ASHEVILLE, N. C. !M DO Gives you these 3 m EXTRAS BesftirhM hot Summer PriVfif t'on with i . cnS,ne Protec- .VW . ,... lmporlan lin with n, Z::a Cnff,ne Protec. OiI...thp SS EXT"A Motor whe" starting ' Cn,ne Pts protection of Vai M 'LASTmo rfWort engiJB. hard drives r? J'drts on Jonp- .. ...a nnne lubrica- For better alt-rou tiotl ,1Se tionand lower ml con 1, neW,fXS Viscosity index" re equalled Hign ,,(,, nnfffr duces "thinning jut - For at highest summer eng. TroAMotorOi, mileage b i EXTRA Motor on Extra feature! int0 this Wended a Pcf Jower.robbing neW oil to fight 8itB on engine carbon and varmshdeP partB. Helps keep eng ; m leaner ...smoother .-at P V ?ZLVtTn Oil today T7 IT. X 1 JVfV Ejbou MONerf CHAVG NOW 70 Al tSSOtXTKA... 7HESXTXA VAW PREMIUM MOTOR. Otif sso get your car set for the tough hot Weather ahead i Here's extra all-weather engine protection . . . new oil economy I Have your Esso Dealer drain and refill your crankcase with fresh, summer-grade NEW Esso Extra Motor Oil to help that hard-working engine beat the heat. For smooth, power-full "Happy Motor ing". . . fill 'er up with improved Esso Extra Gasoline I FARMERS FEDERATION COPS. I4. ESSO WC. ESSO STANDARD OIL COMPANY PHONE 344 AT THE DEPOT
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 2, 1949, edition 1
17
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