Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 13, 1949, edition 1 / Page 8
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ill f-i u i i I- ( rTl I t 7 1U1 In t I M i hi . ri PAGE TWO (Sfecond Sectlca) THE WATNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Mundav THE MOUNTAINEER Malm Street 1M WaynesTfrfe, North Carolina The County Scat of Haywood County Published By THE WAYNESVILLE PRINTING CO. W. CUHT1S fcuss . ,Ed',or W. Curtto Ross and Marion T. Bridges, Publisher PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THIKSDAY One 6.x Year-Months HAYWOOD COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA One Year . Six Months. .... OUTSTOE NORTH CAROLINA One Yewr fctx Months lr7terea ai the post office at Waynesville N MH Matter, as provide ui.d. 1 &.r -..w i i7Q November 20. 1914 $3 00 1 75 $4 00 2 2:") $4 SO 2 5U as Nec Ai'l "f card of trunks, w ill b- i hai j-d OOttWiT notices, resolutions o( respeyi ar-6 all notice ot entertainment (or piuiu Tor at the rate of two cents pei word MEMBERS OF THE ASStlATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS The Associated PteW and Ui.ited Press are entitled ex- news prints in Oils newspaper, -t weu as an .r newt diepatehei . Monday Afternoon. June 13. 1949 An Improved Hospital , The word progress should be spelled with a big capital letter when mentioned in con- - nection with the Haywood County Hospital. Manv new pieces of equipment have been added, and a general renovation pro- t,ram has been in force. - Several civic clubs and business firms have - contributed to the general improvement pro " Srm while the hospital officials have been generous in the use of paint and general cleaning. " A visit on all four floors of the institution 5 makes one proud of the Hospital and the " work it is now doing We say four floors. a because that is what the Hospital now utili " zes the basement and three other floors. The construction of an isolation ward. where patients with contagious diseases may , be treated without contact with other pa . tients has already been found practical and a ot vital importance. . The installation . of the latest designed t X-ray equipment is also one of the features - that have helped add to the efficiency of the iiLStitution. The two modern' incubators, a gift from the i Lions Club, have been used frequently, as a means of saving lives of newborn babies. The general atmosphere, the appearance of everything, and the attitude of the per- - sonnel are all keyed to rendering service as " needed to a community. And in return, we feel that the community the Hospital serves 1 is realizing more every day the importance of having a modern institution of this type in our midst. Clyde Acts Wisely This newspaper " leeis that the public m General was !ad to learn that the handling of u-afhc on Highway 19 and 23 throug.h Clyde will in the future be in the hands of the State Highway patrol. For several vears the police of Clyde have handled the traffic, and it is a matter o! ibliv record that there has been much comment and criticism from time to time In fact, some national automobile associa tions listed Clyde as "among the places to watch. ' Such publicity is not desired. The highway through Clyde is straight, and offers the average motorirt an oppor tune to step too hard on the gas. and speed through the congested area. S( ceding should not be tolerated. And this new -paper favors full conviction of those v,ho violate the speeding law. At the same nine, the rule works both ways. We feel that Mayor Haynes acted wisely when he announced that the Highway Pa tr.,1 would be in charge of handling traffic on the highway through town. The Highway patrol in Haywood is made up of efficient trained men. and we feel the situation will he properly handled by these -guardians of the highwavs." They'll Do It Every Time S SMOOTH VERMIN LETS THE WHOLE YJORLD KNOW ABOUT IT WHEN HES RPPN "TD A SWANK lloH l srvi- ----- . TLrtni"i , Bv Timmy Ektlo J fTluT WHEN THB -MAER OF THB L2if30UNClN6 CHECK DEPT, Or SAW Aiu I WD. w . -n THE wHB 1 I .Ai I ani l " . I I is. m, .M I i-fe . HEPM SENT OVcK A UAi "1.." J A jgj Rambling -Bits Ot Human Interest News pitLJ We couldn't lielp bill , i, birds thai wire liavinu Hi,. wondt'ftui nine niiunt; lliinujii nlt. mists of spray being s.aiin,.,i iu ihc watering ni.ichu'.e mi Uu' t ,,. lianise lawn. It was a dtoiitedis h,,, atfernoon and the tun j. 'bear ing down". Capital "I" is a mask lieh.nd which "Inleriority Complex tries to hide. i-i Every day we find an iiierea-ii number of "foreign" eai- i-iimiiu fnto town. States from en-i , .,.. ,ion are represented ami Uu- ,;, -engers in thee cars seem in iiiui oushly enjoy our M-enn y I h,, , who have spent most ot Uu- mnie! in Southern climates, tike imi deep breaths of sparkling an mi,, their lungs. Even those who au accustomed to the hih moui.i.m,- of the West, arknou ledi-e Umi Smokies have sometliiii'; dnleii-m to offer. all ll,!5 !lJ III the talioiu" Looking Back Over The Years Growing Apples Is a Science Although Haywood is a leading apple county in the South, we do not expect many people here knew that there were more than 14.000 varieties of apples. Certainly we did not until we heard an official of the Inter national Apple Association tell the history of the fruit the other clay. Neither were we aware of the fact that there are about 100 different varieties of commercially grown appiea. 15 VF.AKS AGO Pension checks are distributed to 1!) Confederate veterans. 10 YEARS AGO Ben ColKitt is numed president of the Rotary Club. Ha v wood Farmers staged here this week. $5 500 in tobacco checks lo be distributed. W. D. Smith is in charge of plans Dav to be; Theodore Met'rackeii. I U:. ii St reel mei iiitini vju ..." Eight workers are added at the Waynesville Laundry. Western Carolina Creamery is awarded government contract to furnish butler and milk to C. C. Before you become confused that perhaps c amps i-i this area, some of the better commercial varieties are Mrs Grady1,7d Mrs. Raiph not rown here, let us hasten to say that plevosl have tea at Hotel Waynes- there oldest in pnllil of continued years in the " business, looks hack on 34 ears in business. The interior ot Smith' Urug Store is redecorated. Thirty-tour dan are put ( based bv Wavnesville mei chants to dis play on Main SI reel when the oc casion demands. 5 YEARS AGO Miss Marjorie Beal, secretary of N C Library Commission, praises County Library System. Kxtra able. canning sugar is avail- Miss Lorraine Martel wins schol arship at SI. Genevieve of the Fines. Asheville. Mrs. Homer IMott goes to Wash ington, I). C. to visit her daughter, i Miss Carmen Plott. The difference between a tiies Uon mark mid an exclamation mark is probably due to uli.il the answer was. Have you ever noticed that wlu-n -'IIIIHK Ult-lllylA '"' illOUJI! A ".an wj tJUIr u ,5,1 ""Iked 0 llk to 1 j 1,1 .'our fconJ ll.r f' proiu iiilu a 4iu "IlllfS ut ter all. Capital Let By EULA NIXON GREEN are 16 varieties that account for 80 per ; ville. cent of all apples grown for the market. Practically each of the 16 varieties can be found from the many Haywood orchards. The specialist pointed out that the growing of apples is a science and becoming more complex every day, as the battle increases in intensity as diseases attack the fruit trees, and science makes a more determined effort to win the battle. Right here in Haywood we have some of the most progressive orchardists in the South. They keep up with the latest methods of pro duction and improvement oi quality. BY UNCLE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE . . ,., It BY DFM AMIS A HIGH PRICK What is the principal problem tiAa' ".r " y racing high school graduates oC to- i 'Conltnued day? :. . .. i Miz Bonn. " i "The limet. 3 dollor-'" I Miapt. Miss Lucille Cathey, Clydei -yyi.v do you charge me the school teacher: Selecting a career j rn,,f " shc (uiZIl. C.I7P that habv wuz the limet - Phil Medford resumes his studies W. N Stroup is named head of at Davidson College alter a visit Canton I'oliee Deparlineiil. to his parents. The Human Side O' Life ABE course Hit onl made fly-niindin' worse' or vocation deciding in what field to specialize It is a gamble tor . i.i -i. ! Hum ennsiriei ina the fact that lheir work ol progress continues aitnougn ; ,odav shows laced Willi only aooui w per cent ot ine noi- ci op for the coming season. A Valuable Man To The State On August first Bill Sharp, head of the m;iie Ww Rurenii. is slated to leave the Krioh) nriiinise. inav be overcrowd ed or even obsolete by the time the high school graduate completes i his training for it. 'cr. in' dirty she Won't Go Too Far Haywood County will have about S472,0(K) ' to its credit for school improvements when ' the recently voted $25,000,000 state school j bonds are sold and put into the hands ot . county school officials. It is interesting to note right along this , line that this amount would build only 47 , new classrooms, according to present-day costs. , But before we think too much about 47 , new classrooms, we must remember the vast t amount of improvements that are needed in i the -scopls 'Ot .the cquta.y and . that a lot of rnorey will go to such work. a Haywood's share of the state school money sounds like a large sum of money, but when 1 compared with the actual needs and present prices, the amount is not so large MIRROR OF YOUR MIND Miss Fannie Howell, Waynesville Township High School leather: r:..ttin into Hie kind of work Ihev ,ost he has held efiu-ientlv for the past 12 like best is the major problem to, ' .. i m:inv for those planning on ; years, Mr. Sharp will join Carolina Power and Light Company in Raleigh, at a reported substantial increase over his present $6,800 salary. Mr. Sharp has made Eastern America con scious of the many good points about North Carolina. Scarcely a month passes but what several national publications have an illus trated article on North Carolina. When our Raleigh correspondent first pre dicted that there would be a change, we could hardly believe what we read we have just ( come to associate the State News Bureau and i Sharp as just one, and that is just about the , truth of the matter. i From a reliable source, we also learn that Sharn was a supporter of Mr. Scott in his race for governor, so the reason must all be I.-..,, ,c- if calnrv nnrl not nolit icS. aim ai Liarge manv. For those planning on hit'her education, it's selecting the right college for their studies. j Frank Kosrers, East Waynesville Elementary School: 1 would say the big question is what profes sion, vocation, or trade to take up I believe a guidance program wilh ; well inlormed personnel and a per : sonnel well trained for the work ! could be very helpful. Then. too. ; the marriage problem which I i think should come a little later in i life, is a most important problem. 1 The Rev. Malcolm Williamson, ! pastor of the Waynesville Presby terian Church: The selection of a ' vocation and college where he'll complete his education. I red vou my skedul babies, ditto. 7.u- per'." What does the ditto mean'.' axt. 'Ditto means, ji I like that " "Well. I won't pav it." she sed; "if you h-idn't a--et my baby on your sharp Hps il might not a cried." "I didn '. h;:ve an other hips lo set it on!". I sorlei stormed, a-gil-! ten mad.. J "Why, !i dollers is more'n Hie rientis'' charged," s lie che -chawed i "1 vearnt morc'ii the tooth-den- Mis' rtid--an' now look-v here. Mizi Hoan. you're not purl v a-tall: an' if you don't pay me I'll soo you an I yore husban' 'fore nile." "My husband riiiln't have any ' thing to do with it." she ivplide'. ! "Don't keer, I larnt law under Peit'esser Smith, an he sez Ihe ol man has to at an' ter the ol' 'oman's dels."- "Well. I'll pay ou 'fore I'll j have my husband brought into il but you'll never baby-sit for me an ! other time." she 'tmted. j "No. nor I'll not sil set fir I anybody else." sez 1. takin' tlx I money. "I'm a-goin' back with ller- i niit Joe. to sellin' our Wtindei I Hemidy." 1 liked the "extras" mos' giner'ly rice i Suintimes chicken, an' pies with spice; Hut I had to wail ('twas hours to me l While 1 minded flies -- ter coin-pan-ee! NOTES Insurance Coin mi inn er William Hodges. Wake Finest alumnus U928i and Martin County boy (only 43 1 is raising Im salary from $7,500 to $15,000 iu going in that insurance company ... I) It Graham, superintendent of die Credit Union Division ol I lie N t' Agricul' lire De-nartmenl and 'labor City native, is in line lor a juicy appointment . . . Hi 's the man who has kept Governor Scott 'and many another Stale bigwigi on Hie straight and narrow with hi1- in come lax for the past ten years . The Governor has no more loal friend anywhere than Boh Graham, a whiz in mathematics and a lax expert . . . special i: i) rr i o n w it !. patter becoming more plentiful, Ihe papers - weekly and da! an breaking out in a rash of special editions. The best one received tlill.' Ill' mil ill the SiJ l)i-;i in il ul lilj Cuith I i ot lilt ffil a 1 1 dVi I I a nil i-diliorij fslint mid eMcrdmjlj li;i-ll!' While HliI 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 lor r fine bn'InlJ Mine of whlfj in 1 1 it- nati(J (lair, cattle i hiruard flridl mi 1'Cllll bai in K and Curtis f in ,"i tjalailre St CCBSij niilv a trd'tl ((onlii MARCH OF EVENT! Thcy'de eat an' tawk d can see 'em Till 1 thawt they'de never git theyr till; An' when I'de think mow this is true i "They're ahnos' done" they'de Mart anew! I I "Don't eat il rill." nny wish would I say) I'de like to eat sometime today." Hut I wuz a bov ian' so 'twas me) A-mindin' flies ter the compan-ee. fomw Won't A Tough Old Trout ' Bv LAWRENCE GOULD Consulting Psychologist woiker, demands, and grievances lu.vc come to be used in wayj that "fan the tires of class hatred" where this otherwise need never lfcve existed'. By dealing with facts as facts and people as human beings we might escape from the "mirage of misconception and un truth" which so often blocks the settlement of labor problems. fe ,J for children to hav "youthful poronts"? : Not if the parent try to ct Mk Ute children's contem irii. For that puts a sense ot oomrirtitlr- in place of the chil dsoik'f umi to feel there's someone Hrtor Htasi thesMdvos they can d4td oov sV 'wHk younfc wttnri leor aoy a S t taterioriv r's social triumphs. saM wMk Vrttich she attracts xnon, while a toy r tool hlmstlf a "natural 4aV osod with a latbor i ZaZ&T W tMo tottor thw Con word bo a eouto of labor dispute? Answer: Yes, writes business man B. Stafford Edwards in the Journal of Applied Psychology, in as article entitled "Words Are Dynamite." He maintains that what h calls "emotionally toned" word like labor, management, , , (a ywrtiw !! iji Are some peoplo "constitu tionally" slender f Answer: Apparently. There's a type of person whom scientists call "asthenic" (literally, "lacking in strength") who, although he may be healthier and live longer than the average man or woman, simply can't "put on weignt," even though lie overeats ns mistaken attempt to do so. Some psychia trists believe asthenic also have a different mental constitution and are prone to flirlerent types ot mental illness from those of their "stockier" neighbors. So don't worry about being thin un less your- doctbr "says you have good reason fox it. -. I W ATKINS GLEN. N. Y. (U.P.I iScarhead. which is Catherine i Creek's finny version of the cat iwith nine lives, is off on another ' year of providing fishermen in this i area with hard-luck tales, j For seven straight seasons. Scar head has come up from his Seneca Lake habitat to the creek's spawn ' ing beds, nesting spot of the old ! rainbow trout. At least once during leach of the seasons, the fabled fish has been on some angler's line. But not to stay. At the start of the fishing sea son this year, Scarhead was hooked once again. Four persons with landing nets were ready for the take when one slipped, kicked the line and the wise old trout swam aay to freedom once more. Scarhead got his name from the marks on his head left by the hooks and barbs of numerous un successful fishermen. On the rain bow's head is a silver spoon, left when he first escaped from a Sen eca Lake angler. From other parts of his head and body protrude leaders, results of other unsuc cessful attempts to land him. "MINDIN' " FLIKS When 1 wuz a hoy (sorter boy size I Twas mos'ly me to "mind flies; Final 1 ' the the ; Now. I've haled that day! AIo. list a little. I Some diners linger e-gad'i l o ai ds that aw" ul hungi lad. e'er since ipise the way I'laint fair, waitin' PAI.S TO THE END IN DIANA POMS 'UP) -r- The bag collie and t he" Wtte Wtrrre UbBg'dog were pals to the end. When the lit tle one died beneath the wheels of a speeding auto, the collie raced lo Ihe rescue but was too late. The collie Dulled his little nal from the : street and then stood by a day and 1 niyht until cilv officials took little An' when comp'nv come 'to eat o'shag away. THE ROAD BACK ..-iiVm.Ll Chiang Is Done a Leoder Of China, Capitol Hears Special to Central P: rTisuivr.Tnv'-.The best inton.ntioiHt'M V indicates that Chiang K leader Ul iuua. j i J Twice before he quit in times of stitssM . , . .n, intiii.iii Now r.o one l DaCK 10 neau uic 6" debacle having gone too fa, Th mos it is said, is to encourage the proponent a a. Incidentally. Chiang will nut be given toM should he seen ii the Nationalists duwnmu" Tt had Lecii l-lanntJ to ,i... VMierse tiling minese naval and a.r Mt . .... th niv time of the uosswc ' had fled with Chiang Moieove,. it is repcj (jntna - Formosa. m . Gl IDED MISSILE WjJ msts are not me .- min-" or interfeieticf. ' Chiana Kai-shek sues 6"' ' iammrf The so-eaueu j- , Wn 9 DUE m radio control systems has Military experts found thv - the point at wnicn an v,.. radar impulses .,,,,., ha,( h" J National detense e m , .. rcnoile'l to . .UJ promem anu nu - .,,ki.e jm "l answer to it. They f rentt king occasioned consiaerame t t , viation. one do" NAVY STTTNT Naval av.at. with the AirForceis con. - vent further decimation oi , aircrtn vent furtner aeclm,u"' .. fi5 000-ton trn' Johnson, who scrapped the ' off r(cH The Mavy tninKtng "'a,t. tirp ' Atlantic fleet eomman ?k. armed services to pro .-4 WOULDN'T TAKE DARE BOSTON (UP) Henry W. Sav age, 70. music store owner, calmly looked at the gunman in his store, stepped on the burglar alarm switch, and shouted above the clanging belt, "Now go ahead and rob me." The gunman fled. S (.ween ("c nso jnru rt i VnrfP officers were a- f M, 'thinks it might be able to i . W- J licitv given to the AF's P"l .. wffltJI The idea would be a y, ar . , avt v Het Banshee carrier flghtei. ,pven tops and flown to 40.000 leei said to require 23 mmuies ... . .. . ,ir,cr when It -w- .l,Jfffl ti, a Wnrre claims the 0m almost impossible to i'f ready to disprove this claim if;' t, . ..... ctConr,or,r OLEO TAX u"n 1 J on oieomargnio - tw n- .f A repeal measure, passet by W on in the Senate because 31. . adjournment of Congress abo.n jj . ..M.-ti leaders ie .' m.jiiin AUIIIIiuo" - . . jjie it. would talk the bill to death in will be in session. , . ,ij .T .mTtnU!e lead"' W" nunuw , , omniDu-" aid programs into one pan & llar. . bill totaling .i : to mvi H. J If Will inciuue ""- - Tlir)(ey "".:,-, Program, aid to uree. military 8ovci...-- - d jgpw- wr .cupied area, of Germany and gt The breakdown will tfM ltor,the occupied tounSSb
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 13, 1949, edition 1
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