Tl -. THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Ai,trtt J fAGE TWO (Thki Section) THE MOUNTAINEER nm street pbo 700 Waynesville. Xorth Carolina The County Seat of Haywood County Published By THE WAYNES VILLE PRINTING CO. W. CURTIS RVSS Editor W. Cortls Rum and Marion T. Bridges. Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY HAYWOOD COUNTY One Year - 3 00 Six Months I '5 NORTH CAROLINA One Year M ? Six Months- 215 OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year, HM Six Months - Z50 Entered at the post office at Waynesville. N. C , as Sec ond Class Mail Matter, as provided under the Act of Marrh t. 1S78. November 20. 191V vAjltuary nonces, resolutions of respect, card at thanka. and all notices of entertainment for profit, will b charged or at the rate of two cents per word MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS The Associated Press and United Press are entitled ex ciuiively tp tha use for re-publication of all the locsi news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP and UP ne-.vs tiispatehes Thursday Afternon. June 23. 1949 Growing, Growing, Growing It looks like Southern Methodists are forg ing ahead in the further development of Lake Junaluska. This week the announcement was made that a cash gift of $5,000 had been received by the Assembly, and at almost the same time, plans were mad; public for the con struction of a $50,000 children's home on the Lake. There is no question but what the people of the nation are recognizing more and more the netd of church and church facilities. The summer assemblies of the churches in this particular area are showing results of this urge on the part of the citizens, and the growing interest. We feel it is an encouraging sign. And with pride we are particularly happy that the Southern Methodists are taking a definite lead in this great work, and constant ly improving and enlarging Lake Junaluska. The Good Samaritans Sometimes one is prone to believe that there is not a bit of human kindness left in ihis cold, fast-moving old world. But just as we decide that such is the case, here comes an example that makes us change our minds, and see things a little differently. Not so long ago, a prominent farmer in Eastern Carolina was taken ill, and in a week or so, he died. Hjs death came right at the time when his large farm needed planting, in addition to all the other work that needed to be done about a farm in the spring. His widow's livelihood depended upon the crops produced on that farm, yet she was not physically able to do the work herself. One day about 50 farmers with machines, mules, plows and implements of all types came to the farm and started to work. Before dark, the entire farm had been planted, and the widow given assurance that in due time, the crops would be cultivated again and again, and that they would also take care of the harvest. We have heard of similar examples of this being done on a smaller scale right here in : Hy wotrf. i j i" j j Such deeds as these prompt us to have re newed faith in mankind, and believe that there is not as much selfishness in some people as we might think. A Progressive Step The Mountaineer wants to heartily com mend the Board of Commissioners and the State Extension Service for adding Turner Cathey as an assistant county agent here to work primarily in the promotion of the Com munity Development Program. We feel that it was a wise and progressive step to add Mr. Cathey to the staff of the county agent's office. The county agent, and his three assistants, already have a heavy program to carry, -and with the additional duties of the Community Development Program, there was just more to be done than four men could accomplish. On the other hand, there is no question but what the Community Development Pro gram has already brought about a new day for Haywood, and it is a program worthy of continuance and promotion now and lor the years to come. Mr. Cathey is a man well suited lor the position to which he has been named. He has had years of expev.ence as a leader and instructor in the classroom, and in coaching and directing young people on the athletic field; he has worked in YMCA work, and also ; conducted summer camps. He is a farmer. a leader in 4-H Club work, and knows the problems which face rural Haywood. He also knows the objectives of Haywood, and the ways to attain that goal. J The Commissioners and Extension Serv- . ice are to be congratulated for creating the office and making the choice of Mr. Cathey to fill it. I They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Y0HEN MAMA WANTS TO SCRAMBLE 'EM ISN'T IT A?ACTShCDcAKZ tt-Doncu-j, WOT KOPPEN f THE VQL& TH& STAY INTACT- V But when she tries to FRy t m, eyes OPEAJ, Its HO FUN-THE tflHEN GREMLINS HEXTHE EGG5.AND HOW THE VOLK5 1HJAI" HEy".' DON'T FOP6ET V-rv I WANT 'EM SUNM 7U-fi SIDE OP; -i r WA I i Looking Back Over The Years 15 YEARS AGO L. N. Davis ;il tenets Internation al Kotary Convention in Cleveland this week. A Dangerous Curve Highway 19-A and 23 at the intersection of Ratcliffe Cove road is a dangerous spot for motorists. Since September 1940, there have been five people killed in traffic accidents at this point. In two accidents, the lives of two per sons were taken instantly in each wreck. The highway curves at this particular point, but not on any sharper angle than i scores of other curves in this immediate 1 area. It is hard to tell just what is the cause of all the accidents at this point, unless it j is the fact that a throe-lane highway ends ; just a short distance from the curve, and ; motorists coming from Waynesville suddenly find themselves on a two-lane road instead of a three, and also right into a curve. j That is one theory, which we feel must be taken into consideration when studying , the dangerous situation. J Another is that the average motorist feels ' he is out of congested traffic just as he gets j to the point, and since the countryside is relatively flat, the tendency is to go just a little faster. At that point, many times, a car begins to skid and slide, which some times results in accidents. This newspaper does not feel that the highway engineers have failed in their duty of making that particular spot on our roads safe. There is no obstruction, and as stated above, the curve is no sharper than many others. No doubt the two recent deaths to result from an accident at the point will prompt the safety division of the highway commission to take some steps towards making it a safer curve. The Mountaineer believes that just a series of things lead to making it dangerous, when within itself and just as another curve, it is not dangerous according to present safety standards. Anyway, however that might be, it ap pears that it is time to do something, since five lives have already been lost at the one spot. Sun Kraneisco paper gives Soeo Gap Team spare on first page. Dr. ,1. C. Murphy opens new Drug Store in building formerly oc cupied liy Alexander's Drug Store. Miss Marietta bride of Thomas I. Way becomes . Campbell. Jr. Mr. from York. . W visit T. Crawford to World's Fair returns in New I Dr. Jasper Morgan, physicist, of n.iU.. 1 Inmersitv visits ins pa! ems. Mr. and Mrs. J. It. Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hose of Chi cago are spending a fortnight at Balsam. 5 YEARS AGO Local State Guard unit makes preparations to go to Fort Bragg on July 6. Governor Thomas K. Dewey is chosen G.O.P. candidate for presi dent in 1844. Pvt. Charles Ketner is now with invasion forces on the coast- of France. Writes wife from fox hole. Billy Richeson and George Wal lace Brown return from visit to Pitlston and Philadelphia, Pa.. Washington. D. C and other points. Mis. Ftta Francis Kluttz, torni erly of Waynesville returns here to make her home. She was re cently joined by her daughter. Miss Jane Kluttz. Sgt. Lloyd Stevenson serves as top turret gunner on Flying Fortress. VOICE OF THE PEOPLE What is your favorite summer recreation? The Human Side O' Life BY UNCLE ARE liss Evelyn Siler "The recrea tion I would enjoy most is a visit to the beach where 1 could lie in the sun in the day time and dance at night." Miss Mildred Medford "Dancing and just anything like exercise. In fact 1 just enjoy summer." Miss Dixie Campbell "There are so many. I hardly know. I enjoy picnicking, and hiking and every thing about summer." Miss F.dith Siiminerrow "Pic nickingbecause 1 especially en joy being in the open. Miss Jackie Sue Messer "Swim- '. ming and sun bathing." j Miss Tltclma Ann Jones "I en-! joy any recreation out-of-doors." Miss Bebe Medford "Swimming . is my favorite but I like all out-j door sports." j Miss Betty Bradley "My favor- i ite year-round recreation is sew ' ing but lor summer 1 think my favorite sport is swimming." Letters To Editor ri tfnTSriBWfc XrWiYfiyifcTifilrv r ltawrence'gould JMM yfJjyJUyy Cwwiltin Psychologist strongest men and women sur vived to reach old age, they were able to retain positions of impor tance and continue to live active, honored lives. Today the propor tion of old people is much larger, but their place in the community is leu secure and less influential than it once was. A SWELL JOB Kditor. The Mountaineer: You did a swell job on that 62 page paper. As a newspaper man 1 realize the great labor involved. One trouble is that some people don't fully appreciate the effort and product. For a town of your size, a plant of your size, it was truly a wonderful performance, and I was glad to see the good word about it in many of the daily ; papers. It sets The Mountaineer up as top in its field, and the ! field, moreover, is large. ; K. W. Deacon" Simpson Alladenn. Calif. THE STORY OF SLIM GOOOIN j (In 3 Parts Part One) j The most observing folks in West Ashetown said that Slim Goodinj was, in their opinion, the leanest! thinest, slenderest, rawest, longest I and gawkyest man in the state, also i one ol trie tallest; ana wnen we have concluded our story, you'll probably be ready to agree with them. To begin at the beginning of Slim Goodin, he was born slim. Dr. Olden, who delivered him the child wasn't hard to deliver' said . "If this boy lives he'll probably make a showman in fact, he'dc do to show now." The mother, who was beginning to rouse from the anaesthetic, half opened her eyes and asked the doc tor what he said "I'll show you." said Dr. Olden, holding the slender, purple baby up for her to see "Is that a b-baby?" she mumbled. "Wake up," the doctor said, "this is your baby. Mrs. Goodin. I hope you'll be able to raise it up this youngster is going to make a whopper!" Well, the child lived and grew always up. to the astonishment of the neighbors and anxiety of the parents, until he attained the dizzy height of 6.5. As a young man he looked taller than that because he was so ex tremely lean and thin. Little boys would look up and say: "Don't you git dizzy way up there?" part of Slim Goodin's parents was when the boy was in his teens. He had already reached the six feet two mark of his father which mark Bill Goodin thought was tall enough, and was going on. The family was measuring Slim on the wall, and before the final tack was driven in at 6:5 they were getting very uneasy "Do you reckon our boy wiii ever stop growin' runnin' up. I mean?" Mrs. Goodin said one night to her husband. Bill was nearly asleep, but he managed to turn over "Oh. you've axt me that ques chun before how do I know; well, yes they al'as have slopt." "The boys tease him so," con tinued Mrs. Goodin, "an' altho he comes in mighty handy sometimes. 1 wish he wuzn't so tall an' awful thin" But otherwise. Slim's parents had grown to be "right proud of him". His handiness was manifest ed on many occasions; for instance, when eight or ten inches longer reach was needed anywhere, they called on Slim. Also be didn't need any broom in brushing cob-webs oil' ceilings nor step-ladders in painting them. Rambling Bits Of Human Inlor. -o , evvs p4 Jl "v "'""''taint,., It was a bit unusual but u i no idea how fascinating it , watch. Two boys in the carh t stopped in front of tht. iillgt. window of The Mountain, proceeded to thoroughly n comb and pat their ban iui (J . , feet control. And in a i Utes we saw them reiumu ,..! equippeu wiiu a sujiset-iiiaii side. "Ain't Youth woiidnm pop- He probably writhed in n,f neighborhood of 250 uuumi , 4llU was over sin feet. So 11 dij i, a little incongruous to t,in, carrying a lady's size Un.iiunm colored) umbrella. We have so often wood,,,,! ,i the people of Haywood Cnuni', ,,.,,. ly appreciate the beaut u,.,i at their doorstep. In a rut,, u,, other afternoon, just at mh,mi h,, glory of the mountains and uki,. spreading ribbons of orange Ma;. let and purple against a ha kruii,i of softening blue, caused a til)J in our throat that only mu, l, wonder can produce, lnvohmiai ii F J 5lUlUUs 'illlf "Sill I ll"4 i utt-p '"ititi Hurl llu-t!.i-', t-"l. to I It du Midi Capital Le By EULA NIXON CREES POLITICIANS. TOO -- Judge. whether they be superior, supreme recorder court type, or of the county garden variety, are or have been politicians. This cliai '.e has been thrown at them for ,i thousand years, and though iIua have done a great deal of squiini ing, looking as judicial as possible all the while, they have not been able to live down the criticism. Some of the hottest and mo.-l bit terly contested political eauipaitiiis waged in this Slate have been be tween judges. And on at lot one occasion a man who had ne v er engaged in the practice ol law was named a Superior Court jiki-v (and thus given the power to si ml men to death i simply because In supported the right man for Gov ernor. Many a shirt-tail lawyer m North Carolina has often felt ilial the political opinions and connec tions of jurists have poured over and colored decisions made by them. People would have more confi dence in their judges if they did not have the political taint, but the situation in North Carolina is such that a lawyer who isn't a good politician stands a poor chance indeed of obtaining much of a promotion in his profession. "i'l-l"!-t lit I'liUI' Ji,(J t'l tin' iimi-,1 run i "I tU-nt t ulttiii tow The I -li;.ri;- dj l-.i-t lew thai jum Mill I! A- I tire j l'"H.I Mi-J title attorl Ii iiule Sill rr i-ro-ped Yancey Col ol Na-hull I S Senal K! nutTS ufi i:' Paul Si fur riu J S Hureinl l'r:-) iif tun "I Krai A HELpI IH'II i- M dealer- Main line ! been un tjj ,'n e up fori In' in: SCOTT KNOWS IT - Govu'iim Slim Goodin was named Jonah by his parents; but the neighbors said that would never do they wanted the child to have belter luck than all that; besides, every body was already calling him Slim, and that any other name mot ex cluding Beanpole) would be a mis nomer. Soit wasn't long until the name Jonah was forgotten. Now (he period of anxiety on the But the boy wouldn't hear to be ing exhibited in a road show, altho he had offers "Tm not a-goin' to let crowds gaze at me an' make wise-cracks," he said, "it's bad enough as it is." So. after he road show idea was given up. Bill Goodin and his wife decided to encourage matrimony; and since Slim was too bashful to go out and meet any girls, they arranged for him to meet some at bis own home "But they're all too short for me." Slim protested, after the third short, stocky girl had been invited to the Goodin home. "Very kind f you. son," his (Continued on Page 3) WHfRE JHE MAN POWER SHORTAGE IS STILL CRITICAL SkM har Mkti Han-tflw't "Wy fiW? AMwar: He should certainly be kr frtodui f fee 1" friend she ha but he should not take tb plact t male U'mti diolrerf of her ewa.age. For one ft the biff est Icwona a girl uat tiara' ht.wMt. mav. flftpttii and twenty iww to jet on with nm- . New cfetHnrtW" f kef f itb othef sex, first on a fffendj,' iod day jnwoiiC basis. And she cannot tiafrv tfeit ten her father because afae-CM take bia love end interest fat granted and need not do any? fbiog a "earn" them. She needs febp above ail, but aba aaeda boy war put? Answer. On the whol, No, says Or. Lee W. Simmon of Yale in the anagaxlne Geriatrics. While customs hare varied widely in different periods and places, as a rule old people to a primitive so ciety wen xalaatvaly well off. Be cause only a few of the ablest ana SKooM en author "write down" to Kit readers? Answer: Never. In fact, if he thinks hj does, he is not likely to have many readers, since a "con descending" attitude is as hard to conceal as it is irritating to its victims. But a writer v ho has ideas which he wishes to commu nicate to others will try to express them in his readers' language just as he would learn tp speak French if he wanted to convey an idea to a rrenchman. Anyone who writes on scientific subjects for the gen eral public should consider him self lazy if he does "pot fc an tate technical terms into f: miliar words Mid phrase. Bookmobile Schedule Friday, June 24th CECIL and CRl'SO Parris Store W. A. Swanger Mrs. Edgar Burnett Mrs. Guy McCall Mrs. B. F. Sellers Cruso Grocery Henson Grocery Springdale School Heatherly Grocery Singleton Grocery 9:30- 9:45 10:05-10:20 10:30-10:45 11:30-11:45 12:00-12:15 12:30-12:45 1:00 1:30 1:15 2:30 2:45-3:00 3:15-3:30 Monday, June 2 7 til SOCO GAP ROAD Burgin's Store 9:35- Mrs. Dave Plott 10:00- Siler Service Station ... 10:25 Smoky Mt. Gift Shop ... 11:00 Mrs.1 F. O. Dryman r 11:40- Mrs. L. J. Ballad 12:10- Beeves Serv. Ctr. 12:40- Mt. Exp. Station 1:20- 9:50 10:15 10:45 11:15 12:00 12:80 1:00 1:45 j&$rmjf v Airy MARCH OF EVEN , n KUtkinr. I Berlin! About Threatened Deficit? ' to'h Special to Central Pi WASHINGTON -The re is a slienfthtmn that Congress mav do nothing about tl mental deficit for the l'.wi A high Democratic leader who h, tern President Truman's f..ur-tiii.n-"'- , ropnted 'There seems to Congress for incrt-astnp tax The leader uho is c ;...,..,i..,i tie ,lul net tx-uei effective nit ... the H ,i-t ami that Congress doing anything at all In that event, ne r Pxceed revenues, the fve & enB"s' . ' - ti.lv 1. W vear. i-. - ,,, monumental 2Sl-D'"""- .. Truman fore-851 ... ,lnlla,'S. hill 'e" llllll""' v ,,. cn have predicted it niifht go One out. short of spending, remains. Congress n.W Jms D Mills (R). Arkansas. rfq"'""i- ' payments This would brinjr ml"1 temporary relief ( . . . " .-1 ,.-iv41,K 'W' OPERATION 0;, finally stopped. ,i will save t'v. : ft) United States aootn "Operation Vittlcs" will nu" : in,t 1 The Military Air ltan.-i-" ..,trfn1 planes were siphoned from W K1 (d enough planes bark to r;-V .' the Pacific and Continciuo - ,,frs . ?Th Kvv will cot bar i - ,,,.,,!a operations to the "Pea f-lft wh( gallons of gasoline to the Air ; 3 Marine and Navy ontro. r)rfr. Tacific will go bark to their r"fl-' ' in -the vital Far tasi. Washington . . . V,.T,- bell1 -The Army ana am - ir.f Li!t i will be able to take hundred - in combat and training mm- stVlCfS High ranking officers in , A blockade, possibly desipned to opposite effect on American arn , -.iftCP' m vr.IV TYPE VAKPIAr. - . , W r-.utr IVfll- I 01 1 working on a supersonic H' f r the rr"' l V-'i" able" wing that may conqo" The United States, in two ' '.,, supl from scratch, has learned trail ( uf ..r flight in rw. nhle to build va i .sr.v arises. Illt . j.cull0' II on tiiisi-.j ,,,il !.ve r" in I ine lougncai nihaiK"1' plane, which had to have yewi'i without spinning in at low I"'1" nJ sf4' illll .kl -ptio ..u,.r ih a wing bum bv pu--"l tin to wtnatip- The pilot win jbJ fcr awp will t wingt'P- I , sDtfi1 all"" ,. thawmg. '"bJrt Th "bite wings aio wm - " uauiics m the thin ir vf h'lb tctaniakc t, Ktaf Wmm - 4