Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 13, 1951, edition 1 / Page 16
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Thursday AfteraouSeptemS 1 THE v ATNtS vTLLE MOUNTAINEER r FAG. IWu ('ifcffu ScCiiuu) THE MOUNTAINEER Wsjuerrlllc, North- Carolina tie County Seat of Haywood County Published By THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER, Inc. CURTIS RUSS- ENfor Hatching Egg Business Grovs In Haywood v $3 00 1:75 $4 00 2.25 $4.50 2.50 The newest phase of the agricultural pro gram in Haywood county production of hatching eggs is growing by leaps and hounds. It appears that the several thousand hens now laying hatching eggs in this county has only begun to scratch the potential sur face. ' The projects have been established here long enough to assure all concerned that is is a profitable business, and that this county has the ideal climate for the production of such eggs. . The hatcheries throughout the south, and southeast have learned through experience that they get better hatching results from eggs produced here than in any other part of the country. .; It begins to look like we are growing into the egg business, when men like Ed Sims de cides to convert his farm into the poultry business and adds 10,000 laying hens to his present flock of a thousand. This county not only has the climate, but it has men and women who are quick to see the opportunities offered by such things as these poultry projects. Just as our dairymen, and beef cattle men were quick to see that the grasslands on the .mountainsides could be converted into profitable milk and beef.: Haywood county has another distinct as set in helping the poultryman here succeed, and that is the constant exDerimpnts being '.!'.He will regard the prayer of the destitute, and carried on by the State Test Farm, and the , W CilsIhMSndMarion T. Bridges, Publisher? B PUBLISH ED' EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY F1: HAYWOOD COUNTY he Year i ' Months - NORTH CAROLINA ' On Year - -- - Slit Months " V I ' OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year ' v ' ' '' - "Civ ' Mftnfhn - ; - Biifcred at the port office at Waynesvi'le. N. C, as Seo ond iClaM Mall Matter, as provided under the Act oi .. March 1. 1879, November K, 1914. ' TCbltuary notices, resolutions of respect, card of thanks and all notices of entertainment for profit, will be charged 'tor at the rate at two cents per word. ' . ' ' ' MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS trie Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the ttje lor -publlcatlon of all the local news printed In Una navttpaper, as well as all AP news dlspatcnes. .f rr " . :' NATIONAL E DITOKIAt, AS'spCll-ATidW ,',,Tiursday Afternoon, September 13, 1931 i y.n . ..Ix.i Today's Bible Thought nothdespise their prayer. Psalms 102:17.: Plenty of Football For Haywood " There is no question about it, but what .Haywood is a football loving county. The first game of the season to be played in the coun ty last Saturday night attracted an attend ance of 5.000. That is a figure that many schools hardly attain for their top home game ""artfie end of a season, v- This year, as last, Haywood will have four VrfrVe football teams Waynesville, Bethel, ,Ciy3e and Canton. Each will play eight to ten games, and from all indications, the games yitf be well attended. The game has grown in popularity, as well as developed into some excellent playing. The average school today, has a competent, and well trained coaching staff, and turn out teams that are creditable to any school. Haywood sportsmen take football serious ly; as do the. piar .fl iiVlfiilfirfifllif poultry experts connected with the farm. Taking everything which we have here, it is only natural that Hay Wood should launch out into the hatching egg business, and reap the harvest of the extra premiums which hatching eggs bring over the common yard egg market. ; TheyH Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo & i. ... H T WOy GEORGE! THIS IS ALMOST UNBELIEVABLE! I ' .- 7 ONE OF OUR Jgt PILOTS IN KOREA f LANDS WXVuMpHH.' , I A volcano fuels up with $mlZ ) X IMA VOLCANO ERUPTS ! BLOWS HIM tfyy-Jk fn3 Errm AMD tup pi ANE la sapptV , SkLr-z-i L V v , , . PECORATEO AND SENT HOME-HE WHEBE IS SHE ? ss?CL--- 7 SOT AtARRiED AM, HOUR AFTEtf 7JL WHAT'S SKE V 6N6 WCm . I LANDING HERE S A PICTURE OF C WEARING ? J THAT 4 U jl lllll Rambling 'Rnmi Cits Of Human Interest News. By Frances Gilbert Frazier tOO WOUld inin ,u. "IIU as Thru. ... . increasing L?r increasing strength VJ Angers they " time on th 0ked ' A s'P that cou" , -w. Y passenger." ' V Little Mar Looking Back Over TheY ears Streamlining Funerals It looks like there will be games aplenty for the fans here in Haywood this fall, and we expect some excellent games, and many a star will be seen. While we are satisfied that almost every body irv the county knows that we do not in tend for some years to come to take a definite stand on anything pertaining to funerals, we would like to report that an idle newspaper man in Danville, Va., wrote a story last week in which he said that funerals in certain parts of our neighboring state to the north are be coming more streamlined. Y 'V The city manager in Richmond has advised funeral directors that no longer may they ex pect police escorts for funerals, for police are !S-ssr -r, nerecr- too badly at other spots. . 15 YEARS AGO Waynesville and Canton will get $32,000 armories. New stadium at the high school is completed and will seat 1,500 peopleDedication program is plan ned. : Richard Queen enters Western Carolina Teachers College. Mrs. Lillian Allen Hart returns from Gatlinburg where she took a course in weaving, , Miss Maggie Lou Martin ber comes bride of Ernest Edwards. 10 YEARS AGO Carter Osborne is elected presi dent of the Cruso Electric Mem bership Corporation, Richard Bradley leaves for Da; vidson College. Lestes Burgin, Jr. enters Mars Hill College. ' Y '" Fifteen men, composing the third selective service call, leave for Fort Bragg. Fred Henry Moody is lead er '' William Van Toy and Joseph .C. Swayngim enlist in the Marine Corps. It was about ten o'clock Sun day morning when we first noticed Mm He was strolling nonchalantly rlow'n Main street, and was a typi cal example of wnai an. ui-Amen- ume on the ran football player would iook liKe. . . . and But in his hand, ; swinging by its the breeze long handle, he was carrying a very feminine little handbag. As ul-p sasued and wondered if we were seeing things, three laughing vminffsters (two Doys ana a uuie girl) swarmed out of no-where and grabbed hold of him, crying out in chorus: "Oh. Daddy, you should have seen the birds in tnat tree So you see it doesn't do to form opinions too quickly. Capitol I and Inferiority Com plex are as close to each other as bread-and-butter. The leaves on the aspen tree shivered as the chilly breeze touch ed them. They had enjoyed such a beautiful summer as they joyous ly danced in the sunshine that made their silver skirts glisten they had whispered to the birds that whirred through the branches or loitered for a short rest; they had swung gracefully in unison ... ... : e ;ia j 5 YEARS AGO wltn tne son music oi in$m ana a soarnh narf i spnt hrA fmm mesmerizing moon, But how, so Creenville Army Air Base to look many, of their sisters and brothers Bt,lll went . I,. J kindergarten. n utterly. hm d questioning bv hPP Y ( lowing morning she fi would not Ro t rtl! "tJit in ih , . 0h Mrs. A, I think i it was. t told the chi' , 5 and be paddled." Ym " :e arYthrthi uur nves: Todat row and Yesterday v, "cc" wmpleted away. Tomorrow ha'i' we cannot control it tl is ours to make of it I win and when W( hj situuiu oe proud of Mr ed job. for wreckage of a plane lost since January 31, 1944. had slipped away and settled noise; lessly on the cool earth. They knew that soon, all too soon, they Two hundred members of the North Carolina Press Association are expected today for a confer ence and barbecue supper at the Piedmont Hotel. Lare crowd attends opening of First State Bank at Hazelwood. A Worthy Project The employees of Wellco Shoe Corporation may well feel proud of their action in provid ing the special radio facilities for every bed in the Haywood Hospital. The employees are paying 20 cents per week for a year to have the facilities installed, in both the present rooms and the new ones under construction. Their attitude of providing something for the patients to while away the hours, and at the same time, a facility that will not be dis turbing to other patients nearby, is not only a kind, but constructive thought. It. is encouraging to know. of. such a large group that think,, and act for the welfare of others. ' In some cities in Virginia, so the word comes, funerals are becoming more and more private, with only the families attending the .final rites. Flowers are being taken directly to the cemetery, and are not used in the rites at the home, church, or funeral chapel. List of pallbearers and flower bearers are no longer being furnished the newspapers. In other words, says our Danville reporter, funerals are being streamlined and are be coming less public than they used to be. We have long taken the position, and here we go stepping out where the water is deep and hot, that a fellow who didnYget around to visiting the deceased while he was alive doesn't have much business around when he is dead. And having said that, we bring this diser tion on funerals to a close, hoping that nobody will construe that we are trying to say any Y thing about tfie time of week to have funer als. Stanley News and Press HOLIDAYS State employees during the next 12 months will have, including the three-weeks' vacation given each, of them, five weeks and, Qn-e.-JJayM with full This is shown in- the schedule of holidays listed last week for the regular State employees. Teachers, of course, are not included on the holiday schedule even though they are also State employees. Here is the days-orr list: N. C. State Fair, Oct.. 18; Armistice Day, Nov. 12; Thanksgiving, Nov. 22; Christmas, Dec. 22-26,. inclusive; New Year's Day; Easter Monday; Confederate Memorial Day, May 1Q; July 4; and Labor Day. Since Christmas holidays begin on a weekend, State employees re ceive only three days for Christ mas. In all, holidays total 11, or one day over two work weeks. You might say well, the teachers get off for Thanksgiving. Christmas and so on. l hat they do, but later must make up every hour of it Teachers get no holidays. Wednesday, when he heard Mr WavnifW on the radio, that he wasn't aoing to run for Governor He called Madrid, the capital ot Spain Mahdreed. No man pro' nouncing words that . way gonna run. for no" Governor of North Carolina." ' - v ' FULL BENCH The Southern Conference, looking with fearful eyes on the Korean War, decided last spring to use freshmen on the varsity foottball squads this fall. But the boys have not been taken away in the numbers expected. Now at least one member of the big four has 200 men out for football. MIRROR OF YOUR MIND &1J vl imimm 7 ax r -MnTiiiviiiiiitifi'', n i t i . " By LAWRENCE GOULD Consulting Psychologist school and kindergarten children. She found that in normal times the students seemed to have out grown the more infantile habits (such as pulling at their hair) but that under the stresses Of war time, they regressed toward the pre-school level. Nervous tension and anxiety tend to make us all revert to childhood. Will a woman "tell on herself"? Answer: In e mixture of self. punishment and exhibitionism, a good many women hav set out to reveal their deepest,' most humil- . iatlng secrets. But however hon est they have tried to be, they have Inevitably been the victims of unconscious self-deception, since you cannot see yourself as you are except in the mental "mirror'' of a mind, other, than . your own. A truly unusual book, i therefore; Is "Fight Against Pttrs," in ' Which." ,Lucy Freeman ! reveals her true self as seen in the fours of psychoanalytic treat ment Here are the real workings of a Woman's mind, although in some ways the mind of a far from "avertf' woman. Are wartime college students "nervous"? Answer They are more prone to "nervous habits" than in peace time, reports Dr. Florene M. Young of the University of Georgia in the Journal of Per sonality. Dr. Young made a com parative study of the prevalence of such habits (involving the mouth, nose, hair and face) in college students and in nursery NT Does "poise" show you ore well-adjusted? Answer: Normally, yes. There is no better evidence of mental health than reacting to each situ ation with no more emotion than it deserves for example, not ex aggerating the importance or the difficulty of making a good im pression when you meet new peo ple. The poised, well-adjusted person takes such meetings in his stride because he realizes it is not a matter of life and death that everyone he meets should like him. But there is a kind of false "poise" which is the result of such intense fear of emotion" that the person will not let himself feel at all. Real poise does not mean in difference or lack of interest Miss Mary Quinlan, American Red Cross worker1, who has recent ly returned fifom Europe, addresses D.A.R. meeting. Voice of the People What type of news do yon like best to read in newspapers? Mrs. J. R. Mccracken "I like local news and read that first." GeoreeLioxing "iJiie the com 'miinit development news andlafter that the baseball scores." : - . Phis Brooks- "Generally the first thing I look at is the obituary column and then I look to see who has been arrested over the week end." Mrs. Roy Floyd "The current news, first, and sport news, second." THAT ANNOUNCEMENT In the Sir Walter Coffee Shop here last Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock sat Capus Waynick. ,To his left was Dr. Talmadge Johnson, head of the State Paroles Commission At the omei ena of the table was Alien Langston, Raleigh attorney Sitting between Langston and Johnson was Mrs. Waynick. Other member of the party was Charlie Parker, director of the State News Bureau and handler of publicity for Kerr hcott and Waynick in 1948. The hour was rapidly approach ing. Newspapermen glanced nerv ously in from the foyer of the Sir Walter now and then: Radio men were buzzing about checking their watches, in a far corner of the dining room, four members of the Slate Supreme Court sat like sol emn owls in apparent blissful ig- norance of trie excitement. As 2 o clock approached the ten sion, of course, was terrific. Dr. Johnson leaned over for a few final behind-the-hand whispers with Capus Waynick. Then the ambas sador hustled over to a table oc cupied by Mrs. J. C. B. Ehtinghaus. As he left, he sang out: "I've nev er told you the truth yet, have I?" Mothers of debutantes about the room continued their chirping. some coming by for a gushing word with the ambassador. The judges finished their meal. Now the hour had come and the Waynick party filed out of the dining room. While an worth Carolina waited with bated breath, Capus Waynick stepped up lo the plate. Capus at the bat! In exactly is seconds he had said yes, he would not run for Governor next year., The Greens boro Daily News earlier in the week had chortled on its editorial page: "Will Capus escape us?" He had indeed, in one mighty statement. MAHDREED a barber here FIRST As debutantes waltzed down the corridors of the Sir Wal ter last Friday night, LuLong Ob burn of Smithfield was moving hard trying to. Decome Miss Amer ica.' LuLong has established more than, one first, one of them being Bright Leaf queen here last year. Ava Gardner, also of Smithfield, has become the first N. Carolinian to make the front cover of Time. In Life the same week there were tw0 different- spreads on North Carolina places and personalities. Jonathan Daniels picture is in the September American, along with his 'article entitled "Truman Can't Lose!" and a four-color picture of President. We get the national pub licity, but still a lot of mail ad dressed to Kaieign, s. c. and Co lumbia. N. C. Mrs. J. Crouser "I like state news and national affairs, then I like to read '"about Scientific dis coveries and book reviews." Mrs. Noel Phillips "I'm interest ed in all of the news, but what I'm most interested in is World News." Mrs, Russell Fulta "The Society Page is what I always turn to first and then the front page." Mrs. Woodson Jones "Right now, I look for school news both state and county." , Longest single span of submarine cable in the world is 3,600 miles from Vancouver Island, Canada, to Fanning Island. Six per cent or more of nickel, when added" to chromium stainless steels, produces a series of im proved corosion-resistant alloys known as austenitic chromium- nickel stainless-steels. TOUGH DAYS FOR THE WATER BOY! ?kfmf Problem. When Your Child Won't Ec 1 By GARRY CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D. j TO excect a child tt sat what Is set before him and not to leave the table till he has finished his meal is a noble purpose. But to require him to sit at the table until he has nnisnea eating an the food on his plate or beside it is not usually a good way to achieve this purpose. Imaeine the number of boys and girls between lour and twelve who sit at the table as long as an hour after the rest of the family have finished. Meal after meal, day after day, week in and week out this may have gone on for years. Seems Like Punishment By the child It Is interpreted ts punishment. It marks him as de pendent and infantile. It sym bolizes a lack of normal family enjoyment. He does not engage in happy conversation, tie aoes not feel buoyant and gleeful then: he's In disgrace. Besides, he probably was nagged at while the rest of the family was sitting at the table with him. How can he feel himself a worthy member of his family? Imagine yourself in this child's place, sitting over food you des pised while the mother cleared the rest of the table and the other family members moved about. Perhaps the father had already gone to work. And if a neighbor dropped In while you were sitting there, how would you feel, espe cially if you were six, nLae or twelve years old? Next Meal Ahead When at last you forced your self to eat the last morsel', wen if you washed it down with milk or water, you still have the next meal and the next ahead of you. such conditions, will stJ table until he baa consJ the, food served, would adapt himself to the l program: Instead of serving htal beginning of the meal I much food as you supj should have, put on hisl each essenthl toi, or cl two of trierti, us little as hi you to serve, Just so It J Or, better still, let him serf self. If he hesitates to dri put beside his ilate cup with only j tew tab! fuls of milk in It. Hon A will eat this meager arr.I a very short while. In asks for more, he should a choice,. Outlook Brighter! Treated so, this child dually gain not only at I for proper food, but a regard and a feeling thai worthy member of group. His whole outloci brighter. He will be a hap more lovely person at la elsewhere. If at school dawdled over his srlt'.e he ma? grow more coo and self-reliant. He Is the way iO growth in !r, ence and responsibility. Mothers f younger i can avoid this eating pn they will fo:!ow the sur in my bullet'n, "Food P; (to be had b; sendinga dressed, stamped envelop in care of this paperi i child feed himself as I possible, no forcing o! I to him, very, very sm ings, one food before li time, always lntlng mn between , what is offei nothing, no remarks bj about food or his eatltj You are no more ready to enjoy vour meals and finish them with stirrings in her insides. the family, but less bo, perhaps, of children not respoi as day follows day. these simple measures i The kind of child who, under the counsel of a ped1 Crossing dairy breed animals to produce veal calves for market is being tried by a Bladen County larmer, t. a. Butler, Route 1, Bladenboro. He uses a Holstein bull to breed Guernsey cows. CRQSSWQHD PUZZLE UST W ANSWEI ACROSS : 1. Scheme 6. Head cook ,9. Coin (It.) 10. In this ; " place 111. Quantity of yarn ' ,12. Heart-i shaped . figures 14. Devoured ,15. Malt ' beverage 16. Measure, (Chin.) 17. Maker of. saddles 19. Measure of weight 20. Pole r 2. Covered 21. Nuclei of the Inside of starch 3. Chest .4. Sodium, (sym.) 5. Applaud 6. Listen 7. Blunder 8. Hair above grain 22. Former Italian soprano 23. Long-tailed edible crustaceans horse's hoof 24.Exclama- TnTJ 11. Owns 12. Pay attention 13. Submerges 15. Bloom r 13. Unit of weight 19. Brown by . the sun-' tion 25. Utter wildly 27. Ago 29. Classifies 30. Feminine name 31. French city 32. American humorist 84. Mush inttrv 37. Alw 38. Corr of ml 40. Prow 21. Chop 22. Exclamation 25. Skating areas 28. Exclamation to attract . attention " 27. Chum 28. Attempt 29. A treeless plain 33. Music note 34. Stocking , 35. Help 36. Inform 38. City (Alaska) 39. Saucy ,40. One's dwelling: 41. Weakens '.Goddess of discord Sr.) DOWN fc River n. . Wr - m " ' s:: .44: W. . 7 yyj . tOonrrlgbt, 1M1, Kiss Ftum SyndlcU, Inc.). Saturday morning said he knew
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1951, edition 1
16
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75