~ xvuaibvdot? TODAY'S BIBLE VEBS1 That b?t P?r,:?n 0| , ? ^rrrrrrrrrr Editorial Page of The Mountaineer ?' 1 ?PmIdih 11)^:143. jfl i A Practical And Economical Request Of Congress Rep. George A. Shu ford had the right idea when hp went to the House Appropriations Committee and pointed out the wisdom of lining the Parkway tunnels at Reech Gap as a means of curbing further deterioration. The Representative of this district in presenting the facts before the committee, asked for $280,000 to complete the surfac ing of the 11-mile Parkway link, as well as lining the tunnels. This project would afford a scenic loop of imjtortant value to Pisgah National Forest and this entire area. Rep. Shuford went about his approach to the committee in a practical manner, when he pointed out that money spent on relining the tunnels now would mean hundreds and thousands of dollars saved in later years. This newspaper trusts that the committee, and all of Congress realize the words of wis dom spoken by the Congressman of this dis trict and act accordingly. Pisgah And TV Unless something unforseen develops, the TV tower which had the approval of so many Haywood citizens, will before too long rise from the summit of Mt. Pisgah. There were, and perhaps are still many, who were just as sincere in their opposition to the project, as were those who sincerely advocated the erection of the tower on Pisgah. The entire procedure was carried through in a democratic way, and as in such cases the decision was'in favor of the majority. Those who won do not, however, have any right to do more than to take their victory as good sports, just as those who did not see their wishes in the matter materialize. In fact, everyone we feel, shall take it in that frame of mind. A S:ife Platform You've no doubt heard of the candidate who was running for an office that had noth ing to do with fencing In cattle, hut the is sue had become quite warm, and as he was speaking at a certain place one day, some one in the crowd yelled at him. "How do you stand on the fence law?" And the astute fellow was on the hall with that one just as he was on all other issues. So he replied: "Well, some of my friends are on one side of that matter and some of my friends are on the othec aide, and I'm telling you right now I'm standing by my friends." The moral of that story is that it is always best, when running for political office, not to he ton much "fer" nor too much "agin." ?Harnett County News. . Time To Start Talking Again The records clearly show that Haywood has been entirely too quiet about the Pigeon River Road for the juist 15 to 16 months. During that period of quietness, there has not been anything done towards further completion of the road'. Since being so quiet and nice about the project has failed to produce desired results, it seems only logical that the thing for us to do now is to start raising our voices and letting officials in Raleigh ? and Hender sonville ? know that we want the Pigeon River Road first and foremost above all oth er road, or civic projects. One Haywood man, who is keenly inter ested in the road, recently made the state ment that when the state candidates come around asking for support, he is going to tell them, "I shall support only those candi dates who are 100 per cent for the comple tion of the Pigeon River Road ? brother if you don't speak that language, I ain't for you." A rather harsh, and perhap; blunt way of stating that he does not intend to support any candidate that does not first show an | interest in the project which means so much to the entire southeast, as well as the mid west. The Mountaineer believes that if enough public sentiment is created right now, that we shall realize the fruits of our labors years, and years sooner than if we continue to keep quiet. What Is The Best Answer? As more ami more speeders are being caught, it is apparent that the Superior Court docket will be heavily loaded with traffic cases. Some people have the feeling that provision should be made for a traffic court and give the violators an opportunity of paying the cost and fines and going their j wny. Others feel that the superior court is the place to dispose of the cases, and that vio lators of traffic laws should have to go to a little extra trouble. All these different opinions offer food for serious thought on a matter that must be faced seriously. The Raleigh News and Observer takes a definite stand that the state needs fewer courts and not more. The Raleigh newspaper said in an editorial: "North Carolina needs fewer courts, not more. The electorate and the General As sembly each create more justices of the peace than are needed every two years and! the Governor adds a varying number, de- j pending upon the personality of whoever i happens to hold that office. "The defects in the present justice of the peace system and the unfavorable impression of law enforcement in North Carolina which has been made upon visiting motorists have caused State officials to revive plans for traffic courts, which were rejected bv former Legislatures. "The defects in the justice of the peace system stem from, two conditions: there are too many of them and they are paid by fees contingent upon convictions instead of draw ing salaries. "To superimpose a new system of courts upon the present justice of the peace system would only add to the present confusion. The present system should be abolished and a new system of inferior courts, with proper emphasis upon traffic cnses, should be estab lished in its place." ? Mistakes Are Like That The difference between a natural, pardon able mistake and a foolish, unforgivable blunder too often depends on whether the error is ours or someone else's. ?Waycross Journal-Herald. THE MOUNTAINEER Wa.vnrsville, North Carolina Main Strict Dial C.L fi-!?3(Vl The County Seat of Haywood County rauiM Hv The WAYNESVILEE MOUNTAINEER. Inc. W Cl'RTIS RUM Kditor W. Curtis Russ and Marion T. Bridges. Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY HAYWOOD COUNTY One Year $3 00 Seven Months 2 00 Three Months 1 00 NORTH CAROLINA One Year $4 00 Six Months _ 2 25 OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year ' $4 50 Six Months 2 50 Filtered at the pmt office at WavnesvlIIe, N C , as Sec ond Class Mail Matter, as provided under the Art of March 2. 1879. November 20. 1914 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for re-publication of all the lorn! news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP news dispatches. Thursday Afternoon. March I, 19.11 1 licvll Do It livery lime By jimmy Ilatlo Before-tmis is 1 THE MAIN DRAO OF | NEW ROQUEFORT BE FORE THE COUNCIL PASSED 4 "NO PARKING" ORDINANCE DURING BUSINESS HOURS- I AfTER-same street WITH SAID ORDINANCE IN EFFECT. NOTICE THE DIFFERENCE ? SURE-WE COP CM "WE CORNER 6REW A MUSTACHE / nmi"1. *j> r* * / v ? n u v vm ia HOSTILITIES REOPENED ?PEACE , ?ACT ; w m Looking Back Over The Years 20 YEARS AGO Curfew ordinance is passed by board of aldermen prohibiting chil dren under sixteen to be on streets alone after (file hour following sun down. Exploding oil heater causes dam age to the home of S. H. Keller. Mrs Richard Barber, Jr., has two parties honoring her mother, Mrs. W W. Norman of Grilfin, Ga. Mrs. R. L. Prevost has party on her husband's birthday. 10 years ago | G. C. Sw&yngim of Lake Juna-j luska has five sons in the service. Mrs. Whitener Prevost heads group of 25 merchants' aides check ing food prices. J. C. Madison, chairman, re ports Red Cross quota in sight. Frank Ferguson. Jr.. of Wilming ton is spending several days with his mother, Pfc. Julius F. Davis, Jr. is now in New Guinea. 5 YEARS AGO Miss Mary Ann Massie wins sec ond place in the state DAR Good Citizenship contest. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Stringfield leave by plane for Kent, Wash., to visit their daughter, Mrs. J. D. Jones. Miss Marv Medford returns from a vacation in Florida. Mr and Mrs. G. M. Kimball move to their new home on the Country Club Drive. Views of Other Editors IIOW TO MVF. A LONG T1MF. If you want to live to a very ripe old age, there are a number of highly recommended ways to do so, although we concede that some of the recommendations are in contradiction to each other. Liv ing a long time seems to be pret ty much a matter of opinion, so far as how to go about it is concerned. For example, we knew a gentle man in the 80s once who attribut ed his longevity to the fact that he took two snorts of whiskey every morning as soon as he got up hut did not touch another drop until 8 p.m. when he took two more snorts. Then we read of people who claim that they lived to approach the century mark because they never took a drink at all. Others proclaim tobacco as life-extended, and still others insist that it is life shortening Some say red meat shortens life, othere say it leng-1 thens the span. With fjuch contradictions, it is difficult to reach any conclusion on how to live to be 80. 90, 100 or more. Rut there is one thing that is Certain. If you want to live long, do not be a high official in Soviet Russia. The London Sunday Times, in a summary of what has happened to high officials in the Soviet in re cent years points out that since 1980 nine of the 11 cabinet minis ters holding office at that time have been shot by firing squads. Five out of seven presidents of the Central Executive Committee were executed by firing squads. So were 49 of the 53 secretaries of the Communist Party central organization. So were 15 of the top 27 Communists who drafted the 1990 Constitution of Soviet Russia. So were 70 of the 80 memhers of the Soviet War Council. And. since 1917. three of every five Marshals of the Soviet Army have been shot as spies or traitors. And evcrv member of Lenin's first post-revolution politburo was fin ally shot with the one exception of Joseph Stalin. Play with dynamtie. stick your head into a buz7 saw. jump in front of trucks on the highway, or prac tice shooting at yourself with a pistol and you're still safer and much more likelv to have a long life than if you are an official in Soviet Russia.?Shreveport Times. THE VEST GOES WEST Epitaphs for the vest have been frequent, these last few years. Tailors suggest that it Is an ex pensive garment to cut out and sew; jewelers point out that watches come mostly with wrist bands. nowadays; physiologists as sert that the new fatty layer about his middle warms the average per son adequately by itself. Style jounals hint that the vest origin ated as a sweater for dinosaurs in the Second Ice Age. and can now safely be abandoned. Tailor and Cutter, the priestly utterance of London's Savile Row, says the vest just isn't being worn now. and make way/or cummerbunds. Nobody cleared that with John Foster Dulles, it's safe to surmise A man whose photographs show him well weskited as early as Sep tember, our Secretary of State per sonally exports the vest every time he wings off for another interna tional conference. President Eis enhower himself, proceeding to ward a recent press conference, was pictured not in his usual double-breasted suit but in a sin | ele with full snread of vest; a ques tion-proof vest, no doubt. In less elevated regions, such as the neigh bor's Saturday night whisky tast ing. what is there better to give a man distinction than . his plaid Christmas-present tattersall? The cummerbund is just the thing for one's next trio to Dar I jeeling. It is ideal for bull-fighters. | demonstrators of electric reducing machines and. crises, persons with out a napkin. Rut in other circum stances. what's good for the waist coated interests is good for the country. Though, of course, the Raltimore climate is a special factor. Balti more vests are customarily display ed In a group, as good as new. at the back of one's clothes closet ?The Baltimore Evening Sun. CRIME IS COSTLY "I do not believe the average ciiizen senses the proper role that % crimp plays as a national prob lem. It exists on a scale so enor mous that it is difficult to grasp it It can reasonably be estimated | that 20 billion dollars annually is the cost of crime in this coun try." That's J. Edgar Hoover, Chief G-Man. informing a congressional committee. And he goes on to break down crime costs by main taining that it costs each family ?n the United States an average of ?495 each year. It is this figure that hits home?a terrific cost to be borne in a societv that oftentimes prides itself, to the point of com placency. on the absence of crime in a particular area or community. Mr Hoover has also voiced con cern. as should all of us, over an increase in the crime rate among youths. He said 7.8 ner cent of the persons arrested in 1952 were un der 18 years. 13.3 per cent were tinder 21. and 23.1 per cent were under 25. As disturbing as are these fig ures, they become more so. when they are evaluated in the light of the little interest often shown by the public in crime prevention and in law enforcement. ?Chatham County News. COI.D COMFORT A group of tall - tale spinners were gathered in a country store. "When I was a kid." said one, "it got so cold in mv bedroom that the candle froze and we couldn't blow it out." "That's nothing." spoke up an other. "One night it was so cold in our bedroom that when my brother and I spoke, the words froze as they fell from our lips and we had to scoop 'em up and heat 'em in a skillet before we could hear what one another was say ing."?The Country Gentleman. Rambling 'Rowij ?Bits Of Human Interest \? \vs-_^ I By Frances Gilbert Frazier In days gone by. March 4lh (in inaugural iwarming into Washington to view tin- H jpon a president being sworn into office t ore, packed stands and sidewalks and 'u-u.i narked March 4th. It also ended "Lame l)u vas whisperedi was one of the main"reasoi We distinctly remember the first it H juisition of a radio. The loud speaker wa '? *e had an extra long cord attached s(, t iround from room to room. We called up , ?ave them portions of the music and excit. tnd via an extension cord. With the advent fortably relax at home, call in all the ih i. H iffair minus crowds, lost children food H Jealousy sits in a watch tower. Little Johnny wasn't exactly scared s seven and in the second grade, you would' iidn't quite like, nor understand, the viohe bending trees, rattling windows and send ing down the street. The trouble was one was. You couldn't see it but you could how it felt; but what was it? Just as a precaution . . . not that he Johnny stayed close to his daddy who w: the telephone. "Yes. Mr. Smith." the boy' that data in my coat pocket. Hold the pho to get his coat. Little Johnny, with his 11,11 (he howling wind and utterly oblivious ol ceiver. piped up in a loud voice; "Daddy, work for and the one you said was not hit S It's hard to stop at anv station when tin mind :. .J One of the most gracious things thai 1 F was the kind invitation of a visitor to acron Knowing how difficult it is to get hotel 1 ute. he very kindly extended his invitatim 1 . . .? guest of himself and wife. This invitation, nr. able to accept 'press day being what it is b the kind impulse behind it. Since then we of how the average house-wife could , 1 stranger, unexpectedly hurled into her would take nothing less than an ..ir .](9 this situation with an extended hand 11 fl "dented" well that we couldn't do , \ ? cd upon our mind that this kind invitaC.e who had a perfect wife, or who didn't know Snow may be pure when it hits the earth hut it'.mtM quires plenty of "dirt" in a short time. F ] Voice of the People Do you think there should bp a law against hitchhikers? Bill Freeman. B&P Motor Lines ?"I guess there should be a law against it because a lot of evil has been done. I've never hitchhiked myself so I haven't thought much about it. We meet a lot of hitch hikers in the trucking business but never pick them up because the insurance company doesn't allow it." D. E. Tichenor, real estate and insurance?"Yes. I think it is a hazard from both sides. Many times people will pick up a hitch hiker and then suffer the conse quences.'' J. C. Haynes, internal revenue service. Post OfTice?"No. because the law is not enforceable. The driver is a free agent and it's up to him to protect himself. After all, if you know a hitchhiker, you'll pick him up regardless of the law." Miss DeRrayda Fisher, office manager. Employment Security Commission?"Yes. I believe there should be a law against hitchhik ers. Accidents frequently happen or can result from incidents like Letters ToM \ MM ( IMP J Editoi . I March nr." James i jt ihrntMi fl I certain ' " *? should h ? ; /*/M/il/O-V-V I I | I I 1 1 | 1 i I 1 | 1 i | | I I I I I 2L U. S. EMPLOYMENT... i MILLIONS* I m SO" An kf N?wifM(vrM Pkt*gra^ ? M I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I I I I ? I I I I t I I f ? 1939 30 '35 40 45 'SO 53 ?fcl t I IJ 1 I I I I I | I t I I \ I I I I | I I 1-^ 3ox~ / ???ond .A / \/\ UNEMPIOYMENTJ : # \ n:lf. \ _ *. 9 swrr t u ? cr?ft/s *u*b*o DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 4. Herd of 22. Half an em 1 Tart of a whales 23. Samarium ^ locomotive 5. Melody (sym ) WgggH 4 Choking bit 6. Affected , 24. Mexican 7. Husk by gas * tree 2JV 8. Macaws 7. Abounding 25. Grate 10. Name inhil's 26. Banishment 11. Fogs 9. Cubic meter 27. Pinaceous 13. Foreigners 10. Dutch trees 15. On the ocean dialect 28. River ML Malt (S.Afr.) (Eng.) . beverage 12. Spoke 29. Outside 17. Period 14. Maker of 30. Remove .,klgl of time saddles the skin - , ..M 1?. Assam 18. Affirmative 33. Cap again ''M silkworm vote 36. Spirit lamp 20. River (Fr.) ?r?f5W 21. Conveyed. 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