f Toavrs RIBLK YKRSJE ^ ~ The Pharisee s'ood and prayed thua with hintaelf, God. I thank the*, that 1 am not u ?iher m:n afe, extortioners, unjust, adulter er*, or even as this publlran.?Luke 11:11. - EditoralPage of the Mountaineer ;?? TOOAY-S Ql-OT^I h I One to cleans,- th? , V"'? m H W1? Health Center Another Milestone In Haywood Progress The formal dedication of the new Health Center building here tonight, with open house all day Friday, marks another mile stone in the progressive health program here in Haywood County. The modern building, with the latest equipment, staffed by trained and experi enced personnel, is a major asset to the county. The Health Center is the second great step this county has taken in recent years in pro viding for its citizens the utmost in facilities designed to guard our health ? the other being the modernization of the Haywood County Hospital. We are fortunate here in Haywood in hav ing been able to keep a balanced progressive program moving forward on all fronts ? health, economy, industrial, agriculture and tourist. The growth in all have been steady, yet gradual, which has meant a thorough study could be given to each from the stand point of long-range planning. Our Health Center is designed to guard and protect the health of the citizens through the various services it offers. And health is a major factor to the economy of any com munity. Those who avail themselves of the oppor tunity to visit the Health Center Friday will no doubt be surprised at the wide scope of activities, and services rendered by the Health Department. In this issue of The Mountaineer, we have tried in words and pictures, to give an ac curate account of each phase of the work, and from the pages of this issue, we feel many people will learn of the imi>ortance of the Health Department and its unlimited value to the county. The formal program but marks another milestone of progress for Haywood, which continues to stay at the top of counties achieving the best in North Carolina. Dim Those Lights North Carolina motorists generally ap preciate the courtesy and the good sense of dimming their lights when approaching each other- at night, but as yet the courtesy and wisdom of dimming one's lights when fol lowing another car isn't generally recognized. A motorist can be as effectively blinded by lights reflected from his rear-vision mir ror as by lights flashing into him head-on. Courtesy and safety demand that lights be dimmed when approaching another car in any direction. THE MOUNTAINEER Wsynesvflle, North Carolina Main Street Dial GL 6-5301 The Coanty Scat of Haywood County Puhllfthrd By The WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER, Inc. f. CURTIS RUSS Editor W. Curtis Russ and Marlon T. Bridges, Publishers PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY MAIL IN HAYWOOD COUNTY One Year $3.50 Six months 2 00 BY MAIL IN NORTH CAROLINA 3m Year 4.50 Six months 2.50 OUTSIDE NORTH CAROLINA One Year 5.00 Six months 3.0C LOCAL CARRIER DELIVERY Per month ? 40c Office-paid for carrier delivery 4.50 entered at tha post office at Waynesvllle. N. C? aa See and Claaa Mall Matter, aa provided under the Act of ?farch A 187S. November 10, 1(14. MEMBER OF_THE ASSOCIATED-PRESS The Associated Preaa to entitled exclusively to the use tr re-pubUcatlon of all the local nears printed In this sanpaper, aa well as all AP nears dispatches. Thursday Afternoon. October 27, 1955 W " J r-r>s " til t-v t t-i rr>? Expansion Of Dayton Rubber Plant Ot Major Importance To Whole Area The announcement of the extensive expan sion of facilities at the Dayton Rubber Com pany plant here is of utmost significance to ? the entire area of Western North Carolina? even more, we can truthfully say the state? because the item to be manufactured will reflect itself in the state industrial picture. The details of the announcement of the expansion's made Monday to The Mountain eer by A. L. Freedlander, 'president and gen eral manager of the progressive firm, said the major item would be the manufacture of foam rubber for the furniture trade in this and nearby states. The furniture industry is going in for more and more of the foam rubber cushions, as are other groups, such as Pullman, and airline companies. Mr. Freedlander said the fact that North Carolina is such a large manufacturer of furniture, that it was only natural that the product be made as near the furniture plants as possible. The manufacture of foam, rubber products requires large volumes of cold water. In fact, Mr. Freedlander told members of the Board of Conservation and Deevlopment, that 400 gallons of water wer^ needed to make one foam rubber pillow. And it is interesting to know that the plant here in Waynesville is the largest man ufacturer of foam rubber pillows in the world. A distinction of note, especially in this fast developing era of foam rubber products. The Dayton Rubber Company has long been recognized as a leader in the develop ment and technical excellence of natural and snythetic rubbers. It is only natural, under such industrial leaders as the Dayton Rub ber Company officials, that the firm become a pioneer in the world of foam rubber pro ducts. Foam rubber will not be the sole output of the local plant, because it is-now a leader in making countless numbers of products for the textile and automotive industry. Tn fact, it is said that there is not a single textile plant in the world that does not have a Day ton Rubber product in use, and all the Day ton textile products are made in the Waynes ville plant. It seems but a few short years since Mr. Freedlander and some of his associates were here checking on a site for the construction of a plant back in the early part of 1940. The time has slipped by quickly. The gradual ex pansion of the Dayton Plant has been tre mendous. In fact, the Waynesville plant to day is largef- than the parent plant in Day ton back in 1940. The comments of many individual, and state leaders as published elsewhere in this issue, concur with us the importance of this expansion program to this entire region. This latest expansion program of Dayton is one of the most important things that has happened to Haywood county in many years. The action of successful industrialists gives all of us a breader and renewed feeling jf justified optimism. ? ____ $100 Per Hour From The Smith field Herald we learn that Judge Hoyle Sink, while presiding over a term of court in Johnston county, said that according to some calculations he has made, the operation of a criminal court runs into big money ? at the rate of $100 per hour. Then Judge Hoyle announced that all liti gants and court officials should realize that promptness is the prime tenent of the opera tions of the courts. T, ?? T T 1 1 1 hey 11 JLto it Every lime uy jimmy ilatio J iWR WHEN I PLEADED^Tf MILO CAN THE ONLY INTERNATIONAL^ WITH YOU TO BUY INTERN ATONAL^! YOU EVERY STOCK r7^'4LL MIS V TAPIOCA HE EVER HAD IS ft T4PIOC4? IT WAS SEU-IHS AROUND ft YOU SHOULD4 J ( k.?N HIS NECKTIE ? TEN? LOOK AT IT NOW- OVER BOUGHT AFTER , J* \7&? TWENTY- VOU C0ULD4 /HADE fl THEY GO UP-HE / "J f [ LAST FOURTH OF 1 YOURSELF SOME REAL DOUGH.' / NEVER MENTIONS H 4N ?LPSOCK-" I I jULy HE ?>J,D TO m GOT A DIME? I WANT TO / \ THE DOGS HE / (BUY FIREWORKS / K CALL UP AND GET THE f I TOUTED THAT ). RAPE" HES J V pro - BOUND J ON ^^ y^Go^^^^ < Lookina Back Th rouah The Years IMHB m -m m m m ? m MBV ^ 20 YEARS AGO Mrs. Charles Ray entertains group of friends at an all day quilt- H ing party. at ? Mack Davis, student at Davidson College, spends weekend with his m parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Davis. ?? 'd u Mr. and Mrs. Henry Francis and family move to their new home on Aliens Creek. $1 ZJ 10 years ac.o First floor of Haywood County ospital is reopened to patients ter being closed two years. Mrs. Mozelle White Damour Is arried to J. R. Thomas, Jr. James W. Killian is elected pres ent of the Haywood County Fox unters Association. Rocky Branch Baptists to have 0,000 church. ? ? ? 5 YEARS AGO Fourteen thousand, eight hun dred and forty Haywood names are put on Freedom Scrolls. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Prevost and their children move into their new home on the Country Club Drive. Miss Helen Irene Graham of Clyde weds Grady R. Galloway. Mrs. G. M. Kimball leaves by plane for Boston for visit with her mother-in-law. Highland Flings By Bob Conway The autumn color situation is t somewhat confusing this year. Last weekend while the hues I hereabouts were at their height of < brightness, the color on the Blue 1 Ridge Parkway from Asheville to i Blowing Rock was past its peak and I a bit on the dull side. n From the Great Smoky Moun-li tains National Park, however, has i come the word from Arthur Stup-1 ka, park naturalist, that the ?foli-1 age over that way will be at its I ( height from this weekend through . the first week in November. o From our mail; "A price will be I: given for the best-dressed cos tume." 0 Has there ever been as many I VIP's in Waynesville at one time as there were last weekend and Monday? Here for meetings were Gov ernor Hodges and the North Caro lina Board of Conservation and Development, the North Carolina Park Commission, and governors of the six districts of the North Carolina Lions Clubs. Among guests at the Park Com-1 mission meeting were Edward A. Hummel, superintendent of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park; Sam Weems, superintendent of the Blue Ridge Parkway, and Don J. Morriss, supervisor of North Carolina National Forests. Unfortunately, however, Hay wood let one celebrity get away ? Grace Kelly. T. Hugh Rogers of Clyde is still talking about his recent hunting and fishing trip to Wyoming. Fishing in the Grant Teton Mountains near Yellowstone Na tional Park, Mr. Rogers said he and members of his party caught big rainbow, brook, and Markinao trout as fast as they could pull them In. "It was no trouble at all to catch from 28 to Sf pounds of trout an hour," he said, adding; "It was Just like a fish hatchery." The Rogers party, which spent a week at the IMamond-G ranch in Dubois. Wyoming, also shot four elk and two deer on their trek through the towering mountains, hunting at an average altitude of 12.8M feet. "At that height." Mr. Rogers said, "you feel fanny. My noor | ?led most of the time." Mr. Rogers was accompanied by lis father, T. If. Rogers, Sr. of Tlyde, Corbitt Wright and Terry iVright of Bethel, and the Rev. Wil iam Hensley of Enka. The snow at Diamond-G Ranch vas eight inches deep on their ar ?ival and 18 inches in depth when hey departed. -?o A number of underprivileged children in the Waynesville area sire suffering from lack of cloth ing. If you have any pants or blue jeans, shirts, jackets, or sweaters for boys, the Clothing Closet could use them. You can either call Mrs. Roger Walker and have the clothing pick ed up, or leave it at the Waynes ville Fire Department or Marcus Electric Co. at Hazelwood. Voice of the People What do'you think of the new link of the Blue Ridge Parkway from Wagon Road Gap to Beech Gap? (continued). Mrs. A. R. Wild of San Francisco ?"Of all the places I've been, it's the prettiest ? and I have been around the world twice. The color ing up there is like the Granc Canyon. T'm writing to all mj friends in California, telling then 0 10 20 This Is The LAW By ROBERT E. LEE (For The N. C. Bar Association) ATHLETIC CONTESTS Is it a crime in North Carolina to offer a bribe to a player or of ficial to influence his decision or judgment in an athletic contest? Yes. Anyone convicted of such an offense may be punished by imprisonment in the State peni tentiary for not less than one nor more than five years. It Is also a criminal offense, similarly punished, for any play er or official to accept or agree to accept any bribe for the purpose of inducing him to lose or cause to lose any athletic contest. Is it illegal for a person to give or offer to give money qr other all about North Carolina." C. K. Weekly?"My only regret is that the Parkway is not com plete. I have been over the entire length of the Parkway and on the Skyline Drive in Virginia and in all that distance there's no more beau tiful scenery than along the new link from Wagon Road to Beech Gap. It was magnificent." Joe C, Cline?"It's the prettiest part of the Parkway by far." M. C. Nix?"I have seen all of the Parkway and the new link is the best of all. However, we need ? places up there to picnic, and I something should be done about r the dust on the road through II Sherwood Forest to Lake Logan.' JU 4U 50 60 70 , ?I ' I ??I ' I ' I ' I EX OF DRIVERS IN MOTOR 'EHICLB DEATHS I r.iM II ^ M ISiuH m Rambling 'Roul By Frances Gilbert Frazier I WORRY' What is worry? The dictionary dcfinesti^H ??Undue care; to feel or express great anxiety Worry ? more than that. It is the emotion that can pluck the sun S5 blue sky and drop it into obscurity. can move a ',ai it directly in the path you are tread,,, \y? , ? Hng hand on your throat, or press you, ? turn peaceful dreams into nightmare ? ?f "platitude piled upon platitude tells vox ? ,t ,,v, I)(B vmi anvwhere?or anything-except. perl,.,; , ? has too often been the finger on a suicide ? Liters but the person who hasn't a worrv in the ? Tho doesn't lfcre a very deep life. Human n.du,v hems ? Tv is a large component of man's exist, ,,, ? There may be a moral in Little Mar ? told that most things we worry about never come to pass.fl girl thought this over and then sagely roP!,,d Well. ,n may Day to worry a little because whatcv, I ? might have slipped up on me before I knew p." Heard in passing: "If she had come in while 1 J house, I'd have gone right through the floor, dirt and all.?B We look at pictures in the magazines and ?n their rov?fl in9 th? gorgeous coloring of the autumn i?l;aao ar.d w question the authenticity of the vivid ton, ? But an afternoon s drive through ? Wagon Road Gap. Pisgah Forest and other ? North Carolina convinces us that no when , , , disDlav of fall foliage be enjoyed. The -uM bronze and green each stand out in tin ? blazon the mountain sides and valleys, i to prove ? brush has no equal. The kaleidoscopic panorama is b? M fills the viewers of this masterpiece of art stry with ? emotional aweith ^ awakening Gf beauty 1 its - "*l ? ions But Autumn, wrapped in the hush of approaching wearing raiment of brilliant scarlet, bronz, how takes a closer hold on the heartstr , M memory with thp streamers so brilliantly whereiM can reach. Sometimes the end of the road is just around the ran Now it has dwindled down to-two months and this tin* months from today you will be looking around and wondaf on earth so much paper, tinsel and ribbon could have ttu You'll be trying to locate the furniture you moved out for to occupy that special corner, and you'll be sighing overtVl of removing said tree, packing away the decorations for ami and inwardly groaning at the bills that will arrive merrily January first. Oh well- You've always lived through il and have all that next year you wouldn't wait until the last moment t? shopping, and made every promise in tin h..k In In cm Suppose you have slipped over the traces a wee hit Isn't in Rut?two months isn't long when it comes on galloping fed, ber. Wishes are like leaves flying in the fall winds.. they find a landing place somewhere. gifts to football players that score touchdowns or to baseball players that hit home runs? The North Carolina statutes do not prohibit the giving or offering of money or other compensation to a player to encourage such player to a higher degree of skill, ability, or diligence in the performance of his duties. There are, however, rules of na tional or regional associations of colleges and high schools which prohibit the acceptance of money and certain gifts by athletes for their performances of skill on the athletic fields. But these .are not rules of law enforceeable in the courts. They are enforced by the particular athletic association with which the college or school is af filiated. May a person who has purchased a ticket to an athletic contest be denied admission? Yes, the holder or a ticket of admission to an athletic contest, like the holder of a theater ticket, is the holder of a mere license which may be revoked arbitrarily at the pleasure of the management. The ticket holder's only remedy is to sue for breach of contract, which in most rases merely an action i<-Z 1 24. Insect ^5 /// . 25. Shoshonean __ ?2 ? 1 Indian II y/j 11 28. Enclosure ~~~7/W 28. Mimic 14 (//. 'S 'Jl ,H 29. Measure /// ? 777 yT"? 1 (Chin.) 17 18 /// 81. British 1 . sss, ? W stitches 2^ 27 52? 28 U 84. River (It) ? ? 3 ? 35. Flaps 57" 1