,v ? - ,, T i'% W:'1/' ' ?. , ,;.y ?-? "7 ;v??' . 5- ?:? -.*?.. #*??<>> ' ? '.V- X ' - ,? '. . - v. ' . " '?' ' '?' ? f*\ 1 ' A, ' ? ? ?. . ' '?*'?'? .V ' . ? *?''.? ' '- ? ; ' New Classrooms Approved For WTHS; New Vocational Shop At Crabtree ? ? - ? v' o ' ?. . TOOAVS SMILE e? The WaynesyiiIe Mountaineer phi ?r?. O ? ' Published Twice-A-Week In The County Seat of Haywood County At T he Eastern Entrance Of The Great Smoky Mountains National Park ? 0 71st YEAR NO. 51 12 PAGES Associated Press WAYNESVILLE, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 25, 1956 $3.50 In-Advance In Haywood and Jackson Counties Haywood County Tax Rate To Remain At $1.75 County Democrats Nominate McCrary As Representative, Has 1,188 Margin Charles B. McCrary, Fines Cree* tarmer, was named the Democratic nominee lor repre sentative in tne second primary here tsauiruay, wnen more man a/lid voted in a quiet election day. McCrary received 11470 votes and Charies W. Edwards, Jr., Lake Junaiusita, 1282, giving McCrary a majority of 1188. me vouug was more or less steauy UiiuugiiOUi tne uay and was snguiiy neavier man nau oeen pre dicted last 'inursaay. Tne nomination ol McCrary on Saturaay win put him in the race tor the law-maning ottice against W. A. (Bill) Bradiey, tne hepub lican nominee, in tne November election. McCrary this morning in a form al statement said: "I desire to thank my many friends for the loyal support they gave me In the primaries that have been held iiv the County. To serve the best interest of all of the citizens of Haywood County is my desire and ambition, and to do all in my power to promote the best inter ests of the County and State." In the first primary McCrary polled 2282 votes, just 82 votes short of a majority, with Edwards getting 1683. R. E. Sentelle polled 474 and W. H. Owen, 259. Following are the unofficial re turns from the county's 29 pre cincts, as gathered, Saturday night by The Mountaineer with the co operation of officials of the Board (See McCrary?Pare 3) J. M. McCracken Is Charged In Watson Shooting Jack M. McCracken, 58, of the Rogers Cove section has been re leased on $500 bond in connection with the shooting of Bill Watson, about 40, on the road in front of the McCracken home at 7:50 p.m. Saturday. Watson was wounded painfully but apparently not seriously by pellets from McCracken's 16-gauge shotgun which hit him in a num ber of places on the upper part of his body and face. He was taken to Haywood County Hospital after the shooting, but reportedly will be released today. Deputy Sheriff Gene Howell ? said thaf McCracken admitted shooting Watson, but said that the (See McCracken?Page 3) CHARLES B. McCRARY Recreation Group Will Meet Tuesday All members of the Recreation Commission ? which includes those who have purchased stock in the Waynesville Recreation De velopment Commission ? will meet Tuesday night at 8 p.m. at the court house to formally ap prove several technical phases of the corporation. Richard Bradley, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said that lawyers for the commission had indicated the necessity of the meeting before the deed could be formally recorded for the 17-acre tract of the Horse Show site and for the formality of naming the Board of Directors in order that (See Recreation?Page 3) Carolina Power Pays $114,179 In Local Taxes Haywood's largest taxpayer Carolina Power and Light Cont" pany ? paid their 1956 taxes this morning with a check for $112,996. By paying today, the power company received a dis count of $2,306. Roy Wright, manager of the local office, also paid for his company the tax bill in Hasel wood of $994, and in Waynesville $245, making a total of $114,179 paid today in taxes. 90 Applications Submitted For 14th Annual Farm Tour Ninety applications have already been received for the 13th annual Haywood County out-of-state farm tour, and about that number will be taken on the tour's two buses and one car, County Agent Virgil L. Holloway said today. Information is still being receiv ed here from hotels and reserva tions on the tour, Mr. Holloway said, but the approximate cost of the tour will be $140. The tour will leave here at 6 a.m. Thursday, July 19, and pass through portions of North Caro lina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jer sey. New York, Rhode Island, Mas sachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario, and the states of Michigan, Ohio, and Kentucky. The group will return to Hay wood County Sunday, July 29. Mr. Holloway said that "an out standing tour has been planned ? witlv something of interest to all? both men and women." He added that information on the tour, Including costs, will be mailed to county residents who have submitted applications. HUMID The Weather Continued partly cloudy, warm and humid with scattered after noon and early night thunder storms today and Tuesday. Official Waynesville tempera ture as reported by the State Test Farm: Date Max. Mln. Pr. June 21 80 60 .01 June 22 83 60 .79 June 23 85 61 .26 June 24 85 61 .04 V 1 School Projects Set To Be Ready For Fall Term Three school projects have been approved for the Haywood system, and will be completed before the school terms opens, it was an nounced by Lawrence Leather wood. county superintendent of education. Five classrooms, a study hall, library and audio visual room will be built at the Waynesville Town ship High School. The new rooms will come from a conversion of the present auditorium. The estimated cost is (22,000, and will take about 45 days. Plans and specifications are now being drawn, and bids will be opened soon. The second project, estimated to cost $12,000, is the addition and renovation to the present shop of the Crabtree-Iron Duff school. Work on this project was scheduled to start this morning. . Fines Creek school is slated to get $4,000 in improvements, includ ing walks, new parking area, reno vation to gym, and lighting. Another $3,500 was allocated the Haywood system for new sites. Supt. Leatherwood said that there were six teachers at the Waynesville high school without a classroom, and the new project there will provide for them this year. M. H. Bowles, district superin tendent, said the students would hold assembly in the gym after the football season. For the football season the bleacher seats of the gym are on the field. After the sea son the seats will be installed in the gym, and assembly started. Plans call for raising the present auditorium floor to stage level, and (o re-floor the halls and the new classrooms, with noiseless tile. RALPH N. F EI CUTER received the degree of Doctor of Medicine at Northwestern University's Milh commencement exercises last Mon day morning In Evanston. Illinois. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Feichter of Waynesville. Dr? Feichter completed his pre medical study in three years at Notre Dame University before en tering Northwestern He received his last month's training in pedia trics this spring at the hospital of London (England) University. He leaves Wednesday to begin his internship at Philadelphia Gen eral Hospital. Lions Make Proposal On Recreation Looking Ahead to a fully de veloped Recreation Center, the' Lions Club here Thursday night, voted unanimously, to sell the Commission their one-acre tract adjoining the center for $1,600. The stipulation of the proposal, which will be offered the board of directors of the Commission, is that the Club will contribute the sale price of the tract towards a recreation building when work is started on the structure. "The proposal simply means the Lions Club is donating the $1,600 we have in the lot towards a build ing for the Recreation Center," Ernest Edwards, president said. The club subscribed $1,000 in the $90,000 campaign for the Rec reation Center two weeks ago. Richard Bradley, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said the charter for the Recreation De velopment Commission is back, .and the organization will be set up immediately to handle the busi ness details and development of the center. 1,500 Burley Fields Checked; 40 Per Cent Over Allotment ?? ' . '' V T; " ? Approximately 1,500 tobacco fields have been measured by the ASC, and about 40 per cent have been found to be in excess of their owner's allotment, according to A. W. Ferguson, county ASC manager. Mr. Ferguson said between 30 and 35 producers in excess of al lotments failed to declare their In tentions to destroy the surplus or ask for a remeasurement, and will thus not be eligible for price sup ports at burley markets this year. Another 25 fanners bave request ed remdasurement., The ASC manager pointed out, however, that destroying and re measuring of tobacco will not start until all burley plots in the county have been checked. He estimated that original measurements will be completed by the end of this week ?i weather permitting. After all measurements have been made, a state ASC spot checker will check 5 per cent of the county's fields. Spot checkers for the county are Carl Ratcliffe, Will Leather wood, and Kenneth Hannah. Record High Budget Is Established The tax rate for Haywood county will remain at $1.75 per hundred dollar valuation for the coming fiscal year, according to present plans of the board of com missioners. The commissioners have the proposed budget on file with the Register of Deeds, and tentative plans call for formal approval on July 16th when the board holds their regular third Monday meet Ing. according to Faraday Green, chairman. The new budget calls for an ex penditure of $1,849,677, as com pared to $1,687,460 last year, an Increase of $162,217. The amount to be raised by tax ation this year totals $701,342 as compared with $684,617 last year. The increase is about $17,700. The current tax rate is based on a val uation of $40,076,734 as against last year's assessed valuation of $39,120,996. A cut of over four cents was made for the Hospital fund, and no levy is being made in this year's budget for debt service, which was 7Mi cents last year. The funds from the sals of the county home farm is being applied to debt ser vice. The Welfare fund is down 2V4 cents on the current rate, i The largest increase in the bud get is for schools. The total rate, including the Canton system, is now $1.02 as compared with 89 cents last year. Capital outlay went up from 11 cents to 23 cents. The schools represent the larg est single item in the budget, call ing for $410,672 which is an in crease of about $62,000 from last year. The increase, according to : LawTence Leatherwood, county superintendent of education, is ac counted for as follows: WTHS addition $22,000 Crabtree-Iron Duff Shop $12,000 Fines Creek projects $ 4,000 New sites $ 3.500 I Current Expenses $14,000 "The current expense account ' (See Taxes?Page S) WELL-WISHERS TURN OUT AT C'RACIS OF DAWN to spted members of the Waynesvilte Township HUH School hand on their trip to Mi ami. The youngsters left yesterday morning at 7 o'clock for their "command performance" before the Lions International convention. (Mountaineer Photo). Waynesville Girl, 9, Drowns In Pool At Lake Junaluska ? ? 1 Funeral services were conducted ? his afternoon in the Waynesvllle Presbyterian Church for Teresa Lee Russell. 9. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Russell, Jr., of Waynes- ! ville who drowned Saturday after- i noon in the swimming pool at Lake Junaluska. The Rev. Calvin Thielman. pastor of the church, officiated and burial was in Green Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers were Gary Todd, Jackie Atkins, Bo Underwood, David Hardwick. Bill Morris, Jr., and Carroll Rowland. Serving in an honorary capacity were members of Brownie Troop 60 of Waynesville. Teresa's Sunday School Class, and dancing class. A coroner's jury Saturday night returned a verdict of accidental drowning in Teresa's death in the pool about 4:30 p. m., only about 10 minutes after the girl and a friend had entered the water. Wallace M. Martin, director of recreation, said the child, with Sherry Hollifield, 10, and two older companions, registered at the pool at 4:10 p. m. and entered the water about 10 minutes later. They started to play i n the shallow end, where the water is (See Little Girl?Page 3) Tax List Published Bryan Medford, tax supervisor, annonunced today that the sale of property for unpaid 1955 taxes will be held on Monday, July 23. The delinquent tax list is being advertised in today's issue of The Mountaineer. Waynes ville Band Now [n Florida A group of B7 members of the Waynesville Township High School band, adults, and counselors left here at 7 a.m. Sunday to attend the Lions International convention at Miami as representatives of Lions District 31-A, made up of 46 clubs from Ellenboro west to Murphy. Adults in the group are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Islev and Mrs. Albert Abel, a registered nurse. College students who will serve as coun selors and chaperons and will be available to play in the band if any of the students should get sick are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alley, Suzanne Curry, Jackee Carswell, Dale Ratcliffe. Roy Callahan, and Carolyn Moles. Miss Moles also is a registered nurse. The band spent Sunday night at Silver Springs, Fla., and saw the (See Band?Page 3) Record-Breaking Summer Travel Is Predicted Summer traffic on North Caro lina highways will break all rec ords. This is the opinion of the State Highway Commission's Engineer of Statistics, James S. Burch. who reports primary highway traffic 7 per cent higher this April and May than in corre sponding months last year. Traffic has increased every month for the last eighteen. Advertising Kates To Be Adjusted In Accordance To Costs Due to the continued rise in production costs, newsprint, and postare. The Mountaineer, will of necessity, on July I, make a j slirht Increase in advertising rates. This will be the first in crease since March 1953. Since that time newsprint has advanc ed twice, postare twice, and oth er production costs several times. Soil Bank Program To Be Explained At Meeting Here Wednesday Night Provisions of'the new soil bank program, contained in a new U. S. farm bill recently approved by Congress, will be explained to Hay wood County farmers at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the courtroom. At the meeting County ASC Manager A. W. Ferguson and County Agent Virgil L. Holloway will outline the four provisions by which County burley producers can receive soil bank payments this year. These four provisions are: 1. If tobacco has not been plant ed, a farmer can sign a statement at the ASC office affirming that the crop was not planted because. (See Soil Bank?Page 3) Doctors Of Five States Hold Successful Meet Here Doctors from five states attend ing the third annual Mountaintop Medical Assembly here last Thurs day, Friday and Saturday, were unanimous in their opinion that it was one of the best and most profitable medical sessions they had ever attended. ?The doctors discussed many phases of medical questions, in cluding administering insulin orally, new medicines to control heart skip, new type cardiogram machines, developments in plas tic surgery and use of hormones replacing surgery in treatment of gynecological problems. The discussion on the use of In sulin by mouth came up following an address by Dr. Walter Hart, Florence, S. C., pediatrician, on the treatment of diabetes by chil dren. Doctors reported use of in sulin in oral form, and all reports (See Doctors?Page 3) DEVOTIONAL SERVICES at the croon at Lake Junaluaka Sunday nor nine were one of the final events planned bp the Haywood County *-H Ex change Club for the visiting group from Weld County, Colorado, who left here this mornint af 4er a week's May. The principal speaker at the ?rrrlrrs wee the Ber. John I. lUmrr. pastor ef the Haaelweod Baptist Church (Mountaineer Photo). (See etory, PUe j, Section 2) 400 Young People Arrived At Lake Today For Meet Approximately 400 youth from fifteen to seventeen years of age from the Western North Carolina ' Conference of the Methodist Church opened a week-long Sen ior Workshop at Lake Junaluska today. This is the second such workshop meeting to be held at the Lake is as many weeks. The purpose of the workshops is to give youth vital worship experi ences. personal enrichment, rfnd to give special training to youth and their adult leaders in planning and carrying out the Methodist Youth Fellowship program. Inspirational speaker for the meeting is Rev. Mitch Faulkner of Concord who will speak at various times throughout the week. Miss Anne Lise Rossborg of Fredrikstad. Norway, a student at Wesleyan College in Macon, Ga., will work with the assembly as a representative of the Methodist Board of Education Dean for the assembly this week will be Rev. Bob Bunch of Wln ston-Salem. Mrs. Cecil Heckard of Marion will be head counselor. Misa Mary Ellen Uarrell, director of Youth Work for the WNC Con ference for the Methodist Board of Education, from Salisbury will also be with the workshop group. Highway Record For 1956 In Haywood (TO DATS) Killed...... 2 (1955 ? 1) Injured .... 41 ' (1955 ? J7> Accidents... 96 (1955 ? 7?) Loss ... S31,556 (Thto ~ m'47,)