? ? "All the News Most Of The Time ? The Most News All The Time." ? ? I . -?? ' : ? ;; ? ' . ? ? .t ? - ? * I The Wayne sville Mountaineer Published Twice-A-Week In The County Seat of Haywood County At The Eastern Entrance Of The Great Smoky Mountains National Park a c i TODAY'S SMILE Women usually have the last word?and most of the others, too. ? ? 71st \EAR NO. .?H IS I A(iHS Associated Press WA^NESVILLE, N. C., THl RSDA^ AFTERNOON, JULY 19, 1956 "$3.50 In Advance In Haywood and Jackson Counties POLICEMAN COLMAN SWANGER, left, is keep ing a sharp eye on handcuffed Ben Whitaker, the object of a 6-hour search here Wednesday, fol lowing Whitaker's alleged assault on his employ er W. S. Furry. Policeman Swanger made the arrest. after H'liitaker jumped off a trestle. On the risht is Cpl. Pritchard Smith, one of the several officers on the manhunt. (Mountaineer Photo). Parolee Assaults Man Who Had Him Paroled Final Lamb Pool Slated For Aug. 2 i Haywood County's third and { final lamb pool of the year will be held at the Clyde stockyards | Thursday, August 2, according to County Agent Virgil L. Holloway. Mr. Holloway advises producers to sell lambs weighing from 70 to 75 pounds and over "if-they have fat on them." Animals will be brought into the stockyards beginning .it 7 a.m. on August 2 and all must be in by 10 a.m. Farmers planning to sell lambs must notify the county agent's of- I ficc not later than Saturday, July ! 28 Tht last lamb pool, held June 25, | was termed "the most successful 1 in county history" when 200 ani mals were graded choice. Ralph's Cash Grocery Having 20th Anniversary Ralvn s Cash Grocery, Hazel wood, is observing this week, their ! 20th anniversary. Ralph Summerrow. owner, be gan 20 years ago with 2 employees, in a building just a fraction of to day's 3,200 square feet store. There : are now 13 employees at the store. The store has been enlarged ! several times. The firm has mod- 1 crn equipment throughout, and , operates on the super market self-service plan. ? ' * j Pigeon Valley Fair Planning Meeting Slated A planning meeting for the eighth annual Pigeon Valley Fair , to be held at Bethel School will be j held at 8 p.m. Monday in the Agri culture Department of Bethel | School. Fair Manager M. C. Nix called the meeting and asked that all I members of last year's commit tees and others interested attend The Pigeon Valley Fair will be held the latter part of September. " ' ? A 44-year-old Negro parolee is ' being held in Haywood county jail ' for allegedly assaulting the man i who assisted him to get a parole from prison, where lie was serv- i ing. a 30-year term for second de gree murder. Ben Whitaker. a 175-pound, pocked-faee man. served 22 years of his sentence mostly at the Hazelwood prison camp, tl was largely through the efforts of W. S. Furry, operator of a summer lodge here and in Florida, that Whitaker was put on parole in June 1955. The man went to work for Furry at his place here in the summer and in Florida during the winter. Whitaker was arrested by Way- ; nesville police on charges of be ing drunk, and lodged in jail. The j hahdy man became infuriated ; when Furry did not immediately ? take steps to provide bail, accord- j ing to chief Orville Noland. When I Whitaker was later released from ; jail early Wednesday morning, he ' first went to the Welfare Office , and sought permission to get a new job. This procedure is neces- j sary for those on parole. Whitaker j told Welfare officials he had left j his job with Furry. Then, according to Chief Noland, ' the man went to Furry and pro ceeded to assault the man with his I fist, inflicting painful cuts and bruises about the face and head, j Attending physicians say the tour-; i.-t lodge operator suffered a slight concussion, and must remain in I the Haywood County Hospital for several more days. According to ail evidence, Chief Noland said the Negro used only (See I'arolee?Page 6) Lodge Dedication Set Monday At Boy Scout Camp The David T. Vance Lodge at the Daniel Boone Boy Scout Camp in Pigeon Valley will be dedicated j at 5 ii.ni. Monday, according to an announcement by A. V. Allen, of Asheville, Scout executive. His announcement gave no oth- | er details. The Scout camp is reached by ! turning off the Lake Logan road ; at an intersection in Cecil com- j munity. County Tax Sale Set For Monday | Haywood County property on j which 1955 taxes have not been paid will be sold at auction on 1 Monday. Tax Collector Bryan Med ford today reminded owners. The sale will take place at the Courthouse, beginning at 10 a.m. MRS. FERGUSON IN HOSPITAL Mrs. .1 J Ferguson left Tuesday for Winston-Salem where she has entered Bowman-Gray Hospital and expects to undergo surgery. She was accompanied by her hus band and her sister. Mrs. Joe Web i ster. The Weather Partly cloudy and rather warm today and Friday with widely scat tered afternoon thundershowers. Official Waynesville tempera ture as reported by the State Test Farm: Date Max. Min. Pr. July 16 83 65 .06 July 17 _ 81 64 .28 July 18 81 58 .01 First Half i Rainfall Tops 1955 Figure You're right, the weather has been somewhat on the moist side lately. In fart, figures at the Moun tain Experiment Station here show that the rainfall during the first six months of 1956 topped the same period last year by 4.19 inches. Total for the January-June period this year is 28.02 inches as compared to 23.83 inches in j 1955. Rainfall totals for the first six ; months this year are: flee not .later than Saturday. July January. 2.00 inches: Febru ary. 7-81 inches; March, 4.83 ( inches; April, 5.43: May, 3.55, j and June. 4.40. Thus far, July, 1956 is behind July, 1955 in precipitation with i 2 83 inches recorded for the former and 3.92 inches for the latter. Waynesville Area Is Saluted By Michigan Station According to information receiv- j ed here by the Chamber of Com merce, the Waynesville area was j saluted by radio station WABJ at Adrian, Michigan recently on the j program "Audioscope Holiday. j The text of the broadcast read i Audioscope Holiday is saluting the popular state of North Caro-.j lina, today, and highlighting a wonderful town in the heart of the Smoky Mountains ? Waynes ville. North Carolina! At 3,000 feet above sea level, you'll find richly forested scenic grandeur everywhere you look . . . j with lakes in the sky . . ? thrilling j waterfalls, camping and P|c"!c j facilities, pure water . . . and No mosquitos! Waynesville is a town designed ; for zestful living: For the sports- j man, there's fishing and hunting in season, picnicking, camping, horseback riding, swimming, boat-1 ing. and golf. Whether you dance, oi watch, you'll enjoy a real hoe down. with fiddlin'. banjo pickin. and square dancin' . . . in Way nesville! Nature lovers find much to in spire them in the paradise of the Great Smokies, about Waynesville. Visitors are cordially welcomed in this clean, wholesome town of some 6,000 population. Waynes ville is famous for its churches ... takes pride in its schools, hos pital and community facilities, too. There are grand old resort hotels Ion Main Street, or on the moun tainside, rustic inns and lodges. I dude ranches, farms, motels, courts, guest homes, private homes and i boarding houses . with all home urown. home picked and home cooked food that everybody loves 1... in progressive and friendly Waynesville. North Carolina! Mrs. Aaron Moseley and da"Kt?" iter. Sue, have returned to their home in Jacksonville. Florida af ! tor a visit with Mrs. O. It Martin. County Gets $20,000 In ASC Funds Haywood County has received an additional $20,000 in state ASC funds to be given to farmers who have not received all the assistance due them under the spring pro gram. A. YV\ Ferguson, county ASC manager, announced today. The money sent here came from other counties which did not use all their ASC funds for the 1956 program, Mr. Ferguson ex plained. The additional assistance can be given to farmers for seeding al falfa. pasture, and grass meadows, and tile drainage, the ASC man ager pointed out. If all the $20,000 is not used, the funds will be repooled and given as added benefits ta farmers which have already had all the assistance due them under the spring program, Mr. Ferguson added. Canadian Agency Seeks Copies Of Travel Booklet Earlier this year 20.000 copies of a travel booklet on Waynes- ! ville were sent out to agencies ! throughout the United States Now a request has come from Canada for copies of the publication. Ned Tucker, executive vice president of the Chamber of Com merce, said the request came from the Ontario Motor League in Tor onto, Canada. The Canadian agency said it had been informed of the Waynesville booklet and wanted copies with which to furnish information on vacations in this area. Mr. Tucker said Florida and most other Southern states were "saturated" with copies of the booklets and many more were I sent to other states east of the ' Mississippi River ? especially in j the Midwest. The promotional publications al so were sent to every state in the I union to offices comparable to the ! Board of Conservation and Devel-, opment or the Travel Bureau in 1 North Carolina, Mr. Tucker added, j Burgess Named In Group To Write New Textbooks Yates F. Burgess, electronics instructor at WTHS, and state chairman of the electronics train ing committee, has been named to serve as meetings and publication ; director at an Asheville confer ence August 4. Murray D. Thornburg, state j supervisor of vocational industrial ! training, has announced that Mr. Burgess and other members of ! the committee are planning to write four new books for state school use, dealing with radio, television, industrial electronics, and broadcasting. Mr. Yates said that considerable ! effort will be put forth to publish improved books on these four sub jects by including color illustra tions, step-by-step sequences, Car- ; toons, and other visual demon- j stration material. A second conference on elec tronics will be held August 23 at Lees-MsRae College. MANY PEOPI-E were on hand at six this morn ing to see the 8!? members of the Farm Tour off on the first lap of their 3.:S00-mile journey. Stand ins at th?> bus door, with back to camera is I.. N. Davis, captain of one of the buses. (Mountaineer Photo). Local Postal Receipts Show 7.12 Pet. Gain Over 1955 A 7.12 per cent increase in postal receipts for the forst six months of 1958 over the same period last year was reported today by Waynesville postmaster Knos Boyd. \lr. Boyd said total receipts for January-June, 1956, were ] s3:.ok::.23 as compared with s34.598.94 for the similar period in 1955. lie termed this increase the largest the Waynesville postoffice has had for the past three years. The postmaster estimated that incoming mail showed an in crease of 8 per cent and stamp sales an increase of 10 per cent for the first six months. He noted, too, a decrease of 2.5 per cent in money orders, and commented: "This shows that less money is going out of the town." Mr. Boyd predicted that if the present increase continues through the remainder of the year, the Waynesville postoffice will go over the S80.000 mark in receipts for 1956. Last year's receipts were slightly under $76,000. 'Mystery Of The Missing Ladder' ! Puzzles Painter The "Mystery of the Missing Ladder" has been solved. It all started Tuesday when Kiley Jones was painting outside the former Slaek Stores building and went to rlimb down a ladder placed on the sidewalk on Main St. The only trouble was that the ladder was gone. It occurred to .Mr. Jones that even a light-fingered individual would not attempt to pilfer such a bulky object as a ladder from Main St. in broad davlight and. as it turned out. the ladder was not stolen at all. It seems that the ladder be longs to Hoy Moseman and a friend passing along Main St.. recognized the ladder and car ried it back to Mr. Moseman's store. For Mr. Jones, however, the absence of the ladder constituted a temporary case of non-support. Mr. and Mrs. Hie-hard Bradley an? leaving tomorrow for Toronto, Canada to attend a National Hard ware Convention They expect to be away about ten days. Medford Is Reelected As Park Commission Head William Medford was rd-elected j chairman of the N, C. National ] Park, Parkway and Forests De velopment Commission at the an nual meeting held at Doughton Park, on Monday. Other officers were also re-elected for the year, and included: Frank H. Brown. | Cullowhee, vice chairman, and C. ! M Douglas, of Brevard, secretary. Mrs. Hilliard B. Atkins was also i re-elected clerk and budget officer. A general review of activities for ' th" year was a feature of the meet | ing. and various reports were made. I Other members of the commls | sion include: Dr. Kelly Bennett, Brjson City: W. Ralph Winkler, Boone; W. F. Osborne. Sparta: Robert 1. Presslcy, Asheville, and John M. Archer, Jr.. Franklin. Attending the meeting in addi tion to the commission members were: Edward A. Hummell, super intendent of the Smoky Mountains National Park; Sam P. Weems. superintendent of the Blue Ridge Parkway and Charles Parker, di rector of advertising of the State WILLIAM MEDFORI) ; Department of Conservation and I Development. The commission maintains ~n ! office in the Masonic Temple here. Singer May Make Home : In Mountains Edward MacHugh, famed "Gos pel Singer" of radio for more than | i 30 years, has been in Waynesvilte for the past three weeks as a guest of E. W. Sampson. Country Club I' Road. 1 Mr; Maellugh said that he and his wife. Who now live in Ft. Laud erdale, Fla., are now considering establishing a permanent home in Western North Carolina and have ( been here to look at property. A native of Dundee. Scotland, ; Mr; MacHugh said that the moun tains of Western Carolina "look ! I just like the Scottish Highlands." which he left as a youth of 19 to come to America. . He added that "We have just been getting away from the hot j weather and enjoying the beauti- j fui seeneery." Mr. MacHugh reminisced briefly j of his long career at Radio Center. New Vjork, with two programs daily five time a week, which brought , 1 him an average of from 10,000 to ! 30.000 fan letters a week, The veteran singer said he.still appears on radio occasionally, but not regularly?Wishing to avoid being "the richest man in the cemetery." With 31 years in the field. Mr MacHugh said that he and news \ commentator H. V. Kaltenborn have the longest record of exper j ienee in radio. Top Brass Receive Maggie Chamber Memberships About a dozen of the nation's | big - wigs, including President j Eisenhower, Ed Murrow and Ar- ? ! thur Godfrey, are now officially members of the Maggie Valley Chamber of Commerce. In addi tion. they each have a copy of the recently published folder describ ing the charms of the area. Such a widespread distribution of the literature was a brainstorm of the Maggie Valley Chamber of Commerce, which believes you can't go wrong aiming at the top. Shoot an arrow that far into the air and there's no telling wiat it may knock down for you. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lane and their children, Sammy, Mary Frances, and Linda, expect to leave Sunday for a vacation at Myrtle ? Beach. ) Heavy Rains Cause Damage In Fines Creek Area A lioavy rain at the head of iVeslry Creek, in the Fines Creek irca did some damage to crops ilong the banks of the stream. More damage was done to roads n the area, it was reported, than : o the crops. The creek stayed within its janks for almost the entire length, nit left it at several places, caus- ! ng some damages. The heavy rains fell about 6 pail. Monday. B.75 Miles Of Roads Improved In 14th Division In Haywood County. State forces , strengthened the following 14 to j It) foot wide county roads, and ' heir lengths, with additional stone: layncs Hill Koad, 0.1 mile; Mauney Cove Koad-, 0.2 mile; Eagle Nest [toad, 02 mile: llemphill Koad. ) 3 mile; Price Koad, 0.5 mile: I Black Camp (lap Koad. 0.1 mile. During June, a total of 8.75 j miles of roads in the 14th Highway Division Were improved by Ha state Highway Commission, report ed Commissioner Harry Buchanan of Hendersonvillc today. The 14(h is composed of Hay-: wood. Henderson, Polk. Transyl vania. Cherokee, Clay. Graham. Jackson, Macon and Swain coun- j tics. Division headquarters are in Sylva. An experienced engineer. C. VV. Lee, is Division Engineer. Paul Dupre Is Assistant Division Engineer. The 14tli is subdivided into two maintenance districts. E. H. Webb is District Engineer at i Hendersonvillc for, Haywood, Hen- ! derson. Polk and Transylvania Counties E L. Curtis is District Engineer at Bryson City for Chero- | kce. Cliiv. Graham. Jackson, Macon and Swain Counties. 89 Making 13th Annual Farm Tour Two large buses and a passenger car rolled out of Waynesville early this morning bearing 89 Hay wood County residents on the first leg '455 miles) of a 3.332-mile trip through 15 states and the Domin ion of Canada After a rest stop at Arlington. Va., the group went on to a point near Pulaski, Va., where lunch was served at the Shilo Commun ity Center by a group of Virginia COP members and extension per sonnel. In the afternoon, the Touring Tar Heels were scheduled for a rest stop at famed Natural Bridge of Virginia, after which the group was to go on to Winchester, Va , to spend the night. Friday morning, after passing through portions of West Virginia and Maryland, the tour will enter Pennsylvania for a stop at the Gettysburg Battlefield, a trip to the Summit Poultry Farm and t tour of the Hershey Chocolate Co. plant. The New York state line will be reached about 6:50 p.m. Friday and the night will be spent at Pough keepsie. N y Saturday events will Include a tour of the Franklin D. Roosevelt and George Vanderbilt estates at Hyde Park. N. Y., a stop at Ply mouth Rock in Massachusetts, and seeing "Cinerama Holiday" at the Boston Theatre The group will spend the night at Boston and set the city the next morning. On Sunday the tour will visit the Bunker Hill Battle Monument, have a rest stop at Augusta. Maine and then go to the Bangor Fair Grounds for a chicken barbecue Scheduled Monday are a tour of the Maine College of Agriculture at Orono and a stop at a potato and broiler farm in Penobscot County, Maine. The gfouo will cross into Canada about 3 15 p in and proceed to Quebec to spend the night The Haywood countians will tour the city of Quebec Tuesday morn ing and then have the afternoon free. On Wednesday the Carolina Caravan will move on to the eapi tal city of Canada?Ottowa?where the group will see the House of Parliament and visit the Canadian (See Farm Tour?Page 6) Southern Iron Workers Honor Ilazelwood Man .1. Malcolm Clarke, son of Mrs. Rufus Clarke of ilazelwood, re cently was selected the outstanding iron worker apprentice at the eighth annual Southern Confer ence of the International Associa tion of Bridge Structural and Orna mental Iron Workers, held recent ly at Biloxi, Miss. Earlier. Mr. Clarke was named as the outstanding iron worker ap prentice in the Charleston, S. C . area and was sent to the Southern Conference as a representative of iron Workers Local 601, Charles ton. Two Lake Conferences To Bring In 1,000 Folk Today Approximately 1000 people will open week-long meetings at Lake Junaluska today. The Missionary Conference of the Southeastern Jurisdiction of | the Methodist Church in coopera tion with the Workshop for Chair- j men of Commissions on Missions in local churches and the Youth j and Missions Conference will have an attendance of about 600. Dr. Walter C. Gum, president of the Southeastern Jurisdictional! Board of Missions. Richmond, and Dr. J. A. Engle. general secretary j of the Joint Session of Education and Cultivation Division of World I Missions. New York City, are in I charge of the conference. Approximately 350 Methodist Youth Fellowship young people will also arrive today to open an eight-day session. The section of Workshop for cheirmen of Commissions on Mis sions in local churches will ac- 1 quaint the chairmen with general leadership as it relates to local church mission work. The Rev. H. Burnham Kirkland, treasurer of the Division of World Missions. New York, will speak this evening at eight. The groups will get dow n to work Friday. The Rev. B. Dow Kirk pntrick. pastor of the First Metho dist Church. Athens. Ga.. wrill be t gin the days activities with de votions at 9 a.m. IJr. Gum will speak at 9:15 and Dr. Engle at 10 o'clock. The Rev. Mr. Kirkland will de liver a sermon at 11 a.m. and Jose Valencia, resident bishop of the Philippines, will speak at 8 p.nv Addresses by other prominent Methodists will highlight Satur day's activities. Highway Record For 1956 In Haywood (TO DATE) Killed I 2 (1955 ? 1) Injured .... 43 (1955 ? 37) Accidents.. 102 (1955 ? 76> Loss ... $32,621 (1955 ? 939,479) (TUa Information compiled (ram records at Stat* Hlgfc way Patrol.)