R1DAY. MARCH 2?. 1926. ;55klet tells OF PARK AND ITS N. c. APPROACHES Prepared By A.her,lie Chamber of C.mearce Beini Dief: tnbu!?klet. one of the most afcr.i. . i\ hooks yet to appear devoted to the exploitation of the luties of Great Smokies, has been , ,1 by the Asheville chat -her of ? : . - ree in conjunction with the i?h Carolina Park Commission, i - is directing the campaign in ? state to purchase the Great r i.ics for national park purp? >. The book at'te*- describing the nig. ed beauty of the mountain . the utnber'es waterfalls, the rich foliage nd the marvelous vistas stresses the ecessibility of the park by tlv- imroved state highways leading to its ctrances. "Whatever may be said of -liff ? ul r of travel in th' Smokies the ve*y ppose is true of the approaches to he park area," the booklet st 'tes." Along the whole length of park ?n iorth Carolina runs state highway No. 0, famous mountain to coast highray. At Murphy it touches Georgia, onnects there with roads from Allan a.Birmingham, New Orleans and ther southern cities. A little further ast it conects with highway No. 286 rem Franklin, which also connects ith the Georgia highway. At Dillsoro another road from Franklin omes in, at Sylva highway No. 105 rom the Sapphire region of the Blue tidge enters highway 10." Highway No. 10 is the main highay to the park, says the hook and the pproach f(rom Asheville upward to '.jauii v -ity, tiic jinianiai Kanwu) f the park on the N irth Carolina ide, will be the favored entry way rem all points throughout the state, nd the north, where the bulk of the ark visitors may be expected. SPELLING BEE TO BE CONDUCTER BY CHARLATTE PAPER Here is a chance of a lifetime for powers of North Carolina to get ea! money, as well as real fun, from he covers of the old spelling book. The Charlotte Observer will give IT .00 in elect, in an old fashioned spelling >t?c the county champion. This lucky >oy. or girls, may be among thosefho will come to Charlotte in May as he guest of The Observer. He or he will stop at the City's best hotel rill be royally entertained and will nter the state wide finals. Then "he Observer is offering the following >ri s at the all-territory finals in day; first $100, second, $50, and U1U $2 >. In addition, the champion speller of Xoith Carolina will be sent to Helpfulness to Others Man's Great Achievement The man whose picture appears here *as ji every sense of the word helpful to mankind, as it was he who ?-' Rave to the ? w ?r.1 i Vv a " >7 fierce s Golden t'j -..*V Medical Discoviffftvijet cry which has -v J brought restored ^ to c v 1 t v . ' , i a to say ft v aP" !> - . * I would a i Or WOTTUi to < * ' 1? b r.u, ... w All uca' rr>B s ass? -zap wa erally there's someone to Interfere aud hi stop the tensing, or else the child can s: keep out of the teaser's way. The dog h< can't. sl "The reason I'm not sorry to see "s you teasing Binks just now is that lie's ",i! better off being teased about that lump of sugar than he'd be if you 'r gave it to him to eat." "Oh," said Maida. "I wasn't really teasing him. I was going t him sickest. It is so with dogs. "Only, dogs learn to leave alone * most of the things their instinct tells r them i? bad for them to eat. They inherit that wise instinct froiA their v.ihl ancestors. Those ancestors never knew about sweets. So your dog hasn't the instinct to realise them." And the dog that Is fed too much ?>n sweets isn't likely to leave any descandants c li? prop; l>y his suiTertfJ^s." Ma kin slipped the 1 line) of su^ar sur- ll reptitiousiy into her itQckot. V' "He doesn't seeiu any the worse for 1 the lthnps of encar we'v i*lv??:i him," r she sah! In self defense, "lie's as well ns any doc." "He isn't a year old yet." replied ' Ne^1\v. "At that a::.* a pap is as 's strong in teeth ami d ' on as ? human kin ? ? -an eat almost any i! w. r. i ' ? be harmed liy^t. i'.a: .'-i 'ii.fr Nature is keeping tabs on thorn, ail the time, f And in later years she unices thein 5, pay with compound ii.tmn >t for every iaw of hers they've broken. ? "Nature doesn't tor-ei. Siie Isn't a 'ovlng niotV.er,' as the m-et clu.p? en 15 i:er. Sue's a rif. ... . . p ci : j and there's no broken rule sh.e ilooru'i | tuake us pay for. sooner or later. I i "By the way, what was the uiufter - MUKPHY. C g-Owners ion Terhune i TO YOUR DOG Just Out of His Reach. rfth Dinks awhile ago? While I was . - k there by that window. I heard trn yelling to beat the band." '"Oh!" laughed Muida. amused by ie recollection. "lie wasn't yelling, le was singing.' it's the cutest ihlug e dees. Auut Ella came to see us ils morning and I rnude Binks show ;T by singing for her. E\ery time I lay some very high note on the vlon. he throws hack Ids head and ings' at the top of his lungs. Everyinly roars with laughter to see him y to accompany the violin with soug. ie?" "II'm!" mused Old Man Neg'ey. "A it of folks think It's fuunv to make dog 'sing' by playing high notes on ddles or tlutes or fifes or some such rllliunt instrument. They'd get the line elTw'l, a Utile eani?>r, if they'd pat u cambric needle red hot and ick It into the dog's eardrum. He'd Ing' Just the same. Maybe even a itie louder." "1 never heard such a cruel thing i my life!" blazed Ma Ida. "I ippose you think you're being funny ut you're not. Why. I wouldn't make inks suffer for anything In the orld!" "Wouldn't you?" asked Negley, uniffieu "Then quit trying to make iiu 'sing* by playing shrill music to iin. It hurts him almost as much i me reu-iiuc neeuie wouiu. it uog s iiwe of hearing is so acute that his earing apparatus is pretty near as nsitive as his nostrils?and his nos ils ure the most sensitive thing noun to animals. A high noie of usic Is terribly painfui to those seuklve ear-passages of his. "It hurts them so hard that it makes iru howl with the pain of It. Then >lks laugh their heads off and they iy: 'Hear him try to stng! Ain't he ;ite? lie just loves music!' Well, e loves it about us much as you'd >ve a horuel sting. It's a torture to Irn. "At that, I've known dogs that ?ully loved soft piano music that idn't go t<>o high. We had a collie int used to run into the house every me niy wife started to play soft mes on our rickety old second-hand iano. lle'd sit beside her by the our. with his head on one side, just stoning and loving it. "I;ut any shrill sound means real aln to your dog. So don't amuse our guests next time by playing shrill j itisic to liitu while they laugh ut his >riaent. It Isn't funny." "If I can't feed him sugar and can't j lay my violin where be Is." pouted raida. "what can I do without arming him?" "You can give him simple, commonpn.se treatment," answered Negley. Use plain commonsense with a dog. nd you'll never injure him. You see. ogs ure a lot like humans that way. 'lain commonsense Is the only sure oad to travel with either of 'em." JoiyrUhl by toe McXaught Syndicate. Inc.) The Bills for Billville Bring in the bills for Billville?the I ills that pay the ten:, that heap the j Ives with honey, drown trouble In I ontent; the hills that make a feller [ i>el so wondrous rich and strange he j ells the bill collectors to never mind j lie change. Those are the bill for , (Ulvllle we're Ion gin' for today; that j lag life's storms with rainbows, make Winter bloom like May; the hills that : rive old Want afar?hack to his reary den; the new crisp Fives, and o forth, the bills of Life?Amen!? j itlantu Constitution. To Read Dates on Coins A i un.ny .. enjoy locking or c\ : \ time we get a ".iiv . , : , .s locally we run \ ortf s o badly h:u i be :!>1 To -tee! or < 'ha ta vlli thi. date or any oilw-r r?-ad? n-. : . . i.. i Lj read. ?il'-'i id. SWEETGUM | 1 Rev. M. M. Eller. passed away at 5 a. m. the 17th. Mr. Eller was a Pr' Rtiod man. His many friends will coi mis him very much. He had beersick for some time ana due to his m 2ge he could not possibly over come his illness. ing Mr. John T. Cooper died 3:15 p Ha m. the 17th, he was ?'t* year- of aire? He struck sick suddenly only liv- Gf ins about four days. Mr. Cooper passed away quietly, vei His many friends, will miss him very t,o< much in the community. un Mr. Will Anderson is verk sick and is not expected to live very long un- Do less a change for the better. <;h | \\\ w" THE right ingredi prepared. mixed, milled, make effec Proof that a shovel a not enough is subi above illustration. \vl of the intricate proc< the Royster Fertilize] ROYS Fertili DICKEY FEED < Murphy, MURPHY I Of ASHEV1LLE L Instruction in Typewriting, an essentials of a Bi ALS Instruction in Academy Subje< The difference bet failure is the little tin and the little money it George A Presii I PAGE THREE BOILING SPRINGS _L -J March 13?We are very much surged indeed, to see so much snowr ming. M >. Eula Davis has been very for the past week. Mr. Wade Lovingood was a Boil* j Spring . t week in a steel trap, rr.ea?ne over four feet from tip to tiy it3 wrings. Our Sunday School is dead we a?e ry sorry to say on account of everydy beinj? sick with flu. We are able to carry on the good w^rk. i Our n; i carrier. Mr. E. T*. Msnald is in bed with the flu, Mr. arli? McDonald is as-Utant carrier* ionts, properly cured and tive fertiliser, nd a screen are flitted in the i icii shows one ?oca lit (JHC U4 | r plants. 1 - ' * TER zer COMPANY N. C. COLLEGE IN1VERSITY Shorthand, d the general iaillC53 V/UUI sc o? College and wt-cn success and le, the little effort, : takes to get ready. . Hubbell dent