life difenakee itrntt Establishe i Julv 1889 Published every Thursday at Murph>. Cherokee County. N C ADDIE MAE COOKE Publisher and Owner Kl BY LEE DA\ IS Editor MRS. C \\ SAX AGE Associate Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES In Cherokee Count) One Year, $2AO; Si\ Months, $ 1.50; Outside Cherokee County: One Year. $3 00: Six .Months, fl.75 9 Entered in the Post Olfice at Murphy. North Carolina as second matter under the Act of March 3, 1879. Meditation God of the hills, grant ns thy strength to go back into the cities without faltering, strength to Jo our daily task without to ing and with enthusiasm, strength to heirs our neighbors who haze no hills to remem ber God of the wilderness, with thy pure winds from the iiorthtanJ blow away our pettiness; with the haisher winds of winter drive away our selfishness and hypocrisy; fill us with the breadth and the depth and the heightb of thy wilderness. May we live out the truths which thou hast taught ns. :n every thought and word and deed. Amen. ?Selected \our Right To Know In 1787 when the fathers of the Constitution picse.iied the results of four months of efforts to the states for ratitoation, a cry went up throughout the land (fiar the Constitution lack ed something. The rights of the ??,<ernment were there, but many maintslned to some of the rights of the people were omitted. Thus the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments, was drawn up and added to the Constitution. The first amendmenf goes like this: "Con gress shall make no law respecting an establish ment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof: or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press; or the right of-the people peaceable to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances." This first amendment protects "Our Right to Know", the theme of National Newspaper Week, October 1-8. This does not mean that the right to know is the special privilege of the press, rather it is the right of the press to present to sou. the read er, the facts you have a right to know. Robert A. \ ogeler. prisoner of the Reds for 17 months says, "It is extremely important for the American people to realiA' that freedom of the press is a principle placed in the Constitution for their benefit, rather than for the benefit of the newspaper." ' We are inclined to take this freedom for granted along with other freedoms won for us since the Declaration of Independence. We shouldn't say "It can't happen here. We'll always have a free press." It can happen here and does, in big cities and small towns, as Charles Clayton pointed out in an address at the l'Diversity of Missouri. He says "It does happen in every city where committees of the Board of Aldermen or the school board insist on secret meetings. It is happening right now in Washing ton, despite all denials to the contrary. " 1 he permanent slogan of National News paper Week is "Your Newspaper Lights the Way of Freedom". You, the man-in-the-street. must be on the alert to preserve this freedom which belongs to veu. Scouting With 7he Publisher MURPHY looked good to nve when I had an opportunity to go back for a week-end two week? ago. However, in less than three weeks' of being away, the town had changed so much I hardly knew my way around I imagine by now the stop light and completion of the street work are making driving easier. TODAY (Tuesdayi I imagine has been a big day in our county, with ths Democratic nominees and other party leaders coming in large numbers for the rally. While I ate barbecue at dinner here at Chowan College tonight, I still would like to have had some of that served at the fairgrounds. ? ? * COLLEGE life, though different and interest ing every hour of the day. is just as busy as that of editing a newspaper. In fact, I still do some news paper work, preparing news stories for the college, teaching journalism, visiting newspaper plants with the journalism class, and yesterday we had several newspaper publishers from Eastern North Carolina and Tidewater Virginia here for a meeting of an advisory committee for the new Graphic Arts de partment of the college. ? ? ? THE 16TH DISTRICT of Women's Clubs held its annual meeting Friday in Gatesville, and Mrs. J. H. Bunn. state president, and others that Mur phy and Andrews club women know were speakers. Dorothy Brown (Mrs E. P i who lives n Murfrees boro and was one of my college mates is state treasurer. Among other activities in recent days have been: Attending revival services in Powells ville w hen Dr. F. O. Mixon, our president, was preaching and having dinner there with relatives: attending revival in Eure when the Rev Oscar Creech, associate to the president, was preaching; attending the Chowan hour radio broadcast at sta tion WRCA in Ahoskie; attending services at Au lander when the Dean of Men Henry Reeves preach ed; visiting two of our students who were in the hospital in Ahoskie?one with asthma and one with a broken leg from playing football. Tonight I at tended the meeting of our Sundav School class, the Fidelis. and there were about 30 young women, around the same age of my Esther Class in Mur phy. present. ? ? ? VISITS to some of the lovely old homes in Mur freesboro also have been on my schedule; The present Wynn home, built 180 years ago and first occupied by the Murfree family for whom the town was named. A son of this family later moved to Murfreesboro. Tenn.. and became the namesake of that city. The four huge white pillars on the front of this home were hand-turned by slave labor. Also there was an evening in the Old Vaughn home, part of which was built 175 years ago, and contains some of the most beautiful hand carved wood work and antique furniture I've ever seen. (I know Avis Hoo ver will be down to see me . . . no. the homes and antiques, soon.) Best wishes to alL Looking ? Over A Four-H Clover By FRANCES POTT Aad M. B. WRIGHT LETTER FROM HOLLAND September*! Dear Mrs. Puett: I have been quite busy since the last time I wrote to you; juidt?' have seen quite a lot ot the Pro vie noe of Gelderland now. I think that I forgot to tell you that this Provience looks very 'muctf' like some sections of North Carolina, (it doesn't have any mountains, but it has plenty of trees and beautiful vegetation.kit looks good to me, for I was beginning to grow tired of nothing but flat land with only a few trees near the houses. The soil here is sandy apd they do not do fanning od. & lat?T scale as they did In the northern pro viences Moat of the farms here are small and a great number of them ant poultry farms, with some wf them dwek farms. Ike farm that I am thrlng od inmost ? general term with poultry, about I is strictly a tud farm, there to aonaewhare orar<LfOO <toc*s. You should Juat hear them all ?sir imrm k p***" toM? ^ i faetaal (tola. TO i is one of personal demonstration; I forking side by side, offering a j friendly handshake or grinning through an embarassing situation. These things give for better proof of the personality we are and the people we represent than could a hundred well organized oratory ex amples. This is a typical Dutch village and not all "above average". It la very interesting to be a part of it and really see how the people live. The daughter and I ride our bicycles to the village about 10 a. m. in the mornings to do the family business. It b a usual sight now to see the milk being deliver ed from a wagon drawn by a horse or the bread delivered from a bi cycle cart. Of course It Is not all this way. at the same time you can see quite tuudei n and recent coss venlsnces that show the pi ogress which is being made. -^ >Ust weak I had. * nice vieit la Kaaiiesn which was quite a dif fram this small viHage. I a lovely visit with the family of Mr. Arnold Boerkens, who b now living in Miupigr, North Car olina. They were very gentium to It was especially alaa to well; evwa the lptle torical places of Interest in their city which is one of the oldest cities in Holland. I saw a very old ket place and town hall (and when I say old?some of the dates go back as early as 1100). They even took me to see the statute of the little boy who olaced his finger in the hole of the dike and Holland! The visit with the Beer kens' was so much like being with American people I almost wanted to confess to someone else besides myself that I had often been look ing at the calendar to see how far away November looked!! The van de Pol family has been very Interested in my seeing their Provience. One day the daughter, son and- I went to Apeldoorn, a city some miles away, to a young farmer's meeting. Even though I couldn't understand all it was nice to see how they carried on their meetings. We have also had a visit, to tern of their old fishing villages.' Morken and Volendam; this was a ( boat trip and very nice. Here ere saw many of the acenes and old customs as are often seen In books. Use moot interesting thing of the day for me was traveling out through the sea where they were working on a new East Polder. I bringing dirt up from of the sea to make a new dike. By 1966 they hope to have land where the sea now It' to realty quite . This week I was the guest of a Since egg prices are highest at this time of year. It may pay poa tryroen to use electric lights to stimulate production of fall as Honey has the U. Si Department ef tare as a "plentiful food" October. BLOOD PROGRAM?Children and adults, both p< ssible victims of accident and disease, share benefits of Red Cross National Blood Program. Participation will eventually include every community now having no blood supply or whose supply is inadequate to meet the community need. mThiSu^I newyorkI At the Manhattan entrance of the Hudson River tunnel, a huge truck got wedged against the tojj because it was too high to get into the tunnel. Emergency crews worked for hours trying to get it out. and in the meantime, traf fic was stalled for a mile on each side. Finally a small boy who had watched the proceedings with in terest walked over to tne foreman of the crew ana askea if he want ed a suggestion. Yes, he did. "Well, let tne air out ot the tires," he said They did. The truck came out easily. There's sadness along Broadway and much of the talk among the stage people is rather hushed. For Gertrude Lawrence is gone She was "more than just a bright star. She was Broadway personified in a lovely woman. It was not her acting or singing or looks, but a rare combination of all, an inner radiance which all of us who knew her felt. If any quality about her stands out, it was gaiety? and ?everyone loves to be gay. An un derstudy is trying to take her place. But it will be a long time before anyone really does, if ever. i A local politician running for office has just told the following story about how Governor Giles of Virginia came out in a name calling incident with Patrick Hen ry. It seems that he had heard that Patrick had called him a "bob tail politician" and wanted to know if this was true, and- M so, what was it's meaning. Henry re plied, "Sir, I do not recollect hav ing called you a "bob-taL politi cian' at any time, but think it probable I. have. Nor recollecting the time or Occasion, I can't say what I did mean, but if you will teJl me what you think I meant.1 I will say whether or not you are 1 correct" The young couple aat on the beneh In Central Park and looked the picture of young romance/1 Slowly their heads moved toward each other, hi* arm slipped about' her shoulders, his hand tipped her chin upward and his anxious Bps! mowed surely toward hers. Then hi* aye caught right of an old lady ' eoimty agent for two days One' ?>ay we traveled seeing different p"rt? ?* the Provianee. the next] day we vtsMed a Home Betaomks' whool You aw I have been very here on the term, weak la psteg to be a Am one; ail five af the America W" In Holland aw bar Golden Carrt apa. They have told me it loa Itee a fairy tale; ) am to aw ft. Appeal A. hero will fall in battle one day, His wounds fast draining his life blood away. You shrug and say, "But what could I do?" Brother, his life might depend upon you! Perhaps that boy lies there in your stead. Dying, while you lie safely abed. Your blood might revive him, re lieve him of pain, Restore him to wife, mother, chil dren again. Yon may not be burdened with this world's wealth, But if you are blessed with abun dant health, I-ore is a gift that won't cost you a nickle. You're scarcely aware of the steady trickle. That, rising in reservoirs such as we, Like rivers flowing down to the sea. Unite to form the much-needed flood. Of merciful, llfegiving, war-winp ing blood. So hasten, contribute your drip to the ocean. Help keep the healing streams in motion Then go youf way in satisfaction. This boy s not listed "Killed in Action." ?T. W. E. McKew, L. U. No. 101. standing not far behind them and he raised himself abruptly, ready to rebuke her for spying. But the old one was now moving away, waving her old-fashioned parasol. "Don't fuss at me, young man," she implored. "I Just couldn't help looking at you two. You are so happy. Once I too knew young love. Now he is gone these many years. So don't spoil my borrowed moment of happiness. You can spare it" Raccoon Raccoon Survives Despite Enemies Raccoon, pirate, pet. predat or, prize or peat. So varied are the relationships between men and raccoons that you may take your choice for a single designation, j TV'ddy Roosevelt built his Bull Moose party about a wild animal. This being an election year we found Senator Kefauver following Ms example and using the coon skin cap as campaign symbol The 'ate of the Senator's ambitions matters little to the coon who ??ems able to survive dogs, traps, civilization, fire, hunters and al most anything. Even the rage of college boys for coon skin coats did not wipe the animals out of their range over our whole coun try. j When a country boy in his early spring wanderings finds what look 1 like the prints mady by little 2 s t inch hands in the mud along the creek he has a hunch that the coons have come out of hiberna tion. If he is a careful observer he looks for one track with four toes instead of five and If be finds one he knows he has found a track of a woodchuck rather than a coon, i Raccoons breed In February just after coming out of their hlberna tion. In 63 days two to six young ; are born of the union and both | parents take part in the suocess of { the little family which may re-. main as a group through the first ? winter. By the first winter a young coon may have reached a weight of 12 pounds. Two hundred acres of suitable woodland should yield ' an annual crop of one raccoon in spite of the normal accidents of nature. A full meal may be about1 pounds of fish but it may be an equivalent In crayfish, insects, sweet corn or vegetables We hope this clown of our neighbor hood never vanishes off our home range. If he does we will move to his just for the fun of it. HAYSEED By Uncle Sam A SMILE A smile costs nothing. A smile may be of great value. A smile does not Impoverish those who give it. A smile happens In a flash. A smile may change a life. A smile may help the rich. A smile may enrich the poor. A smile may create happiness. A smile may foster good will. A smile may drive away the gloom. A smile may give hope to the hopeless. A smile may encourage the dis couraged. A smile may rest the weary. A smile may lift a burden. A smile may dispel darkness. A smile takes away nothing of value. A smile may live In the memory forever. I In 1940, North Carolina was ex ceeded by 42 state* In the propor tion of college trained people among rural-farm populations. Pill! BV OR KENNETH i. FOREMAN SCRIPTURE: Mi(%? , DEVOTIONAL READING HB Dedicating Life tor October t. IMS There are tvo cIuni of per aoos in thli world: the drifter* and the dedicated. Drifter* become driftwood, cumbering a barren shore, or they float, waterlogged and helnles*. a menace t o more important traffic. The dedicated, on the other hand, hare purpose in their minds, they have a course and a com pass. They have somewhere to go. lnf then. But not ?11 the dedicated ?re alike. The vital question la: To what is a man dedicated? Stalin is a dedicated man; so are Christian missionaries; so are pol iticians food and bad. The big ques tion remains: Dedicated to what? to whom? ? ? ? Dedicated It God HIGHEST object of an dedication Is God; this always Includes de votion to his cause. To be dedicated to God means to be devoted. In pur- ' pose and In action, in every way that is possible, to making this world?be (Inning with one's own self?come Into line with the pray er. "Thy will be doo?.'' Je 1 the Gospel by Matthew fer the nest six months, was ef aD paresne the topmost cTtmpto ef a He dedicated to Ged. Inn did net drift Into this. Dedication was net automatic, Inevitable. Jesus, not less than those be calls his brothers and sisters, had to make up his mind to the ancient demand: Choose this day whom you will serve. o o ? The Power JESUS WAS not a late comer to his decision. Once or more it has happened that a young man who de cides to enter the ministry will sur prise and even startle family and friends by this decision. But when Jesus "entered the ministry" (as we may rightly say he did. after his baptism), it could have sur prised none who had lutown him He had always been aware of being "about his Father's business." He did not pass from drifting to dedica tion, as most men must; he passed from one stage of dedication to an other. Whatever questions the story of Jesus' baptism raises, one thing Is certain: from and after that even Jesus knew himself to be God's special Representative, endowed with the Holy Spirit for the work be waa to do. Over and over In the New Testa ment we hear of the "power of the Spirit," for the divine Spirit both brings power and la Power. Only the life dedicated to God has the power of God. The Problem r' IS a mistake to think that the dedicated life U free from prob lems. God will not weaken us by making our choices for us. Every temptation is an opportunity to choose, between God's tray and some tray that la not God's. Temp tation may also present a choice not so much between black and white, wrong and right, as balwoau good right and more-right of 4aana* temp il k them he a hew e( But the question was. How? By turning stones Into bread? By as tonishing people with miracles such as Jumping unharmed off (be Tem ple top? No; these were not God's way. The last temptation was not as aboard as It sounds. Whenever man have said. "Let us do dvll that good may come," whenever they have said that a noble purpose glori fies any method used to attain It. they have done what Jesus was tempted to do,---worship Satan, e e e The Practice DEDICATION dees not tree N?l la put at God's dls to avoid, wrong chaise, to he right one. Tot again there la a condition: God will not resist our temptations In our place. There Is something we have to do tor our Lucky You by Dick Shaw a i j r ~ t- '

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