* ? IKraitlcJjJt tytti* nxtb Che ^Hxghlzui&s ^nrunian Published every Thursday by the FrankHn Press At Franklin, North Carolina VOL. LX111 Number Forty nine WEIMAR JONE8 * EdlUr-Publlshet NATIONAL ?DITORIAI ? i Entered at the Post Office, Franklin, N. C., as second class matter Telephone No. 24 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $2.00 Six Months i. - *125 Three Months 75 Single Copy ? 06 Obituary notices, cards of thanks, tributes of respect, by In dividuals, lodges, churches, organizations or societies, will be re garded as advertising and inserted at regular classified advertis ing rates. Such notices will ' be marked "adv." In compliance with the postal requirements. . - , Wealth And Progress TO anyone interested in the South-1-or interested, * for that matter, in the trends in present-day America ? an article by Louis Bromfield in the November issue of The Atlantic Monthly will prove stimulating. Mr. Bromfield, who might be termed the novel ist of American farm life, points out that all the old % American frontiers are gone, but adds that there is a new frontier ? the South. Accordingly, he cap tions his article, "Go South, Young Man!" North Carolinians will be .particularly interested in his praise of this state's progress: Of all the Southern states, and for that matter all the forty -eight, in* state has shown more progress within the past generation than North Carolina. The progress is not alone economic. Few states bftve made so rapid an industrial development, and no Southern state has advanced with such speed toward the achievement of the vital Indus trial -agricultural balance so important to the stabilised prosperity of stny region. It was mot so long ago that the same poverty and shabbhMM which has largely characterised the Deep South since defeat was almost everywhere in evidence in North Carolina. Today the shabby look has largely gone. The farms ap pear prosperous and well cared for in most areas, and the shabby cabin slums on the fringes of the towns are on their way out. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has become one of the most vigorous cul tural centers of the nation. Mr. Bromfield then proceeds to assign a reason for North Carolina's advances: It is, I think, indisputably true that culture, social advance, and civilization tai general are to a large ex tent tied to economics, to living standards, and to pro ductivity. So are ignorance, prejudice, and intolerance. That is a thesis we are hearing on every hand today ; prosperity, if we can just have enough of it, will cure all our ills. The trouble with the churches, we are told, is poverty. The trouble wifh our citizenship, is, primarily, poverty. And especially is this idea advanced about edu cation. If we pay high enough salaries, the best teachers will automatically be attracted to the school room. If we can only have federal aid, the schools will automatically turn out thinking men and wbmen who will lead wholesome lives and be good citizens. Anl, most often heard : Educate people, and they'll make more money. From that argument, it is but a step to the opposite, but closely related, argument : Educate people so that they can make more money ; t'hat is to say, the purpose of education is to enable people to make more money. That argument, though not put quite that crudely, is being ad vanced by responsible persons in the educational world today. Intuitively, the average man knows there is something wrong with this line of reasoning. But exactly where is it wrong? Babies And Bills One of the strangest cases to come before an American court, perhaps, was that of an eight months old baby in Pittsburgh the other day. The mother told the court She was unable to pay a $40 bill she owed a baby sitting company, and so she left the baby with them. Which recalls the story told of a father of an infant born in a hospital in another state. Unable to pay the hospital bill in full, he attempted to arrange for installment payment of the balance. But he was told by the hospital's business mana ger that the mother and infant could not leave the hospital until the bill was paid in full. The father disappeared, and some days later the hospital received a message from him, in a dis tant city: " I hope", he said, "you'll get along fine raising that child of mine". POETRY CORNER Conducted by EDITH DEADER1CK ERSKINE WeevervlUe, N. C. SpuuiurgJ by Asktrili* Brum lU. Kalwuai Ltngwt v/ Amtr hum NORTH CAROLINA I know a very ancient spit of land. An old, old sea heaves heary waves upon It; An old, old wind leaps wildly from far skies To sculpture (ossll'd sand In dunes upon it. Of late came man, the savage red-skin first; Then bold, seafaring wights whose early hope To found a nation In the wilderness Was brought to an untimely end. Their fate Was never known, but others came? again And yet again, till now the burgeoning land Fulfills the vision of the pioneers. Vet man was not content to tread the sand Nor sail the sea: He made him fragile wings And soaring from that same stark, storied strand Proclaimed him lord of all the elements ? The conqueror of water, earth and air. I know a very ancient fertile plain. Its lields are white with cotton in the Fall And ripe tobacco crowds tall slatted barns. In lofty spiring towers of rugged stone The sons and daughters of a sturdy race Explore the endless reaches of the mind And seek with keen adventurous hardihood To meet the challenge of. their troubled times. 1 know a very ancient range of hills. Along their pine-crowned crests the soughing wind Is never still. They march to serried ranks Away and yet away until the eye Of the beholder faints and cannot reach That last blue smoky line against the sky. Immutable and ageless, awful, grand, They still the ravaged, tortured human soul And lill it with a deep serenity. Your ancient spit of land along the sea, Your very ancient, rich and fertile plain, Your old, old range of far-flung, wind-swept hills . Are folded In my heart, North Carolina! MRS. F. B. LEWIS La Porte, Ind. LETTERS CAN BE OVERCOME Dear Mr. Jones: I was interested In your editorial some weeks back regard ing the Illiteracy In Macon County. Does the county have free textbooks? If not, that would help. However, work needs to be done on the parents of the children. I am sorry to say that ever since I can remember there has been a strong tendency on the part of the parents to keep children out of school on the slightest excuse? to help pull fodder, gather i ty-ops, slight Illnesses find colds. I went to school here and I know. Is there no way to enforce ihelr attendance by rigid ap plication of the law? A truant officer' who would call alter a child is out and require a doctor's certificate in case the parents claim the child Is sick? The matter is so vital I can't help, but think about it, and know there is sqme way to overcome it. Sincerely yours. HELEN HILL NORRIS Horse Cove and Atlanta, November 20, 1948. ILLITERACY AND THE SCHOOLS . Dear Mr. Jones: Could It be possible, that In our consideration ol Illiter acy In Macon County, we are misdirecting our attention, when we place the blame either on the children, or their parents? ;,| . 'I J%i itflt Public elucation has not always been our privilege; our history is studded with references to the struggle of Jthe under-privileged to have education included as a necessary social development. The affluent have always had their pri vate schools, and the public school only came Into existence with the use of the franchise by large masses of the under privileged. I sense a tendency on the part of some of those people who have expressed an opinion on this problem, to recom mend that the police power of the state be brought to bear, and the truant officer be encouraged to "do his duty." I wonder just what kind of education Is associated . with an undue use of police power. A use of this power does not Impress me as a reason able argument. Why, for Instance, is It possible for fifty or sixty child ren to enter f.he first grade and only five or six graduate from high school? Are those who do not achieve the satis faction of a high school diploma to be written off as failures who are stupid, dull and unintelligent? Or have the schools been designed for the few who can attune themselves to the memorization of the printed page? I wonder. Is it possible that the people have become disillusioned with our secondary schools, and are refusing to bring pres sure on those citizens who have failed to conform by send ing their children to school? There are several families in Highlands who have with drawn their children from the public schools, and entered them tn private Institutions. I do not know that these child ren are assured of "better education" by this move on the part of their parents. I do know, however, that these parents did not dislocate their family lives for the satisfaction of decreasing their bank account. My feeling is that large groups of our Macon Couny citi zens have become ? dissatisfied with the entire program of secondary education as they see it reflected in their child ren. These citizens are vaguely aware that the state board of education, and the departments of education in the uni versities and colleges have assumed responsibility for the education of their children, and have left them only the privilege of paying the taxes necessary to the upkeep of the schools. It may also be that both citizens with children In schools and those who have failed to enter their children In school, have lost confidence In educational leadership, the Utter group having taken the line of least resistance. Returning to a previous pofcnt. It appears to me that a business which loses nine-tenths of Its capital every twelve years would soon be in bankruptcy. However, the school rec ords show that from the first grade through the graduating class in high school, approximately that percentage Is lost, at feast In some locations. Possibly what Macon County needs, andl this goes for many other communities in this great land of ours, is a re appraisal of education. Such a reappraisal should be under taken by the citizens of the community without the aid of the state department of education, or the assistance of the department of education of the unlvertltUs and colleges. Education did not begin with thU array of ?up?r-*trueture; thM? appenduw teem to iuvt Men acquired over the yeari.. It seemi possible to me that groups of citizens, gathered together under local leadership, and Macon County has Its share, might begin the study of education In the county. They might explore the curriculum of the county schools with a vlaw to discovering whether it realiy stimulates citizenship or merely aids the students in accumulating the necessary credits for graduation from high school. They might be In terested in the study of local educational leadership, for the purpose of discovering whether this leadership Is prepared to pilot the next generation in our complicated society. Education Is due for a re-appraisal. That appraU&i* wilt not be made in the universities and colleges, or by the pro fessors of education. It will have to be made by the people, or fall to be made, If they reject the challenge. It seems unreasonable to believe that j eople enjoy a state of illiteracy To scourge people in ihis i light seems doubly unreasonable. It may be that they are more realistic than we appreciate. It may be that they hive seen the futility of our educational methods, and have de -ided to give thosp methods no further aid and comfort. I wonder. JACK H. WILCOX Highlands and Knoxvill.e, Tenn., November 20, 1948. ? Others' Opinions ? FARMING, THfiN AND NOW Within recent years there has been an Industrial and economic revolution down-on and up-on the farm. The argu ment over "price supports" has been settled in the affirma tive by the Republican and Democratic parties. Farmers will get up to $2,000,000,000 In the fiscal year ending next June. The "old farm isn't what it usterwas," with cotton. w>(fat, oats, eggs, tobacco, corn, rice, chickens, butter-fat, milk, po tatoes, hogs, soybeans, etc., receiving goveyament support. There's a reason! Innumerable reasons! Perhaps you re member when hundreds of European agricultural scientists came to Washington several years ago and congregated at the Hughes electrical farm a few oniles away in Virginia. Every electrical device of that per|6d was at work? on the Hughes farm; In the sheds where the cows were milked; in the chicken coop; the comfortable home? and even electric wires were strung in all directions to illuminate the broad acres. Electif^ed farms are everywhere today. Farm machinery has revolutionized millions of acres, lifting the load of! the farmers' backs. Look around! Turn off the gas on your automobile? stop, and behold with amazement the triumph in ag^culture? a pretty word that broke' into farm society, and progressed so rapidly that politicians, and the political parties, put up big money to back the new-fangled notions that promoted farming to Class A ns a top American industry. In short, electricity, good highways, automobiles and trac tors led the way and a thousand new methods and improve ments lilted the load off the farmer's back. If you have any doubts about all this, get out tfito the country and beho)^' the modern new buildings on your farm; watch the w"h* go-round; listen to the radio, and if you need to talk to a folks hundreds of miles away, thfre is a phone handy bjl|jpr In short; Farm products are A'hat all people depend ioi\? and must have. That's why federal support for farm pticeS" will continue. ?Marion (S. C.) Star LEGAL ADVERTISING ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as adminis trator of Robert P. Sanders, de ceased, late of Macon County, N. C., this is to 'notify all per wns having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned on or before the 19 day of November> 1949 or this notice will be plead in bar of their re covery. All persons Indebted to ?id estate will please make im mediate settlement. This 19 day of November, 1948. EDMOND SANDERS Administratci N25? 5tp ? ltc ? D30 STATE OP NORTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OP MACON. MACON COUNTY, Plaintiff. vs. SALLY LEDFORD and husband MACK LEDFORD, ED GUY and wife GUY, and IKE GUY, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of a de cree of the Superior Court of Macon County entered in the above entitled action on the 8 day of November, 1948, the undersigned Commissioner will on the 10 day of December, 1948, at 12 o'clock, noon, at tha Courthouse door In Macon County, North Carolina, sell to the highest bidder for cash the fallowing described real estate: Beglaning at a poplar at the spring and runs S 88 W 38 poles to a large white oak;, then S 2 W 18 poles to a. stake in the old Angel line; then N 88 E 36 poles to a chestnut; then 18 poles to the beginning, containing 18 acres, more or less; being the land conveyed to Anna Guy by Rhoda Thomas in deed doted October 28, 1930, and registered in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, in Book U-4 of Deeds, page 474. This, the 9 day of November, 1948. R. S. JONES Commissioner. N18 ? 4tc? JJ ? D9 EXECUTRIX NOTICE v Having qualified as executrix of J. E. Calloway, deceased, late Macon County, N. C., this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before th* 26 day of October, 1949 or thte notice will be plead Ln bar ol their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make Immediate settlement. This 26 day of October, 1043. JULIA E. CALLOWAY Executrix 028 -- 6tp ? D2 12 FILL GLASSES IN THIS SIX-BOTTLE CARTON! ?You Can't Buy a Better Value VALUE ax? NOW ONLY TRuSS* /~V p0 W25'i \< t KINKK < OI.A AT \N\ I'UK I!! Bottled by: Pep?l-Cola Bottling Co. ot Bryson City Under appointment from Pepel-Cola Company, N. Y. J