WOULD WIDEN TOWNinrrs OF HIGHLANDS Board Announces Plan To Push Boundary Out Half Mile The Highlands town board moved this week to extend the corporate limits of Highlands. Under the proposal, the limits would be pushed an average of about one-half mile beyond the present town boundaries, and would bring into the Incorpor ation such points as the High lands Country club and the dam and lake of the municipal ity's hydro-electric plant. The town at present is a square, each side of which Is three-fourths of a mile from the Intersection of Fourth and Main streets. Under the exten sion plan, the outline would be irregular. The plan adopted for extend ing the limits Is for the board of commissioners to give public notice by legal advertisement, which appears In this issue of The Press, that new limits will be fixed by ordinance to be adopted by the board at Its meeting at 7 p. jn. Monday, March 7. Under the law, If the board at that meeting receives a peti tion signed by 15 per cent of the qualified voters residing in the area to be annexed, It must submit the question of annexation to the voters within the area affected. Or, should 15 per cent of the qualified voters residing within the pres ent town limits so petition, the board must call an election within the town to vote on the issue. Unless one or both such peti tions should be received, the legal advertisement states, the the board of commissioners will adopt an ordinance extend - ln<* the town limits. The board of commissioners voted at Monday night's meet ing to start the extension move ment. X PLAN FOOD SALE t- . The Auxiliary ot St. Agnes Enisc/n>a]> church will . hold, a benefit/food gale at the Kanta h'lu. Power ar)d T.leht, company nfflie tomorrow (TVldayl, start-, ing at 10 a. lift. ' ,!\ Do You Remember . . . ? (Looking backward throufh the files of The Press) SO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK Advertisement on the front page: Allman House, W. R. Stallcupp, Prop'r. Franklin, N. C. This popular house Is open for the Summer, and the accom modations will be as pleasant and satisfactory as heretofore. In the Legislature: A bill to, abolish the necessity of kissing the Bible in taking oaths. Up to the time of going to press (Wednesday) we have had no mails from the railroad since last Friday, no news from the * rest of the world, and have been compelled to fill up this week with such matter as we could find around home. 25 YEARS AGO The Freeman Hammond Com pany, coming as the final num ber of the year's Lyceum course, will appear at the Courthouse. Franklin, N. C., the night of February 18th. Washington, D. C., Feb. 3 Former President Woodrow Wil son died at 11:15 o'clock this morning. Mr. Alex Moore, - Sheriff of Macon County, made a busi ness trip to Highlands Febru ary l. i It YEARS AGO Representative George B Pat ton's bill to extend the term of the register of deeds of Macon County to four years was pass ed bgr the lower house of the General Assembly Tuesday. The Franklin street and side walk Improvement project is getting well under way this week with 191 men at work on lotla. West Main, Rlvtrvitw, and Oak strMta. .. Highlands Man Is Fined For Failure To Send His Five Children To School I A fine (or violation of the compulsory school attendance law was Imposed on J. W. Beck, of Highlands, here Saturday. It was the first time In years that a compulsory school law case has been taken Into court, and was said to be one of the few times ? possibly the first time? a court in Macon County has Imposed punishment for violation of this law. Mr. Beck, operator of a shoe repair shop In Highlands, en tered a plea of guilty, and J. J. Mann, Justice of the peace. Im posed a fine of $5 and the costs, a total of $10.75. Mr. Beck paid this sum Into the court at the conclusion of he hearing, held In the office of the clerk of superior court. In passing sentence, Mr. Mann pointed out that the law per mits a fine of as much as $25, and that five such fines, one for each of Mr. Beck's five school-age children, oould have been imposed. The Justice of the peace, ad ded, however: "We don't want to unduly punish anybody, but children must be sent to school. They are our future citizens, j and they themselves will not ; have a fair chance unless they take advantage of the educa tional opportunity the state provides for them." Mr. Mann requested O. F. Summer, principal of Highlands school, to notify Mrs. Eloise G. Potts, county superintendent of welfare, and Mrs. Potts to notify him, should the Beck children tail to attend school regularly '.n future, without a legitimate excuse. He explained that each day's absence can be made a separate offense. The only legi timate excuse for a child to be ? Continued on Page Fight School Here Has 109 On Honor Roll ? i One hundred nine pupils of the Franklin school are on the honor roll for the second quar ter of this scbdoi year. The total compares with 67 who won places on the honor roll during the first quarter. To be on the honor roll, a pupil must make grades averag ing 93 or higher. Since first grade pupils are gig^djtorfyJ'satisfactory" or "TOSKtWaetory*. first graders are not listed on the honor roll. The list announced by Prin cipal Robert Guy Sutton, fol lows: Second grade: Jean Rurrell, Beverly Bryson, Jacqueline, Clafk^ .Jackie Corbin, Katrina Elmore, Harold Elliott, Roberta McCracken,. Clayton Rlchardwm, Dickie McWilli&ms, Sara Jean' Mallopep, Dwatn Horsley, . Fran ces Whittti>gtonr Bobby Hunter, Richard Love. Willard Hedden, Shirley Dills, Ann Sutton. Third grade ;? Sue Bailey, Fran ces Ouest, Judy Sue Houston, Judy Hooker, Betty Russell, Frances Tallent, Jo Ann Bur rell, Janet Oreen, Shirley Ann Henson, Mary Louise Long, Su sie Mashburn. Fourth grade: Jean Phillips, Randolph Bui gin, Frances An derson. Fifth grade: Monroe McClure, Jerry Bailey, Beverly Stockton, Margaret Allison, Tommy On use, Judson Hall, Donald Henry, BUI Mendenhall. Sixth grade: Caroline Reece, Virginia Swanson, Margaret Crawford, Nanette Garner, Hel en Moore, Bobby Womack, Rob ert Siler, Oma Lee Hogsed, Hattie Mae Wiggins, Herbert McKelvey, Thelma Tallent, Bet ty Hurst, Robbie Gay Tallent Seventh grade: Norma Jean Welch, Max Henderson, Adolph Conley, Raymond Ledford, Thad Dowdel, Robert Ftnley, Jlrmny Sherrlll, Viola Keener. Eighth grade: Paul Klllian, Jimmy Kinsland, Jack Love, Lee Poindexter, Jr., Mertis Angel, Julia Moody, Martha Ann Rot en. Ninth grade: Eugene Patton, Mary Ledford, Richard Jones, Lesher Green, Mary Ann Ka lian, Charlotte Love, Georgie McDonald, Martha Rogers, Meda Angel, Lucille Edwards, Martha I Ann Stockton. Tenth grade: Dudley Conley, ' Barbara Cribble, Mary Ellen Stoudemlre, Ann Teague, Caro lyn Bryson, Una Crawford, Lu anne Gibson, Barbara Sue Hol land, Marlann Sherrlll, Con naree Nolen, Eleventh grade: Sarah Dal rymple, Patricia Landrum, Nell Waldroop, Donald Brown, Jose phine Anderson, Pauline Ander son, Kate Oreen, Barbara Guf fle, Jo Aim Hopkins, Edith Hurst. Twelfth grade: Iris Cabe, Dor is Dalrympie, Hazel Moses, Dor Is Phillips, Elizabeth Ann Phil lips, Margaret Setoer, Mary Al ios Archer, Julia Ann Hlgdon, Bsrgm Hall, Jane Tip pftt, am J, ROADSIDE TO BE GRAVELED Town Boaird Mioveo To Aid Walkers From East Franklin The Franklin board of alder men, at Monday night's meeting, decided to place gravel along the roadside from Lee Folndex ter's filling station, near the railway station, to the Intersec tion of the Highlands and Sylva | highways, east of the river. This step was Suggested by , Mayor T. W. Angel, Jr., with a view to improving walking con ditions, and as a preliminary to | placing a sidewalk .along this j stretch when funds are avail able. The town has exhausted ? its street improvement funds, it was brought out. A suggestion from Town Clerk E. Vf,. Long that the board ask Rep. Carl 9. Slagle to Introduce a by iu the general assembly1 exempting the Town of Franklin ftom a state law providing for a 2 per, . pant discount' on all pre-paid taxes wasdisapproved. I Members of the. board expressed the view that the discount i would be a proportionately very ' small part ot the town's tax revenue. The board heard a delegation headed by John Vinson request helo in improving the road which turns off the Murphy highway and goes past Mr. Vin son's home. The purchase of a culvert, which will greatly im prove this road, was voted by the board and the matter was referred to the street committee. Members present at the meet '.ne were Ma.vor Angel, L. B. Phiiiins, W. C. BuTell. Erwln Patton, and E. J. Whitmlre. Lions Will Repeat 'Sing For A Dollar* i Program On Sunday The Franklin Lions club will repeat its performance of last Sunday this Sunday at 1 p. m. at the Macon theatre, It was announced this week. Under the set-.up for the unu sual program, any member of the audience, by paying $1, can require any of a long list of Lions to sing any number re quested. If the vocalising proves too terrible, someone else, by paying $1, can get the singer to stop singing. There Is no admission charge. Should a Lion refuse to sing, he is fined $10. The proceeds from both per formances will go to the club's blind and charity work. Last Sunday's program netted just under $100. VISIT CRASH SCENE Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bradley, Mrs. Clyde Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Greene, and Grady Green, all of Franklin, drove to Allendale, S. C., Sun day, where they were met by Homer L. Greene and Jimmy White, of Atlanta, Qa. All were guests at Allendale of Mrs. W. Z. Bryson. It was on Mrs. Bry son's farm that Max Greene and Harold Bradley lost their lives when their plane crashed Dec ember , 'j I > If} ' \ t G. CRAWFORD TO HEAD DRIVE FOR RED CROSS 1949 Quota is $1,796; Mr*. Sloan Resigns At Secretary E. G. Crawford, principal of the Otto school, Monday night was named to head the 1949 Bed Cross fund drive In Maoon County. The appointment was made at a meeting of the executive committee of the Macon County chapter, held In the Red Cross office in the Bank of Franklin building. The committee also decided to hold a "kick-off" din ner for campaign workers the evening of Tuesday, March 1, and to launch the campaign the morning of March 2. This year's quote, is $1,796, about 20 per cent less than the $2,230 quota assigned this coun ty In 1948. The lower quota is made possible, it was explained, by the chapter's drawing on reserve funds accumulated dur ing the war. The committee also accepted the resignation of Mrs. Marty Jo Sloan as executive secretary. Mrs. Sloan, who has held this position for five years, had planned to resign earlier this year but agreed to remain until March 31, tn order to be available for th? March fund campaign. No successor to Mrs. Sloan has been delected, ""in accepting thejund cam paign chairmanship, Mr. Craw ford, who is a veteran of over seas service during World War 2, explained that he Is extreme ly busy and that his health Is not good. "But-", he said, "I am glad to do what I can, because it will give me an oppoHunity to show my appreciation of what the Bed Cross did for me, especial ly when I was overseas." S. C. Bussell, of Highlands, will conduct the campaign in the Highlands area. Chairman H. H. Gnuse, who presided at the meeting an nounced that this county will not participate in the Bed Cross blood program, which is being set up in Asheville for Western North Carolina, and will get under way about April 1. The Bed Cross will not take the program into a county un less the local medical society requests it, he explained, and local physicians have said It is not needed here. The program, designed to ob tain blood from donors for use In hospitals over the area, will cost more to set up than all the counties tn Western North Carolina will raise in this year's Bed Cross fund drive, Mr. Gnuse said. Of the $1,796 to be sought in this county next month for the Red Cross. $1,000 is to be retain ed by the local chapter, and $796 will go to National headquarters. Teen Agers Form Club, Plan Center A Teen Age club, designed to provide recreational facilities for young people here from the ages of 13 to 19, has been organized, with approximately 84 paid members already enrolled. Mem bership cards were distributed it the Franklin school y ester - lay. The group hopes to obtain a building and set up a teen age janteen, or center, where young people, under adult supervision, sa-n meet to play games, dance, jtc. The club is headed by Bur den Hall, president. Mariann Jherrlll Is vice-president, Mar faret Klnsland is secretary measurer, and members of the >oard of directors are Hall Cal ahan, Dean Hensan, Norma Crawford, Elizabeth Jones, Fre la Lee Tallent. Dorlis Sutton, ind Kathryn Rotetn. The officers and directors will neet with Mrs. Clinton John ion. the club's adult adviser, ind Interested business men ind women at Mrs. Johnson's w>me tonight to outline plant tor Httfnj up the ouvtMn I County's Polio Fund Is Within $400 Of Quota Macon County's polio fund, which stood at only $2,204 a week ago, yesterday was reported ?o have c limed to W, f. This h approximately $400 below the quota of 13,24*. Pointing; out that the goal is within sight, and that most rural communities have contributed generous ly, J. H. Stockton, the 194? campaign director, announ ced that a canvass will be made in the Franklin busi ness district today (Thurs day), when it is hoped that the additional $400 needed i to reach the goal can be ob tained. PUSH CAMPAIGN FOR SYMPHONY Hope To Get Required Membership Soon To Bring Orchestra I Plans for pushing the mem- , bership campaign to completion this month were discussed by members of the local committee of the N. C. Symphony society : Tuesday night. The memberships make possi- i ble appearances of the Little Symphony orchestra here for aj free afternoon concert for school children, and an evening per formance for members. About 150 additional members are needed, Miss Laura M Jones, ' county chairman, told the group, and workers who have not seen all prospects in their territory were urged to do so at once. The orchestra is scheduled to be in Franklin Tuesday, March 22, less than six weeks from now. The free concert for child- I ren from the schools of the county is set for 1 p. m. at the | Friendship tabernacle, and the evening members' performance for 8 p. m. at the Franklin Methodist church. I Miss Jones reported at Tues day night's meeting that she and Mrs. Weimar Jones last Friday night attended the meet ing of the Clayton Music and Literary club to present the > cause of the symphony, and were assured that a number of memberships would be obtain- ; ed in Clayton. A trip to Bryson City for the same purpose is planned today. Meanwhile, the program for the children's concert has been announced, and Miss Jones, pointing out that music is en joyed and appreciated in pro portion to how familiar It is, ' asked persons who have records of the various' numbers on the program to lend them to one , or more schools, through the principals, so that the records may be played for the school ; children before they hear the numbers of the concert. The program for the child ren's concert follows: Wolf-Ferrari ? Intermezzo No. . II from the Opera, "The Jewels of the Madonna. Mozart-Excerpts from Sym phony No. 40 in O Minor. Original composition by a young North Carolinian. Everybody Sing ? "For The Beauty of the Earth"; Hall and McCreary "Songs We Sing". Musical Quiz? Based on famil iar songs such as: America; Farmer In the Dell; Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush; Home on the Range; Jingle Bells: Pop! Goes the Weasel; Shell Be Comtn' Round the Mountain; Skip to My Lou; Swanee River. Grofe? On The Trail, from the "Grand Canyon Suite". Debussy ? Children's Corner Suite, a. Golliwog's Cakewalk; b. The Little Shepherd. 2 Britten ? Soirees Musical es . (March and Tarantella). Jessel? Parade of the Wooden ] Soldiers. Brahms ? Hungarian Dance No. V. FOOD SALE SATURDAY , The F. S. Johnston Bible class c of the Franklhi Methodist t church will hold a food sale in i the Nantahala Power and LUrht 1 company building Saturday t morning, itarttnj at ? a. m. I Prepare To Issue Bonds For Schools WiU Visit Nantahala To Seek Site For New Building Members of the county board of education and the county superintendent of schools will visit the Nantahala section Sat urday afternoon of next week, to seek a site for a new school building to serve that area. The trip was suggested by Chairman C. Gordon Moore at Monday's board meeting, and the suggestion met with hearty agreement from other members of the board. There Is a widespread feeling that probably tio community tn the county needs a new build big worse than the region west of the Nantahala mount ains, and the tenor of the dis cussion Monday indicated that the Nantahala building probably will be the next constructed although the board did not offi cially commit itself. A new building is now going up to the EMJay section of the county. While Mr. Moore's suggestion was that "we should go over to Otter Creek and locate a situa tion and build a building," be added that It was doubtful if a site actually could be chosen on this initial trip. He and other board members agreed, how ever. that an investigation of possible sites should be be gun. Commissioners WUl Proceed With Sale Of School Bond* <.. I- ? . * - The board of county commis sioners, at Its meeting Mon day, decided to proceed with the preliminary steps toward issu ing the county's $400,000 school building bonds. This was In compliance with a request of the county boa~d of education, made in a resolu tion adopted the saihe morn ing. ?. ;? 'Mi The commissioners also defer red action on three road peti tions and handled routine busi ness. Petitions were presented ask ing that the state take over a road leaving Highway 23 just south of Jess Norton's residence and extending westward for about half a .mile: a road from Picklesimer branch, by way of Pob Plckleslmer's residence, and continuing up the Ingram Conlev cove: and a road turn ing left at Norris store. None of the petitions was aooroved, the board holding that either they dJd not meet re tirements to be taken over by the state, or sufficient Informa tion was not available. 2_Civic Club. Will Mrrt In Basketball Benefit Tomorrow Teams from the Franklin Lions and Rotary clubs will clash In a special event sched uled for 7:30 o'clock tomorrow (Friday) night at the Franklin school. The affair is a benefit per-> formance for the school athle tic fund, which will receive the proeeds It was explained ay Coach Mllbum Atkins, in announcing the game. The line-ups yesterday had lot been announced, but It Is laid that both clubs have many me-time outstanding basketh-Ul Mayers. Whether the years? and :he oounds? they have taken m since thev Vast played have lerlously affected their skill the >ubllc can determine Friday llfht. It was added. The Admission charge will be !5 and 50 cents. Bnlistees May Request Mavy Submarine Duty Young men who are 18 years >f age and enlist In the navy _ or one year now may request tubmarlne duty, It was announ- ' red here this week by a repre- 1 tentative of the navy recruit- ' ng service. Youths requesting 1 t will be assigned to this type ' if duty, provided they art 1 Found qualified, It wu said. ' $400,009 in Itaean Ooan building bonds "forth* The request, made in day's monthly meeting oft1 education board, refect to boa authorised at a county -*? election held in December, 11 The board of commit ken which was in session at- < same, time, agreed to sjer* preliminary st$?s ance of he bonds. ^ v "? ly 90 days is required dej, bonds Issued and sold, 8upt C L. Houk told the educat buildings not ttten the Immediate future mine heir artU.dal needs, and request*'! 9 to keep minutes of a sessions. Issuance of the seq three years m h red from time to It wia sub* \tn? that the time limit u 1949, and the school board, at a in April, apparently ageement to deter that meeting it *u 1 that, in the event the i Tided aid for the might be on eom basis, and that if had sold iU bonds and the monev, It might state aid. The hoard of education _ an oral request in October the commissioner* teas bonds, and the latter said it would take the under advisement At Mondavi meeting tlon board members ?.f possible, all bat be constructed with providing for srowth ment durtmr the n? five years. Tt ali^ we* o??e-story preferable. In making his sugge* about school lighttaig. Ut ? < "t ?said he felt? and other men# indicated agreement? that oert advice should be obtal and the money orovlded to the necessary lighting in bf inits that are not to b?r% placed. The buildings to be affected are t Franklin. Cowee, and Otto. class rooms m two of 3,1 The Weat Temperatures and tlon for the and the low terday, as Coweeta Wednesday rhursdaor 49 Friday n Saturday 51 Sunday M Monday ? ? M rueeday SO TrMe. 7