John Moore Has A $500 Note That's Legal, But . . . John M. Moore has a note for $500, but he's going to have to wait a while to collect It. There's nothing wrong with the way the note is made out ? it's in due form, and printed, signed, etc. The only trouble Is it's payable "two years after the ratification ' of a treaty of peace "between the Confederate States and the United States." The Confederate note is dated February 17, 1864. Mr. Moore also has a $5 Con federate bill bearing the same date, and one dollar bill issued by the State of South Carolina. The latter is dated "Sep. 6 A. D. 1861." Mr. Moore, whose home Is on White Oak Street, does not re member details of how he came into possession of the currency, < which has been worthless for nearly a century. 3 Are Attending W. S. C. S. School Miss Laura M. Jones, Mrs. Pearl Hunter, and Miss Margaret Wil son left last Friday for Pheiffer College at Misenheimer to at tend the Woman's Society of Christian Service School of Miss ions this week. Mrs. Hunter wil visit her son and family in Charlotte before returning to Franklin. FOR SALE Grocery Store The Following Equipment is Included: 9 ft. storage freezer .... $495 Electric cash register . . . $350 Coca Cola box ...... $100 Neon 4 lights $100 Stock worth $1500 All the Above for $1500 Cash See MR. GEORGE KNEE 3Y2 Miles from Hayesville on U. S. 64 Unusual Family Reunion Held 'Over The River' - 1 A remarkable family reunion was held "over the ilver" ihe j week-end of August 12. It wasn't at all unusual for j the number present. But it was extraordinary for other rea sons: First of all, it was the first time in 10 years Mrs. J. S. Sloan had all of her children at home at one time. Second, Mrs. Sloan bore eight children ? and they are all living. Finally, Mrs. Sloan herself is remarkable; though she Is 90, she took the inevitably crowded and confus ing week-end in her stride, looking after the comfort of each son, daughter, and in-law i as though he or she were an honored' guest. Children and in-laws here for the week-end reunion were: Mrs. Reby Sloan Tessier and W. N. Sloan, both of Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. (Dick) Sloan, of Milledgeville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Harold T. Sloan, of Franklin and Miami, Fla., Misses Timoxena and Eleanor Sloan, of Miami; Mr. and Mrs. Carter S. Sloan, of San Saba, Tex., and Mr. and Mrs. I. L. I (Carolyn Sloan) Easton, of Le noir City, Tenn. Earl Ashe, Former Resident, Succumbs In Portland, Oreg. Earl Ashe, 52, a former resi dent of Macon County, died August 11 in Portland, Ore. Funeral services were held in Portland on the 14th. Mr. Ashe was the son of the late Oscar Ashe. He is survived by his wife and a number of aunts and cousins, some of whom are res idents of this county. 6 Boy Scouts Of Troop 21 Received First Class Rank Six Boy Scouts of Franklin, 1 Troop 21, received First Class rank at an honor court August 9 In Highlands. They are Charles Slagle, Gary Crawford. James Gnuse, Fred Bulgin, Teddy Clark, and Landy Pendergrass. Bobby R. Gaines, Jr., and John ny Swan received Tenderfoot rank, and Buddy Ledford, Jerry Clark. Ronald Bolton, and How ard Buren got Second Class. All are members of Troop 21. The following in Troop 21 re ceived merit badges: Gary Mc Kelvey, Hiking; Gary Crawford, Reading; Douglas Slagle, Home Repairs; Dennis Vinson, Rabbit Raising; Bobby Swan. Nature, Citizenship in Community; Tom my McCollum, Cooking. Reading. Fishing; Landy Pendergrass, Citi zenship in Community, Safety; Douglas Vinson, Cooking, Citizen ship in Community, Nature. John Crawford, of Troop 1, received the Scholarship merit badge and' Donald Hopper, of Highlands, Troop 7. the Swimming badge. Death Claims Mrs. Angel At 93 In St. Petersburg Mrs. Lula S. Addington Angel, a native of this county and widow of Charles L. Angel, died August 13 in St. Petersburg, Fla., at the | age of 93. Mrs. Angel, who had been in declining health for some time, lived with her daughter and son in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Timmons, in St. Petersburg. Funeral services were conducted Wednesday of last week in St. Petersburg and burial was in the Elmwood Cemetery In Atlanta, Ga., the next day. In addition to Mrs. Timmons, Mrs. Angel is survived by two sons, J. O. Angel, of Asheville, and G. L. Angel, of Birmingham, Ala.; three sisters, Mrs. James Porter and Mrs. William Stewart, both of Franklin, and Mrs. Lola Hood, j of Los Angeles, Calif.; two broth- 1 ers, Grady Addington, of Okla- , homa City, Okla., and J. W. Add- ' ington, of Franklin, Route 2 ; ! three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. 3 Local Airmen Ending Training Three Macon County men are completing their U. S. Air Force basic training at Lackland A.F.B.. Tex., the base has announced. They are John M. Shuler, son of Mrs. Daisy Shuler. Furman E. Mason, son of Paul C. Mason, and William B. Gregory, son of Mr. and Mr. Riley Gregory, all of Franklin, Route 4. Kindergarten To Start On September 4 Here The Franklin Kindergarten will begin September 4, at 9 o'clock in the Franklin Methodist Church basement, according to an an nouncement from Mrs. Pearl Hun ter, teacher. At Insurance Meet Miss Virginia Franklin, of Franklin, attended the seventh an nual Institute of Insurance at the University of North Caro lina the week of August 13-17. u'z Bonanza time at Bui? M i We've got a good buy for you -for sure (Vovgefj-fr/fi/e Bot&toz# //> ibdpys Boicfc) Bonanza Trade in Allowance With Buick solidly in Number Three sales spot nationwide, our large sales volume lets us deal ybu an even sweeter trade-in allowance on your present car? which is at its peak worth right today! Bonanza Buy t Today's Buick prices start right on the heels of the smaller cars? but man! just count the extra blessings Buick brings you. Extra power and sizzle. Extra size, room, luxury. Extra-smooth ride. More structural weight and solidity. New-as-tomorrow styling. It's the Best Buick Yeti Buick Century 6-Passenger 2-Door Riviera" Time was never riper for you to start enjoying the thrills a Buick can bring you. For today's Buick prices are low? they may never be so low again. Bight now, in fact, they're low enough to help fix Buick more firmly than ever in the Top Three of America's best sellers. And Buick's hot sales pace means we can give you every last dollar of your present car's true worth? which is at its peak right now. So why hold back another day when you can so easily make a bonanza buy on a '56 Buick? With an all-time high in power and compression ? with a great new sta bility and handling ? with sleek new styling? with a ride smooth as melted butter ? And above all, with advanced new Variable Pitch Dynaflow* giving you new zip and tingle even before you switch the pitch for emergency take-off! Drop in today for a buy on a '56 Buick that you'll find hard to resist ! *Ncw Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmastcr, Super and Century? optional at modest extra cost on the Special. AIRCONDITIONINQ at * COOL NEW LOW PRICK It cools, filters, dehumidifies. Get 4-Seoson Comfort in your new Buick with genuine PRIOIDAIRE CONDITIONING II, Bonanza Resale You can always bank on Buick's resale value but your '56 Buick should get you even more when you trade it, thanks to today's new Variable Pitch Dynaflow.* It's the world's most advanced transmission? only one that gives you the cruising thrift and full-power acceleration of the modern plane's switch-pitch propellers! |i? y** .Ar ptfCK WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUIIT BUICK Will BUIID THEM ? Macon Motor Company, Inc. Mmer Street, West Dealer 594 Franklin, N. C Continued From Editorial Fa*r j WOULD PLAN HASTEN INTEGRATION? local school units make max imum use ol the authority granted by the assignment act. The committee has advised lo cal boards of education to "de clare that initial assignment to schools will be made in accor dance with what the assigning unit (or officer i considers to be for the best interest of the child assigned, including in its consideration, residence, school attended during the preceding year, availability of facilities, and all other local conditions bearing upon the welfare of the child and the prospective ef fectiveness of his school." This advice of the Pearsall Commit tee ought to be followed in good faith. Many All-Negro Schools No assignment of pupils could be based upon color, but that does not mean that every school would have to be a mixed school. Assignments could be based on place of residence. The practical effect of such as signment in many areas of the state would be the maintenance | of ail-Negro schools. Negro pu- [ pils living in residential dis tricts inhabited exclusively by Negroes would attend schools provided in those districts. It is reasonable to expect that the parents of many Negro pu pils living outside of strictly Negro residential areas would choose to send their children to schools with 100 per cent Negro enrollment. Thus what Governor Hodges calls "volun tary segregation" would come into play to relieve much of the tension accompanying the educational transition. And in the absence of a threat such as would be dangling over the head of the Negro In the form of the Pearsall Plan's "escape" provisions, there would be rea son to expect a more extensive practice of voluntary segrega tion than if the state were pur suing what the Negro regard ed as a policy of evasion or "compulsory voluntary segrega tion." Moreover, county and city boards of education, acting in good faith without evading the law against color discrimina tion, could make assignments of pupils on the basis of fac tors other than residence or parent preference, as suggested by the Pearsall Committee, and such assignments further would reduce the mixing of the races and the tension. The strong probability is that the integration occurring under such a course as we have out lined would be relatively light, tions on whether to retain Tension would not be ?reat. Adjustment could be made without disruption of either ed ucational or community life. The 'Safety Valve' And the course we have out lined would not be without its "safety valve." The safety valve would be an appeal to the courts for relief from real hard ship or any demonstrated in tolerable situation. The Su preme Court has called for good faith in "compliance with the segregation ruling, and it has called for a prompt and rea sonable start toward compli ance. But it has recognized that in some areas compliance might encounter serious difficulty and could not be rushed. In its fol low-up decision of May 31, 1955, the Supreme Court declared that once a prompt and reason able start has been made to ward freeing a school system from racial discrimination "the courts may find that additional time is necessary" for carrylnf out the segregation decision but "the burden rests upon the defendants to establish that such time is necessary in the public interest and is consis tent with good faith compli ance at the earliest practicable date." From that decision, it may be judged that the basis of a re quest for relief In cases involv ing hardship or Intolerable con dition would be good faith. A major weakness of the Pear sail Plan is that the Supreme Court likely would not interpret a plan providing for resistance of Integration by abolishing schools as a plan conceived in good faith. The course we have outlined avoids that weakness. Accep tance of the Supreme Court de cision against segregation, movement toward compliance with the law of the land, hon est use of the Pupil Assign ment Law, and rejection at evasive procedures like tuition grants and local option elec schools would constitute a plan likely to pass the Supreme Court's good-faith t?ak. But above all, it is a plan that avoids opening the door to destruction of the public school system and also is a law-abid ing plan under which there would be no flood of integra tion. The first step in adopting such a plan would be to kill the Pearsall amendments at the polls on September 8. BULLDOZING And Grading Work Of All Kinds Iotla Mining Company Phones: Day ? 32 or 340-J-S Night ? J16-J rnon con give you dependable delivery of THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ^MONITOR an in! rational tfa.hr ntwjpjper / Housewives, businessmen, teachers, end students oil over the world rccd end enjoy this international newspaper, pub lished daily m Boston. World famous for constructive newt stories and penetrating editorials. Special features for the whole family. / The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Mas*. Send your newspaper tor the tim? checked. Enclosed find my check, or rrcney order. 1 yeor $16 ? 6 months $8 Q 3 months $4 ? City Zon# Stat* P0-U GRAVEL FOR SALE CONCRETE and DRIVEWAY Orders of (1) One Ton and Up CRAB ORCHARD STONE OR SEE CALL 669 VERGIL MEADOWS