) TRANSYLVANIA "OPPORTUNITIES EMPIRE" NATURAL RESOURCES FOR LOCATING INDUSTRIES d k7 EXPONENT OF TRAN SYLVANIA COUNTY. THE LOCAL NEWS An dependent Weekly. VOLUME XXVIII BREVARD, N. C. FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1923 NUMBER 13 MAKES CERTAIN OF SAFETY Elephant Can Be "Relied On to Be Sure He Is Walking on Firm Structure. )to test tne stability of a bridge or other kind of structure there is no delicate instrument or measuring ap parwpis which can compare in exact ness with the sound judgment of Jum bo. Owing to his weight an elephant has to think twice before trusting him self to anything that is not perfectly steady and secure. This circumstance has developed in him a mysterious extra sense by which he can tell in stinctively whether he is treading on safe ground or not. In a recent case of u newly erected garage lloor, doubt of Its strength arose in the mind of the owner, although the architect maintained that the floor was quite Bnfe. To- make trial of Its firmness, five elephants were borrowed from a traveling menagerie, and led into the Ciirage. If there had been, the least unsoundness or Haw in construction the animals would have bolted in a panic the moment their forefeet touched the floor. However without the least hesitation, the first elephant av Iked forward, followed boldly by his four 'companions. The combined weight upon the floor amounted to nearly 28 tons. The owner was satis fled and the architect vindicated. WOULD " NOT BREAK CIRCLE Not One in Caterpillar Chain Had Ini tiative Enough to Break Away From Endless Procession. f- Fnbre, "The Insect's Homer," re lates, in one of his books, an interest ing experiment he made with certain caterpillars called "proeessionaries," because of their habit of following one another nose to tail in a long un broken profession, apparently without aim ir objective. except that of the one which happens to lead. Fnbro plaeod a complete clrc'a? of caterpillars upon the narrow led;e of a moulding around the circumference of an earthenware jar. There was no leader; each one had his bead to the tail of the one in front. And they marched in solemn parade around the endless traek fur SI hours, ainj appar ently only a chance marching saved the in from literally marching them selves tit death. No single one of the insects fnd suti!fi"TiT Initiative in all those hours to leave the procession, to crawl off the ledge and to branch out for himself. First Use cf Envelops?. ' Tbe first envelope of which tbere knowledge, inclosed a letter 11 to Sir James Ogilvie. The imiv vni:i mi. ii rai.nsii auan a 01 state, and, with its covering, is care fully preserved in the British museum. At that period, mid hng afterward, it was l he genera' custom to fold letters and seal them with wafers of wax. Early in the last century envelopes began ' to come into mere general ust and stumped adhesive envelopes achieved wide popularity in Englani shortly after tlie establishment of the penny posts in IS'O, and by ISoO were largely used on this side of the Atlan tic. The first machine for the marrn faeture of envelopes was patented In 1844 by (leorge 'Wilson, an Engjishiusn, and improvements were made the fol lowing year by Warren De La E7i and E. Hill. Sensible Laws Regarding Food. Among Hindoos, where the house hold cooking is not entirely performed by the mistress of the house (it is tl sacred duty and privilege of a wife U prepare and serve her husband's food) a Brahman cook may lie employee even by a man of low caste, but ir such u case, no member of the house hob dare defile the kitchen by enter ing it. The Brahman, moreover, wil bathe before preparing each meal. Al. food is freshly prepared, and nothinp Is served a second time. In all sucl rules as these there are strong ram parts against contamination a pro tection from disease and the manj deaths that pursue unwise physien: habits. The laws regarding food though set forth In severely religious formulae, are a form of science gov erning health and economics. Asis Magazly K As Others Saw Him. An old negro from the southern rant' districts had gone to the city seeking employment. Everywhere he went references were asked for. Finally lit gave the names of former employers and in due time returned for a de cision. Some of the letters were reac to him, in which he was praised verj highly and his work and loyalty great ly lauded. The old man's eyes operiet wide with surprise arfd pleasure a: he remarked : "Well, I deelair, if I bad 'a 'known : was such a good niggah as (bit, I sin would 'a got mo' pay." Everybody') Magazine. IS THERE WARMTH IN SMOKE? Matter Over Which There Seems to Be F'ossibiiity for Considerable Difference of Opinion. It sounds rather unreasonable and, anyway, we would rather be colder and see the sunshine. We refer to the fancied discovery by a suburban New Yorker that coal smoke makes the city warmer. He writes: "Several towns on the south side of Long Is land have noticed a greater discrep ancy In the weather this winter than ever before. Instead of vaVying three or four or five degrees from the New York city temperature, it Is noted that there Is a variation of ten or fifteen degrees. That is, it is warmer in New York by that much. Is it pos sible that the use of soft coal, with smoke hanging like a blanket over the city, has a tendency to make it less cold?" It would take a long and precise se ries of experiments to prove this; and there would still be the possibil ity thut the higher temperature might be due to other causes. We know that the city is hotter in the summer than the country, but that Is due to the reflection from the pavements and superheated walls of buildings. If the "smoke pall" keeps out the greater atmospheric frostiness, it would possibly be explained on the same lines that a smoke smudge pro tects peach and orange orchards from , northern blasts in early spring. Cities live under a more or less per petual smudge. The "smudge pots" I are always going; but if we could ' have our pure air from heaven strained of smoke and the sun-rays fulling noon us instead of the soot, we should cheer fully accept zero instead of ten degrees above. NO AVAILABLE WOOD SUPPLY Investigation Chows That Umicd States Cannot Rely on Foreis Importations of Lumber. A unique and exhaustive rompiV.nion. of the forest resources of th world has been completed by the Forest serv ice. Cniied States 1 ep:irtment of Ag riculture. This reveals, among other things, that so far as our groa.t struc tural and all-purpose woods ! he soft woods are com-ernod we ns-ust be come seli'-sutiic :d or go without. If ail life available Siberian timber were ptrt at the undisputed call of the I'ni b'd StaK's the .early cpot would hardly supply :m.--foun h of our an nual timber needs. There js an im mense reservoir 7f hardwire ds in the tropics which can be used for, limited and special purposes, and. secured at mahogany prices. I'm the struggle for the world's supply of suft -woods will bwome more and more irtense, and those nations vill fare bet that pru dent Iy use their suitably waste lands for growing coniferous woods. This study shatters the dream o: those who rely on importing the timber we need when our own is gone. Standards of Measure. For most of (is the knowledge that a meter is .'.37 inches longer than a yard Ls quite suiiiebmt. We must know as much as that, because the metric system of measure is so widely employed that one constantly finds it necessary to turn meters into feet or yards. But the ref!noiL!e1.s of modern science demand a far iiigher degree of accuracy in measurement than is per haps ever dreamed of in the ordinary walks of life. The pi. ins taken to ob tain precise standards of measure are almost beyond belief of one who is not familiar with scientific methods. Every one knows Jirrit so-called "standard" bars, on whioii the exact length of the yard and tl? meter are marked, are in the possession of the governments of the United States, Great Britain, France and other coun tries, but every one does not know with what care these standards have been compared and with wlmt patience they have been minutely measured again and again. Washington Star. Should Grow Timber. The national lumber shipment in 1920 was about 2,070,000 carloads, and the average haul for each carload 48o miles. According to the best estimate of the forest service, United States Department of Agriculture, the freight bill on lumber for that year was $25 000,000. A fraction of this sum, says the forest service, wisely invested each year in forest protection and rehabili tation would grow timber where it Is needed, reduce the nation's freight bill, cheapen lumber, and rejease vast amounts of railroad equipment and la for for unavoidable transport. Coal and Iron cannot be grown, but timber can be. Peanut Crop Worth While. The value of the peanut crop in 1922 Is estimated at $29,222,000 by the United States Department of Agricul ture. I.i 1021 the value was estimated at $33,097,000 and in 1920 at $44,2oG,- f 000. Sanity, Soundness and Fundamental Nature of Co-operative Marketing By C. C. MORGAN, American Cotton Growers' Exchange. It seems to me that the recent council of co-operatiws at "Wash ington undoubtedly accomplished a great deal both for the co-operative marketing movement itself and from the standpoint of bringing to the attention of ofiic-ial Washington the entire sanity, soundness and funda mental nature of the movement. It demonstrated the clarity of 'mind, the vision and the devotion o big men from every part of the country to the cause of co-operation, after having hem convinced by intelligent and careful consideration that the farmer himself, under oflicicnt leadership, can by co-operation solve most of his economic problems. It showed the faith of these men in the fundamental institutions cf America and their intention to place the farmer, through proper co-operative organization, in position to fit in with the established business groups and to co-operate with them as well as each other. It demon strated that the businesslike fanners and their leaders are asking not subsidies and special favors, but simply that agricultural producers as, business-men and the business organizations of agricultural producers be accorded th? same business standing and the same basis of financing as other forms 0f business. And this basis is turnover. Intellectual Manufacturing Institutions Dealing With Human Material By DEAN OTIS E. HAND Our colleges are in a s. use great intellectual manufacturim:!; instiiu tions. "We deal with very ljrecii.us human material which conies to us from all parts of thevorld and which varies widely in quality. Out of this material we r.re expected o produce human maehi !;?.? which shall stand the htghot tests and wliivh shall eXieiently meet the complex ami eve r increasing- demands of the world about us. 1 h'. human material does not cume to us in :i's original fim. hut is subjected to a great variety of bran-l onning or ln.dMing processes he fore it is hrotvjht to that .ago where we can Material v;i litis t 'he rm alitv t:r the quality of our ".in'sln product, utvii the tver.tmem which it litis iul'ucnce ;f the ccil:j.re. li' the trrvat 1 eane in tl le mda uch ;: or-. rel'ttl study of the KTia! eh cnts rs into th ir material the !' v-ciitionn-! world, show ;nv le.-s of the malerial upon which we are to our -out put is si) oepenoent ! Large Groups of Foreign-Speaking Peoples Whose Assimilation Is Slow By TIEV. DR. D. D. FORSYTLT, The iriost stubborn ernes is xno presence ot iarire ami ..i , i i peoples T.hise as:milatin lias been p-w. 1 mniijr rants haw not been evenly distributed through our ouvntrv. Seventy-two per en!- are in our eilies. JSvrtne cities are almost solidly freigrn .-polking" and :viera rem li&n's of "the normal population are left. In erihers great colonies have been &?volop( d. know n as Tattle Italics md Little Polaada, where the ideals a:i-d standards (if the Old World are prevalent. These "people are crowding- into our vhoo!p. collet's and tf.uiversities is great a inn hers. They are in every fielc of commercial and pvof.'ssional life. They co;istiivto the great body ..f American toilers. Tivcv are to make up in a very large way our eitizensVip. yet they are outside, the pale and outside the influence of the institutk-n that has meant nwt to our country, namely, the Christian church. While a surprisingly large per cent of these people is not Protectant, a large per cent is iit Catholic and not Jewish. They have broken with everv faith. We Must Not Forget Some Credit Is Due to Him Who Lives for His Country By JUSTICE F. E. THOMPSON, Illinois Supreme Court. In contrast to the men of learning and vision and high principle of the early rears of our national life we now tind infesting tlu halls of " " .... ,, ... , , . . congress and polluting other high places, counterfeit patriots, demagogues and hypocrites. In my opinion, the greatest menace to the continuance of popular government is this particular variety of varmint. lie is the curse of both political parties and is found in every department of our : government, local, state and national. e . . There is just one remedy for this evil, and that is that every citizen become a politician. We have too rnanv political slackers in thin country, , . ... . , , ' , , ... , . v .' too many voters suhenng ironi dry rot. e hear too olten of the Individ- ual who is successful in his private business, but who is too busy to give anv time to the business of the government. It is glorious to die for one's country and all praises to .bim whr makes the supreme sacrifice. But in our praise for the dead we must not , , , vx t i ir r - 4. tt i forget that some credit is due him who lives ior his country. Unless more .J people begin to live for their country they will soon have none for which to die. ALL, in New York ITevaM. pro tit a My begin cur work r.r;n it. :!.'. which, has so much to do with. depend arL?iv, if not received bef.re it is brought v e.er ti. e have found ncce-s.ir nature ar;d the quality of the raw m nrudr.-1 ion. should we. as lead'-s i.. dni.-i r:i than thev al-'vai the t j ; a 1 i t v work :,:nd upou which the quaJit v of 1M. E. Home Missions BultJ. ami critical -ituaTion eon ft nt ni can con - rested irn up. t loreicr. i peak in Brea,!:kvn Caused It Cr. account of a brca'.:-dowr in the Linotype we arc unabk to print any local n: . thfc week. A new part has been ordered and is cxp.cted to ar rive in icvv dnyr, w-v'ch vill replace the broken part, and the News wiil appear cn time in m'v.ch better shape than heretofore. BEAUTIFUL IN ITS RUINS Historic Melrose Abbey Has Been Praised by Every Visiting Stu dent of Architecture. Melrose abbey was a beautiful ab bey now in ruins on the hank of the River Tweed, Scotland, 40 miles south west of Edinburgh. It was founded by j David I (112-1-1153) for the Cistercian monks in 1130, and became the mother church of the order in that country. After being twice damaged by the Eng lish, it was rebuilt in a style of in creased magnificence between the years 1"22 and 1505, but was again devastated by the English under the j earl of Hertford, in 15-15, and was totally ruined daring the Scotch refer- j niation. Since that time no attempt j at restoration has ben made, and the ruins have :-erved us n uuarry for the neighboring tow:, ( Me!.-:,se, T!h main ruined chr. all re- lt the present day. It is great- ly admired for the beauty of its architecture-, Which belongs to the Second Poinled style. Melrose abbey !s the burial-place of Miciacl S -o;t. the Wiz ard of the Lady; Alexander II, and Johanna, his queen; William Douglas, the "Dark Knight." ami the second abbot, St. Wultheof. The heart of Robert r,n:ce is said to be buried be fore the high r.lrar. FUBUC SCHOOL IN AMERICA Deeinning of Institution Can Clearly e Traced to the Commonwealth cf MaGsE.chucctts. Early attempts to provide elementary ptmoiuior. w re made hi Virginia, and ny lie- Dutch in New York, but Massa chr.seii s must be looked to for the be P'noi'g of -he American public school. j In it',:;r, a town meeting of the people -f Boston requested I'h'lMUOIl I'Uf- i rnont oi become schoolmaster, and Mweii iuiif .. acres .it ina-i in part pay '. l.U si rviee-. The school begun by 'Jr. Purmoiu later became the Boston Latin school, arid h-i. had a -on;inu- us existence. her colonies fsOVwe.l in Boston"; steps, ami the next ten years S)iW V(li!!lillil .I hools established in a.l! t?u- ::ew i:::g!and s ttien.ents. In 1G47 the e-ier.-i! -..urr of M;!':?,K'!:;ic:! or dered every town of ." families to se lect w teacher, wlmse s.-.lary was to be paid, by the parents of the cluldren be taught or by the inhabitants in gt-n-er:it. At the same time towiis'hips lmv ing -one hundred families were entered to establish a grammar school to fit youth for cubage. The law establish ing tiiese two grades of schools laid the foundation of the American public school svstem. The Idyl. The idyl Is sometime-: distinguished from other poems by the fact that it presents a picture; it is always dis tinguished from the major types of poetry by the fact that it presents the qualities of one or another of them, In a reduced and exquisitely delicate replica. Such pastorals as the Book of Ituth, Spenser's Shepherd's Calen dar, and all the rural idvls of Theoc ritus are liitle paintings, like th" genre pictures of the Dutch school. The idyl may deal also v.ith domestic, or social, even heroic, themes. The first kind is we!! rt presented by the Hebrew Book of Tobit or Burn's Cotter's Sat urday Night. The social idyl may be of city or of court; it has been culti vated4wit.h great success by the Creeks and the French. The heroic kind is represented by the Book of Esther and by Tennyson's Idylls of tjie King. The I(,-V"s .(1. the Kln ar in a rose-window; each episode atmos- phere. scenes, images, and words i stained with translucent color. C. M. GaIo. g j " ! ri,lAme'1 f 2'3 0ldcst Ccal- Mines" The oldest coal mines In America are those in the bituminous fields ne:"' KI''fl. Va. In anthracite coal was discovered in Rhode Island, anf1( nvo vt..,rs jat(11. Slq-tiors f- '-n Connecticut discovered anthracite in the "j-omlnpr valley of Pennsylvania. The rich beds of the Schuylkill were discovered in 1770. Five years inter: tlie ?"veniInei,t of I'ennsylvania floated; co:1' down the Susquehanna to Harris- ,.,. T, nuig, tiien kmun as Harris Perry,! and hauled it by wagon to the a'r- j sena! at Car!! -.Jo for use in the manu-, faeture of am: r. m' ion. LAND YET TO BE E(?L(IRED Brazil Has More Wholly Unknown Tcriitory Than Has the Entir African Continent. Just as the most remarkable devel opment of the Nineteenth century took, place in North America, so the most wonderful developments of the Twenti eth century are destined to take place in Latin America, Samuel G. Inmioi writer, in Current History. Here is room for the overcrowded populations of the world; here is power to pro duce the food and ruw products for the world; here is a great market place for the manufactured goods of the world, and finally in these coun tries is found one of the most remark able circles of intellectual leaders in all civilization. Beginning at the Rio Grande and stretching on down through Mexico, over Central America, beyond Panama, through Colombia and Venezuela, Hits Andean countries, Brazil, Chile, down through the abounding plains of Argen tina to the Straits of Magellan, is the lurgest expanse of undeveloped fertile land in the whole world. There is more undiscovered territory in Brazil than there is in the whole continent of Africa. One state in that mighty republic equals the area of Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. If Argentina were as densely populated as is the state if New York and it is far more capable of caring mr a dense population it would have 225,O(.)0,o!hj instead of its present population of 0,000,000. Ven ezuela is net. considered one of the largest republics, but it has three times more territory than Japan, while Japan has a population equal to that Of all South America. Arguments might have been made in.-the old days against the dense population of some of these lands because they are trop ical, but mod'Tii science has overcome the difficulties of the tropics for men. The island of Santo Domingo is saiu to be more capable of sustaining dense population than any other similar-sized territory in the world. Now that the United Stales is severely re stricting immigration, the overcrowded populations of the nent ami or r.u ropo v. ill very rapidly turn to tho great fertile fields and friendly cij unties of these Latin-American cou-.s tries. GIVE WARNING OF STORMS Tides Said to Show When Unusual At mospheric Disturbances May Be -Looked For. It has been shown, in the opinion of certain scientists, that West India;, hurricanes and other great storms sea frequently produce a remarkable effect upon the tides along neighbor ing coasts. When a tempest is approaching, oi passing out on the ocean, the tides are noticeably higher titan usual, as i.' the water had been' driven in a vast v.ave before the storm. The influence, extends a great distance from the cy clonic storm center, so that the pos sibility exists of foretelling the ap proach of a dangerous hurricane l y means of indications furnished by th, tide gauges situated far away from the place then occupied by the whirling winds. The fact thatthe tidal wave out strips the adviHicing storm shows hew e::treii!ely sensitive the surface of the Fea is to the changes of pressure brought to bear upon it by the necr resting atmosphere. To Keep Relic of Warship. The captain's cabin of 1 1. M. S. Im pregnable, one of the last of the dd wooden warships, has, by a happy de cision, not been broken up. Instead, it has been erected in the basement ' a Westminster store and was opened as :i wireb-ss demonstration room by Admiral Sir PI. T'reci.ia.ntle. The cab-n, complete in every detail, is fitted with the original brass lamps, both oil ami candle. Outside one of the-portholes Is a moving picture of what would be seen if the ship was anchored off Gibraltar at night. This moves up and down and represents the roll of the ship, while at the same time the swish of an artificial wave is heard. The Impregnable was built and launched at I'emhro'ke in 1800, and about ISOt) she served under Admiral Preemantle at Plymouth. Loudon Times. Wiped Out the Gophers. As a prize for the township killing the largest number of gophers. Linden township -won purebred Holsteln bull given by Cavalier county (North Da kota) in its 1922 gopher campaign, ac cording to reports to the United States Department of Agriculture. Tlie go phers were well cleaned up, saving the county 410,000 bushels of grain on a conservative estimate, and every farmer in Linden township has the privilege of breeding to the bull for a small fee charged to help defray tlie expense of keeping him. The prize promises to be of much benefit to tlie dairy industry of tlie township.