THE SYLVA HERALD And Roralite Published By THE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Mais Street Phone 110 Sylva, North Carolina The County Seat of Jackson County J. A. GRAY and J. M. BIRD HELEN A. HOOPER MRS. JOHN H. WILSON Publishers Associate Editor o .. Office Manager PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, In Jackson County $1.50 Six Months, In Jackson County 80c One year. Outside Jackson County 2.00 Six Months, Outside Jackson County 1.25 All Subscriptions Payable In Advance Entered at the post office at Sylva, N. C., as Second Class Mail Matter, as provided under the Act of March 3, 1879, November 20, 1914. Obituary notices, resolutions of respect, cards of thanks, and all notices of entertainment for profit, will toe charged for at the rate of one cent per word. He serves his party best who serves the country best. ? Hayes I sat me down beside the sea . And wondered who could ever be So dull to hold, with shallow mind That God is not, and faith is blind; Could any other one man than he Have formed this earth and boundless sea? No, only God's creative mind _ Could make such beauty for mankind. \ ? G. H. Dey I Shall Return ?Keeping a promise which he made over two years ago General Douglas MacArthur has returned to the Philippines to begin lib eration of the imprisoned American soldiers who were taken at the fall of Bataan and Corregidor, and of the 16,000,000 natives, who have suffered under Japanese oppres sion since he slipped away from the Islands March, 1942, at President Roosevelt's com mand to go to Australia for the purpose of -assembling and army to do what he has now accomplished ? return to liberate the Philip pines ? this remains yet to be done, but in the General's own wordsd, "it will be done." As General MacArthur landed with 250,000 men on the Island of Leyte he split the Japanese forces in the middle which is following out his usual strategy of divide and conquer. MacArthur is particularly pleased at being on Leyte as he now faces the 15th Japanese division which he said did the "Dirty Work at Bataan". They have been living off the fat of the land for more than two years and I believe they'll be a little softer now, said the General. "But soft or not, we'll get them," he said. The Filipino men, women and children greeted the Americans with great joy as they larked and began to advance into the interior. Everywhere they go the natives rush out to greet them with tears of joy and shouts of happiness. General Mac Arthur and his veterans of the invasions of the Solomons, New Guinea and the other stepping stones back to the Philippines and eventually to Tokyo, will, find much hard fighting ahead but with the help of a strong home-front furnishing the needed supplies for such an undertaking, they will be vic torious. Our Lady Senator As is so often the case we fail to really - r appreciate the people with whom we are in close contact.* This is the case with Mrs. Gertrude McKee. True, we are all proud of her and the many things she has done for Jackson County, but I am afraid none of us really realize just how much she has done. It made us very proud to see in the Congressional Record the compliment that Hon. Josephus Daniels paid her in his ad dress to the Council of the N. C. Federation of Women's Clubs, in Raleigh, Wednesday September 20. Quote: "Three-fifths of the members of County welfare boards are women and their deft hand guides government with a heart, as do the hundreds of other women who serve with _ ability, May their tribe increase! North Carolina's jecord of giving wom en a place in the halls of legislation does not differ materially from that in the Fed eral Government. The women have been voting in this state since 1920, and, though -there are 170 seats in the legislature, exactly seven women have had a voice in making the laws which affect the whole state, many of which peculiarly affect women and the home. It may be well to call the roy. In the state senate in this quarter of a century only one woman has been elected, Hon. Ger trude McKee, of the mountain county of Jackson. As if to atone for the injustice to the better half of the electorate, let us pause to do honor to that district whose voters have had the wisdom to return her to three sessions. Her record of progress and wis dom makes us hope the people will give her a fourth and even a fifth term ? not because she is a woman or because she is indespen sible ? but because her record shames other senatorial districts for not drafting well qualified women to do for them what Mrs. McKee has done for her district, and indeed for the whole state. " Pulpwood Maps Speed Victory The United States Army today is better equipped with maps of the territory it in vades than any army in history. With every new advance, maps revealing every road way, stream and hill are made available to our fighting forces. One news story related that captured German officers were found to be using these American-made maps in preference to their own. Aside from their remarkable accuracy, these maps are marvels in paper construc tion. They can be soaked in water or gaso line, smeared with blood, grease or mud without suffering any damage that soap and water won't remove. Pulpwood cutters can feel justly proud of this development in paper making they are a part of it. A large part of the value of this map paper is that it can be furnisfied our troops in huge quantities when they need it most. More than 70 million maps were used in the invasion of Normandy. Ten million were used in the North African invasion. Ten tons of maps were dropped by para chute to General Pattern's army when it sped across France. Thus pulpwood is doing a specialized job which pays dividends in lives saved and enables our armies to^tmt-blitzkreig the Nazis. Pulpwood cut today may be used to make the maps for the invasion of Berlin and Tokio. INSIDE WASHINGTON SPECIAL TO CENTRAL PRESS WASHINGTON? Some of " the most thrilling stories of modern warfare are buried in theToTflcials files of the Navy, and many may never be told. They are tales of exploits of daring American undersea raid ers in their forays against Japanese ship-; ping. . I Logs and reports of sub commanders are among the Navy's top secrets. The Navy obsured the fact that there were survivors when it announced tersely that the submarine Flier was lost in recent oper ations against the enemy. Alert newsmen noticed peculiar wording of the com munique and pried out the statement that at least the skipper was a survivor. The Navy's communique said that "the next of kin of officers and crew have been informed." The usual wording when all hands are missing is that "the next of kin of casualties have been informed." However, the Navy stood firm on de clining to comment as to how the skipper was saved or whether any members of the crew were rescued. The Navy high command contends that any stories about subs may give the enemy some idea of our underseas technique. News men contend that by clever writing thrill ing stories can be told without giving the enemy any valuable data. However, the Navy so far has won the battle. / YOU RE TELLING ME! GRANDPAPPY JENKINS says he can / "" "V-? remember when cowboys had no trouble gettin jobs even if they hadn't had a single singing lesson in their lives. ! ! ! There are 30,000 varieties of flies and they all make a bee-line for the break in the screen. ! ! ! Hitler is reported to be drinking one cup of strong coffee after another, all day long. Probably trying to forget that all his troubles began over a stein of Munich beer. ? ? ? The man at the next desk says it is sad dening t6 think of how those beautiful post- ' war" motor cars will be driven bv drivers %/ with ugly pre-war tempers. ? ! ! ! According to Factographs the Roman Emperor Nero loved to play the bagpipes hours at a time. Oh, what a fiend that man was! - ? It! ? ? ? Like many a more modest motor car the Nazi war machine is finding the going plenty tough this year. . "SOMETHING ON OUR CHESr News and Comment From Raleigh CAPITAL LETTERS By THOMPSON GREENWOOD BAPTISTS ? Are you in favor of combinging Meredith and Wake Forest colleges, selling $1,250,000 worth of buildings ~~ at Mere dith and setting up the school as a part of Wake Forest College at Wake Forest? The beautiful build ings at MeTeditH will be paid for in full this year, and the campus now is one of the most beautiful in the State. However, there is a move on foot at this time to scrap the whole business and move Meredith, lock, stock, and barrel, 17 miles north to Wake Forest. There is a rumor that Governor J. M. Broughton, the leading Baptist of the State, has considered plans for the purchase of the Meredith build ings by State College. There is no foundation to this gossip. Governor Broughton in a recent letter to the president of the Meredith Board of Trustees denied knowing anything about any plan for the purchase of the Meredith plant in the event the college was moved to Wake Forest. A gentleman from the Wake Forest Board of Trustees had talked with Governor Broughton about the pos sible sale of Meredith, but no plan was offered and the Governor would have nothing to do with such idea. If you are opposed to the move, you had better get ready to fight it at the convention to be held in Char lotte in November, for the matter will certainly come up at that time. In the event you .would like some in formation on mergers of colleges, just talk to an alumnus of State College or W. C. U. N. C. DEANS ? Governor O. Max Gard ner some 14 years ago conceived the idea to combine Woman's'College, the University, and State College into one university, calling it the Greater University. When he went out of office, he pronounced this one of the outstanding acts carried out under his administration. But it has never been satisfactory, and you know it, whether you will admit it or not. At the recent meeting of the Uni versity Board of Trustees the mat ter of what to call the administrative heads of each of the schools came up for some discussion. It seems that [elks don't like to call them "deans" ? they want to call them "presidents". Well, then, what shall we call Dr. Frank Graham? We will call him "chancellor". With a little revamping of the or ganization, the Greater University should become much stronger. This will likely be done. We must not overlook the fact that, within the past decade, the University has become THE State University of the Nation, outranking them all in almost any bedy's poll. The present set-up should < Glenville Lake R. F. JARRETT Today i stood by Glenville Lake And watched its crystal wavelets break Against the shore about my feetr ~ While o'er its waves a Zephyr sweet Bore from some far-off, southern strand The odors of a tropic land, Within its bosom all the day A mighty forest mirrored lay While towering peaks their vigil keep Above its waves so calm and deep. A million flowers fairy-sown Have here sprung up, budded and blown ? To make of this a magic land With beauty spread on every hand. This lovely lake lies cradled high Like some bright jewel in the sky. A beacon light that sends afar not be seriously disturbed. When the editor of this column was in Wis consin recently, he found that the people of that State rank our Univer sity right up with the University of Wisconsin ? and that's some rating when you know something about the intense pride those Wisconsin folk lake in their State. MEETINGS ? The rallies being held by the Democrats throughout the State are being very well attended ? 250 average at each meeting, which is j the best attendance in a long time. While there is no doubt the State will go for Roosevelt, some of the counties which are close may go Republican. The regular Democrats here in Ra leigh thoroughly despise those "Con stitutional Democrats". Oh, yes, they dislike them much worse than they do the Republicans. These C. D.'s tre doing right much harm in those close counties. It doesn't make any difference how prominent they are, | it will be a long time before the reg- j ulars have anything to do with them in a political way. . | MC ? Roosevelt has no worse hater than Malcolm McDermott, head of the Duke University Law School. This fellow can really wax pretty bitter now and then. The Duke ? not the alumni, necessarily, but the builder^ and backers of Duke ? should not look op the President so keenly, as a mat ter of fact, for he had done very little j ior public utilities during his 11 years in office. Perhaps McDermott is ! talking for his bosses, who knows. But we must not forget that during the past 11 years the REA has carried | electricity into area the utilities didn't know existed prior to Roosevelt. Those farmers who have lights in their homes now should think twice before they cast a vote against that man in the White House. INCIDENT ? A heart-rending little incident occurred here a few days j ago. The girl's husband was drafted early last spring, and, not used to working downtown, she had tried to get along without getting a job. Find ing this impossible she took a little j position as a clerk in one of the cloth ing stores three weeks ago. Saturday night she received her pay ($22.50) in four five-dollar bills, two ones, and two quarters. She put the envelope in her bag. It had been raining hard that afternoon. While waiting for the bus, she pulled a handkerchief out ol her bag. With it camd the envelope and the money. Water was gushing down the gutter. Yet, it caught the envelope and carried it down the drain before the girl could grab it. ( it is said she stood there and cried over that hole for an hour or so. A beam as from some glittering star | To guide v all those who fain would! find Healing of spirit and of mind, And God looks on this lake and wood 1 And cries, "Behold, 'tis very good." | Carl Cagle, Jr. J Visits His Parents Carl Cagle, Jr., S. 2-c, of Norfolk, Va., spent a 72-hour pass with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cagle of Sylva last week. J Seaman Cagle enlisted in the Navy in May, 1944, and took his boot train ing at Camp Peary, Va. and was sent to Norfolk for further training. Hie returned to Norfolk for further as signment. He is a graduate o I Webster High school. This & That By HELEN A. HOOPER We all know the story of Lidice ? the Polish village in which every in habitant was murdered by Nazis. But China has had twenty "Lidices". When Jimmy Doolittle's Tokyo rr:ders had to come down on account of lack of gas, they landed on the coast of Ja-occupied China. Regard less of personal danger, the people of 20 villages hid the flyers by day and right, stealthily guided the uninjured *md carried the wounded from village to village until all were safely irt Chungking. And then ? in revenge, the Japa nese shot every manv woman and child in every one of those twenty villages. Wes Gallagher, AP writer, tells us that it the doughboy of 1918 should be sent back to the sector northeast of Nancy, in France, that he -would find things very much the same as when he left it in 1918. The same shell-shattered towns with manule piles in front of the wrecked homes, the same dripping skies, and abover alJ the mud, oceans of it, rivers of it where the roads should be. GI's ar riving in this area found the ground lrtced with long irregular grass cov ered depressions ? where trenches of the last war have been almost obli terated by nature. Modern foxhole? were dug in these same depressions. He tells us that destruction of the villages is even greater than it was in the last war, because of our heavier equipment and the air force. The freezing winds and ankle-deep' mud fail to dampen the troops' spirit. They kid about having running water in every dugout. I wonder how many of us could kid about sleeping in dugouts with water up to our chins, and wading in mud over our ankles. We may hear the Liberty Bell ring out. when peace is declared. Congress may decide to have the bell restored by arc welding. By radio it could be heard all over the world. ? The natives of Hazel Creek must have thought that the war was rag ing in their section on October 16 and 17, when a group of men from Sylva and surrounding towns, were down there bear hunting. When they were stationed at the stand a drove of bears came running toward them with the dogs about a half mile in the rear. Mr. Frank Frick and Mr. Harry Ferguson used up all their ammunitoin in the first phase of the hunt but they each had a bear, and Mr. Frick had a cub for good measure, i Everette Harris and Vaughn Plo>t^ach bagged a bear. Mr. Frick told us that after he had used all of his ammunition that he started back up the mountain to bor row some from Mr. Ferguson when he came face to face with a big bear. There he stood with a perfect shot and no ammunition. Wonder if he sang, "Praise the Lord and Pass the Am munition." LELA'S BEAUTY SHOP Has been moved to their new location over STOV ALL'S CAFE Sylva, N. C. Phone 62 DON'T BE A "BAREFOOT BOY!" j I I Bring your worn shoes in to us for new soles, heels and complete rejuvena tion. BLUE RIBBON SHOE SHOP