T l‘age 2 The Hilltop, Mara Hill College, Mars Hill, N. C. Entered at the Postoffice. Mars Hills, N. C. as second class Matter, February 20, 1926. Member North Carolina Collegiate Press Association STAFF Faculty Director ^ “ARE YOU TRUE?” Christian, to your Cause be true And come to Sunday-school! For cltild and skeptic loci: to you To set the Golden Rule. TESTING THE UBRARY Does not your heart for others yearn. To see them saved from sin? The age.s have given to us a suc- ces.sior, Oif principles ’that lead to greater knowledge. Men, of course, have to .study these principles and tost them so as to get the resulting ;r goals. These results Then bring them here, where the> j facto: c: . learn ^ written in books s^o that others ^ i may proUt hy the knowledge of those Who died for sinful men. v,jitor J- GLENN TRAVIS Associateidito; mary hamby MANAGERIAL Business Manager ' who have gained the re.sult. To keep Some one with weak and weary tread | these books there mu.s be some m- Upon Life’s rocky road, stitutmn nl. oed so as to :^tract and Is feinting for that Living Bread- i se^-ve the most people. Tnis msti The Ivord, the Spirit’s food. Xd;^SirinrMlmger edwin haynes Circulation Manager LLOYD CAIRNES Stenographer - DESSIL LEIB^ DEPARTMENTAL EDITORS Religious REBA LOWE Athletics SAM MILLER ED HARRELL llumni WADE BROWN Clubs BARBARA FREEMAN Jokes ....1' 0- jack MURPHY Poetry RAYMONIA GILLESPIE Exchange - ZELMA BENNETT Community - - GLENN WHITT REPORTERS BONNIE CHANDLER ALICE ROYALL JONES R. E. WEAVER • BILI. LOGAN How good it is, how true and sweet, How pleasing to our Lord, For children in His house to meet And ponder on His word! BOYS! BOYS! BOYS! The young ladies have requested of us the smaller courtesies of the c£impus. , They have waited in the dining 'hall that we might not be hindered in Gur rush to the outside. They have stood by the gym door following basket ball game.s rather than risk the possibility of being trodden under the foot of man. But aside from the slight dip into sarcasm, we have only momentarily forgotten; 'however, let’s start remembering today! Down Sabbath-breakers’ trodden lane Who turns his steps today? O gently turn him back again Into the narrow way. —D. S DO YOU NEED THE SUNDAY SCHOOL? Why do we eat three times a day and exercise our bodies regularly ? What results from failure to do so? A stunted and diseased body. Proper care means robust health, usefulness, and long life. Why are we here in college study ing hours each day preparing the tution must have standard.? by which it must always abide. The following three point.s .should, help us, in a little way, to cheek up on our libraiy to see whether it i.s functioning correctly or not: First, there must be a sufficient number of books with a range wide ; enough that the need of each per son concerned can be filled. Second, if the knowledge is .going to be passed on to others, there mu.st be enough patrons to keep the books in circulation. The books mu.st be taken care of. Third, the building must be modern in every detail, including: flou: .space, shelves, offices, and desks. Our library does not fulfill all o! these I’equirements. It does not have a sufficient supply' of books so that the .students studying any subject here would have a wide range to select from. Our library complies with th; second requirement excepting th And buttled deep, not rise aga .\nd may I forget the crown won. While thinking still of others Wife aching hands and Metxling We dig and heap, lay stem stone; We bear the bufdeh and the he: Of the long day, anil wish ‘t done. Not till the hours of light retut All we have built do we tlivsceri —^Matthew Arm Kodak Finishing:, Enlargements, Photographs, Grout (Every order guaranteed)' College Photo Shoj Mars Hill, N. €.' G. D. FREEMAN, Student, SIGNS! SIGNS! SIGNS! Much has been said about marring fee beauties of nature by commer cial advertising. Some states have laws forbidding the placing of signs along the highways; others limit the number of signs. A sign is not a signal, but in one way a signal is a sign, meaningful, sugge.stive of the thing just ahead. The railroads wotuld be handicapped without a code of signals; the path of war would be comparitively easy to follow, robbed of its silent code; the great cities would have to eifiploy a of traffic cops without the system of light signals now used. Even the American aborigines valued the use of signals; they, too, had a code. ir signals have a very definite meaning to those concerned, just so; the numberless signs have their corresponding meanings to the visitors who chance to pass them. To gain the attention of these visitors, manu facturing concerns Spend millions on the theory that “It pays to advertise.’ They must get results; otherwise, advertising would die a natural death. To bring this theory closer home, do tourists remember Mars Hill? Can a tourist tell when he reaches Mars Hill and why such a place exi.sts? A negative answer must be given. Last summer this writer and a group of friends were sitting beside fee library. Presently a group of New York tourists rode by. They stopped as something of intere.st attracted them and asked the name of fee vil lage and the cause of so many large buildings in so remote a location. Looking at the library they inquired if that happened to be fee jail. The Editor of the Washington Outlook took a picture of the library. Not know ing any details, he was forced to write the librarian to find out fee gen eral situation before he could give a writs up. The letters on the small sign-board beside the highway in fee gap at Little Mountain are entirely too small and too closely written. Many tour- i.sts mistake Mars Hill for Marshall. Why not construct a sign feat would not only let the tourist know' the name of the place, but one feat would be a fitting advertisement? Why not place an arch, a pillar or a mere .suggestion of a sign that would indicate the place at the entrances to fee boys dormitories? Why not engrave the name, “Mars Hill College,” in white letters on the hiUside of fee school properi.y facing fee highway? Why not advertise? assigned lessons ? What can we ex ipect at fee end of fee session if we neglect faithful study? Undevel-i fact feat the patrons should take oped, narrow minds, and dwarfe 'I care of the- books. We do not care manhood and womanhood. Prope: | for our books as we should. We study brings the development of wholesome, vigorous, keen mind, eager and ready for the challenging tasks ahead. mark them up trying to find hoy many page.s more must be read. 'Thir is one thing that must be overcome if we want to preserve our books ...... + , Our building is modern concerning So, is feer« not an infimtely great- , covering, chairs, and shelves er need for fee development ““H ^he floor space .should be doubled, and exercise are to the body, as; librarian daily reading and application to ourj studies are to fee mind, even so an j prayer, and the reading of Go:’. ' ! Word to the SOUL. Failure here' means a weak, selfish, undevelopo character—A LITTLE SOUL. Whik I am questioning who shall be at —W. B. Logan HIS TASK IN RURAL NORTH CAROLINA UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS Speed, Accuracy, Durability Sold on Easy Terms 108-109 Miles Bldg. Cor. Haywood and Government H. L. LOVELACE | Representative Asheville, N- Endow Your Schoo Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Secure Your CrediR Ask or Write for rates | ALBERT H. CORPENING practice in these Christian activitie.s means spiritual' growth, strength o character, the “abundant life here, and 'hereafter, “eternal life.” Just as cheerful companionship a! meals stimulates and aids digestion, and as group discussions disclose nev ideas and establish, facts in the class room, so the Sunday School afford.'' a wonderful opportunity for study ing together the truths and beautie. of God’s Word, enlightening on; minds, strengthening our faith, and consecrating our personalities. As 1 think on these things, the words of that great Christian leader Paul, come to me: Forsake not the assembling of yourselves together. I am grateful, for the Sunday School. Are you ? I need the Sunday School. DO YOU? “THE LOST POEM” Working one day in fee rusitling, breeze-tossed com. Within my pondering mind a poem was bom. No pen and paper had I with me then, That I might write, and pass it or to men. My soul implored the phantom gruest to stay, But quickly as it came it fled away; But oh, how sweet it was, and strong and bright, The whilst it stayed! Like some celestial light That flashes once from off a distant shore, A moment gleams, then fades to shine no more. And now through all the days an years that flee In vain I call the phantom back tc me. In vain implore 1 The poem that came to me Will to my yearning soul be bom Again no more! —D. S. THE WESTERN HILLS The Western hills of Carolina Hold in them beauty, yea, sublime; They seem to 'beckon when you view them. And challenge life’s high upward climb. I oft find joy and inspiration. As toward the hills I lift my gaze And wonder if all other travelers See them with hearts in joy ablaze. Take not away the life you cannot give: For all things have an equal right to live. —Dryden If in your hours of meditation You yearn to have the heart made new, The sight of hills ■will lend yor challenge And strength and hoi>e will come to you. —^Nona Lee Ponder One life;—a little gleam of Time between two Eternities. —Carlyle his task when life’s journey shall ' have been finished? In the moun tains of our South lives a people with many undiscovered forces. Tal ent is one of these forces. Roosevelt said, “All qualities both bad and good are intensified and actuated in the life of the wilderness.” The social salvation of the mountains will not be won by putting its peo ple forward as pawns to advance others;: nor by using them as filling to m£dte the highways of progress more smooth, nor will compulsion from without, however benevolent, even be a substitute for self-direc tion under the impulse of ideals vol untarily accepted. Yet from these great reservoirs of the hills are coming fee prized workers of human endeavor. Furthermore, what is his task? Is it to awaken youth from his sleep? Is it to make rural North Carolina predominant in leadership? If so. w« are to hslp maka laadM. The hungry world is yearning for the imaginative faculties of man to be awakened. Look beyond the im- broken scene. Is there no objective in Ufe calling us? Does no ambi tion rise up within us and seek to express itself through leadership? The North Carolina of tomorrow will suffer, will weaken, unless we, the youth of today hear fee voice that is urging us to choose a life of true Christian leadership. Picture the youth of rural North Carolina as he existed years ago. See him on his father’s farm, walk ing with his father, talking about what he exiiects to be. Then see him in the bloom of young manhood as he unbars the gates to future suc cess. Directed by his vision, he fol lows on and on. “Let self be crucified and slain, OFFERING A CHARMING 1 VARIETY OF GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS For wedding anniversaries, \ birthdays; in fact, for all of sions you will find an appropB gift at Carpenter-Matfeews. j shall be glad to assist you in na ing a selection. N. Pack Square and Broadtf I CAiePE?CT%'MATTH'H? Holcomb & TUsoH Dry Goods, Grocei’J School Supplies; 1 “Selz Shoes” = “It Pays to Adverti^ Posters and Sig^n^ Have Your Slicker “Decorated” -By- Robert Barnes Brown 103 Mars Hill, P* -J