TODAY and | hmxk papxx? fc" PEACE emotions j Xt amuses me to read, as X often * do. newspaper reports headed "Peace j Meeting Breaks up in a Row." The I u?/uuiv ?? wiwi us tu oiwp VYai by conversation is that people bring their personal and racial dislikes and prejudices into these gabfests. I don't believe peace is ever going to be insured by talking about it. All of the peace arguments are based on reason and logic. Reason and logic play a very small part in human affairs. Mankind is still the plaything of its emotions. Let the hands start playing and put the boys into khaki, and we'll all throw reason and logic overboard. Just the way the folk do who get Into a scrap at peace meetings! ? WAR not people's Thinking back over what I have read in the history books, and what I have observed in a fairly long lifetime, I don't remember any war that was actuialy instigated by the people of any nation. Few ordinary people ever \.ant to go to war with their neighbors. They <v e led into wars by governments and rulers who have ambitions and purposes which are seldom fully disclosed to the general run of common folk. I am talking, of course, of the way wars start. Everybody, practically, i3 ready to jump to the defense of his country when the other fellow starts to invade it. How to end war? I don't know? and I don't think anyone else does. A good way might, he for nations to stop trying to Lake advantage of each other. * * * MORALS .... of nations One of the commonest examples of loose thinking is the prevalent idea of "national honor." It implies that there is some sort of a moral law or obligation applying to nations comparable with the moral laws by which individuals are, on the whole, guided in their relations with each ether. There ought to he some such rule or moral law governing International relations, but there isn't. The League of Nations was set up with the idea that it could serve as an international .conscience, and by solemn proclamation "outlaw" nations which started to grab something that beiongc-d to other nations. But I doubt very much whether all the moral force and "sanctions" recently brought to bear by the League against Italy would have had any effect if the British fleet had not been mobilized in the Mediterranean. Conscience has as much to do as policemen in keeping most individuals from taking somebody else'3 property by force. But until we have an international police force, strong enough to overawe any nation, however powerful, I don't think we're going to stop war. AMERICA free Did you ever stop to 'think that the United States of America is the largest area in the civilized world in which all the people speak the same language? It is more than that. It is the largest area in the world in which everybody can travel freely without interference, sell his goods freely without tariff obstacles, and live and work wherever it pleases him. War between any two states or any two sections of the United States is unthinkable. We had a sectional war 75 years ago over the question of slavery. That war settled forever the liberty of every individual to travel, work and trade anywhere in the nation. I become more convinced as time gees en that there win be no such thing as permanent peace until the same liberties of travel, labor and trade apply to all people anywhere in the world as they do in the United States. ? RELIGION .... influence The fundamental teaching of Christianity is the brotherhood of man under the fatherhood of God. Churches and sects have overlaid and obscured this basic teaching with such a variety of doctrines that the essential principle seems almost to be lost sight of in much of our religious teaching. Most of the other great religions of the world have a similar foundation. I am firmly convinced that the world is far 'better than it would have been had It not been for the Influence of the great religious teachers. But I am also convinced that most of us are a long way, still, from really Believing in and acting upon the teachings of religion. Maybe it will lake 10,000 years, maybe longer, but the only ultimate answer to the question of war or i^aue must, oe, 11 seems to me, tne acceptance by the whole human race of the underlying principles of religion. MEETING IS HELD A series of revival meetings which had been in progress at Antioch Baptist Church for a week came to a close Sunday. The pastor. Rev. W. C. Payne, and Rev. W. D. Ashley did j the preaching, and the meeting was described as being successful. WA1 An VOLUME XLVII, NUMBER 20 President lhinks i Roosevelt Indicates That Got Chance of Being R DENVER ... In a conversation with mid-western state Democratic leaders, while enroutc to the coast recently. President Roosevelt indicated, indirectly that he expected Republican Governor Alf M. i-andon of Kansas to be his opponent in the November 1936 Presidential election. The conversation occurred on the Presidential special between North Platte, Neb. and Cliey v.uTE, wyo. un tnc train were tj. S. Senators Adams and Costigan and Gov. E. O. Johnson of Colorado and a group of Wyoming leaders. WHITE PLAGUE IS FATAL TO SEVEN Respiratory Tuberculosis Claims Seven Victims in Watauga County. Raleigh, Nov. 11?Watauga county hail 7 deaths from respiratory tuberculosis within the borders of the county last year, of which 7 were white and none colored people, while the number of usual residents of the county dying from this disease numhered 6, of which 6 were white and none were colored, the State Board of Health reports. The distinction is made because the deaths without showing the usual place of residence wou'.d be unfair to counties in resort or treatment areas. Ill the entire state there were 1,818 persons who usually reside in this state, of which 763 were white and 1,055 colored, and 119 more, or 1,937 died within the borders of the state, of which 851 were white and 1,086 colored. Deaths from all forms of tuberculosis in the state last year numbered 2,143. Protection Against Diptheria Is Urged Tt lo ni'trn.T lmfns oil u. u<6\.u ufuti an ^/aicnus uv UIC District Healtii Department to see that their children are protected against diptheria, and this protection can be secured, it is further stated, by vaccination of all children between the ages of six months and six years. Some six months after vaccination a simple test can be made that will show whether the desired protection has been secured, the Schick test. This test is being made in the schools in the first and second grades in the regular course of the physical examinations. and will be made for any of the upper grade children upon request. No charge is made for the vaccination of the children of the first two grades, but because of a shortage of expense money it is necessary to make a charge of ten cents, the cost of the vaccine, for those in higher grades. One "Good Samaritan," Mrs. David Milton, of Blowing Rock, don iter; $25.00 for the purchase of toxoid with which to protect the children ol our county. At ten cents a dose this means that two hundred and fifty children have benefited from this kind lady"s generosity. CHANGES MADE IN HOURS AT DISTRICT HEALTH DEPT The District Health Department is discontinuing office hours on Tuesday morning and instead will be oper on Monday and Saturday mornings from 8:30 a. m. until 12:00 m. This change is to become effective froir this date. All citizens of Wataugs county are invited to visit theii I hhnlth /lADOrtlDhnf An V.rtr.e. I .? wiviiv uu uicoc uaya aui take advantage of the service that ii being given there. PROLIFIC SWINE I Mr. Clayton Vines of the Beavei Dam section is reported by R. T Palmer as having a sow, the mothei of a litter of 15 Poland China pigs The pigs are described as perfectly normal, are now three weeks old, ant none of them required artificial feed Ing. PAUG. Independent Weekly Ne> BOONE. WATAUGi .andon Likely Foe ornnr I/" 11 ? ^ 1 ??v* ?* AA4AAAOCU* - ~ - <_IINI(I I e publican Nominee. ^ ' Sjy. y'-;' - > ..' " " >3? i 2 BRANDY STILLS TAKEN BY HOWELL Sheriff Reports Capture of Fifty-Eighth Blockade Distilling Plant. A small, but complete distilling outfit, which was being used for the manufacture of apple brandy, was captured by Sheriff Howell and deputies on the Pilot Mountain, near Todd and represented the first illicit whiskey plant to be taken in that Immediate neighborhood for forty years. The capture also brings to 53 the number of stills Sheriff Howell has taken during "MS HOTrtWstraiioo, and the officer states. Incidentally, that the distilleries are evidently becoming scarce in Watauga county, judging from the many fruitless raids which are made. Several nights ago another small brandy still was taken in Stony Fork township. Until recently it appears I the manufacture of brandy had been I abandoned in favor of the synthetic ! corn liquor usually referred to as "suear-hoad." Dept. of Agriculture Movies To Be Seen Arrangements have been made to show several United States Department of Agriculture films eacjj month to the vocational, home economics, agricultural students and 4-H club members of the county, it has been announced. The first series is scheduled to be 3hown at the Pastime Theatre at 11:30 Friday, November 15, the showing having been made possible through the courtesy of Mr. A, E. Haniby. Farmers and home makers of the county will also be Interested in these shows, which are altogether educational. 4-H club members are particularly urged to attend. The first series of movies includes, "Home Is What You Make It," ''Our Wiid Life Resources"; "She's Wild," "The Chip College." Production Credit Official Is Coming ' Mr. L. E. Francis, secretary of the Wirston-Salem Production Credit 1 Association, will be in the office of ' Mr. ?. C. Esrirers November 19. for ' the purpose of receiving applications for loans for live stock investment or other uses permitted under the associations! rules. Mr. Francis is very anxious that borrowers meet him during the morning hours of his onei day visit. i RA KAN CHILD DEAD i Mildred Mae Ragan, daughter of I Mr. and Mra D. B. Ragan of the i Meat Camp section, died Saturday i after an illness with diptheria. Funeral services and interment was I at Meat Camp Baptist Church Sun' day at 2 o'l lock. Rev. W. C. Pyne led the services and Reverends Moretz and Ashley were also present. Surviving besides the bereaved parf ents are four brothers and two sis ters: Billy, Ted, Fred, Raymond r Mary Annie and Opal. r The best exhibit of Jersey anc i Guernsey cattle ever displayed at s - Union county fair were shown thi.' year. A DE vspaper?Established in t I COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, ilNUMBER AIITOSIN CABOUNA NEARS ALL-TIME RECORD By End of Week More Than Half Million Motors Should Be Registered. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION | PLANS PROCEED IN STATE j First Driver's License is Revoked; Education Week Programs; WPA Progress. Other News of Raleigh and The State. ] Raleigh, N. C., Nov. U.?By the j time this is read, North Carolina will have more licensed automobiles and trucks than were licensed during the peak year of 1929, when the number reached 503.590. The registrations were less than 2,000 below the 1929 figure by the middle of last week, and reports for the entire wec-k will show the 1929 figures have been passed. The regist ration la si VMr tvaa r*?ilxr A'71 AC<4 frw ?? !? ' year. The low figure after the peal was 3117,455 In 1932. New cars sold in October numbered -1,938, and 1,091 trucks, as against 1.384 cars and 1,364 trucks in Sep tenrbcr, and 6,978 cars and 1,91; trucks in October, 1934. New can sold in the 10 months of this yeai are 46,197, and 11,834 trucks, a: against 10,046 cars and 9,700 truck: in 10 months last year. SPEARS NEW JUDGE Marshall T. Spears, prominent Durham lawyer and part-time law instructor at Duke University, recently named federal referee in bankruptcy, I was appointed last week by Governoi IShrihghaus as judge of the Tenth Judicial District, succeeding Judge W. A. Dcvin, Oxford, who in turn was placed on the Supreme Court bench succeeding the late Justice W J. Brogden. Judge Spears is a native of L.11llngton, graduate of the University I of N. C. in .1912, later studying law, licensed in 1915 and practiced it: Lillington, moving to Durham about eight years ago. He had the almost unanimous endorsement of the Durham bar and many outside the district. Mrs. Spears ts a younger sister of Dr. Robert L. Flowers, vice ; prv?<leg^v<s.tKl business manager- at Duke University. ELECTRIC PLANS PROCEED North Carolina power companies are going ahead with rural electrification in close co-operation with ine elate Rural Electrification Authority Gi?i?miin Dudley Bagley announces. Lines are being' constructed and authorized and others are being surveyed right -along Mr. Baglej cites that the Carolina Power & Light Co., since dune 15, has completed 11.7 miles of lines serving 10E customers, has under constructiof 18.75 miles to serve 157 customers and has authorized construction ol 127.25 miles to serve 879 other cus tomers. The company is still survey ing for new lines, Mr. Bagley said Other companies are also busy, h< said. TO RECEIVE COMPLAINTS Stock and bond holders in reorgan ized corporations who have been vie timized by dissipation of assets ii high salaries of protective commit tees, receivers, trustees, attorneys oi others, and by assessments of stocl for such orporations, do not have i place to lodge complaints and hav< such individuals investigated. A. J i Fletcher, Raleigh, and J. C. Meekins (Continued on Page 2) Sixteen Sheep Are Destroyed By Dog! Mr. P. W. Moretz, who resides oi the Rich Mountain, reports the slay n'K ?y me aogs or hunters of sixteei sheep, four of which were registere Hampshire ewes, Mr. Moretz tell the Democrat tliat all hunters ar advised that henceforth all dog found on his land will be killed 01 sight. One of the dogs engaged ii the dcpradation is reported to hav, been trailed to a TV A family, when its owner shielded it from death. Episcopal Bishop Will Preach Here Bishop Robert E. Gribben, of Ashe ville, will preach at the Episcopa Church in Boone Sunday morning a l 8 30, and conduct a corfirmatioi service, it was learned yesterday. Bishop Gribben is known as one o ; the most forceful members of tb Episcopal clergy in the state, am . this is his first pudlc appearance b . Boone. A cordial invitation is ex tended to all to attend. INFANT SUCCUMBS 1 An Infant daughter of Mr. sun i Mrs. Frank Ray of Deep Gap die i Sunday, and interment was at th cemetery at laurel Springs Church :moci he Year Eighteen Eighty-Ei] , THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1935 j JIMMY AND BETTY 5 I Former New York Mayor and , Wife End Exile ; NEW YORK . A close-up of c former-mayor Jimmy Walker of j ~ N. Y. and his wife, the former * | j. Betty Compton, upon their return j * ^ here after his three-year self im- | t posed exile in Europe which start- j j ed amid the Seabury investigation. ^ "Walker says he wants no part of ^ ? politics" for the present, at least. g HIGH SCHOOL GIVEN i APPROVAL OF WPA t Sixteen Room Model Iligli s School Building to be Built G In Boone. fi G FISH HATCHERY APPROVED p Later information from the t; Winston-Salem WPA Office, indi- 1 cates that a project calling for the expenditure of about three tfcous- tl and dollars for building and new s water sources at the Rutherwood tl fish hatchery, bus bees approved. v This, it is Stated, brings the amount of money definitely on the n way to Watauga county, to approx- ti imately $05,000. G 6 'f That a sixteen-room model high ** : school building *witt be' erected in ? Boone as a part of the Works Prog- n ress Administration's program, ap- a peared certain Saturday, when Dis- P 1 trict Director Jim Rivers announced an allocation for the purpose of $12,- t< i 000. to supplement a previous grant u of $6,000 and a state appropriation 1: of $12,000. The structure is expected ti to he of native stone. Boone had hi- V therto been without high school hous- p ing facilities, the school having beer, a carried forward in one of the college t buildings. 3 ' At the same time it was said that i Bethel, Mabel and Valle Crucis v schools would 'be pushed as had pre- I t viously announced and that a sup- a plemental grant of $7,500 had been ( - added to the street improvement pro- I gram in the town of Boone, which i together with the money advanced by i the municipality will result in the * expenditure of nearly $25,000. Mr. Rivers stated that the new money added to Watauga county's quota had been granted from a statewide fund, and represents about $20- v 000 more than could have otherwise I . | been secured for the county. He fur- o ' ther states that road projects arc in i ^ the offing, and that a sincere effort a , is being made to allocate the work as per instructions, with due regard t to the centers of heaviest relief loads, t and points most easily accessible to , the unemployed. 1 Work Overtime i The work program in the sixth district is going forward night and 5 day, according to Mr. Rivers, who stated tliat no holidays or Sunday ieaves would be permitted until the full program has beer, inaugurated. ? Tuesday 535 additional workers, j 400 of them men, will be employed. ' g There had been 4,547 jobs created in ' e the 13 counties of the district up j' g until Saturday night, and state WPA j1 1 officials are authority for an an- ' ^ ?wu?n.cjuci!i Liiiii uie sixui district is t ,, now employing more than twice as : I many workers as other districts of , the state. 1R, W. Seehorn Dies; Once Watauga Citizen 1 i Mr. R. W. Seehorn, 85 years old, - died at his home at Shouns, Tenn., 1 last Monday and funeral services 1 t were conducted from the Methodist i 1 Church there in the presence of a s large assemblage of friends. Rev. R. ( f C. Eggers, pastor of the, deceased, 1 - was in charge of the obsequies and i i interment was in the neighboring 1 cemetery. The floral offering was i - profuse. I A widow, one son and one daugh- 1 ter survive. i Mr. Seehorn was a highly respect- < 3 ed citizen, and a member of the i 3 Roan Creek Church. He had former- i e iy lived in Watauga county where he i.'was well known by many. 1 *AT ght $1.50 PER YEAR ill M PARKWAY COl'TRUCTIONTO BE%CCELERATED 3ontraclS^et on Scenic Road For Construction to Mulberry Gap. CONSTRUCTION WORK NOW GOING FORWARD 'he Deep Gap and Virginia Line Sector Constitutes Principal Portion of Thoroughfare; to Detour By Boone. Bids on the construction of the ourth segment of the scenic parko-park highway in North Carolina, -Til be opened by the U. S. Bureau f Public Roads December 5, Chairnan Capus M. Waynick of the State lighway and Public Works Commision has just been advised. When hese bids are opened, they will bring o a total of 43 miles of parkway on vhich contracts have either been let >r bids opened. The first from Virginia line in Alleghany county to its ntersection with State Route 21. iids were opened some weeks ago in Projects B and C, extending from loute 21 to Air Bellows Gap and rom Air Bellows Gap to Mulberry Sap and construe!ion on these two :egments, totaling more than 17 niles. is expected to start just as oon as the contracts have been warded. This four til segment extends from lulbrery Gap to Horse Gap, about 2.5 miles and will bring the parkray to within 12.5 miles of its interaction with N. C. Route 60 at Deep tap. It is expected that bids on the ifth and la^t segment from Horse iap to Deep Gap and Route 60 will robably be opened about January y Browning of the Slate Highway , Chief Locating Engineer R. Gettonunission said today. When all tie.se projects are let and under contraction, tlie first main sector of tie parkway totaling some 55.5 miles rill be under construction. For the time being, it is not plan en 10 miiid mis nortneastern porion of the parkway beyond Deep lap and its intersection with Route 0,T)Ut to follow Route 60 into Boone nd then on into Blowing Rock over loute 28, aince these existing state Dads are already p&ved and offer lmost as short a route as the prcosed parkway route. The parkway from Alrhellows Gap i Deep Gap will follow closely the lain ridge formation of the majestic Hue Ridge and several short seeIons of the scenic road will be in Vilkos county. This section of the arkway will offer unexcelled panorrolc scenery because it will follow he main ridge, alternating on each ide around the higher peaks. The next main link in the parkray to be constructed will begin at Suck Gap on Route 104, and extend iround Mount Mitchell and the haggles to its intersection with toute 694 just north of Ashevllle. ^oad Project Will to Employ 69 Workers Information Wednesday morning ras to tlie effect that the Works 'rogress Administration had approvd road work for Watauga county, evolving the expenditure of *7,995 .nd designed to employ 69 workers. No information was forthcoming as o the specific projects approved, al nougn it is understood that a large .limber of road building proposals lad been made to the governmental igency. Armistice Day Is Observed In Boone Armistice Day was atmost a complete holiday in Boone, all the retail ;stablishments with the exception ot irug stores and cafes closing: their ioors in observance. A large portion >f the population either took to the 'ield and forest with dog and gun or :ook their families on outings, and he day carried with it the usual Sabbath calm. A display of fireworks jy the American Legion took place n the evening. WOULD CONSIDER BUYING CAROLINA GROCERY CP -IN The receiver for the Car' ina Stores, Inc., has received an v-fer for the purchase of the comp; j as i going concern, according to ie Caldwell Record, and the offer ill be submitted to the Superior Court it Newton, November 20th. The party making the offer, has informed the receiver that it is his intention to continue the operation of the stores as such, and as conditions improve, to extend the territory which they serve. There will be no interruption In the operation of the stores. Two of the units of the Carolina Stores are located In Boone.

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