TAUGA DEMOCRAT i? ?l tba people, the very tint objective ihould be life whether we ihould hew a government without I *ou)d not M Cart SHOWROOMS OF AUTO dealera have taken on a new elegance with the advent of the 1990 models, and dealer* aeem to radiate a special pride in displaying them. First showing of new cars has always been a high spot for me, even when, as is usu ally the case, I am not able to be In the market for one of them. It is comparable to the first game of the football season and the first day of spring. A ptyehiatrist would no doubt diagnose the cue u wishful thinking, bora of a frustration complex which had its inception in early child hood when I had my little heart set- on dazzling all the kids in the block with the latest thing in kiddie cars, but being the youngest in a family of fourteen was so far' down the list that by the time my father got to my name I was in high school and never got over it. Our hypothetical bead shrinker, of course, wouldn't bother to flutter up his scientific intel lect with any minor details, such as finding out if I was an only child, had kiddie cars to burn, and got so sick of using the silly little things as a means of locomotion that I Jolly well did shove one into the fire now and then. ANT) WHEN I (EE a jalopy of ancient vintage wheezing by on Its way to the nearest car clinic, or standing in delapldated dignity in some junk yard, I can't help thinking of the forgotten glory that was hers when she first hit the showroom. Boy, she was something, then! ? every whit as new and smart as the 1999 job you looked at today. ON THE OTHER HAND, I sometimes look at a streamlined, souped-up, futuristic shiner that just rolled off the assembly line and envision how forlorn and outdated it will be a few years hence, replaced by an even faster, slicker, more beautiful child of some designer's brain. Ah, well ? time, as someone has so aptly stated, marches on. AUTOMOTIVE ADAM AND EVE?? In the year 1886, it it said there were only two auto mobiles in Kansas City ? but one day they man aged to have a head-on collision! WORLD SERIES POST MORTEMS ? Words they had to eat: Leo Durocher, former Dodger and Giant manager: "Milwaukee ' will take this one in four straight." Lew Burdette, Braves pitcher who MM' the Yankees three times In last year's Series r'T wish we had those Yankees in our league." Fred Haney, Braves manager: "Lew can do it again." Best quips ? Same Lew Burdette, when asked what be hit for his home run in the second game: "A long ball." Gil McDougald, Yank second base man, oo the do-or-dje sUth game: "I was as nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs!" From Early Democrat Files Sixty Years Ago October 20, 1898 . Mrs. Sarah Crowder has been right ill for sev eral days and remains not much improved. Assistant District Attorney Spencer Blackburn will speak at Shulls Mills next Monday and at other points in the county later on. Last Monday at Banner Elk marked the open ing of the county canvass in Watauga. The candidates, or most of them, both political parties, were on hand, and the best of feelings seemed to prevail. ? Reports say that the campaign between Spain hour and Harshaw for Solicitor 'is funny and spicy and causes a lot of merriment. The Indian uprising in Minnesota is about quelled and peace is made again. Uncle Sam will now furnish bacon and 'bread to hte Indians as usual until they want to kill a few more white people. \ General Fitzhugh Lee will be the first to land on western Cuba at Havana by November 1. Special dispatches from Jackson, Miss., say that yellow fever is gaining headway in that State and Louisiana, and that Governor MacLaurin and State officials have deserted the capital. Instructions have been cent to the United States Military Commission in Cuba, fixing De cember 1 as the data when Spanish control over the islands must cease. The commissioners have notified the Spaniards that all ports and customs receipts, and the management of municipal af fair* will pass into the hands of the American military commander on the island. There is much sympathy expressed for Mrs. McKinley, who left Washington for Canton, Ohio, Saturday night to attend the funeral of her brother who was killed, supposedly by a jealous womanO Friday evening. Thirty-lS ine Yeart Ago October 16, l?lfr 0 Mr. Joseph Dougherty, well known In Watauga, died at his home in Knoxville, Tenn., last Thurs day of blood poison. Bingham Brothers bare moved their mer cantile business from Adams to Vila*, and are now located in the building owned by Mr. Jack Smith. . O Capt. Allison is here, superintending the con struction of ? siding leading from the lumber yards of the Carolina Hardwood Co., via the wholesale grocery to depot street. There Is no road in the county that need* improvement worse than the one leading from Vilas to Valle Crucis, and it U hoped that the good roads commission will tee its way dear to do something about it befpre work is suspended. Mr. J. C. Mast of Sugar Grovt was in town Tuesday. He intend* to move to hit Maryland farm by the first of the year, but thinks of making a business trip there, with a number of others, who will look over the farm market in that fertile region. ( Dr. Dula of Lenoir was in town Monday and told the Democrat that all fratauga lacked of having a visit from an airplane was a suitable place to land this side of the ridge. Ha had contracted with the aviator to make the flight, and the two ascended to an altitude of 2,000 feet out from Lenoir, and Mr. Aviator decided after a look of this section through his glasses, that he would not take the risk, and returned to Lenoir, where he had been making flight* for the Caldwell County Fair. Mr. John W. Hodges has purchased a let near the depot from Mr. W. L. Bryan, and will erect a large building thereon to accommodate his increasing wholesale feed and grain business. Mr. John W. Greene of Valle Crucif has moved into the Mrs. Lizzie McGhee old home, recently purchased. ? Fifteen Yearn Ago October 21, 1943 Mr. and Mr*. Robert E. Agle of Kingaport, Tenn., announce the birth of a son. James Heath, on Wednesday, October IS, at City Hospital, Gastonia. Mrs. Joseph Conderman, a summer resident of Boone, left Friday for her home in Miami, ' Fla. Mrs. Conderman remarked that each fall, the day after she closed her home here and left for sunnier climes, it snowed ? and true to i tradition, Saturday brought quite a trace of snow to the mountains. The new library at the high school U now being used by the students and faculty. It has been made part of the study hall and class room A work room and a conference room adjoin the main reading room. The rooms are equipped with light adjustable shelves. The walls are a soft green. A new librarian's desk has just arrived and a card catalog ha* been ordered. By furnishing black walnut logs that can be made into gunstock* to carry the fight to Hitler and Hirohito, Western North Carolina farmer* have found a new way to contribute to the war effort. Considerable work has already beer done in the Criteher building near the Democrat office, looking to the installation of a hosiery plant for the Baker-Comma ek Co., of Burlington, which win' serve to train workers till the big new building can be completed. KING STREET m By ROB RIVERS ? Friendliness . . Comments By Visitors Boone if rapidly becoming known as the friendly town. It hasn't always been so, and the files of the Democrat and the speeches of the civic leaders have been filled with entreaties to the folks to show a little more concern for the stranger within the gate ? for his happiness and for his appraisal of this beautiful vaulted region. . . We are happy that there is the cherry smile, the cordial greeting and the pleasant word on every hand when our visitors come to the hills. . . . And they're taking note of the friendliness and the courtesies and the kindness of Boone people. ; , . We often get letters commenting on this civic quality, the last coming from Mount Airy. . . Although writtei in the first person, the letter is signed by Cleo, Pam and Pat Taylor. . . . We're glad they like our town and we like the letter they sent to us addressed "Dear People of Boone," which follows: # "Over the past week I was a visitor in your city. Being away from home and not knowing too many people, caused me t# notice your citizens more. ... I came up with Miss Jean Cook for the NCEA meeting. While she was at the meeting I spent the day up town. ... My first stop was at a Gulf Station. The friendliness they showed us made us feel good. My next stop was to park on your Main Street, and I couldn't get the meter te work. While I was wondering what to do a policeman came up and fixed the meter and gave us two hours free time. ... As I started to leave, a man in a truck was courteous enough to wait and let me back out. -. . Maybe these are small deeds and wouldn't have been noticed by lots of people, but to me, a visitor, they meant a lot, and made me hope that someday I may have the privilege of coming back again." We hope so too and appreciate your kind words. And since we've generally become known as the friendliest town, we hope that before many more years we'll also be known as the cleanest community in the State. . . . Cleanliness and courtesy are twin civic attractions, or virtues. ? ? ? ? The Fall Colon . . And Some Thingt We Hear Cool nights and continued dry weather perhaps hastened the ooloring of the leaves and the bright displays of hedgerow and forest were gorgeous during the week end. . . . The colors should get better during the current week as the autumn hues approach their peak. . . . The people, generally, especially those who operate tourist facilities, are hoping for at least two more good week ends of fall travel. We've seen a lot of people during the last few days who're having a lot of fun on the highway overlooks, and on the sylvan paths, npw covered lightly with gold and crimson, fit for the feet of the Queen. We've been interested in some of the com ments we've heard as we've helped gaze from high points into the oceans of hills, wrapped in crazy quilts of fantastic gaiety: "Are the leaves always this color?" asked the fellow who was backdropped by all the shades of the spectrum. "Does the wind blow every day like this?" queried the fellow with the thin breezed-out locks. "Where's the Colorama I've been reading about in the papers from the hills?" asked studious looking fellow, who was practically swamped in the brillance of the leaves, who added, "I don't see so much in it, but the kids wanted to come, and I drug along." Another fellow allowed as how "With all the reds aqd the russets I'm seeing down in that valley, the oaks are needing cutting. A lot of money could be made right there." But most of the folks are awed with the majesty of the hills in the fall, and the grandeur of the views 'from the promentories, v and the peaks, down the winding creek bottoms and across the ' crag-rimmed draws, and wi$h they might gaze forever on the beauties of the flaming fronds. There was an old man who stood on the Parkway overlook i near Blowing Rock and gazed long over the bright hills, lined up row on row, till they were lost in the distance. ... He drank in the beauty of each painted leaf, of each wispy cloud which fin gered a summit, and of each gray cliff which stuck through the panorama of brightness and of beauty. . He propped himself against an auto and looked again, as a mariner might con the sea for sails, and spoke, not to the bystander, but to the great vault of the universe: " Such couldn't come 'cept from the boundless love and the power and the canvas and the paint pots of our blessed Lord." (Jncle PmfcrlC^H,s P/(MvtwN'^ DEAR MISTER EDITOR: I Me by the papers where Con gressman Carroll Kearns of Penn sylvania has introduced a bill to put the Star Spangled Banner in the key of A flat so folks won't stumble over them high notes near ? the end. I'm in favor of anything that'll help the Star Spangled Banner git back in good standing in this country. We got kids in school today that can sing all five verses of Elyis Preesley's "Hound Dog" that aiat never heard of the Star Spangled Banner. As usual, they referred the , Kearns bill to a congressional com mittee. That means it'll cost the taxpayers about $10,000, whether wfefit it settled in A flat or F snlrp. The committee will ask a handful of guvernmeat clerks to make a report on the matter. The report will naa to about 300 page* and coat about $10,000, ^rhich is ?bout par fer the congressional re port course. Abe Lincoln asked his secretary onct to find oat something about a saddle horae advertised fer sale in the paper*. Six weds later he got a 180-page report on the horae. After reading the first two para graphs. Abe tbrpwed the report in the waste bajfc at and called fer his secretary. Re told him that fer all he knowed, the horae could be dead by now, and furthermore he just wanted to know the good and ' bad point* about the horse, not a | report ?n bow many bain in the | horse's tail. And I see where they're still agi tating that business about higher pay fer teachers. I consider my- | self a living example of the pro *duct of low paid teachers. I'm in favor of raising a teacher's pay high enough that they won't be no more ignorant folks like me in the next generation. But I think it's about time them politicians git back on the farmer platform again. When I was a young mnn no candidate could git I in office unless he run on a plat- i form of relief fer the farmer. At never helped 'the farmer none, but it made him feel important. I been feeling mighty neglected here ef late since the politicians is all running after the school vote. The next rardidaU* ' that git* my vote ha* got to have a plank in i hi* platforoQcalling fer bigger and better relief fer the fanner. One otheOitem in the papers -caught my fancy thi* week. Some automobile manufacturer from De troit aay* the automobile hat been a "great moral force" in thi* coun try. I cant figger that one oat. Maybe it stopped horse stealing, but aside from that I cant see' nothing its done fer morals. Youra truly, UNCLE PIKNEY I I