jDEMOCRAT THURSDAY BY RIVERS PRINTING COMPANY R. C. Kivna, JE, PUBLISHER l Independent Weekly Newspaper hi 1888. Published for 48 year, by the late Robert C. Rivera, Sr. M SUBSCRIPTION RATES County: One yen, 82.80; lis month ? 8180; four month*, $1.00. Outslda Watauga One year, 8800; six months. $1.78; lour months, $1.38. 'i OLd*:E ZSUBZn ' !??&?""" du"W 11 u Important to J Entered at the poetofflee at Boom, N. C., as ?eco nd class bmU matter, under the art of I of March 8. 1878. ?The bads of our imruMt hetag the opinio u ef tfcr people, the vary first objective shorfd to to keep that right, and Were R left to mt to decide whether we shootd have a government with ; newspapers, or aeeqMpu.li wtthaa*. government, I should no# hesitate a moment to rhooeo ' latter. But (should mean that every man should receive these papers and be capable of BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1960 New Air Speed Only a few years ago they acid It couldn't be done ? that flying was too much against the natural laws to be tuccessfully consummated by van. Gravity, resistance of the air, plus "it was fixed to"* only the Mrds coold do it," were cited as reasons why man had just as well quit toying with the notion of sailing around in the ether. But, like all prophets of the status quo, these were wrong, and just how wrong is shown in the fact that a test pilot has recently flown a rocket plane taster than any human has ever moved before ? 2,150 miles per hour. Joe Walker rocketed to this unbe I lievable speed to a shallow two-mile dive from 78,000 feet, and dropped down for a safe landing oa the mlles> long saltbed runways of Edwards Air Force Base, CsMlsrato. Man's quest of fatting there faster, it would seem, has just about reached its apex. In his first effort to get off his feet, he perhaps rode a beast, later a crude sled helped, but when his tools and his genius finally resulted in his slicing slabs from the ends of a log, boring ? hole near the center and fash ioning a crude wagon, he was on the way. The machine age has been geared to the wheel. The motor car, the air plane, the trains, all date back to the invention of the wheel. We uaed to hear a lot in the old day* of express trains which managed a milo a minute, and when automobiles were devised which could go that fast where road conditions permitted, we thought we had reached the acme in transpor tation. Later one could travel 100 mile? an hour in a plywood, canvass-covered eirplane and aviation-minded men were saying we could some day travel with the sun across the country. In mak ing 2, ISO per hour, pilot Walker has shown that the age of speed is yet in its beginning, and thus the size of the world has been so constricted that we can't get away from world-wide prob lems, and their lethal dangers. But man has always looked toward the horizon and wanted to go. Out of his dreams came powered travel and a new world of pleasure and of peril. Death Toll Runs High Watauga had more than her share of violent deaths within th? past few days. Three lost their lives when a citizen slew twa, and than ended his own life, to bring sorrow in their neighborhood and in the county at large. We extend our sympathies to these people who hava been ao aorely atuiftan.- f Two residents of Welcome wQmWSnt when their car waa struck by a gravel truck which had evidently gone out of control near the Wiikes county line, be ing the first fatal highway accident in the county for more than a year. It is particularly aad that these visitors to the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountain* became casualties of the age of speed. - Man's inhumanity to man, however, is never ao plainly seen as when vio lence stalks peaceful neighborhoods, when a man strikes down his neighbor, or when there is tangled metal and broken bodies on the pavement. In other words such occurrences seem to bring uncommon excitement and almost joy to some people. A man of the cloth who had stopped were the travelers were killed, and offered the rites of his faith, marveled at the curiosity which attended thq gruesome accident. Motorists stopped and tried to get pictures of the bodies ? for what, it would be hard to say, and lingered when it was apparent they could offer no aid. The recounting of the violent deaths which occur, and for which We are grieved, are part and parcel of the news of the county and must be faithfully re ported, but the evident relish with which so many people delve into the gory details of these tragic events, re veals a sinister quirk in human nature. Profit From The Civil War We've had a notion that the Civil War should be concluded, and that the wearing of replicas of the grap caps of (tie Legions of Lee and the waving of Confederate flags have done little for us in the councils of the political parties. May have hurt. This is not to say that we are any less Southern in many basic beliefs than were our ancestors, or that we have strayed away from some of the funda mental teachings. It's just that the Civil War didn't pay off and won't now. Or that is what we thought until thi* business of collecting Civil War relics came into being. Appropriately enough the business of hunting relics on old battlefields starte 1 in Richnond, when N. E. Warriner one day found n cannon bell, and thus was born a new industry out of the misery and travail of oar country's most vicious baptism of blood and tears. Like prospecting for metals, relic hunting is already competitive, we learn, I and those who engage in the activity arc i! without honor, Mr. Warriner says. As In the days of the fabulous finds of gold and silver in the old west, if one tells of where be found something which was left by a bluecoat or a John ny Reb nearly a hundred years ago, others in the business will strip his "hot spot" down to the bedrock. Minnie balls, uniform buckles, but tons, swords, pistols, cannon balls, and the supreme treasure ? cannon, are being sought. Natives of Dixie will be pleased to* know that a Confederate buckle brings $65, compared to $2.50 for a Union buckle. Richmond is the relic hunter's capital, since many battles of the Civil War were fought nearby. However, the newest col lecting fad will spread and apt as not somebody will come up with some of the leavings of General Stoneman't foray into Boone and environs one of these days, to enhance local history and provide collector's items. - Trees (Ashcvllle Citizen) It is apparent, looking around you and comparing what you see with what you remember about past years, that trees are indeed a part of vanishing Ameri i <*??? The forests are still there, true, but what we're talking about are just plain, garden variety residential trees ? the kind that shade an over-heated lawn mower or that abed leaves for you to fSS rake in October. It seems that a lot of folks, when they get a lot for a new house, launch into let -themselves get talked into? .<> ' 'HUSKS having the trees knocked down right away. ' \ We grant it's easier, and we wouldn't stand four-square for building a house so that a tree rises to its lofty grandeur right through the living room. But our contention is that a little extra planning will save most of 'em for you and your kids to enjoy. It's hard to put a price on ? full grown tree. You can buy a replacement but only time can bring it into its own. And goodness knows, we're all running short of time. * ' MIS m mm> ?V>., mM Poor StartBAt Being His Own Boss -- SOME LOCAL HISTORICAL SKETCHES From Early Democrat Files Sixty Years Ago AagMt ?, ltOt. Mercury registered at 92 in the shade at the Blackburn House yesterday Aunt Laura Lenoir, one of our afed and beat colored women, died in Boone a few daya ago. Attorney E. S. Coffey ia push ing the work on hia new residence, and when completed, it ia aaid, will be the beat in the county. Mr. 0. J. Hawkins of Caldwell la erecting a neat residence near the Academy building. Dr. M. C. Boyden, dentist, of Baltimore, will be in Boone on the 10th inst. Dental work respect fully solicited The school opened here Monday with flattering prospects, there being a larger attendance than waa expected. There are now about liS boarders in. Good. . Mr. and Mra. W. H. Gentry of Jefferson are guests of their daughter, Mrs. Nathan Horton. Judge Councill will open his first term of court at Smithfield, Johnson county, on the last Mon day in this month. From the Tennessee Tomahawk: Robert C. Rivers, editor and prop rietor of the Watauga Democrat, Published in Boone, N. C. waa in the city Wednesday and gave us a business call. We found him to be a sociable and pleasant gentle man and it ia due him to say that he ia getting out a splendid coun try paper notwithstanding his Democracy. Hon. J. F. Spainhour of MOrgan ton, who waa elected to the Legis lature from Burke county by a majority of 376 votes, was in town Monday and Tuesday. Thirty-Nine Years Ago August 11, 1M1 The schools of the county are now practically all in session, and County Superintendent Smith Hagaman says the attendance is unusually fine. The Boone Fork Lumber Co. put a crew of hands to work in the trackage of tkeir lumber road from near the Winkler siding, back of the Rich Mountain Tues day. They are getting everything in readiness for the re-starting of the big operation at Shulls Mills which Mr. Gilley hopes will not be farther in the future than ten days or two weeks. Mr. M. E. Towson of Lynchburg, Va. and Mr. N. C. Parsons of Ab ingdon, both Knights of the grip, were among our merchants Satur day, soliciting orders for their re spective houses. They were of the opinion that Boone was fuller of activities in many lines than any small town they had visited. In fact, Mr. Towson suggested that the name of this metropolis be changed to Boom Town. A cut of approximately SO per cent in the price of all candy from gumdrops to bonbons was an nounced by a chain candy store company, following a general agi tation against high prices of these and other commodities. Last Monday the directors of the Peoples Bank k Trust Co. held a meeting in the bank building, the main idea of the meeting be ing to transact business looking to the erection of their new brick building on the Lovill corner. It is hoped the building can be oc cupied by late fall or early win ter. Just One Thing ay CARL GOERCH Ronald Mumford, hotel man who I* now a big shot in the Robert Meyer hotels, was at one time president of the corporation which operates the Governor Clinton Ho tel in' New York. 1 was in Now York some time ago while Roland was there; so I went around to pay him a visit "I'd like to see Mr. Mumford please." I told one of the young ladies in the outer office. 'Tm sorry, sir, but Mr. Mum ford it in aa important conference aad won't Ito out for about an hour." "I don't believe I can wait that long. Just toll him I dropped in, will you please?" "What Is the name?" "Hodges. Tm Governor of North Carolina." The young lady gasped. Tw? or three other ladies, siting In. the immediate vicinity, swung around In their chairs and Marad. "Just a moment. Governor," said the first one. "Ill tell Mr. Mumford you ara here." She daahed Into a? offke dost by. The door was opao and I could hear Mumlord's voice plainly. "Who did you say? . f . The Governor at North Catalina? . . . Governor, hell! It's elAar Elvey Thomas, George White, ar Cad Goerch. Whichever one If is, teA him to sit down and 111 be out in Just a minute." The girl delivered the message with a hurt expression upon her countenanw. Mr. S. G. Winatoad is a well known resident of Roxboro. Used to ha mayor af the town. Mr. Win AFTER ANOTHER (tead attended old Trinity (now Duke) College. He i? the father of eight chil dren. When the first child was ready to enter college, Mr. Win stead said: "What college do you prefer?" And the answer was "Carolina." So he went to Carolina. When the second child got ready to go to college, Mr. Winstead asked the same question, and again the answer was "Carolina." Mr. Winstead sighed, but he acquiesced. The same thing happened with the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh children. AH of them went to Carolina. And last week the eighth child graduated ? also at Carolina. Of course, Mr. Winstead 1* mighty praud of his eight children, but h* ateo it still mighty proud of Trinity aad Duke alto. Gewral Albart Cox,