Home Rebellion Or Home Religion? (By George Walter Fiskel "To many grandchildren smoke and too many grandparents jazz," says Doctor Cadman. "Mutton mas querades as lamb and lamb as mut ton." These are minor symptoms of a widespread home disease: In dividualism run amuck. In count less American homes every member is busy "expressing himself with selfish abandon, obeying instinct and impulse without restraint, each running off on his own pet tangent, (ill the old home-centered life is no more. This subtle selfishness is kil ling out the old home loyaltv which has been the cement of Vmerican so ciety. The individualistic mother centers her interest in bridge and social climbing. Hie individualistic father is absorbed in fighting his competitors and "the plaguev un ions." No wonder the individualis tic sons ami daughters pursue their own favorite sens,, pleasures, crush es, crazes and intoxications, quite independent I v, each going his own separate way. and making the home chiefly a point of departure and re luctant return. $ujrh centrifugal homes are sel dom found in llie country. They are usually urban or suburban, symp toms of overprosperity. social satie tv, demoralizing luxury and the sud den growth of commercialized sen sational amusements. Rural life in general plods along in teh same safe grooves; but cit\ lif,. finds a new thrill every week for every member of thi' family, and thrill-chasing ab sorbs the time and energy of the j multitude who lose their ideals in j the easy glamor of the city. In fact, the thrill is the chief pull to the ??>? or. na lapron-strings, or by anybody's heart-strings. And probably the matter owns no apron anyway. This type of home presents a dif ficult challenge to religion. .The church in the city and the suburb must find a way lo rebuilt lh? tem ple of home religion, for nothing else can stop the spread of this insi dious disease. Education alone can not do it, not even social education, for it lacks sufficient motive power to work the miracle. Only a new born spiritual purpose, in terms of modern religion fitted anew to mod ern social life, can furnish motiva tion powerful enough to conquer this "individualism run amuck." The worst phase of the situation in selfish centrifugal homes is the damage done the younger children, who often realize they are being neg lected. A spirit of resentment to ward thir parents, rising sometimes to open hostility, is occasionally re vealed to sympathetic teachers. In a frank discussion about parents re vealed to sympathetic teachers shrr cently in a class of fifteen-year old girls there were some significant revelations. Only two of the group were inclined to make a slight de fense of adults in general. 4fcThe rest," the teacher says. # "attacked their parents with cheevfui energy." They loudly protested that their par ents failed to understand them, could not get their viewpoint, had forgotten they were young them selves once, and did not appreciate the baility of older boys and girls to think for themselves, make deci sions and take care of their own af fairs. Quite evidently some parents are a problem to their children, as well as the reverse! Acute Problems, of Hipl i School Youth, , In .the midst of the discussion, one girl blazed forth with this bitter ar raignment : "Parents are three things. They are cowards, because thev are afraid to tell their children what they actual I > know and actual ly think themselves. The yare hy pocrites, because they try to pretend to their children that they are what they are not. And thev are dishon est. Iwrause the\ try to make their children do things that they won't tnnoA Jo nmniwSnw f?Am tUn ^.w..w ??"??; 8SHS89 """* M,u shadows and speaks with rather un certain voice. Though self-asser tive in many ways, they are often timid and dubious in the midst of the moral tangles of their complex lives. They know that their social schedules have grown faster than their spiritual insight. A'eic Temptations Teach New Duties Thousands of them in many high schools have been interviewed by various people the past two years, to discover what they consider their chief personal problems. Frank, honest answers have been given and a great variety of moral difficulties and social situations discovered. The ethics of "dates,"' "petting," "joy riding," pocket flasks," et cetera, re cur frequently, recalling very simi lar but less high-powered dangers in the slower days gone by, but reveal ing far greater variety and subtleyt in the temptations our modern youth arc facing. Vo one could examine many hun dreds of reports from these honest girls and boys without feeling the keenest sympathy with them and ad miration for their moral earnestness, as they confess their chief character problems and reveal their need of clear-cut ideals and spiritual help. The following summary of problems reported, classified under seven con venient groups, will be an interest ing indication of the moral struggles of our adolescent youth. These groups are not mutually exclusi-.e. To some extent they overlap (es pecially the last two.) which ac counts f r the excessive parentage. Personal problems of school and su.es __ 42 vocation 3 Problems of honesty and truth p\\m& ;>l^?4A-4-;*44 , 15 Problems of social pressure, imi tation. etc. 1_ 1 1 ? 11 Personal problems relating to religion . ... 12 | Difficulties with parents and rel atives ... . 15 Social relations with the oppo site sex 32 (Including acute sex problems. 11 pe cent ) Problems relating to social plea Pct. Our data sufficiently general so that this percentage may perhaps be taken as fairly typical, indicating the kind of difficulties our high school youth are facing. At least it is clear that many of them are hav ing their trouble with their own par ents. and that they all need the mor al and spiritual help of sympathetic, t intelligent and strongly Christian homes. It is plainly evident that hosts of them are not really getting this help from home. If hat Some Parents Have Done For five months last winter an in fluential group of parents in a su burb of Cleveland determined to face the home needs of their commu nity in a discussion class. It was a well-educated group and intensely in earnest. All through the winter they studied th*ment of certain notes. default having been made in the payment of said note*, and the holder and owner thereof having demand ed foreclosure. I will, for the purpose of satisfying said notes and the costs of sale, sell at the door of the county courthouse In Murphy. l?n the 25 day of February. 1920. at pub I lb- auction to the highest bidder for cash, the following described lands: First tract: In Grahum County. North Car olina. Tract No. 1095, grant?-d by the State ..f North Carolina to John Dockery which grant is registered in book F page 532 in t h-? t fflce of the Kejrlster ??f Deeds nt Gra ham ? ounl.v, and conveyed to C. ? Mills by Ka-1 1*. Tathatu and J. I*. EarA'Co.l |y deeds the first of which is registered Ir said office - in book A\" at j .ige No. 392 and the latter In said ltook W at pate 4?">9. reference to which said record of said Krant and dee?ls is hereby made for more full -n 1 perfect de scription. Said tract is on the waters of l.ittle Snowbird Creek in Graham County ? ind contains 200 acres more or less Second tract: Part of tracts No. 7937 sit uated in Cherokee County. Hcginnlni: on a idack oak cruner of James Turk Davis and runs with that line N. 45 W, 14 pole* to a locust comer: 20 K. l*o isdes to a corner of same: thence N. 55 W. 3q poles to a chest nut corner of same: thence N. 4.1 K. 134 IMtlcs to a black oak corner: thence S. 50 K. to the top of the mountain divide lictween HanKingilog and Davis Creeks; thence down the main divide to the beginning containing | 50 acres, more or less. llelng the lands con voyed by II. I.. Mulkey Trustee in bankruptcy I to M. W. Hell Trustee l?y deed registered in j ileed Iwiok No. 9? at page 24 and by deed of i M. W. Hell Trustee ?o C. C. Mills registered in l KMik 97 at page 86 in the of rice of the itegister of Deeds of Cherokee County, refer ence being here made to both of said dees for description. Third Tract: Adjoining the lands of F. W. I (a vis and others in Cherokee County. Ite ginning on a chestnut the corner of 7935. and running thence with that line N. 15 \\\ GS istles to a chestnut the beginning corner of said tract No. 7935; thence S. SO W. 140 poles to a dogwood; thence S. 50 E. to a hick- ' ?tv stump; thence 40 E. Is" poles to the lie- I ginning. It lieing the lands lniught by C. C. | Mills front Joseph Davis l?y deed registered | in the office ??f the Register of Deeds of ? 'herokee County in book 08 at payu 331. which aw. This the 24 day of January, 1929. <25-4t-Jdni.) J. D. MALI.ONHE, Trustee. xotick: Having qualified as administrators of the ??state of Rev. A. U. Smith, deceased, late of Cherokee County. N. C. . this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate to present the same to the undersigned, and all persons owing said estate any indebted ness are hereby notified to make immediate payments of the same to the undersigned. This notice wiii in In bar cf "nT and all claims not presented to the under Mimed within one year from and after thlii date. This January 22. 1929. JOHN V. SMITH. Mara Hill. N. C. USIR SMITH. Marble. N. C. Administrators of estate of Rev. A. B. Smith deceased. (25-6t) FOR SALE NEW CHEVROLET COUPE 1928 MODEL Wof ford Terrell Co. If You Have DRY CLEANING & PRESSING to be done Call at ELLIOTT'S ODORLESS DRY CLEANING PLANT Murphy, N. C. Not a scent in a hundred dollar s worth I Our Foundation oF ? Industry To justify the claim that Our Country can look forward to a con tinuation of real prosperity on its present foundation, take a few sim ple and elementary facts: 1. In the automotive industry a single manufacturer (not Henry Ford) increased his olitput of cars manufactured continuously in the past 15 yeais fourteen hundred per cent. 2. From 1919 to "1925, four great divisions of labor ? farming, mining, manufacturing and railroad ing ? increased 20 per cent with 1,800,000 fewer workers, higher I wages and shorter hours. The turn over of labor was mainly taken up in newly created jobs. 3. In the first quarter of the present century, the population of Our Country increased 50 per cent but in the year 1925 we produced two and one-half times as much wealth as in 1889, with industrial workers on a 10 per cent shorter day and higher wages. 4. Disclosing the great growing future of Our Country is the increas ed use of power on machines used in manufacturing. In the first 25 years of the present century pofer use of the great prime movers among American manufactuicrs grew from 10.000.000 horse-power lo 37,735,000 horsepower. Industries Inspire Confidence Stockholders of our greatest in dustrial enteiprises todav comprise inillions of citizens, including their own customers and employes. Tick ers on the stock exchanges during the past year could not operate fast enough at times to record the pur chases of industrial securities by the people. Unprecedented sales reach ed from five to six million shares per day. Bertie County has the distinction of being the largest peanut produc ing county in the United States, hav ing an annual yield of about thirty six million pounds. R. H. KING GENERAL MERCHANDISE STANDARD GASOLINE MOTOR OIL WANTED PEAS J Highest Cash Price. Also cane Seed H. R. McINTOSH Hayesville, N. C. See The NEW 1929 WHIPPET I DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR VALUE AMERICA'S LOWEST PRICED 4 DOOR SEDAN .! E. C. MOORE SALES AND SERVICE, Murphy, N. C. 1 THE MURPHY SERVICE STATION is prepared to give your car a COAT OF TOP DRESSING and make it look like new for a reasonable sum. Drive your car down to our station today and let us save you the cost of a new top. MURPHY SERVICE STATION '