Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / May 14, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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2r& *.7? From The Desit Of ScMtorforsytb COBlmTKE WORK? I have bceoj m I lul l ?l * Or.wfsrd of Swain in Mi eflqr* to warn approximately ttUto per >r<u paid bj the Tenoes Nt Valley Authority to the State of North Carolina. Our contention has j Moo that this money does not be ttfcg to the fttoto but to the several iwIIh to wfccfc Mart was taten tor TYAaae and it? rvolr and property management ?f tva uNrf to Qood I tttrll lad manufacturing of hydro- 1 power. Last week a meeting was held with representatives of all counties 1 ' Involved and representatives of the Revenue Commission The advanced planning In this matter was reflect ed by the fact that the revenue peo ple are not Doing to fight this trans fer of funds back to the counties and a bill was introduced in the house to make this change mandato ry. Much credit is due Representa tive Crawford for his fine work and effort. I hope that we can turn back these funds to the several counties. LEGISLATION? The Legislature for the most part had a busy week, highlighted by the Minimum Wage Bill which came up Wednesday. MUSTARD SEED Catholic Chapel Rev. Joseph Dean CHRISTIAN TOLERANCE I. If Catlulics become a majority in a country, do they force their religious beliefs on others? . No. Before A person may Join the Catholic Church and be baptized, lie mul |o through a period of waiting and observing to make sure the Catholic teaching contains the full teaching of Jesus Christ. If ^a la sot convinced, then he may not jpin the Church. Catholic mast be free In their decision, never forced into it. Church law states la Canon 1351: "No one who is unwilling may embrace the Catholic l."H Caholic* believe that their church is the only true Christian Ctareh, do they not strive to destory all other Churches? v No, titer do not. It la true that Caholic believe that Jesus gave htir the key* of His Kingdom on earth, and founded His Church on PlO, aa narrated in St. Mathew 16.18 and the following verses. 1 is also true that Catholics believes Peter to be their first pope imi the apostles their first bishops. But they do not therefore make law I1 s Hi ? of error or the destruction of other churches their goal. IXlpe Pins Xll emphasized the Catholic position in 1954 when he itatad Oat repression of error must be subordinate to higher norms, aaafc aa <(m exercise of belief and religious praattce in the world tmmuMf of states. t.' What la included in the notion of tolerance? Ntnin* Implies f respect for another person , not because lie is mm| or Mta because be is right but because he is human. To i.i Implies a willingness to communicate and to do so on terms which make real communication possible. * Jftl ftorvk* ik dune td trufh when it is put forth In such away that V fefcels those Who hear It. ' iW trtrfhtmfc has, should be eomthunication to others but it must be given- with infinitedelicacy. lest it<ose some of its majesty in the transfer." And here, is the major argument against the intolerant. It la not that they have an excess of zeal in their care for the truth, as is often claiihed; it is that they are so careless and irrever ent In their treatment of truth. It is a quesion, we mighf. say of the mode of truth. When what Is communicated is not really the truth, ?which has its own appeal, but the egoism, combativeness. greed or of those who think of themselves as defenders of the . truth, then truth has been violated. ' ftmhtrt than being the enemy of truth, tolerance serves truth more faithfully than *eala In our age when the truth, if it is to be com ???Bdaaifld jkt all must be freely communicated and freely accepted ftW-ihea, tolerance is the necessary mode of its communication. la ail 'ages the truth suffered at the hands of the intolerant, who made it sceia ugly and drove good men from embracing it. But ih our tiine, intolerance is by far the greatest enemy of the truth, ?pe?ialty when it poses as its greatest friend. ^ Next Week Religious persecatioa in some Countries r - ?roMw?rd Puttie I ifs^ I "-asr ? \ it. Fright*? 1 W-St?r ? Sc??~ ?.c-' air 33. |t;w?nch n 41 Mimic 43. Rod?nt? 44 p?^S,ve pronoun ? 45 Datxlini li*ht league 49. CJ*?h 51. State: abbr. 52. Abundance 54. Violin Amww km \ nrsrrrTTSra 56. Pilferer: slang 87. Put away DO WW 1. Time af year 2. Unccwtr 3. Deeds 4. French "the" Hurried Civil wrong: law 7. Ruthenium: chem. 8. Wading bird 9. Part of a sentence 10. Dog-house 12. Coronet ? 13. Compact 16. Owing 25. Engagement notice 26. Arm bone ? 27. Falsehood 29. Demon i 30. Produce crops J i SI. Weak "f 1 34. Hurls i 35. Criminal ' . 38. Higher 37. Letter strokes 38. Ice pendant 39. Caught 4? . Chum: slang 49. Skirt inset 48. Prepare for publication 49. Catch: slang 50. Nigerian tribe 53 Lithium: < chem. 55. Medical title Your senator voted against this measure for the reason that it was discriminatory, and particularly so against a small select group of peo ple. principally between the ages of SO and 65 yfedrs. The bill was without character or imagination. It held no promise for any future good. That is my opinion. The Federal minimum * age fixes wages at $1.00 per hour and this should take care Of any consideration or future advancement for our people and our section. VISITORS ? Mr. T. D. Bryson. Jr. representing his bar association, was a visitor in Raleigh over the weekend and presented to represen tatives and senators recommendat ions from ex lawyers ? the far west regarding the Courts Bill. We enjoyed seeing Thad and I think he enjoyed being down here, meeting eld friends and former colleagues of the Legislature. (Mr. Bryson is a former member of the House from Swain County.) SIDELIGHTS? Recently your sen ator had the wonderful opportunity of flying wih Carl Goerch. We left Raleigh and flew to Ocracoke on the Outer Banks, landing on the high way. The trip there was most inter esting as Mr. Gverch had a continu ing commentary about the land marks and history of the section over which we were passing. In flying over Bath, oldest town] in North Carolina, he told me that Bath was once visited regularly by the pirates which preyed on shipping along the North Carolina Coast. An English evangelist came to Bath to preach and teach during that period and was rudely received. The preacher had someone row him across the sound and upon reaching the other shore took off his boots and shook the dust of Bath from his feet, pronouncing a cruse on the town of Bath that It would never grow or prosper: It never has. At Ocracoke Island there is a beautiful harbor in which the pirate. Teach, was captured and beheaded. Flying from there down the Outer Banks, we passed over a community in which twelve people live-old men and women without any hope or prospect of the future^ They are all FLORIDA'S GLAMOROUS 100% AIR CONDITIONED [ -2= ~ SARASOTA, FLORIDA * SUMMER -FALL SPECIAL 7 NIGHTS 8 DAYS ? WITH MEALS ? 7 DINNERS 7 MEAtCFASTS $ 56 Double Occupancy (NrNnw) $ 70 Single Occupancy 1*3 Double UM1A $7$ 0<nM? 9*4 Singh [2jl9d||8r $M 5ingU APWL ?6*oD?CEMI?R IS Fun- filed days md wftfc every facflrty Make your rworvattons today. Ml TOW LOCAL TRAVIL AOCNT Oft WMTt ? NEW TERRACE HOTEL over 70 years of age aid their only communication with the outside . world U by a boat which arrives once a week with fresh milk, vege tables and provisions. It used to be a fishing village, now very sad to me, with no hope and only waiting to die. The ocean continues to wash away part of the Outer Barks. This is the preliminary of a break through which will, if not corrected, i flood hundreds of hamlets and [ towns in Eastern Carolina, and de stroy the Inland Waterway. Federal help can be obtained in this, and there is now a bill in the Legisla ture to correct the situation. iWe landed at Beauford where a car was furnished us by one of Mr. Goerch's many friends. We saw At lantic Beach and the whole area surounding Morehead City, having lunch at Tony Seamon's famous seafood restaurant. We finally flew back to Raleigh after a memorable trip. Wish I i:ad space to tell you more about it, and to give you a description and rundown on that amazing man. Carl Goerch. (Darn ed good pilot, too). If They Read lids, Rats May Want To Go Off On A Real Mflk Binge much mUk u he bu to have, he'll live tea per cent longer If aa average rum as be tag were Mke aa average rat, by drinking an extra glass or two of milk a day he might live six years longer. But no one is certain human beings are like rats in this respect. Nor doe4 anyone know how much milk a man needs. And no one has de termined bow many people would be willing to drink more milk. The Department of Agriculture would like to find out. The best thing about these rat studies is that tcey Indicate that the so per milk drinkers have a better time. They mature quicker. That Is, they get interested In girl rats at a younger agt . They stay younger longer. Thai is, they don't get so nile and scraggly as quickly. And they stay interested? at even ad vanced ages for rats? in the ladies. Researchers have now carried their studies on for some 10* gen erations of rats. Apparently milk is just as effective in the 90th gen eration as in the first. Why all this work with rats? It's , because researchers have found that rats are affected? in some ways ? by some of the saipe things things in a diet that humans are. Shortages of some essential food elements hit rats in about the same way they hit humans. But there are some great diference being in the daily requirements of a rat and a human. Department of Agriculure men ?spurred on by the fM-irttr? are already pushing for a bigger boom in milk drinking. They're advocat ing powdered milk in everyhing from soup to meat loaf. They're recommending that you 'enrich' the milk you drink with a spoonful or so of powdered milk. HOPES AND PLANS? I have been working for several weeks in an effort to set up a trip into the far west for a group of senators and members of the Department of Conservation and Development. The purpose: To make them aware of our resources and to ask their co operation and help in exploiting our resources. We need so many things and certainly want all the help we can get. Regards to everyone, and until next week, 1 am Sincerely, . W. Frank Forsyth If you don't like milk: eat chut. (Siden ote one of the tap ontritioa researches for the Department of Agriculture ca^'l stand milk She cheese bai (oo many concentrated calories. "So what does a poor wo man do?" shs asks.) It will be a long, hard road be fore the Department of Agriculture researchers find out whether extra milk adds1 to the' life of hwnan or not? how much milk it takes and how many years it adds. "Because, if you begin with children, you'll probably, die be fore your experiment is concluded," s a y s on researcher." And Who could get even one human being to live on a controlled diet, all m ,ife " . . V But some private university re search men have a substitute plan iri mind. They aim to find out just how much milk and calcium older people need to Ken. running nor mally from month to month . They'll determine this by noting varies the amount of milk he drinks. Does he lose calcium from what effects show up when he them sqpething to work on. Then ms oones who. he drinks tnii amount of milk? Does he throw off i-alcium as waste when he drinks so much more? There are some Congressmen who want the Department of Agriculture men to begin looking into exactly what the Soviet Union is doing. There are rumors the Beds have a secret way of prolonging life. Milk?_ pay all be owned Mm. Id the same way my Heavenly Father will deal with yon, if you do not all of you torgi?s one anther from your ht! arU Matthew l$:21.fe 54,35 "And r d<r not condem yon either" saM Jesus; "go, and from. this time do not sin any more. "John 8:11. 2. Inexcusable u i nao not came ana spoken to them, tbey would have had no .sin; 'but as the case stands tbey are without excuse for their sin." John IS: 22. "But next, the man who had the one talent In his keeping came and said. Sir, I knew you to be as severe man, reaping where you had not sown and garnering what you had not winnowed. So being afraid I went and buried your talent in the ground: there you have what belon gs to you. You wicked and slothful servant, replied his master? but as for this worthless servant, put him out into the darkness outside: here will be the weeping and gnashing of teeth. Matthew 25 : 24-26. 30. Then wiH they also answer. Lord when did we see Thee hungry or thirsty or homeless or ill-clad or sick or in prison, and not come to serve thee? But he will reply, in solemn truth 1 tell you that in so far as you withheld such services from one of the humblest of these, you withheld them from me. NO STRAY? Thu pooch, paws on sill of a White House win- 1 dow, is ? member of the presi dential household. She's Heidi, Mr. Eisenhower's Welmaraner. SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHEROKEE SCOUT mm Do You Need Don't Let Your Supply Get Doni To Foar Before Yoa Call The Seoat To Get A Refill It Will Save Time Business Forms? Statements? ?Stationary? Business Cards? * - Calfing Cards? Annomicen?nt8? - ?Vrsr Books? Would Yob Like Yoar Letterheads To Stand Oat? The Skoal Can Make Them Attractive, Humorous, Beaatlfal, ? And In Colors Try Us! Cherokee Scout / ? ? ? We Can Print Anything Or Have It Printed For You - .va ? ? , v< .Vs ? I Hoar Wkneu Back v r:"*'
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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May 14, 1959, edition 1
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