Judge Alley Writes Excellent Article On "The ©lory Of The Mountains" Of North Carolina (Editor’s note—Judge Felix E. Alley, of Waynesville, recently wrote the following article that appeared in THE STATE maga zine. The magazine gave this prais ing explanation: “Only a person who has a passionate love for the mountain county of western North Carolina could have written an article like this. Judge Alley has that love and has expressed it in terms which, we believe, will thrill you with greater appreciation of the beauties to be found in this great section of our state.”) Never was there a region more beautiful than our mountain country of western Carolina. Hills and valley, timberland and thick et, meadow and “bald spots,” wild grassland and naked cliffs abound on every hand in happy distribution of light and color. I have stood upon the summits of our higher elevations, and there beheld hundreds of the surround ing peaks; some large and others small; some with names and others nameless; separated by broad valleys and narrow gorges. And the thought had occurred to me that when the Divine Builder, in His grand process of creation, passed over this part of the world, He paused but a moment to throw together in confused disorder our wonderful mountainland; but since the completion of our magnificent PLENTY OF Only for Those Who Can Their Own! Extra Sugar for Canning is Available NOW! Be assured of ample, energy-build ing sweets next winter, by canning fruits and berries this Summer. The Government has allotted extra sugar for this purpose, and wants you to help in the present food shortage by canning as much as possible. Apply to your Ration Board for your extra sugar for canning NOW. Dixie Crystals ■ n ", r ' 'rVr £*• ^,/■ ► system of highways and commun ity roads. I have had the privi lege of visiting even the most re mote sections of our mountains' everywhere, and have seen a dif ferent prospect at every turn of every road; and now I see in it all a design too perfect for hu man comprehension. To me its contemplation suggests the un told wealth of the Infinite Uni verse. It inspires in my heart a reverence so profound that it leaves scarce a place for the smallness of earthly hopes and yearnings. Its natural wealth, its ruggedness and vastness, its matchless splendor and its lavish ness of beauty sink into my soul and leave my spirit straining at its earthly bonds to gaze with long ing eyes toward the Infinite Power which ordered its existence. I have been told that a man who had traveled extensively in all the other countries of the world, com pleted his tour by a visit to the mountain counties of North Car olina; and when he had seen them all, he said he believed that when God created the world, He creat ed western North Carolina first; and that He then lost His model, and so did not attempt to dupli cate our section anywhere else on earth. I respectfully dissent from that gentleman’s opinion. More pleasing to me than his sug gestion is the thought that when the Great Architect of the Uni verse had created all the other portions of the earth, He looked upon His handiwork and pro nounced it good, but not good enough. And then, marshalling all of His wondrous power, all of His might and all of His wisdom out of the plentitude of His in exhaustible store, He created the mountain region of North Caro lina, and pronounced it His mast erpiece, among all created things in the physical world. And when with His matchless skill. He had placed upon this masterpiece the imprint of ineffable beauty and glory, it was a veritable Garden of the Gods: a land of indescribable and inimitable grandeur; a land rugged with waving forests, can opied with foliage of brightest green, and resting upon founda tions of everlasting granite. It was a land of sparkling foun tains, limpid and pure as the dews of Heaven, bubbling up from ev ery vineclad hollow and hidden glen. It was a land of roaring cataracts, dancing cascades, mur muring rivulets, brawling brooks and laughing rills, rippling in eternal melody; and rolling ridges, We All Have A Part In This War... • Let’s back the boys who' are fighting for usi Pvt. Leonard W. Barton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ulys Barton, of Brevard, Route 1, is now stationed overseas in the signal hospital corps. j PVT. LEONARD W. BARTON I IN WAR AS IN PEACE DEPOSITS !J IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED TOUR GUARANTEES OF SAFETY ■Conservative management •Government iuperrision •Federal deposit insurance, pro tecting each depositor against loss to a maximum of $5,000. Bin WAR BONDS 0ss* AS A PATRIOTIC SEHVuZ Transylvania Trust Co. Organized November 24, 1931 PI^OSIT im<> ANC1 COMOMTIOJ dark gorges, deep ravines, ver dant dales and extended land scapes; sweeping away until they met in the far-off rim of the sky. It was a land of bright rivers, embanked in emerald and border ed with flowers, shimmering in sunlight and moonlight, and rush ing like liquid diamonds between the hills, from original source to rolling hills, from original source to rolling plain, and then flowing on to empty their pellucid waters into the restless sea. Is it any wonder that our pioneer ancestors, when they first saw this land with its mountains, rocks and streams, its hills, gorges and ravines, its, trees, plants and flowers clothed in the imperial draperies of its light and shadow, its salubrious climate and incom parable atmosphere, believed that they had at last found the Prom ised Land. And is it any wonder that we, their descendants, believe that there are no richer fields on earth than ours: that there is no fairer land than the Carolina Mountains? But sublime and majestic as are our wonderful mountains; en chanting and alluring as are our emerald-crowned forests; broad and extensive as are our swiftly gliding rivers and silvery stream lets,-the surpassing beauty of the mountains is seen in the kingdom of wild flowers: for when Winter has folded his tent, wrapped him self in his mantle of snow and retired to his home on the shores of the far-off frozen zone, and when Spring has come to blow her mellow horn at the persuasive touch of April’s showers and sun shine, the peach trees and the dog woods burst into bloom; the beau tiful, fragrant, trailing arbutus sends forth its white and pink blossoms to carpet the woods; and the redbud on the eastern slopes of the Blue Ridge hangs its pink on the forested hills. And from that time on until all verdure and flowers wither and die at the first touch of the North Wind’s breath, the entire mountain world is one vast flower garden. With a back ground of dark blue encircling the hills, a sea of color spreads out to the farthest horizons, yellow and white, scarlet and blue, pink and lavender. orange and purple, crimson and orchid, and all the colors between are scattered ev erywhere in confusion, but blend ed and softened into perfect har mony of hue and design, in an amazing variety of flowers too numerous to be mentioned here. And even after the killing frost arrives, the mountains, if possible, are more beautiful still; for then Autumn's glory, with its Indian summer, cloudless skies and hazy atmosphere, broods like a gentle spirit over the land. Then every hill is on fire with colors made brilliant by the flashing rays of the Autumn sun. Here a tree will be crowned with blazing yellow, and there another with gleaming gold; others will be attired in brilliant red and purple, and still others in all the tints and shades between, so that every hill and mountain-top seems to be glori fied by all the resplendent colors of the rainbow—a picture painted by the unseen hand of the Divine Painter Himself, and set in this high wilderness as if for His own contemplation, and equaled only in the molten and empurpled splendor of His sunset skies. The seductive mystery of this entire section is beyond the power of words to describe; the wonderful outlook of wide valleys, bounded in every direction by the treeclad hills, opens a world that seems to terminate abruptly everywhere, yet to go on in an endless series of verdant valleys and rushing streams. The darkling wood-belts creep up the hillsides, deep in mysterious shadows, until at last they penetrate the low hanging clouds; the crowning glory of the higher peaks. Mountaineers everywhere will endorse the spirit breather in the following lines, whose author I do not know, but which I have parapharased in order to apply to the Carolina mountains: The poet sings of Sunny France, Fair olive-laden Spain, The Grecian Isles, Italia’s smiles, And India’s torrid plain: Of Egypt, countless ages old, Dark Africa’s palms and dates, But let me acclaim the land I name— My mountain land, in the best of states. The poet sings of Switzerland, Braw Scotland’s heathered moor, The shimmering sheen of Ire land’s green, Of England’s rockbound shore; Quaint Holland and the Father land, Their charms in verse relates, But let me acclaim the land I name— My mountain land, in the grand est of states. I love every inch of our rugged land, Every stone on our mountain side, I love every drop of the crystal water That flows in our rivers wide; I love every tree, every blade of grass That grows within our‘gates, The gem of the earth is the land of my birth— My mountain land, in the Queen of States. Injoy Furlough U. S. ARMY NURS1S Julia Masha nany (left), a full blooded Indian from Black Rive;’ Falls, Wise., and Margaret Bell of Windber, Pa., en joy their first furlough atop Mt. Eden, New Zealand. They are studying a map of the city and en virons of Auckland. (International) Poultrymen who plan to raise chicks for meat production next year, can improve their stock by selecting breeders for fast feath ering, efficient rapid growth, and superior meat production. On January 1, 1942 there were 60,377,000 hogs on U. S. farms. It is estimated that the 1943 pig crop may total 125,000,000 as com pared with 105,000,000 last year. Somebody better grow some extra feed. LIONS TO HAVE LADIES’ NIGHT 14 Members T o Receive Buttons For Perfect At tendance One Year Commemorating National Music week, Mrs. H. R. Bobst, president of the Brevard Music Lovers club, sang two solos at the regular meet ing of the Lions club last Thurs day night at the Bryant house. She was accompanied by Mrs. Mel vin Gillespie. Lion George Massey, who was in charge of the program for the evening, also presented four negroes, who sang a number of spirituals. The club will observe ladies’ night with a picnic at White Pine, in the forest, next Thursday eve ning. Lions Joe Tinsley, W. A. Balcomb and George Massey are in charge of arrangements for this function and Lion Lloyd Hughes has provided with a means of travel. A suitable program will be arranged for the evening. To Propose Officers A nominating committee con sisting of Lions B. W. Thomason, John E. Rufty and John Ford will at that time propose officers for the new year beginning in June. Buttons signifying perfect atten dance for a year will be awarded to 14 members the same evening. Lion Frank Kerber gave a re port on the formation here of three dens of cubs, which the club is sponsoring. He said that twelve boys had qualified for charter members and that others were in vited to join. In charge of this activity for the club are Mr. Ker ber and Lions Lloyd Hughes, Rev. B. W. Thomason and Jack Trant ham. Larry Bryant has been elect ed cub master and H. McDaniels assistant cub master. The charter will be installed at a meeting promoted by the Lions here in a few weeks. SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE TIMES •.. You can spot it every time THEY’LL tell you at Ship’s Service Departments how much ice-cold Coca-Cola means to the men in, refreshment, in enjoyment and in morale. You read and hear similar things every day. When people feel about a soft drink that way it’s got something spe cial. Coca-Cola has. A taste all its own. A drink that adds refresh ment to thirst-quenching. Truly, the only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself ... the trade-marked product of The Coca-Cola Company. A Coke and a hot dog! Everywhere you nee that combination, you pee something that is Americain foreign The best O is always the better buy! BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA COLA COMPANY BY Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Asheville, N. C. Hendersonville, N. C., Branch I’m tired tonight -and I’m proud of it!” Yes, Tom is going home tired tonight . . . just like last night. . . and the night before. Tired and proud! You see, Tom is a typical member of the Southern Railway Family. And when America was plunged into war, something happened to him . . . and to the forty-two thousand men and women who make up this Family. Overnight, every Southern railroader be came a soldier . . . every Southern car and locomotive became a weapon of war . . . every transportation job, a chance to hasten America’s day of final Victory. Since Pearl Harbor, this mighty army has struck many powerful blows for free dom ... by keeping the wheels rolling under the biggest transportation load in all the long history of the Southern Railway System. Rain and shine, day and night, troop trains and war freight . . . tank cars and passenger trains... are rolling continuously and swiftly on the Southern. It’s a big job... a tough job... a vital job. But it’s being done ... and done right! That’s why Tom and the other men and women of the Southern are tired when they go home from the job these days . . . and “proud of it.” They’re proud, too, because they know that th$ work they are doing so well today is paving the way for the new and greater Southland that lies beyond the Victory they’re helping to win. President SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM