The Transylvania Times Published Every Thursday By TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY Brevard, N. C. THE NEWS Estab. 1896 THE TIMES Estab. 1931 Consolidated 1932 Entered as second class matter, October 29, 1931, at the Post Office in Brevard, N. C., under the Act of March 3, 1879. ED M. ANDERSON __Publisher JOHN I. ANDERSON.Editor HENRY HENDERSON_Mech. Supt. IRA B. ARMFIELD_Business Manager FRANCES WALKER..Ass’t Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES PER YEAR In the County, $2.50. Out of the County, $3.00 MEMBER NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION National Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service Chicago San Francisco New York PRIZES AWARDED TO THE TIMES First place, general excellence, North Car olina Press Association in 1942, 1944 and 1946. Second place, general excellence, Na tional Editorial Association, 1943; second place, best editorial, National Editorial Association, 1946. Third place, best editorial, North Carolina Press Association, 1946. THURSDAY,#MARCH 10, 1949 The General Speaks Now that the Red Cross drive is on, it is time to consider seriously some of the work of the Red Cross in times of war and peace. If there is any uncertainty in your mind about what the Red Cross means, it is well to consider what General Dwight D. Eisen hower has to say about it: “Organizations and institutions—educa tional, social, humanitarian—supported fi nancially by voluntary individual contribu tions are characteristic of our way of life . . . evidence of our people’s readiness to help each other. In their forefront is the American Red Cross. “Once a year the Red Cross calls upon us all to help carry on its work. “Each of us has his own personal rea sons for answering this call. These are mine: “To men in the armed forces, the Red ' Cross is a prompt, efficient friend in per * sonal emergencies. “To war veterans—particularly those confined to beds and wheelchairs in Vet erans’ hospitals—the Red Cross remains a constant friend and counselor. “And to all of us the Red Cross is the Tecognized civilian disaster relief agency. It has the know-how to meet human needs growing out of a large-scale national emer gency. “For all these deeds and for the other services it performs, the Red Cross de serves our continuing support.’’ Let’s get behind the drive in this county and raise our goal of $2715 without delay. Remember the Red Cross is YOUR Red 'Cross. Forests On The Farm Farmers are learning that diversifica tion pays off in more ways than one. Ali lands are not suitable to the same crops. And the better farmers who study their re sources and income have long ago discov ered that it also pays not to have all their eggs in one basket, so to speak. More and more farmers are realizing the value of forests, not only from the stand point of beauty, soil conservation, but ac tual income as well. In this section of the state reforestation is a particularly impor tant practice. And we urge1 more and more farmers to consider it. A report drawn up by a committee head ed by Dean Hilton, of State college, clear ly points out the opportunities farmers have of increasing their incomes through good management of forests. “With reasonable protection from fire. Insects, diseases, and from grazing in the piedmont and mountain sections,” says this report, “farm woods will produce an average stumpage income of $3 per acre each year. The harvesting and marketing of forest products will provide a labor in vcome of $12 per acre.” With more than nine million acres or about half of the state’s total fairm land in forests, the Hilton committee figured that North Carolina farmers have a potential income in their woods of $27,000,000 for stumpage plus $108,000,000 as labor in come. That makes a total of $135,000,000, which is about a third greater than the estimated value of the 1948 corn crop, and corn is one of the state’s most important crops. Our forest potential is even greater if we will replant with seedlings our idle and eroded land and the cut-over woodlands which now serve only as eyesores on our beautiful countryside. Besides the nine million acres in farm forests, there are two million additional acres of worn out crop land that should be in forests. And there are another two million acres of cutover land in the state that should be planted or assisted in natural reseeding. The beauty about this opportunity for farm forest development is that the aver age farmer doesn’t need a lot of extra cap ital or labor to take advantage of it. He can do the work at his own choosing be tween crops and in off seasons and he al ready has. the equipment he needs—an axe, a drag chain and a good team or tractor. Expansion Needed Citizens who appreciate the necessity for adequate water and sewerage systems no doubt applaud the decision of the board of aldermen to gather all relevant data so that they will be able to determine what the cost of the project here wilj be. With in the next few days the engineers will submit their reports. It will be necessary for the town to float bonds to finance these expansions, but w*e do not believe the citizens will decline to put up the money. It was revealed some w^eeks ago that the population of Brevard had increased 60 per cent since 1940. Further growth is in progress, and this growth will be hin dered or helped by the kind of facilities w'e have for furnishing adequate water and disposing of sewage and waste. The standing indebtedness of the town has been substantially reduced in recent years, which will make it possible for the town to float a bond issue in the event the people approve of the step. Local AAA Funds Increased With greater emphasis placed on agri culture in Transylvania county, it is partic ularly fitting that appropriations of conser vation materials and payments through the AAA be increased here in 1949. According to the local secretary, Tran sylvania farmers will be aided by more than $22,000 if they carry out the conservation practices required by the triple-A. There is one difference in the program this year. Farmers must get prior approval of practices before they are started. Act now. If you are participating in the ’49 program, order lime, phosphate and pas ture seed immediately. Socialism Is Always Hungry j Recent press dispatches from England illustrate perfectly the insatiable appetite of socialism. There is a move underway to have the labor government take over Eng land’s pubs. It has also been proposed that the government nationalize football pools, which are one of the most popular ! forms of legal gambling in Britain. Final- I ly, an item says that Britain’s mo'tor indus- j try has now become the biggest exporter j of automobiles in the world, and that a minister told the House of Commons that the time may come when that industry will be nationalized. Those who think that a “little socialism” may be a good thing—so long as it doesn’t touch them—should think it over. For if there is one thing sure about socialism, it is that it’s never satisfied until it has de voured all enterprise and established a complete dictatorship over all of a nation’s productive resources, including the labor force. There is a vital lesson in that for the American people. We may think, to take the most important example, that it’s all right for the government to go into the electric business, and to absorb the private industry in the process. But when this happens, the mere question of who is go ing to produce our electricity is the least of the matter. The big thing, which over rides all other considerations, is that a precedent is established whereby any kind of business, from a grocery store to a news paper to an automobile plant, may be so cialized and made a function of govern ment as well. The people can have one or the other, but never both. "These Days” By George E. Sokolsky aiMMItMIIIIIMIIMa|||l||a||aM|||MI||MIMM",||,Mm,m||,|* depression Disinflation, the new federal prose term for a depression, is designed to describe an upset in government thinking and plan ning. Just as Henry Wallace ex pected a bust immediately after the end of the war. and the gov ernment devised its policies to meet that bust, only to discover a boom which moved into an infla tion, so Mr. Truman’s current eco nomic advisers expected a rising inflation for this year and so pre pared his essay on the state of the union and his budget message, on ly to discover a depression. The very men who have made great political capital by ridiculing such a phrase as “prosperity is just around the corner” are now saying that if everybody will be optimistic, everything will be all right. It is as though economists have turned themselves into psy choanalysts, which maybe they have done, and are substituting for an analysis of facts the atmos phere of “the roses that bloom in the spring, tra-la!” The facts indicate that a normal and not unhappy event is occur ring which might have come ear lier but for government interven tion, namely, that the backlog of consumer goods orders has been liquidated and the backlog of cap ital goods orders is in its final stages. This means that the mar ket has changed from a sellers’ to a buyers’ market and that resist ance to spending is setting in. This has been complicated by the Presi dent’s tax proposals and forces the consumer to postpone buying. One can only pay taxes with cash in hand and if the government wants more, the consumer has less money for purchases. This combination of an increase in available inventory and fear of increased taxes, plus the fact that we live in a country in which per haps as high as 40 per cent of all purchases are postponable. ere ates a drop in prices and increases the value of the dollar. This drop would be deeper expept for gov ernment farm subsidies and gov ernment prospective spending for military expenditures and current spending by dumping surplus goods in Europe and Asia under the Marshall plan The President faces the same dilemma this year as he did in 1945 when, in pursuance of Henry Wallace's Statistics, he and the country were violently misled. I listened to Leon Keyserling on the radio recently try to defend the council of economic advisers’ er rors and he did very badly. I shall refer to his absurdities when 1 can get the radio script. In this connection, it is inter esting to point to an article in the London “Economist” which deals with the creeping Socialism of this administration: . . The price systems acts not freely, but under controls im posed bjN business, by labour, by governments, both state and fed eral. Rent controls are impose^ by nation and state. The price of a fur coat in New York includes 20 per cent federal tax and 2 per cent city tax, while if the purchas er goes home with it to Connecti 1949 RED CROSS FUND GIVE cut she may also be liable to a 3 per cent state tax . . . prices on tooth brushes, shaving creams and other trade-marked articles may be set by the manufacturer and must be kept by the retailer under penalty of state law. The recent rise in the cost of travel between New York and Boston had to be approved by the Interstate Com merce Commission. The use of prefrabricated houses to cut the building costs has been blocked by the antiquated building codes of many towns.” Apparently the socialistic Brit ish have discovered a fellow-feel ing in Washington. The “Econ omist” says of this: . . The President’s council of economic advisers calls (the American economic system) a ‘con gery of private and government efforts,’ and the phrase is good shorthand for a definition which could not be more precise with out also being more clumsy.” Quite so. except that the Brit ishers might have used a simpler phrase, “mixed up.” These gov ernment economists seemed to have a happy faculty for figuring | wrong, outguessing themselves, and then covering their errors with federal prose which, while being terriby mixed up and clumsy, gives the appearance of urecision by the art of saying noth ing voluminously. All of which only means that some sort of de pression, already involving 3,000, 000 unemployed, is here and needs to be covered up for political rea sons. Grammatical An army captain who was tong on experience but short on formal education was having difficulties with several college graduates in his company. They persisted in correcting his grammar, particu larly his occasional use of a dangling preposition. Finally, this notice appeared on the bulletin board over the captain’s signa ture: “There is a certain spirit of in subordination in this company up with which I will not put.” How Scalf’s Helped This Little Girl Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Fannin, 102 Nevada Ave nue, LaFollette, Tenn., says: “Af ter she had flu, our little daugh ter, Phyllis, suf fered from loss of appetite and indigestion. She lost weight, phy|iis Fannin looked pale ah^LaFollette, Tenn. u n dernourished. was restless at night. We gave her Scalf’s Indian River Medicine. She eats heartily, sleeps well, looks and acts like a different child.” Scalf’s is on sale at all good drug stores; try it. Nothing re places its years of use. Hear Scalf’s Harmoneers Quartet over WWNC, Dial 570, at 9:30 a. m. Monday through Friday. REWARDING, EXCITING - Yes, and plenty interesting, too. That can be your life, as it is for thousands of other young men, in the new U. S. Air Force. Here’s opportunity that can’t be matched to start a real lv worthwhile career in av I tion. You get the best and mos’ advanced training. A wide riety of interesting jobs. Excel lent opportunities for advance ment and promotion. The edu cational features of training the new U. S. Air Force can mean real success and happi ness for you. For the young man who wants to enter avia tion, this is the deal made to order for you. Act now. Don’t delay. See your U. S. Air Force Recruiter today. He’s at the U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station. It’s at Post Office Building, Asheville, N. C. (SImmmiiiiiii .....M„,g Ihe Everyday Counsellor By REV, HERBERT SPAUGH, D. D. Are you bored? Are you lonely? Does the monotony of your daily routine wear you down? Many men and particularly women are. Elsie Robinson in her syndicated column “Listen, World” makes a istirrino nlan fnt- . many women whose lives are dull and drab from “the soli tary confine- : ment” of the home and the daily round of j domestic duties.jl Every bit that I she writes i s w nut. me uauy spaugn round of dish washing, preparing meals, clean ing, laundering is bound to be come dreadfully monotonous. But much of life for all of us can be like that if we permit it. Eating might become monotonous, as we do it every day. For some of us it is, but for most of us it isn’t, because we eat to satisfy hunger and it gives us a sense of well being. All of us have many routine duties we do daily. For some they are monotonous; for others they are not. It depends on how we look at them. All of us have a hunger for feel ing that we are part of life, and a part of other people. Selfish ness stifles that desire. When we think about our daily duties in terms only of ourselves, they can become fearfully monotonous, and we can be overcome with self pity. But when we realize that the dis charge of these duties contributes to the well being of others we find ......... satisfaction. We are satisfying that hunger for feeling that we are part of life. I will never forget calling on a dear old lady who had led a vig orous and active life. She had reared a large and fine family the hard way. Then illness confined her to her bed. For a while she occupied herself with needlework. Then the doctor took that from her. One day I called on her, found her flat on her back with hands folded. But she was smil ing and quite cheerful. I asked her why she was in such good humor. She said, “I am having a good time with my thoughts and recollections of the past years. The doctors can take things away from me, but they can’t take my* thoughts away.” With the eyes of her mind she was looking back over the blessings of the past and having a good time at it. She was thoroughly enjoying the knowledge that she had been a vital part in the lives of others through many years. If we feel that we are in “soli tary confinement,” it is because we make it so. Only we can close the eyes of our minds. Only we can close the door of communion with our God and our fellowman. There is more beauty around us and behind us, than most of us take the trouble to see. And what anticipated beauty there is ahead of us for those of us who know and love our Lord. St. Paul wrote, “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him.” (Reference: I Cor. 2:9) YOU'RE TELLING ME! ---By WILLIAM HITT--- , ... CMtrcf Pr»Jj Writer Three of the Dionne quintuplets have boy friends, according to a gossip columnist. The other two are, apparently, just a couple of old maids. — England now boasts a talking ghost. An idea! subject for a radio interview. The grizzly bear can outrun a horse. Where do you go to bet on ’em? The elevators in San Francis co’s proposed mile high build ing will, undoubtedly, be jet propelled with rocket-assisted take-off. And how about oxy gen masks for those going be yond the 500th floor? Residents of the super skyscrap er. Hoyt King points out. would be able to look down their noses at the x'est of the city. British navy is to use vacuum eleaners instead of mops in neating up decks. Just another of those sweeping changes? George Bernard Shaw has been t'oted the most popular person in the world over 80 years of age. Hope he enjoys the title—it took him long enough to earn it. Kdlmid Dair BREVARD PHONE 356 Faces of Disaster ! .__ There were thousands of fires last year which left in their wake death, injury and widespread destruction. Again this year, thousands of fire \ .j tims will need housing, medical care, food, and long-term reha bilitation. And, as always, your Red Cross will be there. Last year, through your Red Cross, you gave relief in 303 disasters .. . assisted 312,400 persons. You, too, con help through J Your RED CROSS Giwdmf Galloway's Cafe PETE BIKAS, OWNER