4 .'-" COLLOVHEE NORtlAL A SCHOOL OF MERIT DESTINED TO BE LEADING f ACTOR IN REGENERATION OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA t 4 To the Editor: Since - cotoihg to Jackson count last fall it lias been my pleasure tv visit Cullowhee sev eral times and note with pride whal is being accomplished there. The school has ten well prepared teach ers. Prof. A. C. Reynolds, formerly county superintendent of Buncombe county, is the very efficient princi pal and professor of pedagogy. The school is the largest now in its his tory, having enrolled approximately two hundred students, the larger majority of whom are boarding stu dents. Nearly all of these, young men and women expect to teach. Many of them have already; taught one or more terms of public school. The State most have invested in building something like $50,000. There are three splendid , buildings. One of tiese is a girls dormitory which accomodates perhaps 125 young ladies. ; In the old administration build ing is a well equipped auditorium which is seated with open chairs and seats 600 people. A new ad ministration building is nearing cbinpietion wihch will . cost about $25,000. In this new building there are seventeen tjlaslsrms hall accomodating two hundred pu ifflscieljiilsSon floor wSbe Ifitted s trp a "modern library and reading "room. Just at this time the school and vicinity are taxed to their utmost to provide boarding facilities for the students. This school is located in an ideal community. '.Towering mountains surround it in every direction. In the village is a Baptist and Meth odist church. The school has a splendid faculty and well organized departments Courses in domestic science and agriculture are. given. Ail pupils are taught drawing. A department of music is ' also pro- vided. Ihe agricultural course is ' conducted hv rroi. crown, w lio , graduated a few years ago from the North Carolina College of Agricul ture and 1 Mechanic Arts. Prof. Brown was reared near by is one of the progressive farmers of the coun ty. He gives special attention to training teachers to teach agricul ture in the public schools. This school is destined to be the leading factor in the regeneration of Western North Carolina. Each year sees, the school given new and largei usefulness. There is no rea son why this school within a very years should not be made a college by the State, Perhap there is not a school in the State with a larger sphere of usefulness and I - doubt if and school in the State collects -a student body possessing more latent talent than Cullowhee. These young people all have strong bodies and vigorous minds and are the purest ' AHWQwnn hlnnd on thft face-of i the earth. ' , ; " ; .. '. ."- ; This is one of the schools of auh StAtft mkv well be justly proud. Jt W : I The buildimi is a Jackson county is one : of the State and a monument to the busi- . wU,oo oWiitv of those who have the mnst nroeressive counuca -ui uic State educationally. But Cullowhee tw ii -twW receives r xtw n r An tiiA 1 bnUdings are steam .Heated, ard lihtod with electiicitvP-Tias. ril Uaey,inNews.andObserye;r ; MAT CULLOWHEE MEANS TO L N. C. . The excellent ai tide on the Cul lowhee Normal and Industrial School, written by Prof. Chas. H. Utterly for the News and "Observer and copied in in this week's issue of the Journal, reached bur desk at an opportune time, for it was the purpose of the Journal to devote part of its space this week to Cul lowhee and the great wort that is being done at that institution. - However, we feel that Prof, Utley has told better than we shall be able to do, the story of Cullowhee and the high place that institution, its faculty, and its students hold in the esteem of the people of West ern North Carolina. The Cullowhee Normal and In dustrial School is located in one of the most favored portions of Jack s )n County", where the waters )f Cullowhee creek join those of the Tuckaseigee in their tortuous, tire less journey through the hills to ward the "Father of Waters," and where the fertile valleys, as rich as .any in the State, are surrounded by towering mountains. The township is one of the best agricultural sec tions of Jackson, having great na tural advantages for farming the people of Cullowhee have improved them and made great advancement along t;he lines of scientific agricul ture. The people are happy and prosperous and with the school as a center the community is taking on new life, is reaching out for larger The school buildings are situated on a lovely elevation overlooking the limpid waters of the winding Tuckaseigee, 2250 feet above the level of the sea and commanding a view of the beauty and grandure of the surrounding hills and plains. The girl's dormitory, or Da vies Home, is one of the newer buildings and furnishes admirable accomo dations for some 125 young ladies. I county. The department of music In the old administration building is under the; efficient direction of is the auditorium, with a seating i ivjrs Mary Carter Brinson. . Miss capacity of 600. The new adminis- ( Charlotte Young is doing an excel tration building has just been com- ient work in the department of Do- . i j 11 l ! pieteu anu me recuauon rooms are now being used, is well constructed of first class brick and concrete asbestos slate roofing. In the entir stiucture t lere is not a foot of wasted or unutilized space. The basement is to be used for physical and chemical laboratories and for baths for the students. The floors of these rooms are concrete and tho rooms are well supplied with run ning water making them especially adapted to laboratory purposes. On the first floor are two admin istration offices and five well light ed and well ventilated recitation or class rooms. The second floor has four class rooms the same as those on the first and also has two society halls with library rooms for each. Even the attic is turned to a good purpose, the whole of it being made into Y. M. C. A. hall and lecture course room. Itwiu uc ucaicu uy otui um every room is supplied with an ! emergency flue to guard against a y mishap toithe heating plant. construction in charge. For we are of the opinion that in this buUtogjson u cot hni realized more for the money Rested than in -y bu it has ever erected lor anyurpu.aex . 'The school has, iti-wn. hedtirigf oivyiARCH: 13, 1914 plant, the buildms are lighted with electric current generated at its own dynamo on the Tuckaseigee river; r ,is sullied with pure, clear, fres ae in superabund ance from the sch&l's own reservoir in the nearby . mountains. As it stands today, the State's educrtion- ' r"!V.T'. ai plant at Cullowhee has proximately $50$Q6. cost ap- Cullowhee has been a most potent lector in the edujltional campaign in the mountains! Here a host of young men and wmen have been prepare4!toraiend;have gone forth to spread f tKe gospel of en lightenment allifver this section and even to piednjont rnd eastern Carolina. Day 4ay Cullowhee has been growinind extending the sphere o r its influince until it is felt in every cove anftjon every creek in North Carolina'airAppalachia. The faculty oM?the Cullowhee school is one of th strongest, if not the strongest, offfthe secondary schools in the State and would do credit to any college.. Prof. A. C Reynolds, formerly superintendent of public instruction of Buncombe county, is the principal, and holds the chair of Educiion;;Prof. L. B. Abernethy has the" chair of Mathe matics; Prof. O. S. Dean that of English; Prof. H. B;r Jones of Latin, Prof. E. H. Stillweftjof History; Prof. Frank A. Brown neulture and Prof. J. N. Wilsoti Bursar and has the chair of Ciys , and . Spelling. These gentlemenejflnbj introduc tion to the peopl&lhejjare known all over the wS"r;art of the State as instructpMbiMii fiist rate abilrty,ch:nnelgp hilin the minds of the, students but are moulders of character instilling into the young people 'the things that are more necessary than mere knowledge of worldly; things. Prof. Reynolds, Prof. Dean, ProL Abei nethy and Prof. Jones have come to us from other counties and aside from the Work they are doing in the school are invaluable as citizens of mestic Science, At Cullowhee the trustees and the faculty realize the necessity of looking after the development of , tne bodies of the students as well as their minds and an athletic field of six acres-has been prepared, con taining nine tennis courts, a base ball ground, a basket ball court and a race track. All the young folks at Cullowhee take a keen interest in athletics and every afternoon, when the weather permits you will find nearly the whole student body on the athletic field. Of the student body Prof, Rey nolds says, "We have the best body of students with whom it has been my privilege to work." For a Normal school for Western North Carolina the Cullowhee school is admirably located, being in the center of Jackson and Jitakson is the central county of the western group. Cullowhee is only 7 miles from the railroad and there is being completed a magnifice it sand-clay highway from the railioad at Sylva to the school Cullowhee is a most important element in the .cause .01 education and progress in the moun tains MThft aiding star of Edeca- t jon in the west" Around her Jiick- Jackson county she is a vitalneces- ft REASONS FOR THE FARM LIFE SCHOOL In this age of keen competition men and women are educated for every line of activity. Schools are, nearly as old as the race. Training schools are nothing new. But not training schools for farmers, the real food producers for all the world. But teachers, preachers, lawyers, doctors, salesmen, telegraph oper ators, mechanics and many others have been provided for by regular training schools lor generations. While the farmers and the ones who prepare the food and keep the home have been overlooked or neglected. ON URGENT NEED. The food supply is too short The corn crib and smoke house are about to fail. The butchers find it hard to get beef. The grocer has daily calls for eggs and butter at fancy prices but his supply will not meet the de mands. Eaters are in excess of the producers, or the methods of pro duction are too antiqaated to keep pace with the ever increasing de mands. Scientific methods have been introduced and adopted in every line of activity more than in the produc tion of the raw materials for feed ing and clothing the race. Methods must change or want and suffering finally come. THE PRODUCERS MUST BE EDUCATE!! The farms have lost their virgin richness. Crops are failing for Want of better and more scientific cuiti ing hadan adage that when a man does not have sense enough to , do anything else, he can farm." This idea sent many a man into some so called learned profession to live hard and die poor, when he could have been a leading producer teas ing treasures from mother earth. That idea has made the world poor er. We now know better, we pre be gining to learn that many young men turn their backs on the form be cause they do not know any better, the educated farmer. The world is about to recognize the fact that we all sit at the farm ers table, and feed our stock from his barn. If he fails we go hungry. If he succeeds we have plenty. And we are about to learn that the farm er c in do a much better business if conducted along scientific lines than he has heretofore. In fact if he has managed to feed us all and keep his head above water what will he do when provided with agricultural schools teaching him every fine of agricultural science and stock rais ing. He deserves to be made a prince among men. SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE WILL BRING RESULTS. In every profession this fact has been clearly proven a thousand cimes. In thousands of tests with every known crop the same prmci- L, wnnd ' Honht 1 yic ua3 s " . ' Knowledge is power" as certainly in the corn field, in the garden, in the cow lot; and poultry yard as any where in the world; Too long dready this knowledge has been neglected But this is a new era day has come and we are about to wake up. Real work lies ahead of us. only the wide awake well preparee,upto date in make up and method can cope with the problems ahead of lis. THE WORIS GREATEST . ' . AKIlST. ' Not with pen, "brush, or chiiel $1.00 THE YEAR IN ADVANCE marble but this artist who keeps th& world young and beautiful paints rosy cheeks on childhood's laughing face, and puts manly vigor into man hood's frame of flesh. She keeps the worlds workers, old and young, well and strong, or sickly and weak. The cook in the kitchen is the dynamo of the family and the farm. Skill, she needs, the highest and best the food she prepares makes us happy and sends us to work singing, glad to be alive and face the worH with strong hearts and clear brains or or give us indigestion, the blues steals thei smiles away, kills song and the puny, sickly, underfed, but gorged on indigestible poorly pre pared food, wants to commit suicide. The cook stove not the piano is the real music box. Skill in the fingers that make the bread mean much more than the skill that can tease harmonies from the key board of the piano. Bad cooking heads the list, according to good authority, as the cause of divorce in the courts of the United States, all honor we say then to that artist who prepares our food, sets the table keeps the home and then a "side line" rears- the coming generation, in health' for manhood's strenuous life or ignorant sends the little infant to an eayrl grave and persuades herself to be consoled by a platitude of that ancient patriarch of patience, ; Job. "The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away, blessed be the nanie of the Lord." ; Let no one think, doctor, lawyer, preacher, engineer, teacher, anybody needs scientific correct r training M mm m mm rnrmm. m .MM I I . m a n m m m m- W V destroyer give, herthe b&tossible, -, Chas. H. Utley DELIGHTFUL ENTERRAINMENT AT THE CULLOWHhE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL On Monday evening of this week the departments of Music and Eng lish gave'the second of a series of literary-musical entertainments. The evening was pronounced a decided success by all who attended. The program follows. "Interpretation of Robert Brown ing" Mr. F. L. Wells. "Prelude in D. Flat" (Chopin) Miss Kathleen Conroy. "The Death of the Flowers" (Bry ant) Miss Edna Coward. "The Song of the Cattahoochee" (Lanier) Miss Bettie Snyder. "Gypsy Rondo" (Haydn) Misses Gibbs and Howell and Mrs. Brinson. "Selections from John Charles McNiel, Mr. T. W. Bird. "Doan ye Cry, Ma Honey" Messrs Brinson, Picklesimer, ; Wood and Hardin. "Annabel Lee" (Poe) Mr. Conley Rich, "The Butterfly" (LaVallee) Miss Kaeen(nroy. . , Epch Arden"(Tennyson) Piof- essnr Dean, assisted hv Mt Rrinr at the piano. . ' - ' ' m m THE BOONE- The citizens ?.of. Jackson conny and surrounding ' counties j should not forget the debate betWMn fhiliw whee and BooneFriday -tach 20 This promises io hebir$he most Interesting and exciting;, occssiona nf the ivear. ? i?fTfind HKntA - dmeiijexpectedlja date March 20th. . t v lULLUUiiEE DECATE .1 - t v?