/ 'oniric Sonrna! Thursday, august 25, 1932 $2.00 Year in Advance Outside The County. ?tate To Let Contract For Construction Of Highway 112 On Next Wednesday S(AI w rtiiirsitny the State Ifigh " will let the con i lit' grading ami surfacing T'lliihway n-' 11 "lista,u'? of 529 ' 7r,,in Highway No. J? to Oher ', j, iM-i-n announced at the ' , ,if the ( ihiiii i>Mt.n in Kahigh. wi I among several v., parts of the Slate, that ?|| .tut tin estimated amount ol (lijjinvH* II- is 'he ol,e tl,nt leaves 1". ut ,lu' Ferguson farm J,,,,,, through Qualla township t< ull',|e connects with tin : i? Tennessee through the Great f l ' 1 ,.,?k .MmiiiJiiins National Park d"' Smokies at Newfoum | his mad is to he one of tlx , i iitnnK < > lo the Park, and wil , , " l>n, t ?f the Oreal ','Vuhl: IIiV'mv-'v, leading from South i .nil ina, tli rmigh Cashier's Valley llstjili'irsf, th'wii the Tuckaseigee b; irlloivlwi' I" sylvn, then by High ,,;1. N??. It'. 112 and 107 to Tenn tin' middle west. |, b stM t **? I that the eonstruetio oi lli'^iw.ty from EFa to Chero sill l?i' tlfferred for some time ? ? ariiii'i-rs believe that the eoi. linn of I hi* road is impractica ;V railroad, which leads up the . i v:tU??v i> eliminated. Nnfiiins was -;iiil in the news di> I jl;ljcl??V iil'out Highway .106, froi j Sylvn to CiiHuuliee; hut it is as nr. .1 that tlii- contract will he le witVuV ti short time, as The .fonrnal J T.?. Sylva t'liauiher of Coinmerc* j.- \ v\cr,il citi/riis ol' the count \ /?.Mi' tVic ?<>uratuc "f Chairman ? />'. frt'!'iv? ikt vhi-. paving will t>< iji'iu- a i an early date. Citizens o "'hi r HVsferii couuti* s have bee; tohl by Mr. ,/eft'n-ss that Highway 1'H> is ii/h' of the fo.'uls that he h: in mini/ to const met out of the fed mil niil funds t/i?t ar?- now in hand All Jackson county, and especial !y tin- lower end of the county wil' rejoice tit flic advice that the Quail; road is to he constructed immediate !v. It is Hut only one of the mair '?ntraucrtsvto the Park, if not th 'hief entrance; hut also traverse' Qnalla, one of the best and most |>op ulons townships in the county. THOMAS SPEAKS TO ROTARY CLUB AT REGULAR MEETINC li'oy /,. Ilimuas, of Hock Hill, S I governor ot' the Carolinas dis J triit of Kiitiirv International, in an I aililr^V. ht'lnrc the Sylva-I)illsbor< I Holary Club dt iis weekly meeting Thursday uiglit of la*t week at thi 1 i.'wiU S|.inijjs Hut* I, stressed thi J k^anf" of the pail Rotary play- I I in Willing of a nation and in I I n i'ii:,' \|i(. present condition aid Mr. Thomas. "First to J I 1' aru h '""ardi learning how to live "V'liir. One reason for this is that I I ? "!| his |(,st eonfiilcnec in his fellow! '?U1>. .nul the restoration of this con- 1 I " u,t 's one ot the purposes of I I tri,-i!iKliip is the basis of life, i't'iihle with the world at I ! >s thnt most friendship is I ''"'Red, to gain either socially,! |''':|,""ly. or materially. The pur j Hoi iiry is to build real I I Mini Mr. Thomas. > I the wot hi talks and preach I '' m b pessitaism. One business run without capital or "I criticism. It is an lv. v. '";lt l{ lends downward to ? tl0n* Thomas stated that I , ? 1 '"I ' Ijiini fdi* Notary the abil I 'Vl present problems of I . '? J"1' he did elaim for it ? '? t\ in iiitlueiiec in helping to I l"'. Cameron, and 'ol. A. T. Davidson. ^ There was u trades display during the afternoon, .howing the resources of the county. Jas. W. McKee has been around town for ft day or two. Mr. Hoffman, of the Cullowhee Cot ituluin Company, came back from a lorthcrn trip, Saturday. Misses Lee and Belle Leatherwood ??nd Mr. -Joe Sherri I were in town oil i shopping expedition, this week. John Holdcn is supp'ying the de Hand for fruit among us, and favor- 1 d the Den:ocrat with samples of lus- 1 ions grapes and peaches. NT. Newhy, of Bryson City, who has ecu on a visit to his old home id .'erquimans county, passed here Mon lay, returning home. Charlie Wike, who has been in Co 'umbia and other points since last fall, in railroad service, reached home Tuesday. Mrs. Bishop, of Cullowhee, and her laughter -in-law, Mrs. Bishop, of louth Carolina, accompanicd by Mrs. ?rook, investigated the mysteries of he "art preservative" in a brief vis it to our office yesterday. The School Season: J. H. House is eaching a school at Dillsboro, Fohn C. Buchanan, at Svlva, Mr. Oar land, of Macon, at Bryson's School 'louse, Z. V. Watson, at Clayton's ?H?ar Addie, C. A. Wal'aee, at Double Springs, on Cullowhce mountain, and jr. S. Cowan, at Rivpr Hill, while hose excellent institutions, Cullowhce tnd Hamburg' High Schools, are in Pull blast. C. C. Cowan was induced ?o accept a school on Pigeon River, in I fay wood county, while Thos. F. Long who has been in Haywood for several vears, has returned to Jackson, anil is teaching at Wilmot. We would b< ?lad to be able to advise as to who is teaching other schools in the county and wish for all of theiu the fullest measure of success. We hope a grand stride forward in the cause of educa tion may be made this year. The pub lic school fund for this year amounts to an apportionment of 90 cents per scholar, according to the school cens us returned by district committees. We regret to hear of lack of harmony in some of the districts, which works nothing but harm to the schools. Let the interests of the children outweigh ?very other consideration. '? V '?> . On of the best meetings the Jack son County Union has had for a otig time was held at Shoal Creek commcncing Friday before the fifth Sunday in July. The introductory ser mon was preached by Rev. II. 1). Welch. Rev. John L. Owen presided over the meeting. The churches were represented as follows: Caney Fork, V. C. Queen and J. II. Webster; Ham- 1 burg, J. L. Owen, J.M.Wilson; Mt. Pleasant, W. W. Reed, II. D. Welch, F. M. Bryson ; Scott 's Creek, A. H. Sims, A. W. Farmer, B. H. Harris, T. J. Fisher; Shoal Creek, J. P. Paint or, S. J. Becic, R. L. Hyatt, J. B. Git son, C. J. Hipps, R. 0. Hyatt, A. L. Beck; Svlva, J. K. Alien, Charlie Al len; Dillsboro, A. C^ Connor, 0. E. Davis; Webser, J. W. Buchanan; Savannah, Coleman Caglc; East Fork, A. W. Davis, T. F. Deitz; Zion Hill, J. T. Wondard, W. T. Crisp; Cul!o whee, John E. Enslev. \) LEADERS BELIEVE CONDITIONS ARE GROWING BETTER Washington, I). C., Aug. 24. ? The feeling that economic conditions grn>rnlly are improving is gnuving in Washing, on, v.i h a good deal of argument on hotli sides as to wheth er this is going to deve'op fast enough to be of | olitic.-il ?. alue. Of course there will he an effort to make capita! out of the national confcr enee of business and industrial com mittees of the Federal Reserve dis tricts which have been called upon by the President to meet in Wash ington on August 2(>th to map out a coordinated nation-wide program of action against the economic de pression. That is to be followed 011 September 25th by another confer ence to consider means for the gen eral introduction of the five day week in all branches of business and industry, and that -will be followed in October by an international econ omic conference in London. What effect these conferences will have upon economic conditions is one question; what effect they may have upon the |H>liticul situation is something else. Leaders here see signs on both sides of the political fence of a much more common-sense attitude toward the debts which various European .nations owe to the Gov ernment of the l!nited States. It i: not thought that the people of tin United States would tolerate for a minute any proposal to cancel these debts. But it is thought there would be a favorable reaction toward any sound *u'oposaI to settle them in something else besides hard cast. Senator Borah recently opened the door for discussion when he said ! that if insistence upon the payment of these debts in full and in gold would work to the detriment of the American farmer and producer he would favor some other way of set tling them. Former Governor Alfred K. Smith not long ago proposed that some schcme of tariff adjustments between the I'nited States and our debtors should be made so that credit on account of the debts 'could b.1 j given to nations buying our products , in proportion to the amount ot their annual purchases. ^ And President Hoover intimates that he would be willing to consider some means. of settling these debts through the ex pansion of itiarkcts for the agricul ture and labor. It is not a matter of record as to who it was that sug gested that Kngbuul and l*rau the individual states. They think that legislation will retain Federal control, to a greater degree than in the old pre prohibition days, over interstate traffic in liquor, between wet and dry spates. It is remembered that there fr5s always a question of the constitutionality of the pre-prohibi tion laws designed fo prevent ship ments of intoxicants into states that had voted themselves dry. If such an amendment is adopted it will not be, as many people seem to think, the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution. The present pro hibition amendment is the eighteenth since the document was first promul gated in 1787. The Nineteenth Amendment, as i everyone knows, is the woman suffrage amendment. But there are still pending for ratifica tion by the states two other amend ments to the Constitution, one of which is very likely to be fully rat fied before .next summer by the State Legislatures meeting during the com ing winter. One of these, and the one first proi>oscd, is an amendment to the Constitution giving Congress the power to limit, regulate and pro hibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age. This change in the fundamental law was proposed (Continued on Page two) To Hold Mass Meeting At I Glenville In Next Month Plans are being; made by citizens ot' the upper end of the county for a huge mass meeting, to be held in the High School building in Glenville, during the early part of .September, looking to the construction of High way 10(i from Svlva, through the county to Cashier's Valley. The chairman of the State High way Commission promised, last Spring, that the construction forces would be put oil the road from Tuck aseigee to Gleuvil'e, and the rock crusher placed there, in June. The maintenance forces were taken off the section, and the people believed that the reason for the suspension of maintenance was that construction would begin immediately. However, the maintenance forces have been p it back to work there, and the peopY plan to hold the mass meeting, ap point delegates to go to Raleigh, and ascertain from the commission, jus* what the plans and intentions are at the present time. It was believed, last spring that the work would be well under way from Ttrrkaseigee to Glenville ere this, and that the grading and paving from Svlva to Cullowhee would also be under way at this time. The county has met repeated dis appointments over 10G for a long period of years. Acting under prom ises that it would be constructed, the county has invested some 000,000 in loan* and donations to the State Highway Commission, and 106 remain to this day, the only highway in this part of the State, that was originally a part of the State Highway System, that has not either been completed, or is at present under construction. There is a definite promise from Mr Jeffress that the paving from Sylva i to Cullowhee will be done "at an ear ly date", and it is generally under stood that the contrat will be award ed at the next letting following that of next Wednesday; but nothing has been said from Raleigh in recent months about the section from Tuck aseigee to Glenville, or from Glen ville to Cashier's Valley, and the peo ple are becoming restive over Hie j projects. ' ) t ' . ? : K ? - , v ? ; \ Construction Of Highway 106 Is Adopted As Major Park Project By Committee TODAY and TOMORROW (By Frank Parker Stockbridge) Piccard . . . up he goes Professor Piccard has been higher above the earth than anyone else ever went and came back, He thinks he can go even higher to explore the stratasphere. If the Professor went high enough, beyond the layers of gases which travel with the earth in its revolu tions, he could stand still in spact and let the earth revolve under hin:, coining down thousands of miles from where he went up. He would have tc go at least sixty miles up, however instead of ten, and even then hi* baloon probably would still be with in the range of the earth's attraction and would travel with it. It is not beyond the realm of pos sibility, however, that travellers of the future, wanting to get to the other side of the world in a hurry, may just go up a hundred miles 01 so and let the earth move under them at the rate of a thousand miles an hour until the spot they want to reach is under them. That sounds fantastic now, but n< more so than any kind of air nav igation sounded a hundred years ago. Silk . . . J&pan resumes I lunched the other day with tin head of one of the largest mercan tile firms in the world. He told mi something which illustrates perfect ly the interdependence of nations. "Japan is hard hp," he said, be cause rayon ? artificial silk ? had cut into the world market for Japan's principal export, which is natural silk. The dressmakers of Paris, who set the fashions for the world, have decreed that woolen materials will be the height of fashion this coming winter. But the ladies' garment mak ers of America, catering to the masses don't think the ordinary American young woman will weat* wool; it doesn't sound as expensive as silk. So the American manufacturers have developed a fabric which looks like wool but is made of silk. It can t be made of rayon, and it takes four times as much silk to the yard as the standard fabrics now in use. " As a result," mv friend con tinued, "Japan is getting larger or less for silk than she has had for years and the price is going up. And because of the prospect for this ad ditional revenue, Japan's military party is making plans to go ahead with the conquest of Manchuria, for which there was not enough money available a few months ago." The idea that any one nation can stand alone is as unsound as it is dangerous. Television ... on its way One of the experts of the Bell laboratories, who is working on the problem of television, told me the other day that he thought scientists and engineers arc getting very close to the day when it will be possibh for anybody to see the person one is talking with over the telephone. It is being done now, as a labora tory demonstration, and the problem is to reduce the cost. As for radio television, broadcast ing on a screen events actually in progress, that is a long way yet. It would be Interesting if anybody who had a proper receiving set could see the next Olympic Gaines without hav ing to travel across a continent or an ocean to do so. Xobody who has even a glimmering of what is going on in the research laboratories is willing to say today that anything is impossible. Politics . . . how it's done I asked a small-town official the other day why He had favored a measure which ejearly would bene fit only a few and would not do the town as a whole any good. "I don't like it any better than you do, but I have to get myself re elected. don't I?" was his frank reply. It is the desire for re-election that makes most office-holders careless with the taxpayers' money. Since Highway 106 from Sylva to the South Carolina line, was adopted as one of the major objectives to be at tained in the development of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park area, by 'he advisory committee, from "Buncombe, llaywood, Transyl vania, Swain, Jackson, and Hender son counties, at a meeting in Waynes ville, on yesterday. The Jackson coun ty member of the committee is Mr. A. J. Dills, who succeeded in getting the project adopted as a major objective, at the executive session of the com mittee, following the open meeting. Mr. S. W. Enloe and Mr. Dan Tomp kins were present at the meeting, and presented Jackson county's claims be fore the committee. Mr. Tompkins stated to the com mittee, following recommendations from Transylvania and Haywood, that Highway 194 and a road up by Soco Gap to Cherokee be built at once, that Jacksun county will op pose all plans for the State Highway Commission to expend any money on any highway leading to the Park, that was not an the original highway map | of the State, until 106, which was oil the original map, is built from Sylva to the South Carolina line, contend ing that the original highways were, and still are, of primary importance, that Jackson county lias spent, in do nations and loans to the State, the sum of six hundred thousand dollars, or n: ore, in efforts to get 106 con structed, and that it is a matter of common justice that this road be giv en priority over any others in this part of the State. After the open discussion, the com mittee went into executive session, at which J06 was put on as a major ob jective in the Park development, along with other projects that wero named in the resolution. The whole matter will be taken up when the full report of the commit tee is made public, by the civic bod ies or mass meetings in the several counties, and acted upon there, be fore the resolution is forwarded to the Highway Commission. The importance of completing 112 and 10 7 to Newfound Gap was stress ed at (he meeting, and it was the sense of the committee that this is to be the. main entrance to the Park, and that it should be completed dur ing the next few months, to make it available for travel next summer. Mr. Josephus Daniels was present at the meeting and suggested, as a part of the internal Park develop ment that the Government should try to keep the Cherokees on their Reservation, and encourage the de velopment of Indian arts, which he stated would be a most attractive part of the Park trip, and would prove a source of considerable rev enue to the Cherokees. SYLVA FILES PROTEST TO GAME PLAYED SATURDAY Sylva's chances of winning the Sinokv Mountains League pennant fell short of what was expected of the team when they lost one of the hardest games .of the season last Saturday to Hendersonville. Immed iately after the game a protest was sent in to the league officials at Asheville, due to the fact that three of the Hendersonville players were not eligible to participate in a league game. It is also understood that the umpire was not a league appointed umpire.. League officials will hold a meet ' ing in Asheville some time this month to decide on what steps to fake in regard to the game. Should the game be given to Hendersonville it would eliminate Sylva's chance of winning the pennant. most of the voters in most communi ties are non-taxpayers, what differ ence Joes it make? That is the poli ticians' way of looking at public, questions. The movement to give men longer terms in office and make them in eligible for re-election does not seem to be making much headway. It is worth thinking about. I believe it would be a good plan for all office holders, from Prokbpt down. i