.-t r * : i : F f'-t * - * masses' J ^ , ifiE wA*&SOtf COUNTY JOV&NAu Z J Published Weekly ?y 4 DAN L {PKIWd T Entered as second class matter at | * llle Foe, Office at Sylva, N. 0. I . : J : DAN T j t ' i The watch on the .Rhine becomes | an alarm clack. v Sylva and Jackson County need ; iwany small industries. That ris the I w new way to prosperity. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS i ; FORWARD 3 When one looks ahead, a quarter of a century seems a long period of { . ' time. But looking back upon it. one .1 realizes that it is but a watch in the / right when it is passed. ^ . . To be the oldest editor in this part of the State, in point of service with one paper, makes the writer seem an % oid man. Yet he is not. It seems j t . but 3 few days back to his boyhood ( days at Webster, when he was going - * * u ? f J Wc- in/I fich i hare-1001 auuui uic utmo . t ' fne in the Tuckaseigee in the sum- I J \ I T 1 . mer and sitting at the feet of J. N.J . Wilson at old River Hill in the winter I 1 J J 1 months.. I I ' The twenty-five years during which ^ the writer has been the editor of the, H Jc urnal have brought many changes in , ; '* ? the county and the mountain country. * i. t ,* { Many of these changes have been j * real progress, others, can scarcely be I J * * classed as such. It is a fact that no 1 < one gets anything in this world withf , out paying for it, one way or another, * ' There is no gain without a corresponj ^ 4 ding loss. When a country or a comJ f munity gains something it must lose ? 1* ' something. Therefore, in computing 1 * the probable results of so-called pro} ^ggppsijr#' steps, it is necessary to f count the cost and reckon whether ^ the gain will be greater than the cost. ? Take it by and large, the county has * ' gained much during that period. :v When, tv.enty-five years ago, the * writer assumed the editorial chair of ^ * the Journal, there was not a high ^ > ' way in the county, and scarcely a % K read worthy of the name. There was . not a garage, automobile agency, } tilling station. It took a citizen i ^ * longer to travel from Cashier's Valley % O!- Canada to the county seat at Webt J** ster than is now required to make a i trip from Sylva to Murphy. Electric 4 refrigeration, radio, and many other ilems that are now commonplace in * our lives were then unknown. | The only stisfactory way to travel ^ to Bryson City, Waynesville or Ashe^ ville was by train, and the trains on > L the Murphy branch were crowded j * i'V '? ir almost every day. Centralized schools I ?; and bus transport were unknown.' *1_ . *U? ,,,.,,.,1 rftK *l I UUr IllUIllIlb Wd5 llic Uduai lcugui wx > ^ the school term. The county had no J farm agent, and no home demonstraI tor. I 1 ' ? But the germ of the great school K system for the county was already ''f 3i Cullowhee, for Cullowhee Normal f T"f i-nd Industrial School had been es? ' t. tablished years before, and was al^ - rtady doing and had done a magni-' ficient work, giving promise of bej; J * coming the College that it now is, and | the greater institution that it is to ' f * become. I: *f Shortly after assuming the guidance I 5 of the Journal the writer was offered | i positions elsewhere, with larger pa| 'J * " pers ond a large field in which to ft *: woric; dux ne cnose iu xexiiaxxx xxx xixs> I L - , own country and among his own I J -:j people. And the Journal began at} / 4* tempting to interpt the people of the t ' county, their hopes and their ambif lions for themselves and their county. | jp As such, The Journal ran into inI q\ itable conflict with the ouinions of j 4 certain of our citizens. No man and ] | .* no paper that stands for anything 1 * can avoid'that. NBut, week by week, 1 . j -? year in and year out, this paper has * J j s;ood for what it honestly believed to i be the best interest of the county and ! ft it.< people, and vftith charity toward I \ f ' all, ill will toward none, the paper [ vj. ' and its editor have espoused those [J i-1 x "* causes it believed would make for . > J the betterment of the county, the State li and their people. II f % We have come through many trials i* ^ and tribulations. We have accumudated little of this world's goods. We * have made lots of friends, and some f r. enemies. We have had many days '.1 * . ol worry and trouble; and many days H V : anc* ^Shts of labor. But we have Hi it. also had a lot of fun, and it has been iy | a real pleasure to serve you, our readHi v ers, our neighbors, and our friends, lif > , If we nave contributed any thing uli / to the good of the county and the Nil * v State, we are glad. If we have * wounded anyone in our zeal, or have '& done aught that may have harmed ) At the beginning of another quarter ~ ** a cen^ury? we 1??^ forward to r.ee"' V ^ ing greater progress made in the Kpk.*-.'' 3*"' county than has ever been made be?*' * ; tore in the past. Progress like a snowk; v ^ v toall gains in size and in impetus as it I ? goes along. vV-V ffSSSZESTrnm ~ ? " ^ ' * J 106 AT LAST Of ail the progressive steps tha the Journal, has advocated during th( past quarter century, a paved highway through the county from Sylve to the South Carolina line has beer the one upon which we have put mosl stress. It was one of the first things thai the Journal began agitating for. And we have been constantly at it, until now it appears that our dream is about to be realized. Highway Commissioner McKee, of this county, is authority for the statement that this spring will see the letting of the last link in this great highway to contract. I Twenty-five years is a long time * ~ 1~ ic Q lnntf I to worK an oujtxuvc, a.iv? I time to wait for a dream to come true; jut it is said, ''all things come to him I vvho knows how to wait" and Jackson County has certainly waited, .vith patience for the highway* This will give us a great trunkine highway through the county irom the Southeastern Cities through Great Smoky Mountains National Park , to the midle west. It will be i highway of surpassing scenic gran(eur, ns well as the shortest route for .ravel through the Smokies. It will open up the great upper section of Jackson County, than which here is no better trucking region .n the country. The lack of this lighway has held back the progress >f the county. With its completion, .ve can confidently expect to see Jack-1 on County and the town of Sylva go I .'orward with rapid strides. j Our First Editorial I (Republished from Journal 25 years ago). I $ | Upon assuming control of the Journal, it is expedient that we should set forth what the policy of the paper shall be. We will do all that is within our power for the upbuilding of our county and town, in every way. Jackson county is by far one of the wealthiest counties in North Carolina, in natural resources. She has within her forests almost an inexhaustable supply of hardwood timber. Within the bowels of her hill lies dormant - ?..moitv, r\f oiav rnnDer. iron. an umuiu wcuiui , ?,-??. nickel, mican, and the precious metals. Her valleys are well nigh as fertile as the valley of the Nile or the Euphrates. Her crystal streams, as they hurry on their restless journey toward the sea, generate sufficient power, if harnessed, to turn the spindles of the South. Her magnificent scenery is unrivaled. Her matchless climate is superb. Jackson seems to be one of Nature's favorite children. In fact she has almost outdone herself in giving to us those things that are most essential and desirable to man's highest existence. These are ours, and "it j up to us to develop and appropriate them to our use. The Journal is working in the interest of the county. Your interests nr#> our interests. Let us co-operate and give Jackson the place of preeminence which is justly hers, and make the Journal one of the best county papers in the State. FROM JUDGE CLARKSON State of North Carolina. Supreme Court, Raleigh, Dear Mr. Tompkins I just write to congratulate you on the Silver Anniversary Edition of the Jackson County Journal. A quarter of a century is a long time, and I can imagine the burdens and trials that you have been through in order to make this one of the finest papers in the mountain land. With all good wishes. Sincerely your friend, Heriot Clarkson MRS CRAWFORD CONGRATULATES US Waynesville, N. C. March 24, 1938 Dear Dan; I consider it a great feat to occupy the same "easy chair" for 25 years. And I join your many friends in offering congratulations. The article in the Citizen this morning obrought to mind memories of many years ago when your fine old grandfather accompanied my husband on his campaigns, and I always remember with pleasure your fine old grandmother too. My kindest regards to your family. Cordially yours, Mrs. W. T. Crawford TODAY and TOMORROW (By Frank Parker 8tockbridge) ANTHEM ... .a new one?! The main trouble with our American national anthem is ttjat nobody can sing it Nobody, tht is, but Anna Case, the former operatic star whois now Mrs, Clarence Mackay. Voices ^ / , / . M* nosUM ..o jv vvy -. .*-/ THE JACKSON COUNTY JOURNAL, ftmt ? ^that can sing the low notes of the i "Star-Spangled Banner" can't get 1 the high note? and vice-versa; and#i ' few people can remember most of ; the words. I've been complaining about the 1 . "Star-Spangled Banner" for years, ] and now I'm finding people who agree J with me that a national anthem1J ^ should be, first of all, singable by ' everybody, that it should have words ; ^ which convey a patriotic thrill, and j ' that it should be truly national. Our j anthem is none of thosA "America" . ' is simply American words set to the ] i t-? _: a ; _ i_ 4. e XTinrt " I nnilMl tUIIC U1 uuu oa ?t tiiv. lung. i ' "Dixie" is grand but sectional. At that it stirs northern audiences more than the standard anthem does, because the music has fire and "pep." Anyway, two great musicians, a famous poet ^nd the editor of a na tionaj magazine got together the o- t ther day and decided to offer some big prizes for the words for a new American national anthem. I may take a try at it myself! wool new Drocess If the news that comes out of Rus- JI ia is true, if soon will not be necesary ^ for sheepmen to shear their sheep. 3 Just give the sheep a dose of thallium j? acetate and it sheds its wool, That is ? the report made by Dr. N. A. Iljin of the Wool Laboratories of Moscow. ?*c Moreover, the thallium treatments j make it possible to recover market- ~ able wool from varieties of sheep t which are now bred only for mutton. L Many ordinary varieties of sheep I j" have two kinds of wool, a coarse kind j' called "kemp" which is of no value I for spinning, and a finer kind mix- j i *1 e i with it. Dr. Iljin reports that the . thallium salts cause all of the wool; i; r ? to drop off the merinos and other t-j fine-wooled sheep, but that by grading the dose he makes common sheep shed their fine wool while the kemp: n mains on the animal. , M If this works out in practice it will1 [, give every sheep in the world an add- ' f j cd value and ought to reduce the t! cost of wool. | m STRAIN of thinking I :j .; |IJ wnen we use uur uiauib we pui a ?strain upon the whole body research Ji experiments at Indiana University indicate. The popular notion is that brainwork is a "soft" job; that the muscles get tired only when one ft does manual labor. But it seems that is not true. The harder a man thinks, the more taut his muscles become, H until after a day of hard study, intensive reading or the solution of dif- M ficult problems the ordinary person is as physically fatigued as if he had ben at hard labor. "j l The old-fashioned idea that the 3 human brain was only remotely connected with the body and that great intellectual geniuses are often, or U usually physical weaklings is pretty 8 well exploded. Some men of great S mental powers have been frail of body to be sure, but they have usually died young. In my own line of work, the ablest W and most prolific writers I know are^ L men and women of more more than "" average physical development, who , find it important to keep their bodies |n fit. I notice as I grow older that I l| feel physically tired after a day's men- 8a tal work, with muscles aching which I was not conscious of having used B at all. MAX still Burgomaster I One of the' great heroes of the H World War was Adoipn Max, tmr g ;master of the city of Brussels. 1 Burgomaster Max's name l^ecame J almost as familiar to American newspaper readers as that of any of the ? great generals. He took no part in I the fighting, but at the risk of his life I managed to maintain the civil govern I t ment of the Belgian capital in the H face of the German invasion. Most people have forgotten Bur- H gomaster Max. I know that I had, rJ until I saw his name in the newspaper [1 dispatch the other day, as heading the committee which welcomed For- ( mer President Hoover to Brussels, gj The same Burgomaster Max?and $ still Burgomaster of Brussels, after * nearly twenty-four years. & To me that points the difference i] I between municipal politics in Europe ju| and in America. Imagine, if you can, Uj a mayor of a great American city M holding office for 24 years, no mat- Ifl ter what his record. I can't. We jfl don't do things that way in America. |a We throw our best public officials [a oat because some politicians want fl the job for their own gang. WITCHCHAFT . ancient wrong It seems almost incredible that less II than 300 years ago people believed n so firmly in witches that men and fl women, shiefly women, were im- fl prisoned or even put to death on the fl charge of having traffic with the Devil and casting evil spells upon other people, H The wave of persecution of I "witches" was world-wide. Many so accused were hanged in the Amer-" I ican colonies; in England and on the I Continent of Europe many were ac- I tually burned alive! Civilized folk rto longer believe in supernatural fl powers and manifestations and we leave witchcraft and its punishment H to the4)lacka^t Haiti-and-othargav- fl age countrie?;b while we try ^ - -V i 4 y " v. ' ; . ;' ^ >' ? f T ' * . * v/ 7 I - '. ; - - i- ' i * f7 J.V . ' SYLVA, N. C., MARCH 24, 193$ Size for the insanity to our ancestors. TVA controversy the Tax Bill, the ton Beach, New Hampshire, voted at town meeting to erase from the town records the fact that Eunice Cole was imprisoned as a witch in 1656, to burn all documents relating to ~lhe case and to bury the ashes with the bones of the unfortunate woman in a suitable place, as amends for the injustice done her UC N s ffi ?I % 13 i! XI *3 n ** h fi I Allison fi fi fj We contribute | son county. V ~ resou ni j We serve the : I r # 3 truck men, wit] fi Fj 5 Puroil Produci S Machinery; Old 3 a rd Electric Ref] 3 Gasoline; Oil. L 1 Centi Day 'Phone 41 CATCH / Trout: Aprl 15 to /< August 31 * Bass: June 11 to September 30 Largest Speckle< Larj Prize: 22 c Prize: Size of winners to be judge brought to our store to s . ' Contest open to any Jacks r'.s 1 I > . ' ; 273 years ago. If this serves to warn ' Arrinm i nSl?n is c,vf future generations against unfounded ' Southern R n .accusations and hasty mob iude-' ' ^re *"* 7\/T f raents, it will be a gesture worth r' Charlie Bryscu> ^H{1 making. BALSAM ! a'so' ' 0n ,he | Mr. A. F. Arrington and family ' and' Mrs'* w't Georfc I. moved to Waynesville Tuesday. Mr.1 Asheville Tuecrt Fjn??ll J tocicicu^Birannriririru-im^^^ M I H,t Motor Company K our part to progress in Jack-I fe believe in our county-initsH J ? ? r I rces, ana in us xuture. ; farmers?the motorists?thel h high grade products tomeetB their needs I ts; McCormick-Deering FarmM smobiles; Auto repairing; Leou-H rigerators; International Trucks;M )ay and Night Wrecker Service ral Service Station I Shell Products I SYLVA Night 'Phone 421 aoiaajacuainninoniaao IIJIJIJIJ U l-J IJ1J U U U UI3UIJIJ u m " MJ [ THE BIGGEST| 19 one of the fol* I M lowing prize' I to be given by I us for tbefl largest FlSHl their respetf'B ive season# I I Trout?Prize: HUNTING^T 1 Rainbow Trout I al. WINCHESTER RIFLE No. 6/__, I largest Bass > I PFLEUGER TRUMP REEL _ I * i eithi* ^ | d according to weight. Any entry nwj>i be weighed7 or be weighed by the Gartie Ward / or one of his Deputies. , rone, except employees (or their relatives) o Jeckson Hardware Company I on Hardware I