pjY, NOV. 5. 1»36 the franklin press and the highlands maconian page nine eauty of Macon Described over Radio IRESS MADE One of Macon County’s Beautiful Waterfalls tv’sMany Advantages ven Publicity By Station WWNC HoukT^riklin attorney iiool principal, broadcast a of Macon count>p.ts beauties, recreational facil vast natural resources- address over radio station . Asheville last Thursday The address, one of a series salutes” sponsored by .rchants of Ashevdle, was ac- Me daily papers of a full page * tellinc of Mcicoii isement teinub ^te^'ofS'Houk’s address fs with a sense of deep ap- tion to The Asheville Citizen Station WWNC that the hof Macon cousty, thiough fell tonig-ht attempt to pre- to other sections, ^ far anc a very meager pictuie ot county,'something of its past -has endeared it to lomething of its I support a firm faith in U 513 square miles contained ' the borders of Macon C are largely within the water- iof the Little Tennessee river in a general way take the ,|of a great basin surrounded fountains of majestic propor- i To the west lies the great Ihala range, rising well above ) feet above the level of the ^0 the north and east is lo- d the Cowee range, almost as Hand rugged. And to tbe south |hes the great Blue Ridge in which culminates in the great nding Indian, one of the highest Is of the whole Blue Ridge g«. I lindians Lived Thtere In the valleys between these iges, some 200 years ago, were the principal settl'Cnients of ijMiddle Cherokee Indians, iinklin, the county seat of Ma- ■county, is located on the site the Indian town of Nikwaski. I the banks of the Little Tennes- (f^river, within the limits of the ^ent Franklin, the great cere- i|al mound of these people stands 3ay. The story of its building has ijed with its builders. It stands beside a broad highway over 1 speed the vehicles of the :rn age, and within a few is located a gasoline filling m—the trade mark of this age, yet—sometimes when the moon e deer has come or when the ;st moon has bathed the sides eastern pile with silver ra- :e across the rich bottoms of river can be heard the chant arriors, the hoarse cry of med- fmen or the eternal love song ome forgotten maid, roeated at Franklin is the ad- ffitrative headquarters of the lantahala National forest, which ^ains over 300,000 acres of for- wands which have been bought P by the Federal government and Wch are administered in accord- with the best practices of m^ervation and iitiliz.ation. This forest, 120,000 acres of which ^ Macon county, contains some ■the most magnificent scenery Jsome of the most rugged areas ill of Eastern America. j^-Jadiating into all portions of ^forest are modern all-weather roads which have been con- ttcted by the forest service. On E well graded and splendidly „'tained roads the visitor may ^1 for miles through virgin for- r''d over them can reach many [ts. Facilities Improved ^uring the past four years, pri' by means of the program of r'CCC camps, four of which are iW in Macon county, the r-ec- J^nal facilities of the forest area '^sen vastly improved. New > have been built, existing I* widened and improved, camp and picnic grounds de- and rearing pools for fish 'been provided. ■ J -Photo by Courtesy of Nantahala National Forest IT It • r„11a.ah river between Franklin and Highlands are viewed The Upper Cullasaja or Dry Falls in t - J- country. They are regarded as the most each vLr by many thousands of persons are known best, perhaps, as the Dry Falls be- b^autiful waterfalls in this scction of the of water without getting wet. This and cause a person can pass along ^ Bridal Veil Falls—are among the magnificent scenes that w.terfalls-the lower Cullasaja and the ii wict,lands.. CCC boys have built a parking tTo^;the; waterfalls-the lo^r Culh^ Highlands.. CCC boys have built,a parking o-reet motorists on state highway -\o. to stou there. It mav be in the plastic paint on your wall. It may be in the wall paper in your house. It is on the composition shingles with vvhich your house is covered and it is m your automobile tires and in the rubberoid roofing of your garage. “Not only in the field of industry but in that of agriculture has Ma con county gone forward rapidly-— particularly in tbe field of stock raising and dairying. “During the past few years Ma con county has gone far towaid providing better educational oppor tunities for its children. To the central high school at Franklin and to the accredited high school at Highlands it transports children from all sections of the county, thus bringing to the rural section the opportunity of thorough educa- tio.nal advantages. During the past decade the enrollment of high school students in Macon county has increased over 500 per cent, has Low TaK Rate “Macon county provides one of the most delightful places to live imaginable. It is not a section of cities hut every modern improve ment is found in her towns. Frank lin has one of the lowest municipal tax rates in the country, and with Highlands the county has two of the most cultured, progressive and enlightened communities to be found anywhere. The people of Ma con county are a friendly people, a hospitable people, a neighborly people. When you come to Macon —whether to rest, to play, to fish, or merely to ride over our magnifi cent roads asd feast your soul on the glory and grandeur of our mountains—whenever you come— you will be welcome, for we of ^Macon county know that when once you come you will come again and if you keep on coining you will come to stay—to live—to become one of us. For there is something about our mountains to those who have lived among them as there is about the sea to those who live in sight of its restless waves. He who stays long in the presence of either must needs go back again. There is a pull—a longing for one more sight of the blue ranges, for one more breath of the winds from lofty summits—for one more picture of a sunset across the purple peaks —for one more trip back to the mountains of Macon.” space near ‘Among the greatest of these has been the wiJcniiig an.l '“'I'''™ '> to “1:. road leads to t ie v er> "’= raie. ot IS ,» "k l.e forest scnioe tas i r SO-foot lookout tower ^^:^\vhich the unaide^^^^ To 35 miles away the rea,1iie-:'e " .e,f ,,1.1. Great bmoKies massive tl'cir keaJ. over 6.- peaks hfhng t ? ^'tt’the Santeetlah lake spark- l^^^he sunlight retr^tSlves above the surround- the Federal govern^nent E S^l^i^d the Wa^ apart, wild road runs on a shelf carved out of the side of the sheer Si'amte walls. Two hundred feet below the roadway the river falls nearly 100 feet in one of the most magnificent waterfalls m the whole region. In order to carve out the shelf of the road it was necessai> to lower the engineers and work- „ien down the sides of the cliff hiker or horseman and at various points, particularly at Vanhook, eight miles west of Highlands, capip grounds have been set aside where provision has been made for water supply and cooking facilities. Another of the same type is at Arrowood, eight miles west of Franklin. At other, places the for est officials have set apart sites wlvere camps and dwellings of a " Irit they might drill the wlvere camps and dwcmngs oi a tlnP cxDlosives which permanent nature may be built on of the orpn of 11,000 'TSevS wilderness set - ^ f h Siv?I S fowl, and fis „atura towi, 1 tiieir natural Here ^nd turkey, and ;J°?s1fteyearihey are open to fisherm'cn__ «At Fr=^nklin the ville highway, route intersected by Nor^ the outstanding way No. 28, Appa- scenic drives borders lachian regioi. crosses of Macon „tain ranges three great ino through gaps J east of above sea level e^^^te ^s Franklin on th gi-jes what Highlands this roaj was T ay construction miles of hig highway system, the whole S ate to fol- Here the road is co 1^^ low the , this point fron * w deep. The thousand feet deep. rock for the explosives blasted the highway out ^h>er cliffs of living rock. ' “Several miles further on toward HiJhlands the highway passes the Pnlla=;aia dry falls where famous Cullasaja _ uiy the 40-foot curtain of water ia far out into its bed below, leaving oom behind the fall for a person Jr etS -t.tf-miles further '^''h ?m|ng from'tLdiff above, which, ^VSd aUows%he motorist coBplet* behW .he ve.l of water.^^ ‘Twenty miles to the east of „ thn is Highlands, the highest .rated town in Eastern Amer- incorporated towi This town ot iUU peui L p nne of the most popular re- '^"T’ n the whole section. It is sorts in Atlanta ; of the S«.rwT.I. v.,i.ors come from the less riv( 500 ^nk ISO maes"‘from Atlanta and dunng a greater portion of year who it 15 have wegions t; revel in summer climate of a reg- 1 4-000 feet in elevation. around 4^ tee ands cS where Bobby Se have less well graded land belonging to the forest. The whole area is a. botanical paradise in which practieaOy every plant species native to Eastern America may be found. The wide range of flora and the wealth of biological material has led to the establish ment at Highlands of a research laboratory by outstanding scientists of some of. the great universities. This institution bids fair to become in the botanical field what Wfcods Flole, Mass., is to that of marine life. Extensive Mineral Deposits “Macon county has not been in the past primarily an industrial region but it is impossible to^ esti mate the millions of feet of timber or the amount of mineral products which have been removed from Macon county in the past; and, while much has been taken, the resources-particularly in the -min- ■ eral field—have hardly been scratch ed, There exists known deposits of copper, feldspar, mica, cyanite, keolin, vermiculite and other min erals, and with the presence of the national forest, where the timber supply is protected and treated as a crop, the section is assured of further development along industrial lines. “During the past few years Ma con county has rapidly become one of the chief centers of the mica grinding industry. There are sev eral plants located in the county which are engaged in the industry and in all probability there are few people anywhere who do not have somewhere on their premises some Triails for the ground mica from Macon county. Map Aids In Working Out Farming Program The farmer who wishes to have a well balanced, profitable farming program next year will stand a bet ter chance of succeeding if he works out beforehand a systematic, budgeted system of operation. F'irst he should consider the type of land he has, then determine what he can and desires to pro duce on it, said Dr. G. W. Forster, agricultural economist of the N. C. agricultural experiment station. He should estimate the ,number of acres he wishes to devote to various crops, the yield expected, the livestock and poultry he wishes to raise, and the commodities he expects to sell. After making preliminary esti mates, 'he should study them to see whether they will make for a well balanced program. In working out next year’s farm ing budget, it is important to know the size and type of various fields. By making a map of the farm, the farmer can have a defi nite guide to go by. Such a map does not have to be as exact as one made by a civil engineer, Dr. F'orster explained, but it should show the approximate boundaries and areas of various fields, the location of buildings, roads, woodlands, and pastures. Enter Your Lucky Strike / ‘Sweepstakes’ Get Your Entry Blank From Us Angel’s Drug Store PHONE 119 LUCKY to a