dlte iffnmkiht nttb Highlands iltatjmhm Entered at Post Office. Franklin, N. C.. a* second class matter Published every Thursday by The Franklin Press Franklin, N. C. Telephone 24 WXDiAR JONES Editor BOB 8. SLOAN Business Manager J. P. BRADY News Edltcr iOLs ALLEN SILER Society Editor and Office Manager CARL P. CABE . Mechanical Superintendent FRANK A STARRETTE Shop Superintendent DAVID H 8UTTON Stsrsotyper CHARLES E WHi'lTlNOTON Preaaman 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Otrrsss Macon County Iran Macon County Ons Tear $3 00 One Year >2.50 ?x Months 1.73 Six Months 1.73 Tliree Months 100 Three Months . .? 1.00 A Myth Explodes For decades now. nearly all the experts and most of the laymen have, had a standard prescription for what ails lis in North Carolina. V Whatever the state's economic ills, we have heen told, and told, and told, there's a cure-all ? indus try . . . any kind of industry. If we don't get well immediately, then the trouble is not with the pre scription hut with the size of the dose. What we need is yet more industry: once we get enough in dustry, runs the well-worn theme, all our troubles will be over. And the chorus swelled in volume, a couple of years ago, when North Carolina dropped below even South Carolina in average per capita income. "Disgraceful !" shouted the worshippers of Indus try; "now, even more than ever, we must get more industry ? that's the one way to raise our average per capita income." Well, maybe. Rut the other day there came out of the U. S. De partment of Labor an announcement that raises some embarrassing doubts. In 1954, the Labor De partment said, North Carolina was 48th among the states in average weekly earnings of manufacturing employes. In other words, it isn't our oft-cited failure to strike a balance between industry and agriculture or our low farm income or even the lack of enough industry that puts us near the bottom in average per capita income; the average income of every body is pulled down by the average income of in dustrial workers in this state. That is, we are in 44th place in per capita income because we are in 48th place in average earnings of factory workers. Of course we need a balance between agriculture and industry, and of course a certain amount of in dustrialization is necessary to attain that end. Rut what we seem to need first of all in North Carolina is industry that, on the average, pays de cent wages. The World Do Move The world, it is said, "do move". Things change. Yesterday's ideas and tastes and customs arc out of date today, or, at the latest, tomorrow. We've granted that all along. Rut it seems it was a purely intellectual acceptance of this great truth. We didn't really comprehend it until the other day. It always had been our idea that the purpose of art was to transmit from the artist to others ideas or inspiration or some other emotion. The viewers of paintings or sculpture* or the hearers of music were expected to see an 1 hear and feel what the arti>t saw and heard and felt . . . and the more viv idly the artist got across his message to a great number of people, the greater his artistry. As we say, that was our idea. But it seems we were wrong, dead wrong. Because the other da;, we visited an exhibition of modern painting. We wondered, at first, why all the pictures were lying on their sides, instead of top up. We leaned to si-le to look, but that wasn't the trouble. Maybe the were upside down. So we bent over and looked between our legs. They made a mite more sense that way, but still they conveyed neither ideas nor emotion ? unless puzzlement be emotion. So we asked. And we were told! Modern art (and they spell Modern with a capi tal, if not the art) has as a single purpose, to "ex press the soul of the artist" ? and to heck with everybody else. O. K.! O. K.! Our apologies for being ignorant! But to go back to our opening remark: ? The world do move. Praise be! Maybe it'll move some more! >1 Others' Opinions High Authority (Wall Street Journal) The late Jim Thorpe, blesides being a champion athlete, was considered a fine referee. One time he removed a player for cursing. "What rule did I violate?" demanded the player. "The second commandment," replied Thorpe. There was no further argument. Slow And Easy (Capper's Weekly) t A tourist driving along through the country noticed a farmer and his little daughter sitting under a tree. The tourist pulled up alongside and admired the little girl. "What do you call her?" he asked the farmer "Amalasyinta," the farmer replied "Isn't that a rather long name?" The farmer looked at the tourist with contempt. "Listen, son, we're not city folks ? we've got time." Ending Sentences With With (Cleveland Plain Dealer) We may be old-fashioned, and ail that, but we can't agree - with English teachers who don't mind if a student of com position ends a sentence with with. Teachers of freshman English may indeed have given up trying to ban a preposition at the end of any sentence ? we'll admit that they have hoed a long, tiring row ? but we wish they hadn't given up so easily. Such usage of words is simply sloppy writing. Any sentence can be rejiggered so that it will not end in a preposition, which is not only shocking to the eye but hard on the ears. We are aware of the existence of the "usage makes it proper" school, but we don't believe this, either. There are some people who use double negatives, but no one would attempt to defend this practice on the basis that usage makes it proper: Some people say: "X have went," and ' her and me," but if everyone in the country followed suit, that wouldn't make it right. True, some pretty good boys have been guilty of prepositional endings to sentences. Sir Winston Churchill is reported to have made a marginal note on a manuscript which had been corrected by a secretary who didn't like a phrase which ended in a preposition as follows: 'This is the sort of ar:*nt pedantry up with which I shall not put." Then there is the story of the small boy who said: "I want to be read to." "What do you want to be read to from?" his mother asked, starting out on "Little Boy Blue". The child didn't like it, and said: "Why did you pick that for me to be read from for?" You can see how complicated it gets! / It may be stuffy to stick pretty closely to the rules of grammar, but unless we do our language will get sloppier and sloppier. Others may do as they choose, but as long as we live we shall never end another sentence with with! Leave The Good Myths Alone (Chapel Hill News Leaden A magazine writer says Davy Crockett was a phony, a wife deserter, and a ne'er-do-well. The information is not surprising. Some of the big figures in history were not at all respectable in their private lives. They could not wear the harness, that's all. But aside from ail that, it is a question whether a people should, without good ground, be deprived o.f their favored myths and legends. A good myth is part of a nation's treasure. The learned person.? who stamp out a myth fail, as a rule, to put anything in its place. They pour water on a harmless glow and leave a grey blank behind. They forget what should be obvious ? that people must have heroes as well as daily bread. A hero perhaps begins in mmw mm m mm m m us mm Town etc/ OUtSt, A KAHJUM AtUft S4W us umy sua ? mi msamm rumen m on* mm * 4 m mm * nssm rumn num. rm no, makm mm m " . mmrs ham. was mtmt, mow mm- , HO 4*1 MAUtt 140119 UM ? 4 KUOW j 4sur m mas 4WAT. oews nmis hot... rums mm. a meem oookut mam * of mm seuereo mm mse hah oo omes CAKTOOHS WAS m SVBJKT Of AH AJtTKli W A HtWS pah* of em vtao* a faak a sum/a of m cm or mtJK tff WIST AOSTMAUA . . . ALMOST HALF WAT K0UH9 roe eAKm. i i AN INBIAN VMSm AGAINST AM EARLY MI MAM VNBER CONSTRUCT tOM IN NEVAPA IN TNi %0's REACHES A TNR/IUNG CUM AX WHEN AN exoteb young braye $f the paiute tribe \ CHAM TNi IDCNNOTM IN PERSONAL COMBAT. [ MS SUCCUMB IN LASSOING TNI NRj-NNfATNTHG , MONSTli r IN AN EXHIBITION Of OBNRAGE ? STMU THAT BESEmS A, NATTIER i I jsZQ&ji a small way; he is only one size bigger than the average man. But he grows by loving repetition until he fills the horizon, de livers orphic and revered sayings, and at last becomes the saint of small boys who naturally must have romance to off set the steady diet of routine at home. The Davy Crockett legend was in its beginnings harmless and useful. It has been over-done in the wholesale American way until it has become commercialized and racketty. But as long as it inspired a single small boy to heroic deeds and lofty imaginations, it had its place in a varied universe, and the destruction of it shows only that the destroyer is baldheaded and middle-aged, and is out of touch with a boy's world. Time For Silence (San Angelo, Texas, Standard Times) A visitor to a town deep in the state of Maine joined in a small group of men on a store porch and made a few remarks. No one replied and the visitor asked, "What is there, a law here against talk?" One of the natives replied, "No, but there's a sort of mutual agreement among us that nobody says any thing unless he can improve on the silence . . How wonderful It would be If everybody only talked when they could improve on the silence. Should that become the custom what stretches of silence we would have, restful for the ears and for the tongues. Sessions of the legislatures would be only a fraction of the hundred and twenty days they now cover. Rumor and propaganda would get no circulation. Even fear of another war might be dismissed. There are countless other wonderful possibilities that do not need enumerating. Everybody would have time to read a good book or to do a little quiet thinking and soul-searching and It would all be for the best. There would be more happy homes and contented families. The habit of keeping silent unless one could improve It would grow until we would say nothing unless it meent something for the good of mankind. , Poetry Editor EDITH DEADERICK ERSKINE Weavervllle, North Carolina THE SUNFLOWER'S SECRET The sunflower gay and yellow Growing by the garden wall Peeps at all the other flowers Because he is so tall. But he has to turn his head around To follow Mr. Sun Everywhere he goes Until the day is done. Marion, N. C. ANNIE G LITTLE SOUTHERN PINES PILOT SCHOOL BOARDS SHOULD BE ELECTED BY THE PEOPLE 1 If a machine runs smoothly, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's the best possible machine ? or even that it is the best machine for the job it is do ing. It's human nature not to look beneath the surface or ex amine the whys and wherefores if things roll along pretty nice ly We're thinking these thoughts in connection with the way county school boards and a good many city school boards are chosen in North Carolina. We have no reason to believe that the county board of edu cation and the Southern Pines board of school trustees are not doing as good a job as would similar groups elected by the people. Maybe they are doing better jobs than would 100 per cent elected boards. We're not thinking in terms of next week or next year, but rather about what Is the most satisfactory way to fill public offices in a democracy in th# long run. If good and capable men and women fill appointive offices that handle thousands of dollars of the public's money and administer educational sys tems that have a personal im portance to practically every family in the county or city ? we can congratulate ourselves on our good luck, but not our good judgment. It may sound misleading to say that county boards of edu cation are not elected, as they are nominated by Democrats ? and Democrats only ? in the Democratic primary in May of one year, but then are appoint ed by the General Assembly in the Spring of the following year. Regardless of all other con siderations, this lag of nearly a year between "election" and taking office is a mockery of responsive democratic govern ment. It is a glaring example of the 'lame duck" muddle that was eliminated from the Federal government more than 20 years ago when the Presi dent and Congressmen, elected in November, did not take of fice until the following March. County board of education members generally think of themselves as elected officials, but look what happened this year in Watauga County when the representative in the Gen eral Assembly wanted to ap point one county school board and the senator wanted to ap point another group. They nev er got together and now Wa tauga's county board of educa tion is to be chosen, or maybe has been chosen by this time, by the State Board of Educa tion ? taking the matter com pletely out of the hands of the local folks of whatever faction. As for city unit school boards, they are elected in some cities and appointed in others. In Southern Pines, members of the school board of trustees are ap pointed by the town governing body, the town council. Little-d democracy presumably enters the picture because the people have elected the council and so the council can speak for the people In choosing school offi cials. This Is what Is known as keeping politics out of educa tion, but it is our observation that the politics of appoint ment are at least as involved and potentially vicious as the politics of election. One result of the lack of school board elections at town and county levels is growing public apathy about school af fairs. School business tends to become hidden business, because no candidate is compelled to defend openly his stand on school issues in order to hold his office in a free election. It is our opinion, therefore that school elections on both town and county levels, should be non-partisan, just as the Southern Pines town council election is non-partisan, and al so that these elections should be held at a time when no other election is being conduct ed. Such a procedure would instill new vigor and public interest in operation of the schools and might bring out as candidates persons who would have much to contribute as school admin istrators and who now either can not or will not advance themselves for such a public office. News Making As It Looks To A Maconite * ? Br BOB SLOU During the past week there have been events of considerable significance on a local, state, na tional, and international level. The "Meeting at the Summit" has been held. No one can yet judge its worth. But it is certain ly to be hoped that as President Eisenhower indicated on his re turn to the United States that there is a new friendliness in the world. Perhaps man throughout the world is coming to the gradual realization that he has created forces of de struction so powerful that they must nev er be unleashed if mankind is tn siirvivp Oft ~ " Sloan en it has been said that "Necessity is the mother o t invention." I think that real ization of this i? the moving force behind the peace moves today. * * ? This past week Gov. Luther Hodges expressed the thought that mass integration would never be put into effect, in the public schools of the state of North Car olina. To me, that is a strong in dictment of the effectiveness of the Christian churches. One of the principal tenets of Christian ity is the brotherhood of man. Will the Christian churches never be able to influence their members to the extent that they cannot mix and mingle together due sole ly to a difference in color of skin? Today, I realize that public feeling prevents it, but does the Gov ernor think that the churches will never overcome this? * * ? Locally, the loss of our district school principal, Ralph Smith, is of considerable importance and to me points out a weakness in the state school contract system. Mr. Smith was able to change his mind even though he had signed a contract here, but had the Board of Education changed their mind and found a man they had rather have had than Mr. Smith, the cry would have been raised, "Oh no, you can't do that, he has a con tract." It is a poor rule that doesn't work both ways. Do You Remember? (Looking backward through the files of The Press) 50 years ago this week We were informed today that the track was laid on the Rail road extension to the Scruggs place, this side of the Rabun Gap. Mr. L. H. Enloe, who has been spending several months in At lanta, Ga., returned to his home on Cartoo^echaye last week Major W. J. Stribbling, of Wal halla, S. C? was here Mooday on business connected with our tele phone system. 25 YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Bolick, of Washington, D. C.. have been vis iting Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Amnions. Dick Jones and the Rev. j. A Flanagan left Tuesday morning for Gaffney. S. C., to attend a two-day session for presidents and secretaries of the Rotary Club for the 58th District | Miss Alia Phillips, of Andrews, visited Miss Marie Palmer last ' week. She was accompanied on her return home by Mrs. Palmer and Marie, who spent the week end in Andrews 10 YEARS AGO Sgt. James B. Gibbs has return ed to Harvard. Neb., after spend ing a 20-day furlough with his 1 mother, Mrs. Florence Gibbs, in the Cowee community. Sgt Gibbs [ has been in the service for the J past 2'/2 years Mrs. Dan Reynolds, of the | West's Mill community, left Thurs day for Norfolk, Va . for a visit with her husband. Seaman 2/c Dan Reynolds. Mrs. Reynolds will also visit her aunt, Mrs. Turner \ Vinson, and Mr. Vinson, in Clay ! ton, N. C., before she returns. Major General E. Brown, arriv ed Saturday to spend a 30-day ? leave with Mrs. Brown at the home of Mrs. John Stephen Se well, following several years of overseas service. ? Highlands item.