*! hr jfntitJclut ^rrss tinft ?kr ^Htgkhitttos jB&rmttmt NH-uQd cl Uk mm 11 privileges authorised at Franklin N C Puollahed every Thursday by The Franklin Press Telephone 24 Established in 1636 as The Franklin Press Member: N. C. Pre st Association, National Editorial Association, Carolinas Press Photographers Association. Charter in ember, National Conference of Weekly Newspaper Editors. BOB 8. SLOAN Publisher and Advertising Manager J. P. BRADY News Editor WEIMAR JONES Editor MRS. ROBERT BR Y SON Office Manager MRS BOB 9LOAN Society Editor CARL P CABE Opera tor -Machinist PRANK A STARRETTE Compoaltor CHARLES E. WHITT I NGTON . . Pressman O E CRAWFORD Stereotyper DAVID H SUTTON Cocnmeiclal Printer SUBSCRIPTION RATES Out sid* Macon Cooktt One Year $3.00 Six Months 1.75 Three Month* l.Ot Two Team . 5.25 Three Tears TJO Inside Macon County One Year 92M Six Months 1.7S Three Month* .... l.Ot Two Years 4J3 Thre* Yesrn C OO THURSDAY. MAY ?9. 1958 'A* For Effort Last -week, the Smoky Mountain Staples tried to take off Franklin's morning bus to Asheville ? ' again. The "again" refers to "tried" ; for this is only the latest in a long series of efforts of the bus com pany to leave Franklin high and dry. And again, .the proposed change was unheralded in advance. Thanks to a bit of vigilance, people here still can go to Asheville by bus and return the sayie day. Some of the regular passengers were prompt to notify The Press. Mr. D. D. Davis, district repre sentative of the State Utilities Commission, also was alert, and was quick to order the service con tinued in effect. This and another proposed bus change were char acterized by a couple of rather amazing "over sights". The first was the failure of the bus com pany ? again ? to get word of the impending change to the local bus station. The second was in the arrangement of a schedule between Sylva and Cherokee; the latter change would have dispatch ed a bus from Sylva, after it had sat there for an hour, just late enough to miss connections at Chero kee. j If you try hard enough, we suppose, you can make any business fail to pay. And the bus com pany deserves an "A." for its effort to make its short rnns so unprofitable it will have a good case for discontinuing them. Our Best Manners Our best mountain manners to the newest news paper hereabouts, The Highlander, which made its bow last week. Of, for, and about Highlands, it is to be published weekly by James S. Goode Asso ciates. Since it is our understanding that one of the chief "associates" is to be Mrs. James S. Goode, we'd sav the new venture is launched by a good(e) team, with good(e) prospects. There are many desirable things we could wish for The Highlander ? that it never contain a fac tual or typographical error ; that all the business men advertise, regularly; that everybody applaud when it fearlessly publishes the bad news along with the good; that nobody ever wait till press .time to telephone an account of a meeting that took place two weeks ?arlier . . . We could wish all those and similar good things, but that would be idle wishing; because, in this im perfect world of imperfect humans, none of those is likely to happen. So we'll content ourselves with expressing a more modest hope ? that the publishers and ed itors of The Highlander have as much fun as we on The Press have had the last dozen years. We welcome The Highlander to the Macon County scene ? for many reasons; most of all, be cause it is a new signal of the progress and growth of Highlands, the unique mountain community the rest of Macon County is proud to claim as its own. Up To You Do you believe in the democratic form of gov ernment? Do you believe in the rule of the major ity? And do you believe that every right carries with it a corresponding responsibility? Your answer to all those questions, surely, is "yes". Well, how can we have democratic government, when we have rule by a minority? And what else do we have, when onlv 7, .say, out of every 10 vot er! actually votes, and 4 of those 7 vote one way and the other 3 another? When that happens, isn't a minoritv of 4 ruling the majority of 6? How can "Anybody Give A Hoof About Inner Space?** 4 / _ fcoK6?^J i the will of the majority even he determined, much less put into effect, unless everybody votes? And how can you and I claim the right to vote unless we are willing to shoulder the responsibility not only of casting a ballot, but of voting intelli gentiv and seriouslv for what we believe is best for all? Those questions are prompted Dv the approach of the primary election Saturday, May 31. How they are answered is up to you. Ain't Science Wonderful! Dr. Lydia Sicher, Los Angeles psychotherapist, came up last week with an announcement that made the front pages. All men, says Dr. Sicher, are afraid of women, "including their wives". What an amazing discovery! Who'd ever have thought it! All of us can thank our lucky stars for Dr. Sich er and psychotherapy. All of us, that is. except all the women and most of the men who are married. They knew it already. Furthermore, most of 'em would point out that, for a scientist, Dr. Sicher was rather careless with her wording; in the interest of accuracy, she should have said not "including their wives", but "especially their wives". And if you doubt that this is an old, old truth that Dr. Sicher and psychotherapy have only now stumbled on, all you need to do is make one test : Try to find a husband ? any husband ? who'll tell his wife the truth when she asks him about those letters he was supposed to mail last week, and that now are burning a hole in his inside coat pocket. Snooping Government (Chapel Hill News Leader) Cyrus Eaton, Cleveland business man, may be exaggerating when he declares the United States has a. spy organization rivalling that of Hitler in his prime. But more than one citizen has noted with foreboding the growing tendency of branches of the United States Government to regard all citi zens as possible enemies. This habit was one of the curses of life in old Europe and Strictly Personal By WE1MAB JONES I always have a good time in ' Chapel Hill, 'and the recent week end there, attending the confer ence of North Carolina editorial writers, was no exception. The conference itself always is exceedingly worth-while. But. whatever the program. I'd want to attend, just tecause it's held in Chapel Hill. For Chapel Hill does something to people The place is unique ? and that's a vast under-statement. The town itself, growing fast now, still retains the friendly village atmosphere. The campus, especial ly beautiful in the spring. Is al ways impressive. And campus and town are vibrant, more than any place.! know, with youth. All It* weaknesses are on dis play. But all Its strengths, too. And today's youth, it seems to me, has a poise, an honesty, an idealism shot through with both realism and courage, such as no previous generation. It is these things, that nobody can fail to feel, that make the pulse beat a little faster, In Chapel Hill. This trip, though, I was consci ous of a nostalgic sadness. The life of a college generation Is only four years. And so, with a few welcome exceptions, all the boys and girls I knew, the year I spent there, are gone. I missed the cheer ful "hello" from halfway across the campus, the smile of greeting, the friendly wave of the hand from boy or girl. It wasn't quite the same. It wont ever be again. The annual conference now brings editors from big and little papers from all over the state. The heart of the meeting is the critique sessions, where you learn what your editorial page looks like to another editor. He tells was the cause of flight across the ocean to an America which promised to be free. But one of the consequences of two world wars has been a growing tightening of government holds on the private citizen. His habits, his opinions, and even his reading matter may be called into question and noted in dossiers. He is no longer free to go and come as he pleases, and his political views may cause him to be denied a passport for the most harmless for eign travel, while the United States' system of fingerprinting for all sorts of reasons has aroused the wonder of even a hardened Europe. The refusal of a passport to a University of North Carolina professor because of Frank P. Graham's endorsement of the applicant could only have resulted from a niggling and of fensive snooping by ignorant government employes. Even Mr. Eaton himself, though well known as an industrial leader, has repeatedly been finger-printed for what is ironic ally called security reasons, compelling him to call It "quite a humiliation for a loyal and devoted American;" while as for the science which the U.S.A. is now hurrying to develop, Mr. Eaton has no doubt that has been hampered by the shad owing and tracking of our scientists. All this is one result of a terror of communism that looks farcical In the case of a country so powerful as the United States. Europe has no such terror, though much closer to Russia. This convulsion of fear will be much worsened if we go to war with Russia and spying on both sides will be multi plied. But few citizens have spoken out against this police state threat like Mr. Eaton. More voices of protest might in time reach Washington. > DO YOU REMEMBER? Looking Backward Through the Files of The Press 65 TEARS AGO THIS WEEK (1893) The population of Macon county by the census of 1890 was 10,102. (In 1950, it had grown to 16,174.? Editor.) An opening for a new business enterprise in Franklin? for T. F. Munday to get a rain-crow and a tree-frog and open a weather bureau. ? , In courtesy to the Presbyterian service conducted by the Rev. Jesse W. Siler, there will be no service at the Methodist Church next Sunday except Sunday School. 25 TEARS AGO (1933) Mrs. O. C. Hall, of Kyle, may not be the only woman school bus driver in North Carolina, but it is doubted if any driver, man or woman, has a harder route. It is 12 miles long, cover ing Kyle, Aquone, and other communities in the Nantahala section. The 20 advanced pupils go to high school at Almond. Mrs. Hall's job is to take them to the Swain county line, where they are transferred to another bus, which carries them the remaining 12 miles. Miss Hester Thomas and Mr. Paschal Cabe were quietly mar ried Friday afternoon, May 26. 10 TEARS AGO Miss Ann Lyle and Miss Marie Jennings are valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively, of this year's graduating class at Franklin High School. Honor students at Highlands High are Miss Dolly W. McCall and Miss Juanita Alley. Those at Nantahala are Wayne Deweese and Miss Roberta Roper. TRIBUTE TO A TEACHER STUDENTS OF MISS EFFIE BOOE TURN CLOCK BACK 40 YEARS > Holt McPherson In High Point Enterprise That commotion In the dining room of the Sheraton yesterday was a group of students moving the clock back forty years or so for a teacher whose love for each of them bridged that time amaz ingly. The Effie Booe who came to High Point in 1817, right out of Yadkin County, was yesterday the same buoyant self as she met ? and readily recognized ? students whom she hadn't seen in all those days since she was an unforget able character in the faculty of old Elm Street School, and, fol lowing a year in war work at Washington, two more years at the Main Street School. None of us knew just what to cxpect, for time has a way of changing people in many ways. But as soon as she scolded her husband through the revolving door and explained his mlxup as due to the fact they had no such contraptions down where she lives in South Carolina. It was evident she was the same testy gal who had drilled discipline Into students of another generation; then she went up to the dozen or so former students, looked each one over as closely as If on official inspection, called him by name, hugged, kiss ed and, in general, showed that astonishing enthusiasm which made her a great teacher. Jake Samet gave her a beauti ful orchid. It brought tears to her eyes. Then she had to see the pictures of his four grandchildren which he produced from a fat wallet, and she was all eyes for those youngsters; somebody brought her a bottle of perfume She made a lot over the fact that any former student would offer her, of all things. "Indiscreet." for she was always the soul of discretion! She chlded Frank Wood and me for ungainly avoir dupois. while commending Mary Elizabeth Long on her gainliness. She was about the youngest one in the lot. and certainly one of the nicest guests, as well as teachers, any of us recalled. Her concern, as we expected, was less with ma terial success ? and some had done quite well ? than with hu man values and accomplishments Her husband had little to say. She talked, as she said herself, enough for both of them. Charles Kearns wartted to know when she'd be coming back, and for once there was sadness in her tone as she said she might never get back ? but it was worth the trip up here on the bus just to enjoy the company of young folks ( ? ) she loved and who showed they loved her! The teacher today has a greater Job than ever before to teach more than mere facts, just as Miss Booe did in her day when the teacher enjoyed higher relative status than Is the case now. She had the courage to try to Instill in her pupils real love of knowl edge. the challenge to take the hard way. emphasis on proper ideals, attitude, and beliefs. She sought to sweep away the cob webs of prejudice and discrimina tion from the minds of her young sters and to supply them facta of life In such areai as should nave pointed them In the right direction. To her. teaching was the most challenging and reward ing Job in the world then, and it needs be so today. She had that happy faculty of making each child under her tutelage feel like somebody, yea. somebody with obligations and responsibilities, and she instructed her pupils not only by teaching them but also by netting an example for them. Is it any wondef that her stu dents 40 years later rise up to call her blessed and In doing so find that she. more than they, has de fied those years and remained youthfully eager to continue en couraging them? We like to think of her; because she can understand better than most in terms of the poet who said: "In the breast of the bulb Is the promise of spring. In the little blue egg Is a bird that will ling, In the soul of the seed Is the hope of the sod. In the heart of the child la the Kingdom of God." you what's good about it, he tells you what's bad. and usually he tells you how to Improve It. There's a frankness in these criticisms that is often blunt; they are occasionally so savage, in fact, that these critique sess ions have come to be known facetiously among the editors as "the blood-letting". Yet nearly al ways they're taken in good humor, and presumably prove beneficial. Of more general Interest than these rather technical discussions are the sessions at which outstand ing figures discuss public issues; with their talks followed by question-and-answer periods. Here, too, no holds are barred, the qusetloners. many of them quite keen, tearing Into the speaker, questioning his facta, denying the validity of his logic. From these latter sessions, I brought away a single Impression: Four years after the Supreme Court's school desegregation de cision ? four years during which it would seem everything possible to be said on the subject had been said ? it is the topic uppermost in many minds. And the problem ap(>ears no nearer solution now than it was back in 19S4. There were three illustrations of this: First of all, an editor from Nor folk and one from Richmond, guests of the group, though in complete and violent disagreement about the segregation-integration issue, were agreed on one thing ? Virginia will close every school in the state, if necessary, to avoid any desegregation whatever. The second illustration came in a talk on the advisability of a new constitution for North Carolina, a matter now under study by a state commission. Wnile the speak er did not say so In so many words, he left the distinct im pression that the race problem will, and should, decide the issue ? In the negative. Why? Because the present constitution has a provision requiring segregation of the races. If we should adopt a new one. we should iace the prob lem of whether to leave that pro vision out and thus open the doors to Integration or leave, it In and thus defy the Supreme Court. So, he seemed to conclude, better leave well enough alone, no mat ter how outmoded our present constitution. Finally, there was the debate between liberal editor Harry Gold en, of the Carolina Israelite at Charlotte, and conservative James Jackson Kilpatrick, editor of. the Richmond, Va.. News leader. Their topic was "Dixie's Des tiny", surely a broad subject: the South's future will be. determined by many important factors. Yet 99 per cent of what they said, and 100 per cent of the general dis cussion that followed, was con fined to a single factor ? segre gation vs integration. Thus the problem posed by the Supreme Court's decision grips us; like a cloud, it hangs over us, day and night, year In and year out. After four years, we are so paralyzed by it as to be able to see nothing else. I left Chapel Hill with the feel ing that however good a case may be made for the Supreme Court's action, the result has been dis astrous. BOOK REVIEW 'Gift From The Hills' Is Story Of Penland School And Of Macon's 'Miss Lucy" GIFT FROM THE HILLS ? Miss Lucy Morgan with LeGette Blythe. (The Bobbs-Merrill Com pany. Inc., Indianapolis and New York; 3X4 pp.; $5> This is the story of the Pen land School of Handicrafts. It also ? and perhaps even more ? is the story of "Miss Lucy". For the benefit of those who do not know Penland. the school's "Miss Lucy" is Miss Lucy Morgan, born on Cartoogechaye Creek and reared there and at Murphy. An autographed copy of the book has been presented to the Franklin Public Library by Mrs. Carl S. Slagle in memory of her husband. Penland is a dream come true for "Miss Lucy". And the school is a child of faith; because, by all the rules, it just couldn't have happened. Emerson's observation that every institution is the lengthened shadow of one man is peculiarly true here; yet Miss Mor gan is quick to give credit to others ? scores of whom she names. Time after time, in fact, she says, when her faith faltered, it w?s the faith and sympathetic generosity of others ? the moun tain people of the nearby coves as well as friends in far places ? that gave her encouragement to start again. By modestly putting himself in the background. LeGette Blythe, who did the writing, has done a remarkable job. The story is written In the first person, in "Miss Lucy's" words, and those who know her have the fee ting, as they read, that she is in the room, speaking. All her energy and confidence, all her ability to turn obstacles into assets, all her love of people and her charming humor are as vivid as it she were present in the flesh. Thirty-eight years ago Miss Mor gan went to the Episcopal school, established at Penland by her brother, the Rev. A. Rufus Mor gan. to teach. Possessed by a passionate desire to see the moun tain art of weaving preserved, she first learned to weave her self, then began to teach others From that has grown the Penland School of Handicrafts, an institu tion that has attracted world-wide attention, where every handicraft imaginable is taught today. While the book, is devoted chief ly to telling the story of the birth and development of the Penland School. Miss Morgan's personality dominates it. and there are de lightful glimpses of her early life' and members of her family. All through it, too, are light touches, provided by the distinctive humor of the mountains Perhaps the best picture of the atmosphere that is said to make Penland what it is is contained in a letter from an Ohio woman, after a visit to the school: "Figuratively, as well as literal ly. it has been a mountain-top experience-. Not knowing the Pen land tradition, I had expected to find only a school where one might learn a skill; I did not dream that it was the expression of a way of life. The distinctive spirit of the place . . . was a subtle thing, found in the fragrance of unvarnished wood in the morning dampness: at Bailey's Peak swathed in mists or printed blue gray above the pink mimosa blossoms: in the comfortable clop ping of looms. It was in Auntie Fleas' cheery good humor and in Mr. Peters' twinkle and unruffled patience: in the plaintive music of the shepherd's pipes: in the voices singing 'Auld Lang Syne' softly in front of the glowing embers of the great stone fire place . . . ; in Mr. Worst's seren ity of voice and his fine tact, kindliness, and respect for the dignity of men and women; in Mrs. Conley, motherly and com petent, carding wool or stirring yarns in the steaming iron pot in the dye shed; in Professor Lear's barbed jests deflating little shgm balloons: in the glitter of mica in red clay roads; in Mrs. McElwain's brook laving forget-me nots and peppermint: in velvety, myriad-colored moths fluttering into the dormitory out of the dark ness where the whip-poor-will call ed and the moon rose over the corn; in Mrs. Ellis ladling out cider In the fresh coolness of her spring house; in a woman in the fold of the hills, washing clothes in a brook and In an Iron kettle over an outdoor fire. . . . SCHOOL'S OUT Drive Carefully American Trucking Association* Inc.