KEr CITY OF THBM0UNTA1W V I'll MB TOLUME XLU , FRANKLIN, N.C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1927 NUMBER FORTY-FOUR JOUAM PRESENT BIBLE AND FLAG School Auditorium Scene o Exercises Jack Stribling rresides Sisk and Stree Make Talks. Cullasaja Council No. 158, Junior vyruer united American Mechanics, Friday afternoon formally presented the local school with an American riag and a Bible. The presentation occurred at the school aduitorium at 2 o'clock, with the school children and faculty, and a number of members of the order ' present. Jack Stribling, councilor of the local council, presided, and in troduced the two sneaker. R. D Sisk, former councilor, who pre senter! the Hag, and J. W. Street Chaplin, who made the Bible oresen tation. The flag and Bible were ac cepted by Principal G. L. Houk. Mr. Stribling told the children something of .the Junior Order and its principles, and then introduced Mr. Sisk, who traced the history and development of law and government, urged respect for the law and govern ment, reviewed the history of the American flag, and expressed the hope that sight ' of the flag morn ing and afternoon by the school chil dren would tend to inspire patriotism in their breasts. Mr. Street told the, children fhat the Junior Order not only believes in the Bible, but teaches it.- The Junior Order however, does not stand for teaching the Bible in the public schools, he said, among other reasons being the fact that different persons put different interpretations: upon its passages, but it does stand for the reading in the school each morning of a passage from "God's Word." . He pointed out that there was no law in North Carolina requiring that the Bible be read in . the public schools, but he urged that teachers should voluntarily read a passage each morning. ' Stikeleather, Walker Plan Falls Route The Press wishing to receive first hand information concerning the pro posal to build highway No. 28 under the Dry Falls of the Cullasaja wrote Mr. Stikeleather concerning his in tentions with reference to this mat ter. That both Mr. Stikeleather, and Mrs- Walker will make every effort to route No. 28 under the falls is indicated by the following letter re ceived from the former : Asheville, N. C, October 26, 1927. Mr. Harris, Franklin Press, Franklin, N. C. My dear Mr: Harris: I am in receipt of your letter of the 25th. Mr. Walker and I are plan ning on putting this highway under the high falls. . You may rest assured ,that 1 am not merely casual 1 about this but I am very serious and earn est about this and propose to do it if it is within the range of possibility, both as to physical and financial, but I do not propose to give this up if there is any way I can get it done. Sincerely yours, J. G, STIKELEATHER, Commissioner. CULBERTSON HERE FOR DELCO PEOPLE Mr. R. F. Culbcrtson has been appointed Transylvania" representative for the Delc.o Light company, work ing under the office of Reusing Light and Refrigerating company of. Hen dersonville. Mr. Culbcrtson comes to Transyl vania county highly recommended for this work, having had many years experience with the' Delco Light con cern. As soon as practicable, Mr. Cul bertson will bring his family to Brevard. The Brevard News. ' Tellico Locals Rev. Billie Potts, of; Highlands, and our pastor, Judson Smith, are con ducting a series of meeting at the Tellico church ... Mr. Lyles Harris, accompaniey by Mr. Woods, forest supervisor, and Mr. Burnes were visiting our school Thursday. Mr. M. D. Billings was in this section Friday. ' UK- r T? HT A.. . A avii. v. i-. . iviuuuy was, uii uur streets Wednesday in the interest of his lumber business. . r Mr. Robert Ramsey went to Bryson City Friday on business. Mr. Samuel T. , Ramsey drove a team a distance of 4 miles and brought back a load of goods. He is 80 years old. We believe he can beat the- most of we younger fel lows driving now. We had a box suppcr.at the Sul phur Springs school house on the night of the 15th. The beauty cake brought. $43.90,' which was awarded to Miss Alma Raby, of Cowee. Total amount of the supper was $71.30. A part of the Juniors from Cowee visited our box supper and presented our school with a Bible and a United States flag. Mr. Rollin Rick man, one of the Juniors, made an interesting talk on the Bible. Mr. Baxter Elmore, also a Junior, made a nice talk on the United States flag and Americanism; Dr. Thos. E. Winecoff Ac cepts Parish at Scranton Pa., Will Leave by Oct. 1 Rivertorf and Fremont county, Wy oming, will lose one of its most prom inent citizens by October 1st, thru an announcement just made public by Dr. Thos. E. Winecoff, for the past number of years Vicar of the Epis copal church of this city. Dr. Wine coff has accepted a call to a large parish in Scranton, Pa., and expects to leave by the end of this month to take up his new duties. Dr. Winecoff was chosen over more than three, hundred clergymen con sidered for the place, and it is un derstood that the new position offers a remuneration of $6,000 a year. It was learned . that the church to which he goes has a half-million dollar edifice, the parish house hav ing, for instance, a larger kitchen than that of any hotel in the State of Wyoming, nad the strictly religious activities are on a scale equally im pressive. The men s Bible class, for instance is said to have a member ship of two hundred and fifty. Dr. Winecoff has an international standing as a scientist, and the call to this great church in the( East shows his national standing 'as a preacher. Competent, authorities in the matter have repeatedly asserted that Dr. Winecoff "has no superior in the entire American ministry, eith er as a scholar or as a preacher." He was recently re-elected to a second term as state president of the Izzak Walton League, and has been a public spirited citizen general-1 y during his residence here, giving of his best, both of ability and ex perience, as a member of the school board and in every other public move ment for the upbuilding of Rivcrton and the state. Dr. Winecoff and his good wife will be greatly missed .in this com munity, where their friends are num bered by their acquaintances. Ex change. t. . Big Liquor DEATH OF UNCLE n ni j nnwKi JU3ia,. capture wane Born May 185a ,d Octobcr Two automobiles, one- man, and 21. 1927. Age 77 years, 5 months and 168 gallons of liquor were captured H days. Uncle Henry was born and by local officers last . Friday morning reared in Macon county. He is sur- about 2 o'clock. vived by his wife. Hattie fnstice nnH Four other cars, believed to have children, Lester and Badger Justice been loaded with liquor, escaped, Mary Conley, Ada Brown and Sada after engaging the officers in a gun Conley. battle across the Macon-Jackson, coun- Uncle Henry was always full' of ty line. fun and a hard worker while raising The man captured gave the name, his family, and he was loved by officers said, ow Frank Mease, oi everybody that knew him. He was Canton. a member of, the Baptist church and The officers gave chase when the I we feel, assured that he has gone to liquor cars passed through Franklin, rest on the great beyond. and six miles cast, on Highway No. We give thanks to all the folks for 285, near the foot of Cowee Moun- t,ieir kindness jurinii his sicklicss lam, mi juisuu, tuning un a uui si I i i u of speed, rounded a curve too fast. and death. and both liquor cars went over. One He was placed away at Dryman's driver escaped, the other being cap- Chapel grave yard, the funeral being tured, when he returned a short dis- nnn,P0. k v h rv,ni ,..f Hh a m I VVIIVIUVk.VI J -4' ' vvnn J , J i V'" tancc -to recover ms cap. ine man A j number of people attended the funeral. We hope our loss of Uncle Henry is his great gain. Written by a friend of Uncle Henry. New Cabbage Found For Mountain Farmer Danish Strain Best Suited to Market Requirements in Western Carolina 35 Years Ago The following items are reprinted from The Franklin Press of Septem ber 28, 1892: . Can't you settle your account by court week? F. T. Smith. Judge Bynum is courting the Jack son people this week. Brother Brown preaches Tom Wat sen more xehemently in his third party speeches than he ever preached Paul to sinners. Mr. C. Randolph, of Steccoa, N. C, is spending a month at the Allman House under treatment by Dr. S. H. Lyle for dyspepsia , with which he is severely afflicted. I will have fresh beef every Tues day, Thursday and Saturday mornings at Mrs. Love's brick ' store. W. T. Potts. Quod Erunt Hoc. Pax Vobiscum. Which means: Always go to the Allmari House for your dinner. The ..Presbyterians held their meet ing and communion at the Methodist church from Friday night to Sunday, and some very good preaching was done by Revs. Foster and Jesse Siler. No Cologne Factories Then The citizens of Franklin would do well to look after cleaning up their premises. If they find their hog-pens, backyards or alley ways condemned by the health officer within a day or two, they need not be surprised. A walk along some of the streets about dark of an evening will con vince anyone that cologne factories do not exist. Raspberries in October As an indication of what Western North Carolina climate can do Mr. J. M. Carpenter brought to The Press office last Saturday several branches of raspberry vines contain ing many large and ripe berries. Mr. Carpenter states that his vines had many berries m June and that the present crop came from new shoots that grew during the summer. In cidentally many apple trees are now blooming in the county. was drunk, the officers said Leaving Deputy Derald Ashe to guard the capture, Sheriff C. L. In gram and Deputy Fred Cabe drove on to the top of the mountain, which marks the county line. Just as they rounded the curve at The top, they declare, they observed four -cars, waiting, and from these there came a volley of shots. The officers, in turn, emptied both their guns. There were no casualties, so far as could he learned Fridav. The liauor runners then madly Mountain tarmers oi tne namourg dashpd down the hkrhwav throne section in Jackson county, in CO Jackson county, and the Macon coun- operation with the extension workers, ty officers were halted by the county are making an effort in working out ine ' Detter meinods oi manceiing iau In one raiitured . ear. a Nash, were cabbage. 240 half-irallon fmit iar of , whisk pv lhe growers have started at th O ''I r .t I it 1 ' iL-i while in the other, a Dodge, was pottom oi tne ladder, realizing inai found three 16-eallon kees. the standardization ot a variety tnat will produce a gooa tonnage per aue . r a . . . ,i i i.. .... K.j. A DP LI ITTf'T T -v I OI t ,iu o-puuuu nidus is mm iu uv. AKUill 1 Eil 1 AINU armrrmlished before thev can create ENGINEER HERE h sady demand for their product A nroeram ot this kind was preseniei Douglas D. Ellington, a prominent to ' a eroup- of cabbage growers las architect of Asheville. and Arnold vear. and a cood strain oi Dams H. Vanderhoof, a well known engi- cabbage was tested by one grower neer, also of Asheville, spent Sunday This strain of cabbage proved su and part of Monday here as the penor to that being grown, eve guests of Col.' H. G. Robertson, during a year of unfavorable weath While here they visited many sec- er conditions, lhe crop was uni tions of the county and were im- form, consisting of small compact mensely pleased with what they' saw. heads with a .minimum of burstin This year six tother growers tried D-J C D..Li: u UL out this seed, and have reported De 1VCU WUM I UUHt UCdllll ., U(J ,;,t, u nn,1 ,t,tP curses oerve inousanas that it is the variety ior ineir secuoii In North' farnlina arul market. One grower planted it in in or in uaronna fi ,d ith- thrce othcr strains of A m n"in vj rVr.cc r.Ki,v knoifV. Danish: and stated that it excelled i itiiviivaii ivv. vi uuaa liiliiv. uvauii i - j - ... ... r. . . f iL. U- Ua r, nurses in Worth Carolina have served any ""e ui mc uui unci., in. a. nearly 33.300 ncrsons durinir the fisral so comnienfed on the high germina t t-tiP tion of the seed tin 11 al nlirt miAn miKlir f"flar Kir The cabbage was followed to , th the local chanter market. An average size head, simi This rpnrpcnntc f .v,ir....n lar to the kind of cabbage the house nurses, who have in that period made wife usually buys, was purchased ioni7 f :o.stj 7 alonir with a similar size head ot an- A-ww viana iv iiwilits, inaucvitll ,- I ' . .,!!. 029 school children, and riven instruc- other variety that was trucked in uy tion to 7. 84 persons at (.19 health a1"" mountain iduiiei. conferences. . lhe growing ot late caDDage in Of paramount importance, the re- Ja?ks?n and otner counties oi nigner port emphasizes, is the work of the altitudes and peno. ng tne cr op a.noag nurses among school children. Many t.ne niarkets ot me r.eamontscc- rhilrlron vuhn in fnrfnpr rlavc ,mi1H tUMlS Ot thlS State and DOUtn aro- tiov k r,,;vi,,i ;..ot Una. has been, for years past, dumb" are found to be suffering from fsmirce of L"come ior many mountain physical defects which make accept- farmers. The coming of lhe auto able scholarship impossible. It is mob'le tru.ck ,and Rood roads have m not uncommon,, the nurses say, for a a ,w.ay simPllfied the methods of child who is not making his grades PU'.ng; nowever, compet.t on W1m ir, K ,.,;fu ,i(rfi., northern cabbage, which is often ship- I.V IWUUU Willi UVILVUVC VISIUli. . i 1At it- which when corrected brings immedi- ped to our local markets by the car. ate improvement in his scholastic pad,, is making' the marketing of our standing 1 eaoDage more uuiicun caui ywi. Often these defects arc not marked .Anc s' 1 enough to be noticed without an in- " caDuDaSe " ;inf. samc vT-n (,Zl .ntinn Kt f. k ..,1, .u- less than what the mountain farmer .. Z ": I.-:: 1 ' is willimHo sell his from the truck miijii uiduy v-irni.in.li iiiikiii mi UKK'C I i .1 i J . aloncr .inHpfioitflw ..nrlor ;m.Cc;Kl.J or example, tnrce wnodus wuv t.nJ;. . ' ' sold and. delivered to wholesale deal Health experts who have made 7 ",c .c4.u V"Vu? rarpf.,1 stHipe HnVlarP th,f ,nm,L tn Iirst WCCk in oepismuer vi ui uvhuivi " viui I1IU1 1 i I 1 COL HARRIS OF CHARLOTTE HERE Observer's Editor, Great Booster For Western North Carolina, Pays Vis it to Franklin Monday. Col. Wade Harris, editor of The Charlotte Observer, paid a short visit to Franklin Monday.,: He was ac companied by Messrs. Brown, of Black ' Mountain,' and - Wilson and Buchanan, of Sylva. The party, un der the guidance of the editor of The Press, visited the Cullasaja Gorge to see the highway work now going on there. They found that the road crew had been moved back to the rock cliff and was engaged in bulki ng a rock wall along the river side of the road at that point. .Passing this work the party proceeded up the new -roadway to the Lower Falls of the Cullasaja. Col. Harris after seeing the rugged beauty of the gorge remarked that the scenery here re minded him more of the West than any he has - seen in this state. ' The Observer's editor was also , entranced with the idea of building No. 28 be neath the Upper or Dry Falls of the Cullasaja. If this proposition is pos-' sible from an engineering standpoint, he believes that the extra cost,, if any, should not stand in the way of placing the road under the falls. mately seventy per cent of American school ' children have physical defects of. a serious enough nature to re tard their mental and physical de velopment, such as diseased tonsils, and defective vision and hearing. By the early detection of symptoms oi contagious disease, schools are al so protected from the outbreak of cpidimics. Local Red Cross officials .. state that the organization now has 585 public health nursing services in the United States with 731 nurses. Cave Man Stuff year at $1.80 a hundred. A mountain farmer was trucking to the same place and asking $2.00 a hundred. The dealer who was buying this cabbage at two cents' a pound and taking on ly the small heads from the truck load, stated that he was compelled to buy a carload of Northern . cab bage so he could sell as cheaply as his competitor, who had been buying carloads at $1.80 laid down at delivery point. The grower in the North has a constant, supply, 'arid' 'Can 'deliver: .a product properly graded to fit the market at the dealers in this section need it. ' Our growrs can meet this competi tion,, hovve'ver. if they will produce a volume of solid marketable 'v'" heads, arid, distribute it to- the dealers a A warrant was issued last Saturday for Mack 'Lcdford. nccro. on the t e 'ft cnarge oi wire Dcating. lhe warrant ih nhA it Th t ?n:l fntn.-p was sworn out by R. D. Sisk, in his production will be absorbed through capacity oi cnairman ot the county welfare board. Ledford was charged with strikino- his wife across the back with a shot gun. He struck her with such vio lence, she is said to have declared that the stock- was broken off the gun. our local markets distributing, the cabbage by mean3 of the automobile truck, since the dealers, according to interviews, prefer mountain- cabbage. A small start, has been made in Jackson, county in educating the farm ers to the needs of a production pro gram to meet market requirements us Big Forest Fire In Clay A forest fire in Clay county Sat urday and Sunday burned over about 1,500 acres in the head waters of Tuni Creek, near Tusquittee Bald. Only about 60 of the acres burned over belonged to the Nantahala Nat ional Forest. The fire broke out Saturday after noon, and Sunday morning 21 men left Franklin to fight it. In the par ty from here were Supervisor A, A. Wood, Ranger Z. B. . Byrd, Assist ant Ranger T. C. Flint, and Road Superintendent J. G. Siler. There were also fighters present, it was understood, from Haycsville and from V. T. Latham's camp on Buck Creek. The fire was gotten under control late Sunday, when the wind fell, and a heavy dew Sunday night was of further assistance in checking it . The origin of the fire had not been definitely determined Monday. Franklin people came in for no little praise from the office of Super visor Wood on account of their read iness to go to' the scene of the fire, and help in the fire fighting. Toccoa Defeats Franklin Franklin High school went down in defeat by a score of 12 to 0 to Toccoa, Ga., high here last Friday afternoon, the Georgians clearly out playing the local eleven throughout the game. ' Franklin failed to make a smklc first down, its gains being made prin-, cipally by punts, with McCollum and Stewart showing up to good advan tage.' l he ball was in trankun terri tory most of the time, the locals best playing being staged in the second quarter when they held the Georgians ' ' for downs on Franklin's one-yard ine. lurngall, who scored loccoas two touchdowns, and -Gaston starred for the eGorgians. The, lineup: TOCCOA POSITION Kirk rather Childe . McNecly Roberts .aurence 'ailey Smith asto.n'. urnball' ,ogcr-s LE LT LG C RG RT RE Q15 LH KIP Fir FRANKLIN Carpenter Guest Thomas Henry Crawford Wilkes Wilkie McCollum r Young Ncwniau . Stewart well as- getting 'a better', tonnage per acre, so as to lower cost ot p'ro- tiction and meet competition prices oin othcr cabbage-growing -sections, he next step will he iri. providiht; ('.equate storage facilities in order o' have a steady flow of cabbage by truck from the grower to the dealer i he needs it. ' When a program of this kind is under way, i. t , standardization of' the variety, grading and proper stor age facilities, it will be a means to ward ro-operativc marketing. H. R. NfSVVOXGLK, Uqiartiucr:: of Horti