Iation&l Forest Unexcelled Climate Unsurpassed Scenery State Game" Refuge 17 Peaks Over 5.CQ0 Feet High Ideal Dairy County Creamery, Cannery Excellent Highways Cheap Electric Power for Industries Law-abiding Citizenship VOLUME XLIV n era ' r . - r , I 1 sumy school DRIVE H DMM Nine Churches Engage In Revival and Enlargement i Campaign The Macon county Sunday school "revival and enlargement campaign be gan Sunday in the nine churches of the association. The workers ar rived here in time for the initial meet ing held in the afternoon last Sun day at the Baptist church here. The churches participating had representa tives at this meeting. x U 1.' 14 U A-., oerviccs arc ij ue uciu cav.u uajr this week at the Baptist church at 10 A. M and 7:30 P. M. The reports are very interesting each morning when the workers from the churches participating meet at the Baptist church in Franklin for reports and inspiration. The reports on Tuesday morning showed that there were 480 people in classes on Monday night in the nine churches studying Sunday school methods. The resident church membership of these nine churches is 1,103, while there were only 461 in Sunday school in these churches last Sunday. A ; goal of 1,264 has been set by those churches for Sunday, December 1st. The organizations in these Sunday schools are being enlarged . to reach and hold the large number of possi bilities found in these churches. The churches co-operating and the directors are :', Holly Springs, Mr. E. R. Callahan, director, Tuscaloosa, Ala., Watauga, Miss Kate Allison, director, Mars Hill; Cowee, Miss Inez Cart wright, Elizabeth City; Oak Grove, Rev. W. E. Bost, Valdese; Prentiss, Miss Eunice Roach, Pelzar, S. C. ; Sugar Fork, Miss Ruth Cooper, Mars Hill; Newman's Chapel, A. V. Wash burn, Sylva;. Pine Grove, Wyan W. Washburn, Shelby; Franklin, Mrs. A. V. Washburn, Sylva. The campaign closes Sunday after noon with a great Sunday school rally at the Baptist church here when the association will be organized to T""con serve the work started this week. APPEAL MADE TO TAX PAYERS BY GO. BOARD Commissioners Ask Voters Whether They Want Levy For New Jail In a statement issued from the office of J. 0. Harrison, chariman of the board of commissioners of Macon county, the members of that body on Monday appealed' to the tax payers of. the county as to the. advisability of an additional levy on county prop erty to pay the cost of erecting a jpjew county jail. ' The grand jury serving during the November term of court here last week, ordered the commissioners to begin the erection of a new jail be fore the beginning of the next county court seSsibn, or else face a grand jury indictment. The jail was re ported to be inadequate and unsani ' tary. - The statement issued . from the commissioners listed the amounts spent on the county jail and on -equipment for it since August 1. The commissioners point out that practically everything has been done iiWESYiGATE r.iACCN COUtfiY HEART OF A MOUNTAIN EMPIRE RIPE FOR DEVELOPMENT Sffe (f f i . n,' ',: n r Tlie First Thanksgivim ru "MM i ;::x;:;:;:;v$v:;x::y n .V 4t t5!1 t '- 4. y J S I :. In Plymouth colony, attar , the first dreadful winter, of ,1621,. summer brought a plentiful crop and in the fe! fcovnrnor Bradford eet aside a day for thanksgiving. Great were the preparation the few women in the colony spent days in baking, and cooking and even the children helped. As guests, more than four score Indians were Invited, Who furnished venison and wild turkey for their share of the feast The tables were set out of doors and the company sat about them as: one big family. It was the first .Thanksgiving. Hunters Must Have Permit And License Fred Slagle county game warden, announces that all hunters should take notice that hunting without per mits on property other than their own is a violation of the hunting laws. Even though the hunter has the required hunting license, he must also have the necessary permit. Mr. Slagle states, furthermore, that no trapping for fox or. other game is permitted under' the hunting laws. to the present jail that can be done to make it a safe and sanitary lodg ing for the prisoners. In August, 1927, Judge W. F. Hard ing, stated' that Macon county had been in need of a new jail for 11 years. He asserted that something must be done. "I came here 11 years ago," he said, "and the grand jury reported that the jail was in bad condition. I think they used a good Anglo-Saxon word and said it was 'lousy.1 They said that the bed clothes were dirty and that it was in about as bad condition as it could be. "I , came back six years ago, and the grand jury did not say so much about it being dirty, but declared it was inadequate and unsafe. I was here a year agOy and the grand jury said very much the same thing."- In October, 1927, the Macon county jail was condemned by .L. G. Whitley, penal institution inspector for the State Board of Health. Out of six requirements, he reported that the (Continued on page eight) FRANKLIN, N. C, THURSDAY NOVEMBER nn A . ' ), t v - ir RABBIT DISEASE DAME! SOURCE Tularemia Can Be Avoided By Care in Dressing And Cooking During the last ten days the press service of about fifteen .State departments of health have sent out literature, some of which has reached our desk, calling attention to the fact that now the hunting season is open all hunters should beware Of rabbit fever. Some of the United States Public Health Service recent reports placed suspicion on quail as well as rabbits. This disease is a rather serious occurrence and for the most part is spread by handling or dressing for the table rabbits, and, as just said, possibly quail; which are infected with the .disease. This infection from the infected rabbit or bird may be easily transmitted to a person who has an abrasion or sore of any kind on the hands. Jt can be easily prevented if all persons who dress rabbits or quail would use rubber gloves or refrain from such duties if there is any sus picion of sores or abrasions about the hands and arms from which in fection would enter. Thorough cook ing of infected rabbits destroys the infective agent, and there is no danger for people who eat such food after it is thoroughly cooked. The danger comes through handling the uncooked carcasses. To sum up, our advice to people who like rabbits for food is to go ahead and eat them as usual, but to be careful in dressing, and to thoroughly cook them before eating. r 28, 1923. in 'r iU Former Ritter Sup't. Dies In Arizona Word has just, reached Franklin that C. A. Divine, who was located here several years as superintendent of the W. M. Ritter Lumber com pany, died in a Phoenix, Ariz, hos pital, September 30, following an op eration for appendicitis. Mrs. Gertrude Webster, of Phoenix, sister of Mr. Divine, notified The Press through C. C. Currier, of Cor Yielia.K C,a., of the death of her brother. Mr. Divine had a number of friends in Macon county. IV AERIAL PASSENGERS GREET LONE LOOKOUT Cabin Plane Swoops Over Standing Indian; New Station Planned . (By Z. B. BYRD) Standing Indian Mountain is con sidered one of the most important lookout, points in the1 Nantahala Na tional Forest. The Forest Service plans to build, during the summer of 1930, a modern lookout house on this peak. The old log . cabin now in use on top has about seen its best days. It has withstood the storms of many winters and the blazing sun for many summers and it is with a feel ing of sadness that the plans for tearing down this friendly old cabin are made. The little cabin has witnessed some stirring events. It has been used for a camp for fire fighters on some of the worst fires the Nantahala Forest has ever Had. Men who had exhausted themselves on the fire lines have found shelter from the cold and a place to cat and rest., After the fires were out, the whole story of the ope J Water Power Mica, Kaolin, Asbestos, Abrasive Materials Copper, Timber Prcc'.ous and Semi -precious Gems ' Abundance Good Labor Ample Transportation Facilities Pure, Clear Water Productive Soils NUMBER FORTY-EIGHT SCORE OF SUBS Students Create Flurry To Get Blanks and Proof Lists Several scores of new subscriber's names have rolled into The Franklin Press office since the opening of the giant , subscription campaign a week ago by the Ijigh school Juniors and the members of the Teachers' Training department. With the opening of the contest last Thursday 'afternoon, there was mighty flurry at The Press office for sub scription blanks and proof sheets of the subscription list. Students de manded lists of subscribers in many sections of the county removed from the vicinity of Franklin. One young lady came in a few days later and reported eight subscriptions, and . as serted that she had just started. The contestants are divided into two teams; the Reds and the Blues, and while both have been sub-hunting with a zeal that would put to shame a professional sub-getter, the Reds are slightly in the lead. But there is no way of telling which team will be in front when the re sults of another week on ' the su1h path have been counted. .The teams,, are ju.t-jor new newal subscriptions, and are" using with effect the argument that now U the time to subscribe or renew! before the subscription rates advance from $1.50 to $2 a year on January 1. The workers in the campaign receive a personal commission and a commis sion for their class out of the sub- scriptions secured. Still another effective argument be ing used by the teams is that. The Press makes a very desirable Christ mas gift for a friend here or who has moved outside the county. They; arc pointing out that the subscription may be held up until the week before Christmas if that is desired. Indications point to the fact that the total subscription list in this campaign will have reached very re spectable . numbers at the date of closing on December 20. Watch the Juniors and. the Teachers' Training Class! big fight was told and retold by the fire fighters. Many strange stories have gone me rounus unacr us inenaiy rooi when the wind was howling outside and the little stove roaring inside. Paul Bunyan and his famed Blue Ot have been ressurected and brought to this lonely mountain top to furn ish amusement for the lumberjack fire fighters who are never in strange surroundings if Paul and his ox are present. The wildest, most imposisble story of the feats of this immortal pair will be accepted as fact because Paul Bunyan and his big Blue Ox invented logging. Paul Bunyan is the Patron Saint of the logger and his ox is the Sacred Ox to Paul's followers. Many strange topographic features are easily explained to the listeners if Paul and his ox had any part in the making of them. It has been said that the cove east of Highlands, known as Horse Cove was made by Paul Bunyan skidding a huge poplar log from 'Satulah (Continued on page eight) START COMING IN