INDUSTRIAL EDIT I O N i (VWVWWWVWWWVVWWVf MADISON COUNTY RECORD, J I Established Juno 28, 1901. jAe Medium. I Through which you reach' the people of Madisoc County. i MEWS-R I FRENCH BROAD NEWS, Established May 16,1907. I Advertising Rates on Application. Consolidated . Nov. 2nd, 1911. CORD VOL. XVI MARSHALL, MADISON COUNTY, N. C FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1914. Madison County Good Roads First, a calf wended its wayj alonir the hillside, and, crazing here and there, knocked the dew . II 1 L 1. xrom ine van grass oui icm uu hind it the broken stalks, and a passer by, wishing to avoid the wet and the dew, followed in its trail, and a second and a third and at last befora the day was done a beaten path was formed. A horse man came and saw the track and followed it. It was the thoro ughfare and traveller and horse and stock followed it and it be . come the public highway, pro tected bv law and secure to man. Through our mountains the roads have followed the ways of the past, and up hill and down at slicht grade and steep, the wag ons and the horse, the footpasser nnd the stock have follwed the time-worn roads that have been rnmnlained of. but that were laid out not by human skill or human choice but by a wandering calf But as" the years have passed men have come to wonder why we have followed the beaten paths at so much discomfort and at such an expense to wagon anu Konet. Ronda that have no rea son for being "and which ha've been maintained at such an ex pense and discomfort to all. - Mn lmve to be told that dis- fnrt is m-emeditated and that t.imft exDended on a bad road adds in the cost per ton of the thing hauled. They have to see that also life and that HUJU wfcw time saved is money saved. , It is necessary to show-that a ton hauled over a rough road and steep is done at the same cost of power and at twice the cost ot time as douoie man wciguv good roads. So for many years wAhave-rbeen satisfied with our '' old roads that were fair, for a part of the year and almost im passable for the rest of the year. That wagons and buggies wore out in half the time they should becauae of the roughness of the - road, "And this conviction came to us presto a change and a rapid change, and the county starts on nnnr era. of Droeress and ; new - roads appear and the riches of the county increase, and men De- gin to wonder why they were content to travel the old trask so many years, following the aim less wanderings of a preadamic calf that' wandered over the hills in search of provender. Madison county is laying out a good system of roads that are to follow and which are not a drag to the horse and add pleas ure to the driver. In the last legislature a law was passed per mitting the county to issue bonds; for good roods, and when this was done half thbso bonds were issued and the good 'work began. With a road commission com posed of Fowler Shelton, Guy V. loberts, Geo. W. Wild, S. W. Brown, and A. F. S;rinkle, the plans were made out. Engineer Clintr was employed to lay these roads out, and so through the county there have been surveyed the routes that are to be followed. The money was appropriated to the different townships according to their taxable values and in a great n any of them the work has been begun and a fair sys tem has been given to us. With a grade of 4 to 5 we can trav el in comfort in many directions and where it was impossible, be fore to go with a machine. The time is coming when wo can travel in almost every direction easily. . From Marshall to Walnut, to Mars HiU out Walnut Creek, from Sandy Mush, down Spring Creek, up Big Pino from the state line at Paiut Rock to Hot Springs, from thence to Hurrj- cano and Walnut Gap, from Lone- some tiap una into uaurei we nick and shovel and dynamite have cleared rock and hill, and thft mad winds its way. making eaav the task of the farmer in marketing his products. The state highway has been worked and the convicts that- the state has given us have built a road Mint is eeod. and soon we will have through connection with all 'the points east and west. Not all bv any means of the amount of bonds sold have been nsnd and many townships have not used them at all as yet, but eno'ueh still remains of those that have cone heaviest into the road building to place the sand uuom them which will keep them from getting tod muddy during the winter. Where before the horses sweated and pulled they nnwTpst nullincr. And where a lot of lumber stalled in the mud nnra TOO RAA fafimS trOttiflg at their task. : Owner - haDDV. teams rested farmers satisfied,. 1 a.n d wortl more, broad highway where one can nass with ease another ve Ihicle, and the county richer by many limes the money spent on the roads in bonds. So Madison goes on in , pro gress, and will grow as the years rm?s. ' Ana' her direct result of better "t - ?yV''-"t ''4. J-iSr-'J ' 1 . - -.-.l V Hi I -J. 1 -.-fi Li , ' . ' 4 hi . f When Road Was Just Begun Up Spring Creek, self to the front in this question of eood roads. When once the citizens cf our county feels that he needs a thing he goes after it and gets it, and we are in a fair way to have all that could be de roads will bo the betterment of our schools. ' The complaint of many is that they cannot travel the. roads, to school. And we will . improve our schools if wo hav hp.tter roads-. Good roads onrl had schoolhouses do not go i sired w44 w " 1 . together, and we cannot have i . it is necessary, however, that good schools until we have good we all , wori together ior uus roads One has its influence on great improvement and not have fVm nthpr Wo would like to im- anv hangers back and carpers oress this on the mind -of the because the roads are not being .uoiAr hui t as we want is to oe. J!ivcij I ... . . The elorv of France and the one together and pulling togetn- . . . . ,io er. we will get a system or ronua countries oi BiUi ope is its aui, i ... .j i . v co rr-u Z KiU in thA that w be our pride and the some of which were built in the i,a-w time of Caesar, and which have cnuaren 6010 , u krrow ud and speak of us will give come to us tnrougn a tuuu0auUo r l. - - vears. He built groat roads for J "A V"T : :r jeaio. no uuu p, , . VioVinr lived in the his soldiers to pass, and these . :u., thft neo. days of good road building. nave uuu nicii cutu - i--- i . , . i u . . . ii l Thorn - navfl Deen m enu , uu- ples oi inose counuius.. .. r u a. oiort hnt stacles to over come in our.build not for the tread of armed host, ing of roads because of the hills but that the great army from the and mountains. Grades have to farm may bring to the marts as be nei,j t0 and mountain sides easily as possible the products oi have been taken off and the gul i i i i. .uUno That, I . . - thft SOU WHICH IS UUI these may oe marneieu us tucr , , , . . q ly as possible and at least cost of " -" .T- .i cf..ni, t.ft t.hA seller, is herculean but it , is beio,dope. and t'lereforo cheaper to the We" should givo credit to those in buyer. " v : clijirge of the work and see that -And our county is -pushing it- they are upheld in their efforts to lies filled, but it has been done give us the best possible for our money. It is a joy now to ride toward Mars Hi'.l toward Walnut and our heart beats with pride where before we traveled with discom fort and vexation of spirit. '. Tho rnuntv is already feeling t - the impulso-of a now hfo coming 'rora these highways which pass ns great arteries through its cen ters. It is necessary that these arteries should bo large and well built and if we have them so, the blood of trade will course freely through them and those from the outside will be able to come in and help us and from a hermit county isolated from the tourist and. the traveler who shuns u because we have no way of travel, hosts will come in to enjoy the scenic beauty for the eye, and our health giving air for the weary and the sick. It will mean that we will be able to bring to the railroad the milk and drive our cattle easier. It means the . increase of land values everywhere and we will see.it in the near future. We need not fear comparison with our neighboring counties as our B.i stem compares favorably with'the best of them. The old roads are a thing of the past. The old generation has nassed and a new one has come. The manners of the past have gone, the old houses have given wav to the new. The still has seen its last day, a new era has come and we are awakening to the fact and we are a part of the new Madison that is striving to take its place with other counties that have awakened to the fact that the world is moving. - PerhaDS there is nothing that has so changed in the last decade as the opinion and ideas in regard to good roads. All over the country, north and south, the ouestionof supreme importance now is the improvement of the roads. States are spending nat ions on their highways Cougres ses are held to talk over the best moans to tet them. Evory place the farmer is to the front in ad vocacy of the idea. And down here in Madison, we too have felt the idea stirring, and feeling it we have started in and we did if. cmnrt and heavy. 30U,UUU strong and so we go marcning ou to erreater achievements, acbieve- mpnts that would have stunned our forefathers but which are to be expected in this day and hour And our vision reaches, out into the future and wo see the county threaded not with some main highways only, but from these tro out. the ramifications until 'every byway is a .highway and NO 44 every home has its good road leading to the front door macad amized and kept, for it is the roy al road to wealth and ease. Patton Brothers General Road Builders. Perhaps to the average person tho part the contracting engi neers and general contractors play in the up-building of a com munity is not first apparent, but we must think that a little thought on their part will show at once that.more than any other bod v of men that they are respon sible for the acquired, advantages Urbich a town and county may possess. The firm of Patton Brothers was formed in kast Tennessee some ten years ago, and since that time they have constructed miles of roads which reaches the inspiring total of more than two hundred and fifty miles. Macadam roads, thous ands of yards of stone and con- . i rete walls, etc. They were successful bidders against well-known competitors for the construction of twelve miles of graded roads in Madison County -which includes 75,000 yards of excavations and they are making wonderful progress however, this wonderful progress should not be a surprise when we take into consideration that they have all the latest machinery tt. mniloi-n rnn.rl inakincr. and lJl IHWIVI . " c. . that they employ from seventy five to one hundred men and are working forty head of horses and mules. The firm is "eompeseUif - Messrs W. A. and K. S. Patton. Their contract here .is a very arge and difficult l one and is under the management of Mr. W, A, Patton, the senior mem ber of the firm. Thev are always found ready and pleased to figure on any kind of road consrtuction, and they are equipped and prepared to bid on work in any section of the . country. ,Guts shown on this page illustrates the dif' fkult road building Messrs. Patton Brothers are doing in Madison Co., near Hot Springs. '."s. xr.- 1 S. - f - 4. 1 1' , 5 ' . . . - '. X Same Scene as Above 30 Days Later Same Scene 40 Days Later.