, -1 n Ji. . f ' 7. r W - ' ' f1- ' 44444444404404': i ws -1 e cord : ; ; i J Madison County Record " p ' X: French Droad New ' ' . .'; ; , COHBOIJDATID HOT. 1.13 i.. ,' 0P" , THE) O'nLY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN MADISON COUNTY VOL XXI MARSHALL, vMADlSON COUNTY, N. C. FRIDAY, JANUARY 11th, 1924. No 2 r Tfea Bene Paper la Verse. Today. 80 far as appearance goee, - the chief difference p tween the country paper and the city paper is in size. The coua trv naDpr." beinir in the main a local paper, does not need tht space that the city daily requires for its general news and features. But today the country papers make use of the same typo graphical devices and pictures that the citv naner uses. Thli word is needed to - introduce fine little poem by an unknown writer, who speaks of the older type of -country weekly which too often was poorly printed Sand edited: Tisn't filled with cuts , and pic tures nor the latest news die- . ; patcnes; And the paper's of ten dampened .and the print is sometimes : blurred, ; ' There is only one edition, and the eye's glance often catches ' Traces of a missing letter, or at times a misspelled word, -' Vo cablegram or special any where the eye engages; ; The makeup is perhaps ,,a trifle crude and primitive, But an atmosphere of. home iife , fills and permeates the pages ' Of th e little country paper, printed where you used to live. How. the heart grows soft j and . tender while its columns you're "Xvery item is ffsroiiiar, - every name you know full well, And a flood of recollection passes o'er you while, you're musing On the past, and weaves about, you an imaginative spell. ' ' You can see the old home village ;once again in .fancy, seeming To be clasping hand of neighbor, and of friend and relative; ,And their faces rise before yoa as.you'Je idly, fondly , dream-, ing, JO'er the little country, paper printed where you used to live, j The Front Porch Arithmetic : He was trying to teach her arithmetic, his mission. He thought it was Heki issed her once, ' te kissed her twice. He said, now thats addition. Then there v followed smack by smack in v silent satisfaction. v Timidly she . gave him one back ' and ' said, now thats satisfaction. Then he kissed her and she kissed-him without an ' explanation. Then both together hugged and said thats multiplication. But Dad appeared upon the scene and with his great decision he kicked bi n miles away and' said thatsl long division. P.W.PAYNE, of Highland School. Luck, N'C.k Jan. 3, 1924 The News-Record, . . Marshall. N. a.'. Dear Sir: Please find enclosed money order for $1.50 'to extend my paper through this year. Please send me a recoipt for ir j: M. COWARD. - C. A. Ballentine. of Cardenas in Wake County won ZZ7 with two ton-car exhibits of corn at various fairs held in -the State this past fall. Show XU i::v;s On last Friday afternoon, De cember 21st, quite timber of the patrons gathered at the newborn school where a short nrnsram W& civan bv the schoo children followed by a Christmas tree whieh was enjoyed by all. The farmess of this sestlon are busily engaged naming on their tobacco. V : Everybody of .this section. at tended church Sunday and heard a good sermon. . " Mr. Henry Turnage a well known citizen of thla eecUoois very alck at present. ; : V Mhi'Bonnie- limmeat wasbr vited out to La Graasre to take dinner Sunday with one of her friends f - : ' Miss Ethel Jarvis, has re turned to Farmville te teach this winter. 1 Miss Belle Jarvis speat Chrlpt- mas in Benson where the has taught school for the last four years.--'-; ' v Misses '.Belle Jarvis, Bonnie Amnions and Messrs. John Tur nage and ( Ernest Whitted mo tored over to Sulphur Springs, Saturday, p. m. We are having a grand school this (year at Mewborn even thing is progressing nicely. The teachers are Misses Belle Jarvis, Bonnie Ammons, frora Mara tsH Creei Jt:ss The peeple of this place are proud to jsay that eur Sunday school and singing are doing fine. We would be glad if all the I people of this community would take a little more interest in Rework of the Sunday school and singing. We espec- 111 I u. -II' 1 iau invue you an w pieiw come every Sunday during the year of 1824 ' ; 1 j ' Mr. L. M. Sprinkle, of Char lotte Court House,Nya who has been visiting relatives at this place returned back te his home last Tuesday. , - '.' Miss Hallie-Silver who Is teaching at thia place enjoyed the pleasure of spending the week end at her home la Mar shall. Mr. Rev Capos a i d" . Miss Mamie Buckner were the guest of Misses Bertie and Gertie Edward Sunday. .-.v -Mr. Kenneth Phillips made a nleasant call at Mr. Robert Callahan's Sunday afternoon. Misses Sallie Kate and Eliza beth Sprinkle returned home last - Tuesday . after spending a few days in Spartanburg, S. C. Misses Dot and Ella Callahan were the guest of Mise Daisy Phillips. ; Ir. and Mrs. Davis Edwards were visiting Mr. Hillard Merrill Sunda, V: -y : Mr. Allman Buckner was the giiest of Miss Ora Bell" Merrill Sunday afternoon. . . - ' Mr. John Moore la on the sick list at this time. X.Y. Z. Ten farmers in Lincoln county are getting chicks ready for the early market. Some have taken 62 their first hatch and the in cubators are now-trasy again. From, twelve to fifteen thousand es will be set between now mi t-s first of April -V supply t:?J chks to -bote! reports Ccu-iy A3nt J. Q. Morrison. Ia America To Lost Colony? EVERY Ame rican school boyf knows ef Sir Walter Raleigh's "lost colony," a band of Eugliah men sent to the coast of North Carolina to found a settlement, but which was so neglected by the Eng lish government that it disappeared. Year! afterward the government was awakened to the sense of duty it owed to those who had. crossed the Ocean to carry English customs and ideals into the wilderness, and it sent an expedition to the Caro lina eosst to learn their fate, but the. settlers had disappeeard, leav ing no trace. Tbeira was a lost American colony. The disappear ing of J.his colony retarded the set tling of these United States for at most a hundred years. Wnat would have been this country's present greatness if the seeds of its power had ; been , sown in the fifteenth instead of the sixteenth oentury? Pozsibly the entire course of human history would have been . changed. All of this is but to call the read er's attention to the possibility that some future historian may write of a second American' colony disap pearing as completely as did Sir Walter Raleigh's, and in this age of rapid changing political and so cial events exciting less interest than did the disappearing of those we have mentioned. -V ; :; - v . ;,,. VTL'pvvr tof Wr'armsCthe uT- tice'of our arms, the justice of our cause, have given us colonial poa- sessions in both the Atlantic a.nd acific oceans. It is as though a divine power has given to us a real colony the Isle or Pines. Is indifference to cause us to lose this real, living part of our great re public that at the present is -ours for the claiming? As has been mentioned in a pre vious article, at the .close of the Spanish-American war a number of Americans moved into the Isle of ines, carrying with them their possessions, buying - land, making the island their home. None of them believed they ; would ever be iving under an alien flag, thinking it was but an insular part of their country they were crossing the sea to live in and that they and their children would be living under the flag ot thier country and protected and prospering by its laws and re gulations. That their fondest hop es have not been realize is well known to those who hnve kept in touch with these emigrants since they first settled the Island. So far the United States has never exer cised its rights of title to tho is land. Why this has not been done is not diBoussed.' That it was not done makes it very probable that some' , future historian will write very learnedly of the fate of Ame rica's "lost colony" in the West Indies. The treaty of Paris conferred the title of v possession to certain Islands in the West Indies On the United States. One of these was the Iele of Pines. Its area is ex ceeded by dhly four other islands in the entire archipelago. It is the nnlv one that had never been set tled, but had ; been used by thej Spanish Governmenf as a penal settlement. ..If was in reality a wilderness, the title to the most of thfr land being in the name of a few Spaniards who lived elsewhere. These owners were bought out by the settlers', 90 per cent of the land passing ulto their hands. Had this island never passed under the con trol of the Cuban government, it is a safe estimate to say that today there would be 50,000 instead) of Have A Second 1,000 Americans living in this, one of the most pleasant, wholesome and fertile islands ,of the West Indies ; These American tettlers many of them have now been in the island for over 20 vears have kept the American faith. ' Today, notwith standing tho adversities of 20yeais under an alien flag, the island is yet American. If given the chance under American government the rapid development of the colony would equal that of California in its early days -a development! made possible because these settlers have blazed!the way; they have prepared the ground. - South of Cuba are the West In- eiefr-a dineront world irom ours, with: different manners, customs and language, save in the English islands. Spain, England, France and Holland for centuries fought and planned and strove for the pos sesion of those islands: Spain, ; after having left the Impress of her civilization on the most of these islands, was driven out by Ameri can bayonetu. Holland was driv en out by England, and the remain ing wo are yet in control of many of the islands. Not an island in the enthe chain of islands, save the Isle tof Pines, but was colonized by Oryjs thother not , -these, jpWeraJ Most of them are thickly populat ed and all are hoary with a civili zation much older than ours. Fate 0r a higher power must have left the fairest one of these inlands a wilderness, that in the , fullness of a divine plan the sons of this mighty republicwithout the handi cap of others' mismanagement could put the clear cut stamp of theirs, the highest type of civilization, on the wilderness they have conquered on the edge of the Caribbean sea and south of the Cuban coast. , ' That an American can live and work in the tropics thes9 colonists have proved. That Americans do not ose their conception of govern ment an all else that is truly American, they have and are yet demonstrating in their- insistence upon not becoming a second ''lost colony," - in the nu o t blending their lives, thoughts and ways of living into the ways of those who by some strange turn of the wheel of fate for a scoiev of years have controlled them " politi cally. V'.v: ' It is interesting in this; day to speculate, after the lapse qf cen turies, as to the causes of the dis appeaiing of that-first English col ony on the coast of North Carolina In reality there'need be no specula tion. A young tolony is but an in fant of the parent stock, ,and an infant left to itself, not protected and guided by the parent, will per ish or else.never develop. y We can imagine these abandoned English men, gazing over the wafers, think ing of, prajing for the sight of a rescuing sail, their hearts growing sick With prolonged waiting. - Then a time came when hope (fqr hope is not eternal) died in their breasts and they disappeared. Did they perish in the wilderness or in the waters? Did they disappear amonS the surrounding savages, blending their blood with that of the red men? , To us it is an unsolved mys tery. To those who have lived! since their time they are the '.'lost colony."k " .- Will some future historian tell of an American colony' that disap peared in a West India, island; write of an island .peopled with a quarter of a million inhabitants; Report of County Qu&rrantlse Officer. ; Marshall, N. C, Jarv9, 1924 Duraig the-year 1923 I had reported to me the following 629 cases of measles. ' 34 cases whooping cough; 21 cases diptheria. 2 cases chicken pox. , 5 cases venereal disease. 9 cases scarlet fever. 5 cases typhoid fever. Making a total of 705 cases of communicable disease, which we haVe had in Madison county in one year, all of these had placards mailed to them and were due to have been under quarantine, several instances have been reported to me where some one was peeved or hurt because they were quarantined. riends we must keep control of the- diseases and this is all the way we can do it. I am fully persuaded that not more than half the measles and not one-tenth of the whooping cough were ever reported. It is an absolute violation of the ublic Health Law of North Carolina to fail to report these diseases, if a physician is called then he will do it, if you have no doctor with yours then it is up to the head of the house to see1' to it that they are reported. Don't v'olate the, law, report U your ;cassa3.djhen vtry.to observe your quarantine regu- ations. Thus we will have better health. Lets all pull together for 1924. . ; ' Sincerely,' . W A. SAMS, M. D. County Quarantine Officer, Madison County, ; Memorable Words These heroes are dead. They died for liberty they died for us. They are at rest. They sleep in the land they made free, under the flag they rendered stainless, under the solemn pine;, the sad hemlocks, .the tearful willows and the embracing vines. hey sleep beneath the shadows of the clouds, careless alike of sunshine or of storm, each in the windowless -palace of rest. Earth may run red with other wars; they are at peace. ;; In the midst of battle, in ;the roar of conflict, they found the serenity of death. I have one sentiment for soldiers living and dead. Cneers for the living; tears fbr the dead Robert G. Ingersoll tell of their manners and customs, of the resources of their island and that had and American colony planted in this island succeeded he would be telling of American cus toms and of American people in his description? ' These forsaken Englishmen on the coast of North Carolina watched over the ". waters in vain. Help came, but it was too lale.. Today, --iust as they watched and waited, down there on that tropical island, Americans, just the same kind of folks as are you and I, are watching for the papers from the States, waiting for news that will tell them the folks at home have not forgotten them, that they are remembered and their waiting and watching and labor and hard ships were not in vain ney are not to be America's second lost colony.". Cullowhee State Normal Opens ' Cullowhee, N. C January 4tbt f The Spring term at the Cullow . hee State Normal opened Weduet- : day, January 2nd, with many ne pupils entering both the Norma) ' and High School Departments. ' The" exact enrollment " cannot , be . gjven at this time as students aria still coming In. Only four board- , ing students attending the. Fall term have failed to return all of whom have either written or - tele- graphed that they are delayed . by illness and would arrive this week. President Hunter is pleased with the outlook. He . Informed the correspondent . today that every mail brings applications and in quiries regarding the Spring and , Summer quartern. "It is doubt-' ful, "he said, "if we 'can ' accomo- klate all who wish to come; even : with the additional forty five rooms at the Moore Building which' will be available at that time. . Cullowhee has been selected by Supt. A. T. Allen, of. the Depart ment of Public Edutation, as one of the eight state summer: school of North Carolina. The 'number of Subjects for each term has been reduced and a definite course of training will be offered.. t lew Year Thoughts v . 4:Foc;Tl; lie jGro;vef Raleigh, N.. C. January Pork production in North Carolina can - be made more profitable in , North,, Carolina thafi it ever was in the.. Corn fielt believes W. W. Shay swine extension specialist for the.. State College and Depsrtment of Agrieulture, if the swine growers, will give more attention to their - animals, proper care to the feeding and watch the marketing trend. Mr. Shay says that it is old stuff. to tell about how to handle hogs properly but at the New Year it is worth repeating. Hefsays. "Every, good farmer knows that , he should feed his brood sows a heavy pro-, toin food with the corn and that a portion of the brood bows ration should come from such animal food as' tankage, iisli meal or milk, He . known also that he should provide the sow with clean, dry sleeping! quarters for her and the newly far- ; rowed pigs. :;; i .''f" "Long coarse , bedding is ' not ' suited for young pigs because they get tangled up and when the. sow, lies down, the pigs are , unable to ge$ out of her way and are crushed The pig needs a dry bed. When in' a dry bed and lying against bis mother, he can stand cold weather' but a damp bed is dangerous and a cold draught is almost certain- ( deeth. . 'The good farmer .'also knows '" that dirty food leads to digestive troubles and that muddy, filthy yards make wet beds and dirty r troughs. It is also well known that - it does, not pay to carry more pig! than there is feed for. If a mso tj has feed for only 20 pigs and kef pi 40, when the 20 would have weighs ed 4,000 pounds and been ready lat. sell, the 40 would wpigh . lesai thad , 4,000 and hard Jtf. sell. il S i . J "All of these, ar some'gfaf othe things to which the swine grower must give attention tearing Ithft coming year to make twiew his hog. -.i H lo .1- Miss Paulin? to Asheville Tu ;-V"t&;'r. .-:Lu herstadiu aLtfeUla.'ijr i i"(t . TOO 03 si o''.'