the-;; ' ' ill it 'nil.' ' . , , . r i THE NEWS-RECORD 0 V BOTH A YEAR FOR $.t r eXTHE Nt NEWS-RECORD f V ' ii r i i t i i 'ii T- the? only newspaper! punished ip; Madison county yoLx&i MARSHALL, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1926. 1200 -y: 'a- SWITZERLAND HOTEL AT WALNUT CHANGES HANDS COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT'S COLUMN in. Edited by O. DILLARD NEW YEAR I 1 i ..... f, ? iWe wish to urge upon all voters in the Special : Schobol Taxing District for the Marshall district to register and vote for the proposal of enlarging ttie district, and voting a special tax of thirty cents over the entire district as enlarged for the purpose of equalizing educational opportunities within the district. This election is held under the law enacted by w ' the General Assembly of 1923. Under the law . it is possible to enlarge districts and vote a spec ial tax for the support of all the schools within the proposed taxing district. After the election is carried the Board of Education has the author ity to organize the schools within the said taxing district so that the educational opportunities may be equalized. Sec. 239, of Art. 18, states: "The County Board of Education is hereby au thorized to organize the schools in a special tax ing district after a special tax has been voted m such a way as to equalize educational opportuni ties within said district." Tf thP Portion carries it will operate to repeal all existing rates heretofore voted, and the rate will be the one voted in the special school taxing district. Section 238 of Art. 18, under which pWtinn is held states: "If a majority of the qualified voters in the special school taxing dis itrict, shall vote in favor of the special school tax, then it shall operate to repeal all school taxes heretofore voted in any local or special charter district located within said special school taxing Idistrict" except tax that may have been votea for bonds. It is estimated that this election will yield be tween $2000.00 and $2,500.00. The raiiroaa a lnno will nnv nracticallv $1400.00 additional tax fnr th snnnnrt of the school. The other two dis- tricts will furnish the remainder TVio nHvaTitac-p tht the Skvland and Pleasant View'districts will gain'by voting this tax, is that these districts will share m the funds so that tneir school term will be lengthened and that all their high school pupils will share the opportunity of the Marshall High School and Elementary SchCol without any additional costs for tuition or transportation charges. So long as the schools are maintained at Skyland ana rieasani v iew iha Wtyi will be eiffht months, providing the elec tion carries. This will also give these places the opportunity to get well trained teachers every year, as the term will be longer, thus warranting teachers who have the best preparation iu ctu- ont work there. Application for a loan from the Special Build-i.4T.-nA v.oo lioon nrmmvpfl hv the Board of County Commissioners for a loan of oo,50U.UU for the purpose of building a new building at Marshall. It is very necessary that this election be carried so that funds may be available to pay off the interest and installment on this loan as it comes due. It is not known yet whether the loan will be granted, but if the election carries, there will be hut little dnnht about its beine: approved. But it it does not carry, then it is almost a certainty that it will not be. for the reason that ther." will not be sufficient funds to care for the loan as it comes due. ' The building need at Marshall is very great. The present building is entirely inadequate for the children who are attending. There is no playground for games or physical exercise. It is very inaccessible. Therefore the building does not serve as a community center as it should. Part of the building is unhygienic and unsanitary, and cannot be mv.de because of the location. The lighting is very bad in some of the rooms. Toilet facilities not only are inadequate, but un sanitary. The water for drinking purposes is not sufficient. In fact but very few things in the You bring new hopes in sunny rays, You fill our hearts with gladness, You chase away all our wrong ways, And we forget our sadness. You ftiake us want to Btart anew, To make this. -yea much brighter; You make us strive to be more true, Our load you make much lighter. I M. LISENBEE. GOLDEN RULE AND w'ORLD PEACE Mr. S. R. Freeborn Sells Property at Walnut AH Mr. S. R. Freeborn has sold QUIET OIRISTMAS The law passed at the last out his holdings at Walnut and session of the General Assem will go to Asheville to make his bly of North Carolina prohib home. Th property transfer- iting the buying, selling, or us- red includes the Hotel, the store By DR. S. PARKES CADMAN President of the Federal Council of Churches In this powerful appeal for the adoption of the Golden Rule as a guiding principle in international rslations, the great r-adlo preacher ho!ds up an an example in constructive international charity the work of the Near iar.t belief, which makes its nnnual appeal for the rurp-jrt of the American people on Colden Rule Sunday, observed annually in December. milN'G in the history of the American people of recent ycurs so heroines them as jyJ;'j their attitude towards the un happy und persecuted people who have been the hene-ficiaries of the great work of the Near East Re lief. At this season when the annual lppeal for the support of this work Is made, through the observance of Golden Rule Sunday, It is an orer whelmtngry gratifying thing to hear the report! of the triumph and aue cefttes. of this philanthropy. I hare been hearing of the hei'iti tt the Near But from the days ot my cal promises hare not always been realized, at :iny rate tfe have tried to retain Ilia credit of our peopie by con tributing gtnerously to this work, which we must continue to Bustain. As a churchman, I may be permit ted to point out that the Near East Relief hag contributed enormously to the cause of church unity. At Stock holm a few weeks ago I had the privi lege of conferring with all the patri archs sad metropolitans and arebbtsh epa of the Greek church. They assur ed me that they hare been drawn toward tfea Weat not. by the common iiv- Switzerland ing of fire works in the coun and all the tics of Madison, Haywood, property at Walnut owned by ' Mitchell, Yancey, and Macon Mr. S. R. Freeborn. The pur- proved to be a very valuable chasers of this property are law. The Christmas season in Mrs. Frances Locke and son, .ilia: .-.hall was the quietest and Edwin, of Florida. This change :".o.-t orderly that has ever been will doubtless come as a sur- observed in the town. The -ii i.ye to many of Mr. and Mrs. -citizens and officers are to be 'YeeLorn's friends in the coun- congratulated upon the observ- who will regret to see them r.iice of the law. Nothing ber th e County. Mr. Free- ::; can be said ol a communi ,vill enter the real estate iy than that its citizens are law .y lea Vi oi n business in Asheville. abiding. ARSHILL COLLEGE REMOVE NOT THE GETSSPLENDIDGIFT OLDUNDMARHS (Copied by J. B. MARTIN, Jr.) Provision in Will of Jacob F, Alexander Leaves $10,000 Annually to Baptist Institution i The old time religion is om j earth today with the same pow jer and authority, and bringing m. u ,.riii jforth the same results as it did Through provisio nsin the will iiiole days, txod has not in changed His plan of Salvation. Heaven's resources are not ex hausted. The Power of God just the same today. God has said, "I am the Lord I change not." Men today are trying to modernize the salyatioji of Je- X 6. PARKES CADMAN early youth,, when Mr. Gladstone con-du-tfd iii.s memorable ( -impaign in c.hi. Ii he (ienouncert th-- Turk and ii;t,i ! that the Turks fIi;u:!1 be thrust l.-.K and lxi?gase out of their country. The horrors have continued ever since, but our country has been an instrument in alleviatin:: them by con tributions out' of its abundance to the crucial need of the distressed orphans and what few unhappy relatives they have left to them. We cm do no better thing than to rive for those who aro in need, and thus nrittn such merchandise out of our rtr.iorial welfare as to have cre-- dtiuialK for the life which Is to come. I do i")t take the attitude that there Is anything much to praise about the American people in this matter, though 1 am proud of them, as we all are. It would have been a strange thing if we had not done as we have done. Wh :i you tiiinit of the millions which rfre squandered in this country upon feminine devices for beautify lng which do not always succeed in realizing their object when you tla'nk ;f the vast cost of trying to make r.uMon look like lamb, when you think f thy multitude of surplus things :h which we surround ourselves in ily life, and then see this work for , off children. I think you will agree th me that even though our politi- , concent of intellectual mmd-i nor by the doctors of the church, but rather through the work of Near East Relief. That work has won the hearts of great bishops is well as refugees and politicians. Trulv we have seen the truth of the saying that a little child j the terms shall lead t hem. The little Armenian j stated. orphan, Zadi, whom thousands have heard sing and talk at the preliminary Golden IEule dinners in a hundred cities of this country, is a five-year-old representation of thousands of these Eastern peoples, whom wo have ap proached not with theology or doma, but with those deeds of mercy-which are tine rery essence of true religion. of Jacob F. Alexander, who died recently in St. Petersburg, Fla., Mars Hill college will re ceive an annual income of ?10,000 part of the $32,000 an nuity eft by Mr. Alexander to various Carolina educational institutions, according to a statement yesterday by Rev. J. W. 0,'Hara of the Baptist Mis sion board, under whose super vision the sch'ddla endowed now jsus. Tljey" have removed tTi operate. l!irtrlmnia trmr.fJnH fcairl rVvaiiM This bequest will enable Mars ;-.-H--?4 tt;ii tr tnlcp the hinhest, ratmcr not be moved: they are substl ' " hi the Southern .Association of tutincc a sham for the old-fash-f-r.lle-es. U c -: A'.r. O'llava . , , -tates. Mr. A'enndcr v.-.-r-. a 1011 e1 wav 10 oa- inev are I prominent Florida and North leaving out repentance, restitu I Carolina business man. :r , ,vin? faith endeavor- Other institutions covered in the bequests are: Alexander mg to cnmo up some otner schools, Inc., 10, 000 a year; way. They think it is not nec .Hartist Orphanage at Thomas- , . th k ville. $2,000 a year; Boiling cessar t0 D0W tne Knee in rev Academy, $2,000 a year; and erence to God, repent with god First Methodist churches of ly sorrow for sin and seek him Forest City ?1,00 each This ...... .. . endowment becomes operative until the witness comes from January 1, 1927, according to Heaven. of the will, it was ! People teachings have said, Vir.ilor- THRIFTINESS "If your mother gave yea "ime religion have neglected the of the Bible, they away with tbe old They have tak- There Is a lesson of world peace (n j er or mv little one?" Oils philanthropic approach to the I hearts of men. We must follow it.uji with this decision that we will not ' Mayer ot Burnette a large apple and a small one, and en up with, something refined, told you to divide with your brother, . , . ' , u- u i m ;m-" new something scholarly, cul- which apple would you give him: " Johnnv "D'ye mean my big broth- ture'd, educational, but W e praise God for the old time re ligion that has power to trans- allow the state in the future tflrdictats to the church or to nny body of nen as to what shall be their atUtud; to ward peece and war. We must tak our patriotism from the preaching oi the prophets. Unless we want a fund like this every tfty years to repair the recurrent waves of slaughter and devastation, we must cling to 'h spirit of the Golden Rule. The qurt'.tj of mercy Is not strained. It droppeth as thfi eentle rain from heaven. It Is in Buncombe's Jail for Safekeeping (Frr.m Ashevillo Citizen) m men's lives. They will ow what a shout of victory :y means. " he worldly church of today a lost Its power and the sac- Wr'i'ice Ray, slayer of Dr. O V. Buir.ett;; in i pistol duel on red old altar. You do not see a lonely mountain road in Mad-sinners down on their knees ison county several weeks ago, 'ir-nrag out tears to God, but SkiecoSe8 rhirmou'; was yesterday afternoon lodged; there is one place where the arch bettor than his crown. jn jaji here for safekeepmg ok j The sheriff of Madison coun o ty held a conference with So- God where the ordinances of J. Ed Swain while he was the Church of God are kept, f. v. I -nnnA 9Hn 000 00 in school here yesterday. It is under- feet washing St. John 13, and and that is' among the people of school facilities are so poor as Marshall. Waynesville within tiie past - iL ul ty.-Wt, olpmpntnrv and hiffh stood that there 18 considerable the Lord's Supper and baptism plains, iiavuijc uuui mvii- n i. , .. , .... . , , .-. - Schools. SylVE has recently erected an 80,000. fhng over this killmg ,n by emersion Sinners are get-;, hieh school building in addition to having an ele-SMadlSOT1 Couilty and the Jai1 m tin the old fae religion. . . mpntarv hnildinff. Brvson CitV. Murphy, Rob-'Marsha11 is considered none too They get it the same old Bible building measure up to what a standard school (Joinsville, Hayesville, Franklin, Brevard, and,8- ,way and they know that came ; Hendersonville have all recently Dunx new puna-; - - . ingS that meet the requirements for Standard jwounded in the gun battle and not shaking the preacher's,. RrMion s. if these towns can ao bo tnere is no rea- o""fc "" " - av " "ui oi"i" a viu uuv would be a good advertisement for the entire; son why Marshall and Madison County can not eenvuie, iom ViAimtir TheMiannta oinnlAAnimTirenat in WaofJlA IilrAnnaA - . . i i M. iUUM OU wuuuub should be. Anew building at Marshall would not only be a good business asset to the town of Marshall, but recovering God saves you and. it satisfies you. vv 1 I .- T ha An nn t m