4 AC T MARSHALL MINISTERS FAVOR HOSPITAL WRITE OTHER MINISTERS COUNTY TO 3 T R E S S IMPORTANCE OF HOSPITAL IN The following communica tion .from the ministers of Mar shall to other ministers in the county shows how the ministers feel about the proposed hos pital : As you are aware, that the Duke Foundation makes it possible for Madison County to have a great hos pital on a BO-BO basis, and that this very important matter will come be fore the people for their decision A pril 9th, we, the ministers of Marsh all, feel that everv minister of the Gospel in this County should use his influence and his pulpit, if neces sary, to inform the people concerning the great and urgent nature of this proposition in a word, to place the facts squarely before the people. We surely cannot afford to let so wonder ful an opportunity pass. The 8mall cost to the taxpayers of 30 cents to every taxable $1,000.00 is almost nothing and that the hos pital will be Belf-supporting is almost a certainty. What such a Hospital will mean to this- and coming gen erations is beyond calculation; that it will prove a veritable God-send to the people and a blessing to human ity, there is no question. To be, or not to be, is now the su preme question: Shall we pass it up? or avail ourselves of it? We face a real challenge. How shall we dispose of it? This is the duty and privilege of every registered voter to answer. We feel so stronely on this mat ter that is whv we are addressing our brethren in the ministry to do all they can to broadcast the real situation as it is to all the people free rom bias or prejudice. ' If this is done, as we are hoping and praying it will be, there can be but one result a Great Hospital to answer a great need in a Great County, of our . beloved Nprtb Caror J. T. M. KNOX, faator . Presbyterian Church. HORACE L. SMITH, pastor Marshall Baptist Church. J. C. UMBERGER, pastor M. E. Church, South, Mar shall and Hot Springs, N. C. Hospitals For Neglected People A correspondent asks for in formation concerning the Duke Foundation's offer to aid coun ties and municipalities in build ing hospitals. The Foundation has entered this field especially for the pur pose of aiding in providing the isolated rural people hospital facilities which they do not have under prevailing condi tions. The Foundation matches local money dollar for dollar, for the construction and often proposes also to grant a dollar a day for the care of charity patients in the hospitals thus reaching a class sorely in need of medical ministration. . This paper is not, of course, ,in position to advise any coun ty or .municipal corporation as to issuing bonds, for hospitals. This much' can be said, howev er: hospitalization for the peo ple of rural districts, especially . those unable to pay for ade quate medical and surgical treatment, is one of the great est social needs of rural North Carolina - , There are .many ' welfare projects worthy of praise and support. None is more vital, to the masses of the people, es pecially in remote sections, , than that in which the Duke Foundation is contributing to the building and maintenance of hospitals. In 1928 the Foundation spent in the CaroHnas- more . than a half million' dollars for hospitals and orphanages. Editorial in Asheville Times. A CORRECTION In our issue of March 22, a report was sent in from Upper Brush Creek, mentioning "Austin Falkner, Jr.1 We understand there is no such person over -there and the one who' sent m the report deceived this paper with a fictitious name and deserves the ebntempt - of the public. A reward trill be given for the real name of the. writer. ; v.; I,'; 'yj?. Pasture seed, mixtures are being slanted on small grain in Burke A - :i:r. J- A a i. ! 1.1 - - 2 ' WaJ r W ss bsm w www n'sj 1 moro .permanent pastures. . .. 4 -.';.' -ji ;.v " ' " Top-dressing small grain - with i ,.it -qicketjnr nitrogen is a sure way to increase yields of grain and hay, aay agronomists. ; ?...'- From LAKE ONTARIO, CAN. The following clipping from a newspaper published! in Can ada is sent usv by Mrs. E. P. Reed, former)yMiss Zola Free man, of Barnard., N. C. Mrs. Ree(d is betftfm&ffa subscriber to the Newa-Kpora ana sne though following item would be of jnferest. We think so too: DIED AS HE TOOK A STEP One of the most mysterious deaths that has every been reported from the inland reaches of Northern On tario, says a report emanating from Toronto, has sifted down from the far outposts.. .Trappert and prospect ors who have experienced the biting life-wasting cold of that section, do not scoff at its possibility. According to the report, an Indian party engaged in running trap-lines in the region of the headwaters of the Attawapiska river, discovered the body of a white man standing bolt upright, with one foot slightly ad vanced as if he was about to take a step when suddenly stricken. The (body was hard as a board and was ifrrm in its unusual position. The In dians found the man's snowshoes were firmly anchored in slusn ice. There were neither marks on the clothing nor anything in the pros pector's sack that would indicate his identity, according to the report. Recovery of the body, cannot be made until summer, it was stated. FAVORSJOSPITAL PRESBYTERIAN MINISTER OF MARSHALL WRITES Marshall, N. C. April 2, 1929 The News-Record. Dear Mr. Story: , i l am pleased to note the interest now being manifested. jconcermngjthe proposed Duke Hospital for. Madison County. ..' I wish to add just a few words a long with the many that are being said and written in its favor. First of all, in the event this hu manitarian proposition is voted down, I honestly believe that every voter against it will wake up to see his mis take before many moons have passed. There is surely no one who questions the motive of the Duke Foundation in donating $37,600.00 to establish a hospital in Madison County on a 50 50 .baais. Then.What is wrong a bout accepnyMVir)ft? There is absolutely ribtveing withheld from the public,'? far as any one can see. There Is nothing underhand a bout it. All Is open and aboveboard; and the fact,vAl the facts that can be obtained, are being placed before the voter. These facts and figures all point one way, And that is to vote yes. i am connaent tne nosprcai win never prove. W.vheviUDuraen, out in every way a blefsing1 tovthe people of Maaison county. ' .v -1' . ir-'WMtT. M. KNOX. FELLOWSHIP CONFERENCE A Fellowship' Conference has been called to meet With the Bantist church of Mars Hill on Friday, April 12, at 11 A. M. All the pastors and leading laymen and women of the French Broad 'Association have been invited to-this meeting, the purpose of which is to foster fellowship and to inereas interest in the denominational pro gram. - This is one of a series of such con ferences that Dr. Charles E. Maddry, Raleigh, general secretary, and Rev. Walter M. Gilmore, Raleigh, mission secretary of the Baptist State Con vention, ' are' s holding at this time throughout; the state. '. "These conferences", says Mr. Gil- TUSCULUM STUDENT LOSES . PURSE IN MARSHALL Mr. Drake, a crippled student at Tnsenlum College, lost a parse in Marshall Wednesday, near leven o'clock. He had about $12 in the parse, ' representing- his savings : for some time. ,- Finder woald show the right heart by returning ' to '-'. ., j THE NEWS-RECORD OFFICE y- ; Marshall, N. C. v - Mrs.' Housewife What makes you t x 1Ja it. . n . m aw v W 114, yiie UIUII WVBV UlViUIUfBi f iMilkman rWell.' you see, the pure food law don't allow- Us more than 25 million bacteria to the gallon, and you wouldn't believe how long it takes te-tount the littWSon-of-agUns. The tFftthiliidr J:.'y.'h.'.- more, "have been well attended, thus far and considerable stimulus has been given to the work of the denom ination." Continuing Mr. Gilmotie says: "The Baptist denomination in the South is now confronting serious problems, the solution of which will determine very largely the future of the .denomination. At these confer ences, these problems are freely dis cussed and every one given the privi lege of expressing his or her opinion or of asking any question in regard to the work. The meeting will last about two hours." COUNTY BUSINESS TRANSACTED MONDAY BOARD OF EDUCATION REORGANIZED Committee Appointed and Other Matters of. Business Attended To Monday was an important day in Marshall. The Board of Education as constituted by the last legislature met and the two new members, Dr. R. L. Moore and Mr. Calvin H. Reeves, were sworn in. Dr. Moore was made chairman of the Board and many petitions and requests were heard before the Board went into executive session. Committees for the schools of the County were named, very few changes being made. In Marshall Mr. P. V. Rec tor was put in the place of Mr. Natt Holcombe, who has moved from Marshall to Mars Hill. Quite a number of people were in town and some one remarked that grindstones were needed, as nearly every one had an axe to grind. The election of a county superintendent will take place the first Monday in May. What the commissioners did we hope to be able to give next week. :THE PUBLISHER'S : ABOUT . THE ELECTION TUESD A Y.i APRtX 9 V - A y called upon to go to the polls and hospital for Madison County." Many is all about anyway, and they wish from start to-finish. This we would be glad to do if we could. T-hatM v. , l a -n i i c i. u i. v m . . , - . . ,. Tlviv1 states will lock in fierce stnf e, best this writer sees it, the doctors of Madison County, as well as 6t J And seek to takp each other's life other counties, seeing the need of such a hospital, have looked around to see haw one may be built and have learned that in recent years, Mr. Duke in his will provides that a certain sum be set aside every, year from the income from certain any with which to aid in the building and maintaining hospitals in communities which saw the need of such hospitals to the extent of helping to raise the amount necessary. It was a benevolent spirit which prompted the gift and a very worthy cause for which it was do- nated. Doctors perhaps rmore than all others are VP a position to know how urgent is the need for hospitals. They see patient after patient die who might have been saved if the proper treatment could have been administered. The patient often would rather die than subject the family to the expense of a hospital bill. If they could know that the county would help defray the expense when necessary, doubtless man cases would consent to go to the hospital who otherwise would not. No one knows quite so well as a doctor the many handicaps a patient undergoes in many of the homes such as are to be found in Madison as well as other counties. Lack of conveniences, cleanliness, and even ordinary judgment in administering drugs or other treat- ment by members of the family, make home treatment not only ineffec- tive, but also very expensive, as it becomes necessary for the doctor in many cases would consent to go to the hospital who otherwise would which a nurse would do at a hospital. No matter how we look at it, sickness is expensive; whether we have hospitals or not and re can . rest well assured that it is coming to all of us sooner' or" later. ' Those who are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak and thishos- tion. Taxes and bonds are words that some sections, and yet we cannot suggest aIy method of raising mon- iT ey for the common good which distributes the burden so justly on all. It is true, no doubt, that some classes of neoule are taxed more than - they ought to be, and the burden to another to some extent. The es is a problem hard to solve, but those, who work hard and deny them- A selves comforts and many good things 4n life in order to get ahead and.?; live independently through life should not bear all the burden for the ;1fn nineteen hundred twenty-six, nnnr. thriftless f nllnte whn mnVnn are two classes of poor, one class which makes no effort to do any bet- ter and the other class who does tho best he knows and in spite of; ail'. his efforts remains poor, due to circumstances, sometimes what is call-. ed luck. The fellow who tries earnestly. to get ahead, who is willingA to work and work to the best of his ability, always faithful and bolty' est, never losing time, using his brain as well as his hands, such A man deserves to be helped when in trouble, and distress. But the fellow who sits around half, two-thirds, fault and never trying to do for himself deserves no help, and perhaps ought not to be helped by a hospitalor any other benevolent institu- that kind of a fellow has to be helped when it comes to a matter of J,:?Ujdtb-newspapers) Don't all those life and death. The Duke 'Foundation comes in to help all the needyr'$PPrs make you tired, my boy? whether deserving or not, as individuals, if the community meets the 1, ?No Jon't r?ad them ''requirements. : e- Madison County has a wonderful proposition, the offer of $37,600 if the county "will duplicate that amount, and in addition to that theH Foundation agrees to pay one dollar ......... pense pi every ' cnanty. patieni. nave you uougnt mis maner - throughT Can you afford to vote against it? ; It so, you do not have ,tn$o and vote. . All you need do is stay at home and your vote count 'against the hospital;! If, however, you think we ought to seize-this ft offer of help While preparing to help others, vote YES, and let's set an example in caring for our sick. j " ( V 'TT DRUG PLANTS IN WESTERN ll NORTH CAROLINA i'at ) nnt eronsrnllv known that 76 percent of all the drug plants cottfCf,' ted hi the United states are gauiw mI in a radius of 100 miles around Asheville. N. C. A famous botanist, Asa' Grav. found more varietie,q(,Umproved it if she had written it this plants on a au-miie eiurouuiwir.iinonin. jieiore renuing it, jiicbdc uw the North Carolina mountains than he found across the northern part of the United States from Massachu setts to the Rocky Mountains. Of the drug materials handled by Asheville dealers, 225 are indigenous to that region, and their sale is the principal source of income of many mountain families. Starting in the early spring, the first to be gathered are Balm of Gilead and Black Willovv buds, followed by early roots, which must be gathered before the sap be gins to flow. Then come a variety of barks and late in the summer, other varieties of roots for medicinal leaves. In the winter these families supplement their incomes by gather ing and selling Galax, Laurel, ferns and other ornamental plants. Formerly only wild plants came into the market, but latterly some va rieties, such as Ginseng and Golden Seal, have been planted and cultiva ted. Some of these plantings.; hya been highly profitable. Ginseng has sold at prices ranging from $6 to $10 or more per pound, and at Bryson City, N. C, R. L. Snelson has report ed yields from Ginseng beds ujM $2,000 per acre per year duringVfc period of five years from planting the seed. In the same region about 250 farmes are growing Golden Seal, their-plantings ranging from a quar teE"6f an acre to four acres each. Re turns over a three-year period have amounted to as much as $5,000 per Rtl Gs , THe success of these plantings sug-v gest - opportunities for further ex pansion and for the cultivation, of other varieties of drug plants.-rThe Southern Field. COLUMN VARIOUS MATTERS special-election Taw vote for tne" bonds: td help of them wish to know, what this us to tell them everything about it I stock in the Southern Power CompA, , " ' . are becoming very unpopular should be shifted from one shoulder rlvcease, matter of proper distribution of tax-' nn effort tn Viavb nnvtbino'. Thnrp and .nine-tenths of his time finding ft a day toward defraying the ex-.I?Paren- , ; . v . .7' Nurse -What ni do voa nav? W 1 A Woman's Prophesy 500 Years Old Some people seem to believe the fpWphetic age passed with the Apos- ues. xiere is a. jjiuyueaj muinai iv years ago by a woman. Read and see if you can suggest how she could have dertake to transport yourself back across five centuries and live when there were no steamships, no steam railways, no sewing machines, no cook stoves, no radios, no automobiles no flying machines, bo submarines and none of the many other inven tions so common today. Now, if you are back there sitting alone, in your quaint old-fashioned dwelling, read this poem and see if you do not think she had a real vision of the future happenings of the world !-J$Iother Shipton was born in Nor folk, England, and died in Clifton, Yorkshire, 1449. Thus you see she died 43 years before Columbus dis covered America. J. H. Phillips, Ashdown, Ark. A WOMAN'S PROPHESY 500 YEARS OLD (Original Mother Shipton Prophesy) "A carriage without horses shall go ; vjftUsters fill the world with woe. i i;n 1 .11 i AOljonaon, rrimrose nui snau oe, Its center hold, a bishop's see. Around the world men's thoughts shall fly Quicker than the twinkling of an eye. And waters shall great wonders do How strange, and yet it shall come true. 'Then upside down the world shall be, And gold found at the root ot tree; Through towering hill proud men tf: shall ride, Nor horse nor ass move by his side. Beneath the waters men shall walk; Shall ride, shall sleep and even talk. And in the air men shall be seen, In white, in black, as well as green. A great man then shall come and go, For prophesy declares it 80. In water iron then shall float As easy as a wooden boat. Gold shall be found in stream or stone Inland that is as -vet unknown. Water and fire shall wonders do, And England shall admit (TftWi The Jew that pnee Was held in acorn, born. t L. . 'I ' A war win foiib with the work: Where dwells the pagan and the Turk And seek to take each other's life. When North shall thus divide the South, The eagle build in lion's mouth, .hen tax and blood and cruel war Shall come to every humble door. Three times shall sunny, lovely France, Be led to play a bloody dance; Before the people shall be free, The tyrant rulers shall she see. Three rulers in succession be Each sprangjfrom different dynasty. Then, when the fiercest fight is done, England and France shall be as one. The British olive next shall twine IH marriage with the German vine. Men walk beneath and over streams Fulfilled shall be our strangest dreams All England's sons shall plow the land Shall oft be seen with book in hand. The poor shall now most wisdom know And waters, wind, where corn did grow. Great houses stand in far-flung vale, All covered o er with snow and hail, And now a word i nuncouth rhyme Of. what shall be in future time, For in those wondrous, far-off days. ifM women shall adopt a craze X0; aress nice men ana trousers wear, 'Aiid cut off their lovely locks of hair. They'll ride astride with brazen brow, A witches ail a broomstick now: Then lovt shall die- and marriages And nations warin as babies decrease. The wives shall fondle cats and dogs, $JaA men live much the same as hogs. "iff' Build houses light of straw and sticks For then shall mighty war be planned, And fire and sword sweep the land. But those who live the century through In fear and trembling, this will do. Flee to the mountains and the dens To, bog and forest and wild fens, Fojtorms shall rage and oceans roar Wiben Gabriel stands on sea and shore r as he blows his wondrous horn, 4wlla atinll Hid nt haw Htt Kami . 'Old Gent (observing boy burdened . .. , " : jjind Lady (to applicant) I am sre you would learn . to love my Nurse What wages. do' you pay Ldy Thirty dollars a month. !NAirse Well, I Could only be gen Ue,'with . them at that price. The pathfinder. .vJ . Lee went to a spiritualist's yes-j k lAoir iri, i snmi ci a Christian : then, be build tfSi4, V. Ss I A 1. . .1 ,,...(. 41 ...X,.- teraay.. - : Paul Any good? . Oh, modtumC I'Z. -it. ' FROM CHAIRMAN BOARD OF EDUCATION Dr. R. L. Moore, who wa made chairman of the Madison County Board of Education Monday, says: I have mistaken the mettle and temper of those who make up the Board of Education of Madison Countv if they are not united in pur pose and desire to secure the utmost efficiency and economy in the manage ment of the schools and to unite all our people in their hearty support. To this end it will be their policy to make all appointments as far as pos sible from among those who are not actively identified with any faction or political or 'business group; to reach all decisions as a body and not as individuals privately solicited, though giving in open meeting all sides a hearing; to consider every school in its relation to a county wide system toward which they will continue to work as rapidly as pos sible; and to impress upon teachers their obligation and privilege to pro mote the social, moral, and religious interests of the communities in which thev teach, for the example and life of the teacher- mean far more than the things they teach. It will not be easy to live up to this standard, and blunders and mis takes will be made; some will be pleased, some displeased; but let all know that they will be dealt with frankly, openlyt with kindness and "firmness in the right a8 God gives us to see the right." Criticism that is sincere and open and constructive will at all times be welcomed. Co operation is craved in an effort to promote confidence one in another, progress in spiritual as well as ma terial development, and a feeling of common interest and obligation, for "we be brethren" twenty thousand strong. ' "All your strength is in your union; All your danger is in discord." R. L. MOORE. April 2? 1929. MARSHALL CHURCHES GIVE SERVICE HOUR TO HOSPITAL ..,DISC.USS1QNt-:-,,; Tteiwd-W0fck. service of the Mar- i ?cr,r?Zr.": z JzrMZ .: ve-& , at the school building to hear Dr. Rankin discuss the hospital proposi tion. Rev. Mr. Umberger had charge of the service, reading, talking, and praying, and the speaker was intro duced by Mr. John McElroy. Dr. Rankin discussed very forcefully the need of such hospitals, the cost and operation. After his speech several quesltions were asked. It was regretted that a greater number of people did not hear his. fine dis cussion. Rev. H. L. Smith and Dr. Knox were in other parts of the county discussing the same matter to other congregations. As adver tised before, Dr. Rankin spoke at several points in the county Wed nesday and Thursday. My Old Gray Coat Out of the legends of Russia comes the story of the old gray coat. Out side the walls of Moscow paced to and fro a sturdy, stalwart soldier of the Czar's guard. He was set to pro tect the life of the Czar from every possible attack. The time was night. Through the lonely hours he kept his faithful "vigil. The night was bitter cold. Then the storm broke. First the rain,' thenthe sleet, then the swift falling snow. He was not fully prepar ed for such exposure. Out of the darkness appeared the form of a Russian peasant. He wore a heavy, gray coat. As he approached the Czar's guard he discovered that .'the guard was without a warm coat. The peasant insisted that the guard take the srrav coat for nrotection dur ing the storm. The guard protested a- (gainst it; tne peasant insistea upon r it. Over the protests of the guard tne , , peasant took off his warm, gray coat .'4 and flung it over the shoulders of the J guard, who paced around the walls of i Moscow unharmed by the wild sleet and snow. , j Just a few rods away was the peas- ant's cottage. He would hurry to his own fireside, and also escape the v storm. But the old gray coat had o t-- warmed his flesh that the cold, cut-, :A ting winds pierced his lungs, and laid , him low with fatal fever. For days he,., raved in dehrum, but just before he passed the portals to his eternal home " he returned to consciousness and said ,- to his wife:"You do not know whom -;; I have seen 1 1 have seen Jesus. And : wonderful to tell, He had on my old gray coat" Then the Russian peas ant went to his immortal home to find Jesus and his old gray coat Certain ly Christ had on the peasant's old ' gray coat, lor it was He who said: : "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these My brethren, ye have done it unto me." The War ' Cry. j : , Quidnunce What became of that play you wrote five years ago? Obfusca The managers decided it was too daring to introduce. Quidnunce Send it on again. Obfusca I did. Now they say it b too tame. The Pathfinder. a 1