MADISON COUNTY RECORD Established June 28, 1901. FRENCH BROAD NEWS Established May 16, 1907. Contolidatad Not. 2, 1911 THE NEWS-RECORD The paper that tells what tho people in the country as well s those in town are doing. Published TWICE A WEEK tuesdays and Fridays THE ESTABLISHED NEWSPAPER OF MADISON COUNTY MARSHALL, N.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1930 4 Pages This Issue JIB"" YUM yoL. xxix COURT HERE NEXT WEEK THREE MURDER CASES AND QUITE A NUMBER OF LIQUOR CASES ON DOCKET Superior Court will convene in Marshall next Monday for the hear ing of criminal cases. Judge W. t Moore is scheduled to be here, but according to the papers, he is sick. However, it is expected that it will convene as scheduled. Three murder cases are on docket as follows: State vs Cornelius H,g v, m,rlpr of Coates; Mate g 'ti. u; -for the murder of Mc- ( VS tlttl AWV . . oi,iiM. State vs Dewey Kiniey j t W T vatnr and J. " w xr and J. ". Fowler, ch.d ith .; ,. . About cases .n all are on the docket, about 85 of vLh are said to be for violation of the liquor laws. PRIZE OFFERED TO THE HIGH SCHOOL ' an ordi . Tmy believe. ERS OF NATf' Norsoem.o b,livo, that only Attention is called NQRTH ; men cane(i geniuses men of prize offered y ' Qp SCI-j special gifts and special priv CAROLINA AlAU submitted i ilepes ever succeed anyhow. No ENCE for the best es.ay , m t &re to the Acaaemy y - hool student upon a subject - lected by himself within a described fieTdhe prize is a cup and it will be presented to the winner at the com- i . ImT O IltlllU livi o mencemem T - currem. y i The subje ct J lor i are restricted to the neia are iwwiv i curing materials; the content and imposition must be the work of the student. h handg LKarrAcademyby !eCUr:f the North Carolina Academy rsctnt6, Chapel Hill, N. C or from US0L SCIENCE COMMITTEE : . ;.k.m. Chairman, Bert tun""' ' xj r Durham, N. C. ( DEFEAi -11INT HOT SPRINGS QU 1 N T Friday afteoTthe Spnn Creek basketball team came to Hot ring8 with the intention of cap Spnngs score in tunng the big . the tw0 tbirTt wTa trd fought game, teams. It was a nar full of excitement, but the sm Bra Frty. v'" w cSnra ""''""Ltl . Win. ot dtk. bt viaiuv t ,j lift planning to come this Friday. aa a bunch of new tricks and stunte j We are sure that nis PK... be entertaining and we hope . h. . wdl have a large audience. Half of the proceeds go to the benefit of the schooL Admission, 10c, 15c, 25c Everybody come Friday, Nov. 21. J. N. COATS DEAD Mr. J N. Coats, age 57, of Walnut Creek, 'died Monday morning, November 17th, at his home, after a brief illness of heart trouble. He is survived by his wife and several , ,.j Vninnl services were to cnuaren. , be held Tuesday, interment follow ing at the Roberts cemetery. The quality of hay gathered In e.st--ern Carolina thU season will be much above the average due to the excel lent weather for curing. Howevei, the crop will be short, reports N. B. Stevens, of Cumberland county. It must be three years since I saw you last. I hardly knew you-r ou have aged sol" " : w.n T wouldn t hsvo i known you except for that dressr Bootn larkington, famous novelist, j,q has been blind for several year.;. . WHAT IS GENIUS7 - ! Most men and women are con- men of special gifts and special men of special gifts and privi leges who fail, and there are men of mediocre ability who succeed. Anv man nnssesKinc certain essential qualities of mind and n , heart( .f he ugeg them wil, mke be nis mart in tne wuriu uu " cVoSerVv successful m i ti i . 1 - ,1 1J J L These essential qualities 1 set down as Imagination, Purpose, Vision and Good Humor. No man of imagination ever runs in' a rut. Imagination is a creative iacuity. uiven a y. - ft drop of water and n erain of sand the man of imagination will create a worm oi iana anu water. The man of intrepid imagination marks the highest development in the progress of humanity. The ability to see with a spir- itual eye we call Vision. The difference in men is large a dif- ference of vision. To see clear- ly means the task is already half done and the battle half woni Columbus saw a new con- tinent swinging out in propless space before he began his plea for finance. When the storm- 'god walked the waters and -lashed the sea into foam, he persevered because the lure of j.i.4. niiiAK milled him on. Lllttb ikj.w. i Watching a boiling kettle on the coals Watts' vision ran on ahead of the puffing spout and vis- ualized an engine with nerves of steel and breath of steam. life and oeiwiiA " driving towards it we call Pur- tVia unrest way for a - man to reach New York is to I III II ----- i &nd board , train fm dty Should . OIIU 4V.- . V tolro a boat lor Kjuon lie J sometime land in New York, but not in time to accompnsu was, at one time, possible. An impregnable purpose, a death- less resolve, the burning of ev- ery bridge already crossed so that retreat is impossible this sort of resolution will give stability to our dreams. And to smile through it . v. k lner as a genius. T limi iv w.w ... lnt of funny things to relieve the distress of life we will only se? mem. by the side of every ro.r.. lion you may see a . v: .n. maVinr her daily - vnii"i'"'",'- , . will And jester ' King - " - .. whose task is to spread a smile. The world is full of fun but only the man oi gooa profits therefrom. , Franklin Press. to look as though AJ1U l ."- -- the real vanishing American is the TEACHER TRAffflNG CLASS WHAT THE MEMBERS OF THIS CLASS ARE DOING SWEET-PEAS Sweet-peas are one of the most popular annual flowers, because they are of so many beautiful colors and shades. As a cut flower for decora tion there is nothing more adapt able. There are three distinct types of sweet-peas: 1. The winter flowering types. 2. The Spencer type, and 3. The old Grandiflora type. From the middle of November to the tenth of December is the time to bow sweet-peas for the best results. Tf the winter is mild, plants will be gin to bloom in March. Sweet-peas like rich soil and a sun ny place. Prepare the soil well by spading ten inches deep, making fine and loose, and free from stones. Sweet-neas shuold be planted :n rows, six inches apart, covering one inch deep. The plants should be watered well every day. j MAKING MARSHALL BEAUTIFUL j .One thing we might do at this j time of vear, in our campaign for i Making Marshall Beautiful, is to set tvnps alontr our streets and road sides in and near Marshall. Trees along the street in marsna.i and along the roads in the surround ing country would add a great deal to beauty of this section, if properly selected and planted in the proper places. , . rru i,00f kind of trees for this purpose are those of this section or of some section where conditions are very much as they are here. These trees by being adapted to our cli mate and soil, will live better than foreign types of trees Decause ,their being adapted to conditions here. , , Some of the best trees for road side planting in this section are red oaks, sugar maples, American elms, mossycup oaks, American Lindens, white ashes, white oaks, red maple, pin oaks, tulip trees, swamp w. oak, chestnut osk, urn" the various kinds of hickories. Now is a good time to transpi- v,oB trees. We should be Iliuot - v.. able to get a large per cent oi . auie w - ' trees to live at this time if we use in transplanting. tne pi.wc. v - - - we aiiuum j of these trees as possible for this is .... Amnoiirn We should try to set u an important step m uui for "Marshall the Beautiful". WHY PLANTS ARE KILLED IN WINTER Whpn the night irosts tnreaicu - When tne mg self is not the enemy of plants, and - 11 I. I t in, I ) I i CanYouTellWbatThisM Tl.r TCtMft and youTl be wrong each time.. It's merely a suming V?o7 tKww River bridge Philadelphia taken trom a most Mual angle does not force them to give up their leaves. But it is the soil which stops their growth. Each plant demands, besides moisture and soil salts, a definite soil temperature. Plants do not die from cold as from moisture, ice, and the winter's sun. The changeable autumn cli mate which goes suddenly from cold to rain and back to sunshine does not permit the wood of the trees and shrubs to become sufficiently mature. They are soft and full of sap, after a moist summer, and are not ready for the resting period. Their shoots have not become hardened. The sun may be considered as an enemy of the plant during the win ter. ()n warm days it induces a flow of sap which will freez dining the night, therefore causing the riant to die. MAKING MARSHALL BEAUTIFUL Now is the time lor us to tiegin 1.0 plant trees and shrubs. A town cannot lie beautiful unless it has shade trees and shrubbery. ;Man in developing his civilization destroys many of the natural beau- ties iounu ueiuiu in.-. ii'""b - regions of his greatest activities 'there is the greatest destruction. This is done to make room for his farms, roads, railroads, villages, towns, and cities. In spite of his excessive destruction of natural growths, he loves shade and growing plants and will make a great effort 4... atw trees and shrubs where he can enjoy them in his every-day fffe as a partial substitute for what ne iiao uivj In order that the benefits accruing the primitive man from his associa tions with these things shall not be lost to the people of the present day, it is necessary painstakingly to sub stitute plants for those that have been destroyed. To do this, plants must be moved continually from one place to another; building sites need to be made beautiful; parks are to be developed; country roads require , j-. otiH small fruit plan- snaue, uiu - tations are to be established; forest I tations aie w .i tKi;0i,orl and Dlants must De reeoi.o"""1"'"! ed t0 satisfy such de- I mands. T.aniTitinc should take place in th fall or spring time, whenever the ground is not too wet. Nature has been good to us to pro :a with so many different kinds 4 trppa and shrubs. Most of them .... IV I can be easily transplanted into the, ," " - , , where they are needed. trees in his own yard. Argentine President . iHnimmr"irfi General Jose Evaristo Urtburu, who led Argentine revolutionists to victory artd, has been chosen head of the South American nation.' :0NE0F : : THE MOST : INTERESTING : One of the most interesting advertisements we ever read was found in an exchange coming to our desk this week. This particular advertisement contained the names of fourteen citizens of Lhe community where the paper is published and fol- lowing each name was an a- mount due to a local merchant and that apparently was not collectable by the merchant. A creditor's association had insert- ed the advertisement and offered .oio. tw iudcrments thatjiad been secured against the citi- , zens. What a bombshell would be exploded throughout the nation if in every town judgments were secured from people who i i w.. -niirrViHses and who JlttU I had refused to pay just obliga- tions-and then these juagme.. were published in the local pa- pers. Many are going at such a rap- id pace and a host of people liv- beyond their means that some such a jolt may be necessary to bring men and women to a sense of their responsibilities in the matter of credits and debts. Many a merchant has gone v v.tviirvtrv because the man he has aided with credit has disregarded honest obhga- tions Vnrtr TYianV HI tniS JOmillulliujr How many .f , the merchants placed accounts in the hands of a collection a- eency, secured judgments and published them? Probably the shock would be too great for any community if such a plan were adopted in a wholesale manner. KOCK mil w ' Herald. - Columnists in Italy are not allowed to crack jokes about the army. A man by the name of John Hole in Detroit sjgns name by making a "J" and then punch- ing a hole in the paper. The owner of a gymnasium in New York, which caters to prize fighters only, paints sunsets and flowers in his spare time. It remained for the Lions Club to take up the protection of pigeons in an Ohio town. The Pathfinder. Million Year O 1 d Secrets Psychologists of the future will, perhaps, make synthetic gentlemen of all ofus. If anybody could discover the peculiar mineral and at mospheric conditions that grow Kentucky blue grass, he MARSHALL : CAR STOLEN When Miss Stella Carver went to her garage one morning lat week she found the door open and her new Ford gone. She was fortunate e nough to find it nearby with only some accessories removed. The rob bers had tried every way they knew to make the car run without the key, and had pushed it oir on the side of the road and abandoned it after fail ing to make the electric connections necessary to make it run. Miss r.iirver was much pleased to find j they had not been successful in car jrying it away. might breed elsewhere the blue Wooded horses that, in winning so many classic con tests hriner urlamor to that hilly State. It is possible that some day somebody, through the sci lentific employment of heat and the chemical and geological elements that abound in the neighborhood of Kimberley, may be able to reproduce the quality of African diamonds. The mi'llion year old secret of molten rocks and paraffin which have made Pennsylva nia crude oil superior to an other lubricants for man's machines may be solved in time so that baser oils may be refined to match it. The something that makes South Sea Island pearls and French champagne supreme Mn.r fM.anfublKr Vi n Vnmun tn 1 . . the laboratory worker ana passed on to the industrial world. But none of these things is likely to happen. The thor oughbred is still one of the mysteries of nature and prob ably will be always. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB MEETING The Home Economics Club of Marshall High School held its monthly meeting in the department. This meeting opened with the song, "America". The program cen tered around a very worthy subject, Health. To the roll call, each u v,wi urifli o health ril 1 p. llieiiiuei wioncicu 1 - Afterwards the topic, now a uiri Should Live the Twenty-Four Hours a Day," was discussed by Belva Farmer, Elizabeth Ramsey, Jeanne o a-nA Kntf Gwaltnev. A opt lunii - v,ui, ennor was rendered by Mary UCOlUl """ft " - Rudisill, Lillian Worley, Ruby Smith, Elizabeth Shelton, r ranees fuc, Nell Roberts, and Mary Faulkner. Lastly, the club formulated the following health rules to be observed for two weeks. 1. Drink six or eight glasses of water a day. 2. Drink one glass of water be fore breakfast. 3. Drink two glasses oi muK a day. 4. 5. 6. 7. Brush teeth twice a day. Sleep nine hours every night Eat two vegetables each day. Take a bath at least twice a week. ' 8. Eat fruit at least once a aay. 9. Exercise in fresn air. 10. Have bowel movement once a day. j Each member of the club made an individual chart consisting of these rules. For the next two weeks each member should have carried out these rules. ." t It is desired that these rulea will be observed not only by th Horn Economics Club, hut by everyon In terested in hia own health. ; - ' pedestrian. Ex. . Ex.