;? -r-; " ~ "J: : ^ 0 r fir First, Sec tea"'1 all the POLK COUNTY ? The Gateway ?f Western North Carolina Tryon, N. C., July 9, 1925 An Independent Weekly Published in an inde dendent part of these United States. Five Cents Per Copy $1.50 a Year jSflULS OVERRATED; REALLY A WAR JgOlEER OFFERS ANSWER TO TANGLE . p8ier Development, Made Important for Political "CC pointed Gut By Smithsonian Expert Who Has Made ilS close Study of Existing Conditions. appear to be suc^ a colossus of power and pie ^ if Dr. Samuel S# Wyer, noted engineer of ,? 1 js correct iu his appraisal. Meanwhile it i:'~" ;s one of the greatest engineers of the age p,:e>; ' (,,-uo way or the other in Muscle Shoalg ex L. ? Muscle ?/?s all v . ? country ?yjOlirO'" the VJVt ' k pOiitiO iclieve; -rategic "f elei> *Tangle being aired in federal courts Fili On I Ordinary Folks jkl It's All About. De- | fU ad Judges disagree. Ju^p .Mcl v'i.'iiii k. at Los j Bieciarc s tiu- o'UTimieut's Doiieiiy and that | Hardiu.- exceeded the 1 fcieiutivi- discretion in I tte matt m the na si:: ii1 iiit' mtt rior de- I \u?) tuii.es Federal ?[ l iifv r nue, and uP n ftt l?uiuv affair with the Harding j ifpii. With identical j avu/'fi I .11 the two cases !&? Court can uu- j ir? hviid its temper. j jjtiir t-uonuity of the lapther with the politi- ' is.- eases have had up- j U^y,? these, combined . i apprehensions regard. ! ;-'>jt!,>uv generally, | Dcoif aud fcllk Hills af_ | L.-fj .iu unwarranted Im uiy opposite decis- j I in the etxreme to the j s should tic remembered ! r siiiiv u.mrt often re- j ?iJiii in these cases j 14' appeal, in the result : majority ni people have ! lit! SURPRISE 10 IIKfOillS HERE Ifapr. Son ot Mr. and Mrs. iojef. Weds Miss Flossie Has been Member ol Clapel Hill Faculty >y-'- f notice was 2. ? ?? ? observer <*-?: A.i. particular i 1 wIlu have I iJi.i'-:..- : ' ?acliouL his j L???. - Vit-_ i'.aA-i. lot Wy- ^ '4 UUti V . * ' K'-.< ? ? F1 ' tred to ?- r offiei ? as used. 'Tt'inony ! : by au ? , where l I'll where I summer ' ! ? r of the j . ali<] Ikrri, ilr. ? '!?'? past - duugh i'aiHell. ' '? ive tak Sdf-H . ' ' ' -I al v hut 4 lj !?. l , ; ? "H' dur ? ii, j visit | I^ti ,.f ' ?> for the to j *V center % *..,/* 1 !f-morial , Manse 10 laa^.. . ' '"-'tupied ; ' *fjrk ljMi ' ?''' i he new 1 1 ' u r?- mi . , , I S'W,. Probab J : October. 1?^ h>. ' the rVdki'i';;;'iai> rai3ed V 'D a tricity can be depended upon at Mus cle Shoals, says Dr. Wyer. Com paring the development with others, ' he adds: It would take 35 Muscle Shoals to equal one Niagara Falls. It would , take 250 Muscle Shoals to equal the undeveloped water powers that can be easily developed in the United ^tates. It would take 400 Muscle I Shoal8 to equal the stationary horse i power now in use. It would take j more than two Muscle Shoals to i v.qual the Colfax steam station of j the Duquesne Light Company 12 I miles north of Pittsbourgh." When the Wilson Dam, part of the ' project, is completed thia year, the United States will be in the position j of having $49,000,000 invested in a ; plant without provisions for trans mission line8 and market, according to the engineer. "That is," continues Dr. Wyer, The Muscle Shoals power project will be all dressed up and no place to go." "On the basis of leasing the Mus cle Shoals plant, it will be impossi ble to secure rental Large enough to wipe out ultimately the investment. N0 one but a fool would agree to pay a large enough rental that would ultimately wipe out the money that nag gone into the project. "On the basis of seliling the Mus cle Shoals plant, it will be impossL ble to get a bid the bitterness and agony and suffering engendered. But mos t of all he stressed the sacrifice (f the man who came back shattered in nerve and body to take up tqe battle of life where he had left |t under a terrible handicap. Thetie j men, said Mr. Pless^ are the re*l j heroes of the war. Music by a twenty piece band enfl j ing in the' strains of the National ; air accompanied the unveiling of a memorial which wil] stand as a me- . mento of the heroic deeds, not on y of those Polk County boys wt.o died in France, but of every son )f the rugged mountains who saw ser vice under the Stars and Stripes j when the nation needed them. Dinner on the grounds followed | and the afternoon was given over to the renewing of old friendships and the making of new ones^ and the enjoyment two sizzling ball games between Greens ' Creek apd and Columbus aU(j Saluda and Co lumbus which the county seat bo^s lost. The first game going to Green Creen by a score of 9-G and tie other to Saluda 13-8. Columbug was gay with bunting and everyone present seemed to en joy themselves to the , limit ? and over. With it all order prevailed and everybody went home pleased with their celebration of America's greatest holiday. Mr_ Dan Ledbetter, or uree, nio ! tored to Tryon last Saturday and I after a brief visit with friends at I tended the celebration at Columbus. \ o MILL SPRING MEETING OF POLK COUNTY CLUB 1IILY 21st Through a typographical error; it was stated in the last issde of (jhe NEWS that the next meeting of the Polk County Club would be held at Mill Spring on the first Tuesday in July instead of the third Tuesday in the month as provided by the by. laws. ^ The meeting under the auspices of the ^Masonic Lodge at Mill Spring will be held on t^ evening of July 21 at 8 p. m, and an effort is being made to make it a Joint meeting of the Rutherford County Club and the J Polk County ClnJ). Mr. Price, Edttor of the Ruth r ford Sun and chairman or tii. ; r gram committee of the Ruthern r.i County Club is working with repre sentatives from Polk County to per i feet such an arrangement.