PUBLISHERS Gordon H. Greenwood .... Partner George W. Dougherty .... Partner EDITOR .Gordon H. Greenwood CIRCULATION MANAGER ..Mrs. Mel linger Henry SOCIETY EDITOR . .. Mr». Elizabeth Dinwiddie MECHANICAL SUPERINTENDENT . George W. Dougherty LINOTYPE OPERATOR .Roy L. Rutsetl MEMBER WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES Buncombe And McDowell Counties. $2.00 Outside Buncombe And McDowell Counties $2.5u Entered as Second Class Matter September 13, 1945, at the Post Office in Black Mountain North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879 The People Have Spoken! The people have spoken. Indications are that when final tabulations are in more than 55,000,000 Americans will have had a choice through the ballot box of choosing the nation al leaders for the next four years. Of the electoral votes Eisenhower will receive a great majority. The popular vote was closer. Be that as it may, whether we like it or not, the people have elected Eisenhower and he will be inaugurated as President on Jan. 20. The two candidates, Eisenhower and Stev enson are two of the highest type men to run for the Presidency in many years, but the campaign, through no fault of their own, developed into a dog-eat-dog match with noth ing barred, not even the strangle hold and gouging. It was the dirtiest campaign, with more mud slinging than has been seen in many years. How much effect did this type of campaign ing have on the outcome? The NEWS believes very little. We have yet to find a person who believed, truly, that either man was a Communist, that he had set out to wreck the country, that he stood for or approved of Reds in government, or would like to make the United States subservient to a foreign power. All of these arguments may have influenced a few voters, but they were mighty scarce around Black Mountain. What, then, is the answer? How much ef fect did the support of Truman have on bringing about Stevenson’s defeat? What about corruption in government? Korea? High taxes? Charges of waste in govern ment? The five percenters? And dozens of other subjects we heard discussed and redis cussed? Although reams of copy will be written, ana newspapers and books will be published on the subject, no one will ever know for cer tain why the American people swept ouf of office the party in power when the prosperity of the nation was at an all-time high, when personal incomes were hitting new peaks with each new quarter. “It’s time for a change,” the opposition said. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn’t, but after 20 years the spell has been broken and come January next year a new administration will take over the powers of government. Facing the new President will be the same problems that have given Mr. Truman many sleepless nights for the past four years. Much is expected of President Eisenhower who comes into office when the United States and the free world are opposed by the most pow erful foe in all history. He finds us engaged in a war which we are neither able to win nor to lose without spreading the fighting to a much wider area. Indications are that the people will expect him to clean up the mess, as they did Truman, without actually engag ing in an open war. We can’t have our cake and eat it too. What do we want? We expect and we want him to be President of all the people, not just the industrial areas which gave him his margin of victory. Failure of the large cities, which usually go heavily Democratic, to follow party lines, cost Stevenson the election. Eisenhower cracked the traditionally solid South but many states below the Mason Dixon line failed to go with the tide and ran true to form. The South has made more progress in the past 20 years than in the century before Let us hope that the time will never come when we will have cause for regret. This Could Be Their Last! Black Mountain and Swannanoa will meet here Friday afternoon for what may well be the most important game of the year for both schools. Each will be trying to keep alive a winning streak and claim a share of the county crown. Both the Warriors and Darkhorses have run over some of the best teams in this section during the season, and will be attempting to keep the record clean. But the game has another very great significance which many may not realize. Since the teams play on a home and home basis next year’s game will be played at Swannanoa. By 1954, according to present plans, the new consolidated high school will be ready and the two teams will become one Thus, this could be the final game to b€ played here between Black Mountain anc Swannanoa on the football field. For this final game it is fitting that both teams should rank with the best fielded by either school for many years. It’ll be home coming for Black Mountain and graduates and former students are expected back from far and near to help in the observance. Win, lose, or draw, in this final game it has been a wonderful season for both schools. Congratulations. 111113 Raleigh Round-up i f: Predictions — Now that the election is over, let’s take a look at some predictions which were made on the outcome in North Carolina. These have been served up to us during the past few days—and should make interest ing conversation as they are com pared with the actual vote. First of all, there is Lynn Nis bet, pipe-smoking Raleigh re porter for the afternoon news papers. He was one of the few scribes in North Carolina, or any where else for that matter, who predicted that Harry Truman would win in 1948. Size — Here was his forecast last Friday as to the size of the vote: “First of all, there will be the biggest vote ever cast in a state election, going well above the record of 839,435 in 1936 and far beyond the 793,209 of four years ago. The heavy registration re ported during the past month and interest manifested at political meetings throughout the state in dicate a total vote in excess of 900,000. It will be nearer a mill ion, if the physical facilities at the 2,036 voting precincts can accommodate all the people who want to vote.” So said Nisbet with regard to the SIZE of the vote. Now check with your paper and see how his prediction stands up against the facts. Another Nisbet statement: “Chanc' s are there will be many precincts with unserved waiting lines when the polls close at 6:30 Tuesday night.” 125,000 To 150,000 — Nisbet said that Stevenson would win over Eisenhower for President by about 15 per cent of the total vote, the margin to be 125,000 to 150,000. State Auditor Henry Bridges guessed last week that Stevenson would carry' the state by 300,000 votes. With that statement, Bridges put himself out in front as to the margin of Adlai Stevenson’s victory in North Carolina. Attorney General Harry Me Mullan figured the Stevenson lead would be around 10 per cent— or approximately 100,000 votes out of a total North Carolina vote of close to a million. Assistant Budget Director Dave Coltrane, who is still around and doing a good job despite blasts and efforts to fire him by Gov. Kerr Scott, as of last Friday thought the state vote would run around 60-40 for Stevenson over Eisenhower. He was worried about Stevenson on the national front. A Certainty — One thing is sure: Adlai Stevenson was praised, hallowed, and all but sainted by the political leaders who toured North Carolina this fall. We re fer, of course, to the Democratic warhorses. How different from 1948: In that year, Harry Truman was hardly mentioned by anybody. Democratic Nominee Kerr Scott finally got around to whispering his name just before the election. Otherwise, he was dead as a dodo in Scott’s speeches and very much the forgotten man. Why? Because we were all sure that Truman could not win. Might as well ad mit it. This year — because of what happened in 1948—we have not been ashamed of our Presidential nominee. Mainly, however, the Democrats have thought he stood at least a 50-50 chance; and so he has been plugged vigorously by the speechmakers. More Money — As a usual thing, the big money tossed around in political maneuverings in North Carolina comes during the spring as the Democrats square off for the primary. Every four years—and some times in between—we do every thing we can to kill off each other in the Democratic Party here in this state. The blasts which Hu bert Olive’s camp threw at Good Democrat William F. Umstead, and vice versa, were something to behold and much worse than anything the Republicans have said about Mr. Umstead. We don’t recall, however, when as much money was available on both sides as this fall. First and last, and including the primary which led up to the General Election, those millior votes expected Tuesday cost up wards of $1.00 per vote. Another Christmas — In one of his books, Thomas Wolfe wrote something about how Octobei Roams The Land. Christmas is a lot that way; oi is getting that way. According to a survey com pleted last week by the N. C Merchants association, we fine that the Christmas seasor begins in Morehead Citj on Nov. 3. The season roam: from town to town up the state beginning in most places on Nov 28. In Forest City, for instance the Christmas season opens oi Nov. 20; in Raleigh on Nov. 20 in Roanoke Rapids on Dec. 3; ir Taylorsville on Dec. 5; in Albe marie on Dec. 1, etc. Christmas is a local thing; and there is n( effort at uniformity, except thai the day falls on Dec. 25. Other LETTERS TO THE EDITOI Star Route, Black Mountain, N. €. Broad River Township. Mrs. Ann Hubbard, Membership Chairman Elementary School P.T.A. Dear Mrs. Hubbard: As an ex-Teacher of the Rural schools of Broad River Township, am enclosing 25c to show my in interest in the children of my com munity. I am old, past 70. It would not be physically possible for me to attend your meetings and tak< part, stiU I am a well wisher foi our schools. This bulletin was brought to m< by Diantha Vess, 5th grade stu dent. My interest stems back to 1901 when Diantha’s grandfather wa: my pupil, and my last school ir 1923 numbered Diantha’s mother Hope you will accept the 25< and just consider me a friend o: the children. Sincerely yours, MRS. BESSIE LEE ELLIOTT Adopting Child Is Complicated Matter For Kj By Ed Rankin Greensbore, N. C., Nov. 1— Have you been thinking about adopting a child? Maybe you have relatives and friends who have been giving this serious consid eration. If so. you or your friends are in need of expert advice, because the adoption of a child is a com plicated matter these days. A sensible approach to adoption can result in unbounded happiness foi new parents and the child given into their care. Hasty or ill-ad vised adoption methods often bring heartache and possible legal difficulties to childless couples who act before they think. Take the word of an expert, Harriet L. Tvnes, executive di rector of the Children s Home Societv of North Carolina, you should deal only with a qualified adoption agency in taking such an important step. The Children’s Home Society is a volunteer, non governmental agency which has served over 5,000 homeless child ren in North Carolina since 1917. Miss Tynes. a soft-spoken social work who has directed the activ ities of the agency since 1944, has shared in hundreds of these adoption cases. She has advised, assisted and encouraged childless couples across North Carolina in their efforts to have their own family. The demand for adoptive child ren is so great today that an actual “black market in babies” exists, Miss Tynes warns, and there is evidence that operators of so-called adoption agencies are doing business in North Carolina. These unscrupulous people have found that there is big money in “selling” babies to unwary couples who let their fervent and honest desire for a child run away, with their judgement and common sense. Then there is al ways the well-meaning but unin formed “amateur” who frequently tries to do a good turn for a childless couple by handling the “arrangements” between the mother of a child born out of wedlock, for example, and the new parents. Both sources for babies can be dangerous, the Children’s Home director asserted. “If you are seriously interested in adopting a child, go to a thor oughly qualified children’s agency and tell them of your desire,” she declared. “Choose an adoption agency with the same care that you choose a family doctor or family lawyer.” Is the agency fully licensed? (A qualified agency always com plies with all state, federal and local laws.) Does it place child ren near blood relatives? (This is NEVER done by a good agency.) Does it do a considerable volume of adoption work? Has il an established background in the field of adoption? (Make sure the agency is not a fly-by-night.) Will it permit trial placements oi children previously unknown tc the adoptive parents? (This vio lates every sound principle oi modern adoption procedures.! Does it maintain complete records on each case? (Every reputable agency does.) These are all tests to apply to prospective adoptior agencies. POET’S CORNER Conducted by Anne K. Sharp, Chairman, Creative Writing Club KNOWLEDGE I only know the robin brings A breath of spring When first he sings. I only know a tulip bright From winter’s grey, A lovely sight. I only know the first green tree A wealth of joy Enriches me. I only know a baby’s kiss, I’d poorer be Were I to miss. ' For knowledge more, I do not care, But such as this L I gladly share. ; —Peggy Kyle, New Bern branch, Pen Women. Our Creative Writing club finds » that by exchanging poems with ; other groups it broadens our 1 friendships and spurs us on to ‘ even greater accomplishments. ; wise, the season is determined 5 locally and is more or less adapted r to local conditions and habits. One significant note: trend to ward later openings for the Christmas shopping season. Ob servance of Christmas seems to be getting more reverent and in • better taste — thanks to our 1 merchants associations and cham 1 bers of commerce, j Notes — See how the Repub licans of Moore county have made .’ a Little White House available to Ike and Mamie in Moore. Pres j entation was made last week to . counter the Moore County Little ’ White House owned by Adlai Stevenson’s sister, Mrs. Ernest j Ives. Haw! } Did you notice that bank clear , ings in Charlotte during October , ran to a whopping $606,690,585, _ 88? Set a record! Well, one thing; North Caro | lina teams will not be bothered ^ with bowl bids come December. Sale of season tickets to State = college basketball games began r Monday. Season opens on Dec. 2. The Advisory Budget commis s sion, political engagements laid - aside for a season, returns to Raleigh on Thursday, Nov. 6, to 3 resume its discussions on budget s ary recommendations for the 1953 i legislature. We were unable to find a Dem c ocrat here last week who thought { a single Republican would win a congressional seat. Close, yes, they said, but with the Democrats emerging the victors. The Children’s Home executive pointed out that a qualified child ren’s agency will have a working arrangement with competent ped iatricians and lawyers who can advise on medical and legal prob lems involved in every adoption case. This is your guarantee that you will know the exact state of the child's health and that the adoption complies in full with all legal requirements. These are factors which you can never be sure about when you deal with unqualified adoption agencies or bumbling friends or acquaintances who have no knowledge or train ing in this field. “Once your decision is made, and you have selected your agency,” she continued. “be guided by their advice in how to adopt a child. You and the agency need to know each other extreme ly well. The agency will want to know your background, your health, your ability to support a child, your attitudes toward the growth and development of a sound child, and many, many other details. All of this information is necessary in finding the right child for the right parents.” At the Children's Home, where the aim is “a home for the child who needs a home and a child for the home which needs a child.’’ trained and experienced social workers take a personal interest in the application of every couple for a child. A case worker is as signed to get to know each ap plicant and to follow through in all the details of the adoption. Meanwhile, every incoming infant receives a complete physical ex animation and is tested by skilled psychologists to find whether the child has normal average intell igence for its age. A complete case history is prepared, giving all available information on fam ily background and possible hered itary traits. By the time the Children's Home Society decides that it has the right child for the right parents, the couple selected is asked to come to Greensboro where the Children’s Home Society nursery is located in a large, rambling home. This is a tense and excit ing moment for the prospective parents. To some extent, they show the same anxiety, the same trembling eagerness and the same tenderness as natural parents when shown their first infant at the hospital. It is always a policy of the Children’s Home Society to leave the prospective parents and the child in a room alone when they first meet so that the couple can decide for themselves under no pressure or outside in fluence whether this will be their own child. It is extremely rare to find a couple deciding against taking the child they are shown. This is a tribute to the meticulous and personal care with which the Society workers have studied the background of the infant and the background of the couple. It is also a tribute to the thousands of young couples throughout North Carolina, unable for one reason or another to have child ren. who long with all their hearts to give their loving care and at tention to someone else’s home less or orphaned child. wnen mt- wup*v -- child, the baby’s layette is ready and the new parents can take their little boy or little girl home immediately, it generally takes 12 to 15 months lor formal and legal adoption procedures to be completed in North Carolina. The Children's Home case workers keep in close touch with the pat ents during this period and are always available for advice and assistance in any problems that may arise. Since the Children s Home is a licensed and fully authorized adoption agency, there is never a question of losing the infant through legal action of the natural relatives. The Children’s Home Society never releases an infant until it has full legal cus tody of the child. This is one of the pitfalls of hasty adoption procedures. Miss Tynes pointed "out that in North Carolina the laws allow the natural mother of a child to change her mind in the matter of whether or not she wants to keep her child anytime within the first six months after the birth of the child. Regardless what agreement the mother may have signed before or after birth of the child, this would be null and void if the mother decided to take her child back within the first six months. In the case of the Children’s Home Society, its charter from the Legislature en ables it to keep the child only one month before it can have full legal custody of the infant. The demand for adoptive child rcn in North Carolina continues to grow. At the present time there at the Children’s Home' in] M fortunately, the period oi ir I time is increasing. Kaeilit I the Home are limited whii ;'l plications for children an> °i I ing the Society's files ,s, "l!i now should expect to least 15 months from the "f S! inquiry until it can receive child, and it may take longer u, 1 this. * ’N “Regardless of the waiting iod and the very natural for a child,” Miss Tynes sniti - is far better for a couple tn a'1 with a qualified agency and f H low correct procedures rather h take hasty action and fiirt the tragic results which imv , low.” 3 fo> I This advice comes from adoption expert who knows fr experience that the slow wav a0!$. the legal way is always the be I means of adopting a child. j (The anual campaign for f„nd to support the volunteer, nJ| governmental Children’s Society of North Carolina is J underway. The Society receive no tax funds, gives its .servjCe! free to all, and exists entirely o voluntary gifts. During the pJ 49 years it has served over sooo homeless or orphaned babies i North Carolina. If you want help the Society expand its se'’ vices to help additional union, unate children, contribution*. caj be mailed to the Children's Home Society of North Carolina. 745 Chestnut Street, Greensboro C. All contributions can be 4 ducted from federal income taxes Tryon Lowers Seasonal Barriers And Attracts Vacationists Year Around Tryon, resort community in North Carolina’s mountain-ringed Thermal Belt, is pushing back the barriers between “seasons and attracting vacationists in the auturftn, mid-winter and summer as well as during its traditionally popular spring. The Thermal Belt is a peculiar atmospheric condition that tempers both winter and summer, and makes autumn and spring very long. Scenery around Tryon. near the southernmost Appalachians, in cludes rolling farm and hunt country, bubbling mountains streams and waterfalls, and sharp blue peaks such as those of Tryon and Warrior Mountains. The aut umn coloring IS laier man m areas of comparable altitude, fre quently lasting until mid-Novem ber, when the sourwoods, dog woods, oaks, maples, and hickorys blanket the slopes with red and yellow. Giant white pines, box woods, spruce, and red-berried holly provide green for the winter. In the spring, Tryon’s dogwood and laurel turn the hillsides to pink and white, and wildflowers bloom in great profusion along the bridle paths w'hich extend for many miles south and east of the village. Lake i,anier, with a sur rounding cottage colony, is ideal for boating and swimming in sum mer. George Cooksey, president of the Tryon Chamber of Commerce, says that increasing numbers of Tryon’s seasonal visitors are either staying the year around or spend ing as much time as possible at their homes here no matter what the time of year. Cooksey, who with Miss Clara Edwards is co owner and manager of the 85 year-old Oak Hall hotel, put the big white inn on a year-around basis of operation four years ago. Today the hotel attracts “Amer ican plan” guests all year, together with dining room patronage from business, club and social groups from the cities of Rutherfordton, Spartanburg, Greenville and Shelby. Described as a place “where people retire to do things,” Tryon has none of the inertia some times associated with communit ies attracting retired people. Its colony of retired executives have turned their energies to equestrian sports, hobbis, community better ment and small local businesses. And their homes and farms, from simple cottages to elaborate estates, reflect their interest in landscape design, horticulture, and animal husbandry. Many year-around residents of Tryon work in Rutherfordton or Spartanburg; others are assoc iated with the thriving industrial plants located in and around the village. There are still others who are officially “in residence” at Tryon most of the year and com mute by plane or train to their offices in northern or mid-western cities. Late autumn finds the Tryon Riding and Hunt club and the famous Tryon Hounds beginning a season of sport which extends through the winter and officially closes with a round of horse shows, gymkhanas and the famous Block House steeplechase in April. Herbert S. Thatcher, retired tex tile executive who has been secre tary of the Riding and Hunt club for 10 years, points out that Tryon appeals to those who like leisurely rides along scenic trails as well as fox hunters who enjoy the challenge of T-yon’s incomparable hunting country. There are three good stables operated by the well known horseman J. Arthur Rey nolds, as well as many privately owned pleasure horses and hunters. Even those who follow the hounds can ride around the big jumps if they wish. The Tryon Country club is open all year, its nine hole golf course and tennis courts kept in excel lent condition at every season and its swimming pool popular in summer. Many of the inns and cottages - remain open from October through May, or even the year around, and there are also apartments and guest homes open for that long a season or year around. The inn dining rooms offer excellent food. Artists, writers handicrafters, musicians and actors have long found congenial surroundings in Tryon, many maintaining homes here. Sidney Lanier, F. Scott Fitz gerald, Margaret Culkin Banning, H. V. Kaltenbom, John Burroughs, William Gillette and Donald Cul ross Peattie are but a few of the famous personalities who have dis covered Tryon as a place for both work and relaxation. Tryon grapes, famous the world over, are still grown on the sunny slopes of Big and Little Warrior Mountains, but at present the sup ply scarcely meets the demand for table grapes, and the old wineries are not being commer cially operated. The village of Tryon has un usually varied shops and goods for a community of 2,000. You can buy everything from today’s New York Times to tweeds leather goods direct from Eng land; from imported herbs to baskets woven by the mountai; people. There are many beautifj churches, good schools, the Lam» Library, a hospital, and a varie; of civic clubs. Seth Vining hi successfully published the Dai! Bulletin as the “world’s smalls daily” since 1928. I Transportation to and froj Tryon is facilitated by good high ways and direct rail service t( northern and southern points Within a few hours’ drive are the rugged peaks of th£ Great Smok ies, the mountain metropolis of Asheville, the neighboring sum mer resorts of Flat Rock. Saluda and Henersonville, and the v;mtCT resorts of Southern Pines and Pine hurst. Swannanoa Residents The students of the Swam nanoa school will begin next week a circulation campaign to raise funds for use of the indi vidual rooms. Watch the Neivs next week for further and more detailed in formation.