IS3B:'
I Mrs, Doyle Alley, of Waynes- I
vJjje. was here yesterday. I
* *
Miss Anne Cowan is the guest I
0/ Miss. Miriam Evans in Ashe- I
* * *
Mrs. Harry Hastings and Har- I
H $ Jr., left Wednesday for a visit I
H ^ relatives at West Jefferson. |
* * * I
Mr. and Mrs. r. e. Freeman, I
of Coryrion, Indiana, are visit-' /
relatives of Mrs. Freeman I
H * * *
Miss Irene Cathey, of Ashe- f
ville, spent the week end here I
with her sister, Mrs. M. Buchan- I
Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Denny, or
^shville. Tenn., are spending
(he week in Sylva with Mrs.
I Denny's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
I H. Stein.
*
Miss Lilly Henson, who has
I been a nurse in the Community
Hospital for several years, left
this week, for her home in
I *
I 'Dr. and Mrs. Charles Z.
I Candler, Miss Margaret Candler,
I ;j;5. J. R. Ryan and children,
I have returned from a vacation
I at Nag's Head.
H Mr. and Mrs. Olin Williams
nave returned to their home in
Harriman, Tenn., after a visit
with Mrs. Williams' parents, Dr.
and Mrs. D. D. Hooper.
I
I Mrs. Charles Reed, Charles Jr.,
I and Miss Wanda Jo Dills have
I returned from a week'fc stay at
I Myrtle Beach, S. C., and Mt.
I Olive. Mr. Reed remained in Mt.
I Olive for a longer visit.
I * *
, Mrs. J. S. Williams of Fletcher,
and Mr. and Mrs. Furman Williams
of Canadian, Texas, have
returned to their homes after a
visit to Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Freeze.
9 *
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Jones
and children have returned
from a visit to Mr. Jones' sister,
Mrs. Fred L. Edwards, and
Mr. Edwards, in Bluefield, West
Virginia.
?
Mr. Coleman Luck arrived
from Texas, last Thursday for
a visit with relatives. He was accompanied
by Mr. Walter Howard,
who spent the night here,
enroute to Walnut Cove.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Parker, Mr.
Crawford P Shelton and Mrs.
John L. Hyatt visited their
cousin, Mrs. C. E. Ray, who is
critically ill at her home in
Waynesville, Sunday.
* * *
Mr. J. will Jordan, of Suffolk,
Va., Mr. M. D. Cowan, Mrs. Mary
Cowan, and Mr. Frank Cowan
have returned from Dandridge,
Tenn., where they were guests
Iw Mr. and Mrs. George Zirkle.
Lieut, and Mrs. Mack Fowler,
and their little daughter arrived
on Monday for a visit to Mrs. W.
M. Fowler. Lieutenant Fowler is
stationed a t Barnard River
Naval Base, in Florida.
Mrs. Charles H. Derry and
Miss Mary Anne Derry left on
Wednesday after spending some
time at the Freeze House. Mr.
Deiry has recently been appointed
United States Consul at
Sydney, Australia.
t * *
Rev. and Mrs. J. Gray Murray
| and children, Dorothy and Gray,
will arrive Friday from their
home in Cary, for a visit with
I friends here. Mr. Murray was
Pastor of the Baptist church
I here for a number of years.
Mrs. O'Dell Bankhead, who is
spending some time here with
I hpr w?
I?' parents, Dr. and Mrs. A. S.
Nichols, was the guest last week,
Highlands, of Mrs. Will Craig
?f Chester, S. C., whp is spending
the summer there.'
* * *
Miss Margaret Martin has arrived
from Rock Hill. S. C. to
up her duties as Jackson
Aunty's Home Demonstration
aSent, and is occupying an
apartment in the Roy Allison
I 0Ine' on Hampton street. She |
*as accompanied to Sylva by i
I er brother, who is spending a >
Mrs. Herbert Bryson, of Wash- j
ington, D. C., is spending some |
time here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy C. Allison.
Mrs. Mary Cowan and Mr.
Frank Cowan are visiting rela- *
tives in Asheville and Old Fort. *
* 11
c
Mr. and Mrs. Gerson Dillard
and children, Mary Lou and
Jane, of Uniontown, Ohio, are
guests of Mr. Dillard's mother,
Mrs. Tabitha Dillard, at her
home here. They were accompanied
by a young friend, also of
Uniontown.
, c
Mrs. Maurice Carleton and v
young son, Tom, are spending to
some time with Mrs. Carleton's *
mother, Mrs. Eugenia Allison, t
and her . sister, Mrs. John H. to
Morris, in Webster. Mr Carleton,
wh0 accompanied his family to t
Webster, has returned to his a
home in Haines City, Fla. r
* v
Mr. and Mrs. John Le Deen, J
of Austin, Texas, were guests of f
Mrs. j_.e ueen s uncie, Mr. m. u. X
Cowan, as they passed through
Sylva on th^ir honeymoon trip.
Mrs. Le Deen was formerly Miss
Elizabeth Cowan, daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. G. N. Cowan, of
Rocky Mount.
MRS. BRYSON RESIGNS ^
FROM HIGH SCHOOL
?
Mrs. Herbert Bryson, who has ~
been teacher of English in Sylva
High School for the past several
years, has resigned, and Mrs.
Kermit Chapman has been
elected to fill the vacancy, the
Journal learned today. Mrs.
Bryson will remain in Washington
with her husband, Lieut.
Herbert Bryson, wh0 is stationed
there.
National Forest Timber
Fot Sale
Sealed bids will be received by
the Forest Supervisor, Franklin,
N. C. up to and including August
18, 1941, for all the live timber
marked or designated for cutting
and all merchantable dead
timber located on an area embracing
about 360 acres within
Bad Creek Unit, Chattooga River
Watershed, Jackson County,
Nantahala National Forest,
North Carolina, estimated to be
460 M Feet B. M., more or less, of
yellow poplar, northern red oak,
white pine, oasswooa, cucumoer,
white oak, black oak. chestnut |
oak, red maple, birch, scarlet j
oak, pitch pine, chestnut, and I
hemlock timber and an unesti- I
mated amount of chestnut ex- !
tractwood and tanbark of chestnut
oak and hemlock. The removal
of the extractwood and
tan bark is optional with
the purchaser. No bid of less
than $10 for yellow poplar; $8
for northern red oak, basswood
and cucumber; $7 for white oak;
$5 for white pine; $2 for chestnut,
black oak, chestnut oak, red
maple, and birch; and $1 for
scarlet oak, pitch pine and hemlock;
50c per unit (160 cu. ft.)
for chestnut extractwood, and >
$1.50 per ton (2000 lbs ) for tanbark
of chestnut oak and hemlock
will be considered. $250.00
must be deposited with each bid
to be applied on the purchase
rofnnHpH nr retained in
pi il/Cy 1 V/l UAAVAVVft .
part as liquidated damages, according
to conditions of sale.
The right to reject any and all
bids reserved. Before bids are
submitted, full information concerning
the timber, the conditions
of sale, and the submission
of bids should be obtained
from the Forest Supervisor,
Franklin, North Carolina.
Bout of town m
printers pay |)]|
no taxes here 1
LET US DO YOUR M
PRINTING IBB
PERSONAL
Ginnit ? t?ll Paul to tu? hi*
headl Tell him you're going
to do better with your baking
from now on ? since you've
learned about Rumford Baking
Powder. Now you'll bake
him all the oakes and hotbreads
;0 on fnnd of. For with Rum
lie lo uv ? ford
you can use any good
recipe without worrying about
how much baking powaer you
ought to use. The amount the
directions call for ? that's the
amount to use of Rumford for
perfect results. FREE. Send for
new booklet, containing dozens
of bright ideas to improve your
baking. Address: Rumford
Baking Powder, Box R Rumford,
Rhode Island.
I
\
THE JACKSON C
-1 i ?
Presbyterians Will Use
Episcopal Church Herfc
It has befen announced that
he recently organized Presbyerian
church in Sylva will hold
ts services in St. John's Episopal
Chapel, until such time
,s the congregation erects its
wn building.
BALSAM NEWS
By Gertrude Ruskin
Three cheers for the Jackson
ounty school board! Ground;
/as cleared Monday for our new
irick school house. Buchanan
Jrothers, who got the bid expect
o have the school completed
y November.
The Rev. Oscar J. Beck and
wo assistants, Ralph Bradley
,nd Frank Gunter, have been
ecently conducting a two
/eeks' revival at. Rnrlrpr's Pr?plr
Sunday afternoon, July 20, a
aptisimal service was adminisered
to several couples In
barker's Creek. It was a sueMADE
FRESH DAILY
'A Quart For A Quarter"
CO I
V
A
f
JN a gr
Ford R
for Ameri
full produ<
under con
lanti, Mid
blies will
175 a mo
staff cars,
trucks for
i
R
V OKALIR AOV?HTI?eMB*T
i
r t
v 'IV - ?. j :
* I"
! \
i :
OUNTY JOURNAL, THURSDAY;
cessful revival the Rev. Mr.
Beck said.
I.
Everyone has been asked to
bring or send their old and
worn out aluminum ware to
George Knight's store. Maryr
people have responded and the
pile continues to grow. George
is storing the aluminum in the
cellar of the Middleton cabin,
near by.
Mrs. W; D. Shields and her
tw0 children have rented the
Robertson's cabin for the summer
so that they can be near
the Walter Noyes, Mrs. Shields
father and mother. Her husband,
Lieutenant W. D. Shields,
has recently been sent to Greenland
for temporary duty in the
Coast Guard.
Miss Mary Moore, principal of
Girl's high school in Atlanta,
Georgia, has just returned to
her summer home hfcre after I
? ', .>7*.
I. CHIROPI
DR. M. E.
Consult me about your bac
illnesses. They ???e things ths
treat
2 DAYS A WEEK ?
TUESDAY AN1
IN. "LEADER BU
.n} * 4
i t..
Natioi
MM Jfe JSk ST1
mes r
.
I .
eat new $35,000,000 taci
i {
ouge Plant, military airph:
ca's fighting forces will ?
:tion. In another huge Ford
struction at V/illow Run,
t '
h., big bombers and bom
be produced at the rate of
A.
nth. Army reconnaissance
big army trucks, and be
the air corps have air.
I
* i *
i
i j
.. i
r
eese-Ham
JULY 31, 1941
chaperoning a group of outstanding"
boys and girls from
DeKalb and Fulton county high
schools, to the National Education
Association i n Boston,
Mass. The trip was given by
radi0 station WATL of Atlanta.
Miss Ellen S. Koch, teacher in
Newark, N. J. is with Miss Mary
Moore, in the cabin which they
built together at Balsam. They
are certainty- proving the statement
that "North Carolina is
one state where the South and
North .. take time out to say
'Howdy VVr They spend many
quiet months together every
summer in their hilltop cabin.
ah nf thp. cabins at Balsam
are either rented or the home
owners are enjoying them. The]
Mountain Springs Hotel and the
Balsam Lodge are doing a good
business. '
FACTOR |
, WELLS I
kaches, Sciatica, and chronic j|
it Chiropractors specialize in ?
tog. |i
Office Hours 9 to 6
> THURSDAY >
ILDING, Sylva |
.r A;
ial De
irst?
#
r; . ' i:A V
v*
H** "31
Iir 'f
Tlie Ford
; is in high g
. of these rec
| that at the
tory at; tfie done, Ford
ne engines meet the g
; ,.V
soonever built. .
Plant, e'rs are wc
near Ypsi- deliveries f
her assemmore
than ^ ^this. At
cars, army ^ u f (
)mb-service
jady rolled And . . *
pton Mote
? ' v.-. 1 . 1
* 'v; :
' tm
... . ... *
When
you feel well. Jt is misery when you don't
Have you ever dragged through a day made minerahle
by a Headache, Neuralgia, Muscular Pains or Functional
menstrual Pains?a day when only your sense of duVjg
kept you on the job?
. i.? A . M Mill
Dr. Miles Anti-Wain Kills
asaaQy relieve Headackes. You will find them effective
also in the relief of the other nagging pains mentioned
above.
prompt acting pain re- 11s Tabktm.
lievers may save ymi
hours of suffering.
/? ii lBii IJySflllK'
Umi f?ll dinette**
tm pwktc*.
B to 161 B B ml jflll
aBW I H V|v VV
/ -V .
rith Ford
k r * *
: y
v-I ' . I
nd we're glad
does^
** *
t . . " *'?
>" v
' )
";'-4
i from special Ford assembly lines.
national defense production program
3ar, setting records for getting things
As Ford dealers we're mighty proud
ords. And we're glad to report to you
same time the defense job is being
is working with all its capacity to
reat demand for the finest Ford car
And for you, our customers, we deab
>rking overtime to see that you get
ast. : - \ J<
" i'r
defense comes first with Ford .;. and
: the same time ... we can still give
leal on a big car right now.
' Mii t
Now Is The Time to Buy! ij ;;;!
r * ' I 1
f .. . ,
V
V ' '
i
ir Company
.
y *