Newspapers / The Sylva Herald and … / Aug. 18, 1943, edition 1 / Page 6
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Subscriptions Just Received Subscriptions have been received from the following, up to Monday noon. (The Herald has no subscrip tion solicitor and asks that all sub scriptions be brought to the office^ "or mailed.) S. W. Enloe, Dillsboro. B. E. Harris, Sylva. G. K. Bess, Sylva. T. J. Painter, Sylva. C. Z. Candler, Sylva. J. F. Corbin, Sylva. E. E. Tobert, Whittier. Love Dillard, Sylva. John N. Ashe, Webster, Lewis W. Bumgarner, Norfolk, Va. Jesse Claybo, Cullowhee. O^ady Claybo, Cullowhee. Roy Ensley^ Sylva. W. A. Robinson, Baltimore, Md. Delia Cowan, Greens Creek. M. A. Plemmons, Sylva. R. G. Seago, f Speedwell. S. A. Carden, Sylva. D. L. Oxner, Whittier. Oscar H. Cabe, Dillsboro. Hubert Blanton, Whittier. O. L. Lanning, Glennville. A. H. Bryans, Glennville. T. F. Buchanan, Greens Creek. Ed Fisher, Sylva. C. B. Queen, Dillsboro. Sherman Davis, Sylva. t J. A. Moore, W frittien ? ? Sylva Insurance Agency, Sylva. Dorothy Queen, Portsmouth, Va. Mae P. Stallcup, Whittier. R. U. Sutton, Sylva. W. E. Pettit, Sylva. W. H. Smith, East La Port. Herbert Gibson, Sylva. Herbert ? Gibson, ? Jr 7, ? Middle . Itiver, Maryland. Lt. R. L. Ariail, Jr., U. S. Army, San Francisco, Calif. J. T. tlribble, Sylva. Z: V. Parris, Sylva. Theo Dills, Newport News, Va. Sgt. W. L. Wilson, /U. S. Army, 'Camp Haan, Calif. Ac. Lewis Wilson, U. S. Air Corps, Erskin College, Due West, S. C. * . Sylva Tire Co., Sylva. J. Claude Allison, Sylva. Luther H. Baker, U. S. NVfcNew /York, N: Y. % r H. sT. Hunter, Cullowhee. * J. Of Frizzell, Webster. V ?, T, McGinnis, Sylva; Cpl. James C. McConnell, U. S. Army, Camp Phillips, Kansas. Pvt. Charles C. McConnellJ^U. S. Army, North Camp Hood, Texas. Carl Corbin, Sylva. ^ J. N. Bumgarner, Sylva. E. J. Bumgarner, Fountain City, Tenh. . * ^ .K _ John S. Rogers, CuHowhee.v Blaine Nicholson, Cowarts. ' J. K. Terrell, Whittier. Claude Jones, Sylva. J. W. Reed, Sylva. CORSICA LOOMS AS U. S. AIR BASE AMIIJIWOC" WMb* GERMANY THI ISLAND or CORSlCAtaktn from the French by the Axis, will make, an exfceUent bai lor Allied air operations against -northern Italy should the Germans set up a defense line along the River Po. Sard m a would have to be taken before Corsica could be occupied and used for that purpose, but Allied bombers taking off there (1) would fly oniy 200 miles to Turin (2), Milan and the Po.- Brenner Pass (3) is only 320 miles northeast^frozx) Corsica and planes beading there could carry heavy bomb loads. fjvt^mnVnvnf) Mrs. W. P. Kitchens, Whittier. i John Coggins, Erastus. R; L. Watson, Cullowhee. ? ?? ? ? Elzie M. Stewart, Glennville* T. C. Fisher, Glennvitle. - ? i V J. S. Higdon, Sylva. V John R. Jones, Sylva. Sam P. Cogdill, Sylva?^ ? Av J. Dills, Sylva. * Jesse G. Dills, Cullowhee. > Walter Bradley, Whittier. Bruce Clements, Whittier. Perry Parker, Sylva. j -T. L. Wike, East La Port. J. R. Messer, Whittier. Mary Queen, Whittier. Hubert' Ferguson, Whittier. ' ,J. W. Keener, Sylva. Ben N. Queen, Sylva. Emitt H. Blanton, U. S. Army, Camp Carson, Colo. Carl Hoyle, Whittier. Bell Cabe, Greens Creek. Leila Evans, Webster. J. T. Bird, Sylva. John C. Morris, Sylya. Sterling Melton, Argura. _ Frank Crawford, Sylva. Ralph Hunter, East La Port. R. B. Mikels, East La Port. Claude Stanford, Sylva. Elzie Bumgarner, Sylva. Carl Smith, Sylva. S. C. Cogdill, Sylva. H. Hayse Hooper, Glennvllle. In these uncertain days if you do not know what to count on you can still count on your fingers. The location of hell has never been determined but there is much evidence that it is close by. " 1 "N" Eat Salads for Vitamin A By BETSY NEWMAN IF THE family is home for lunqhf ,m*J^e Jk large salad the piece de resistance of eai, Today's Menu - Breakfast Orange Juice or Tomato Juice Cereal Milk Toast Jam Coffee Luncheon Salad Bowl Cheese Dreams Fruit Milk Dinner Ham Loaf Broiled Peach Halves Baked Sweet or Irish Potatoes Carrot Sticks Sptnach with Tomatoes a Lemon Chiffon Pie Coffee Cheese Dreams Sliced bread Sweet onion American Bacon cheese Prepared Paprika mustard Toast slices of bread on one side, butter untoaste<f*side and arrange slices of cheese on butter. Spread lightly with prepared mustard if liked, ana aprin^t^wg^h papri ka. Place slices sweet* onion and minced uncooked bacon over cheese, arrange sandwiches on broiler rack, toasted side down, and broil under medium heat about 6 minutes, until bacon is crisp and cheese starts to brown. Ham Loaf ^*4 lbs. ground Vfe c. evapo ' smoked ham rated milk % lb. ground *4 tap. cloves pork 1 tbsp. brown 1 c. crumbled sugar corn flakes 1 egg Mix corn flakes, egg, vugar and clove# together ; add milk and ground meat and work well to gether. Pack in 2-pound loaf pan and bake at 300 degress F., for 1 hours. Serve hot or cold. This recipe will make sufficient loaf for 6 to 8 servings. Two-Day Family Fued - Ended In Fatal Shooting (Continued from Page 1) shooting Mrs. Daves and son, James, and that he then shot Mc Call with a shotgun. The investigation made by of ficers and a reporter from The Transylvania Times at the scene xjf-tfre shootings revealed- that trou ble between the McCalls and Daveses had .been brewing since last Sunday ? afternoon. The first controversy, it was stated, develop ed over a matter involving a son of Harley McCall, Walter and James Daves. Another argument was said to have been over a ques tion of "dividing blackberries." Between Sunday afternoon and Tuesday afternoon several fist fights between various members of both families are alleged to have taken place. Wounded members of the Daves family said that Harley McCall went to their home late Tuesday afternoon "dead-set on having a racket," as the 13-year-old Lonnie put it, andthat McCall and James became embroiled in an argument and then the shooting started with McCall firing the first shot from' a .32-calibre pistol. Funeral service for McCall Wtfs held Wednesday afternoon at Shoals Creek Baptist chu^chr He is survived by his wife and 10 children. Ira Daves, who was said $o have left home after the shooting end ed, told officers he walked four miles before catching a ride_to Rosman where officers found him about midnight Tuesday. He was shot in the lower abdomen. v CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR QUICK RESULTS FOR SALE ? Six Room House with bath, barn, garage and coal house. Located in Moody Bot tom. H. L. Womack, Sylva, N. C. Aug. 3-12-17. FOR SALE)? Pigs. Cross between Poland China and O I C. Now ready. Also brood sows. J. S. Higdon. Aug. 3-12 CARDBOARD in six colors, 22 by 28 incheaT only .& cents. & sheet at The Herald office. ... LE6AL BLANKS o f every des cription on sal?"at The Herald. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE? 2 horses.__Will trade for pick-up truck, ton or 1%-ton truck or car. 11-C, Herald. Aug 28-25-1 FOR SALE ? 37-acre farm on High way No. 10, near Willets. Has six room house, variety of fruit trees, and two springs. Priced reasonable. See R. C. Queen, route one Sylva. Aug. 10-17 . ? V ? ; ^ ? 1 FOR SALE ? tu C.- .Smith Type writer, in good condition: Write Mrs. Charles McConnell, Speed well, N. C. Aug. 25 Heard in an English air-raid shelter : "Is there a macintosh in here that's large enough;' to keep two young ladies warm?" "No, but there's a MacPherson who is willing to try," was the reply from a dark corner. CUT OUT AND MAIL OR BRING IN TODAY | SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Sylva Herald, , . ... , ? . i Sylva, N. C. ^ For the enclosed $ send The Sylva Herald to ^ I Name ?T. | I ? ? .> i Route or Box No. 1 Town and State - ' I SUBSCRIPTION RATES I In . Jackson County Outside Jackson County i 1 Year $1.50 1 Year $2.00 I 6 Months 80c 6 Months 1.25 I All Subscriptions Payable In Advance 500-Piece Inter-Locking JIG-SAW tf 4 Some Simple ? Some Difficult - - YOU'LL ENJOY THESE ? Also? Bingo ? Chinese Solitaire? ? ? Parchesia ? Lotto * ? , THE HERALD Stationery Department Belk's Is Headquarters For SCHOOL CLOTHES Boys' Shirts, fast colors. Just the thing for school wear. Sizes '6 to 14 ? "Fruit of the Loom" brand, famous over the years for rare quality. Sizes 6 to 14. $1.48 "Lucky Lad" Sport Shirts. A Boy Scout preference. Belk , QOl quality. Sizes 6 to 16. Little Boys' Ties. Will look good for a long time. 4 fg + Only Cloth Hats, triple stitched to stand long wear . . . several fiAi - colors ? ? ? all Boys' Caps, adjustable colors. Smart 251 u79* and durable Heavy play-cloth Shirts. Made for the boys who is "hard on clothes". Blue and gray stripes. Also blue chambray and gray covart . . . Sizes 6 to 14 70^ Only . W Hanes Boys' Shorts and Shirts. This world-famous brand only ~ Boys' School Pants, blue, tan, green, brown. Dressy and rugged. Ideal for Junior's 4 J\, Q school days .9 ? Boys' Suits, extra quality ,r. . ideal for dress or $A95 playground .... ^ and ^ Boys' Sanforized, 8-ounce "Red Camel" Overalls. You know "Red Camel" quality vu nawn 1VCU $1.29 Boys' Overall Pants. Specially constructed for 4 OQ hard service Scout Style Oxfords for Boys. Sizes 1 to 6. Tan shoes with Compo soles for $2.95 long wear pr. School Oxfords. Sturdy shoes in black or brown 4 A O Sizes 8 to 2 ^IiTO Anklets "Slack Sox" in white and all colors. 4 Eft Sizes 6 to 10H School Dresses. Fast color per cales. Many styles to - choose from ? ^1* BELK'S HEPT. STORE "Home Of Better Values" 1 Of All Business Failures Are Non -Advertisers, According To Bradstreet. "XXf ?^arav. ? Your Local Newspaper r> Is Your Best Advertising Medium. i t t' START Advertising NOW! in THE HERALD i
The Sylva Herald and Ruralite (Sylva, N.C.)
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Aug. 18, 1943, edition 1
6
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