Speedwell Club Has Dispiissinn On Home Gardens The Speedwell-Cullowhee Home Demonstration club met with Mrs. H. T. Hunter of Cullowhee, on Tuesday afternoon for their sec ond meeting of the year. Presiding was Mrs. Edward Bryson, club president. Members answered to roll call by . giving a suggestion helpful in gardening. Miss Margaret Martin, home demonstration agent for Jackson county, talked briefly to the group concerning victory gardens and d's tributed pamplets on various phas es of gardening to the members. Guest speaker for the afternoon was Professor Gyrus G. Phillips, teacher of agriculture at the Cullo whee Training school, who talked on the subject of Hot Beds and Cold Frames. The next meeting for the club will be held with Mrs. (Edmund Bat tle in Cullowhee on February 7. At that meeting Miss Mart:n will give a demonstration of preparing meals with little or no meat. Give New Life To Those Old Shoes . . . Our Experts Will Fix Them Up Like New. Blue Ribbon Shoe Shop Main St. Oppo. Herald Office Back The Attack ? Buy War" Bonds And Stamps. Wolf Mountain ~ News By Mrs. M. D. Nicholson Miss Martha Ammons and Ster ling Galloway were - married on January 30th. They are spending a vy^ek with relatives in Brevard. Seaman Henrjf Carland of Bre vard, visited Mrs. M. D. Nichol son last week. ^eaman Carland is stationed at Bainbridge, Md. Cecil Matthews hes returned from Pontiac, Michigan, where h fras been employed in defense work.^ ? Mrs. J, C. Parker attended the funeral of her brother, Dock Woods at Allan's Creek near Waynesville last week. ?* Rev. Bunyan Kilpatrick, of Bal sam Grove, held services at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Ray Nichol son last Sunday. A large crowd attended. Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Coward have gone to spend a few weeks at th?ir home in Winter Haven, Fla.f Mr. and Mrs. Coward live at1 Pioneer Lodge. Pvt. Coy Shelton is spending a 15-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbum Shelton. Pvt. Shelton is stationed at Camp Campbell, Ky. Mrs. Paul Moore and daughter, Paulette, of Hayesville, were re cent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Wood. Miss Eloise Matthews, who is employed in Jacksonville, Fla., spent last week visiting her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Matth ews. She returned to Florida on Sunday. Cpl. Lawrence Banther, of Lak? Toxaway, visited Cpl. Andrew B. Nicholson recently, they were both home on furloughs. Cpl Banther is stationed at Selman Field, Ala. and Cpl. Nicholson at Foster Field, Texas. Mrs. Terry Galloway and sons have returned home after spend ing some time with Mr. Galloway in Clayton, Ga., where he is em ployed. Mrs, Wallace Wood and small sons spent last week with her par ents, Rev. and Mrs. Ernest Boley, of Balsam. The many friends of Mr. and Mrs. Joesiah Galloway will be sor FARMERS - - Buy and Get Your FERTILIZER Out As Soon As Possible We Sell . . . ARMOUR and PLANTERS New Shipment Expected Soon COTTON SEED MEAL S3. 00 per 100 pound bag Grow More Meat and Eggs f This Year ... Produce poultry with more edible meat per bird; pro* dace more eggs per layer ... It can be done with feed that invigorates. FUL-O-PEP LAYING MASH SCRATCH GRAINS * GROWING MASH * STARTER MASH Farmers Federation Mate Street VEARL ENSLEY, Mgr. Sylva, N. C. Reduce Eg? Loss By Proper Feeding I ? A large percentage of the ug? losses due to cracking and break l ing' can be elimina t*d>y proper feeding, suggests C. F. Parrish, (Extension poultryman at State Col lege. . About 5 percent of all eggs pro duced are lost between the nest and the table, and most of this loss can be eliminated by feeding the flock a sufficient amount of vita min D to enable th:m to utilize to full advantage the calcium in the ry to know that their small dau ghter, Lillian, is seriously ill. J Ralph Owen, son of Mrs. Car ncttie Owen, leaves for the Navy in a few days. * Mrs. J. B. Guilliams has receiv ed word that her son, Jimmy, has safely arrived overseas. He has been in the Marines for over a year. Mrs. Guilliams has another son serving in Ireland with the Air Force, David Lemuel Guilliams. ___________________________________ oyster shell or ground limestone. "We are approaching the season of flush egg production," Parrish iay?, "and pnulfrymftn ahould malto every effort possible to reduce this loss between the nest and the table." Oyster sh.U or ground limestone,! which should be before the flock at all times, is not enough in it self to eliminate thin-shelled eggs. There ar? several carrier of vita min D such as feeding oil and, if the flock is producing many soft or thin-shelled eggs, it is advisa ble to mix this feeding oil or other sources of vitamin D with the grain every day. Sources having a pot ency of 400 units of vitamin D per gram should be used at the rate of ^ pound to each 100 pounds of grain. This can be easily mixed when using z Ounces of oil to each 25 pounds of grain. Be sure to determine the potency of the vitamin D carrier before using, Parrish warns. The strength of the oil will b? indicated on the container. Every poultryman should watch his flock carefully at this time of year and be sure they have sufR PROFESSOR OF LATIN AND -GREEK AT L'NC PASSES CHAPEI. HII.L? Shipp Gillespie Sanders, 55, professor of -Latin and Creek in the cassics department of the University of North Carolina for the last 20 years and a brother in-law of President Frank Graham, died January '26. Professor Sanders had been ill for several months. cient calcium available and enough vitamin D to be abb to utilize this calcium to full advantage. QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms off Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS due to EXCESS ACID Free BaokTeilsof HoiiieTreatinein tHsf Must Help or it Will Cost You Nothing Over two nnUloo bottled of tht> W ILLAKI. T RE ATM KNT hav? aolrt for r?linf o ?(ympfomsof (Ilstpmsw art*iriH frtmi Stomati Uld Duodenal Ulcor* du?< to ??e?s Acid *?oc Olgostlon. Sour or Ups^t Stem.ici QMSlntu, Heartburn. v1> lue to Excesi Acid. Sold on I r? <1.i> * in. SYLVA PHARMACY \sk for "Millard'* ** ?*pl Yo?$Wrfie,n.j' , ^ c Ju P?*" / SPECIAL COFFEE Best Part of thcTftcal BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS Pin-up picture for the man who "can't afford"': ' J to buy an extra war bond ... YOU'VE HEARD PEOPLE say: "I can't afford to buy an extra War Bond." Perhaps you've said it your self . . . without realizing what a ridic ulous thing it is to say to men who are dying. The very least that you can do is to buy an extra $100 War Bond... above and beyond the Bonds you are now buying or had planned to buy. In fact, if you take stock of your resources, you will probably find that you can buy an extra $200 ... or $300 . . . or even $500 worth of War Bonds. * Sounds like more than you "can afford"? Well, young soldiers can't afford to die, either . . . yet they do it when called upon. So is it too much to ask of us that we invest more of our money in War Bonds . . . the best investment in the world today? Is that too much to ask? WE BOUGHT EXTRA WAR BONDS ? TH ? . WAR LOAN Ie$M BACK THE ATTACK ! THE JACKSON COUNTY BANK Highlands, N. C. Sylva. N. C. Member The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

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