Newspapers / The Sylva Herald and … / Aug. 22, 1946, edition 1 / Page 2
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AT SOSSAMCN'S . ?12UNCH laXXlUDS ?? , Christmas Carol ?Ronald Coleman Can t Help Singing ?Deanna Durbin Heifetz ?Gershwin The Misadventures of 'trbert and Sam Small ?Pat O'Malley Dohnanyi, Suite in F. Sharp Minor ?Opus 19 Treasure Island ?Thomas Mitchell Song of Norway ?Selections by Greig Porgy and Bess ?Gershwin Alice in Wonderland ?Ginger Rogers COLUMBIA RECORDS Drivin' Nails In My Coffin Some Other World ?Floyd Tillman Night and Day Smiles ?Claude Thornhill Jealous Lady Southern Belle ?Curly Williams After I'm Gone Bothered By The Blues ?Wiley Walker & Gene Sullivan Wine, Women and Song It's Up To You ?A1 Dexter and his Troopers And Then It's Heaven I Guess I Expected Too Much ?Harry James STATE COLLEGE HINTS TO FARM HOMEMAKER By RUTH CURRENT N. C. State College Commercially canned tomatoes have been scarce on grocers' shelves fot some time, and the size of next season's commercial pack is uncertain. Homemakers should can only perfect, ripe tomatoes. Speed them from garden to jar. If buying, choose tomatoes grown nearby and still garden-fresh. * 11' .a boiling water bath canner is lacking, a practical canner may be contrived from a wash boiler or other large, clean, deep vessel with a nuod lid with perforations. Place a rack in it to hold the jars so that they will not touch bottom. Make a lattice rack of wood, if necessary." Water must boil all around, under, and over every jar. Prepare tomatoes this way: Scald for easy peeling. Remove stem ends, peel, quarter. Bring toma toes to a rolling boil, stirring as tomatoes heat in their juice. Pack [dean, hot jars with hot tomatoes j and add a teaspoon salt to each I quart. Cover with hot juice to | within one-hali inch of ar top. Ad just jar lid, according to its type. Read directions that come with tops. ? Process or heat in the-boiling water bath canner?this way. Heat pint or quart jars of tomatoes in the bath of boiling water for 10 minutes. For dependable, detailed directions on home canning of all kinds of fruits and vegetables, write the Agricultural Editor, State College, Raleigh, for a copy of "Canning Fruits and Vegetables," Circular No. 271. 1 Dishes a n d ordinary family glasses washed with soap and rinsed in hot water can very well be left to drain dry .saving a con siderable amount of the home miker's time. Silver must be towelled dry, and fine glassware t<5 ;e cle~r olio needs towelling. Be . ar y:>ur dish towels are clean and Irv Srggy, soiled towels are bac t?m ? j breeders and can easily con :..j,lunate dishes. Clinic Will Be Held At Cashiers September 5 Dr. Mary Michal, head of the Diuri-'t Health department, ad vises this week that she will be at ?he Cashiers clinic on the morning of September 5. She will be at the county office ir. Sylva that afternoon. OLIVINE PRODUCTS Corporation n GENERAL STORE AND OFFICE LOCATED ON CULLOWHEE-SYLVA HIGHWAY (N. C. 107) 3 MILG3 FROM SYLVA Crushed Rock, Sand, Gravel, Building Stone We now carry a supply of ice to help out in the present shortage. * EXPLOSIVES ? GASOLINE AND OIL P. O. Address Sylva, N. C. DUSTS That Kill For Bean Beetles S-A-50 will kill over night. For Cabbage C-R-33 containing a strong repellant prevent ing moths from laying. DDT?3% For Worms SABA DUST for Harlequin bugs, worms, and leaf hoppers. For Tomatoes, Potatoes and Cucumbers TOMATO DUST? Blight control only. COPPER CAL-AR. Blight and Insect Control. SOUTHERN AGRICULTURAL INSECTICIDES Phon? 427 Hendertonvllto, N. C. Distributed by FARMERS FEDERATION HI6D0N URGES OF COVER CROPS CHIEF of the Navy's guided missile section in Washington, Capt. Sted man Teller envisions the next war as a Flash Gordon type, with pilot less rockets carrying atomic war heads thousands of miles an hour to "sniff out" targets He declared the Navy has weapons now which were unimaginable a few years (i{".national Sc ivdphoto) D. C. Higdon, chairman of the Jaokson county AAA, urges all < farmers of this county to seed their I entire cropland in some winter cover crop. The chairman stated that setting o-.it a cover crop is very impor tant this yen: tht? scarcity of food and feed products through out the entire world, and the re sponsibility of America in .feeding the starving peoples of the world. Higdon declared that each acre needs a cover crop this winter in order to conserve the resources of tiie soil and to make it more pro ductive next year. The county AAA is nov .. - sition to furnish Austri; pea seed, crimson clover .. e grass seed. FORMATION OF BAND AT SCHOOL TO BE DISCUSSED TONIGHT 1 W. H. Crawford, principal of Sylva High school, announced yes terday that there will be a meeting tonight at 7:30 at the high school , of all citizens interested in helping to form a school band. "We have an opportunity here in the fact that the college at Cullo I whee is willing to offer 2,000 dol lars toward the salary of a music I instructor, who would teach here i and at Cullowhee," Mr. Crawford revealed, "provided that we pay , the other 1,000 dollars. Church Of God Revival To Begin August 26 James Sanders, evangelist, will be present at the Church of God revival to be held in the Hayes Wike building just above Dick's gap bridge above Cullowhee on Highway 107, beginning August 26, at 7:30 p.m. Meetings will be held each night LOCKING AHEAD ity GEORGE S. BENSON President?Harding College Searcy. Arkansas Strike?At Whom? i Financial reports make interest- j ing reading to people who know even a little bit about what they mean. To some, they loolt drab be- ; cause they are printed mainly in figures; many students never have 1 learned to enjoy studying figures. ! Just the same, dull old numerals tell the truth in a romantic way to those who love cold facts of struggle and adventure. Late in May it was my good for- ; tune to have with me an annual re- ! port or one or America s largesi cor porations when I had to spend three i hours on a day train. In the back l of my mind as I rode along, was a lurking fear that I might reach : home a day (maybe a week) late | because of labor troubles, just then j coiling to strike. My dread threw I a bright light on the figures in hand. | Division of Wealth The company about which I was reading plays an important part in the lives of more than a quarter of a million people: 100,000 employees and 150,000 stockholders. Two out of every five of these people drew wages while three out of five re ceived dividends. The average share owner got less than $500 a year. The average employee took home more than $2,500 a year. Daily newspapers for days had reported threats of strips in the plants of the firm I was studying, also on the lines of the railroad I was riding, and in many other in dustries. Question: If all the em ployers of all the companies strike for v.'h ? * they want and get it, who will pay th^ difference? How will they pay it? These questions have answers and they're not secrets. Enter Apple Conductor The train stopped for a few min utes under the shed, cf a b.^town* ?tation and a railway r cwsh~} eame through with fresh afternoon papers. On page one. under Wash ington date-line, a wire story told how OPA would grant higher prices on automobiles. Nearby was an other item about a 10% boost in shoe prices. Then I remembered that bread and milk and meat all had pone up r#?opnt1v. \<hw..ie; -u uuik or only eat, the pnej gains catch y^a. Wagwo arc ins..'.-' the cc~. evc-j manufactured thiii_, a;id the con sumer pays. It is too obvious to de serve proof. Not long ago official dom was sounding off freely about how wages in Detroit could be boosted without charging higher prices for automobiles but it didn't work out that way. Why? Strikes Are Weapons It is because strikes are not tools. The official theory was right: Wages can go up without boosting prices but production has to be increased if it happens, and strikes don't in crease production. Sudden wage in creases of 18% to 30% have to come from somewhere, but where? A stockholder drawing $500 a year can't offer much of a boon to a $2,500 wage earner. Strikes can't take something from the owners of a company that the owners don't get. That leaves no body to pay the higher wages but Mr. Consumer whose family drives the car, wears the shoes and eats the food. A large majority of con sumers are themselves workers. In the absence of increased production, a strike is a boomerang. It hits the consumer who is the worker himself. for two weeks, and the public is invited to attend. School Days Are BRING YOUR YOUNGSTERS TO BOWER'S ? We are equipped to dress your boys and girls for school. They will be pleased with the looks and mother will be pleased with the price. Sturdy and smart outfits. Bower's Bargain Bilt Stores Sylva, N. C. 32 TURN OUT FOR GRIDIRON PRACTICE Thirty-two Sylva High grid spe cialists turned out for the first practice session of the season last Monday night at the school field. Coach Guy Sutton, replacing Leonard Huff, who resigned last week, szi? "Prospects look good, but we have sorr^e heavy games on schedule." Outstanding returnees from last year's squad include Jimmy Nichol son, Ben Sumner, Hal Wilson and Kent Coward. Four of the practice squad are ex-G.I.s. Beginning Monday, Coach Sut ton announced, football practice will bo hold every school day after, noon. The first game on tap for the Hurricanes will be the match with Hayesville here September 13, to be sponsored by the Sylva Lions club. BUMGARNERS HAVE FAMILY REUNION Nine children, eighteen grand children and two great grandchil dren were present Sunday to help Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Bumgar ner celebrate their 74th and 72nd birthdays. This is the 21st annual reunion of the family, held each year on the Sunday near their father's birthday. A bountiful pic nic dinner was served. The children attending were Lee Bumgarner and wile, Mrs. Dave Dillard and Mr. Dillard, Natan Bumgarner and wife, Walter Bum garner, Charlie Bu~* :*ner and Mrs. Bumgarner, Mrs. CU.'ford Ca gle, Frank Bumgarner and Mrs. Bumgarner and Miss Pearl Bum ner of Sylva and Mrs. Hal K* ner of Brevard. Old Field, Dills Cemeteries To Be Decorated Saturday On Saturday, August 24, the people of the Beta section of the county and all others who have friends and relatives buried in either Old Field or Dills cemeter ?s, are asked to meet to decorate ese graveyards. Old Field will be decorated in the morning, after FOR SALE?1935 Plymouth sedan with good radio and heater. Ed gar Turpin, Love Field. Cullo whee Road, Sylva, N: C. * 12* which the Rev. G. Napoleon Cowan jf Raleigh will preach in the old sanctuary. Everyone is asked to bring a lunch and eat it picnic style at the noon hour. In the afternoon Dills cemetery will be decorated. Dr. W. Kermit Chapman Dentist Offices In BOYD BUILDING Waynesvllle, N. C. Phone 363 William B. Dillard GENERAL CONTRACTOR Residential and Commercial Con struction. House plans prepared. CONCRETE MIXER FOR YOUR CONCRETE WORK Sylva, N. C. ?^. , A Good Tread May Save Your Life ir Don't take chances on "smoothies." Good tires make for safe vacation driving. Let Us He-Cap! GUARANTEED AGENT8 FOR B. F. GOODRICH SILVERTOWN TIRES "The Tire That Outwears Pre-War Tires" SYLVA TIRE CO. SALES SERVICE We Are Well Equipped To Service Your Car With a staff of expert mechanics on all makes of cars, and with improved facilities, we are prepared to offer you the very best in auto repair service. Until new cars are available in quantity, it is important that your car has constant attention from ex perienced mechanics. Don't wait for a break-down?drive in today for a complete check-up! BUCHANAN AUTO and Electric Company PHONE 53W SYLVA, N. C.
The Sylva Herald and Ruralite (Sylva, N.C.)
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Aug. 22, 1946, edition 1
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