ftft 8 1st PRIZE B **H David Pruitt, Jr., student of^Ole* ville 4-H club, is shown with his I prize in the medium weight class al ievement exhibits last week. Witl r>l :mo riv; lp;iHf?rB CUVII15 wu banv w??v?? pect to see a better type of farming in the coming years than has been Donnahoe. < > < !! Hunting and Fishing 1 SVLVA SPM I: Phone 280-J 4 i > ( > hmhhbmhbi O 1 I I Thursday, * I Bottle of 100 I 5 GRAIN ASPIRIf I Guaranteed | IP P Tussy's I BEAUTY PLUS CREAM I SI.51 I $3.00 size I SO-51 $5.00 size plus tax TUSSY'S A lipstick and a midnight perfunn I $1# plus tax Profess EEF CALF ; I I I 1 : ,;; |pp*f^ : -mb 1 EaT<m c E ' *'$r^gK/Mz ''fty/. l' s ^sbb-ib i "i;" /SaSPv'* *- *Tk% B : x;. . '' i i :! . bi iville school and member of GlenHerfprd beef calf which took first it the annual county 4-H club achh young boys like David coming s in our farm program we can ex; and animal industry in the county practiced in years past. -?Photo by < Licenses for Sale here |[ IT SHOP, lie. ii Sylva, N. C. it < i > n WTTSTTTWrn lilulLLhU )A Y SPECIA Friday and Sati | Pint 70% Absolute I I I ALCOHOL I by volume ' I Introductory Offer Wallgreen's Ammoniated j I TOOTH PASTE I 7&c value - 2 TUBES '| 59c Pint , I MINERAL OIL iliac ?ional Drt *11 4Q r iiuiiv ta THESY Parris ... | fvam naoe 1 i \ WVU?*4?MVV? 4? V??? lersonville, president of the asociation. c "We feel fortunate," Buchanan * aid, "in obtaining the services of ' vlr. Parris, who not only has had * vide experience in the newspaper s ield but is an authority on Cher- r )koc history, lore and customs." A native of Sylva, Parris is a l ,-eteran newspaperman of 19 years t ixperience in the United States * ind abroad, twelve of those years 1 .vith the world's two largest press 1 issociations?The Associated Press 1 and the United Press. His newspaper and public rela- J :ions career began when he was . thirteen, covering sports and gen-: *ral assignments for the now ex-| Linct Jackson County Journal of, 1 Sylva, and as local correspondent! 1 tor The Asheville Citizen-Times, ' The Associated Press and the: J United Press. Three years later he ] joined the Brooks, French, Smith Advertising Agency. J In 1934. he joined the United Press as the youngest capitol cor-!, respondent in Raleigh. Three years later he was transferred to the UP New York bureau as fea-i ture writer, then resigned to be-] come roving correspondent for the Winston-Salem Journal-Sentinel. | Rejoining the UP as night bureau manager in Memphis, Tenn., he returned to New York in 1939 as assistant night'cable editor before going to London in March, 1941. Sent to London in 1941, Parris| covered the diplomatic run there until 1944?taking time out for the invasion of North Africa, where he landed with the G.I.!s at Arzew. In 1944 he began a new assignment in London as diplomatic correspondent for The Associated Press, holding that post until May, 1946, when he was transferred to New York to cover the United Nations. He reported the San Francisco World Conference and the United Nations Preparatory Commission and first A(ssembly in r ?-J ttrAll ac mootinffc nf the lAiiiuuii) no wbii uo ' w....ou ? Big Four foreign ministers in London and New York. Parris left the Associated Press in 1947 to devote his future to creative writing. His most recent work, "The Cherokee Story", was, published this past summer. He I i LLS tirday Only Perfection I FACIAL TISSUE I 500 sheets l 9" x 12" I $1.25 size HADACOL $?.19 SO,39 $3.50 size Leon Laruine I CREAM I DEODORANT $1.00 value | 50c ig Store Sylva, N. C. r LVA HERALD AND RURA 5ylva Enjoying building Boom According to an Associated Press t lispatch released yesterday the T Rp?prvp Roarri states that n >uilding permits for this year in { he Carolinas show a very onliderable increase over the cor- t esponding period last year. j * Certainly Sylva and vicinity are ? it this time doing their full share1 r owards this building gain. At ( ^resent there are at least five new ? buildings going up in town, busi- y jess buildings, that is, in addition | :o quite a number of new homes; springing up all over the county. \long the Cullowhee road in par- I :icular seems a favorite building I ocality. j In the city limits, there is a new j building going up, now near com- j pletion, by Dan Allison that is to | be used as the new post office., Hooper Motor Co. has about completed a brick and steel addition 1 to their garage. Fulmer Motors j also has added to their garage andj Kirk-Davis Chevrolet Co. is near-/ ing completion on a new service station near their garage. Construction is now in full swing on'; the new telephone exchange and 1 off ice across from City Hall. ^ Sylva seems to be contributing1 ( a full share to the rapid growth and prosperity of the South as a whole. i I co-authored "Springboard to Berlin" and "Deadline Delayed." Recently his work was included in "A Treasury of Southern Folklore." Buchanan, in making the announcement of the appointment, said that Parris would divide his time between working for the Cherokee Historical Association and free-lancing. Parris' wife is the former Dorothy Luxton Klenk, artist-designer of New York and Topeka, Kansas. For the past two years the Parris' have been living at Devotion, N. C., but have now moved to Sylva. I Manui BE1 I HUNDREDS 0 I > s ' WO I J FAIL 'I I AS YOU ALL 1ITIS f ^ 1 ! LITE Legion . . ! (Continued from page 1) he committee may Know now i nany to plan on for the dinner. , The price will be only $1.00 per j slate. The membership drive so far his year has reached only 117, r hose in charge announced. They * ire very anxious to reach the 1 lumber, 175, promised the State * Commander by November 11. You 5 ire urged to join now or renew s four old membership so that a c good report may be turned in. ED BUM6ARNER TO 1 HEAD TODRIST GROUP NEXT YEAR Ed Bumgarner, Sunset Farms resort owner and one of the biggest tourist promoters of this area, has been elected president of the Jackson County Tourist Associa-: tion for 1950-51. . Bumgarner was elected at the annual election meeting of the, association last week at the Sylva, Legion Hut. Wade H. Beck of Qualla was! elected vice-president and Mrs.' Phil Lee, Sr., of Sylva, secretary; and treasurer. John Parris, who took up permanent residence in Sylva this week,! was appointed to represent Jackson County on the board of governors of the Western North Carolina Tourist Association. H. J. Landis, Sylva merchant and tourist operator, was named alternate director. The new executive committee of the Jackson County association is composed of H. L. Bass of Sylva, Realus Sutton of Dillsboro, Miss Alma Lassen of Beta, Fred Williams of Sylva, Col. Lee Hooper of Speedwell, David Brown of ? ? ^ X cuiiownee, ana james ^annuu ux DilLsboro. Bumgarner succeeds Colonel, Hooper who served as the association's first president and guidulmai facturers Ovt rTER D IF FAMOUS MAKES IN T HAT A BUY THE! OLS JERSEYS I LES -> VELVETS SATINS NYLONS VALUES TO $22.! KNOW SCHULMAN'S AR] DRESS BARGAINS ! i ALMOST UHBELI Your Choice of Hundreds of Dresses CHUl I Departm We Feature Only N f SYLVA LIONS PRE- " PARING FOR lllllllll IIUIIATHPI ANNUAL MINIS I MIL The Sylva Lions club has nnlounced that committees have >een appointed and arrangements ire in full swing for preparation or the club's annual Negro Min-^ itrel show. It is hoped that the show will be ready about the midile of November. The show has been an anriuaY" >d the organization through, its ?irst season. Members who attended the meeting voted Colonel Hooper a rousng round of standing applause tor his untiring and unselfiaft^ftorts in guiding the association hrough a successful first $175.00 E The TASTE and FLAVOR, ire stands out so BIG. That's why e an extra one of the delicious ho BRED FLOUR?not only millet hut from a soecial variet' extra fine flavor. For the best letters, 25 words 01 and your family enjoy WE8TEI than any other, we offer: $50.00?FOR T $5?For each next best 10 lett letters. Contest ends Nov. 30, 1950. D Address all letters to: EARLE-CHESTERFI ELD I ! WANTED?Fr A new Free Service LEWIS ESSO SE Phoni We pay collect calls and? will remove your cows, any cost to you if called ; CONSOLIDATED HII n's . irstocked Wi RESS & HE NEWEST STYLES IE ARE! :orduroys gabardines plaids SO e famous for their i ? t ? > # EVABLE AT -MAI> tionally Known Brands rhursday, October 19,1950 affair for the past several years and has been well received and ^ supported by the public. The Lions this year expect to put on a bigger and better Minstrel than ever before. The cast is composed entirely of members of the Sylva Lions club and all oroceeds of the show '< - - i?i.. are lieca oy ine nua lucai/, aiding the blind in Jackson county, and sponsoring a recreation program for the young people of Sylva. Watch this newspaper for further details and the date of the "Big show." North Carolina's apple crop this year is estimated at 1,184,000 bushels, Steper cent great than aver ag^j&d 164 per cent larger than the apple crop of 1949. The natier^p crop is expected to be 11 gfc^'cent below the 1949 crop. :a$ gash the thing in eating?that's what a ach member of the family wants t biscuits made with WESTERN i from rich Kansas hard winter / of Kansas wheat known for its * less, for you to tell us why you 1 RN BRED HOT BISCUITS more 4 HE 1ST PRIZE ers. $1?For each next best 75 ecision of the judges to be final. MILL CO., Asheville, N. C. *> -1 Oi. 1_ ^ esn ueaa oiock ? for your Community / all? \ RVICE STATION ( e 9105 ( >ur special equipped truck y horses, and hogs without y at once. y DE AND METAL CO. ] ? * mien's IhLE i T jtJfl, ..

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