fen? And Pwfl Hi i nave vli.jr SntnrHav , i. Vvo cnnprinr . Kvrt S Clerk in (i. p .1 that nn Satur- ceu jinns the veterans PW th SUtes and v, the first mommy y- M V last state legislature ,1) the pension runs .stance group. . be no change in the lurt paid t0 either veterans but they- ";" each month msieHu I , veterans a"u l"c"1' ye on t"e Want Ads pD-Experienced cook. White Lred. Year round job, in Ini.Fla, To stay on premises. U $25.00 a month. Leaving two weeks. Apply 1V6 bast In Street. Mm. Thomas G. lie. June !9 pD Best prices paid for scrap mum, brass, copper, etc. H. Miner, Be!le Meade Service on or phone 9164 or 443,. ," 29, July 6. : JFIT SQUARE DANCE Spon- d by - American. Legion Auxil- To be held Friday night in nesville Armory, from 8 o'clock Good music. tf at Ad re one cent word ach insertion. No ad la t for less than 25c. T kAnVn onti T.lirw- L book cases. Write Mrs. 1. J. ston, Byx 6, franklin, IN. I,. 21 tCRES grain and dairy farm 1 cut in small tracts to suit baser, 7 miles from Canton, 10 from Wayncsville on high Terms one-third down, bal- 1, 2, 3, and 4 years. Lee V. rs. June 29-July 6-13-20 tALE Seven acre tract. New Jom rock bungalow with bath dinette. One of the best to ps for service station and t cabins. Seven miles from nesville on Soco Gap road Ing to the Smoky Mountains W Park. William Heinz, R. 2, Waynesville, N. C. 15-22-29. SALE Field srrown tomato ubbage plants. Special prices large quantities. Located 5 from Waynesville on Bethel D. D. York, Waynesville, N. -"e 1. June 15-22-29. HITIS SUFFERERS Get from lis Druer Store frpA interest- Iwklet on new Colloidal Sul- ' method. to rel Mhrifis due to Sulphur defi- 'to y ta'ie inexpensive ' "-S0L sold on money back antee if i,o day trial does not ; "wuceable relief. 1-8-15-22-29-July 6-13 P'E READY with your July Potatoes. Just received a nt this week. . Get vour ? now from FARMERS FED- Tm : : June 29 COLLIE and German Police for sale. Male, two dol Call at Tuscola Dairv Farm, funaluska. - . .. June 29 F . """'HI ClOVll ill f'Jnty to act as representa- uuh ana uiet Health Re- Jlartha Washington I Dietetics. Fvnollpnt nn. :-iy. Sr,l..,i;.i tor do4:i , . Aaaress Mana nte .o. 1, Box 187, Hi gh A P T.i V . - v. ieiepnone D37U, 29 P DAN'CESponsbred by the '" viud. jo be held at Gor- Vtel, every Thllrsrlau nurht in.... - lu,e Soco Gap Dance team n.L: - June 29 buying those chicks Person. DELAY ive T ; 6 g0t 'em ready June 29 Nation- jiMJLAU BLOODl HOUNDS After Customers E!Lr Want Ads Dead in Bomb Plot j 1939 SETTING A NEW LOW IN EIGHT MAJOR DISEASES The M.t;op,limn Life Insurance Company announced last week that on th- K;..,; 0f a .;um,y 0f tne company itu'.ustrial policy holders, this year is making better health records than in 15.38, the banner health in ti-ht important diseases. For the first tive months of 1939 compared with the corresponding period of 1S.3S. dwlines in m-tality among this large cross-section of th; general population were record ed for tuberculosis, pneumonia, per peral conditions, chronic nephritis, appendicitis, -diarheal diseases, diphtheria and scarlet fever. J. Milton Lee Shortly after J. Milton Lee, 28-year-old son of a bakery store owner, was killed when a dyna mite bomb attached to the startet of his father's automobile explod ed, Mrs. John Knudson, wife ot the co-owner of the Lee bakery, received a telephone threat warn ing her that "your husband is next" In the wreckage of the car in which Lee died police found a note saying, "This is your warn ing, Lee, to watch your sales or else." S1IAK1' EAMHQl AKE SHARKS PACIFIC COAST The most seveie earthquake since 1906 occurred in Hollister, Calif., early Saturday morning, but the damage was confined to a district 13 miles south of the town, Three brick fireplaces toppled, dishes were brok en, and furniture overturned. The earthquake was felt in Pasadena, and in San Diego it was strong enough to shake the furniture and sway light fixtures: At the same time an earthquake of slight intensity, was felt in Northern Alabama. Rotary Chief FARMER LAID TO REST I'NDER ORCHARD TREE Jacob B. Milkr's six sons carried the 71-year-old farmer of Altoono, Penn., to the final resting place he had selected underneath an old apple tree in the Miller orchard last week. One of the sons, the Rev. John H. Miller, of Springfield, Mass., con ducted the services. One of the farmer's three daughters played the organ at the church ceremony. Spe cial permission from the state made the orchard burial possible. JOB PLACEMENTS ITT AT A 2.V9000.000 TOTAL Secretary Perkins stated during the past week that the United States employment service, soon to become part of the Federal unemployment FARMERS' SI BSID1ES $638,491,958 TOTAL WALTER D. HEAD Walter D. Head, 56, headmaster of Montclair academy at Montelair, N. J., is the new head of Rotary Inter national, elected at the annual inter national convention in Cleveland. The V. S. Agricultural Adjustment Administration reported it paid $638,41,958 in subsidies to farmers for co-operating with crop control programs during the 11 months end ing June the first. The benefits in cluded, $121,348,422 in adjustment payments on the 1937 cotton crop; $58,030,1.52 in sugar payments for 1937 and 1938 crops; $378,616, 711 in soil conservation payments anil $13,. 801,471 in parity payments for 1936 crops. Operating expenses of the AAA exclusive of local farmer com mittees were $18,156,145. compensation system, bad made an excess of 25,900,000 job replacements since July, 1933. The agency has been part of the labor department since it was established in the early months of the New Deal, but under President Roosevelt's reorganization order will be shifted July 1 to social security. Behind the Seen HOLLYWOOD mm By HARRISON CARROLL Copyrirht. 1939 King Features SjndlcaU. tut. HOLLYWOOD. Anything can happen with two people so much n love but Phyllis Brooks' friends will make a bet that she and Cary Grant postpone their marriage until their re turn to Amer ica . . . the cer emony probably taking place tn New York, so her relatives can attend. ; Meanw hile. Grant is the town's most im patient lover. The "Memory of Love" company worked day and night so he could By to New York to catch the Nor-mandie. 1 J f mmm ImBHii"" Cary Gran Some of the c.ftler observers at the "Young Mr. Lincoln" premiere did a lot of wisecracking because Jeanette MacDonald and Gene Ray mond waited almost 10 minutes so the photographers could make pic tures of them. But the two weren't being hammy. Last year, Gene got in an awful jam with the camera boys because he rushed Jeanette into the theater before shots could be made. He was Just trying to avoid a similar Incident. Biggest car at the opening drew a series of phs! and ahs! from the crowd. It drew up, the door opened and finally out stepped John Car radine. . He got a great hand at that Ona Munson is certainly getting a rush since they signed her as Belle Watling. . . . Three escorts at the premiere. . . . Dick Hanlon. Lester Donahue and Jerry Powell. I Betty Grable almost had a 40 week tour lined up with Phil Har ris' band but something happened at the last minutef She tells me she is sick of college pictures. "You have to be a straight sappy lead in these," she says. Vehement denials from Betty that separate personal appearance Tiiannorl bv her and Jackie Coogan mean a marital split. "Thank heavens, everything is all right between us!" she exclaims. For a girl who won't be 22 until December, Betty has hit plenty of headlines . . . many of the unpleas r, rihr. . . . She was only 13 i when she started in pictures . . in ' Eddie Cantor's "Whoopee.' j . Funny problem on "The Rains Came." The research department at Twentieth Century -Fox has been going practically nertz trying to find out what sort of a night gown high caste Indian woman would wear on her wedding night They are now waiting a cabled an swer from Bombay, The Bood in this picture, Inci dentally, will surpass the deluge that Noah rode through in the ark. That lasted for only 40 days and 40 nights. Schedule on the Fox epic calls for 47 days of shooting in the rain. The studio has had to build a 100.-000-gallon reservoir on the back lot to insure sufficient water. London sends a laugh, Warners staged a contest over there in which the prizes were to be the bow and arrow and the dagger used by Error Flynn In "Robin Hood." So far, they haven't been able to present the prizes because the literal-minded English customs have held them up as deadly weapons. A new fan club for Clark Gable has been formed in, of all places, Tahiti. He's been popular over there since "Mutiny on the Boun ty." Has had to send 1.000 photo graphs to be distributed among his admirers. Barbara Stanwyck Maureen Q'Sullivan and John Farrow, almost the only people in Hollywood who were assured space on the first passenger flight of the Atlantic CI l p per, now will give up their tickets ... be cause the baby will be too young to travel. Mozelle Brit ton leaves any min ite for Okla homa City. . . .o recup e ra t e from that crash. It will be the first time her three sisters have seen the baby. . . . No use for the Hollywood lads to cast eyes at Kathryn Adams, the Greg La Cava discovery playing the second lead In "My Fifth Avenue Girl." She's affianced to Frank Greenhough, of St Paul, and he'll be out here as soon as the term is over at Ham line university. . . . Barbara Stan wyck and Bob Taylor finally got a week-end off for a honeymoon. They chartered a boat and went fishing. ... Dick Arlen has ar rived in town with his mother. His 83-year-old father will follow soon. Paramount is tickled to death at the naturalness of 77-year-old Walter Damrosch in "The Star Maker," and is looking for another picture to put him in. . . . Heather Thatcher is no longer the only woman in Hollywood who wears a monacle. Auriol Lee of theater fame, and Virginia rieia aunt. is sporting one arounc tc n. New Bishop v7r.'w ; j i Msgr. Richard J. CiiKhing Director of the Propagation of the Faith society In the Boston arch diocese, Msgr. Richard J. Cushing has been named an auxiliary bishop of Boston by Pope Plus XII. He will fill the pout left vacant by the recent elevation of Archbl.hop Francis J. Spcllrnan as luad of the church in New Yt.rk Quizzed in Death . y 'www ' lift ''' " i"? ' f r I Harry Itrandun Police In Chicago held Harry Brandon, 40, for questioning in connection with the slaying of Mrs. Rose Neary, 42, found stran gled to death in her apartment. SINCLAIR PRODUCTS At UNDERWOOD SINCLAIR STATION MAIN STREET SpaUon Underwood, Manager FARLEY SEES I'lTl'RN IN Bl S INESS THIS SI MMER "The nation's business is on the rise if postal rtceipts can be taken as an example, Postmaster James A. Far ley told the New Jeisey chapter of the National Association of Post masters. "Postal receipts for April were $66,541,799, or $1,000,000 more than that month last year," he said. "Pos tal receipts for the first ten months of this current fiscal year totaled more than $10,000,000 than the pre vious year." (((.I.I MRI S TRAIL WILL BE FOL I LOWED ACROSS ATLANTIC ! P.n American Airways started 25 j hour pa.-st-litrer service yesterduy i across the Atlantic ocean, which , Christopher Columbus took two and I one-half anxious months to span. The airline's 41-ton Dixie clipper, with 10 nun and four women took on , at two p. m. E. S. T., from Washing ' ton s-a base on the first regular scheduled service of its kind between 'the I'nited States and England. "THE LOST COLONY" OPENS THIRD SEASON The summer lonir celehinti.m ,it' the 352nd anniversary of the found ing of the first Enirlish colonies in the New World and the birth of Vir ginia Dare, gets underway July the 1st, with the oneninir of the third season of Paul Green's historical drama, "The Lost Colony," at the Waterside Theatre on Roanoke Is land. It is acclaimed by dramatic critics throughout the country as the foremost, historical attraction in modern America. It will be present ed nightly from July the 1st through the 8th, after which time it will be given on each Wednesday, Thursday, rrulay, Saturday and Sunday. RATES SHOW INCRKASE N'oith Carolina's birth rat.' showed a noticeable detreas,, the tir.-t four months of 1930. So did the death rate, however, putting t lu- law of compensation into effect. Vital sta tistics diviMon showed that during January, February, March and April this year, there were 25,435 babies born in North Carolina. DI KE AND Dl'CHESS OF WIND SOR TO RKTl'KX TO ENGLAND A London newspaper carried the report Tuesday that the Duke and Ducbiss of Windsor would return to England sometime m October to take up their penmanont residence. It was also stated that th,. Duke had given up his (itrht to have the Duchtss recognized by the Royal family, s..i.;..i, .. .... ...ill ii ii lie i'iiiiii ' i I II ineii I ii" fuses lo grunt. There is no question, so the report statv about 'their ob taining permission to return to Eng l i r !..:;. i . . i,. limn, it'i tin in luii Ht'jl I I" , 111: Duke and Duchess are free to live wherever they please. MITH INCLAIR ERVICE We Specialize In WASHINC, GREASING, TIKE KBIA1K1N(2 AND ACCESSORIES V. S. HiKhway 19 & 211 Clyde, N.C. 0 Th 1 3 1 s Bront osaurus, I the thunder reptile. 5 N Ha appears here to I V emphasize . . . ' ' ' N " J V A; ... the vast age ofT N' 1; ''A - , A crude oils from which - V ' ; Slnolalr Motor Oils " h I) 1 - ! : are refined. Sinclair 1 'fZi Opaline Motor Oil, for J, example, is refined ji '- from the oldest Mid- t I ! Continent crudes. IJ i 11 The3e crudes were 4 lji mellowing and filler- ill ' ins In the... c q v , J : l J if i ' ' - 1 ' vtW - I .- , . - I 1 &r ; r f J . ' ti'4'f kith' I . . . earth even before ts?)jff i" w i-jjtfv dinosaurs roamed Am- I , R15' Uvl erica. Oldest crudes hJi Jfr plu3 most modern re- J1. f fining are the reasons 'j' V 1 why Opaline last3 pi longer and stands up L p"-'j better. Ask your nearby Sinclair deal- Nfc er. You'll like the Wjl - vmS( way he treats you. I ZJ CWfflvUtiilA UIMIHV lUAmv Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.) ALLISON - DUNCAN, Agents HAZELW00D and MURPHY