Jay Afternoon, January
if
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t
4 ?
C:i L. 1.CIAL TAGS
:la:: -zzz. Ha. (UP)
' i c.'.i. i r.s will be able to rec
radio "hams" by their auto
- . tags in 1950, The state au
; t-i special plates bearing call
;bers of the operators.
PIOUS HOPE
ST. LOUIS (UP) Mrs. Leola
Peddiford hopes the men who rob
bed her of a leather case took a
good look inside. It contained only
her Bible. "I hope they read It,"
she said. . ,
i'l.
KM-
i4
i: 1
(Hlni i; lililil to"
De Soto Announces Brand New Model
- V
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V. f 4 lJ
1 ' "-'"v V
i
Sate on fuel! Stop this heat loss!
.With efficient, fireproof Eagle-Pichcr In
Bulation installed in Bidewalls and ceilings,
heat ia kept within the house. As a result
rooms are warmer and easier to heat
and you'll Bare as much as 40 of scarce '
f ueL '
Ask about the Certified In
sulation Job i an Eagle
Plcher exclusive. " " "
FOR FREE SURVEY CALL
Asheville 3-0946, Canton 2263
it
vi
De Soto announces a brand new model that goes on display at Howell Motor Co., De Soto-Plymouth
dealer on Tuesday, January 10.. Advance information disclosed that the new De Soto will introduce a
long list of new style and performance features. The rear of the car Is completely new with sweeping,
peak-crowned fenders; a wider, lower window 33 larger; a deeper, lower, more protective bumper;
and relocation, of the combined tail lights, stop lights, and directional turn lights. The newly de
signed grille is lower and new combined circular parking lights and turn signals are set into it. The
hood ornament is a new beautifully sculptured bust of De Soto. Interior styling is luxurious. In the
forefront of mechanical advances, are new and larger hydraulic brakes. No car in America will have
larger brakes. The 112-horsepower, high-compression engine combines with Tip-Toe Hydraulic Shift
and gyrol Fliud Drive to give excellent performance and "lets you drive without shifting."
MORE ABOUT
Health Unit
(Continued from Pare 1)
his headquarters in Sylva.
The new governing body also
elected as additional members of
the board Dr. T. D. Slagle and W.
R. Hampton of Jackson County;
Dr. J, L. Woody of Swain; and
Clarence E. Mitchell of the Cher
okee Reservation.
The officers for the counties
within the new district were select
ed as follows:
Jackson Charlie Thomas, sani
tarian; Miss Viola Mann, nurse;
and Mrs. Juanlta Phillips, clerk;
Swain W. T. Grant, sanitarian;
Mrs. Doris Hicks, nurse; and Juan
lta Meadows, clerk;
Cherokee Reservation Miss
Mary Oliver, nurse;
Macon H. T. Collins, sanitarian;
Gladys Shopc, nurse; and Eva Con
ley, clerk. i
John R. Cabe
30-31 Mclntyre BIdg. ,
Robert F. Wilson
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
WOMEN WATCH FORESTS
COLUMBUS, O. (UP) Five wo
men are employed by the State of
Ohio as fire watchers at state forests.
MORE ABOUT
Court
(Continued from Page 1)
Sharp, East Fork;
Nathan M. Walker, Clyde F. A.
Crawford, Clyde; W. C. Welch,
Iron Duff; Lloyd Shelton, Ivy
Hill; Frank Mehaffev. Ivy Hill;
O. H. Shelton, Wanyesviile; Jack
T. Cabe, Beaverdam; G. Newton
Ledford, Fines Creek; W. C. Jen
kins, White Oak; Welch Singleton,
Pigeon; J. T. Powell, Beaverdam;
Erastus Wood, Jonathan Creek;
Gid Francis, Waynesvllle; Jarvls T.
McCracken, Waynesville.
Second week
C. L. Leatherwood, Jonathan
Creek; Norman Caldwell, Ivy Hill;
Grady C. Rogers, Clyde; Nettie E.
Allen, Waynesville; Harvery P.
Haynes, Fines Creek; George Gal
loway, Waynesville; J. L. Teague
White Oak; A. Howell, Waynes
ville;- W. H. Burgln, Waynesville;
John B. Sharp, East Fork; Matt R
Caldwell, Clyde;
Miss Mannie Clayton, Waynes
ville; R. B, Hipps, Beaverdam; Max
Rogers, Beaverdam; Oscar Grasty,
Ivy Hill; Cashus Rogers, Crabtree;
MORE ABOUT
PMA Starts
(Continued from Pare 1)
being launched on a nation-wide
scale in one to four counties In
each state.
In North Carolina, Haywood and
Iredell ara the only two counties
in which the program has been set
up and approved.
However, the results of the work
in these two counties will be an
alyzed by the various agencies to
determine exactly what parts of it
would be useful in their own par
ticular programs.
One of the prime purposes is to
encourage the individual farmer to
organize and maintain his own
conservation program and to use
his experience in developing his
own agricultural projects.
The directors of the program
also want the farmer to consider
his farm as a whole, rather than
as a single cash enterprise around
8IOSE AEOCT
Tardy Taxes
(Continued irom rase 1)
ties against those filing after Janu
ary 1. He said, however, that since
he had not received the notice un
til January 4 that he would charge
penalties only against those people
who file after that date.
The penalty, he declared,
amounts to either f 5 or 25 per cent
of the income tax the delinquent
filer must pay whichever is the
greater.'.. '
The letter Mr. walston is sena-
imrout to the delinquent taxpayer
requests him to come to the collec
tor's office in the Court House on
certain date and bring all his
records -with him.
If the tax payer does not appear
to keep the engagement, then Mr.
Walston will compute the tax, pen
alty, and interest he owes and send
him a bill for it.
If the tax payer doesn't pay the
bill, he'll be subject to a tax war
rant.
Mr. Walston said about 500 per
sons in and around Canton are on
the delinquent list as not having
filed tax returns for 1946, '47, or
48.' '
He also reminded the folks who
have figured that thetr exemptions
do not require them to pay any tax
that they are required by law to
file a return anyway, showing these
exemptions.
The late tax money turned in to
the collector's office by December
31 did not mean, however, that
everyone of . those filing returns
made payments, s
Actually, Mr. Walston said, the
money came from only 20 per cent
of those who filed.
Clycb Firo
(Continued from rage 1)
bucket brigade hastily organizea
by church workers who were pre
paring the chapel for a Christmas
program. It was under control
when a fire engine from Canton
and the hose cart from Clyde arrived.
One Clyde official said later that
if the blaze had made any heaa-
. 1 4 1 ,J
way, tne towns nose can cuuiu
have done little good.
The cart carried only' 1,000 feet
of hose, he explained, and the fire
hydrant closest to the church was
some 3,000 feet' away.
The members of the bucket brig
ade had obtained their water from
a nearby house."
Egg production usually drops
from 20 to 25 per cent during a
hen's second year of laying, ac
cording to University of Illinois
poultrymen, ,
Uie r-Iountalaeer Uam
L...i'i
0? DnoiiAcet
Ai w t"t older, strew )
exertion, eicvnivt smoking or t
cold sometimes slows down k,'"
tioB. This may lead mny
plain of nagging backache, Iojs j
energy, headache and diiaiaJa?
up nights or frequent passageTa
from minor bladder -irritation,
dampness or dietary indiscretio1!
If your discomforts are dii, , '
causes, don't wait, try Doan ', piiL
diuretic Used successfully b J1
over M years. While the J V
often otherwiss occur, if, tJ" '
many times Doan's give
help the 15 miles of kidney tubejL
flush out waste. Get Doan, p.'
DoAirs Puf
D. J. Boyd, Ivy Hill; Irving F.
Leatherwood, Waynesville.
Yon Will Find at
10) 9
Kays
Hkindreds Of
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IT GETS COLD IN VIRGINIA
BURKES GARDEN, Va. (UP)
Weather station records here show
that killing frosts have occurred
over the years in every month in
this area except July and August.
But the oldest inhabitants of the
area cannot remember a single
crop failure.
which all his other enterprises are
built.
Cooperating in this Haywood
County Conservation Program are
the county Extension Service staff,
the Farmers Home Administration,
Tennessee Valley Authority, the
county vocational agricultural
teachers, The Champion Paper and
Fibre Company, the U. S. Produc
tion Credit Administration of Hay
wood and Buncombe Counties, and
the N. C. Agricultural Experiment
Station.
For the training period, two-
man teams consisting of a forest
er and an agronomist will instruct
groups of approximately 20 PMA
community committeemen each,
spending two days on farms, going
over woodland, cropland, and pas
tureland to observe conditions.
One PMA official pointed out
also that one important effect of
the new project will be to make it
a supplement to the extensive
Community Development Program
which is entering its second year
in Haywood.
"CHECKERBOARD
JAMBOREE"
h&zM$- --Vlth
"iMw favorite Guest
rf- WHCC 1:45 PJVI.
T . f')ih eomplimnii of
Your Local Purina Dealer
Attention Mr.
I 8
raraier.
him ww wx mm- aari
mm seds &
m I
ImJ . V-' .
,;i . , . f
Sheets
Towels
Pillow Cases
PEC
Shop liir leparlmenSs For Doysf and Children's Uear
RAYS
De"
n n
M tiO
WHO
We Now Have The New Heavier
FORD Tractor
I
We Have In Stock
The Following
DEARBORN
IMPLEMENTS
12-In. Slatted Wing.
Flows.
Double Disc Plows.
12-In. Moldboard Flows.
it Lift Type Bush and
Bog Harrows
Woodsaws.
Tillers
Cultivators. i
Side and Bear Mowers.
DELIVERED
PRICE
With
lore Ilosrsepover
Call Us For a
DEMONSTRATION
- ON-YOUR FARM
TODAY!
,Let Us Show You The Many Improvements t
1950 FORD TRACTORS Have Including
Exclusive Implement Hydraulic Touch Control-
Plus 815.00
N.C. Sales Tax
Phone 461 . , . MainS