Newspapers / The Transylvania Times (Brevard, … / June 7, 1934, edition 1 / Page 5
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Bugia Glen To Open -- The Greenvnle Y. W. C. A. jumo ^•amp for girls will open at Cam] Burgiss Glenn, Cedar Mountain, 01 June 13, anvl will contniue in sessiot until June 27.'The senior camp foi firls over 12 years of age will operati rom June 27 to July IS. These ramps have proved extreme ly popular in past years, and it is ex petted that many girls from Green ville and vicinity will attend one oj these sessions this summer. _ NEW ARRIVAL Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Led better a daughter on Tuesday, May 29. FRESH MEATS VEGETABLES GROCERIES Phone 47 We Deliver Serving the people for years, we always appreci ate your patronage and try to treat all people right. . . ii CITY MARKET S. F. Allison Mi,in St. Brevard jRULES COMMITTEE :j FOR POOL IS NAMED !i . ■ Aldermen R. P. Kilpatrick and i Anthony Trantham, together with ! City Clerk Harry Patton have been j appointed as a committee to have 'charge of the city park and swim ■ ming pool which will be ready for i opening within the near future. 1’ This committee wiH make the nec essary rules and regulations govern ing the park, playgrounds and swim ming poo! and will also have oversight of the supervision, their actions to be i subject to approval of the mayor and board of aldermen, j Pcuring of the cement pool is com ( plete, steps being poured this week | in the shallow end of the pool. Ernest '"Miller, in charge of construction for ■ pool and other improvements will be • turned in at any time after thi3 ' week. | Bath house, fence surrounding the ] pool an dother improvements will be I ' started within the week .it being in- j ■ tention of the town to have the pool j ready at an early date. PREVENT CHICK DISEASE BY PROPER SANITATION Although no cure has been found for chick coccidiosis, a particularly destructive disease, it may be pre vent! d when proper sanitation steps are taken, says H. C. Gauger, in structor in poultry science at State College. The parasites which cause the dis ease are usually present wherever, there is any poultry, but older birds sometimes harbor the parasites with-1 out suffering any serious ill effects. It is the chick between four and 12 weeks of age that suffers most. Infection starts when a chick eats, the microscopis eggs of the parasite, i The eggs break open in the intestines 1 of the chicks and release myriads of living bodies which attack the mucus membranes. Infected chicks are weak, listless, and droopy. The appetite is gone and j they huddle in groups as though they, are cortd. There is usually a whitish,. watery dropping which has a ten-, dency to paste up the fluff around ■ the tail. Infected chicks soon die. i Chicks should not be allowed^ to f cat the parasite’s eggs, says Gau ger. The brooder houses should be, k^pt sanitary and every precaution taken to keep the eggs from being tracked into the houses from other ; places. Infected chicks should be removed j immediately from the flock and killed and either burned or buried deeply. The litter and sand in the brooder houses should be changed j every other day or oftener. Only fresh, clean material should be used for litter. I While the chicks are in the brooder house the runways should be prepared by spading or plowing the soil so as to turn the infected top soil under. If this is impracticable, the chicks should be restricted to a limited area, which can be covered with sand , or gravel, or they should be confined to an outdoor, wire-floor sun porch j until 10 or 12 weeks old. I i See the Difference! There'S no QUESTION about seeing the difference PURINA STARTENA makes in chicks at six weeks. Thev weigh more. They are better feathered, They have stretch and frame. They are sturdy and lively. It’sthis difference that STARTEN A makes in chicksat six weeks that has brought the reputation to STAR TENA as being America’s best for starting chscks. fUfclNA . chick Jtwwika , PUUNA rj 'i,CHICK. N Feed & Seed Co. The Store With the Checkerboard Sign ____y UNVEILING CEREMONIES PLANNED BY W. O. W.'S Unveiling ceremonies of the monu ment of Sovereign James Waits Cuth bertson wil ltake place next Sunday afternoon at 8 o’clock at Crawford cemetery near Balsam, under sponsor ship of Balsam camp No. 631 of the Woodmen of the World. Graves will also be decorated and memorial services will be held for deceased sovereigns of the W. 0 W. Camp, as follows: Thad M. Connor, Charles A. Rahy, H. Posey Ensley, Dock W. Ensley and Wm. Thadeous Clayton. Members of the W. O. W. and the public are requested to be present, and all are requested to bring what flowers they can. HOME ECONOMICS GIRLS CAMP AT SWANNANOA Several girls of the home econ omics department of the Brevard high school, accompanied by their teacher. Miss Virginia Willcox, left Monday for a five-day encampment at the home economics camp at Swan nanoa. The party will return to Bre vard on Saturday. Local girls attending the camp with Miss Willcox arc: Elizabeth Jenkins, Gwendolyn Grooms, Marie Smith, Helen Galloway, Marie Meece,! Jane Yongue and Lillie Siniard. U. S. COASTAL SURVEY BEING MADE IN COUNTY _ I U. S. Coastal Survey is being made in the county this week, a crew of engineers under F. M. Poole working' the first of the week above Rosnian. j :oming from the Highlands direction.1 Engineer Poole states that the; survey will be made as far as Hen dersonville, and then skip to Ashe ville. After the survey is made a crew will also visit the county for; map making purposes. Want Ads . FOR SALE—Fresh picked straw berries. Phone 2901. Miss Annie Sash. _ WANTED—A bargain in high grade piano. Cash. Camp Carolina, phone 1004. _Itc | FOR SALE—Five burner oil stove with built-in oven. Also 50-pound porcelain lined refrigerator. Inquire »t Moore & Osborne store. ltp ^ FOR RENT—Furnished house, three; bedrooms, modern conveniences, i jlectric l'ange. Apply to Dr. J. H. j McLean. 3tc; (.’OR SALE—Tomato plants: differ-; ferent varieties, 20c hundred at; >ed; sweet potato plants ready Jpne . J. L. Bracken, Lake Sega, R-K. CELERY PLANTS for sale—seit | bleaching. Ready now. 35c hundred, r $1.60 per five hundred. $3.00 per thousand—at the bed. Rev. J. *• Scott, Penrose RFD. ~~‘1 FOR SALE—Tomato plants, Stone, I Bonnie’s Best, Marglobe and Brim-, mer varieties. Fifteen cents hundred at the bed. P. J. Ashworth, 23o Maple St. Brevard._j FOR RENT—Good pasture after J June 1st on Miner St. Apply - j Turnpike Rd., Brevard._ MAN-WANTED' for Raleigh Routei of 800 families. Write immediate-! iy. Rawleigh Co., Dept. NC-180-SA,. Richmond, Va. I MOVING and GENERAL HAUL ING—reasonable prices, every ioad insured. See Charlie McCrary at McCrary Auto Service, Phone ..90, Brevard, N. C._ WANTED — Your Shoe Repairing | We are equipped to do first clasa shoe repair work. Ladies soles and heels 75 cent?. Men’s sole3 and rubber heels $1.00. Brevard bho« Shop, T. E. Waters, owner—Newi Arcade. Jan 1 t.c , WHEN you want to move, don’t i cuss, call Siniard Transfer Co. a„ 'phone i 18 . . . and your wor : ries will be over. Also wood, kincung, sand and gravel—general hauling. Cash only, but less. REOPENING— Blacksmith shop on Depot street. Equipped to do your work on horseshoeing and general re pair work. John Cantrell. up WANTED DOG WOOD — Will pay $15.00 per cord. Specifications lor cutting dogwood logs—not less than 4 1-2 inches at the small end oi log To be sawn in Billets or short pieces that will measure 18, 36 or 54 inches in length. There short logs to be 85 per cent clear oc de fects and we mean by defects— red heart, knots, both large and small, bird pecks, etc., that can be seen with tlie eye or. the outside of the tree. A log that is hollow could not be used unless there was 2 1-2 inches of solid tree between the hoilow and the bark. H. S. TOWNSEND Railroad Street Brevard, N. C. WANT TO TRADE OR SELL— Jersey or Guernsey heifer3, first arid second calves. Will trade for beef cattle, either cows or steers. Aiso pasture for rent by the month or season. Paul F. Roberts, Cedar Mtn. May 10 3tp. WALTERMIRE HOTEL under new management, offers excellent meals iat a reasonable price. Special week ly rates. ___22-Lc ' Renew Your Subscription MRS. JOHN HOOPER | CALLED IN DEATH | Funeral services were held at the : Or’rville Baptist church in Anderson, | S’. C., Sunday adternoon for Mrs. John Hooper, who died Saturday as result of an automobile aocident in which 3he sustained injuries the pre vious Monday. Interment was at Sil ver Brook cemetery. ' Besides her husband, J. H. Hooper, 11 ehjldren survive, five daughters, and six sons, as follows: Mrs. W. N. Porter, Mrs. C. L. Griffin, Misses Virgie, Callie and Ada Hooper, and J. D., H. B., J. R., Jethro, John and Frank Hooper, ail of Anderson, S. C., also one sister, Mrs. H. P. Jewell, of Brevard, and one brother, Robert Queen, of Marble, N. C. Brevard relatives attending the funeral of Mrs. Hooper in Anderson Sunday afternoon included the de ceased’s sister, Mrs. II. P. Jewell, and the latter’s daughters and their husbands, Mr. and Mrs. Giant, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley and Mr. and Mrs. Pressley. Mrs. Jewell and her sister Mrs. Hooper met last summer for the first time in 30 years. OLD LANDMARK IS BEING MOVED ON MAIN STREET Another landmark in Brevard is being removed this week. The old one-story frame building on West Main street, which was built about 35 years ago. by C. C. Kilpatrick for Nathan McMinri, is being torn down, and the lumber purchased by G. W. Hayes will be used by him in building a carpentry shop. An interesting fact concerning this old building is pointed out by Mr.: Kilpatrick that he erected the build ing at a cost of $300 to Mr. McMinn. who in turn fcesed it to Mr. Kilpat rick for a period of six years for use as an undertaking establishment. Mr. Kilpatrick paid a rental of $5 per month on the building, thereby mak ing the income in rentals for the six years equal to more than the original cost of the building. BOWLING ALLEYS ON MAIN STREET OPENED Brevard’s new bowling alleys, located on Main street, were christen ed last Friday night with a win by the local team over an Asheville crew brought over by Beverly Trantham. The new place of amusement has all new equipment and is attracting a number of people. The first cargo of furs was sent from Canada to England in 1676. Within a few' weeks after Roent gen discovered X-rays in 1895, physi cians had bgqun using them in ex amining broken bones. TRY OURWANT ADS ALL INJS| (and THIN SHi SMOtCID I I »CAMEL-I ■ mu in——»i B. H. DeBUTTS D'.v. Pas. Agent, Asheville, N. C. — SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM fg Pr< itect Your BY WASHING and POLISHING IT REGULARLY . the car will LOOK LIKE NEW. jfc; j ,MHl mnn-- _ — ■ — —— i ■■ mmmmmm ■ nM j firestone “ss311 transylvaxu Starters ! BATTERY COUNTY'S ONLY _ ,Au",-^^ion«!:7.i genuine Generators FiiMtaoi Courier Beiierr ia* oalr- f #.* 40 Ignition ^ And Free Inspection Service Drive - ow sJS in .An<l Let u* Check YouT ^M 19 Ignition System. -^•^jse *r Have you seen the new CHEVROLET |! 4.50-21.... •.«!» 6.0M7HW *§*• Call on U3 for a demonstration, and we I sivlsZ' t*"jo Iw-scunj 16.4a believe you will be convinced that it is j j ■ ^ the greatest automobile value on the L. “ ytU,t*HU,Uwrw*ocTU>bt‘-torRUhartlCr^keJt market today. XI and Hurray fimUM, An •"X Monday h *JL iJf/it-.V B. C. JVrfuwk A * ^ ^ * -■"-™«MliillHMiilri —-—-41 REPLACEMENT PARTS When you need parts for your car we can furnish you with almost any item de sired. We Carry Rims, Wheels, Hubs, Bearings, Springs, Radiators, Pistons, Rings, Connection Rods and Bearings, Clutch Parts, Transmission Gears, Drive Shafts, Rmg Gear, Pinions, Axles, etc. SEE US WHEN YOU NEED REPLACEMENT PARTS. McCrary Firestone Products • • Good Guff Gas and Oil
The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 7, 1934, edition 1
5
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