Newspapers / The Transylvania Times (Brevard, … / June 24, 1954, edition 1 / Page 19
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(Omitted Last Week) An iris is a lovely thing, but not So delicate as lupine in full bloom; Though pinks and pansies held their sunlit spot, They cannot match the helio trope’s perfume; And if bleeding heart is grace ful!, still It’s dripping radiance may not compete With memories of tulip, daffodil Or crocus here beside the garden seat. Each has its special beauty. If one choose Cleome or larkspur as the love liest, Could one be certain that the early rose Is not, when all is said and done, the best? Far better with each day to take one’s pleasure Impartially from all the garden’s treasure. —Morrison TRY TIMES WANT ADS Stop Taking Harsh Drugs for Constipation Avoid Intestinal Upset! Get Relief Ttab Gentle Vegetable Laxative Way! for constipation, never take harsh drugs. They cause brutal cramps and griping, disrupt normal bowel action, make re peated doses seem needed. When you are temporarily consti pated, get sure but gentle relief—without salts, without harsh drugs. Take Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative contained in Syrup Pepsin. The extract of Senna in Dr. Caldwell’s is one of the finest natural laxatives known to medicine. Dr. Caldwell’s Senna Laxative tastes good, gives gentle, comfortable, satis fying relief of temporary constipation for every member of the family. Helps you get “on schedule” without re peated doses. Even relieves stomach sourness that constipation often brings. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s. Money back if nocsatisfied. Mail bottle to Box 280, New York 18, N. Y. The last two lines of the poem is good advice. For, if you’re like me, you love all of them—each has a beauty all their own. GARDENING: When roses start to slow down on flowering, perk them up with fertilizer, and be sure to soak it in. Keep the dead flower heads picked or cut off. Cultivate very shallow, and place mulch around the base of roses. Plant more gladioli at this time, and at two week intervals until the latter part of July. If you have a nice shady place out-of-doors, you could plunge pot ted plants there for summer. Be su to water regularly and keep them sprayed to repel insects. June is the month that chinch bugs or Japanese beetles are, or have been, at work. They have usually done the damage when the brown spots appear, but other areas could, and should, be pro tected. Chinch bugs kill grass by sucking out the juices. The Jap anese beetle grubs kill grass by eating the roots. A ten per cent DDT dust will kill both insects. Six pounds per one thousand square feet of lawn is the needed amount. Put on just before a rain, or soak in with the garden hose. In buying, you might ask your dealer’s advice about sprays or dusts for chinch bugs and Japanese beetles. Fifty per cent wettable chlordane is good. For other garden subjects such as rhododendron or azaleas, spray with a nicotine or rotenone spray. Keep all dead wood cut out of shrubs, trees, etc. Save seeds of the early bloom ing flowers, and plant right away, the earlier the better. June brings roses—and foremost in gardeners minds when roses are mentioned is the beautiful rose garden at the home of Brevard’s rose king, Aston Heath! Many oth er lovely flowers at the Heath home, too. Mr. and Mrs. Don Jenkins grow marvelous roses, too. The beau tifully landscaped grounds, the magnificent trees and lovely lawn all add up to “a dream picture.” Have you ever seen the superb potted plants and the many other splended flowers Mrs. Porter Tins CADET JAMES L. CHAPMAN III, of Terrace Park, Ohio, displays his diploma after he was graduated with the 1954 class at the United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Although Chapman was ranked 470th in his class, he had the distinction of being the 20,000th to graduate since the Academy was founded in 1802. (International) Robert E. Tinsley Is Inducted Into US Marine Corps Robert Earl Tinsley, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Tinsley, of Route 2, Brevard, has been enlist ed in the U. S. Marine corps and been assigned to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot at Parris Island, S. C., Sgt. Carl W. Ripley, local Ma rine recruiter, announced today. Pvt. Tinsley will be assigned to a ground, sea or air unit of the Marine corps upon completion of a 10-week basic training period at Parris Island. He will then become eligible to attend one of more than 140 job specialist schools offering marines training in 470 job skills. ley grows? Well, you have quite a treat in store, for Mrs. Tinsley is one of Transylvania’s topmost gard eners! So long, gardeners! Cows on North Carolina farms produced 161 million pounds of milk during April, 1954, some 17 million pounds more than was pro duced during April a year earlier. Q......B f. . . And We Quote:} ........ c “Why is it that the wrong num ber on a telephone is never busy when you call?“—Charles Knouse. “Dumb animals have one advan tage—they’re not scared stiff about their sins every time they get sick.”—M. J. Monaghan. “Most girls will do almost any thing for a dinner except cook it.” —Ted Steele. “Once the citizen loses his sense of personal responsibility for the welfare of the nation—of partici pation as an active, loyal citizen— we shall indeed be destroyed from within.”—Sen. Karl Mundt. * * * “If you don’t think the dollar’s worth anything today, just try to collect some that are owed you.”— L. S. McCandless. The average number of people employed on United States farms in 1953 was 8,580,000, about 1 per cent less .than a year earlier. ew engine power! lew operating economy! ' ■■ New Chevrolet Trucks... do more work per day... more work per dollar! You save hours on the road. Thanks to greater ac celeration and hill-climbing ability, you can save time without increasing your maximum road speeds. You save extra trips. That’s because of extra load space. New pickup bodies are deeper, new stake and platform bodies wider and longer. You save time on deliveries. New truck Hydra-Matic transmission saves time and effort at every stop. Op tional at extra cost on Vi-, %- and 1-ton models. You save on operating costs. The “Thriftmaster 235” engine, the “Loadmaster 235,” and the “Jobmaster 261” (optional on 2-ton models at extra cost), deliver greater horsepower plus increased operating economy. You save with lower upkeep, too. There are heavier axle shafts in two-ton models, bigger clutches in light and heavy-duty models, stronger frames in all models. And your savings start the day you buy. Chevrolet, you know, is America’s lowest priced line of trucks! Come in and see all the wonderful new things you get in America’s number one truck. Now’s the time to buy! Get our BIG DEAL! Save with a New Chevrolet! McCrary Auto Service, Inc. Dial TUrner 2-2311 BREVARD, N. C. PERSONNEL IN PISGAH CHANGES District Ranger At Local Station Transferred, Ef fective July 5 A number of personnel changes in the Nantahala and Pisgah Na tional Forests were announced to day by D. J. Morriss, supervisor of North Carolina National Forests. Elmer R. Jacobs, assistant ranger of the Pisgah district here, is being transferred to Eustis, Fla. He will be replaced at the Pisgah Forest office by Chester M. Archibald of Mississippi. Other transfers and changes an nounced by Mr. Morriss are as fol lows: District Ranger John Wasilik of the Wayah district of Nantahala, with offices in Franklin, will re tire June 30 after 35 years service in the United States Forest Ser vice. He will be succeeded by Wil liam L. Nothstein of Lenoir, rang er of the Grandfather district of Pisgah. Taking Nothstein’s place will be Edward M. Manchester of Rob binsville, ranger of the Cheoah dis trict of Nantahala. Manchester’s job, in turn, will be filled by Earl A. Parsons of Chattahoochee Na tional Forest in northern Georgia. Bob Pearl, assistant district ranger in the Wayah district, has been promoted to district ranger and will be transferred to Gloster, Miss. He will be replaced at Franklin by W. J. Bryan of Center ville, Ala. John Stanley of Marion, assistant ranger on the Catawba district of Pisgah, will exchange posts with Clifford R. Gaulkner of Murphy, assistant ranger of the Tusquittee district of Nantahala. On August 15, District Ranger George Anderson of Murphy, will transfer to Danville, Ark. He will be succeeded at Murphy by Wil liam C. Howell of South Carolina. All of these changes will take effect July 5. When you think of prescrip lions, think of VARNER’S. — adv. When your plumbing or heating equipment needs repairs or ad justment of any kind, give me a ring. I also do installations in an expert manner. I hold a state license as a plumb ing and heating contractor and have had 16 years’ experience in the business. Dependable work at reasonable prices is my motto. S. H. BARNETT AT F. H. HOLDEN MILL WORKS Phone 3-1132 ) Get rid of old-fashioned, wasteful heating systems t Install FLUID HEAT ECONOMICAL Automatic Oil Heating today I • Save up to 30% on your heating bills: Install a famous Fluid Heat Automatic Oil Heating Unit today! Whether you require a complete new unit or a conversion unit, large or small, there’s a f luid Heat unit to nt your neeas. /vna remem ber—with Fluid Heat, you own a unit backed . by over 29 years of research and manufacturing | know-how! Don’t put it off... visit or call ua today! There’s no obligation, of course. Winter Air Conditioners • Boiler Bonier Unite Rotary and Pressure Burners • Con version Units "WORLD'S ECONOMY CHAMPION" We Clean and Repair Any Make of Furnace FREE INSPECTION COKER HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING CO. Phone 3-6471 Asheville, N. C. Who owns an ELECTRIC FREEZER . . . if she could get along without it now! • Save time on shopping, meal-planning, preparation. • Save money — freeze garden produce, buy in quantity, at peak season or on sale. • Always have a variety of fine rood at your fingertips. See Your Electric Appliance Dealer or Come to Our Sales Floor Office: TUrner 2-2621 — Sub Station: TUraer 2-4291
The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 24, 1954, edition 1
19
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