""""j ' ? ??i ? . IT" '^?^M??Um?^,?U?1?L^?J??^?5 ^___| 1 : LJ g ;_j i^^i-T-rt-y*-1-^- - ? ? 1 _ ? j 0) tl?' Y ear in Advance inthe County. ^ Sylva, N. C., Wednesday, August 4,1926 $2.00 the Year in Advance Outside County [fOLli, STATE POULTRY r Hce SHOT BY CATTLE TESTING FRANKLIN CREAMERY IS OPENED enrriAl IQT UCDC IirVT wiw n?*i..n..? SPECIALIST HEBE NEXT WEEK v?M?a*iiuill IV Ul LULU RAYMOND GLENN' CAMPAIGN STARTS GREAT DAIRY POSSIBILITIES SHOWN irrtiisei"cnts 'iavt' ^een made LarJi i'??""> c'? w- Tilson Lsttare ?'i?- -ivices of Air. A. 0. Lor, 1 >,,ult r.v S|H'ciaIist for Lfcvn ^""Iv ';""K'rs week. L ((liver, is known to many of ? tanners and business men from last .March in the in ?" visit, hctv ul a standard flock of poul a cash fiti farm. S?i work iii tartt'il Hiis ?lion i>l ?li<\ ci jitaml pin'Moed baby chicks were 1 -1 Kftcf (n*t ul :i si:"" ' 8s lilt* lion ?"?" ? startfil lliis year in most every ' ;!u\ connt v. Some 5 to 6 ^jt i" ?' f4j# cash nop on every Jackson r,H farm. S"iae real good foun ' --.irt ii: tana poultry has , tailed from the best our own lltN-ks in the county this * ?-? -1 itfhcd Wf 2 iito 7 thousand chicks Ufbrwuin on tlu- farms from out *|p thi* coiiU;) ? '* Kb bromU.:. rising of these ' bv tin-.various farmers has {* . WI iwess on, the whole 1% ??* growing off fast L a, wt.n-ls were marketed. J, it is cvi'i' Ht already that we ' ))ri,|?n u? house and feed these llet' ami tl?' best of our yearling t for tall funl winter egg produc-j tfor there's where! our real pro-j Htt nufilt'- Then too we are noti mL ,0 furnish a siood warm house I'jocljfwt 10 ??>' ,ien or Pullet i will uot pay lis well for it, so tok eoll our entire flock very in the next davS if we have it already. ): / Oirthe' wlwk'l the pullets from our fc produced and hatched here in eounty from the best breeders in choice t'loc'fcs are looking better Kady than those importeu from tilde, so we are ready for pro itiu^ more cljicks; troin our own ?b?a flocks in a county hatchery i our Wit, [ Theke and other important prob ps uqiuH-ctetl with farm poultry Hying will be thoroughly discussed WWwex and County Agent TWaou at tk fallowing meetings! next- ueek: Monday Mrs. Fay Yar j*r'x a. m. aml .Wis. J. H. Reair K> a. in., hot It in Qualla, and Mr. Norman Hall's, Savannah at 4. m. TuosdaV/(arl Allman's, Web-' ler, IV a. to. and S. jl Phillijw' | 'illets, j?. in. ami McKinley Hen 's, Addie 4 p. m. Wednesday, 'rank Norton's. Cullowhee 8 a. m , Wwnv.HoojH-1 s, S]M*edwell 10 a. in. I ^'1 Marion Moody's, Krastus .'1 p.' ."jaiul' Taylor^' Hampton's, Glen?' Jill* 5 p-o in. Thursday, Miles b's, "fui'ka>ci;iiee 10 a. m and K.j t'aiiey Fork *2 p. in. audi hit Nicholson's, Johns Creek, 4 III. I J Thursday night at H p. m. the iltrj- jjrowcis thruout the county un,'ed to meet in the town hall " Sylva Supply to hear Mr. Oli talk on*,* A County Hatchery for klisoti" Sitd to hear the plans! lor starting? tlie hatchery this J"- A hatchery will furnish a good Bj'rktt tor engs in'the spring when P?y sell cheap otherwise, we can pduce better chicks than we can s and lor less money and certainly W|" keep our money at home ro Jackson count v. -o S. ALFRED JOHNSON DIES | On .July 2 '.r.l Mrs. Alford Johnson| N-Mary Clark \va> called to rest. Johnson lived a be*mtifnl ^fstiaii life, ha\infj'professed faith 1 Clirist when hut a yoiuu; woi ' in ^ united with the Baptist church. M?. Johnson married Mr. Alford Pohnsoji,in 1*10, u, this union were' T?n.nine children, six of whom are pill living. Mr. ami Mrs. Johnso:i w'-,e *ivfs ot Macon c ounty. Mis. Joltn jj"1 s f?ith(*r' was a confederate sol r and trave his life for the I'^se ,r the South." i ^ Johnson had been in ill ^ 'or several months; still nor caine as a surprise to many of * ,rit'n?ls and relatives. Everything 1 wuhl In- done to relieve ?cr "Terin^ iu the medical profession ^ {W. The end was quiet and N-tui. I' ,rs" Johnson is survived by her Mr. Alford Johnson, and CL ? Ire"' M,s- Sarah Pressley, Tcip'6 ,'?'n,S011. John Johnson, Mrs. JVV|? Wilson, Mrs. Beulah Wilson, [ Th Vranks. |st ft )mu'l'al :in^ interment were lltv 0 "ll^ cemetery, Rev. Wes | ? Ken conducting the services. Y T. R. BALSAM Mr. John T. Jones and family went to Waynesville Saturday. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert For est Bvyson July 26th, a daughter, Ivaty May. Miss Dixie Jo Warren returned Sunday from a visit with her sister, Miss Hannah barren in Ashevillc. Mr. Hubert Ensley spent last week end here on1'his way to Charlotte where lie will take a course in the Chevrolet school. Mrs. Maybelle Perry and Mr. Howard Warren motored to Canton Saturday. i > Mi-s. Margaret Jones and Mrs. Lona Green went to Waynesville Saturday. Miss Stella Jones of Waynesville was here Sunday. Mrs. Sells and little Master Jack have returned from" a week end visit 1 to Covington, Ky. Mr. W. M. Quiett and famliy who have been visiting in and near Whit tier stopped a short while in Balsam Monday en route to their home in Orlando, Fla. Mr. Kobert Brvsou returned Mon day from Salisbury. Mrs. J. C. H. Wilson, Misses Louise and Melita Wilson of Ashe ville and Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Burdcll of Tampa, Fla., were here Sunday o-i THE FRANKLIN CREAMERY Ashevillc Citizen. \ The opening of the Carolina Cream ery Company's new plant at Frank lin Saturday was an important event to that section, and the most en couraging assurance of its success was Ihc recognition of this imj>ort ancc bv the people there. They came by the hundreds from a wide terri tory and made the occasion a nota ble one.' And is so doing they showed an appreciation of the economic j>os ;i bilities of their country1 and an in terest in progress aloug the lines of certain success which does credit to their intelligence. It is thereby indi cated that they realize the great nat ural advantages of their region as % dairy center and are keen to take advantage of these. As pointed out by one of the shakers, Dr. A. J. Glover, of Wisr cousin, a state where the dairy in dustry has been brought to a high |K>int in volume and perfection, Wes tern North Carolina has many ad vantages over Northern states in the matter of milk and butter production. The climate here is alone a notable ajssct in our favor. As Mayor Dan Tompkins, of Syl va, stated, poor roads have been a bar to dairying on a large scale in the far Western counties? but now that good highways run North and South markets are easily accessible, and with a modern creamery at hand there is strong incentive to capital ize natural assets. The banks of Jackson county have shown n com mendable spirit in encouraging blood ed stock there, and Macon county now has an immediate home market. Dairying in that region will eventual ly be on a big scale?why not now ? OPERATOR "BREAKS" New York, Aug. 1?C. T. Wright, telegraph operator on the long West ern trunk wire of The Associated Press "broke" for the first tiiac in many a long trick tonight when the emotionless Morse code ticked off the story of a truck wreck at Gastonia, N C. c, r "Five girls killed," the item read ?just another of the so-conna n holiday fatalities?a pienic party o^j a family outing, a grade crossing, a' speeding express. "The dead are Bertha Wrigl.-, 16, her sister, Laura,JJO" the copy mid, and then a break and the sign "(more)" as another point inter rupted with what seemed tq the con trol editor a more weighty item. Telegrapher Wright took the in tervening item and then cor.ipletud that from Gastonia. "They are my sister^", h?"; ex plained, "one of them lived 'with me most of the time since mother died. I'm afraid I'll have to ask for relief so that J. can go there." Si. 'V John S. Nance, highway construc tor, is in Bryson City Hospital re covering from four gunshot wounds, and Raymond Glenn, Sylva jeweler, is in custody, pending the outcom? of Nance's condition, following a shooting affray on the streets of Sylva, last Friday morning. .Mr. Nance, whose homefis said to be in Bedford, Va. has been in Sjlva only a short while, working with the Overstreet and Nance Construct* >n Company, contractors on the high way from Sylva to Balsam, and is said to be about 35 or 40 years of age. Mr. Glenn is a young citizen o? Sylva, having moved here with his family, about three years a