Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / Jan. 5, 1927, edition 1 / Page 3
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REVEWING 1926 By A. B. CHAPIN j * ' P^l i*Tf ^ _ in | . V X S.> . ..f. ? Me ft>ee a y C+iA?HEo Life takes ANOB?ru i , RiDe ?* = Viw ***> ^ ^ W Cot ths +f?o?_ . # Rvaco tmcm bv- r ? ^ QfZpif ? TCRRIFIC STORMS ? "ft ^T' '^/: ~1BMT ,--:?? ' "V &*r&SZ*+ * 100,OOO.OORm^-==T^^r ^ -V ? -. RESCUES CavjSPPSy \ I ~ ^ uCiT^^r ^ iiV MAMY'J .. ? v;- Some ! '* . NEW C-HAMOS A ft>4 |KTi Cc Sa APcwal v.srron/ AMOMfr THE MtSSlNC- "uHL Oil's VwCU ? I CU*#.W.BLUOTT RuDOlPh WALEVTImO CARDINAL MGRCIFR- LUTMSB- 0UROAWK Col. Jonw c. cooudg-5 oscah. S. Straw? JOWM W. WifrKS ftOBT TODD UNCOUJ EUtfBMi V. D69S \WCLG Jofi'CANWOJ ^ _ Sen/ATOft. Cu'MMiwS ?jAaftY HOUOlWl jf) e^?ELz-EfflU SbwAT?% MtKUJLSY JCMPH Vswtu, Advertise in The Jackson County Journal This Week ?y Arthur Britbane GOOD NEWS. CANALS, CROPS, PROSPERITY. WE ARE HOMOGENOUS. ALL ALIKE. It's really a prosperous country we live in, and the prosperity has <?ly commenced. Arthur Rey nolds, able Chicago banker, says our prosperity will last through 1927. It will also last through 1927 and beyond, if we give it a dumee, really, work and do not d*at each other too much. ?? _____ Revised Government reports on trops put com for this year at two billion six hundred and forty-five million bushels, wheat at eight hundred and thirty-two million three hundred and five thousand bushels?and forty million bushel* ?f rye, forty-one million bushels of "Wi eighteen million six hundred ?"d eighteen thousand bales of thirty-three million nine hundred thousand boxes of oranges, ?k-i and you have a slight idea o< *h*t prosperity means. And unlike oil, those crops are exhausted, but go on forever, Creasing. Land in France jj^nted to wheat for centuries pro more bushels per acre now it did 200 years ago. The is that when farmers have big ^?P* they get small prices. Com toatlon sales and voting could , P that, but farmers do not yet tn?" how. ( ^thw good news for all Ameri go ? this: "The lake cities will connected with the Mississippi, . ^ulf and all ports of the world iLj^lfrble waterways through ?S^Ution that should pass this Winter. And a canal from the . lakes to the Atlantic also seems probable if an agreement can be mute with Canada for joint use of the St. Lawrence. . _____ J T The right plan would be an all American waterway from the lakes through New York State, and that will come. But it would cost five or six hundred millions more than the low cost of the St Lawrence canal, which probably will come first. Fanners are deeply interested in these canal projects, for which Secretary Hoover deserves great eat praise. He is a worker. The canals will cut an average of twelve cents from the freight on export wheat and add twelve eents to the farmers' price. ? Harnessing the Colorado River see.iis not far away, thanks to a number of earnest men, including Senator Hiram Johnson, Secre taries Work and Hoover, and others. The remaining difficulty seems to be arranging an agree ment between California and Ari zona. The dam would bev in Arizona, a great part of the power and irrigation would be used in California. The prosperity of one State is reflected in all States. California can no?, thrive without benefitting Florid* and Maine. Arizona, the great State of cop per, cotton, citrus climate and the Colorado, will prove Itself the State of brotherly conciliation. The thing1 designed is to use the country's wealth, water and power especially, and thus build up the entire nation. Arizona will not unwisely withhold from devel opment and use that which, at the moment, she herself cannot use. This is written on the writer's eleventh trip across the continent in fourteen months. The oftener Kou cross, the more "Uniformity of fe and maimers in America amazes yon. t The young man in semi-balloon trousers, left in New York, you find again in Chicago, Kansas City, Topeka, Gallup, Albuquerque, Bar* stow and tens of thousands of him in Los Angeles. Travel a short distance from the shores of Brittany to the moun tains of Auvergne, in France, and yon find language and clothss changed completely, also inter ests, habits and manners. ; Here, from Miami to Portland, we all know the same baseball and football Bcores, see the same mov ing pictures, wear the same clothes, fat about the same About l/ou. Healtn Things You Should Know DRIED FRUITS * Winter now bemg on, the hurr.p famlly may Weil consider the ii" of the best obtainable fruits for 1 dietary. Fresh, native fruits ; difficult to obtain at this season. Fortunately, we do not need accept inferior substitutes; we lv. in dried apples and peaches, as v. as prunes and apricots, not only equal, but actually the superior most of the fresh fruits that co, to our tablsa. As an article fruit diet, there is nothing fi. than the old-fashioned, home-dr apple, which may be stewed, : partaken of three times a day, v the utmost benefit to the sysl Preserved fruits, which are no aar?iy heavily sugared, are r difficult of digestion. The "di apple piseldom heard of more, is far safer to indulge in t many of the factory-made c'i cals which are incorporated too many of the fashionable pit today. Drying fruits, especially in sun, does not remove anything value from them. The watery c tent of the apple is taken away evaporation in drying; the v mines are left, along with the ac and bases peculiar to the variety fruit dried. People who eat d fruits in abundance are seldom flicted with constipation, indi; tlon, nicer of the stomach, many nervous disorders?a Ft ment whiclrdoes not hold g, when' excesses of fresh fruit ; taken. [ \ Dried fruits are In no way perimental; they are a time-tn Sroven, preventive of disease, ave never been called to trer.i patient suffering from an over-u of ftewed, dried fruits. Next Week DANGER SIGNALS Faith without works is worth little, so are pledges without action. The business-like farmer will begin now to plan his crop acreages for the coming season A difference of over 1,000 pounds of legume hay per acre was secured where land was limed as compared with a similar unlimcd area in tests j made by North Carolina farmers last) season Five demonstrations with soybeans showed a yield of 4,606 pounds of hay per acre where one ton of lime was used on the land as compared with 3,822 pounds of hay per acre where no lime was used. The farm population of NortW Car olina in 1925 was 1,446,881 persons. Of this number 937,001 were white people. IAS DiK III BED li Went back to work after three days of home treatment i C. L. Normandy, a civil engineer liv ing at 234 West 9th Street, St. Paul, Minn., was taken with an attack of lumbago and for one week could not move in his bed. "A friend told me to use Sloan's Liniment and I got a bottle. After using it one day, I was able to walk about the house. After three days I was able to go to work, and now 1 am as well as ever. I would not be with out Sloan's Liniment if it cost $5.00 a bottle. It is a sick man's friend." The reason that Sloan's gives such remarkable relief is that it gets right at the cause of the pain. It stimulates the circulation throughout the place where the pain is, and clears out the germs that are causing it. Right away you feel relief. The pain stops, and soon vou are fit as ever. Get a bottle today and have it on hand. All druggists?35 cents. Sloan's Liniment KILLS PAIN The best New Year resolution for the North Carolina farmer this year is one pledging himself to produce Tom Tarheel says the best Wife saver is not some highly advertised bottled concoction bat is running wa his own food and feed crops. ter in the house. - J. B. Ensleu & Son <' I ! Feed, Flour and Groceries Our customers need never worry about quality?flavors or prices. You are never taking a chance on any article?we never substitute something "just as good" for the best. We have alfalfa hay. Buy it for your milch cows. One pound of alfalfa is worth ?' two or three of Timothy, as a milk producer. We deliver in the city and will take or ders over the phone?number 136. ? v, ? v ) ,-v ' : i * "* ? ? .. t groat/ cold weather starter now more dependable than ever "V * Probably no single feature of Dodge Brothers Motor Car has been more widely talked about and commended than the i . power and promptness of the starter. The new two-unit starting and lighting v system now advances Dodge Brothers leadership in this important respect still further. There are now no moving starter parts when the car is in motionmio starter chain?no noise?no wear. The new starter is even more DEPENDABLE than ? . . 1 !>- ? ' the old, and far simpler and more compact in construction. ? . , , - <? Many other major improvements have been added during the past twelve months, all vitally affecting performance and in creasing value far beyond the apparent measure of current Dodge Brothers prices. Sedan $1005.50 Coupe $ 948.50 Touring Car ..., $ 897.00 Roadster .... $ 895.00 *' M. BUCHANAN, JR., GARAGE Sylva, N. C. We Also Sell Dependable Used Cars / ? i Brothers MOTOR CARS li, ? : - i?Tv -
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
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Jan. 5, 1927, edition 1
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