Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / March 16, 1927, edition 1 / Page 7
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'COLDS Recommended and Sold by ?YLVA PHARMACY American Forest Week, is April 24 to 30. v Rutherford County farmers are preparing to store their sweet potato crops. One 3,000 bushel house will be built at Ellenboro; one of 12,000 bushel capacity at Forest City and four 1,000 bushel houses are planned for other sections of the county. Of 1,000 bushels of sweet potatoes stored by M. B. Sample of Pastoquank county last winter, less than two per cent were found to be unfit for food. Mr. Sample built his house last fall.' SAY*" BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST I pr't vi safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis ? Lumbago > Fain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism / r DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART .Accept only "Bayer" package ?- I I ?? Aim ? i MM which contains proven directions, j Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tabWts ' Alsf bottles of 24 and 100?Druggist* ( is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Uoaoaceticaddaat^r^of SalleyUcMil ?' COMING BACK A defunct used car can be Cheaply doctored up so that it will just about carry the purchaser away. The trouble is, he stays away. You can't make customers by making enemies. We prefer to make and keep friends. M. BUCHANAN, JE. GARAGE ? ' , ? ( A USED CAR IS ONLY A5 DEPENDABLE AS THE DEALER WHO SELLS IT Pay and . / " ! Tote'em , ' ^ / Vk r ; (\ ? > i f t* '<?" '' '' .< V# "j ' . ' ' JUST TO SHOW SOME OF OUR CUT PRICES POR ? ? ? I ? . . - u ? THIS WEEK: ? 0 ? f $1.75 C. S. Meat ^ 6<) C. S. Hulls LL ~ V ' > K SEED OATS ?> ii , 1 4.00 SA\ - 4 25 ""Burt.... *r :::i 4.20 Ked Rust Proof ? ? ? SEED POTATOES * ? V 2.00 Improved Early Rose, per bu - v 2.00 Green Mountain, per bu - *? ~~ 3.... 1.10 8 lb. Bucket Lard " 58 4 lb. Bucket Lard.... ? ?'' "" ~ .22 Salt Meat,, Clear Sides, per lb. - ^ Halt Meat, Fat Backs, per lb rr ? " " Xj 07 Sugar jx-r lb .23 Pure loose Coffee, per lb ~~ j5 Apple Tobacco, 10 lb. box $6, plug ? -r ^ . \fy Reynolds Tobacco, 10 lb. box $6.50, plug ^ j Br'iwn's Mule, 10 lb. box $5.5% plug .15 1 Bi Mu-Williams 10 lb. box $6.00, plug ^ . 1 carton '200 Chesterfield Cigarettes ^1 carton 200 Camel Cigarettes pi Iv Prince Albert 2 doz. carton 2.81, per can J. B. tnsleu & Son Feed, Flour and Groceries NORTH GEORGIA INDIAN MOUNDS YIELD STUDIES Atlanta, Ga. Mar. 13?The fasci nating work of reconstructing the life of a prehistoric people that dwelled on the banks of the Etowah River in Northwest Georgia was re lated here tonight in an illustrated j talk by Dr. Warren K. Morehead, of Andover, Mass., direcctor of the pres ent archaeological expedition at the Etowah Indian mounds near Carters ville. ; ?>. Having removed the last of 120 burials in one of the mounds, the exploring party is now concentrating J on the village site, the ethnologist and director of the department of American archoology said: "The life and arts of the war riors are well known because of the number of weapons, ornaments and other things found in the stone graves," the si?eaker said, "but the life of the common people, who we're in the majority, has remained unknown." Work will continue two weeks Jpnger in the Jancient >vil|age^ ,he j said, and the explorers expect to j reconstruct the life of these people,: and have already found portions of the principal clay > walls of their buildings rt one point two feet below the surface, members of the exploring ;>arty , have discovered the hardburned floor ol' a wigwam, the floor being practically intact. Mr. Towe and Mr. Wilson, asso ciates of Dr. Moorehead, have found a number of' clay toys in various puts of ihe field, as well as some odd pifH's, Sewing needles cooking pots and c\vlV> used in perforating de6r skins. ? ?. A skeleton also was discovered with several unusual objects, one o which was a long, slender, sharp instrument of boner\ This object widened at one end and decorated may have been usec( in ^primitive surgery." , v ;1 Practically all the burials unearth ed at the Etowah mound were sur rounded by stone slabs forming coff ins. In some of the graves fragments of textiles were found some of cloth a?d cane and others of wild hemp and wild cotlon. Preservatives had to be used in securing these pieces. No attempt has been made to date these moun,] builders, Dr. Moorehead said. 11 They are simply pre-De-Sota ?that is before 1540. C & G RAILWAY COMPANY SELLS AT AUCTION Murphy Scout - ' f>\ Issuance of receiver's certificates for the purpose of raising funds for the operation of the Carolina and Georgia Railway was recommended yesterday by Silas G. Bernard, receiv er for the road, in his report to the court of its sale to Percy B. Fercbee, of Andrews, for $50,000. Mr. Bernadr's report to Judge Thomas J. Shaw declared "-that the above price represents only about 25 per cent of the indebtedness of the I Carolina an,] Georgia Kail way Com . pany, and therefore your receiver recommends that the bid aforesaid be not approved, but that your re ceiver be authorized to issue receiv er's certificates and obtain thereon sufficient funds with which to put said road in running ox-der at the earliest possible time." The property, including all lands, road beds, superstructures, rights of way, contracts, bridges, trestles, char ter rights franchise^ and rolling stock, was sold yesterday on the Bun combe County Courthouse steps to Mr. Ferebee, who was the highest bidder. Sale of the property came as a result of a complaint filed January NOTICE OF SUMMONS SERVED BY PUBLICATION ?f J North Carolina, Jackson County. j Superior Court. Mrs. Neal Quiett i. vs. Hubert Quiett The defendant above named will j take notice that an action lias been! commenced in the Superior Court of' Jackson County, in the State afore said, by the plaintiff against the de-: ; fen dan t for the purpose of severing the bonds of matrimony existing be tween the plaintiff and the defendant,' and a summons therein has been is-1 t 1 ' sued returnable before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Jackson coun ty, Sylva, N. C., on the 5th day of April, 1927, when and where the de fendant is required to appear and answer the complaint to be filed therein and if the defendant fails to answer, the plaintiff will take judg ment for the relief asked in said complaint. ^ This the 5th day of March, 1927. J. T. GRIBBLE Clerk..Superior..Court. ' 20 in Superior Court here, against the road by J. R. Simmonds and W. T. Givins, of Johnson City, Tenn., and the Franklin Fourth Street National Bank, of Phildelphiaa, Pa., creditors. The complaint requested appoint ment of a receiver. The appointment of Mr. Bernard was signed January 25 by Judge Shaw. The road which extends from the Southern Railway at Andrews, Chero kee county, through the Peachtrec and Hiawassee Valleys into Hayes ville, in Clay county, has been idle for some time. John C. Arbogast, of Asheville, president of the road, de clared in his answer to the complaint, that the road had been unable to meet its obligations and lie too requested appointment of a receiver. The sale conducted yesterday is subject to the court's approval. DARE COUNTY STUDENT ENROLLS AT CULLOWHEE Cullowhee, N. C-, March 10?From far away Dare county on the Atlantic coast, where Sir Walter Raleigh plari't ed that "Lost Colony; inl584 comes Miss Lessie Rollinson to Cul lowhee State Normal School to con tinue her education. Although Miss Rollinson lives in North Carolina, three days of contin uous traveling were required in ord. r for her to cover the more than 500 miles which separate her home frcin Cullowhee. She left Frisco, N. C., rarly, Monday morning and did not ?each Cullowhee until Wednesday aC ternoon. Miss Rollinson cross d tli Mbemarle Sound from Frisco to Elizabeth City on a fishing traveled by train from Elizabeth C ty and rode in a bus from Sylva to Cul lowhee. RHEUMATISM .While in France with the American rmy I obtained n French prc-scjv> on for the treatment, of Rheumstisi and Neuritis. I have given this . io thousands with wonderful result The prescription cost me not!, in sr. I ask nothing for it. I will 'mail it : you will send me your address. A postal ill bring it. Write today. AUL CASE, Dept. C-654. Brocfct^j Mass. . .!: # ? Now is the time to put Frigidaire in your home Act before hot weather comes A CALL at our display room, a word from you, and tomorrow you can have Frigid aire in your home. And from that time on you can forget about refrigeration. You will be entirely independent of outside ice supply. Come in today. See the Frigidaire frost-coil ?how it works?how it preserves the fresh ness and goodness of all foods?how it freezes ice cubes for table use?how it makes delicious frozen desserts.* . ' L C. hall to ire PRODUCT^S^ oP GENERAL MOTORS / * ? , ? ? ? ? Chevrolet stands unchallenged as the world's ,largest producer of gearshift Eccn<>rnical trucks. N r - With its powerful valve-in-head motor ?now equipped with AC oil filter and AC air cleaner; with a 6-inch channel steel frame, super-rugged rear axle and these modern 3-speed transmission, recently . improved?it is praised by users every- Low rrices I where as the greatest commercial car 1-Ton Truck j $/:oa I ft . ? Stake Body value of aU time. i.xonTruck $7cc Only the economies of tremendous i.ToPniltdy tim volume production make possible such ?cabTnd ch??i. 610 super quality at Chevrolet's low prices. i-Ton Truck *495 Come in and see the truck that has won %-Ton Truck $->qc worldwide leadership. Learn why it has chaMi" given such supreme satisfaction to so Chasiij AH price* f.o.b. Flint, Midi In addition to these low prlew many users of every type?big fleet d^rSeLwe^SXHS Operators and individual owners. ' ?S? .vilKlII v .? ? V?: ? . . , ?; '* 7 , ' ?t ? , \ t \ f* ; ' ' ' ? ?" 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Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 16, 1927, edition 1
7
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