#)|7l
fl0,<, a '? "?'?!> Hilda.
P & ft &
)lr. n"'1 \'s "? L- Kti-ner, who
nlltly ltl"\'W
H't'J'C
I MlS. S. T. ,Mc
[,S. 1'. "?
\| f iDiii Sylva to Glcn
V W|MV . I ..
^,r, ln'K'i Mw?la>
vil'ft -v. -r *
... M (Mrs ? ?'
" .... dm lirst of
yr, U. ?' ?
hinitiit n>mr up (lie first of
?
IV. H. Khodes.
t *
Hutu and ?hiiinita Moody,
in quests for the
. '"'"?ss of
[h < ***' -? ??
lii
uiuth
Mr
(?,{
h.iu
'r.,| ,!:,)? of >liss
Kvelyn
Kit
T|,. .? l:"f ?v*'"
.'I Dr. 0. B. Van
Jit r?- for his funeral
|,,v iiii'ih<r, Mr. Arthur Van
U'lK
y i(| -.hi. I r.iMklni, from Mf
(li?.,t olii'i. ami his sister, Mrs. W. P.
\Vln-rrv, hi Omaha Xehras ka.
* *
?j|H. h.r.iif IV;n-l)crs' Association!
fillov. " ill serve a luneheoii ,
!i.i- of the county at the
rarity t?n? * meeting to he held
!,nr<' ?' the luncheons
Blji hi- nj> a plate. The pro
of (' , ,
tv?:n t,rl
l,? in
c< i"1''
l.
\m
hm'iI for carrying: on
nk of the community.
i!? nvll;'"'
ir 7t *?
Tl?. CnlIi'V.hee ('omirunitY Clul
nill Ju'M it* ivsruhir meeting Friday
iH.ki -1 ;5:;{0- Mi*. Stilhvel1
Bill talk i'" ' I"' coming election.
If,,.:, ,,, . f..r I lie afternoon are Mrs
j.- I!. Brown, Miss Catherine Xeal
;ni, jf,,. K. If. Stilhvell.
* * #
ALLEN BARRINGTON
\|i^v\,!:i li.i.'i inirt??n, daughter of
Mr*. I!. I'. H:?:i :.nirtoii, and Mr. L.
I'. Alliii ?ni' married at the honu
<t" tin- liriili*. >?'i Savannah Bond
Sunday ev? uii-ir in the presence of |
uw tvi-nds. KYv. .1. (J ray Murray '
iA' tl\*- Kir- 1 Baptist church
perfuming iW ceremony.
Wis. .Win. win* i> a registered
nnrsc, li.ivins (jiaihtatcd from th<
IHuhsn ith hospit;\\ in l'ayctt.eville
h:i> ninilr n Ir, r?e ciivle of friend.'
sin, i- cnniinu' tn S viva, several years
afro.
Mr. .A //rii is u <ii'i>/-i!it ial citizen J
?>l Sv'v." ha viui: In en identified with
it" l'iisiii?> lit]- in various ways. He
fiii'r nwn<. :<tiil operates the Allen I
Kullcr mills at Beta.
Mr. and Mrs. Alle.n, following a
vi'Mniu' trip, nil! reside here.'
SHELTON TO SPEAK TO WOMEN
Mr. W. T. Sht Itoii, of Wavnesville
will aiMn -> tin women of the Meth
odist Society, at the
hoii'i- if MrO I!. L. McKec, next
Wt'tVic-iliiv ;? ?' 't'-vruiMi. The woiren
an -tiulvitiir "The Future in Indian
Minimis'': :md Mr. Shelton wis
iiluitifinl \.-ii I? work anie.Mf* the Tn
?litns in f!;,. S uit Invest for many
jw.
RED CROSS WANTS CLOTHES
^ P. Mcfniire, Jackson coun
Iv,lirii)iir ill" l!i" Atvericwi Red cross
'' ^'kin; . ill for all citizcns to
s-nV <l:>i-a!i|? <1 clothing that can he
"l|1|i. ;nd turn it over, to the Red
I j?. distributed to the
'""lv Dr. McGtlire and his relief
nntti i- rcMiiist that the people
'I" in>t ijsve nionev or aarticles of
W ur i-lotliini; direct to beggars ;
'"iMhat th v In- turned over to th^
"-''i' ll r.lnt workers, who will
v" that ji|| v.n'thv causes are relicv
t li.it 1m l p is extended only to
as are worthy.
correction
,Tbc last week, in in local
s'''!,l th.it Miss Mvrtitw Dillnrd, a
'f 'lMit iiiir-i-, of Brevard, was vis
J!'n? Mi>s A1 v :i Garden. Miss Dil
?""?l. a -fncksun county gsrl, and n
?f Sylva High school, is
a sratluatc mirsp :,nd not a stiulent
niiiv.
MRS. RHODES ILL
^'iiiwU ,t m,.s \y h. Rhodes will
n<Tr?t <li.it she is quite ill, having
'Votu tl?. Community hospit
V?st( rdiiy, to an Ashevilje hosp
>hi. is under the care of
a prior to an operation,
will probably he performed to
||l0rr,'tt'. Mr. Rhodes, who has hecn
[ '?" M-v? ral months, is somewhat
"nprovwl.
f0W[,ER HAS OPERATION
s- II. Fowler, who underwent
"I'1 "''ion for appendicitis at th<
"'?'I iiosj >i? al, is getting along nicc
>< li!s frii.nds will he gratified to
"arii.
SINGING Af TUC&ASEI&LE
There will be an old time singing,
in the "Christian Harmony" song
book at Tuckaseigee Baptist church
on Sunday, October 30. The singing
will hegin promptly at 10 o'clock.
At 11:30 Rev. P. L. Elliott will
preach. Dinner will be served on the
grounds.
The period from 1:30 to 4 will be
devoted to singing by the old folks.
All former pastors of tho church
have been invited to attend the ser
vices; and everybody is invited to be
present and join in the signing.
MISS WILMA MONTEITH WEDS
On Thursday afterupon, October
6, at the home of Rev. O. T. Owen of
Walhalla, S. C., Miss Wilma Mon
teith became the bride of Mr. Bill
Ilenson. The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Monteith
of Glenville. She is very popular
among her friends and school mates
She is a senior of G'.enville High
School and is -continuing her school
work. Mr. Ilenson is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. P. Ilenson of Norton.
He is also popular among his friends
Mr. Ilenson is a talented painter. He
takes a great interest in his com
munity and home affairs.
Mr. and Mrs. Henson will make
their home at Norton, at the present.
THE ROTARY WHEEL
(By John P^rris, Jr.
The Rev. Arthur Flannagnn, of
Franklin, was guest speaker at the
weekly meeting of the Sylva Rotary
Club Tuesday evening. Mr. Flannagnn
gave a brief talk on tht> work of tli<
Franklin Rotary 'Club. E. V. Vestal,
of the Sylva Rotary Club, gave a
very interesting talk on his visit to
ihe State Fair in Raleigh last week.
There were fourteen members
present. It looks as if some of those
records we were working for are go
;ng out the other way. But as yon
know sometimes it is impossibly to
attend, so was th .cease in this in
stance.
f * * *
Dr. II. T. Hunter was absent, so
!iis place as president was filled by
J. C. Allison, viecpreside.n t of the
Club. (
* * *
Someone mentioned to me that Dr.
Chapman had a fondness for straw
berries. Is it true Dr. Chapman? Is
t true? We do know one thing, and
that is that you would like straw
berries, toO, if you had them over
son:,e of that good ice cream down at
Tarrett Springs.
* * *
Tho Sylva Rotary Club is doing a
great work in distributing pigs to the ,
farm boys in the county. This is one
of many of the fine works they are
carrying on, and unless you art be
hind the scenes, doubtless you will
never know how many things thev
are doing. But sooner or later it will
all come to the front.
\
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND
Under and by virtue of the author
ity conferred by deed of trust exe
cuted by II. E. Battle and wife,
Annie Battle dated the 15th day of
December, 1028, and recorded in
Book 108, Page 175 in the office of
the Register of Deeds for Jackson
County, Jefferson E. Owens, Substi
tuted Trustee will at twelve o'clock'
noon on
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 1032
at the Court llouse Door of Jackson
County in Sylva, North Carolina,
sell at public auction for ?ash to the
highest bidder, the following land to
'
wit :
BEGINNING at % corner of a
rock wall in the margin of the; West
side of Ridgewav Street, said point
of beginning being 165 feet in a
Southerly direction from the inter
section of the Southerly side of Har
ris Street with the West side of
Ridge way Street, and runs South 14
degrees 30 mins. East 82 feet to a
stake; thence South (56 degrees
minutes West 187.5 feet to a stake
in the margin of Robert Street;
thence North 23 degrees 30 minutes
West 81 feet to a> ; stake; thcue?
North 6G degrees 30 minutes East 19C
feet to the BEGINNING. Being al1
of Lot No. 4 and 26 feet of lot No
15, Block No. 7, of the Courtland
Heights addition to the Town of
Sylva, North Carolina.
Being that property conveyed by
N. L. Sutton and wife, Ellen Suttor
to II. E. Battle by deed dated Jul
14th, 1928, and registered in Book
105, at page 232, records of Deeds
if Jackson County, North Carolina
This sale is made on account of
default in payment of the indebted
ness secured by said deed of trust.
A ten per cent (10 jvr ceiit) cash
deposit will be required of the high
?st bidder at th? sale.
This the 7th day of October, 1932
JEFFERSON E. OWENS,
Substituted Trustee.
(2560) ^ \ 10-20-4t-tdb
SUHDAYJWii:
LESSON
Vy Charles E.Dunn
Problems of the Modern Home .
Lesson for Oct. 23, Ephesians 6:1-9
Golden Text : Joshua 24:15
The family is always changing. It it
one of the most sensitive and fluid of
our institutions. Today, under the im
pact of formidable
unmistakable signs
of strain. Some of
the functions it
formerly perform
ed have been taken
from it. New pat
terns of thinking
and action have
arisen to threaten
its stability.
? Yet we must not
be alarmed. Any
thing that is renlly
human cannot be Rev. Cbas. E. Dunn
crushed. Surely the family is the most
personal of all institutions, closer than
any other to human nature. This mears
that while outside influences can loom
large in the nurture of children, there
are certain functions which the home,
as always, will continue to fulfill.
One of these is fellowship. The child
craves companionship. He thrives on
affection. Here the home affords him
his best opportunity. There he is
thrown into constant and intimate
association with parent, brother, or
sister.
Another function of the home is
guidance. No one needs direction
more than the child. He is helpless,
inexperienced, woefully ignorant. He is
also excessively curious, proposing un
answerable questions. Now no guide
can possibly be more influential in the
nurture of a child than a wise parent.
Then, too, a good home furnishes a
child with the best possible type of
stimulation. We live in a da?y of over
stimulation. Children are early im
mersed in a bath of high-powered ex
citement. But the stimulus of the talk
ing picture, the loud speaker, the
speeding motor car, powerful as it is,
is clearly secondary to that of the
family circle, where life unconsciously
moulds life.
A fourth function the home pro
motes is interpretation. Every day the
child has new experiences which he
is eager to share with the other mem
bers of the f.imily group. Who can
unfold their meaning better than a dis
cerning and sympathetic mother? Bun
yan, in "Pilgrim's Progress," intro
duces, the home of the Interpreter.
If all of these duties are reverently
fulfilled, in the fear of God, and the
spirit of Jesus, then the program Paul
J dvances in our lesson of rearing chil
dren '*'in the nurture and admonition
of ths Lord" will be realized.
PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEES
ARE LOVERS OF BOOKS
forces, it shows
Washington, If. C., Oct. 29. ? When
President Hoover moved ?' into the
White House somebody started the
report- that there were no books in
the Presidential mansion. A commit
tee of book publishers set about r.c
pairing this deficiency, and a librnry
of about five hundred volumes, main
ly of the English classics, was for
mally presented to the Tinted States
for the President's use.
It so happened that this effort
was unnecessary, bocause the Library
of Congress sees to it that a selec
tion of the latest books, as well as
any special books which the Presi
dent may wish to consult, are al
ways on the shelves of the \Vhit<
House Library.
Both Bookiish
Whichever way the election' goes
next month, the .next President will
be a booklover. Mr. Hoover is not
t. # j
only a great reader but is a 'so a
writer of books. Jlis writings have
been un the subject id' his life
work, mining engineering. The best
known of them is his translation,
with the assistance of Mrs. Hoover,
of the earliest known book on min
ing. It is called "Dc Re Metailiea,"
and was printed in Latin in the 1 fit ti
century by a (Jerman named (Jco>?.
Agrieola.
Mr. Hoover once figured out that
the time ho had spent cm ships, in
the course of Jiis professional tra
vels, would amoount to a year and .>
quarter. On his Voyages he has a1
wavs take.; i a : nink t'ul of books with
him, and there are always hooks on
the stand at the head of his hod.
Governor Roosevelt grew up sur
vounded by books. Tie still lives in
the house in which he was boi the
old stone Roosevelt home in xljrde
Park, New York, which stands on the
brow of a hill high above the Hud
son Ri\rpr. The south wing on the
mansion is the library, a magnificent
room nearly 75 feet long and two
full stories high, and all the walls arc
lined to the ceiling with bookcases
filled' with valuable volumes, many
of which have beeu in the Roosevelt
family since the 1700 's. Governor
, Roosevelt could not fail to be influ
, enced from boyhood by this easy ac
cess to world's great literature.
It is a rare thing in America to
find a man living for fifty years in
one house; it is atill rarer for a moh
to iive to bo fifty in the house in
which he was born.
" ?
FOR RENT ? Six-room house one
fourth mile Cullowhee school.
Erie Coward, Cowarts, N. C.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our thanks to
our many friends for the kindness
and sympathy shown us during the
death and burial of our husband and
fathei*, and for the beautiful floral
offerings.
Mrs. Van Epp,, Richard and Corwin
Van Epp and Mrs. <T. B. Law.
"Outstanding in 1932"
The honor and title of beinp "The
outstanding woman in America for'
1932" was awarded Amelia Earhar^
Putnam, in civic ceremonies at Phil-j
adelphia. Her solo-flight across thu
Atlantic, the first woman, was thj
feit which won for her.
RAYMOND GLENN
JEWELER
SYLVA, N. C.
SO-HY
To prevent the soar odor from
damp wash clothes, rinse them
each time after using in a solu
tion of a few drops of SO-HY
in a little water. -
AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE
?<. )
Laundry; Dry Cleaning
Hat Blocking
\ *
( Pressing
t * - \ ,, ?- %
Best Service Best Work
* Truck Calls 3 Times Every Week
Don't forget our new prices on thrift wash
? n i \
Waynesville Laundry, Inc.
See Fred Henry
Clark's Cafe
The Home of Good Food
Your Patronage is always -
appreciated. We serve
only the be,st of foods and
our prices are reasonable.
Phone 36 A. H. Cagle
SPECIAL
BeginningMonday October 24
Through November 5
i ?
Reface Valves and Grind in; Clean
Carbon and Tune Motor
6-Cylinder 4-Cylinder
Cars Cars
3.50 2.75
Jackson Chevrolet Co.
TRAIN TRAVEL BARGAIN FARES
\
November 5th, 1932
Following round -trip fares ajpply from all stations in
Western Carolina territory:
5.00 Washington 5.00
6.00 Baltimore 6.00
7.00 Wilmington 7.00
8.50 Philadelphia 8.50
9.50 New York 9.50
r. Washington and Baltimore tickets good leaving those
stations returning as late as November 7th. Other des
tinations November 8th.
BAGGAGE CHECKED - - HALF FARES FOR CHILDREN
Reduced Round Trip Pullman Fares to Washington Only
Tickets good only via the B. & O. north of Washington
and will he honored ,only in day coaches on the B. & O.
Another splendid opportunity for an economical trip.
See Your Agent or Address
J. H. WOOD, D. P. A.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
Fifty and Fit
A MAN is as old ? or as young ?
as his organs.
At fifty, you can be tn your
prime.
Why go along with "fairly good
health" when you might be enjoying
vigor you haven't felt for years?
There's a simple little thing any
one can do to keep the vital organs
stimulated, and feel fit all the time.
People don't realize how sluggish
they've grown until they've tried it.
The stimulant that will stir your
system to new life is Dr. Caldwell's
syrup pepsin. It will make a most
amazing difference in many ways.
This famous doctor's prescription
is a delicious syrup made with fresh
herbs, active senna, and pure pep
nn. It itarU its good work with toe
' ?
first spoonful. That's all yon need
to drive away the dullness and
headache of a bilious spell, and rid
the system of that slow poison that
saps your strength. It's better than
a tonic for tired bowels, and unlike
habit-forming laxatives you can
take it freely or give it to any child.
And it isn't expensive.
Get some syrup pepsin today, and
take a little tonight. Don't wait
until you're sick to give your system
this wonderful help. You can avoid
those spells of biliousness or consti
pation. A spoonful every now and
thenJs better than constant worry
about the condition of your bowels,
or fear of auto-intoxication as yoo
grow older. Dr. Caldwell's syrup
pepsin protects the system. All
druggists keep this preparation.
*