Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / May 4, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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JA0E80N COUNTY JOURNAL Published Weekly Dy The JACK&OS COUNTY JOURNAL CO. ? ( Entered n.s second class in.it I er at the l'ost O ffieo at Syivn, S. C. DAN TUMl'lilSS, Editor DATES ARB SELECTED FOK FARM CONVENTION The ;tl>t 1 1 1 ? 1 1 1 ; 1 1 gathering of ilie North Cwioliua Mule tanners Con vention Null lie held ill State College during Farm and Home Week July - I to lilt, inclusive, according lo JIH itlilioillireliielit It'olU (. Italics A. Shel l ii hi, secretary. The meeting this year will likely be the most iiotniile gallifi'Lug in the JO years of the oignuizn'iion. Through (he rlJ'orts of 1'residnit J'). C. Jlrooks, the Anierii'aii Institute of Coopera tion will hold its short eoiir.se and public i.iee! US at the eollige. t.'lis summer. The open meeting .vill be held at the same'liine as tlie tanners convention. Dean I. O. SelM lib has said that the animal conference of iioiue and farm demoiisl ration agents will he In hi at I lie same lime tilid J)ireetor T. I'. Browne has .stated that the \ocatiomil teachers of the State will niter during the week for their annual short ionise. / There is al*o a ]>o.ssil?ilily thai a school for (i range I .ei-t unii will In held at the college during the w?.ek. Thu institute of Cooperation will attract leading educators from all parts of the South* ast and in ad dition, the officers of tin institute plan to bring to the College a^ group of outstanding speakers./ c ' At the presont time, it appears that the Convent ion this summer will be the greatest gathering of it> kind ev or held at the College, Air. Sheffield says. The Stall' Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs will liitract a large number of leading North Caro lina farm w..niin i>> the annual meet ing alw.n- I.. M . I : . i i i ; - I'aitu and Home week and iln-iv will be an ad ditional number to attend tin* annual short course scheduled by lire, home demonstration tit pari nienl. v MicKny of llctidcl'suu count V " ** P ????eil| of u?. C?.iventirm this ymr nn.l Mrs. J), we.v Dennett of Forsyth coiuily is presiricnf of the1 State Federation. j TODAY a id I TOMORROW TAXES . . . easiest to pay There is only^one easy wa;. to pay tUXltS, Til.lt ir> ?. til*'"1 ?' of Ul?' pUtclia-" J't'li r I'l "l!!c! h.nj; 1 the tuxpuyer wnnla. v U licit* ISiiln -i l;ile>l |,!\, i 1 1 : 1 1 nil beer | is mi eMimple. Nobody ]>:iy.i it who| doesn't Want lie i r :iinl iiul".ily who tvuuta beer ' ili jri' t -i to puyiny ji -pi ici? which include* t !??? lux amounting to ! about one rent for un ??r< linury si/.ed yluss. Thf cigarette t fix i- another that is not painful. It euiacs to six ceuts mi ? uch of twenty cig arettes. Lust vi nr tin- (iuveiniiM'iit s income from cigarette tuxe.-> was over three hundred million dollatv. In Itiijv last Fall 1 bn.nd ti'ltl every siyn poster or |?u1?) ??* notice ol any kind lias tu |?:i y a tux. riven the caid over the hell button in my hotel bedroom telling me to ring mice ior the port of twice for the elm ilmrmaid and three times for a wait r hud a revenue stamp stuck on it. Stamp taxes have never I u u ed in America as freely as < >e where. They are the easiest taxes '.o collect na well as to pay. CHANGE .... mighty slew Miss Frances l'erkins, Se? :itnry of Labor, said the other day f' ut more than tv\*o thousand persons : id wi it - ten with elaborate schemes i ? change the whole social system. I'robubly never before have s'? many. Milk all over tlie world been bus> mnkinjr plans to remodel the world. Xotli ny is easier llinii to make an i?' ul ph:ii; nothing is harder tlism to v ,'uce hu mnn beings to follow a p!ir>. It takes from three to n : lionsiuul generations to change the h; its of a people. What is needed now is some thing that will work next month, hot next eenturv. It would be a ;;t>id p'uu for example^ il I lie rebitioiis d iudis trv and i??rri?*ii!t !ni? eonld be re id justed so that every factor-" worker would have a pice,, of land to fill! back nu, but the present generation of factory workers doesn't know how to live on the him!. , r The hi^t tiling Americans want it seems to ire, is to bp eouipe'led by law to do anything to which tiny are not naturally iu.li.ted. ] don't think highly of niiv \cji4*me of >toci:d refomi which is not the product of the evo lutionary interplay of natural forces. CURTISS . . . late honor Olonu ( urtisJi died three wars asro, '?* * hut tin* War Department 1ms awarded iihn the Distinguished Herv ic'O Cross, wlii. lt W?l* given lo hi, jtliother IIS H IIIOIIII llt?? ill Ways to In I L'lierished ?f her brilliant and Mov ed son. - . I kiH'\v ( i li'ii ii CiM'ti>s iuhniaiiMV, I J in U till' days when lie was {| hi?y?-it* icing kid li ving l<? 'ide faster than i iybo.lv else. Whetijie was l??>?t?>n at iu. New York Slate Fair lie resolved f ? make a hievele which won hi go J ister than anybody has ever gone. The lirst ijiotorcvelo grew out iol' that dctermi iiiition and (ilenn Curtiss wns j he lirst iiinu ever to travel at a i-pe-ed III' more than 130 miles an hour. UU most famous achievement, how yor, was linking the uirplane practi cal. Tlw Wright brothels were the 'lirst to fly, hill ( nil iss was the lirst J to build a plane th:il (nnyliody could Itlv. Me did (Ui?n'e t'ii' Ihi* development 'of a via lion and taught more men to fly than anybody else i ver did. I'm triad his mother has his l> s tinguifhed Service Cross. HORSES . . . man'fl medicinc When the wild \Moligols t'oin the high pl:ifeaiis id' Asia swept around i li(k Hhiek Sea, a thoa -aiid or more {y.ai-s before 'Christ, they iutroihseed 1 1 lie horse to Europe. The (1 reeks had 'i.(.\vr seen men oil horses, and In- 1 Ji,.\v.l. many of them, that man and | Hiorse Weiv pile. Hciice the u.t\ 'h of t ? i lie Centaur, hall hi >ise, hall man. j In another thousand yt?iu> I lie horse | hail beconu 1 i i ? * indispi usiddc leliance '.if travelers and, explorers all bver the world. A couple of thousand years llater tin- automobile was invented and Nk who thought I hey were wise said l.'le day of the horse -was over. "* ; More jwople are riding horses today j than ever lie fore. Cooil hoi-os bring j higher prices, than for (many veins, j Cjlv folk are liarninV anew the old; , ,|,i h til at "the best medicine for the ! i iside of man is" the outside" ol' a. horse," and the' parks are tilled with ridel's daily, rain or shine. The hest j ridels in the World today HIV still the Motiu.-ls, luit the hest horses are j bred in \ it ' in a and Western lai-i |lo|?e. The wild mustangs ii(iid lirou 1,-iios (if ..111 Wi^leru plain- are de Ivceiidiyits of the horses hroiiglit hy Spanish t'oiif|iiistudores; America ne\ (ei1 had horses until alter 1 I.I?. FINGERPRINTS . very praoied ??I'riietiral" jieople foitighed- a| ?!<??' Fan rot whi'lit thirty year-, ayo, he ill-, sis ted that the fingerprints of every, captured crook should ? he recorded. Today identification hy fingerprints is re'ied upon in every policy depart Dion I in the world, and the Depart- 1 irtent . ? t" .Justice in \N r^hoigtoii nVainlaitis i?n international clearing - house of fingerprints, will more than T^r T U'O million records. No two persons have I'V.T been) found whoso fingerprints were ulike. j Joe Faurot retired from tin- jxjlift- ; department seven veins ago and 'is trying extend ,tu' u>;? t'mgcr j, rinls ?idi'iitit'ii-iition in < U:: r fields, lie has lately inventid .a imthod of fingerprinting wliieli does not soil the lingers, as the old printers' ink sys U in did. lie thinks the time will coir.e ! when everybody's fingerprints will 1m- I recorded from birth, SO nobody can ever pose as som-body else and there will be no doubt of anybody's iib-n titv. ? . JURORS DRAWN TOR MAY TERM Th|- list id' jurors winch follows lias hen drawn by the jury eonnnission, l?r the May term of superior court, wlii. h will be presided over by JllUge I |i Clement. Thtv jury eommission is composed of (i. C. Turpin, BiUard t oward nnd .1. U. Bumgnrner. FIRST WKKK : Frank Coward, \\ . I). Melton, Linden Cabef Sam Beit/., ( liarlie Allison, Lewis Bumgamcr, Thad Cowan, 1.. P. Allen, Ascuc Hooper, F.lhcrt Moss, Ham Brvson, Lawrence Coward, Harve Tillev, J. B. I {. own, II. T. Cowan, Will Adams, ibrk Stewart, Theodore Queen, Os , ir Collins, W. C. Jennings, G. Nor .!. C. Sutton, W. D. Bishop, J. K. Barrett, C'. L. Zacharv, .1. IJ !Uaekburiit S. S. Shook, Uobeif" X. Brown, Lewi*' Monteith, H. W. Hsh ?Uar 15.. k, K. 1!. Bills* l>. A. Monteith, Andy Adams, K. I*, Jarrett I'hillip Moigiin, Kelly Bradley, M. ^ ? .Calloway, .1. C. Cannon, (I. W. Coop '?.??, George Rogers, I'. II. Feiiruson. SHCOND WKKK, C. I1. Dill aid, .1. T. Stewart, Kuler Knsle^ J. K. Nor man, Irn Brown, II. I*'. Brittle, L. 0. Ilenson, Jones Fowler, W. M. Gallo way, C. II. Kitchen, I. If., Hi'ooKm, P. 1?\ Fullbrlghl, II. <V Curtis, II. A. fell. .1. M. Blanton, K. II. Shuler, N. lion Davis, Uenrv Bills, T. L. WikeK .IhIiii II. Morris. W.ll. Cogdill, James Turpin, K. IV Tathaiu, K. 1*. ^ ike. ATTEND W. 0. W. MEETING Messrs. II. K. .Monteith, Lewis M?.ore. B. K. llarri>, II. II. Messer :md Br. W. I'. MeGuire luiv.e returned from A -In villi* where they have been attend in?; the stale convention of W'.mmIiii. >1 ?*t the World. I V ? . ??? . i iii 1 1 'file) are dating coffee, carnations, I bread mid ecg>'in New \ork to ussuie I I In* purchaser o| Iresliness. .Iffa'f.i planted last fall in Forsyth ' count \ iK showii../ ep \vl' t':is spring. V. .1.- Berntli reports T.r> aen s tbai MlM'fect in stand. 1 * ' v. ( V ' ? ? i - /g^A TME FAMILY ?DOCTOR ^J'JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, MD. A LESSON I wish it had not happened, for it makes me sad to think of it. But it is true in every particular, fur I know of the incident first-hand. A little hoy of about nine took an acutc attack of appendicitis. The diagnosis was unquestioned, for a fiue surgeon was called ? he advised immediate operation. The father rebelled stubbornly; "I don't want no cuttin' done," lit said with finality. The surgeon returned to his place of ^business. / Four days later the same surgeon ? a man of eminence ? was called hurriedly to see the boy; he had grow'n much worse. The doctor found him with cold, clammy extremities, thready pulse, dilated pupils, swol len enormously in the body, ? peritonitis! A (/lance was enough; the boy w.ts dying. "He can't live another hour," the surgeon said quietly; "it's no use to try the impossible." The father wrung his hands and begged the doctor to do something ?operate ? anything. He writhed in despair with his unreasonable re quests. Itut it was too late. The doctor waji in deadly earnest when he spoke to that father ? a bitter lesson was to be studied. "I called here and told you what should be done," he said; "you didn't want me to do what I knew should be done. You wanted to temporize ? I hoped the child might get well, in spite of my better judgment. You refused to listen ? you are respon sible for this child's death !" Which was too true. So many people step in front of the trained physician. That boy could have been saved, but the one in authority objected. What do we learn from this? . * ?) I" M ) O \ ) \ v v. 4-H CLUB NEWS > ? Hot School Dishes The 4-H idea has given the children of a consolidated school near Kelley, in central Iowa, hot foods every day all the past winter and at the unbelievable Cost oi a penny a dish without loss. And what's more the. food has been the be9t that could be prepared from a nutritive and health standpoint. \ Miss Hazel McKibben, home eco nomics teacher, is the major domo of the unique enterprise. The school grounds are large enough to permit the use of a half acre for a garden A year ago the plot was planted by the pupils in home economics with crops which would mature on or after Sept. 1, which was the opening date for the fall term. The janitor cared for the garden after the miln? term closed, When school opened in the fall the home economics pupils gathered the crops as they matured and canned them as a part of their class work. Som? of the root vegetables were canned and I others placcd in a storage fitted up in the basement. The vegetables thus put away were used as the basis for the school lunches. Besides there was sup plied a vegetable soup and a milk des sert, or a vegetable dish and cocoa, or two similar dishes. This was for va riety. The foods lacking in the stored supply were obtained by bartering for them with children who were willing to take the hot dishes in trade. About one half the children pay cash for their food. The others bring food to eat and barter for some of the hot food. Sounds like a miracle, but it just shows what caft- W Our Only Anxiety ? Over Inflation ? By Albert 7. J>, id I EUROPEAN PLAN ? - pii ./'***? r WATCH YOUR COAT AMD HAT and i'll Have a DOUBLE CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM SUNDAE SUPRCMt ? s* ? ' *r NOW, DEAR-,- DO Ycu RrA; ? / THINK YOU CAM RltH'CL \ BIT ANY-TIME YOU W -v ?:wm ^IpvV, V! isMa ; I p ?4$ Al> p , ??$V V! $S?iiw4# ?*LV ? ? - ? X. V ' ? * NOTICE OF REMOVAL Dr. W. K. Chapman Has moved his officcs to Room 7 Colo Building 'VHio l>tsi way In add a small ( amount oC limestone In the ><?il racli . yesir h to have the foil li/.er manu facturer use ground limestone as a filler In 1 1 u?, of sniul. Dr. G. Conrad Nichols Dentist Office?: with Drs. Nichols Oy?-r, Sylvji Pharmacy LITTLE 0L? ..IWliOBK When suburban New Yot leers nisi the last train for home they can go to certain hotels where pajamas, tooth brush and razor are supplied at no extra cost. No baggage is required to register, ? + + There are but two firms in town which clean chimneys. ? ? * Newsstands report that the jig sa;y puzzle craze is on the wane. ? + * There is a nun in New York wbo owns a parrot with a vocabulary of 224 words. ? * ? There is a company here which pro poses to place on the market a radio device which makes it possible to open the garage door without getting out of the car. You simply press a button. * ? ? When you come to New York you can hire a bjimp for $f)0 an hour if you can use one. ? * * They are dating coffee, carnations, bread and eggs in New York to assure the purchaser of freshness. ? ? ? It has been suggested to a motion picture theatre manager here that he print his program on one side of onion skin paper so that it can be read in a dark room by being held up against the light of the screen. ? * + Once in every five days a New York er is killed for participating in a fam ily argument. * * * Once in every seven days a gangster is killed here. * * * New Yorkers are, however, going places. By the hundreds of thousands they go away on week-end trips. By the thousands they take cruises. But get a New Yorker off Manhattan Is land and he'll start counting the min utes until he gets back home. * * * The sign over a fur shop here reads : "Trachtenerg and Son-in-Law." * * * Colored finger-nails which ean be attached, shaped and filed, are being sold in a certain New York beauty shop. ? * * * If you need one you can buy, when you come to New York, a gold-plated nose-shaper, worn inside, to make Sleight, noses look saucy. How She Lost 18 Pounds of Fiit FOR LESS THAN $1,00 "Will >ay in njrard* to kr-iixdieu. 1 took it to reduce. I lost i^? |>o.ind> alter Iisinjr one bottle and Jeel iiue. .fust bought one more bottle today ; ? 1 1 < I expert to lose IS more |>oiiii<Is. I now weijrli MS and lie! line." Mrs. Jlany h'obinson Akron, Ohio (dan. (i, (knee a day take lvr.isehen Salts ? < ue hall teas|K>ont'ul in a jrla? of hot water first thin;? every morning. 1m s'ides losinir ujjlv J'ss t SA1T.LY you'll in iie.illb and j?liysi? ?:< I alt.ae liveness-- constipation, ?as. jjiul aridi ty will cease to bother? you'd feel younger? n.ore acfive-.-t :dl of ambi tion? elear skin --.<]?:irk!i m? eye?. A jar that last-. 4 weeks c? -ts bur a trifle at any drug stove in the w>*rM- -Itui ?' 4(11(1 if oil) ii I* , ? ) , Tlio llon. M.'imU'! L. Qm-. *?n. j-h< i<lent of tin.* I'liiJippinf . ?? now in Washington for i?.nVf i" regarding Philippine in?li iw _? i. v ? -v_ . - _ ?'*? iA. i Grocer 0 ? I ().)c id I-"* : ' !)r Flour, 24 pound bags, from .... Corn Meal, per bushel Side Meat, per Jb ... ? Heavy Fat Hack, per ll> Lard, per 8 lb. pail Lard, j)er 8 lb. carton Sugar, per 100 lbs. .... >4.T ? Loose Coffee, per lb. according to grade and variety l.><- 1<> *J ; ? Shelled Beans, per lb. according m v:t rietv, from ?'<* 1? y ' ? * ? ! We carry a full line of caiineo g<>o<ir- . our prices are well in line with 1 1 i,,VAr" prices to be found on 1 he market.. feeds Choice Timothy Hay, per hundred Oats, per.") bushel sack Corn, per bushel . .. .. . Wheat, per bushel ? - Rye, per bushel ? Cotton Seed Meal, per ban' .... Dairy Feed, l(j per cent Dairy Feed, 24 per rent - We carry a full line of chicken ',( eluding Sci'atch Feed, Layinu Chick Feed. J. B. ENSLE r u k p h '"S J {W w>yiV8j * "i ? '*?' f I
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 4, 1933, edition 1
2
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