Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / Dec. 7, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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ournai ii.so . yEAB in ADVANCE IN THE COUNTY ^5,'gj^Sy!; J '*, ?>. fA, THURSDAY, DZO. 7, 1933 $2.00 YEAB IN ADVANCE OUTSIDE THE COUNTY HOUSE KICK FATAL ro WELL KNOWN FARMER of countv . j .It'll II, 1 '!'? O ilill k'-l ?? ?*o ?_ ,,, --m* lit i*m is, Jii ' .j, r. . i.r iiiiy liif.-pil Ji1, i" r.y Wc ,i.|V i?i r: in lioiii injiii i > I Ill H'.'ls kil'kl'il viol 'lil !' i?,, ' 'lin n I iy ;i yimn;' Imrs ? I :l rOII|t'<* of m il's fl'OM > IV III tlM'IIOiUI.' !, : J:r. I tWI- ? (ilk II to > i ? .! mi t ion p -i (Wiiich ? l in >iivi- liis lilc. i:.,! ? T rrtu~ vl v:?;iin ? <> nt\ ii' Al?. K i i rlit'M IijiiI i \ 1 1 1 i>; .. : ??.III' V IM:i.,l ui* I'.is ill'.', Jllti! , ?' 'ii r \*!m? ?v;i-' ^h'Cimm.iI i;: : r ? . ? * i ?' ? I , Jlllll W1H IIIH*' of llll" ' most n p ft nl t*: 1 i/.i'iis, Kiir Inn i-> sit i \ i? l.y !'i-i o'i ! i > . 1 ? MK.s, I'iiill. ? i Jii'l ?' I !;?"? !u\v !?, ?>!' \V:i liiii 'In' . .?Hid I In i ?! ui' S* i\ ; on ,!?.,! i i'.-, Mrs, T. K. 'iiit In i.\ Syiv:' ]! I.. It. Itrovvii, Vu"u?f. I :?v."i, (lliii *1 ? I. con Dillnril iiml Mi: i |..n \ khi-'iiii. i?l Sylvn, mill oMicr vcli?.*i j ;iiii| ji lnrpr<> circlr of fricniU. t".. !?? i I will bo lii'ld n( Rentf i, !> |!;ipiisl fliniYh, Bi'tn, of whicli i, It. ui loiifr Inm'ii n nwmlicr, on . tin i Moi'iou' or Siitiinlnv. Dcfinit k.. , ii"f l?o? it s??t, pi'iulinir tli. | n" hi> son, Mr. Frnvloup Kitcli , . i.-otii Wji^liinv.ton. 10 YKARS AGO [j VUctf.'eifj" Democrat, Dec. <?, 1'893* K ->V<!i IV ti. I^is-lr.ii sjivs thai * I, N v. ! I l|i ' |)l'|?p. T |?<?l ? I in ji!;ni' ? ? . !ii- Cldu'i r pit sine ;i i iir*i .It- en- ?t 1?. ami that t h | i.ii;.' Svv liti'ii h!oo its a>'ll pod <lh- T'.i- i- 1 ? ' irst year he lin ?i i , i.' i on flu* r'ver, l)i' ? fc IVil: i f', ' in i !i: I ? lwint it'iil crop . ' i!i ? i f !? i'ii ! 1 1 * ??> of his labors * !? '..mil to indulw in 1 ? i i < i : of f! shiny, wil It i'1 ? n ? id afford him mm- ? <i*)i I.. II. 't ||;i? ( VI had licfolV. Tl> ' }' -li <? i iar??' ii. principally black ? l*-i> ? ??ml !>';?? ti!', I.otlt of which arc fin. li-l; l'o- -purl a? \\\ II as for food. Miaiiil: A' four o'clock, p. in, Hit-, i.', at i he residence of t It 'll'' ' I'-ther, Mr. A. B. Oil's Mr T ' Itnvun an ! Miss Tinn Dills. '> i \ It. Thomas performing the ? ? !'? if ay. I"> i Happy Valley: Our school is -'ill ic yood condition and vw si hoi coining in almost every day. "ii rnrii, which is rn a vera. ?re crop f ? ? r m-, is all {gathered and wheat al' ivvii. M. \V. Brvseii, of Webkter. ?'?.I -. in onv valley a f:w days ayo. i"..l?iii!' after his mini ral e'aiui*. - ? \ ?mr seribhler strt-ll-d into an oh! I'liryimr place (he oth r day, ne:i' Heta, which contains evidences of its I'cinir one of the f:rst y lanyards in 'lii< county, for whi'e p op!e. Tie '. inlf- or slahs are of soaps I one and !?jir s.ieh dates as 1 HOS an 1 1811, and '?I. ? that T noticed particularly wit* iii.ii kci I "John dribble, 18ft;V." CPISCOPAL SERVICES II Albert Xew, the rrctor, will i ?' I s:'jvi'"s al John's Kpis " I t clinch, Ivre, Sunday evi niny. ; ' The pnhfie has a cordial in '< n to the service. balsam Ill wiithi'r here wns itleiil for I ':"ik -.^h i :??r, elenr >kv, lirijfhl sun l>ii' ?, wiirm enontjh to j;o oilt with" ' 11 ?' VV|'|||), \ 11 "? >clioul iravc n veiy interesting '?> ? in suitable for the owns! on. Al ?>. i *' r i> wns nil interesting bucket hull ? ?i"1 nhiy1"' hrtween A?l<li.e niul I W?l The score \viih 21 to 31 in favor 1 1 '.)!(?, >r.r\in Nnmthers split "' I. jrivinj; in Hazelwooil. ^1'' IV I'. Hiy?on of Asheville nn>l In. ,4 fiiiliorine nrvsoii nnd neph ll! ^:ln(y Di'V^on of On lit on spnl ' ' ''fk i-iiil hero with relatives. M iv. ni'orsye Knight niul Vernon ? iiumIc ji business trip to Mor* '? T mi., lnsfi week. ^ Mm vet tn .Tones went to Ashe ,l" ^innlttj'. -fnl'ii White of Asheville spent * v I't'iv, jyiirst of her brother, '? I>. Kenney. -s'V & Ml Public Relations s?ii Here xvltli are presented the men who now head the Treasury Department at Washington, u realignment brought about when Secretary WViodin was granted leave of absence in an attempt to regain his health. No. 1, Herman Oliphnnt, general consul to the secretary; No. 2, Acting Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr.; No. 3, Kurle Bailie, in charge of fiscal affairs; No. 4, Win. If. Mc Reynolds, Administrative Assistant ; No. 5, Herbert E. Gaston, public relation ; No. 6, Roswell Magill. adviser on tnxrttion. | Administration Hopes For | Eiu'ly Relief From CWA I I Wa I). . . (i. There :* ,i :! laii;;' In*! i' in Aih.ii istniJic.il cir i i-'t s ( I ! ; 1 1 .!? Im. ' i i of initial--* ? CVVA i< ? ? i s > ? (|<> immv (<? lirui' ii'ii :ii i < i it it .ii ;? i.li I' lijiii jiii v I Iii ii*- 1 else lit a Ii?: ?. Ik. ii lev. <! .-o far. It i- 1 iiiiy ill. i>r ln.;r \v : k-? old, l>u j dr-ady muni v , is r!*??vir ?? into tli. ! *>i:-kets ? I Ii: mlriil- of I hoii<i'd.s i; iirmy p ut-:; v! I n?U!i(i:tv, in j>n v - ? i ???!? I I'urT'i'iil uurk iii't itally under way, V o ' VW' \ is I In* civil Works Admitiis ! ialion. It lms not liin<^ to tlo with i Iii' 1 1 1 ? ? ?:> program of pithlie works, iiiluiinM,-; tfi il Ii v tlir I'WA under \ < > IJ;<s. N'oi Ins it any i:c- , on lo tin. Civilian (.'onservti ! i<?l im5.||?-C-I- is ills' Administration'?.- , ? mi? k v j? v of put tin** four million j H'"ii ii. jiJ women nt work i? ii hurry! it f ill waves, on roil work. To ?'?? 1 ?> lot of VI V | tap" hlld I n IP i"?i, -o }'!i- chiihqiioii nil tap i-n 1 1 ? r, I lurry Hopkins, was called in j ?i l>o:? ih' jol^.lt I nkcs n long time ? '<* tr t m:tj at work on |>tilili?* work- , '?<'i'iitis" ii',fir the inoTi' V has hern dlott-.l the p'a'ts hwvt lo lie til awn, *'io I i'l- I' iv vii'it : ads have to h>> ? ? o ?l U. rl ^i il for. ami it msiy, niul n*n ?' sly i1 M' trk - nie.'iV nov'ths, ; pet '?aps it y nv ov move, hi-fi there t ?; much lo tlo fur which wa'.?''.-> c:<n '?e p-t r?l. The Administration litis not 'ti t faith in i'> pnhiie works j. :? ram >s ft vnenrs of ?f?*t I i njr money into wide firtnl.'! !? i, hut tens tint to ? 'no s'i \v. Mil i is of iin niph'y 'I nr Hicif-j a win!' r of ilntr w > 1 1 v*e' f'ire an ' c'i-t* fund- lianli v a' >i ' jirth r to " i. .Morcov. r, as |1 -riv 'loiikins ' i hers liav ? poi'n. I <? '<ep >i'i ' |- rp'e ;rn tli" <,fnl" f n i: y ' ii ? f Ii it live !?its 1h. in o t of tli* liahit i f work. So l! - r\VA plans take :V'Oi> "DO mi'!' ami women off I he do! ? -ml 't ? I put tin m e"i wtvres fii- ivhii '' J^ev will Iiiiv" tt\ work, and to I'dil >'>i i tlier 'i.OOllj'illl who Imv not \ I h?. *t i forced lo tin ily for relief, lint pnio (ihly would do before Spring. And they tire nlca "y *tnrti|i;r t? work Take one >d-it'<, ncluisftts, for ?xaniple. T!?" Ouvernov and the may i rs i;f "vuvl cities left Washington i :i 'i Tl-rti-i!-.- n;"h< v' -re tliev runic to ?*et th'ir inr?!rnet:ous how to start Mi' h"I' i o!-1 ;????' in i I'c d Mav Sfat ? Kxaetlv <in' w-fvk la I- r l'#e lirst ot t lr> new ?o-l; vroji'i'ts had heeu fi|> prov<d, a'i'l iu l': th;"i a \ivnV Pay roll rh"ek< v:ere i I'in-r !' ?**; ifi>i-t i i i-i "" ?on ?".?I- th ? first ]?nyoff Til tl .. ?! ?>">li>>i' i 'i r >"* ?*vd th" c,i jit |.,in'',?,'r' " '? 'iiaeee Hoard had .... If, ,| |?, ? In!' , T C:tv and town ?>fl'if i"':? a' the S' 'te ITonse to te'l lh;m how to u-o "'out frelt;n?r their .-I'f t In re" I' colls anil on- th? ?i. w r\V \ ^yvol*. \ij 1 1) i?i ???y eity oi town lmd to fir ?vis 'e sunie sovt of pro^ra'?' of 'p ?'?!'? i"".i'.'vcii<"it. tj' t tl"? aii Mvovd of th" Pua fd, ."I'd j* o ah.-ad The iiro"i"i'is hav." old'' to he aooro* ? d o iee, not ie'^ o r tl end ren-ferred ?intil th'-y I hs'i'k to AVashiiv'ton Th?v in'i'it provide r^jTiilar work nt js><*ulnr w^"'>k for nnen'p'oved poou'" able and willing to work. All projects ^ - "I , ? | J. W. Fleeman Dies j A. ter Short Illness I I i % J ! .1. \V. Fireman, well-known citizen j of Sylva died yestarday morning at j !i i v !m ?>?? on Cob. -go Hill, following ! I ii brief illness. Air. Floeomaii, who wa-> I employed in (ln> maikot department :it tlie Svlva Supply Company, be ? jimi' ill Friday. Diptheria and romp ii*atii.ii-s developed, Sunday night, J ?nd lie passed away, yesterday morn J I i n.!?. A .uiiiw nl' Town ->ee, Air. lyle .? : man, with his family, came to Sylva , -everal yew* ago, and made many; friends here. ILe. was a member of the Sylva : Baptist church, a number of tin hoard of deacons, and aetive in the .???? k . ?t '. Ii rh?lol) / , v Surviving are hi> widow, two child ri n, Bon:t:e Fleeman ami Barney I'li nian, both of whom ni ?? Indents in Svlva high sehool, and :? nnmh< r d-frie'lv5 " -V are to I i e by day lab ^ . not by enntrai . i'he working we< '? . is to be J ? 10 lion. . find pay at the valo of 50, con Is ! ii v'tonr for anakil> t labor; $1.LJ0 a 1 for skilled 1? '?? ?<*. Work ers to ; i' ?!ccttd by the Ii 'lids of | wc!far d ii ?tments in eac> . immun ity, wl"? : re nppointod Ci i Works .Ydmi .i .t .ilors in each cav. Th ? ???!??' undertaken ni.d' r OWA includes such etnploymenl for the ''white eoPnr" class of unci ,i'nyed as statistical surveys, work in iate lah . atone fin) municipal ho. ;<itals, em i.lovme**t na the staffs of museums, ?irl <rni"er< s juid other publi ? centers, canvas; 'in' communities in I*' half of "el"nn-np and paint-up" i u./ements -ponsored by business a? > iations, {?ii:1 i.n direction and >? i| -rvision of pro.i cts r ainly employing manual li.bor. Such rr?rk includes pes' control, rural p.v*!nfton projects, re- 'amation i ground.', , ri;>air of parks rod play ground ?. v pa;r of sewers r d sani tation rouipmtnt, road vork that ! does not conflict with m ?*">r stat?- j and federal roadbuilding programs,; charinrf and preparing of l.-md. foi reservoirs anfl watersheds. Mv 4h" <i?T f'"'d avi?;,ible for the CWA are vxausted, il m firmly believed h eve that the p-.H> '?? works nrogra'o on a grand scale '.ill have f i into full -wing, providi -mplpy* incut, for millions. It is al* he firm -onvict ion that by next R; * <* busi ness nwl Industry in g; \:al will have st??iU in me in that ?mst of the nncmployi out vk will be t; ken i v by th" end of i. \*t Sum ??ri\ Avd I hor? i a be" f wh'ch m o' its ?n a ce. Jiinty in -s h ? minds of tl:os v'-'s-' t << tie a .rlenltnrfll ovobl >m. that r ry ' l?:iif?. in the nature ?>f d' stress Mid ; if r'ng :r.>ong the farm 'r?. v;il hi'' vr.iish.d before ?mot! er h. > est *!isOi rn- mound. Af 'in time, the Civi :nn t'.nserva lion Camps are to he extended, mor.^ of th m to lie esiaMr h.'d, a :d several hnndved thousand more yovng men put at forestry work. . . Haywood Bar ?onors Judge Walter Moore A portrait of t lit* liitc bulge Wal ter K. Moore, Syiva jurist, whs pre s? 'iit ???! to Havwi ?! <o: y at a mo mot in I service lie. ! in I court room of the new I lit \ >'oo<l Mint v court house, .Monday n.ternoi- 1. Judge Felix K. Alley teces-scd su perior court for the t..ercisos and ordered that a detailed . port of the services he spread upon the minutes of the court. The portrait, a gift of the family of the late Judge Moore, was pre en ted hy (Jeo. II. Smathers, the last ?mrvivig classmate of Judge Moore at ::n viving classmal. of .In ire Moore i> rait was accepted fo? the judiciary t>y Judge Alley, and for the Hoywood county hnr .'isociulioo hy J. 1?. Mor gan. In preen ting the | ??rtrait, Mi". Smathers cuiogm.l the i'e and char aeter of Judge M ore. I stated thai the late jurist wrls hori October 14, ISC;"), ut the old Moor home, five miles west of Ash vjlle, son of Wil liam Hamilton Mi uy nr Mnry (Jud der Moore. On his fat' r's side h? was a great c*r: idsoi; ;.f William Moore, who serv tl as captain in l he war for Arm iean i lependence. On his mother's rde he was a great grandson of Kobs I I/o\ . who was a colonel ill the Revolution -rv War and who was amon<r 'he en ,:est settlers in what was then Rune nhe county., Col. Love located mi whr is now Way nesville ahout the year "l7})2. ^Mr. Smathers ; ':cteh ^ the life of Judge Moore, w'io wa licensed to practice law in If SO, an soon there after located at * \*ehs' where he married Miss Lau a En I \ Ho eeivcd the county' in th gem 1 assembly, and in 18!>!) was i nde aker of the House. He was i istmn- ntal in the establishment of :!ie sc'.-ol at CulJo whs?, which is noo.- Wes' in Carolin. ToV^iers College. He sef" d as grand master of the Masonic lcsi'go of North Carolina Tn 1920 hp wa ^ elected as Judge of the S-perior Court from the 20th Judicia' District, and was serving the State in th:it capacity at the time of his death. Tu accepting th- portrait, both Mr. Morprnn and .Tudj?'* Alley spoke elo quently touching the characteristics of Judge Moore, fhat erabled Mm to serve his people well an<t endeared him to them, PLAY BY NTQH" SOH OL PUPILS On Friday nip-* I, D< mber 14, at the conclusion oi the institute that is to be held a! Wost: ra Carolina Teachers College, at C.i'lowhee, for tra'ning unemployed tv.r'iers in adiult education, a group of night school pupils and teachers fro i Buncombe county will pive a play at the college The same group of night school pupils have given th's r?tav in many j>lac:>s, including Washington, D. C., Raleigh, and Charlotte.. The admission will h'* fifteen cents. A large audience Is expected from all Western North Carolina, -is there will in night nM ? CWA Puts 180 To Work In County W ith More Jobs To Be Available At Once i TODAY and i TOMORROW : ? ? ? ? i (By Fraik Pnrker Stockhridg.') ! PINE ... for newsprint. i Since wood-pulp was first made in ?iy home town of Stockbridge, Mass.. ?>ixty years ago, it has been believed (hat only spruce and hemlock fibres ! A'ere suitable; pine had too much j pitch in it. One result of that belief ! was to send the big paper mills that make "news-print'' or ordinary news paper paper, farther and farther into .he G'anad'an forests, as the more i * southerly supplies of spruce were ex hausted. All the lime there fere millions ol acres of fast-growing "slash" pini on the sandy lands of Geogria, Am bama and Florida, mostly going to wast;-. My fiiend, I)r. Charles A. Hcrty, famous chemist, began ex perimenting, and he discovered thai this southern pine contains no pitch until it is fifteen years* old. He mad - some paper from young pines and i; looked good. Last month he shipped three car loadi? of wood-pulp, mad< froin young pines, secretly, to a bin Canadian paper mill. It fabricated per fectly on the fast, machines and seven Georgia dailies printed their entire I edition <?f one day on it. POWER . . . man made. People think of Boulder l)nm aud Muscle Shoals as the great sources of [enoimous power. But the other day there was completed in Brooklyn th< largest siuglej power unit in the worlds except Niagara Falls. That is the new steam plant of the Brooklyn Edison Company, which can generate more jmwer than anybody ever dreamed of getting from the Colorado River or the Tennessee. I It is a false notion that water power is either plentiful or cheap. C. P. Steinmetz, great electrical en gineer, once said to me that if even drop of water that falls on the sur face of the United States were to generate power all the way from the monntain-tops ? to the sea, the totul power produced would not be as muc^ as was then being produced by steam. Any wafer-power project except th ? very largest, and few of those, takis *o much capita! investment that the interest on the capital alone amounts often to more than fuel would cost for a steam plant of equal power But I suppose politicians trying to get appropriations for local projects will keep on making the public be lieve that it will benefit by developing watcr-powen. KNEES . . . in Automobiles # Sonne of the new 1934 automobiles will have a new sort of front wheel suspension, which some bright pres-i agent has described an "putting knees in the ear^ firont legs". Instead of a front axle, each wheel will be in dependently supported with its own spring arrangement to take up the shock. The idea Is that humps will not be transmitted through the frame to the whole chassis. There is no doubt that it will work for several European manufacturer havo been wing the same idea for yearg. Indeed, most oF our automobile ideas come from Europe. Thev h?f? four-wheel brakes, high-speed, smnli bore engines and streamline bodies long before we did. The reason is that European ears are made in smnli quantities, as a rule, and the makers are free to experiment with new em gineering ideas and designs. They go! enough for their ears so they c;i?. take a chance. TALKIES . . . there's hope. The two most popular utalkie?" that the American motirfn picture people have produced in a year are ''Little Women" Knd "Three Little Pigs". Artistically, the best motion picture that T have seen is "Henry the Eighth", an English film. Hollywood is still posessed with th.? idea that to be successful a picture j tnnsti have more than a trace of in ?Vceney. Yet- the proof that the pub lic is not sex-crazy as the movie prople think they are ? as many of them are themselves? is found in the sucecss of these three pictures. I am beginning to be hopeful about to mmlm One hundred ' and. sixty men &ud 20 women began work thus week, in the county, on s;\eral Civil Work-. Authority projects nf various kinds, and it is expected tliilt the number will he increased to 300 within thy next 30 duys. This is in keeping with IVtoddeui Koosevrlt \- plans of reduc ing unemployment to the minimum tor the winter. Included in the projects in the coun ty are the widening and surfacing with gravel ol the Canada road, the jc'ope creek road from Highway 10*! to Highway No. 10 at Beta tlm Big Ridge road, I'ressley cruek and Piunpkiutowii mads; improvement and repairs on tin- ground and step-, at the court house property, a lock wall ami gntUriiig at the Sylva cem etery. instalntion of water and mak ing other improvements at the Tucka seigee school, the const ruction, of twe thousand sanitary toilets, and a thorough going over and removal ol' all trash, logs, etc on the Sylva water shed. It is expected that other pro ject will be added fo those already adopted. Wages ol' from 30 cents to $1.10 .tu. hour are being paid. The 20 women are engaged, undei direction of Mrs. Carrie Bryson, in making garments for needy child ren, at the recently established sew ing room at the Sylva school. N. D. Davis, CWA administrator for the county, has general supervis ion of the work. J. N. Wilson is dis bursing agent, and (.'. J. Crispe, time keeper. Roscoe Ramsey is in fuli charge ol' the employment office. QUALLA Mr. Asbury Cagle was buried at Union Hill cemetery, Nov. 30. Servic es were eouducted by Rev. J. L. Hy att. The following was read at the funeral. Asbury Cagle died Nov. 29, 19.33, age 7-1 years, 5 months uud 22 days. When he was about 25 years ?? age he joined the Methodist church. He was born and reared in Haywood county. He leaves three Bisters, Mrs. Parcy Hyatt, Mrs. Clarissa Moody and Mrs. Mary Brown. He was nevev married. Rev. C. W. Clay, the new pastor, preached at the Methodist church, Sunday morning from the text "A<? cording to my gospel". The sermon was interesting and the audience at tentive. A mistake occurred in last week'" Qualla Items, though through no fault of The Journal. It was Rer. Lucius Rogers of Sunburst, who vya* reelected pastor of the Shoal Creek Baptist church. Mh?w\s Clara AViMavd and Blaflchc Tihitts of .Asheville Normal were guests of Miss Gertrude Ferguson, Sunday. By Rev. J. L. Hyatt, at his homo on November 2'i, Rev. Talmadgo Whit temore, of Barnesville, and Miss Grady Gasoway of Whittier, were united in marriage. Mrs. A. J. Franklin of Bryson Cit> spent Saturday at Mrs. 10. S. Keener'-. Mr. Dixon Ilvatt has been seriously ill for the pn-t- week. Miss Loncilc Seroirjrs, of Brasstowti visited M'ss Edna Hoylc last Week. Miss Geneva Turpin spent Sunday in Waynesville. Miss Edna Freeman spent the week end with relatives at Be ta. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. B.^He and Mr ?L M. Hyatt a.nl family eallrd at Mr. D. C. Hughes . Mrs. Martha Med ford and daugh ter of Clyde, Mrs. Yoik Howell and Mr. Frank Owen and family visited nt Mr. Osear Gibson's. Rev. and Mrs. C. W. Clav and Mr. P. O. Elliott of Wliittirr were dinner quests at Mr. P. W. McLaughlin's, Sunday. Hujrh aiid Lillian Fcrruson spent the week end with relatives at Sylva. Mr. Wayne Rhinehart returned to Canton Monday after a visit with home folks. Mr and Mrs. Kern Noland of Can ton visited relatives Sunday. Mrs. D. C. ITusrhes and Miss Mary Baltle spent Saturday at Svlva. Mr. Rufus Hyatt and daughter, Miss Helena, of Waynesville, and Mr. and Mr*. S. P. Hyatt of Qlenvile and Miss Louise Hyatt of Cullowhee spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hyatt
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 7, 1933, edition 1
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