Arizona Kidnapping * J ! I.YSON, Ariz. . . . Above ia ,1 :.-t. Utobles, 6, daughter of a u.:iljhy Arizona family, who was k. dipped as she left school and I i for $15,000, ransom. It was in t : town that John Dillinger and u \w>re captured last year and it !, iJiousjht by some this was a Dil-1 planned revenge- on local1 Drake Relay Queen uii_ j i MfCAOO . . , Miss Martha Stull ' >' r), blue-eyed blonde beauty , i ' :t Invest erf. University returned 11 honored Queen of the Drake ('?nines at DesMoines, where :s crowned and presided over ?J. . :issic irames. ^ Wi - OF APPLICATION FOR PARDON <f North Carolina, Coiiuty. hereby given that the ?n 'Mi-lev Wahlroup, who wa |V |' 11 'In October 1933 term of Sii|u'jj. ? I . ?ui t nf Jackson County /'(?; Mtt!::' i iie prohibition laws aif! - : t<> six months on th< rl'ly to the Governor of X- i. j lor a pardon or parole IK' :i - 'licliee. Ti: ' hi y; 2, 1934. Marli'v Waldroup. NOT i f OF TRUSTEE'S SALE ? i nl hy virtue of the power "1 - ? ilnineil in that certain I'* ? ?>;' I rust executed hv Zeb Lee f'-'A Mill wife, Maynicc Cooke, te (?? : i jin-ial National liiuik, High ''"i1 i. \. Trustee, unikr date of I'nitnlier I, 1927, securing the in ?I l?!< 'iiie-s therein described, said '? "i of Trust being recorded in the of the Register of Deeds for ?l;n k>on County in Hook 102 at Page default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness, and in the request of the holder or hold is-. thereof, the undersigned Trustee vi|l, on the 11th day of Juhe, 1934 :it 12:00 o'clock noon, at the Court house door in Jackson County, North C arolina, offer tor sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, the following de scribed premises, to-wit: A certain lot or parcel of land in near the city or town of Sylva. t "inly of Jackson,, Township Sylva, iiinl more particularly described a? i Mows : I'JJJINNFNC at ?} stake on the X"iih side, State Highway No. 10. I - ' feel from the intersection of ll'irlnvay and Mill Street, boin? M\ corner of lot No. 32, and the ?nier of lot No. 33 and runs ?' li'-c with the line between lots ' ' i > ?'!'_> and 33 N. 45 degrees W. ' lo a stake in the line of lot '' ; i r i ? 1 corner of lots number? ? i hence with the line be ""'i ioi No. .'{9 and lots numbers : d :! ! S 45 degrees 30' W. 100 ' 1 ' :? slake corner of lots num and 35; thence with the line 1 hils numbers 34 and 35 S. '?ces K. 200 feet to a stake on . " It side of State Highway No. h willi Highway No. 10 N. ?!? ? , (?< no* E. 100 feet to the BE and being lots numbers ' ' I of a subdivision of the s,ivder, Farm, made by I. W. Civil Engineer, as recorded U> Hook No. 1, at page 32 in '? ''lice of the Register of Deeds ?i -kson County, N. C. 'r|,i- the 7th day of May, 1934. NATIONAL BANK, mon POINT, N. C. TRUSTEE ;!vi "MIN D. BIGGS, RECEIVER l!v "mNSON, ROLLINS & UZZELL ATTORNEYS Many a mid-town tenement kid Will miss the sheep that used "to graze in Central Park. And since they've sent them lover to Prospect Park there'll be many a kid who'll grow up, live and die in Manhat tan without ever knowing how a lamb looks in real Ufe ? gamboling on the green. For there arc loads of native New Yorkers who never leave the city of seven million. The window-washer in our office build ing s one of them. "Forty-two years in New York," he boast: < "And never been out of it yet!" . . i And probably he didn't even know' that there were sheep in Centra' Park! There's still money in New York ... A friend was telling ol her sister's wedding reception "Mother was a little iurtled," she said, "for the bill for the champagne punch alone, was $24.4 . . . And poor Sis ? she could do with h little of that money!" . . . Our friend didn't mention the luxurious wedding gifts, however. ? * ( Look! He holds that cane oddly. . . . Oh ? he's blind . . . "Going across?" I asked. It was up at Columbus Circle ? southwest corner of Central Park ... "I don't have a complete mental picture of the streets," he replied to my question, "just certain landmarks ... I ran right into a traffic marker on the sidewalk this morning. Hit it pretty hard. But you have to expect ac cidents like that if you go outside at all. If you haven't the courage to meet them ? you stay cooped up in the house." . . . Just another ar gument for "The Seeing Eye," that New Jersey institution that trains German Shepherds ? erroneously called "Police Dogs" ? to lead the blind intelligently, avoiding just such accidents my chance acquain tance mentioned. * ? * New York telephone calls aver age 7,500,000 a day! ? ? ? The cops in this town are brave lads, ordinarily. But they're camera shy! General O'Ryan, you see, who's head of "New York's Fin est," has issued orders that blue coats must not pose for news camera men. "It's undignified." says the General. flUWYKWXH 1 LESSON \y Rev Charles E. Dunn Christianity and Patriotism Lesson for' May 13th. Matthew 22. Golden Text: Matt. 22:37-39. "Pay therefore what is Caesar's to Caesar and what is God's to God." In these famous words Jesus advises obedience to both God and the state. It is possible, He says, to serve both. But it is perfectly clear that loyalty to God, in the Master's mind, must take preced ence over loyalty to Caesar. It was for His excess of faith in God that our Lord was cru cified. Now we live in a day when this fundamental issue is very much to ReT- ckai- E ^f3* the fore. The agitation aroused by demands of an absolute charactcr, made by the state in opposition to Christian principles, has reached an acute stage. The lines are clearly drawn. On the one hand are the na tionalists who, in the name of patri otism, insist upon an unqualified con formity to the edicts of the state. On the other hand are the members of the Beloved Community who obey God rather than men. At the present moment the national ists have the upper hand. Germany is demanding that the churches re nounce their historic faith and accept a pagan substitute binding them com pletely to the chariot wheels of the totalitarian state. Russia has out lawed organized religion. And while the plight of the Christian Society is not so desperate in other lands, there has been a most menacing suppression of that freedom so dear to the Chris tian. In the fifteen years since the war there have been more prosecu tions for free speech in England thaii in the half century prior to 1914. And here in America the patrioteers are in the saddle. When Prof. Doug las Macintosh, of Yale, recently ap plied for citizenship, he said that in the event of war he would follow his conscience in preference to the law of the land. His case was carried to the highest court of our government and he was denied the right to be a citi zen. The truth is that the state to day, for the majority, has tak?*n the plice of God. Against this God state must the followers of the Cross arise in solemrj, protest. CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE OR TRADE: Two houses anA lots at Cullowhee. Apply at the Journal Office. ________ We have fine, peppy Chicks, every week? FARMER'S FEDERA TION HATCHERY, Mrs. John R. Jones, Manager. . PAINTING? SEE KAY F. MONTAGUE At the Freeze House, Sylra ( \ VICTIMS , , . ?As time goes on, I become, more and more impressed with the icvastating effects 6n the health of the people by this socalled "deprcs iion." To be candid, I have never witnessed anything like it. Literally housands of mature men and women are breaking down in their nervous systems ? the break-down striking at the very foundation of the physi cal structure, sweeping the victims from the field of combat-r-the zone >f making a living. Never, in my e::istence have I seen anything more devastating. I have urged my patients, "don't worry; there is nothing worth iQ much to the individual as -his LIFE. And, life can be made little else than constant torture ? by worry l - Yes, dear reader, we family doctors giving our life-energies to our patients-<-we advise people - not to worry? only to catch ourselves doing the very same thing. Symptoms of impending break: General weakness in hands and legs. There may be numbness and tingling, with very little aptual pain. Just a feebleness ? feeling of incapacity, "unequal to the day's task." When these symptoms are felt, REST at whatever cost. \ All sorts /of surface sensations may be' noticed; coldness of the hands and feet is common. I have observed "nervous chills", the sort not followed py noticeable fever. The patient himself remarks that "he can't stand anything ar.y more." S~me imagine that they have influenza, but' /the absence of cough and marked nasal symptoms prove no infection. VTheie may be loss of appetite, languor, and above all, marked discouragement with daily affairs; the feeling that it isn't any use to try to venture further. , , Mental break-down ? nothing strikes, me with more feeling of dread. Dethronement of reason! To all my readers, REST ? before too late. Subscribe to The Journal $1 a Year in the County UPSET NERVES DRAGGED HER DOWN It was a great record of leadership that Chevrolet made in 1933! It's an even greater, more im pressive record that Chevrolet is making for 1934! Already, sales are tens of thousands of cars ahead of laet y?#r. Production is running higher than that 6f any other auto mobile company in the world. And every day, from state after state, comes the same report on registrations: Chevrolet is leading all other cars! KNEE-ACTION WHEELS ?? WE?m?PIWF < ) I ) I 1 The big reason for such preference is plainly shown at the right. Chevrolet has so many vital features that others in the low-price field have left out: Knee-Action wheels that are fully enclosed for complete safety and ab solute dependability. A six -cylinder valve-in head engine with an exclusive "Blue-Flame" head. Big, "cable-controlled" brakes, the beat in the low-price field. Large, spacious bodies by Fisher, with Fisher No Draft Ventilation. And real "shock -proof' steer ing that brings new ease and comfort to driving. No other low-priced automobile has a single one of these five leading 1934 features. That's why no other can be backed by such a confident statement as this: CHEVROLET MOTOR CO., DETROIT, MICH. Compart Chevrolet'* low Mivered pricet and eaty G.M.A.C. I A General Motor* Value " ' ( : x .. " ' \ ?? \ Save with a - CHEVROLET SIX ****** u ?> BOlWWVIWIfff j JACKSON CHEVROLET COMPANY t

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