f
YEAR IN ADVANCE INTHf
Efity Elections
V Board Organizes
m * -? orfrani2at;0n Qf ffre C0UT1- I
fl'jtil UJC v.r ?
of Elections, by the electioiil
V .flron Hooper as chairman, and I
o Queer as secretary, and ihel
Kgciftment of W. E. Crrindstaff as I
Eft rd member, politics in Jack- I
Kfcunty, in this political year of I
Kgf has gotten oil to a real start; I
K^andidates for various offices!
Blearing as fast as flies in Aug- I
B. ?vcn though the democratic pri- I
jry ;s almost two months away.
first announcement that was!
Bjg was that of Dan Tompkins, I
Etor of the Journal, former Repre- I
EfS Present Heading Clerk I
House of Representatives, that I
B tfj:i be a candidate for Repre- I
Etafve in the General Assembly. I
E^ftDillard, ?f Beta, who was twc I
^Ljrv- fiected s member of the Coun- I
?f Education, has announced I
" L fnv. thai
(t. i VV'lll 0C a kouu.uutb
..post. No formal announcement
{en made by Representative T.
{!hftter, but it is rumored tliat
\ ilso be a candidate to succeed
^inted race between Baxter C.
esiari Solicitor John M. Queen,
t& soi'citorship of this district
;jrpji>ped.
I in Haywood it is said that
jfCogbirn, Canton attorney,
lues R. Boyd, Waynesville
, will be opposing candidates
. State Senate.
:e Register of Deeds race six
ites have developed. Mrs.
?' She: rill Roane, present int.
has announced that she will
ake the race, and Earl Reed,
Lee Henson, Sylva; Roscoe
qawinnnh- Dour Davis, Web
KrJid Glenn Hughes, Cullowhee,
Hpt.i'l entered the lists for this
H C: of the Court Dan M. Alison
Kb?At asain.be a candidate, and
bij Moses, of Sylva; Frank C.
fcawftrd, Sylva; Jennings Bryson,
Beta, and Roy M. Cowan, Webster,
lie candidates for this position.
I Finance Commissioner J.
ID. Co.Inn !ike\ ise w'll not be a canIda
? and J. H. Long, of Mountain,
lid H', Vernon Cope, of Sylva, have
In u.:ced that they are aspirants
fc;' hat important position.
I Whi> Sheriff C. C. Mason has
fcide no forma, announcement of
us candidacy, it is generally under- toe
Aat he will seek renomination; I
frd Fr< 1 Sutton, of Qualla, is op- I
!gh'm.
Cf Howe 11, of Qualla, and Cleve
r' of Hamburg are candidates to:!l
themselves as county comi.iers,
and Ed Firher, of Beta,
, a candidate for commissioner.
QUALLA
iBv Mrs. J. K. Terrell)
' Susan Keener, daughter of
i Mrs. F. S. Keener, died Sat
night and was buried in
rs cemetery on Monday mornie
28th. Besides her mother,
survived by two sisters, Mrs.
franklin, of Bryson City, and
has. Swexl, of New York, and
brother.,, Messrs. James, Penn
fevier Keener of Qualla, also
' nephews and nieces,
had been afflicted for about
but bore her sufferings |
wn ;'?tience and seemed resigned to
^ inevitable.
That she was a christian was the
?ntfottjng words spoken by the
*lat the funeral. She was a
;?nb;r of the Methodist church.
'e service was conducted by Rev.
* Crawford and Rev. C. W.
Ssr; of Bi'yon City. Several vis^
Y-'ere present.
'artists TO F.UILD
lDl>iTlONTO church
1 n eting held at the close of
0 ^aching service, last Sunday
church here de,
2d.tc build an addition of six
school rooms, to relieve the
!*V( -d condition of the Sunday
|f 001; The addition will be built
^ fo^crete blocks and will adjoin
,* ^}'rch on the side next to Main
i a
teaching from the back of
^ Present St nday school rooms to
hiji ^ window in the side of the
c ^nduitorium. Besides the class
the addition will contain a
U p"lt f
' v 1 tor a heating plant and two
1 r^oms.
I".
'felt'** ^Urc^ also made plans for the
if the fiftieth anniversary
0 be l?rganization, the celebration
some time this summer.^
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Looking Backward
lo Jackson County
49-30-20 years ago
Tuckaseigee Democrat, 1889
Major Finge^, State Superintendent
t
of Public Instruction,^ has perfected
a plan to carry out the act of ttid last
Legislature, which abolished "all the
white normal schools, and ^provides
. t a. xt
uiai uie sum set apart for them shall
be expended for teachers' institutes.
Major Finger says that these iiisticutes
will begin July 1st next/; atij
ihat in a year from that date 'they,
will have been held in each of' the
oinety-six counties of the State fqi
,i term of at least one week each,
i hey will cost ten thousand dollars,
jl which the counties will pay half.
Jhe State appropriates four thousand,
and a thousand comes from the
/eabody fund. Only North Carolina
.eachers will be employed to conduct
nese institutes. The State Board of
education has dismissed the "bluejack
speller" l'rom the State list of
,chool books. Oakland Institute an
udustrial and literary school for
, oung ladies, will be opened next
jeptember. The property is situate
a Victoria, a suburb of Asheville,
and is under the auspices of the presjyterian
church. Mr. W. M. Burns,
jf this place, and Miss Laura Gibson,
jf Scott's Creek, were united in mar;age
on last Sunday, at the home of
Jae bride's stepfather, Mr. A. W.
farmer, Rev. A. B. Thomas, of Dillsooro,
officiating.?Mr. Berry McDade,
vVilmot, and Miss Maud Slatton, of
Jillsboro, were married on Sunday,
it the residences of Mr. J. M. Philips.?We
are reliably informed that
.he Equitable Manufacturing Company
will begin active operations at
jnce. The foundation stone is now
jeing prepared and the lumber for
.he buildings is now being sawed at
VIr. Jarratt's saw mill. ?The new
.tore at Wilmot, to ?a.~Messrs. H^ll
k Fishers' is new complete nrid the
lepo; full of goods to g< into it.
VIr. Jaa. C. Fisher to manage the
jusiness there and doubtless all will
vork well. ?At the hour of 10 A. M.
j'riday, March 30, the Sunday School
Jonference was called to order in
Vebsicr,, and the exercises of the
lay were begun by a prayer meeting
.>i one half hour's duration, conductid
by Rev. Frank Siler. Capt. J. W.
Terrell being absent, Mr. W. E. Moore
cindly consented totake his place and
ielivered a very cordial address Of
welcome. Rev. Frank Siler was elect.
? 1 . ? i rv ?
v?d permanent president ana k. ij.
Madison permanent secretary. The
following members and delegates
were present at some or all of the
ousiness sessions: from Webster,
Revs. Frank Siler and B. G. Wild,
Prof. W. H. H. Hughes and Messrs.
W. A. Enloe, W. E. Moore, A. J.
Long, Sr., A. S. Bryson, David Bigham,
J. E. McLain; Cullowhee,
Messrs. Henry J. Rees, David Brown
and Fidel Pressley; East Laporte, Dr.
J. K. Case, Messrs. P. C. Allen, and
Javan Davis; Double Springs, Messrs.
Thomas and J. S. Leopard; Dillsboro,
Maj. J. H. Bryson and Mrs. F. Merrick;
Wesleyanna, Mr. Nathan Cabej
Cashiers, Rev. H. M. Bennett; from
Hamburg and Highlands, Rev. A. W.
/acobs; from Sylva, R. L. Madison.
The following visitors were in atendance:
Rev. J. C. Orr, of Waynes.
file, Rev. John Burnett, of this
ounty, Rev. J. F. Austin, editor of
ne Asheville Methodist, and Rev.
Jr. LeFew, of the Franklin circuit,
it the first session on Saturday the
ommittee reported as follows: "We
.nd, from the reports furnished us
J- n;?i.
hat there are in trie oounus 01 ** w?ter
Circuit and Hamburg Mission 9
Junday Schools under the guidance
jl ihe M. E. Church, South, and that,
.11 the schools there are 432 scholars
jnrolled, with an average attendance
of 294. In these schools we find 59
officers and teachers engaged. Only
.nree of these are kept open during
me whole year, the balance going into
" 'Winter Quarters".?Last Friday
evening being the occasion for the
election of officers in the Sylva Literary
Club, the election was entered
upon and resulted as follows: Presiueni,
Mr.'S. A, Davis; Vice-President,
Mr. S. Waidrope; Secretary, Miss
^ila Potts; Treasurer, F. A. Luck, Jr.;
Sergeant-at-Arms, Gen. E. R. Hampton.
Jackson County Journal
April 10, 1908
Dillsboro locals: Born, to Mr. and
Mrs. Holmes Bryson, a little son. Another
Democratic ticket by and by!?
Master Will Cathey is home from
page frye) ?
It '
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t\ r ?YLV A.^OrtTHCARC
Parent-leathers
Elects Officers
Mrs. Raymond U. Sutton was elect-;
ed president of the Sylva ParentTeachers
Association, at the meeting
held Tuesday afternoon. The
new vice-president of Mrs. M.j B.
Madison; secretary, Miss Bertha Cunningham,
and treasurer, Mrs. Dah
Tompkins.
This was the last meeting of the
school year, and the new officers expect
to have all committees appoint-^
ed and the organization ready to
function When school opens again,
next fall. I
Rev. A. P. Ratledge, pastor of the
Methodist church in Sylva, wa3 the
speaker for the afternoon, and used
as his subject, 'The Home, The School
and The Church".
Miss Mayme Long's room won the
i r ? 4 -4* a
uauiiez~ lur yuxvui. uiienuciiice.
Jury Drawn For May Term
The Jury tommirsion, composed
of R. U. Sutton, H. H. Bryson, and )
Dillard Coward, met on Monday and
drew'^jhe jury for the May term of
Superior Court. The court will be
for the trial of both civil and criminal ,
cases, : and the gran i jury will be ;
drawn from die list of jurors for the r
first week. The citizens drawn to;:
serve as jurors are:
FIR8T WLEK
I
Robert M. Bryson, Cullowhee; T. :
F. Dillard, Sylva; John B. Battle,
Qualla; Ralph Ashe, 'Canada; L. T.
Queen, Webster; Milt Bryson, Cullowhee;
Jesse Brown, Sylva; Sam C.
Buchanan, Gay; A. D. Parker, Sylva;
T7*? ^ lT* Pi i rt<i+Q r'ocViior'c" _T n i
r I Ctlixv j. . r ugam., _ . .
Bentley, Glenville; R. W. Williams,
Sylva; Howard Wood, Cowarts; W.
L. Fisher, Sylva; M. M. Galloway, j
Wolf Mountain; P. ]Z. Dean, Sylva; I
Paul Warren, Sylva; Ed Fisher, Sylva;
L. D. Hail, Gny; P.VUfHensotti j
Glenville; T.'A. Didard, Cashier's;.
Charlie Brooks, Barker's Creek; J. !
T. Gribble, Sylva; Dock Harris, Syl- j
va; Grady Saunders, Qualla; B. R. j
Morgan, Sylva; Fred Beasley, Sylva; j
Ben Hooper, Cullowh?e; Lloyd Hoop- j
jer, Tuckaseegee; Jude Buchanan,
J Barker's Creek; Dave Shuler, Dills- !
jboro; C. E. Smith, Sy va; Cling Tay- j
lor, Cullovvhee; R. F. Hall, Qualla;
Geo. Rogers, Webster; Ralph Tatham,
Dillsboro; L. Claude Allison, Sylva;
H. S. Queen, Quaila; L. H. Cannon,
Webster; Hubert Potts, Dillsboro; C.
W. Deitx, Gay; E. P. Wike, East La
Porte. ; ,j.
SECOND WEEK
j John C. Morris, S: Iva; Bragg Al- j
lison, Green's Creek; Walter Melton, j
Wolf Mtn.; M. M. Hoxit, Wolf Mtn.; 1
M. V. Breedlove, Glenville; J. B. |
Breedlove, Glenville; . Lynch ' Dil- j
lard, Cashier's; R. G. Snyder, |
Williets; Fred Barron, Gay;
J. R. Bryson, Cullowhee; A^cue
Hooper, Tuckaseigee; G. W. Cook, j
'Barker's Creek; J. F. Keener, Sylva;
, Alvin Crawford, Cullowhee; John W. ;
| Buchanan, Gay; Jack Warren, Sylva; j
Lambert Melton, Canada; R. F. Jar- !
rett, Dillsboro; Paul Fugate, Cash- I
ier'a; Gene Henderson, Mountain; I
Worley Wilkie, Barker's Creek; Wal- j
ter Jackson; East La Porte; Charles
| McCall, Wolf Mtn.; Ed Norton, Cul- j
lowhee. J
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Specialists Aiding Mrs. Evans j
* * * '^i
Mrs. Sallie Brooks, assistant nutrf- *
tion specialist of Stale College, was
in the county this week, assisting Mrs.
Harry Evans in her work. Miss' *
Brooks spoke Tuesday at Cullowliee,
and on Wednesday, ^at Gay. * * . 8
Miss Rosej Elwood Bryan, Home
Demonstration Agent at Large, will
be here next week and will assist
v/ith the program in i'ne county. All
members of the Home Demonstration
clubs are urged by Mrs. Evans to
attend the meetings next week, ?nd
visitors will be welcome; 27
At Pre-School Clinic J
Twenty-svent children were present
at the elementary school building,
last Wednesday, for the pre-schoo!
clinic. Medical and dental examina|
tions were made by Dr. C. N. Sisk, !
I Mrs. Howard Clapp. and Dr. W. P. 1
McGuire. ... %
Mrs. Harry Hastings was chairman
of the committee from the P. T.
A., in charge of the arrangements.
Refreshments were served to the
youngsters, and each of them was
presented with marbles, tops, or dolls.
Dr. Sisk expressed himself as being
gratified at the 1 ?alth conditions
of the group of children who Will"
{enter Sylva school next fall. |
1
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M
HL' NA, APRIL 7. 1938 , ' ' /.
"SSSSSSSSSSSSSSS^SSSB'
THIS WEEfe^ .'" '"'
WASHINGTON
r?v- . I .
' ' Washington, April 7,- (Autocaster)
"?^The Japanese .cherry blossoms
bloomed; early this year .around th^
Tidal Bisin, coming into full flower
f ju^t! as Congress Voted to appro- ,'
nri OIA fU AM A
; v4 Jluc uiaic uiau a uiuiuii uuuai o vu
build the largest Navy in the world,
with a coup?m& battleships of 45,000
tons, thousands of tons larger than
the top ^imit agreed on by England,'
Japan ajid the United
years ago. Japan broke its treaty
agreement first, by laying the keels
of two giant warships. England fol-,
lowed suit ar d now the United States'
falls into line. Congress also added
$35,000,000 to the Army appropriations.
-
Conservative Coalition in t940?
y.' JMore and more talk is heard in
the anterooms of both houses of Congress
of. Cordell- Hull as a possible
coalition candidate for the Presidency
in 1P40, ' The belief grows
among exper enced political observers
that the 1)40 contest must be along
a new line-up, not Republicans
against Democrats but between Conservatives
ai d the New Deal, with
the anti-New Deal candidate as
likely to be an old-line Democrat aa|
to be a Republican. Those who are
opposed to the whole philosophy of
the New Deal include a great M
growing number of Democratic leadifers,
especially in the South. Mr.
Hull is from Tennessee. The eyes
of many of those who believes that a
real coalition of the anti-New Deal
elepients is politically feasible are
turning from the still badly disorganized
Republican party toward the
Southern Democracy for leadership,
and more and more resting on Mr.
Hull. _ ... ...
That the Administration Is,.well
aware of the growing disaffection
toward it of what was once the
"Solid South" is evidenced by humerous
signs of the j.time^. 'The
President's open gspod^aJ 6f Florid!.",
Senator Claude Pepper's candidacy
for renomination at the May 3rd
primaries is one of those signs. Mr.
Pepper is an out-and-out New Dealer.
He faces" opposition from two
powerful opponents', neither of them
committed to the New Deal. One ia
Congressman Mark Wilcox, the other
is former Governor Dav Scholtz. The
defeat of Senator Pepper by either
of those would be a slap in the face j
a -1?^TV/Tt f
tor toe /vammibLiuuuii wniv,i? .
Roosevelt wants to avoid at all haz- J
ards.
Bid for Southern Vote
The political strategy behind the
President's Gainesville, Georgia,
speech is interpreted here as an effort
to build up pro-New Deal sentiment
among the rank and file of
Georgia and other Southern voters.
Mr. Roosevelt came out flatly with
the declaration that the workers of
the South are being exploited by
Southern employers and that what
he called the "feudal" system under
which Negroos live and work should |
be abolished and southern wages
increased materially.
p :
Along with suchefforts to hold
the South in line politically (Virrv tlfe '
1938 elections and with the 1940
i
Presidential election in view is the
announcement by the A.A.A. that
half of the $500,000,0000 which is to
be distribute ! to farmers in the next
three months from the Federal
Treasury, under the Soil Control Act
and the Crop Control law, will go to
the South. .
The total amount to be distributed
to farmers under the new law may
be half as much again ai the five
hundred millons now available. The
bills which have been iutrpdtieedd^
new processing taxes are" calcula'ted1
to raise $ 212,000,000. The purpose
of these n?w processing taxes, to
provide additional subsidies for
farmers, is not stated in the bills as
introduced. . That is supposed to
make the tax Constitutional, byi
keeping it a legislative secret that it I
is levied upon the whole people for J
the benefit of a single class. That |
was the ground upon which the Su- \
preme Court declared the old A.A.A.
Act unconstitutional.
No Balanced Budget
It is generally recognized's.*here
that there is no chance of balancing
the budget for the next fiscal year,
no matter how much the new tax
$11 may yield. Nor is it likely that
the Government will ever take in-as^
much as it spends so long as expenditures
for relief, farm aid ajjd
other purposes outside of the actul
operating expenses- of the govern-?
ment continue to run at high figures.
Increased expenditures for the Army
and Navy and the need of building
up an auxiliary Merchant Marine by
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$2.00 A YEAR Of .
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TODAY and |
TOMORROW
' -p- ' ' : ' ' *
(By Frank Parker 8tockbrid?e) n
CHESS . ... mental sti ml us
- My favorite game, when I can get
aftybody to clay it with me, is chess.
To the onlooker who is not a chess enthusiast
there is nothing; quite so boring
as watching two chess players
^taring ate chess board for sometimes
an 'hour or more without making a
move. To the chess devotee there is
nothing mate sUtnulating to the mind
jha&PfifcfcriBg out the tenth move ahead
and calculating what his opponent
will da
. Nobody knows haw =. old the game
of chess la, but It originated ffi Asia
thousands of years ago. An exploring
party in Iraq recently un- 1
arthed a set of terracotta chessmen
in a stratum of ancient relics at least '
6,000 years old. And there is .evidence
that the Hindus played chess
before the Arabs did. It i? probably
the oldest game invented by J
men that has come down through the '
ages in anything like its original form.
Chess is facinating because it is 1
solely a battle of wits. The player j
who can outthink the other wins. I
know of nothing so effective to keep
one's mental processes polished up v,
and eatlij
JEFFERSON . . .no New Dealer j
Nobody has any more admiration
for Thomas Jefferson than I have.
But I cant see him as a statesman
of Washington's caliber , and particularly
I cant see him as the patron
saint of the political movement
which Is called The New Deal."
The President has proclaimed
Jefferson's birthday as a date calling
for national commeration. The }
DuiOQp of fba Mint is bringing out (
a new five-cent coin bearing Jef- .
tmmmfim fc?it i?i?A of the head_of
head of the buffalo on the currant I*
Btth. The Poet Office Department
n iiiiimnrmii i r' rn - ~ >
thweart Stamp instead of Washington's.
A greet memorial to Jefferson
is planned close to those of
Washington and Lincoln near the
White House. 1
I have no objections to honoring *
Jefferson, but I wonder if those who ?
are trying to make him a popular *
national hero realize that he was elected
President because he stood for (
the exact opposite of what is now
going on. His ''Republican'' principals
were oppooad to those of the t
Federalists. He feared^ above all ^
things the carifiHiitfaii of powerl*
in the Fedaral government and the|t
restrictions of individual rights andl^
libertiss, Ir
WHISKERS , Is 0eaflres8flc
I have bans ftjnaf* or lass fre-P
quent visited In the galkriec of both#
Houses of CiilgW for more than#
fifty years. Whan I was young most?
Senators and Representatives WOrel
either full besids or luxuriant mus-B
taches., Only Southern members
were clean shaven, and most of theml
wore plain black "string" bow neck-B
ties. The Southern members gen-.B
erally still adhera to that particularly
badge of the statf ian but full beards!
are also cwMphHSiis by their ab-B
sence among muhss from he North?
and West * " ~ ' ; " B
The outgtmwffng apt of whiskers#
in the Roups !p the facial adornment Jl
of Represaittiallvi Thtfchanv of Jtfas-B
sachusetta, who looks as if he neverlj
patronized a harbor. Of the samel
species, but naatly trimmed and '
curled to harmonfair with the wearer's
rather danrtHloi clothing is the /
f ull beard -of Senator James Hamil- t
ton Lends of IflfafcOU. Once brilliant /
red, his.baaid Is now only slightly j
pinkish,
f ^Jk^Jfaa^i* ?the^)f\hr mgj? 7vth<r ?
has sat in Congress from two different
states. A native of Virginia, he was ^
elected to Congress from he Statf fOf j
Washington and resigned to fight ?
in the Spanish War, Then e went to Jj
Illinois and has been el* ted from ^
that state three times., Whiskers e
are no handicap to him. e
BEAUTY .... illrpotss
fitting in the press ga ry of the r
Houae of' Representative the ^gher
mentally^award[ev |rst^ prize I
for Congressional beau* to Mrs. ?
? i-u
Edith Nourse Rogers, Kf J^iapve from
the Fifth Massachil*L-S district.
That goes for Mrs. Rogers' ankles as
well as her smiling face i
aui^ole of blonde h^ir.^toejn (the 1
ankles) are visible fr^^?he*gaiterieg, \
sinc^Mrs. ^Rogers' seat is In the fro** ^
row. j
The Blue Ribbon for masculine ^
pulchritude I awarded to Bruce Barton,
New York advertising man ?
turned politician, * "He's too good- ! f
.?W|
(Pleas? turn to piga ttwM).
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ADVANCE OUTSIDE THX COUWTT | i
Republicans To Meet, |
Here On "April 16th ^
.v-, .n ? v?.t* '-r^A
County Republican Convcmtion ' v
will be held here on Saturday, A^iU T,r!;i ,
16, beginning at 2:00 o'clock P^li '.vail'-r;
The call for the* convention1 follows: iv<"T
A convention of the Repblfcan1 "<*'*
party of Jackson County ik hereby
? ; \ ; . t?. t-K t vfc-V(*
called to convene at the Qourt HoUae n - ,
at Sylva on .SATtUUDAY1, APJUL Uf, . , 1?V
1938, AT 2:00 OCLOCK P.' M.'The J* :
vf; ''I t j flL TJt
purpose of this meeting is to elect 3 _ . ,
County Chairman, Secretary, and el^ {? *.
feet a county organization.-1 'TfiE.cbnf* V>1 ^ J
vention will also consider the telec* v{*tion
and endorsement of candidate v
for the Republican ticket to be voted
on at the ensuing geheral eiefetifen. ' j
The Honorable Jake P. Netted '<*; ;'V*V
Charlotte, Repubflcan candidate f6t^ kc"'the
United ' States Sdniate; tod-' thtfiiV!; f*;'
Honorable' VonnO 1 L. Qudftr,JAkhe^>K ^
vine, Republican candidate lor Con-' - ''H
gress, will be present to address the
convention. We urge that every Re*- rr. > A'
publican in the county be present and >v ,??{ $
especially are we anxious that tl?5
ladies attend this meeting, ' ; J.
B. ENSLEY, ' *
Chairman Republican fcxe. Com. 7 %
Attest'
i C. H. NICHOLSON, I' f
Secretary Jackson Co., Republican j V'
Executive, Committee.'^x ' . r?l i k y' ! ,
jilw h'Q V; ??*| (<:; , r : 4 . ?
G. N. Cowan Movca To , 'f J
RockyMount ^ $-.t?
Friends yt Rev. G. N. Cw?a, wU* ....
be interested to learn that Mr. Ctwan r, , J ,,i: #
md his family have recently moved .*.*?> .-* .
from Apex to Rocky Mounts , r :yj ?
le will be, pastor ope pftheflaptjgt,,* t^,r
churches. Mr. Cowan, who is a na- ,,;
ive of this county, has been pastor ?.
)f the Baptist church at Apex, for *v .
ibout twenty yegrs,, ' ; ;V v WV; ic-n-i
1 "v' , =. .:. '7. , 1-; >yirt
Recovering From Appefr. dectomv
' '
Miss Virginia Gustafsetiv Jeacher
at Western Carolina Teach* '
)r&. College, is recovering
ippendix operation, at the Harris &
Community hospital. - 4
m , y'
. y
^Arvaptinor An A tlvAriltPlWnt y
UUA JL Utifc A AM A V w ..
' J.
The Journal wishes to apologizes s %
o its readers and the advertiser for < 4
he condition and appearance of the 4
idvertisement of the Sylva Ougply ,'t
Company, appearing in the Silver * jr,
Vnniversary Edition. The advertisenent
was not set up in our own shop, * ?
wing to rush of work in getting out
he special, and we, therefore could
lot, avoid the error, which we did 2
lot know about until the paper was J
irinted. ? 4
iylva To Have Flower Shop *
Mrs. Lucile Painter will open a y
lower and gift shop in the Coward *
louse? on Ff^ ?nd SjWifay ? I %
-jtf a&jl.^ ., :i
Mrs,, Painter, who hag' token aw * >
curse in the florist busineea in X
Jreenville, S. C., will carry cut flow- 7
rs, petted plants, corsages and fungal
designs, as well as a line of gift <[
Jjpp t articles. *
A w? 7
baptists Will Have Assoda- '
tion Study Course |
Beginning next Monday night, i
Apri^ ll^the officers and teadigrs of J
he Sunday schoolf in the Tugkatetqee t ]j
Association will f<pne together |t toe %
iyiva Baptist church fqr flat'toflhty rr Vt
if study dea^g with Sunday school
a.f.o/Krr uki >
The following classes will be taught:
*he adult workers, by Mr. McKinley . J
ILmpson; Intermediate worSter^^by^ ^ ^
liss Mildred Cowan; Junior wortcm, 2
y Mrs. H. M. Hocutt; Primary w?Kk~ * . J J
rs, by Bliss Sadie Queen; and a gmral
class, by H. M. Hocutt > \\
The tead^^j^i^ a J!
dethodist To Hold Meeting \ '-2
In Webster \
y * 4
A series of reyival services will
>egm-*t-the.^dgfbodijt church, in
Pebstet; $un<^ mondfc at 11 o'clock,
according to announeanrrt v
nade by the preacher in charge, Rev. ?
j. A. Hovis. Rev. M. T. Htaflhaw. * V^f
ri Rutherford College, will preach i J ^j
it each service. Rev. Mr. Hlnshaw y
rupptted for Rev. A. P Raledge, '.J
mtchgr urckargeof
luring his recent abonce in Vtattt* ' J |