I I ^ ^arTv advance in th WL Liquor El mjle Held It County, L* trill iy 1:0 liquor stores elec ;;i Jiii.w,(tod T liis \oa,r. m,.,. rri:\ 'Vi.i-y jlus I [in (. a bt> Act, piovidmgf i'or ? Loivs Jii \\ aynesWlte and I'd. t>S of tiie outcome of Kk1'1' - pty-uiile eiectiou 111 Haywood, Wainro^taut^^^1'* ailti ^ai> Jiiguod jyuuc.ion,^ prohibitifig holdJu;^ a tulK ^i, nmch passed ihu Lc ol iU.'icseiitatives as a local P.|wusoii-d o) Kepresentative [I a?.il which \wis sneaked by lue Kit,: uiu'hig a lew minutes aosence l^u.ur Jicivec, on tiie ciooe of K caused a great deal el ILieih ;it ltie time, it provided E| a.i election oil tiie question of BL- jtoiOs could be called 111 Hay ti ?..an- thi' general statute; Out Ej i:41tic event the majority- vote Bih iouiity wns against the AiiC ^Hdio. either v\ aynesvii a or tyvxiiMiips snou.d give a ^^Lionr tor lae stores, then a liquor foutU ue established in thai ^H, villained quiet for a ilC:^,i;.it:l, a few weeks ago, peuiie circulated in the county, I hat, I he Board of Elcci-all a'i e eetion. The Board act H laioiauly on the petition and ^H^ytoiv> over in Haywood with & great deal 01 interest, since it i ml a snort distance from Sylva to Rayiusvi'le. I V>. T. ( raw lord, appearing l?r *b |i< i(,iior sitM ad ocates, announcrl that he would appeal Judge AI r'$ ruling io th(, Supreme Court. MOODY WRITES Of ARMY maneuvers tiiis summer frank \Y. Moody, who is a Corporal, ia the Service Section, Fourth R'U Artillery, and Battery Clerk U Fop Hrafra, has written us the fo Liiiir yarding the summer manrivi r>. I Tiic Third A ray maneuvers l'o* nterly held at Fort Benning, Ga., wti hdd at Biloxi and Shelby, Miss. 'I;f season. Enlisted men and offi ^ are leavu;^ in lai*ge convoys, by ^' Tiiment motor Ir uisportat.on, t< arrive there not later than The 20G or this mo^th. Tlioy will practice y modem methods of warfare, n ^th uipht and day. Complete equip ^nt is taken bv each person, as * r,'a|,-y JMing into action. The inaneu v,'r-? will prob;ib v last two months. T!?' C. AT. T. C? held annually a his station had a fine record,in vie^ J1 previous training. Members of tn 1 raining Corps on joy the miUtf?r and courtesies existing on. regular army posts. They nil, a "'h. i i tlie boxing, 'win1 !ni,)- t' lmis, and the many oc?ij, ocerod by the encampment. 1 ' '"Xpfftcd that many Blue (.our? filiates will receive their com'.ib "'ids season. Uarents and citizens are urged T hsit 1*< ic Kragg, the world's lure ^ Held Artillery Post. SUPPLY GIVES FREE PARKIN , M:(> -y!va Snpp y Company in < (5r to assist in the solution of tl Peking problem in Sylva, has opA ^ free parking for cars and Iruel its lot near the Sylva hotel, > ^ corner of Allen and Bailrot Mre,ts. The lot is conv3nieat:y r'htcd near the business district, ai ni'nbody is welcome to use it P<*i kin^. ?r- ???? ^ALTOWAY HAS OPERATION ( r.iTowav. of Ca iv* Wspita 1 here, for an append operation. He' was accomo&;i ed ,>|va by bis father, Esquire A. .-;rf ~:*' v; ' V.'^C '."? " ? ' '3 .-^ k - V . i : '. " ' * ' .:.vr*.v.! "< ' IftClt! E COUNTY lection To i Haywood Law Invalid TODAY and 1 TOMORROW (3y Frank Parker Stockbridge) AMERICANS . . . devotions I was one of the 150,000 who went to Gettysburg for the givii jenimm encampment of the Grand. Army ot ine Ueputvic and'the Limed CoineU (,;ate Veterans. Eighteen hundred old men?their average age was 04, and many were centenarians - met in the tented city on the spot, whole the decisive battle of thi \Vur Between [the States was fougkr, in the liisl 1 three days of July, 1363. ] Ancient enmities wor forgottccn,. old hatreds buried, as the foes of 75 \ ;>:irs asro fraternized in e: c h otber's O-" - ' tents and swapped tail stories, mugl1 nilied by time, of their youthful oxperieuces in war. As I mingled with iiieiii and listened to them the one . thing that struck me most forcibly was that those fonner foes were all Americans. Americans fought Americans 75 .1 years ago. Looking back over history I it is clear to me that lllue and dray .'alike wore fighting for America. They differed in their concepts of [ the American ideal of Liberty, bulj Were alike in their tierce devotion to the American spirit. They were wile Ijng to lay down their lives for a ,i spiritual cause. So long as Arneri, cans chenfch the spirit of Liberty as j these men did, our democracy I safe. If that spiritcal devotion dies out in the youth of America, we are . a lost nation. I j HEROISM ^ fighters -J On the battlefield of Gettysburg I are hundreds of statues, monuments, >' and memorial tablets. The one which impressed me most wi^li the heroism j of the Americans who fought each j other there is a bronze figure of a soldier brandishing his clubbed musl* k-t like a flail. War was waged at j close quarters in the days of short s range muzzle loading muskets. To fire his single shot effectively a solj dier had to expose himself to the e .lemy's fire, theii fail hack and f ro load. And when there was no time to nioad, it was hand to hand fighting v ill: clubbed musket. Pickett rs gallant charge on the , ; I'nion breastworks at Gettysburg j was fought that way. Nine-tenths of his 4,000 brave "boys in Gray were l left dead o," dying on the slopes of , the narrow valley. In modern wurI fare most of the fighting is between u opponents who Jiarcny see cuni umii Jt took heroes to fight n war in 1863 LEE . . . . . leadership ^ The outstanding hvurc among tie ? monuments 011 GeTysl/urg battlefield xs the bronzy statue of General Kob '* ert E. Lee, astride of his fam 1 war-horse, "Traveler". And in the 1 hearts of both Blue and Gray, as 1 p listened to the ancient foes talking 1 over the great figures and episode.1 of Civii War days, Lee seemed if ? : stand first in the admiration of botl sides, as a soldier and as a man. 'If Ijoe bad accepted Lincoln'i t thought to b( sen ous, he is now beievcd to b The first general miceting or the teachers of the county will be heid in the auditorium of Sylva Elemen- j tury School next Friday morning, - * ?? * -i i/\ _?_i i_ i July 'jy, beginning at iu o ciwu. - On the following day, Saturday, Dr. J. H. Highsmith and Superior! dent Madison will hold a meeting for principals, and agriculture and hoin? economics teachera VACATION SCHOOL AT BETA A daily Vacation Bible School at Scott's -Creek Baptist church closed Friday night-Miss Lillian Wyatt was assisted in conducting the school by Mrs VV G Dillard and Miss Luei'e Dills. Seventy one pupils were en rolled in primary, junior, and inter mediate classes. A picnic was held | Friday, and commencement' exercises ! were enjoyed, Friday night. That i^ how old men, reflecting the wisdom that comes with year*, If.:..-, back on the history they helped to make. TAPS ...... farewell ,1 I loft. Gettysburg wua lilt! SUllllu in my oars of the uiost; poignant, sod-stirring music in the world; the punitive, long-drawn notes of a bngle sounding "Taps'' on the h-1.*top beneath whose sod lie the bones of thousands who perished on th'.1 slopes and in the valley. Row on row of white stones murk the graves of men who weie bur1 ;J whore they fell; their names, their regiments, oven the co'or of the uniforms they wore are forever unknown. A week before the reunion workmen unearthed another skeleton on the battlefield. All that can cvei be known is that those bones, too are ,an American's. I took leave of my century-ob hosts of both armies with a feeling of sorrow mingled with pride that J was bf their breed, of the line. pi ' those venerabV American heroe! over most of whom, before ancthe' Independence Day rolls around, tin bugles will have sounded "taps'', tl.i j soldier's last farewell. ; Back 1 v ? ,]l '\ ? ^ _ 0 1 C-HAP '* -?"~7 ? n ? . !i 1 ' J [JNA, JULY 21, 1938. FORTY-THREE CHILDREN HAVE TONSILS REMOVED Forty-throe Jackson county child ren had thedr tonsils removed, at a clinic held on Tuesday and Wednesday, at the, iligh Sclioo. building in , Sylva. The clinic was he d by the county health department. Dr. J. R. . McCracken, eye, ear, nose and throat Specialist, operated, and was assisted %y Dr. Saru Stringfield, Dr .C. N. ; SL.sk, and Dr. N. C. Lynch. Twenty one- operations were per < formed 011 Tuesday, and twenty-two on Wednesday. , AT THE BAPTIST CHURCH The new Sunday school plant, which is being added to the Baptist church hoie, will soon be ready for < occupancy. In discussing the condi- , lion of the church and Sunday , School, Mr. J. V. Hall, Sunday School superintendent, said: "We ( liave onlytwo more Sundays !o coin])lete our associafional year. Our Sunday School is running about *25 piv oent above a year ago. We al? ( | pleased with the interest and coip- j eia .ion being shown by all our peo 1 ]?!<;. We want the next two Sundays to -be. good days for our Sunday 1( School and church. We hope to iMMft ' ;i large attendance on next Sunday, : ( tuid then on the fifth Sunday, the1, date of our anniversary service, we i hope to have a capacity crowd, and , a great day together. We hope Oe , liave j'our new Sunday School' anae* so that it can he used, in a short time/ SURPRISE BIRTHDAY PARTT !. i On last Friday evening, Miss Hi zabeth Allman gave a surprise birth- | day party, at Webster, for Miss Hel- ] en Adman. The home waas attractively decorated. After gatnueh were oil joyed,^refreshments were served. ? r\f ,mnrA vnilllT twcutj l/i 'iilvi ^ . people present at the affair. HERE FROM PANAMA Mr. That! Deitz, Jr., who h i mer* | her of the Coast Artillery, stationed i in Panama, is visiting his parents. | Rev. and Mrs. Tliad F. Doit', at t lioii* homo at Beta. This is Mr. Doit/\s first visit home in three ' years. He wiR be here until the first of September. ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE 1 i Mr. and Mrs. John W. Wilson, of Sylva,announce the marriage of their f daughter, Miss Eirta Mae Wilson, to Ml". Woodrow Savage, of North Mat I ewan, West Virginia. The marriago * took place on July 16 in Pikeville [ Kentucky. f They were aeecompahicd by MV.and > Mrs. Frank Corhn, of North Mittl* wan. Mrs. Corhn is the former Miss J Gertrude Wilson, sister of the bride, r The bride wals attired in a tailored suit of Wally blue, with accessories o The 01' Swimmii WAipy-ovr/ j / V^BAtPy- CAT /// ^ ^ *; 1 " '^-^'' -Iaju "'j . 4 ->.1 fai itif :fti"'!aa''* " i .. */, v ? , , . '" "-".* * >".* >f-;" $240 A YEAR Of THIS WEEK IN WASHINGTON Washington, July 20?The death of Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Nathan Cardoza, who had been ill since last December, will make no change in th^ line-up of the Supreme Bench, as between Liberal and Conservative approaches to Constitution al questions coming before the higu court. Justice Cardozo, who was appoint od to the Court by President Hoover > few mouths before President Roosevelt took office, was known throughout his distinguished judicial career as a man of broad liberal views, who held that tbe courts should keep pace with changing economic and social conditions and be * * * A ? J) TT/> i, {* 1'xtmneiy toieram 0* .wg*? U?i/' v v * L j forts to adjust the laws to new con-| ilitions. | His opinions as a Justice of the Supreme Court followed that tine of judicial reasoning, and he was oount 3d one ?f the Court group who could w depended upon to uphold any properly drawn laws designed toj :arrv out the the Administration \s economic and social po'icics. I Tn picking his successor, the Prcsi [lent will, naturally, select a jurist whose mind rpns in similar channels There wil? be no such change in the J Court's personnel as occurred after the resignations of Justices Van l)e ranter and Sutherland, ultra conserv atives, who were succeeded by the lib era I Justices Blask and Rood. The general belief held here, in the absenee of any intimation from the President, ifl that Felix Frankfurter of the Harvard Law School is the most likely choice for the vacancy. Prof. Frankfurter, although holding so ofNol position in the ? o OTA of flfipl Uovernrnem,, nw opcuu ? ? of timie in Washington in the pasb five years, acting in an advisory ea paeity oif legal matters, as he did io President Wilson's administration when he was a very young man. President's 'Political Tour Among lawyers he is regarded as an able exponent of constitutional law. Tic has written several books on the Constitution and the Supreme Court, and his appointment to sue c-eed Jnstiee Cardoso wonld meet with little if any opposition from the bar. The political pot is boiling with great heat and giving off much steam which somewhat beclouds the outlook i wi/MYiant Interest ?enters 01 im| 1. ill: iiiviuvu* . _ the acts and WCStiti of Mr. Rooaevelt in his capacity of leader of tke Dem ocratic Party,.. ta going into stat<* where party primaries 1sr? psndinjj and advocating to Eoeriaitisn <1 "liberal" for to flbwiU who will go alooaf ^2th feica. ,TT7i.,-^i.' of navy, and a corsage of baby rose buds. Mr. and K? 9?H lib their home 'n Nartk Hntewan. - II m I ' iw! i * ADVANCE OUTSIDE THE COUNTY FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR J. P. REED Funar&l services were conducted at Scott's Creek Baptist cliv.rcii, Monday afternoon, by Rev. Tiiad F. Deitz and Rev. W. N. Cook, for James P. Reed, one of Sylva townskip's best known and most promi j. nent citizens. Mr. Reed, wn?> v.;:s ? t i ^ U _ L^.,? years oi agie, aiea suaaeiiv, sucut 10 o'clock Saturday nigh4, it ins home on Fisher Creek. Ur- had to Sylva during the day, and ha 1 dinner at the home of his son, T. E. Reed;and appeared to be in his usual -hcofth. Afr. Feed, a native of Georgia, had lived in/this country practically all his life, where he was a good farmer, and stock raiser, a good neighbor, and a good and substantial citizen. He was interested in all com raunit.y activities, and was especial y active in the work of Scott's Creek Baptist church, of which he was a deacon. for more than forty yearsInterment was in Old Field Ceme tery near Beta. Pall bearers were ot his grandsons, Kenneth Reed, Vanoy Heed, James Lee Heed, ,01-u Carv Reed Snvder, and James * *rv" 7 " 4/ v * Edgar Reed. Flower girls wax* Jifr granddaughters. r Mr. Reed is survived by one dmogb ter, Mrs. (leorgc C. Snyder, of Beta, four sons, T. E. Reed, Sylva, John Reed, Beta, Rev. \V. C. Reed, New1 ton, and Wallace Reed, of Beta, by sixteen grand-children and four great grand children. Senator s Barkley of Kentucky, Bui'kley, of Ohio, Thomas of Oklahoma, and Mrs. Hattie Carrawa/, Senator from Arkansas, were among the ones to whom Mr. Roosevelt gave personal indorsement 111 speeches in , their home, state OA his transconti liental tour. j The threat to eliminate Senator j-N-uys of Indiana, as punishment for : his opposition to many New Do.ul j measures, did not accomplish i!s purpose. The Indiana Democrat!,* , partv organization, facing Mr. Van - - -a Nuvs' throat to run as an independent candidate if he were not renom m inated, and realizing that such a course would split the Democratic vote and result in the election of a Republican Senator, handed him th* nomination on a silver platter. New York Political Picture In New Yor^ a dispute which em phaeiaes the sp]i? between President Roosevelt and his successor, Goverp; or Kfifftcrt Lehman,.' was started i wbm Got. [Lehman announced that i hi* administration had got the. state I fln&neco "oot pf the red", cleared I off the j(iefieivof nenr y 1 (>0 millions I which the Bofceevelt Governmental a&ffiniotnfien had left behind, it. &2& p?t a onrphu of more than 6 wiChraa Into the state treaatqy. President Roosevelt countered with n Cratwaat that this condition was XMlt cf Inderal aid to the I ?&&?* tf New York in taking cam of J the unemployed and those on relief * Tiifl is denied by Qpv. Lehman s t Meads, wha produce tigures is aupf pert of their eontention. ] | All that is a part of the stru^Ho gle between New Dealers and anti| Administration forces o*er the two Senatorial vacancies to be ftljcd from Ww York next November. Dov, Lehman, who is anti- New Deal, has thrown his hat in the national JT?, % ajnd it is the belief of most axpltfenced political observers that ho is certain to be elected. Senator Robert Wagner, ardent New Dealer, wants to be re-elegted. He has rejected, so far, the aiigge*t i hnt he ehanfle olaees with Gov. T/ lmian and run for Governor, taftfo 1 v because of his belief that no otter out and opt New Degier could get himself ejected to the Senate fww Now York this year. Alfred T. Sir.itr. In Race The New Y?> k t:' nation is eom plicated by the revival of interest hi i-?smer Governor Alfred E. Smith, vi.o has returned to the poJi iei*! limelight as an outstanding member of th(> qout#?Ition. There is ta'k of patting Mr iSimith forward as a coalition Democrat io-Repnblican candidate for ator on an uncompromising antiNew Deal platform. On the Rephblican side, muri? hope is being pinned on Pennsylvania, where - observers . see indieatn>s of a strong conservative swings " r?nv ^loct Arth ir 'JaStti% Ik publican, as Governor, and re-elM. Senator James J. Da^is. In the tb? ticn at large the Republicans counting now upon a minimum of 81 (FImh tun to gip tn) _ f5'*? *** \ \ // '.ye jr..'.* ' |j ? ^ ^ | f\?r ' | .. .