I I I I 9 i'^sS^II H Hb I ! ] | ,'i^W|BBBBBf!^mPB^^^^BPX'' ~ 5, 00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE IN TIE ===== GERMAN ARMY IS I hi tut u/t I War? with German trmU, I Warsaw, with British ships , | with eight million Fr.nchm, I frontier, the world hat ttapj I fi3hting the tamo old year , I Hitler, the loader of || I with the invesion of Pol I nearly the entire civilized I France took up the cheMen I I Again the world it n I I millions of marching men, I I with thundering gum, I balsam I Born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bryson, I a girl Saturday morning. I a very large crowd attended the I reunion of the Jones familiar Sunday I at the home of Mr. Jim Jones. The I graves in the Jones family cemetery I were decorated with pretty flowers. I Rev. C. O. Newell baptized MelI burn, the little soil of Mr. and Mrs. I George T. Knight, and Master Wil liam Balfour Knight was received as n member in the church Sunday. This was the first service of the kind held I in the Methodist church here since I the unification of the three Methodist I churches. I Rev. O. J. Beck has just closed a I very interesting revival at North Forte I Baptist church and baptized six SunI Seven Balsam boys and girls went I to Waynesville high school Tuesday morning. y V i I Mrs. Rachel Cathey and daughter^ I Misses Alma and Madith, of Candler^ I were guests o( Mr. and Mrs. G. C.i Crawford. Sunday. ; I Mr. Glenn &itherberfi*v of Way-J W' nesville, spent the*" wi8c-ehd I Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Christy. | I Miss Nannie Knight, Mr. and Mia. I George Knight, Mrs. D. T. Knight, Mrs. George Bryaon and Mr. J. K. I Kenney attended fourth quarterly' I conference at Elizabeth church near I Waynesville Sunday night ' The revival at the Baptist church closed Wednesday night Six per* I sons were baptized Sunday. Miss Maudalene Bryson fell off concrete steps and dislocated her arm. She was taken to Waynesville for medical attention. I Horse kicked Junior Bryson and fractured several ribs.1 He received I medical attention at Waynesville hospital. , I Mrs. Lee Roy Dock and children I arrived last week from Orlando, Fla., and are occupying their summer cotI tage. f Mrs. Henderson Jones has returned from a visit to her sisiter and other relatives in Tennessee. | I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Coffey and I children of Lenoir arrived Sunday, to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I A. C. Bryson. i I Fair To Be Held " At Glenville ' m I Glenville, North Carolina, August I 14,1939. Premium lists have been isI sued for the Blue Ridge Fair to J5C held at the blenville School House, I September 7, 1&3SL. . Cash, prizes.*are to be awarded for the beat exhibits frnm school. This """" iU1 '??) HVUIIV) ^ I fair is an annual event and the only I one of its kind held in Jackson counI It is sponsored by the Glenville Parent Teachers Association. The executive committee is as follows: I Mrs. j. m. Cunningham, Chairman; Mrs. Kate Bryson, Secretary; F. S. I Griffin, Principal Glenville high I school; David Pruett, Principal CashI iers school; Mrs. Mamie S. Evans, G. I R. Lackey, S. C. Clapp,county agents; Mrs. Oscar Monteith, Lyman SteI Wart, Norton; Mrs. Sam Bryson, Mrs. Oscar Monteith, Lyman Stewart, I Norton; Mrs. Sam Brysoh, Mrs. Bryson' Big Ridge; Mrs. John Long, El bert Moss, Pine Creek; Miss Jessie I Pi'essley Double Springs school; and I Mrs Madge Merrill, Mount PleasI ant school. The program will be ann?unced soon. I Interested I to This year rnore ***** W percent of I m?rth Carolina'g farmers attended eeUngs or demonstrations held by reveai^Unty agenta? 8 ***** surrey I II i , 6 COUNTY _ v . Tjpr jr. ; -. ^ . .>,v. ' . ITS OF WARSAW l . ; i V. 0 % Miw wMl.My b* a great thundering at the gate* of mt, and n in bafll* amy along the pad back to 1914, mid it j he German state, started it, t and, over the protest of world> and England and ge. 1 seking beneath the feet cf and the air reverberates / < , "** 4 ' i Visitor Gets Back Valuable Watch v v f* ' . Vr The Journal is in receipt of a let- a ter from Mr. James F. Schmidt, who q lives at 2032 Maryland Ave., Indianapolis, in which he highly com- p mends Chief of Police W. O. Allen c and Mr. Walter Bumgarner. Mr. Q Schmidt was touring the Smokies a a few weeks ago^and stopped at the r Shell Station in Sylva, where he left p his Bulove watch in the wash room. As soon as he returned to his home, p he wrote Mr. Allen about it Mr. ^ Allen went to the station, and Mr. r Walter Bumgarner had found the p watch and was holding it for identification of the owner. He mailed it to Mr. Schmidt and the owner is very complimentary of Sylva and her people, because of the kind, honest treatment he received here. v " A Bryson Heads County * Young Democrats e 1 " \ 3 9 V.. It- . Jennings A. Brysdfc was etectea ? president ot the Jackson County Club ford, Cullowhee, was elected vice- u president, and Mrs. Walter L. Jones, secretary- treasurer. q - ' . .T7 t Soco Gap Dance Team o Gets Publicity for WNC n Raleigh, Aug. 24.?The Soco Gap s< dance team from Western North f< Carolina, most of the members being from near Waynesville, obtained a a lot of publicity for the entire state when it went to Washington to dance c for the King and Queen of England when they were guests of President ? and Mrs. Roosevelt, it was pointed 0 out by Chas. E. Ray, Waynesville, f. member of the Board of Conserva- j tion and Development. a oiirmincrs received by AUUUlUlllg w wurr the news bureau of the bureau of the P advertising division, pictures of the ?0 Soco Gap Dance Team anci stories v I about it, appeared in hundreds of ^ newspapers throughout the coun. . e | Cippings have been received from s | such widely scattered cities as Washjington, D. C.; Aliance, Ohio; Oklahoma City; Boise, Idaho; Cohoes, N. Y.: Long Island, N. Y.; Miles City, Montana, Lowell, Mass.; Dayton, Ohio; Utica, N. Y.; New oYrk City; Dallas, Texas; St Paul, Minn.; Tren- " ton, N. J.; Asbury Park, N. J.; Nor- ^ wich," N. Y.; Danbury, Conn.; Chillicothe, Ohio; Brooklyn.; Little Rock, Ark.; Waterbury, Conn.; Port Huron, 0 Mich.; Dunkirk, N. Y.; Savannah, 8 Ga.; Charleston, S. C.; Beaver, Pa.; Lonft Beach) Calif.; Tampa, Fla.; Pat- * terson, N. J.; Buffalo, N. Y.; and ^ manay others. *- : | c ' Bordi Allison I Hurt In Wreck E Burch Allison suffered a concus- 1, I sion of the brain, when his car crashed on the highway west of Hazelwood, Friday night Mr. Allison was, ^ taken to the Haywood County hospital, and brought to Sylva, Saturday. Sunday he was taken to his home in Webster, and expects to re- ' turn to his school at Star town, Catawba county, next Monday, j . Mr. Allison was enroute to Web- ^ , ster, where Mrs. Allison is teaching, { when he went to sleep at the wheel, t and the car crashed. \ * .*} . . ? Imrover W. S. Richardson, of Bellair ir (Craven County, believes there J* , nothing that hnproves land so much as a crop of velvet beans plowed un-i' der, says Assistant Farm Agent Paui'M Cox. . J1 K' - m - '. - Y1* @011 . ??'&&: V^ ^Y^'Y .-*' : v * - . ? . j. : .... -.{? > <. SYLVA, NORTH oAfeOI Rites Per War Veteran Held Here, : Enterment of the body of W. H. thodes, World War Veteran Mid. 3iief Statistician for the North Caroina Department of Agriculture, was t Sylva, last Friday afternoon, with lev. A. P. Ratledge, pastor of the lylva Methodist church officiating. Mr. Rhodes died at Rex hospital in taleigh, Wednesday morning, flowing a short,illness, t Funeral series were held at Edentoh Street Methodist church in Raleigh; Born in Kinston, ahd- reared in jenoir, Jones, and Orange counties, At. Rhodes came to Sylva wheii a roung man, just graduated at !the Jniversity of North Carolina. He aught in the schools of the county, ind made his home in Sylva until ifter the World War. Shortly sifter he war he became connected With he Department of Agriculture, iand vas promoted to Chief Statistician, a j :ew years ago. He served in the War in the H3th "ield Artillery, 30th Division, Since he war he has been connected ^ith he North Carolina National Guard, iand was an officer in the Reserve 'orps. He was a son of the late Prof. W.! I. Rhodes and Mrs. Rhodes, beloved 1 y.. itizens of Sylva; and is survived by me brother, L. B. Rhodes, of Raleigh,' ind two sisters, Mrs. Richard L. Pat- > ick, Atlanta, and Miss Carolina thodes, Raleigh. j ; Pall bearers were W. E. Reed, Ben I. Cathey, H. P. Cathey,J. Claud'Alison, Dan Tompkins, John H. Motis, Commissioner of Agriculture W. Lerr Scott, and Louis Hair. , ' ; M ^ I 1 ii QUALLA |< There has been an interesting revival at Olivet conducted by Rev._ Ir. Stikeleather. Several Qualla oiks attended the quarterly qjjpfeg; lice at Olivet church on SitfHtoSt vening, conducted by Rev. ^Oth^the M^thod^t re to have electric lights installed ci the near future. Mr. J. TV Shelton, of Los Angeles, California, is visiting at Mr. J. L. lyatt's and Mr. C. P. Shelton's and ther relatives. Qualla was his forler home. . Rev. R. L. Bass and family spent everal days in Qualla. He was a armer pastor in this section. v Several tourists attended services t Qualla Sunday. Several employees from Cherokee ailed on Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hughes. Mr. and Mrs: C. A. Everhart, of angsport, Tenn., Mrs. Nina Mitchell, --.ii? tt?II onH 1 Durham and Mr. Miner xiau. (uw amily, of Whittier, visited at Mr. . K. Terrell's. Mrs. Martha Rhinehart has returnd from a visit at Swannanoa. Mrs. Roxama Carter with several ther relatives from South Carolina /ere guests at Mr. W. F. House's Sunay. Mrs. Sara Ann Gibson has returnd from a trip to Virginia. She is topping with Mrs. Dona Davis. Epwortli Union Meets The regular monthly meeting of the iwain-Jackson Epworth League inion was held Monday night in the Jylva Methodist church. The presilent, Miss Aileen Sigmon, of Bryson 'ity, presided. Miss Mary McLain, ?f Sylva, was in charge of the pro-am. George Swearinger, of Waynesville, ind J. B. Ivey, of Charlotte and Lake unaluska, were present and made alks. Mr. Ivey, an amateur magi-j ian, also entertained the group with | t magical?;ji>erf ormance following the! usiness. Session. It was defcitfed to hold the next I neeting :ai\. Whittier on the third! Monday night in September. I There will be plenty of cranberries! ? as turkeys for an earlier! iO Vt w .'hanksgiving Day in November, at ording to U. S. Department or Agri-1 ulture officials. Trench Silo I Like an increasing number of Nort1 I Carolina farmers, % Harvil Harrif J jouisburg, Route 4, is making plans o build a irench silo to supplement :attle this winter. .An order by a nation-wide grocery :hain for 2,500,000 flour bags was tailed recently by the Cotton Textile j institute as a "major victory" in a j :ampaign to boost the home consump- j ion of American cotton. j y.s, v^>' - >'' :V5? ' ? vi?~4-'\\ vK;'; ?*?-, ' - ' r.>x ' :*4 t* f-mflk ' 5w - J?i; #" - Sfffif: %1 Uv** . 'V-' W* ?9?* - -W?r^ -' v.'^-'-:5 -. i'-VF> **.7v': ' ^, 'v; '. ' NA, AUGUST 31, 1939 Sylva's Oldest ? Citizen Passes T-r-?? ?Wilburn Bumgarner, 91, Sylva'j eldest citizen, and one of the oldesl i^tizens in the county, died at hif I lome in this township, Friday mailing. He was an active man up until ilmost the moment of his death, and iad performed his usual chores about kn +U r.4 lit- piatc uiai> iiiuiiiuig. Funeral services were conducted Saturday afternoon at the home ol us brother, John Bumgarner, by Rev. Ir. A. Hovis, and interment was in the family cemetery. Mr. Bumgarner is survived by the following children: Cole and Estes Bumgarner, of Sylva, Mrs. Eli Cooke, of Asheville, and Mrs. Etta Robinion, of Sedro Woolley, Washington. He leaves also his brother, John, 23 grandchildren and 35 great grandchildren. Mr. Bumgarner was the son of George and Eliza Bumgarner. He was born March 23, 1848,. in what was then Macon county but now is in Jackson county. .On October 26, 1871, he married Miss- Margaret Talitha Parys. He was one of the chainbearers in the survey in which the townships of Jackson county were laid out. Cnuntv Teachers Meet Here The teachers of Jackson county not in the elementary school in Sylva, met Wednesday morning, for a general meeting, with Superintendent A. C. Moses, presiding. Talks were made by Miss Julia Weatherington, of the State Department of Education, Mrs. Ruth Dick Everett, Field Secretary of hte North 'Carolina Education Association, G. C Cooper, John's Creek, A. C. Hoyle, Cullowhee, and Mrs. Dan Tompkins, Sylva. vV' Apple Worm Control Begins With Harvest \ The apple harvesting season is at jum$t;&iid it is the time to reduce MMSn tflttltiigtr1 if llttlrt trnar'e nrnr> advises' H. R. Nlswonger, horticulturist of the State College Extension Service. He explained that the worm of the codling moth which attacks apples hibernates after leaving the apples they have ruined, and re-appears the following spring to infest the next year's orchard crop. "The first measure in trapping these moths is to separate the worst culls fiom-the good apples," Niswonger stated. "If the culls are to*be saved for ready sale, they should be piled cn a layer of old hay weeds or other litter at some distance from the packing or storage shed. The worms will hide in the litter as they leave the fruit, and the litter can later be raked up and burned, destroying the wrorms. "Culls saved for sale during the winter should be stored in a tight Building from which the moths cannot escape to the orchard the following spring. This same type of storage construction should be used even even when holding the good fruit for winter sale. "Provision should be made for the storage of harvesting crates and containers in a tight building since many worms crawl into the corners and crevices of the containers and hibernate. Some growers dip their harvesting containers in a vat or old barrel containing water heated to near the boiling point. . "Other measures being followed by progressive growers include picking up of fallen apples from under the trees and hauling them out of the orchard. This is very important because the worms will live all winter in piles of rotten apples left in the orchard," Niswonger declared. -?9. : ' V U. D.VG. To Honor President " ~ * * " J nf fVtO Mrs. L. ?. Fisner, rrwmcm w North Carolina Division, United Daughters of the Confederacy, will be the guest of honor at a luncheon jy the B. H. Cathey Chapter, at the Community House, Sept. 7. An informal music program is beag arranged by a committee of the hapter. Schoolmasters To Meet Friday I The first meeting of the school year of the Jackson County Schoolmasters' Club, will be held Friday evening, a1 Stovall's Cafe, in Sylva, it was announced today. The value of poultry and eggs produced in the United States in 193? was nearly a billion dollars, or aboul 112 percent of the total farm income. r:* v J * ***2o?T - ' '*'' m *;' ,?-r ' * ;*^ ~ * ' ." 4: i *v-% .j&fctff'- " -\f ** ' *' ' 1)3*1* II ItMAn^snii i JACKSON COUNT ONE MlllUOl Sylva has a million doll in its history. Last week, < R L. Ariail, cashier- the a; Bank topped a million dolh ? Starting with $10;000 c steadily through the years, dollar institution, . 1SYLVA SCHOOLS OPEN| It was back to school for the young 1 nonnlo rvf Svlua fltld TJillsbOTO. ThUTS" w* , i day August 31, for the school bells! i rang, the doors were opened, and! the call to books came forth at 9l o'clock in the morning. (All other schools in the county have been running for a month, except the training school at Cullowhee, which has to run coincidentally with the College. The school there will probably open a month from now, when the huge building program is expected to be completed. The teachers for the Sylva schools this year are: Sylva high, J. Louis Hair, principal; Mrs. Mary Scott, Edith Buchanan, Elizabeth Ammon, Sue Allison Bryson, Louise Henson, Leonard Huff, * Dan B. Cook, Sallie Mae Monteith Campbell, Claude Henson, and W. A. Hatfield. Sylva elementary, F. M. Crawford, principal; Mrs. J. F, Freeze, Annie Louise Madison,, Rhocfa Cope, Louise Mason, Mrs. Beatrice Parker Gibson,! Belzora Holden, Norma Painter, Eve-I lyn Parjrer, Mrs. Emily Tompkins,i and Berina Cunningham. | CBOP MARKETING WILL BE PUSHED J Raleigh, Aug. 23.?Commissioner I of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott toda^I announced the appointment of W.H I I Darst, veteran agronomist, as farn I 'crops marketing specialist for thil [North Carolina Department of Agri-| culture "to develop a broad program! looking toward better preparation o | farm crops for market with emphasis I on better handling, storage anc I 'grading." Employment of Darst is anotheil step in the Department's program tc| increase much-needed services foi I farmers in the field of marketing! Commissioner Scott said. Darst has had 29 years experience! in agronomic work with state anc| ! federal agricultural agencies, hav-| ling served agriculture more than 161 | years in North Carolina prior to leaving the state two years ago tr work on his doctor's degree at Cornel University. He is a graduate of Ohio "StaU University, B. S. degree in 1910, ani received his master's degree fron Cornell in 1925. From 1920 to 193r? | he served as professor of agronomj at State College and from 1929 to 1937 was director of the North Carolina Crop Improvement Association and seed sertification service. In addition to his work in the-state, he has been Extension agronomist at! Ohio State University, professor of farm crops at Pennsylvania State , College, executive secretary of the .Federated American Farm Bureau at "Chicago (seed Service) and senior; agronomist with the United States Department of Agriculture. | While' at State College as professor J of agronomy,, he was in charge of I farm crop teaching in the school of | agriculture, assisting in Extension and Vocational work, and was also 'in charge of the seed certification (program. Camaign A campaign has been started among . Polk County farmers, in which they i will be asked to plant five pounds of I "rimsnn clover on their pastures this 'fall. Food It is estimated that for every in. crease of $100 in the income received , by families whose yearly income , is $1,500 or less, from 20 to 30 percent of the increase would be spent for food. Going Up , J. T. Daniel, Oxford, Route 1, made 104 bushels of corn on his demont stration acre in 1033, but this year, t with continued favorable weather, , he expects to make 125 bushels. ' ' .. "v- . > . , - . ; ^ ^ ^ ^y - ?; V'iJ5) W5? * ?*? - ^.fi^./;"-'';"' ' y^'v.^V', @"r >f * ^''^' I' ""ry-:." k'.' ^ l:'?^'v-j3 v ' -^'5 ^ " - jr * - 7 - ^K-J ^JL* LDVAHOB OUT STUB TBB COUHTT i*|fl r NOW HAS I I DOLLAR BANK | lar bank, for the first time according to a statement of neb of The Jackson County I apital the bank has grown until now it is a million DEATH RATE IN STATE 1 BY DROWNING HEAVY 1 Raleigh, Aug. 23.?North Carolina's i I epidemic of deaths by drowning un- rj abated, figures released by the State I Board of Health Show. The total - v 3 I for last month was 33,as compared with 21 a year ago, while the June, g 1939, total was 35, against 21 the cor- Mr responding month in 1938. fl The State's total death-toll from B drowning in 1939 stands at 104. Dur- . ing the first seven months last year, ;'-B it was only 66. The Board of Health's iVtal Sta tistics report for July, this year, B shows a total of 115 deaths attributed 1 to preventable accidents, as compared I with only 107 a year ago. There was a noticeable decrease, however, in I deaths from all causes, the total for July, 1939, being 2,453, against 2,635, I last July,, the death rate for the niunm dropping from 9.0 to 8.3, while the infant mortality rate for the month dropped from 82.5 in July / 1938, to 57.8 for the corresponding month this year?the total number, from 505 to 373. .... There was also an upturn in the number of births last month; wheh 0,454 were reporter, as compared * _J with 6,120 a year, ago. This is in ' contrast with the general trend so ^ far this year, up to July, which'has been consistently downward. There were only nine deaths from typhoid and paratyphoid fever thruout the State last month, against twelve a year ago, and only 2 from measles, compared with 23 a year ago, when an epidemic occurred. There were no deaths from infantile paralysis, compared with one a year ago, while deaths from pneumonia. dropped from 113 to 73 and from diarrhea and enteritis among chil- . >jj dren under two years old from 174 tr? 113. Tuheroulnsis deaths dronned from 137-to 119, while * pellagra claimed 25 victms, five more than in July of last year. 1 Prosposed Lecture Discussion Course lor Sylva An introductory lecture on "The World's Insecurity and the Outlook for Peace" (or "The Modern World and Its Problems") is announced to / be given Tuesday evening, Sept. 5, at 8 o'clock in the basement of the Sylva Methodist church by Dr. Willis A. Parker, Professor and Director of Extension Work of W. C. T? C. The purpose of this lecture is to bring together all persons in Sylva and vicinity who would be interested to support a series of lecture discussions during the coming fall and win-* ter. Dr. Parker is especially well informed on these subject and already has classes in three other communities ' && in Western North Carolina. He has lectured contenuously to one group in Aeheville fo reight years. f Dr. Parker announces, that teach- ',V ers and other persons interested in the proposed Extension Courses of " . Western Carolina Teachers College will meet on Tuesday, Sept 5, in the Sylva high school building at 4:30 P.M. It is important that everyone interested be present because the subject or subjects to be taught will be decided upon and enrollment will be taken. Persons who can not be present should have some one authorized to express their preference of subjects. Fly-Killer By sprinkling acid phosphate every few days on manure piles around his dairy barns, A. C. Basefoot, a Harnett County farmer, has practically eliminated flies about his placed . Profitable ~ From a recently completed project begun with 200 baby chicks, James Lee, a 4-H Club' member of Four net profiit of nearly $30, .y;p|