, J i ' Miss Frances Calhoun spent [! laSt week end at her home in I Murphy- I I I jfr. James E. Buckner has re- / turned from business trip to 1 I At^ta- j I * * * J I ^ J. B. Owen, Jr., is spend- ! r^a day or two in Knoxville, L rnrnn., this week on businett. ' j /" ' V r I Mr. and Mrs. Tom Moore, of < I Chattanooga, Tenn., spent a few I I days here, last week. I j I Mr. John A. Parris, Jr., of New I ( I York City, has been spending the | J I week with his parents, Mr. and J ? ( Mr. Can M. Allison and family IJ I have moved from Webster to |f - nn K-^npr I I their new numc. _ I Street. # ( j Mr Wallace Coward, home on 2 a furlough from Fort Bragg, it visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ( Elbert Coward. f . Mr. and Mrs. Bothwell Lee, of * Augusta. Ga.. spent Sunday night 1 here, guests of Mrs. Ben H. 1 Cathey. J * i Miss Mae Metcalf and Miss 1 Christine McBrayer, teachers in the Candler school, will spend the * ieek end' with Mr. and Mrs. I johnny Watson. t and Mrs. Miller Jones, of f Ssnnnah, Ga., are guests, for a * /Artunight, of Mrs. Jones' sister, v Mrs. Dan Tompkins, and Mr. * Tompkins. 1 0 0 0 J Mrs. Sarah Kaveny has return- 1 ed. after spending the week end } with her son-in-law and daugh- * ter. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McNeill, * at their home in Shelby. I Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Hatton and c Miss Mary Hatton, of Bessemer, ( Ala., and Mr. and Mrs. Michael * Fowdy, of Whiting, Ind., were ; guests, this week, of Mr. and Mrs. c John B. Ensley. c I 0 0 0 i Mr. and Mrs; Roy C. Allison c went to Black Mountain, Sunday , and returning were accompanied by Miss Anna Marr, who is spend . ing the week here. Miss Marr will j 1 leave, the last of the week, for a g visit with Mr. and LTrs. A. V. J Washburn. Jr., in Nashville j enroute to her home in Waco, ; Idas. t * t Ms. John A. Parris. I- Mrs. Mattie McKee and her I daughter Mrs. Cyrus H. Nichol- j I son. are in Chicago, having been , I called there by the serious illness ( | of their son and brother, Mr. j I Henry McKee. i I ' VV1LEN-SMITH < Miss Ida Ruth Smith became 1 I the bride of A. H. Wilen, Jr., Sep- ] I tember 29, at Blue Ridge, GeorMrs. Wilen is the daughter of I Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Smith, of Cul- ! Ilowhee. She is a graduate of Western Carolina Teachers ColI Mr. Wilen attended the Uni versity of Minnesota and is now I *ith the Aluminum Company of I America. He is a son of Mr. and I Mrs. A. H. Wilen, of Zim, Minne sota. I The ceremony was performed I by the Rev. Mr. Snyder, pastor of ^e First Methodist church of Blue Ridge. Only a few close Iriends were present for the lemony, which took place at l^oon. I Mr. and Mrs. Wilen are now on Ia bedding trip through the west ern states. I CARD OF THANK? I wish to thank all of our I *riends an<* neighbors for I ^ kind expressions of sympa luV * I v ?uU ior tne beautiful floral ^utes offered during our reCetlt bereavement. Mrs. Lovica Parris and Daughter. SOUTHERN I \v} Oratory has been estabI th ^ ^ Charleston, S. C., for J.purp?se of developing high I disease resistant vari- ; I ^8 and strains of vegetables . I pted to Southern conditions. I . -- > . . k- ; : v! " " " v * v. ' ' ' ' , ' . I. . . - / ,. ,| . : i.. msssssssssssssssssst ' 'ni gg QUALLA Rev. C. L. Fisher preached his last sermon for the Conference year at the Methodist church Sunday morning. He left in the afternoon for High Point to attend the W. N. C. Annual Conference. The Qualla church paid Its assessments in full for the past year. Mrs. Thomas Bryson, of Cullowhee, and Mrs. Sam Saunooke, Df Cherokee, were the pianists for the Singing Convention, on October 1. , The October meeting of the Qualla Home Demonstration ;lub met with Mrs.. J. M. Hughes. Mrs. Harley Ashe, of Newport tfews, Va., visited Mrs. A. C. Hoyle Misses Ira and Sallie Keener, )f Kansas City and DesMoines, [owa, visited relatives in Qualla md Whittier, last J/eek. Miss Lizzie Zachary, of Caliornia, spent a few days with rel itives in this section. Mrs. J. H. Hughes, Mrs.^A. C. loyle and Mrs. Thad Beck spent Friday with Mrs Terry Johnson, it Cherokee. Miss Oma Gass returned to Canton, after a visit with hom^ oiks. Mr. J. M. Hughes and family, dr. D. C. Hughes and family. Mr. dr. and Mrs. J. E. Battle, Mr. and dr. Frank Hall and family,, and Ar. Burton Bumgarner and famly spread a picnic dinner in the ?ark, Sunday. >imson Clover Seed To Be Bought In State North Carolina farmers who >lant crimson clover this fall and larvest it for seed next spring vill be able to sell the seed to the federal government, says E. Y. ^loyd, AAA executive officer of J. C. State College. The Comnodity Credit Corporation will >uy crimson clover seed and turn t over to the Triple-A for distri>ution as a grant-of-aid. "The seed will be purchased," loyd said, "only from farmers :ooperating in the Agricultural Conservation Program who com>ly with acreage allotment prorisions of the AAA. The crimson 1 ? ? ? ? ?V-, n n^Arrrnm i C aim. .lUVCi pUltlltlOC [/lUgiam AO MUii id at enlarging the 1941 domestic )roduction of seed and increasng the acreage of winter cover :rops in Southern and East Central States." The Commodity Credit Corjoration will pay a basic rate of .0 cents per pound for recleaned ;eed which meets the following equipments: 96 percent purity, free of noxious weeds, and showng at least 85 percent germinaiion. The price of 10 cents per X)und is slightly above that-afforded by the market in 1940. "The Federal seed purchase program is not intended to keep my private dealer from buying trimson clover seed," Floyd emphasized. "Farmers cooperating with the AAA program are free to sell their seed either to the Commodity Credit Corporation at the rate of 10 cents per pound or to regular seed dealers at the price they are able to pay." This is the first such program for crimson clover, which is used extensively as a winter cover crop by farmers of Tennessee, North Carolina, and other states in the East Central Region. It is from these States that .the Federal government will buy seed for grant-of-aid distribution. WHEAT ? The current Canadian wheat crop, estimated at 561,000,000 bushels, probably exceeds domestic requirements by 275,000,000 bushels, report U. S. Department of Agriculture foreign experts. CLASSIFIED ADS PIOS FOR SALE?Eight weeks old ORC and Poland China. $4 each, if you buy them now.. John R. Jones, Sylva. WANTED?Just aminute of your time to show you something new, and something different in life insurance. Can insure the whole family at a wholesale rate. Our Educational and Savings Pol iceis can't be beat. John R. Jones Local Agent. AVAILABLE AT ONCE nearby Rawleigh Route. Good opportunity for man over 25 with car. Trade weii established. Route experience helpful but not neces* sary to start. Write at once. Rawleigh's, Dept. NC-r219-102, Rich1 mond, Va. I . I ttiEJACKSON < ODDS AND ENDS! By TAMARA. At last I have found where Capistrano is.. My sister and I have argued this question for some time now?she was sure it was somewhere in Spain, and I just as positive it was near Italy. We were undaunted. Nofhinor oaiiIH wuiu viiangc uui ininas. Then one day last week we both sang over the ether About that time we were aware of someone saying " and of course you know Capistrano is off the coast of California." \ Do you like to sit in thenar and watch the world go 00 I do. Today I sat up town two hourse and watched. Ono girl, walking along, stopped near my car.v As she was looking the other way I couldn't see her face but her hair was usually beautiful. Curly and sort of honeycolored. For ten minutes I sat there and stared, thinking I had never seen any thing so pretty. Then she turned her head. It took me a couple of minutes to get over the shock. Mentally, I set in trying to remedy her facial anatomy?but all my efforts came to grief. There was nothing I could do for her nose. Some men's hats are funny looking with all that plumage, especially if they run to more than three or four quills. Let's hope our fine feathered friends don't go in for ostrich in their toppers. Other bright colors men are going in for now are very attractive, even though you do have to have the aid of colored glasses to look at some of them?And the separate jackets are knockouts. Enough for that. This war would be good for one type of person: the nagging, petulant woman who frets and complains of her lot in life. It's too bad she, too, can't be drafted into service. That would really give her something to holler about. SditO^ Ar"1 Comprise Farm Team j Weekly newspaper editors and , county farm and home agents make up a team that has been one of the most potent forces in the improvement of farming and rural living in the past 25 years. Those are the sentiments of M. L. Wilson, director of Extension for the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Director I. O. Schaub of the State College Extension Service says he heartily concurs in the views expressed by the Federal leader. Of the beginning of this period of team work, Director Wilson says, "The United States was nearing the end of the row as far as new land was concerned. In the more carefully cultivated sections, farming methods lagged behind experimental advances in agricultural science. Into this picture stepped the county agent and traveled from farm to farm on foot, on horseback, and in buggies. "On the country editor the agent leaned heavily from the earliest days. Usually the work of the county agent made good newspaper copy. Frequently he would write a column of his own in the weekly paper and his writings were compact with good sense. "Judged solely as a job in practical, popular education, the achievement of the county agent ranks high in American social history. The county agent is now equipped with an automobile and a clerical force iri his office, but is most frequently to be found at some farm talking about crops and rural improvements. Th? wppklv editor is still one of A*AV ** * his mpst highly valued allies." To this Director Schaub of the North Carolina Extension Service adds: "Agricultural Extension work simply is giving information about better ways of farm living and one of the best methods of reaching a farm audience is through the columns of local papers whose editors the farm people know and trust. "Since the summer of 1914 exclusive copy for weekly papers has been mailed each week from the office of Frank H. Jeter, , State College editor. The weekly newspapers of North Carolina have, since the beginning, given liberally of their space to this cooperative program of rural i betterment." ' 'r " ...".' v -," " h * COUNTY JOURNAL, SYLVA, N. C., C NOTICE QF REMOVAL OF T< GRAVES ? i To the surviving husbands or , wives or next of kin of those persons now buried in the following cemeteries located in Hamburg Township, Jackson County, North Carolina, near the town of Glenville, in said County and State: ' 1. The Hamburg Baptist , Church Cemetery, located at the , Hamburg Baptist Church. 2. The W. F. Holden Cemetery located on the old W. F. Holden 1 Farm, near said Town of Glen- 1 ville. . ] 3. The W. A. J. Nicholson i Cemetery, located on the former ] W. A. J. Nicholson property near said Town of Glenville. me jviuntciwi cemetery, located on the lands formerly belonging to A. J. Monteith, near 1 said Town of Glenville. " , You, and each of you, are here- ; by notified that the land on which the above Cemeteries are 1 located is now owned by Nanta- | hala Power and Light Company, I and that said land is required for use as a reservoir for the water impounded by a dam which said Company is now constructing near Glenville, North Carolina, and that it is, therefore, necessary to remove the graves from said Cemeteries, as provid ed by Section 5030 of the North j Carolina Code of 1939. Said graves in said Cemeteries j will be opened and the dead bodies or any part buried therein fs FIRE I Moi Begi ' Hold 0 1 WAITFOB I[ The Grei r ( ? (ever know ! Charlotte. ! jandise will ! OF PRICE Meal and S cTery trucl j bargains aw this sale fr I j tend. j Sylva i* - At < i i 1 i I J \ V j ; ' 1 t "> / 1 " 7 J.;?ii 7 >CT. 24,1940 3r anything * ftlterred. therewith , shall be removed to a new Cemetery located near the Town of Qlenville, North Carolina, and t re-interred therein, by said re- i moval shall begin on or about t the 25th day of November, 1940, t and shall proceed until completed. 1 The removal of said grayes will be under the supervision of 3. E. Raper, Agent of Nantahala Power and Light Company, and those persons having relatives t buried in said cemeteries who ? * have not seen Mr. Raper are re- A guested to communicate with 1 him immediately, at Glenville, 1 North Carolina. This the 19th day of October, 194T). Nantahala Power and Light Company. By S. E. Raper, Agent, Glenville, North Carolina. ,1 IRE Mm NIK IN NT NERVOUS *Re*d These loportant Factsl Qulrwlnf narrea can make you old, haggard, ! cranky wn make your Ufa a nightman of ! and "th? blue*." ?alm wwatattnf-|>f ? ana Umb functional A A SM01 ^ * -M- TT-1 H7TT1 SALE Wll iday, O nning Prom ^ n n lo I our r I THE BIG B itcst Feast of n in the Sta 575,000 Stocl be sold REG Assemble al Hull Sacks i k possible to ay in. People om 100 mile * Everyone im Supply Old Massie Fi SYLA : j ' \;-V I i f i ! : ' ' -'l-. ' J -jMCBEASOta . ;'/. DOUBLE jl The demand for farm products Flue-ftUred tobacco growers of ?y consumers has been increas- Australia are to cooperate in an 1 ng in recent months as general immediate attempt to double the tusiness conditions and pure has- country's output of the leaf, this ng power have picked up, re- decision being reached after a Kjrts the U. S. Bureau of Agri- meeting between growers and . - - . panded in this area, if the pres- \ . ent plans are carried out. For the first eight months of Draft Lottery his year, the sale of milk has teen the largest single source of Will Be On ar income, according to the . j J atest Milk Industry Foundation 29th of Octot)CF eports. | Cheap Apples! 1 I SUITABLE FOR JELLY, CANNING, BLEACH- | I ' ING& DRYING 1 j * 1 GRIMES GOLDEN - GOLDEN DELICIOUS | j 1 STARKS DELICIOUS - ROME BEAUTIES I I STAYMAN WINESAPS | I At Barbers Rock Apple Station | BARBER S ORCHARD 1 Five Miles West of Waynesville, N. C. i | On Highway t9 - 23 1 I i r j L L | vE WATER j X START V ' -".'U ctober 28 th ' ptly at 8:00 A. M II iof Meren- . ARDLESS I 1 your C. S. j. c. Whitmire I ind engage Sales Manager |S carry your The King of I | will attend Bargain Feasts I 1 t 'Cyclone Whit' invites all ;s m every men, women and children within 10 Western N. C. I rited tO &tm coun^es to attend this sale, the greatest ever ? nntd nf thp | Known w tins poi V vi ?uv _ state. Company, Inc I jrniture Co. Stand I , n. c. ; I ;;.j : I * *E . ' ' ' * ' :"\- ! ' . : \ I ' .. - lya * >H % ,^S