I ^ I S)5( .4 YEAR IN ADVANCE OUTS I hi Applicants Who I I Ire Eligible Will Be I Accepted In July m g. 0. Henson, Supt. Public I M welfare- has just received no- I tice from the State Director of I ccC Selection that all eligible f applicants available will be ac- I I cepted during the July enrollI ment period from Jacfcson I county. I I Mr. Henson states that the! I! voung nien wno wish uj gu tu CCC camp during the July*enrollment Period> should make application at the Welfare ofjice aS early as possible and not later than July 14. To be eligible to enroll in the CCC camp: A young man must be a citizen of the United States; Unemployed and in ,ieed of employment; Between seventeen and twenty-three and J one-half years of age; Unmar- : ried: Out of school; Physically j and mentally fit and able to do j vigorous work. , If previously enrolled with CCC. he must have an honorable discharge and have been out of camp for a period of ninety days. In order to be seated, each applicant must agree to serve at least one full term of six months. Ordinarily he must agree to serve in any CCC camp in the United States. He cannot choose to t>e sent to a particular camp or a special region. Each enrollee may decide at the end of the six months period whether he wishes t0 reenroll for another term. The maximum of service is two years. N0 one is eligible who is on parole or probation. Likewise, youths are not eligible if they have ever been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for more than a year. Each man who has one or more dependents must be willing to make an allotment to them of $15.00 a month, or half I of his cash allowance of $30.00 I a month. CCC enrollees are paid in two ways. Part of their wages comes in the form of good food; sturdy good looking clothing; medical care; educational and recreational opportunities; the rest of it comes in the form of cash or check. Regular CCC anrollees are paid $30.00 a month in cash. This is the way of cash pay most CCC enrollees is distributed! T0 enrollee in cash, $8.00 per month; T0 dependent at home, $15.00 per month; To savings account, $7.00 per month. The S8.00 which is paid to each enrollee in cash at camp is enough to pay for his personal expenses including some amusements. The $7.00 per month which is put in the savings account for each enrollee, will be paid to him in a lump sum at the time he leaves the camp. Thus an enrollee who stays six months is paid the S42.00 which he has saved when I he finishes his enrollment. If he stays a year he I receives $84.00. The $15.00 a month which the enrollee sends home to his family is a very important matter in most households. For many young men the CCC proI vides the first opportunity they have ever had to help the folks at home. W a youth, is promoted by hard work to be an assistant leader, he receives $36.00 a wonth. If he succeeds in becoming a leader he receives $45.00 a month. The total value I ?* the food, clothing, medical J care, etc., and the $30.00 cash I *ages paid t0 each CCC enrollee is estimated at $66.25 a month. The CCC also offers training young men who are intereste(l in becoming skilled workers. RECORD Carnation Homestead MadcaP, a' three year old heifer wifh her first calf, recently broke the world mark for production of milk and butterfat with 31,908.4 pounds of milk and 1.216.5 pounds of butterfat ift her first year of production Seattle, Washington. \ i .. ' i . .1 rj , ?I)C li IDE THE COUNTY ARTICLE I Congress shall make no law respecting an establisment of religion, or prohibiting of the free exercise thereof; or abridging the fretdwn of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaqeably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. ARTICLE ii A wen regui&tea Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the rights of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. .i ARTICLE III No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law. ARTICLE IV The rights of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. ARTICBE V No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamoiw, crime, unless oft a present&ent or 'indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any i person be subject for the same ! offence to be twice put in jeopard^ of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, witkout due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation. 13-Year Old Held In Stabbing Case Involving Uncle I Layton Fisher, 13 year old Willets youth is being held by the sheriff's department, pending the outcome of three knife wounds received by his uncle, William Fisher, 68, also of Willets, Saturday night. Mr. Fisher is in the Community Hospital in what is described as a critical condition, with two knife wounds in his chest and one in his stomach. Jim Fisher and Eliza Fisher, father and mother of the boy, are also being held. Jim Fisher Is a half-brother of William Fisher, the wounded man. According t0 officers, an altercation was in progress between the three adult members of the Fisher family, over a gap in a fence having been left open and cattle escaping into the fields, when the youth is said to have stabbed his half-uncle. All are members of a promjnont Jackson county family. lilVAAV I ' ' * . I Singing Convention To Meet At Fall Cliff 111 ? The Jackson County Singing Convention will meet at the Pall Cliff Church, near Speedwell, on Sunday, July 6. This will be an all day singing, with dinner on the grounds. "AH persons who can sing are invited to be present, as well as those who cannot sing, but who would like to hear some very good music," stated Jennings A. Bryson, the secretary-treasurer of the organization. -Bp* SYLVA, NOBTH~j^^E^AT : ^Lr> EBSH ^ ffi k . c i .. ^BBI \ ^Smxr^^^EfKH T" fffljS'xvV^.^i^^Mj Fffl^^iiit f9 H Bfpp &ffi& - ' t r f I Jtlu - " I UlaS.' ' ; w^imfflMBlM / n i "Proclaim libei i the land, to all| . $ thereof*'?Levil J3> H 111 II J RING AGAIN THE ] (An Editorial by J Never, on any Fourth of Ju the thirteen colonies signed thei laration, and pledged their lives cause of liberty, has there been gr the greatest democracy on earth, their faith in their institutions, a Ring again, bell of history, the flag of freedom, re-echo the i pages of Holy Writ tnat are msuu The days that lie ahead ho proclaimed oil that Independenc termination, for high courage, foi To that faith, to those belief and our brethen of the English-si a common spiritual heritage, red< try, with firm faith in that God, placed their faith, and entruste brought forth upon this continer | I ' r * ' " .. - <. i' ' 1' 'OUtlttJ I . .1 j ' ' - ' . - . . i . " THURSDAY, JULY 3. 1941 ; J; _ * - V- ' ' ' ?a|8Bw^Pjk ' Rppti yn?] '| * rty throughout the inhabitants ticus 25:10 ':v" j' '" I ' .1 i ' I ' . . , ' ' ' f i * * /. j; ; 4 I ! ' * \ " " | . ' i ' : ' : - i ; . . j rnii?n ^S*\s i ; . ' i PROCLAMATION 1 ' ' " I Dan Tompkins) , ly, since the representatives of ir names to the immortal decand their sacred honor to the eater need for the people of this t to renew that pledge to reaffirr^ 1 nd in the God of their Fathers. Call us once again to rally to t -i.?i frnm thp sabred II1II1U1 l/ctl WU1UO 1J. urn ibed upon you. 1 Id peril for the cause that you :e Day. The days for great de- y : profound faith are upon us. e s, this generation of Americans, >eaking world, who with us hold 8 3dicate ourselves and our coun- f in whom the founding fathers d the nation that they had s it. , t | \ "i ' . -I ' - -v : . i : \ ' \ ontm . . \ 9 ??????????? mm $1.00 A YEAR ] ARTICLE VI In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury ol the State and district whereir ? the crime shall, have been committed, which district shall have \ ' * been previously ascertained bj law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to l|>e confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtain ing witnesses in his favor, and to have Assistance of Counsel for his defence. p ARTICLE VII In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and n0 fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law. ARTICLE VIII . 1 i Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusua! punishments inflicted. ARTICLE IX The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shal not be construed to deny oi disparage others retained by the people. AKTHJLHi X The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively or tc the people. Last Rites Held In Cashier's T uesday For Mrs. Robinson Funeral services i were conducted at. the Cashier's Baptist church, Tuesday afternoon, for Mrs. Daisy Alexander Robinson, 54, who died at her home in Cashier's Monday. The service was conducted by Rev. Clyde McCall, and interment was in High Hampton cemetery. Mrs. Robinson is survived by tier husband, Dennis Robinson; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Passmore and Miss Christine - - ?- ?-??? ?ii Robinson; one son, iwsuue, an of Cashier's; two sisters, Mrs. Brown Goudelock of Liberty, S. C., and Mrs. Lawrence Monteith of Glenville; one brother, D. B. Alexander, of Green's Creek; and one grandchild. Two Killed In County In First Half Of Year Jackson County reported 2 .raffic fatalities during the irst five months of this year, tccording to a five-months iummary released this week by he Highway Safety Division. This number represented an ncrease in comparison with the lumber killed in Jackson Couny during the same period last ' U11 rear, when no persons were kwd. Traffic fatalities for the state is a whole totaled 448 persons or the five months period, this rim toll running nearly 49 >er cent ahead of the 301 perons killed in North Carolina he first five months of last i . ' *v. tr V *' V '_r ?'* \ fr, ^ ' :$|| 1 , | f J . 1 i r # IN ADVANCE IN THE COUNTY Senator Bailey Will : Speak At Rally In ; Asheville, Friday j I A Asheville, (Special) ? A giant 1 patriotic rally, the first of ISa kind conducted jn Western > North Carolina in vinany years, will bring citizens from 22 T counties to Asheville on the ? night of July 4 to hear an important address by Senator Josiah W. Bailey. 5 Not only Western North Caro} lina but the whole nation will follow the proceedings, for Sen' ator Bailey's speech is to be SENATOR BAILEY broadcast over the facilities of the Columbia Broadcasting System from coast to coast. At a meeting in Asheville on Tuesday representatives of fifty I patriotic organizations and service clubs met with Chamber of Commerce and City and Cou*fcy officials to make detailed plans for the rally. Invitations to attend the meeting have been sent out to many public officials and prominent persons in the Western counties. Posters explaining the . : purpose of the rally are being i distributed for public display. Mayor Lyons Lee of Astieville in a formal proclamation has urged that all good citizens attend. , Senator Bailey, despite the press of official business in Washington, has agreed to come to Western North Carolina because he feels that he has a ; message of the utmost import> ance for the people of the state ( and nation. His topic, "Our Republic: It Must Be Preserved", will embrace the dangerous problems and perils that beset , the United States in a world at war. ' . The senior North Carolina Senator, who electrified the Capitol in his impassioned plea for passage of the Lend-Lease Act, is a leading advocate of aid to Britain. As Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee he occuDies a Dosition of high im portance in Administration councils. It is confidently expected that his address here will comprise an important statement of governmental policy toward the present world crisis. The civic committee in charge of arrangements for the rally, headed by Don S. Elias, President of the Asheville Chamber of Commerce, has announced that a program of military and patriotic music, as well as vocal entertainment, will precede the meeting. It is scheduled for 8 o'clock at the Asheville City Auditorium, and will last approximately an hour. Plan To Hear President In July 4th ^ddress Town officials and members of # the American Legion are sponsoring a meetiijg at the community house, Friday afterinooi},' when exeiteises will be held and the address of President Roosevelt will be heard over the radio. All persons who are unable :i to attend the meeting are urged to listen * in at home to the President's address. year. : Eleven counties had 1 10 or more fatalities, these being Apanfcnce, Buncombe, Colum(Continued on Page 3) V ' 1 -'M sJ 74$ r '