THE FRANKLIN PRESS and THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1135 $60 IS RAISED ATKENOPARTY (Continued from Pg One) games punch was served. Litt of Prizes Following is a list cf the prizes and their donors: Milk pitcher,' Franklin Hardware Co.; pair silk hose, Pendergrass Store; Dutch clock, Bryant Furni ture Co.; box dusting powder, Angel's Drug Store; five gallons CUoll rroa T nor Cabin Service Sta- 7Ul.ll o - . oWtrir tnaster. Nantahala , VMW 1 Power & Light Co.; coffee and bacon, A. & P. Store; picture, Con,irc' stnrp; blue oitcher, Ma con County Supply Co.; two meal tickets, Watfcins' Cafe; two luncn eon tickets, Dixie Hall; tarn,. Blu menthals; tarn, Polly's; box candy, Cooke Players; ctean and press suit or coat, Economy Cleaners; one meal ticket, Munday Hotel; year's subscription to Macon Re view, Joe Moore; year's subscrip tion' to Press-Maconian, Blackburn W. Johnson ; teeth cleaning, Dr. W. E. Furr; lubricating job, John Cun ningham, Standard Station; taxi trip, Mashburn & Palmer; taxi trip, Harve Shidles; shampoo anu finger wave, Franklin Beauty Shop. Walnut end table, Ledford Furni ture Co.; hand woven towel, Mrs. J. W. C. Johnson, Trimont Inn; wash and grease car, Lee Poin ter Service Station; 5 gallons Shell gas, Tracy Barnard Shell Sta tion; Crystal water bottle, Leach Brothers; 5 qts. Gulf Pride oil, Roy Carpenter; 1 carton cigarettes Dowdle Wholesale Co.; ice bag and mallet, Kelly's Gift Shop; two innrhrnn tirkets. Kelly's Tea Room; two cans coffee, Star Market; or gandie collar, Mrs. W. J. Zachary; linen handkerchief, Jess Angel; jar orange marmalade, Mrs. Ethel Johnston; jar mixed pickles, Mrs. W. W. Sloan; jar strawberry pre serves, Leach sisters; jar jam, Mrs. Sallie Sellers; jar pickles, Rogers Hall; cake, Mrs. W. B. McGuire; cake, Mrs. Roy Beshears; cake, Mrs. Alice Rimmer; cake, Mrs. D. D. Rice; four swim tickets, How ard Valentine; cookie jar, Franklin Terrace. Vanity case, Perry's Drug Store; pound butter, Nantahala Creamery; two tickets Macon Theatre, Harley Lyle; pair silk hose, Agnes Hig- gins; auiiny ouui v.., Gift Shop; shoe polish, City Shoe Shop; Parker Pen and Pencil set, Drs. Furman and Ed Angel; hair T Aetr Conlev: box candy, VUV, -.v.". 1 ' . . Philip S. Hoyt; car wash, Triangle Service Station, Erwin Patton; gloves, E. K. Cunningham & Co.; White Lilly cake flour, Roy Cun ningham; bag rice, Sloan's Market; !s & L. Store: man's shirt, Joe Ashear; shampoo and finger wave, Hallie's Beauty Shop; jar pickles, Peoples Market; meal tick et, Scott Griffin; meal ticket, Peek's Cafe; ladies' handkerchief, Trotter's Store; book, Eastern Star; box candy, C. T. Blaine; vanity box, Eckerd's Drug Store, Asheville; 7 yards Biltmore home spun for ladies' suit, F. L. Seely. Cash donations were given by ttip fnllowine: G. L. Houk, C Tom Bryson, Horner Stockton, Dr. J. L. West, J. W. Addington, Roy Beshears, r n Raird. Arnold's Cafe, Ben McCullom, Ralph Womack, Henry Cabe, Pope Ellard, Joines Motor Co., Dr. W. A. Rogers, Horn's Shoe Shop, M. D. Billings, A. B. Slagle, J. S. Conley, Harley Cabe, Fred Sloan, John Herbert Stone, T. W. Porter, Sr., Franklin Ter race, Miss Rachel Davis and Office, Burrell, Chevrolet Co. George Johnston, two new books for library. Mid-Western Terror n Cowee Ball Team Wins From Camp F-9 Club, 9-2 The Cowee baseball team won a 9-to-2 victory1 oyer the club from Camp NC F-9 of the Civilian Con servation Corps Wednesday after noon of last week. The game was played on Camp F-9s field near Franklin. Another srame between these teams has been scheduled for July 6 on the Cowee diamond. Batteries in the last game were: Cowee Duvall, Bryson; CCC F-9 Gaines, Rogers, Bebber, Lawson. Births .College President To Preach Here July 14 Dr. R. L. Moore, president of Mars Hill College, will be in the nulnit of the Baptist church both morning and evening of Sunday, July 14. All former Mars Hill stu dents of Macon county are given a cordial invitation to come and hear Dr. Moore, and all the young people of the county who are in terested in gome to Mars Hill Col lege this fall are urged to confer with Dr. Moore while he is here. The public also is invited to hear him. YORK, Neb. ... The above awe gome photo, showing the "funnel" of a tornado which lashed down near here, was taken at a distance of a little more than a mile. Build ings on three large farms were ear ried away. The photo is copyrighted by Wright Gale. TUirn on Fridav. June 28, at Madison. N. C. to Mr. and Mrs Willis Cantey Johnson, a son, James Willis Cantey. Mr. Johnson, a son of Mrs. J. W. C. Johnson, of Franklin, formerly lived here while engaged by the contracting firm of Cobb and Homewood in the con struction of state highway No. 28 west of Franklin. Madison, N. C, is the home of Mrs. Johnson's par ents and she has been staying there for several months while Mr. Johnson has been at work on s highway project near Fredericks burg, Va. Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Cope an nounce the birth of a son, Perry Wayne, at their home on Palmer street, Wednesday, June 24. Longest Unbroken State Road Nof th Carolina claims its famous highway No. 10, a stretch of con crete that extends 600 miles from one end of the commonwealth to the other, is the longest unbroken state road in the United States. rBILIQUSNESS I Vegetation is to Soil What Skin is to Body Vegetation on the earth is likened to the skin on our bodies by fed eral erosion-prevention workers. Remove a large portion of the skin and terrible sores result. Reckless denuding of millions of acres of the richest land in the country has resulted in erosion; huge sores up on the earth. "Recovery from the disease of erosion is not a simple matter," says M. H. Bennett, of the Soil Conservation Service. "Obviously we cannot return to pre-settlement conditions. The natiion has its roots in agriculture and if the na tion is to continue, agriculture must continue. We cannot raise corn and tobacco and cotton in the woods. We cannot harvest a wheat crop from the unbroken prairie. But we must make some conces sions to nature, whose laws we cannot repeal even if they are irksome. "Protection and production are not necessarily incompatible. With a system of correct land use we can farm much of our sod and keep it, too. We cannot safely farm all of it to clean-tilled, erosion-producing crops. Some of the steeper and more erosive land must be in trees or grass. These crops . anchor the soil. Like the skin on4 our bodies they protect the earth from the disease of erosion." A COMPLETE WAVE FOR 1 CENT Now you can quickly and easily wave your hair at once for one cent or less! New improved Wildroot Wave Powder makes a full pint of professional wave set for 10c three pints for 25c. You make your own wave set by mixing powder with water. Dries quickly. Leaves no white flakes. Rmm indef initely. Simple directions in every pack age ior linger waving or resetting your permanent. Get a package today at any 1 4 ' . drug store or toner, goods counter. 25c size MAKES 3 PINTS 10c SIZE. 1 PINT but I am going to enjoy it more from now on my retire ment income begins this birthday' IT IS a pleasant prospect to see a Hfebf comfort, oninvmont- anH financial independence when vou vujvj iiivuii 1 contemplate your retirement years. Nearly every man earns a fortune between his first pay check and his last. . . . very few conserve enough of it to pro vide for old age needs. Yet it is a simple and inexpensive matter to make adequate provision for the retirement years through a Jefferson Standard Retirement Income Plan. Let us explain it to you. Prepare now to face the future unafraid. ED. J. CARPENTER Ageat FRANKLIN, N. C Jefferson Standard LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Julian Price, President Greensboro, N. C. Many Expected To Attend Concert at Cullowhee Summer visitors as well as per manent residents over a wide sec tion of Western North Carolina are expected to attend the concert by the North Carolina Symphony or chestra, under musical direction of Lafar Stringfield. to be given as one of the high lights of summer school commencement exercises of the Western Carolina State Teach ers college at vCullowhee on July 17. The concert, which will be pre sented in the natural amphitheater of the college, ts open to the gen eral nublic. Arrangements locally . a P 1-v v rw TT A. are in charge ot ur.i ri. l. nunier, president, and W. A. Potter, direc tor of music at the college. Classified Advertisements BLACKBERRIES WANTED Will pay IS cents a gallon for nice, clean blackberries delivered at cannery not later than 4 P. M. each day beginning Monday, July 8. TEAGUE CANNERY PrwntUs, N. C. ltp . SALESMEN WANTED WANTED : Man to start in busi es selling widelv-known products to satisfied consumers. Complete line. Largest company; established 1889. BIG EARNINGS. No capi tal or experience needed. Write for free particulars. Rawleigh's, Box NCG-74-1, Richmond, Va. ltpd ACCEPTS POSITION Maior T. F. Carmack left Wed nesday to accept a position as in structor at Georgia Military Camp on Highland Lake. Flat Rock. Mrs. Carmack will remain at Trimont Inn. VISITING HERE Mrs. Stanhope Sams, of Colum bia, S. C.r is visiting her sister, Mrs. T. W. C. Johnson. Frank B. Johnson, of the Forest Service engineering unit located at Greenwood. S. C, is spending sev eral days with his mother, Mrs. J. W. C. Johnson. Goodrich Silvertown TIRE PRICES SLASHED 1 0 & AND A TUBE FREE With Every Silvertown Tire Bought During This Sale Here it one of the most sensational bargain offers ever made to tire buyers. You get the ONLY tire in the world with Golden j Ply blow-out protection at 10 off, and in addition, absolutely FREE, a Goodrich Gold and Black Tube in exchange for your old tire. Don't be confused by other offers. Bear in mind this is all first-line Goodrich merchandise . . . not second or third-line tires or tubes. ABOVE OFFER GOOD ONLY UNTIL MIDNIGHT JULY 6, 193S HERE FOR SUMMER Mrs. Placide Dover, of Garden Gty, L. I., has joined her son, Gerard Dover, at Trimont Inn, where they will spend the summer. You Save from $3 to $8.80 per Tire Cars Washed and Greased - $1.00 CARS WASHED INDOORS, NOT IN HOT SUN Sinclair Service Station At Palmer and Porter Streets JIMMY McCOLLUM, Manager ZEB ANGEL, Owner

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