Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / July 3, 1941, edition 1 / Page 5
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THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1941 THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN PAGE FiIVE Germans Blast a British Steamer in the North Sea Highlands Highlights MRS. H. G. STORY J" V. X CHURCH NOTES Highland Prwbyterian Church 10:15 a. m. Church school. 11 a. m. Sermon, by Dr. Ken neth J. Foreman, of Davidson col lego. 8 p. m. Christian Endeavor. Highlands Baptist Church Rev. J. G. Ben field, Pastor 10 a. m.- Sunday school. 11 a. m, Sermon. 7 p. m. B. T. U. 8 p. m. Sermon. Highlands Methodist Cburch Rev. J. S. Higgins, Pastor Norton: . 10 a. m Preaching. Cashiers: 11 a. m. Preaching. GUuVville. 2:30 p. m.-Preaching. Church of the Incarnation Rev. A. Rufue Morgan, Rector . 10 a. m. Church school, 11 a. m. Holy communion and sermon. .. HELEN'S BARN PLANS EXTRA FUN FOR FOURTH The program for the ,s,quare dance at Helen s Barn on Friday night, July 4th, promises funny faces, favors and plenty of fun,, as announced by Mr. a,nd Mrs. S. A. Wilson, owners. FRUIT AND VEGETABLE STAND OPENED ON MAIN ST. Mrs. Louis Edwards has opened a fresh vegetable : and fruit .shop at Wiley's Fruit Stand on Main street, and will specialize in water melons and cantaloupes! The mel ons, fruits and. vegetable's, grown cm the Georgia farms of her brother-in-law, are gathered late in the afternoon and brought to High lands for next morning selling. Buddy Thompson is assisting Mrs. Edwards in the management of the .shop. t SOCIAL EVENT CLOSES ADULT EDUCATION SCHOOL Twenty members of Mrs. Annie Westbrook's class in adult educa tion work closed the season's ac tivities with an all-day trip to Asheville last Friday. The party enjoyed a picnic lunch at the Asheville Recreation Park on the Black Mountain road; going on in to Asheville after lunch where they visited the Citizens-Times office and radio broadcasting studios. The return trip was . made by Balsam Gap for a visit to the fish hatch eries; -..'' Those making the trip with Mrs. Westbrook were Mrs. J. E. Hicks, Wayne Hicks, Paul Henry, Mrs. G. P. McClure, Mrs.. O. C. Vin son, Mrs. John Baty, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gibson, William Henry, Wet zel Baty, Marion Norton, Reba Beale, Don Holt, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Wilson, Carma Heddcn, Leona Norton, Annie Wilson, Christine Dills and J. C. Hicks. MRS. J. A. HINES HONORED AT PARTY iIN CALIFORNIA Mrs. j. A. Hines, who is: visiting her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Bailey, in Santa Rosa, Calif., was honor guest at a barbecue and bridge party recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Ellison, when fourteen friends of the' hosts were entertained in' the attractive garden of their home. Mrs. Hines has been in Califor nia since the firstxof May, and has been honor guest at number of social events arranged by her daughter's friends. , DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN TO PREACH AT HIGHLANDS Dr. Kenneth J. Foreman, head of the department of philosophy at Davidson college, will preach at the Presbyterian church at 11 o'clock Sunday morning, July 6, and at 11 o'clock each following Sunday morning through the month of July. , , MISS SARAH THOMPSON ENTERTAINS AT BUFFET Mis,s Sarah Thompson was hos tess at a buffet supper last Wed nesday night at the home of her mother, Mrs. H. P. P. Thompson, 'who assisted her in entertaining. Centering .-the lace-covered table was a bowl of pink rose's. The supper was given in honor of Howard Pearson of Buffalo. N. Y, a former Highlands high school student. Those enjoying the occa sion with the hostess and honor guest were Estelle Edwards, Caro lyn Potts, June Thompson. Rich ard Pearson, Billy Nail, Richard Zoellner, Bob Shepard. Edward Shepard, Paul Shepard. Henry Cleavelamd. Wendell Cleaveland, Buddy Thompson and Richard Thompson. After supper the young people attended the dance, at the Dugout John Beale, son of Mr. and Mrs. Haworth Beale, is expected home this weekend. John has completed four years' service with the U. S. Marines and will be at home sub ject to alL Louis Reese and his sister, Mar children of Mr. and their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Furman Merrill, in Asheville this week. Mr. and Mrs. , Merrill will return home with them this week end to .spend the Fourth of July with relatives here. Mrs. Ada B. Kline and her daughter, Miss Elizabeth Kline, of Clearwater, Ela., are spending the season at their summer home on Peace Mountain. L. D. Rouse of Montgomery, Ala., who purchased a part of the Holt property last summer,, "is. here with his architect and the plans tor his . new home which he ex pects to build 'this .summer! . Miss Jessie Keener and Miss Alice Lowery will return this week end from Atlanta where they have been visiting the former's sisters and brother-in-law, Miss Mary Keener and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith. Miss Jessie Keener is plan ning to begin the hospital nurses' training course this fall. Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Gle'ndirfning of Savannah, Ga., arrived Monday to spend the .summer at "Wood bine", the Trice cottage on East Main street. Prof, and Mrs. O. F. Summer and little Miss Mary Summer are expected to retunn this weekend from a two weeks' vacation at Myrtle Beach. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. George of New Orleans will ! occupy Mrs. Harry McCall's summer home on the Walhalla road for the month of July. Mrs. J. H. Wright of Atlanta, house-mother at one of the Geor gia Tech fraternity houses, is spending the summer with Mrs. Elizabeth Prince of Fourth street. Asheville press comment said that Lewis. Rice, Jr., exhibited tact and an understanding nature" as Dumary the butler in "This Thing Called Love-," presented three nights last week in the Little Theatre room at the Langren hotel in Asheville by the Players Guild. Lewis is the son of L. C. Rice of. Highlands and the late Mrs. Rice, and has just graduated from the Lee Edwards high school in Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Hicks and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Crunkleton at tended the singing convention ' in Franklin last Sunday. Mr. and 'Mrs. E. Harris Drew of West Palm Beach, Fla!, have leased Chestnut Lodge on Satulah mountain and will be here" until October 1. Mr. Drew is attorney for the city of Palm Beach. Mrs. Nellie Young and her two daughters, the Misses Marie and Ruth Young, of Miami, are in their recently purchased cottage on Blanchard Court, just off Foreman road. Miss Margaret Thompson Makes Map Of Macon Miss Margaret (Peggy) Thomp son, daughter of Mrs. H P. P. Thompson and the late Dr. Thompson, has not only had an enviable college career but is meeting with .success in her new position with the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph company at Charlotte; judging from the let ter we have just received from J. Bryan Ray, records supervisor of the company, which we are giving here : . "Your announcement last week in Highlands . Highlights of the graduation, of the two Thompson sisters at Queens-Chicora. college reminds us that it will be of in terest to the friends of Miss Peggy TKZhnpson -to learn that she was one of a dozen young ladies with Outstanding scholastic records selected this year "for em ployment in the Carolina's Divis ion Accounting Department of the Sourherri Bell Telephone and Tele graph company at Charlotte. "You can page Mr. Ripley on this one: for believe it or not, it just so happened that Miss Thomp son's first assignment was to draw a map of Macon county, her own .native land. This map is being drawn on a scale of one inch to a mile. It is drawn with India ink on imperial tracing cloth and will form a part of the official records of the company." Boys Solicit Funds To Buy Wheel Chair Fairdee Henry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry, is to have a new wheel chair to help make his shut-in life happier, and Fair- MUGGS AND SKEETER kffik. vk im kkal ' wjwi rrVTl ET justwmem we almost Jl oM,Nrr 1J LZ but HOwf...vw cant V " iHT!' ) W...VEW eo out Torvte -rnouetxn tufvV avfstedV J.V.L j hm enough monev tobwonTH... ut tmim rr -n' rot aw bksht!! 1 com..shed'n fskh mb A SKnTOTHMMlK KM TVEWOOWr OU NEW eSiBAlX UNIKXJM9,) AHIA. TAKff IN UMUI...APTER ALA.. 7 AMU- fCP VA PAPPV "ACK-AW. N' AHtui PEOOON6 .-AK TAKEN" EM )4 &AV'' y- TW.NCV rOL PoeA,EM.V VlCEER O'THtT! WM M ON IHIft ( GIT BM OUTU ( TA(TT JW6 OTHER. fflZN I 5 -. icw I ' si 1 - This dramatic picture, just received from Germany, shows shells from a Nazi warship exploding beside what is described as a British steamer dee is grateful to the four . boys, of 14 years of age and under, who are responsible for his getting this chair. . On a recent Friday morning Joe Waller, Tommy Stro,ng, Maurice Calloway and Mack Neely were out riding their-new bicycles. In pass ing the home of the Henry boy, who has been unable to walk for several years, the idea popped into Joe's head, that a wheel chair for Fairdee would be the next best thing to riding a bicycle and, with Joe,- to think was to act. He re vealed to his companioas his plan of, soliciting funds for the wheel chair, and immediately they set to work with the result that by the next evening $25.00 had been raised and turned over to W. H. Cobb who has ordered the chair. Fifty-six citizens had a part in buying this chair and - the gifts ranged all the Way from five cents to a dollar. "What A Life" To Be At Community Theatre The Community Theatre will present "What a Life" by Cliff Goldsmith in an afternoon - and evening performance at the High lands School Theatre on Tuesday; July 8. Arthur Little is the pro ducer and .the cast of characters includes : . Mis,s Shea, Mr, Bradley's secre tary Sara Little. Mr. Patterson, a teacher Jack Wilcox. Miss Tike, a teacher Sara Gil der. Miss Wheeler, a teacher Alberta Goff. Miss Egglcton, a teacher Alice Lowery. Miss , Johnson, a teacher Ann Little. Henry Aldfich Fred Allen. Barbara Pearson Harriet Zah ner. Bill--Earl Young. George Bigelow Guy Paul, Jr. . Gertie Jan Chambers. Mrs. Aldrich Virginia Wiloox. Mr. Ferguson, a detective Ilan McFarland. The stage manager is Mary Eliz abeth Young. I The matinee performance will be gin at 2:30 o'clock and the eve? .ning performance at 8 o'clock. Tickets are on sale at tty High lands Drug storff,,,, ' . State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q. Is it necessary to follow a recipe in preparing fruit juices for cooling drinks? A. No. Use the odds and ' ends of fruit juices yOur refrigerator may offer. The juice left from the pineapple salad last night will make a pleasing combination with the juice of a fresh ' lemon, lime or an orange or two. For color, crush and strain half a cup of berries and add a tablespoon or two of jelly. If used as an appe tizer, the drink .should be more tart than sweet . feince sugar dulls, rather than stimulates the appe tite. A sugar syrup is more - ef fective for sweetening "summer drinks than sugar itself. Q. What are some of the. im portant things to remember in marketing eggs? Guarding Christ's Birthplace i. II I Photo by Frances Jenkins Olcott The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, built over the site of the stable in which Christ, the Prince of Peace, was born, has been con verted into a near-fortress by the British as a result of the war in the Holy Land. , ' A. Never put the e'ffgs in cases urit'l they are properly cooled. When warm eggs are put in cases, they can't cool rapidly. So, they begin to lose quality and may even become bad. The way eggs are marketed also affects their quality and the number lost through soilage. Egg,s need to be marketed often. And once a week isn't often enough. Twice a week isn't often enough in hot weather. For satisfactory results, eggs need to ! be marketed just as soon as possible after they are gathered and cooled. One other point, the eggs must be protected from heat while ort the wsy to market. If the eggs or containers in which they are, packed are exposed to the sun or heat from other sour ces, they will lose quality. Loss of quality means loss of market value. Q. Can milk absorb odors from the air around it and get an un pleasant taste that way? - A. Scientists say that the mild, delicate flavor of good ' milk is -very easily tainted by absorbing odors from the air. If you keep milk uncovered in the refrigerator, it . wil soon take on the taste of fish, cabbage, banana, melon, on ion or; Other foods with a decided flavor that are also in the re frigerator uncovered. Milk will take on the odor of disinfectants or medicines' with " strong odors used in the barn where the' cows are milked. For example, milk will taste of coal-tar for . days after coal-tar spray has been used in the dairy bann. Tells How To Make Good Hay Crops A hay crop should yield at least a ton per acre and three toas per acre possible in North Carolina, says E. C. Blair of N. C. State college. Here are some of the rules for good production set out by the specialist: . X, m i m .W-r - ms.M 'vi"y.v v'.SKf I In the North Sea. The stricken vessel be sinking. No word was given as to All hay crops respond to a fer tile soil, They take large quan tities; of plant food from the soil. The non-legumes get all their food from this source: Legumes, if in oculated, can draw about two thirds of. the needed nitrogen from the air, the other third, neces sarily coming from the soil. For these . reasons, hay crops should be grown in rotations to which legumes are turned under and should be well fertilized. The "presence of plenty of usable plant food and lime in the soil not cnly results in bigger yields but also in hay of higher feed value. Such hay contains, more pro tein, vitamins and mineral matter j than the same kind of hay grown 1 under conditions .of soil poverty. Animals fed on this hay grow fast er, develop better. jbones,, and are healthier tha,n those fed oh hay low in these materials. V .-. Stable riwnure is a valuable sup plement for fertilizers in all parts of the state and -should be used alone at the rate five (tons. per acre in most sections. . , . Lime alsois valuable in .'that "it will increase the yield a;iul mineral content of hay, if the .soil needs it. While certain crops, such as alfalfa ' and . red 1 clover, refuse to grow satisfactorily an most soils without an application' of lime, oth er,s will grow .without it. LEGAL ADVERTISING NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina Maoon County Under and by virtue of the pow er of sale vested in the undersign ed trustee by deed of trust exe cuted by Pauline Fou'ts Cable and husband, Harry Cable, . to the undersigned trustee, dated 28 Oc tober, 1939, and recorded in the 5ffice of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina, in Book of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust No. 37 at Page 136, the undersigned ; trustee will, at 12 -Vis -. J. i w has been set afire and appears to the fate of the crew. LEGAL ADVERTISING o'clock noon,, on Saturday, July' 19, 1941, at the courthouse door in Franklin, North Carolina, offer for sale and .sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate: Situated in P.ilrningtbwn Town ship, Macon County, North Caro lina, and being the. land described in a deed from B. L. Hunnicut and wife to Pauline Fonts, dated the day of October, 19J9, and at Tecord in Deed Book D-5 at Page 279 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina. Default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness se cured by said deed of trust. I This the 18th day of June, 1941. ii J. FRANK RAY, Trustee. J26-4tc Jlyl7 ' NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE North Carolina, Macon County Under and by virtue of the' au thority conferred upon me by a judgment of the Superior Court of Macon County, entered on the 2nd day of June, 1941, in the case of Home Owners' Loan Corporation and T. C. Abernethy, Substituted Trustee, agaiast Leona DeHart (widow); Helen DeHart; Turner DeHart; Doyle DeHart; and Ker mit DeHart; and J. H. Stockton, Guardian Ad. Litem for Turner De Hart; Doyle DeHart; and Kermit DeHart, minors, I will on' the 10th day of July, 1941, at 12:00 o'clock, noon, at the Court House door of' Macon County, in Franklin, North Carolina, offer tor sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash, at public auction, the following de scribtd land: All that certain lot, tract or par cel of land, situate, lying and be ing in the Town of Franklin, Franklin Township, County of Ma con, State of North Carolina, and more oarticularly described as fol lows: , Bounded on the North by Oak Street; bounded on tht East by lands Of Mrs-. J. H. Higdon; bounded on the South by lands of Macon County, and bounded on the West by lands of Joe Palmer. BEGINNING at an iron rod at a "' point in the Southern line of Oak "' Street (formerly Baptist Church St.), corners of E. B. De hart and Joe Palmer and being Joe Palmer's Northeast corner, and runs' thence with South side of Oak Street East 784 feet to an iron rod; then South 2li deg. West 511 feet to an iron rod; then South 70 deg. West 84I4 feet to an iron rod; then North 2 deg. East 540 feet to the BEGINNING. Being the same land described in a deed from W. H. Sellers and wife, Sallie Sellers, to E. B. De hart, dated September 8 WCte re corded in Deed Book 0-4, at Page 299, records of Macon County. De cember 16, 1927. This sale is made on account of default in the payment of the in debtedness due by the defendants and in accordance with tha terms of said judgment. . This the 9th day of June, 1941. DAN K. MOORE, Commissioner. J12-4tc Jly3 By WALLY BISHOP Mr. J. W. Reese, Jr, are visiting
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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July 3, 1941, edition 1
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