4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER t, 1942 THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAlN PAGE FIVE J i Highlands Highlights MRS. H. G. STORY BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. H. M, Alley, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sunday school. 1 1 :(KJ a.m. Sermon 70Q p.m. B.T.U. H:(K) p.m. Sermon. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. H. T. Bridgman, Minister ID :(KI a.m. -Sunday school and Bible classes. 11:00 a.m. Worship service uikI sermon. M) p.m. Christian Young People's League. METHODIST CHURCH Rev. J. S. Higgins, Pastor l a. tn. Preaching, Norton. 11 a. m. Preach ittqg, Cashiers. 2:30 p, m. Preaching Glenvilte CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 1 1 :(MI a.m. Services every Sun day iis Postoffice building. . EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE .INCARNATION Rev. A. Rufus Morgan, Rector 10:00 a.m. Church school. No Services. MELLERS-NEUHAUS NUPTIALS SOLENMIZED Quiet simplicity marked the mar riage of 'Mrs. Pauline Edwards Netihaus of Davenport, Iowa and Moline Illinois, to Lewis L. Met iers of Chicago, which was sol emnized in the Presbyterian church here Sunday morring, September 27th. The couple was attended by the bride's father, W. W. Ed wards, and by her cousin, Miss Estelle Edwards. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. H. T. Bridgman, pastor of the church, in the presence of relatives and close friends. The church was attractively dec roated with Southern Smilax and white chrystanthemums barjked around the altar bordered with two copper urns filled with white gladioli.. The wedding music was played by Mrs. A. C. Holt. Mrs. Mellers wore a mist biege tweed dressmaker suit and match ing toque with a matched box coat fashioned with Labrador fox collar. Her shoulder corsage was of American Beauty roses, held by a diamond and crystal clip, the gift of the groom. Her ac cessories were of copper alligator. Miss Edwards wore a dark' brown dress of bark crepe with matching- accessories. Her corsage was of bronze orchids. Mrs. Mellers has been associated with the Isabelle Ramey Shop in Davenport for a number of years. Mr. Mellers is with the Westing house interests in Chicago, and has done considerable design work for the Jpower plants with the local utility company and indus tries in that area. Mr. and Mrs. Mellers will reside in Chicago. Following the ceremony a wed ding breakfast was served at Hotel Edwards. r r . . on .-sunset 'Mountain, give.n as a courtesy to the new school prin cipal, W. C. Newtoix Mrs. New ton, the school faculty, members and officers of the parent-teach ers association and others inter ested ini the work of the school. x new. teachers have been added tolhis years faculty' and the tea w.asVin the nature of a get-ac- quainud affair. AutuVnia flowers from the Kav- enel girdens decorated the rooms and cntered the lace-covered tea table, where Mrs. S. L. McCarty, Sr., and. Mrs. Nathaniel Marti,n presided over the tea and coffee service. Mrs. Frank H. Potts, Mrs. H. P. P. Thompson and other 1 1. A. members assisted the Misses Riavenel in serving and en- tertaimn g. n iMIY flBWSo tOrV OVSR A ffRfVARO SURPRISE BIRTHDAY PARTY FOR MRS. WILSON iis. uojii warson aim miss Wright entertained with a sur prise dinner party for their moth er, Mrs. S. A. Wilson, on her recent birthday anniversary. The white birthday cake. encirclei with pink gladioli, formed the table centerpiece, and place cards were boutommeres of pink gladioli. Guests included Mrs. Annie Price. Mrs. Lilly Pierson, Mrs. Carl Zoellner, Henry Wright, Vernon Wilson, ami Charles Watson. J 4 lit 7 met ' n WW iMMy 6?onwo Joe- Borneo And navoatip' LWi J AM E J" 14. MAC I A jk. NAV6ATORAWBOM8AR0 TOk GtH'L.OOOUTflEOH THE APRIL XOKyo RAID- M WEARS THE D.f.C. AND MILITARVORHR OF CHINA SrueiCO rAVItSATiON AT CORAL (lASUt, Rainbow Springs (Unavoidably Omitted Last Week) RALLY DAY AT PRESBYTERIAN S. Mrs. Jackson of Miami, Fla., is "Rally Day" will be observed visiting Mr. and Mrs. Adriarj by the Presbyterian Sunday School Howell, for several weeks next .Sunday morning, as a climax to religious education advance Rev. and Mrs. P. McCracken of week, it has been announced by Waynesville visited Mr. and Mrs ttie pastor, Kev. H. T. Bridgman. Way,ne McLnacken Sunday. ihis church is also preparing for a series of meetings beginning on Rev. Eugene Pipes, of Murphy, the 14th and closing on the 24th. I is filling the place of the Rev. A number of cottage prayer meet- J 'm Vinson who has been pastor ings have been held in prepara- of the Holly Springs Baptist church for the past five years. Mrs. Thelma Edwards and fam ily visited Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Franklin Sunday. Bill Bolick is now employed in Cashiers. WEDDING BREAKFAST FOR MR. AND MRS MELLERS Hotel Edwards was the scene of a wedding breakfast for Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Mellers, following their marriage at the Presbyterian church Sunday morning at 9 o'clock. The three-tiered wedding cake was topped with a miniature bride and groom. Seven tapers in star shaped holders, with red rosebuds in each star, formed the central decoration at the bride's table. Seated with the bride and groom at this table were,: Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Edwards, Miss Estelle Ginger Edwards, Miss Dorothy Linardy ar.l Henry Willard. Deco rations at other guest tables were carried out in the red and white colors. tion for these services. FRANK B. COOK IS CHIEF AIR RAID WARDEN Frank B. Cook has been appoint ed chief air raid warden of the recently organized Highlands Civi lian uetense Council. A tentative list of captains appointed to work with Mr. Cook and their respec- Miss Emmy Elliott, daughter of five areas are: Charles T. Ander- Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Elliottt is son, W. C. Newton, H. S. Talley, working at rontana. fc. A. hurt, Jr., W. R. Potts ahd drearies McDowell, the bustness W. V. Parker and family visited sections of Fourth, Main and other Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Watts of uowraiown streets; Bud 1 hompson, I Jones Creek last weekend. rourtn to Chestnut; Marvin Baty, Chestnut; Tom Potts, Bearpen Mountain ; Malcolm Zoellner, Foreman Road ; Doyle Burgess, Spring Street, Eugene Paul, Wal halla Road; Tom Harbison, Satu lah Road; Tudor N. Hall, Horse Cove Road, Carter Talley and James Beal, Dillard Road. Pvt. Ausborn Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Parker, who was inducted in the army recently, is stationed at Miami Beach, Fla. Mrs. Bill Bolick visited her brother, Weaver Elliott, of Carbon, over the weekend. " IT" WAS AN INTfiRCSTlMe tr More tham 62,000,000 seedlings have been planted by hand in the forestlands of Washington arid Oregoiiv in support of the forest products industries' pro gram for growing more trees. Organized fire production is maintained upon 334,000,000 acres of commercial forests in America. State College Farm Questions And Answers Q. Will there be any cuttle sliows this fall, in view of the fact that the State Fair and other events of this nature have been cancel led? A. Yes. A show and sale for 4-H Baby Beef Club members and vocational agriculture students in the Western part of the state will be held at Asheville October 7 and 8. A similar show and sale for Piedmont and Eastern Carolina boys and girls will be held on the State College campus in Raleigh October 13 and 14. L. I. Case, ex tension animal husbandman of N. C. State college, is in charge of the two eveats, and the N. C. Bankers' Association is cooperat ing to supply the premium money through member batiks in the re spective areas. EXECUTRIX NOTICE Having qualified as executrix of Albertina Staub, deceased, late of Macon county, N. C, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased to exhibit them to the un dersigned on or before the 3rd day of September, 1943, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in- I debted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 3rd day of September, 1942. RUTH V. CARTER, Executrix S10-6tp-O15 The . amount of new wood cre ated annually by the growing process of trees in the American forests has been steadily increas ing for a number of years, and now is estimated at more than 11,500,000,000 cubic feet annually. NOTICE Wade Pickens, having qualified as administrator of Joseph John Martin,' deseased, late of Macon county, N. C, this is to ratify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to he undersigned on or before the 22nd day of August, 1943, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said es tate will please make immediate settlement. This 22nd day uf August, 1942. WADE PICKENS, A27-6t Administrator. TRUCKS BEGIN TO COLLECT SCRAP On October 1 several trucks will begin collecting scrap metal in Highlands and vicinity in the three Iotla By JOSEPH POUTS Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swafford BUFFET SUPPER HONORS BRIDAL COUPLE Mrs. Frank. Ruthvin entertained with a buffet' supper Saturday eve i:ng honoring Mrs. Pauline Neu haus and Lewis L. Mellers, whose marriage tok place Sunday morn ing at the Presbyterian church. The buffet table was centered with vari-colored nasturtiums in a silver bowl. Other guests in cluded in the courtesy were W. W. Edwards, Mrs. A. G. Edwards, the Misses Mary and Estelle Ed wards, John Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Dane Linardy, and Miss Sylvia Nutrizion. MISS HARRIS ENTERTAINS IN HONOR OF MR. AND MRS. HAGER Miss Rebecca Harris entertained with a small tea Wednesday after noon honoring Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Hager, whose marriage was an event of September 8. Miss Alice Frost presided at the tea table and Miss Rebecca Nail as sisted the hostess in entertain ing. Mixed fall flowers graced the rooms and the from, porch.. About twenty guests were invited to meet Mrs. Hager. THE MISSES RAVEN EL HOSTESS AT TEA The Misses Marguerite and (Tare Ravenel were hostesses at a tea Saturday afternoon at "Wolf Ridge" tacir ? ,T campaign The rd Merrin F represen l ,h'S scra.P.meta w'" lives of the Iotka church at the M,v -r SU1J" '' 'r ",e annual county B. T. U. meeting Mayor and Town Board of Com- .i- i iiiugc vital UdpilM huv.h i.-;.i.... :u. c . i . A1Hvn., ,1, .JCpiCIIIUCl - "l llr '"sM imvi t limn a jvai dKU I IE :j:..:j..i -.i. i I r" uiuiviuuai cmzci:, wim tile neip of the school children, gathered and sold a number of truck loads of Scrap metal for the benefit of the Red Cross war emergency fund, it is believed there is still large amount of this much needed war material uncollected in this section. Personal Mention Mrs. Watson Barratt of New York City arrived Sunday for a visit with her mother, Mrs. H. M. Bascom, at their home on Satulah Mountain. Private Julian Zoellner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Zoellner, is taking airplane mechanic training at Keesler Field. He writes that his work is interesting and praises the bigh morale of the soldiers stationed at this Field. Mrs. M. C. Richardson, her daughter and son-in-law, and Mrs. Jack Farr and small son of Char lotte were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Root. Miss Lave He Jones of Harlan, Kentucky and Naples, Fla., is vis iting Miss Peggy Polhill at Trice mont Terrace. Miss Jones is the daughter of Senator D. C. Jones of Kentucky. Arriving this week end for a visit with Miss Polhill will be Miss Sitph Sigler of Hatttesburg, Miss. Miss Sigler is president of the Tri Delta Sorority at Brenau College, Gainesville, Ga. Mrs. R. L. Dekle and Miss Etta Thornton are visiting in Douglas, Ga., en route to their home in Thomasville, Ga., after spending the season in Highlands. Dicky King returned to Fort Bragg Wednesday after spending a ten-day furlough here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. King, at king's lan. Miss Geneva Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Allen, who has been very ill, is reported to be improving Mrs. Rosie Fouts is spending some time with her sons in De troit and Flint, Mich. A large crowd from Iotla and vicinity have l)en attending the revival services being held at the Burn ir.v town church. The meeting closed last Sunday with the bap tising at 11 o'clock. The Misses Ruth Ellen Rowland and Mildred Rogers visited Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Swafford last weekend. Miss Willie Mae Rogers and Miss Dessie Mae Fouts were guests of Miss Irene Lowe of West's Mill one night last .week. Virgil Willis is a patierM in the Angel Clinic. Steel cargo ships require as much as 300,000 square feet of plywood in their construction. A new method of making cans of wood fiber without changing the machines formerly used for making tin-steel cans, has been developed by the American Can company as pan of the war metal saving program Using wood instead of steel for folding chairs for the Army will save 21.750,000 pounds of steel this year, according to the Army Quartermaster Corps. Forty-one states cooperate with the forest products industries in programs for the prevention of forest fires. The volume of wood used for fuel in America is second only to the amount which is used for 1943 AAA Farm Program To Stress Legume Seeding Seeding of winter legume crops this fall is the best way to bolster production of important war crops inext year, and at the same time beat the threatened shortage of nitrogen, according to G. T. Scott, chairman of the State USD A War Board, with headquarters at State college. Legume seedings are needed in North Carolina to replace applica tion of nitrogen fertilizer which will be reduced because large quantities of commercial .nitrates are going into manufacture of munitions, Scot said. Growing of winter legumes mainly crimson clover and Austrian winter peas is recognized as one of the best methods of restoring productive vigor to the soil. Many war crops, such as peanuts and soybeans, are soil depleting. : At present, North Carolina farmers Jiave received or have been shipped 4,822,500 pounds of Austrian winter peas, 350,000 pounds of ryegrass, and 1,356,500 pounds of crimson clover. Under the 1943 AAA program, he said, greater interest is being placed on seeding of winter le gumes as cover and green manure crops. Tlie rate of payment for establishing and burning under a good stand of winter legumes has been increased from $3 to $4 per acre. Harvesting winter legume seed in a workmanlike manner or leaving all the legume forage on the soil as a "go-down" cover crop will earn $3 per acre, as compared with $1.50 per acre under the 1942 program. These credits are a part of the maximum pro duction practice allowance which may be earned cm an individual farm. "We can't trust to luck with mismanaged land," he said. "We must run our farm plants at the greatest speed they can stand without burning out the soil." These cover crop seed will be furnished farmers by the AAA and costs will be deducted from any payments due the farmer under the AAA program. ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualified as administra trix of Sarah F. Bolick, deceased, late of Macon county, N. C, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 8th day of September, 1943, or t hi; notice will be plead in bar of theii recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate settlement. This 5th day of September 1942. Arietta Bolick, Administratrix S10-6tp-Olf NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina, Macon County. STATE vs. JESS COBB Whereas, on April 7, 1942, Jess Cobb transferred unto the Clerk of the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, title to a certain motor vehicle hereafter described, in lieu of bond for the appearance of the said jess Cobb at the April, 1942, term of Macon County Superior' Court; and whereas, the said Jess Cobb failed to make his appearance at said Superior Court us he was hound to do, and at the August term, 1942, of the Macon Superior Court the bond of the said Jess Cobb was ordered forfeited, and the undersigned was authorized, tin empowered and directed to sell said motor vehicle and to apply the proceeds of said sale in the manlier prescribed by law. Now, therefore, pursuant to the foregoing order, 1, A. 15. Slagle, Sheriff of Macon County, North Carolina, will, on; the 12th day of October, 1942, at the hour of 12 o'clock, , noon, at the court house door . in Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina, sell l the highest bidder i.ir ' cash: One 1933 Chevrolet Coach, Mo tor Number 3762615. This, the 10th day of Septem ber, 1942. A. 15. SLAGLE, Sheriff of Macon' County, N. C. S17-4tc-08 Restrictions on use of taxicabs in New York -City will save 107 million taxi miles . annually, as well as 428 million tire miles, 15, 000 new tires, the same number of recaps and 10 million gallons of, gasoline. To relieve 1 FX Q Misery of J JLi YJ O LIQUID TABLETS SALVE NOSE DROPS COUGH DROPS "RuhfMy.Tiam" Wonderful Liniment 666 Try NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION North Carolina Macon County. Fred Tallent vs. Lona Tallent The defendant, Lona Tallent, will take notice that an action en titled as above has been com menced in the Superior Court of Macon County, North Carolina, for an absolute divorce, and the defendant will further take notice that she is required to appear at the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said County in the Courthouse in Franklin, North Carolina, on the 14th day of No vember, 1942 and answer or demur to the complaint in said action or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief therein, de manded. This the 21st day of September, 1942. L. B. LINER, Asst. Clerk Superior Court Macon County, North Carolina. S24--ttc015' JOIN! JOIN! JOIN BRYANT BURIAL ASSOCIATION Only costs a few pennies a month to protect the whole family. They have the merchandise and equipment to serve you well. O. C. BRYANT, Prw. Fish and Oyster Season Is Here Again They Will Be Served Daily at CAGLE'S CAFE HIT THE BULL'S-EYE MrMMiMWalMuirHM pjalm. WuMMlirllauM Maw The World's News Seen Through The Christian Science Monitor An International Daily Newspaper it Truthful Constructive Unbiased Free from Sniational Mfn Editorials Are Timely and Instructive, and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Male the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price $ 12.00 Yearly, or $ 1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $ 2 60 a Year. Introductory Offer, f Issues 2 Cents. Name . .. Address. SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST WAKE UP AMERICA! THE CIVILIAN POPULATION HAS NOT REALIZED THAT WE ARE IN AN ALL-OUT WAR Thousands of typists, stenographers, and secretaries are needed for defense work. Urgent demands are being made on our schoo' to fill this demand. We are rushing our students through jusl as rapidly as we can to meet this emergency. We are in neec1 of many more people to train for these defense jobs. Who it willing to help his country in these perilous times? Our prices and termsasare most reasonable. If you want to help your country, get in touch with m. Government jobs pay food salaries. For fall information write or phone the ATHENS BUSINESS COLLEGE ATHENS, GA. (Fssuy AcxradHod)

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