Newspapers / The Sylva Herald and … / June 19, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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American Lesion Drops Game To Murphy 5-4 " The American Legion baseball* club fell before a strong Murphy team in a close game on the Mark Watson field here Sunday after noon with a score of 5-4. The boys from Murphy started their scoring in the first inning when two hrits, an error and a walk cost Sylva three runs. Sylva came back and tied the score in the fourth inning but Murphy scored again in the fifth due to two walks and then a double by Crawford. Blalock led Sylva at the bat with two for three, while Crawford got three for five from Murphy. Kin ney was the winning pitcher for Murphy. Sylva AB H Dillard, 3b 4 2 Rector, If 3 0 Smith, c 5 0 Blalock, cf 3 2 Phillips, rf 4 0 Morgan, ss 4 2 Lee, lb - 4 2 Troutman, 2b 3 0 Cunningham, p 4 1 ? TOTAL 34 9 Murphy AB H Crawford, lb 5 3 Black, 3b 4 0 Palmer, If 2 0 Kirkland, rf 4 0 Lowlor, 2b 4 1 Kemphill, cf 3 1 Jones, ss. 4 .0 Cole, c 2 0 Kinney, p 2 0 Hughes, p 2 0 TOTAL ; 32 5 BRYSON, DRIVER TO MEET IN SIX-ROUND BOUT AT CHEROKEE Holmes Bryson, 147 Asheville boy, will meet Dick Driver, 142 pounds, Cherokee, in the main event of four matches to be staged in the Cherokee school gymnasium j on Thursday night, June 26, at I 8:30, sponsored by the American i Legion Steve Youngdeer Post. Three four-round bouts will feature Rocky Elkins, 142, Ashe ville, and Jeff Thompson, 140, Cherokee; Yank Carson, 143, Asheville, and Reggie Thompson, 142, Cherokee; Buddy Martin, 126, Asiaeville, and Johnnie Crowe, 126, Cherokee. American Legion Batting Averages Player AB H Pet. Dillard 65 27 .415 Phillips 76 31 .408 Morgan 70 28 .400 Rector 64 25 .391 Blalock 11 4 Lee 30 10 Burch 39 Baker 18 'Smith 36 9 Arrowood 57 14 .246 Cunningham 50 10 .200 Warren 12 2 In the long run if pays to buy a ? All STEE1 UTILITY TRAILER Dtrmp Type ? Fall Tom C&scity Whtti you buy a Karrjall, you get a trailer constructed entirely of steel that won't wear out ? won't rot. You get truck capacity and strength?save hun dredsof dollars in cost. Sides are 13 gauge steel, bottom and frame are 10 gauge. The dump body is hinged to the axle, which always supports the load. This specially patented feature is important for good service over a long period of time. Karriall also makes two other models of all steel utility trailers. See them today | BUCHANAN AUTO & ELECTRIC CO. Illustration above ibowi Karria ll Utility Trailer fitted with stake rack*. These re movable mckj fit all models? made in four aectiona of hard wood with metal fixtures. Phone 53 Sylva, N. C. OTebbittg Snbitations Engraved or Plateless Engraved ...on ... FINE QUALITY STOCK Place your order early for the BEST SERVICE the book store In 8ylva Herald Building MAJOR LEAGUE |i STANDINGS I I Pet. .574 1 .560 j .551 .500 .488 .468 i .446 | .418 I Pet. ' .585 / .571! .558 | .528 .472 ! .464 ; .436 ' .392 I Annual Forestry Camp Toi Be Held At Elizabethtown The annual forestry esmp for! farm boys, operated by the North Carolina Division of Forestry and Parks in cooperation with the N. C. Agricultural Extension Service, will be held at Singletary Lake in the Bladen Lakes State Forest near Elizabethtown from August 25 through August.31, according to Assistant Forester F. H. Claridge of the Division of Forestry and Parks. The purpose of the camp is to acquaint farm boys with good methods of forest protection and management and to give .instruc tion in the use of ^ fire-lighting equipment, timber estimating, tim ber harvest, selective cutting, tim ber stand improvement and re forestation. However, Mr. Claridge stressed that camp life will not be all work and no play. The boys will have plenty of time for swimming, sports and other recreation. The 1947 forestry camp will be limited to 50 boys, including 25 4-H boys, and 25 Future Farmers of America boys. The campers will be chosen by county committees and an extension camp commit tee who will nominate outstanding boys who meet the requirements for attending the camp. There will be no charge to the boys other than turnishing transportation to and from the camp. The sponsors of the camp are the Southern Pulp wood Conserva tion Association, the Champion Pa per and Fibre company of Canton, the North Carolina Pulp company of Plymouth, and .the Riegal Paper corporation of Boiton. These spon sors are providing funds to cover the cost of camp operation, meals and lodging. AMERICAN LEAGUE Team W ? L New York 31 23 Boston 28 22 Detroit 27 22 Philadelphia 26 26 Cleveland 21 22 Washington .? 22 25 Chicago 25 31 St. Louis 21 30 i NATIONAL LEAGUE Team W L Boston 31 22 New York 28 21 Chicago 29 23 Brooklyn 28 ^5 St. Louis 25 28 Cincinnati 26 30 Philadelphia 24 3l Pittsburgh 20 31 Lindberg, Houts To < Present Program Western Carolina Teachers Col lege will present Mr. Florian E. Lindberg, violinist, and Mr. R. T. Houts, Jr., accompanist, In the fol- j lowing program in Hoey Audi torium, June 22, 8:15 p. m. The public is cordially invited to at tend. Sonata D Major, Adagio, Al legro," Larghetto, Allegro, Handel; Concerto A Major, Adagio, Al legro aperto, Adagio, Tempo di Menuetto, Mozart; Romance, D' Ambrosio; .Slavonic Dance G Mi nor, Dvorak-Kreisler; Malaguenia, Sarasate; Hungarian Dance No. VII, Brahms-Joachim. Mr. Lindberg is a graduate of the Wichita College of Music and Dramatic Art, of Wichita, Kansas, and The University of Texas, Aus tin, Texas. Mr. Houts received his degree from Salem College, Wins ton-Salem, and is a student of Dr. C. G. Vardell. Both Mr. Lindberg and Mr. Houts are of the faculty of Western Carolina Teachers Col lege. Blasting with dynamite is repid ly becoming the most economical means of ditching in North Caro lina. 1 See SOSSAMON'S For Your BOAT MOTORS PHONE 57?SYLVA SCOTTS SCRAP BOOK -"til MAl-ltst <01 004 >? HXMiP FoK. 4*1 *LDt<*?.lLA>4tAM ISLAND O* "1"- -SCRAPS. iXtL <* <?tl ?ONQ BIRO oF PARADISE ?S Mostly QUfLL ?' WH*< DOtS <?&. WO*D PSYCHE. MEAM ? Bo<?(/?oUk A>MD BU<TLRFLY* By R. J. SCOTT <?. LOOKING JO AHEAD GEORGE S. BENSON Mmwb President?Harding College Searcy. Arkansas A Sound Thinker A? I sat a few days ago In the spacious office of Mr. John Snyder, secretary of the Treasury, and lis I tened to that keen thinking gentle man outline his views on certain rhonetary policies, I found myself I wishing that all public thinking were as clear, and as cognizant of good economic horse-sense. I In the first place the Secretary believes that a thorough study of the necessary costs of government should be made. He believes then that this cost should be reduced to the very minimum consistent with good government. In the second place he believes that a high na tional income is possible only if a sound economy is maintained. This sound economy must be based upon maximum production at high Ef ficiency, which he feels would make possible a large foreign trade. On Your Feet, Sam! .. In the third place he believes we should seriously undertake liberal payments on the national debt. This should be done at once. To me that is just plain, common horse sense. It is just the way a wage earner, farmer, merchant, or man ufacturer, heavily in debt, with a large family, but still in good health, would have to plan if he expected ever to get on his feet and leave any heritage to his children. Uncle Sam is heavily in debt, his children have adopted spendthrift habits, have lost the art of hard work, are quarreling with one an other, and are growing more and more inclined to leave the worrying to the old man. The need of the hour is sound counsel from Wash ington for tvhe entire nation to real ize its critical condition, and to act accordingly. A Sound Program Secretary Snyder's program needs to be understood, for it is one in which the whole nation can partici pate. His three point program (in my own words) would be about as follows: 1. Stop the fantastic waste in al j most every department of govern ment. Pare costs rigorously, forget ting political expediency. 2. Let industry reduce prices un til the profits stand at a very low level. Let labor aim for maximum produ<#ion, in order to get a real raise through lower prices. Such production will permit active for-! eign markets, a thing not only neces sary for us but for other nations as well. 3. Let taxes remain on a broad base. with only those cuts being made which are necessary to induce Investment in the tools of produc tion, while we all do our part to re duce the very heavy national debt. Steady Employment Personally, I woitld modify item three. It is my opinion that if re ductions in the budget were serious ly and studiously undertaken, all three points Secretary Snyder fea tures could be achieved, and we could still obtain at the same time a real reduction in income taxes. Comparatively high taxes we must have. The costs of national living, in times of peace but amidst quar relsome and aggressive neighbors, may continue to run high. But there are certain reductions that by all means should be made in order to encourage more venture capita^. We shall continue to need wide invest ment of private capital in tools. That" will mean more jobs and mora steady employment. . Cooks Return To County From Washington State Mr. Eula Cook and family re turned about seven weeks ago from Concrete, Wash, and will again make their home in Jackson county. They had been in Wash ington for 15 years where Mr. Cook had been engaged in the logging ] business. He is now living at Speedwell and is enjoying renew ing old accpaintances and takes an especial interest in the singing conventions held in various parts of the county. CHERRY NAMES NEW WILDLIFE BOARD Governor Cherry named a nine member wildlife resources com mission in Raleigh last Wednes day to be sworn in on June 18. The new compiission was set-up un der legislative action at the last session of the general assembly, after thousands of sportsmen of the state" had worked for a separation of the game and fish division from th'e department of conservation and development. After making the appointments Cherry said that the commission, upon being sworn in, will probably organize and make its selection of a director and a chairman of the board. - The post of director is a full time position which carries a sal ary to be determined by* the gov ernor and the council of state. The chairman, like other members of the commission, will be paid on a per diem basis. The members by district are: 1st district, Joseph R. Winslow, of Robersonville; 2nd district, Thom as J. White, of Kinston; 3rd dis trict, S. B. Coley, of Raleigh; 4th district, Harry A. Greene, of Rae ford;<5th district, Frank T. Erwin, ; of Durham; 6th district, D. K. Sing, ' of Charlotte; 7th district, R. Floyd Crouse, of Sparta; 8th district, George W. Keesee, of , Gastonia; 9th district, Dan M. Furr, of Ashe ville. Bible School Closes. The Daily Vacation Bible School of the Sylva Baptist Church closed last Friday, June 13, with a picnic for the children at Smokemont. There were 116 registered, with an average attendance daily of 84.! An offering of $22 was taken for China relief. A fine faculty of 22 members worked faithfully. RETONGA WAS WORTH $1,008 SAYS MR. BALL Regained Fifteen Pounds Of Needed Weight, Can Eat Anything, And Feels Fine Now, He States "I wouldn't &ke a thousand dol lars for what Hetonga did for me," gratefully declares Mr. Edward F. Ball, well-known resident of 817 South 17th St., Knoxville, Tenn. "I have regained 15 pounds of | needed weight and I feel better I than in several years. "Nervous indigestion gave me so much trouble I was afraid to eat, anyway; and I confined myself to the lightest kind of diet. Gas seemed to turn my stomach into a hard knot and press up against my chest until I couldn't get a deep breath. Constipation was so stub born I had to change laxatives all the time to get any results. I lost 25 pounds and felt so all-in I lord ly see bow I kept going. "Retonga relieve! all this dis tress so remarkably that within ten day I was eating heartily at every meal without distress. I have re gained 15 pounds, don't have to take harsh purgatives, and I feel better and stronger in every way than in several years. I wish I could tell everyone about Re tonga." Retonga is intended to relieve distress due to insufficient flow of digestive juices in the stomach, loss of appetite, Vitamin B-l deficiency and constipation. Accept no substi tute. Retonga may be obtained at Sylva Pharmacy.?Adv. Bible School Program To Be Given Sunday Vacation Bible-School got under way in the Cullowhee Baptist Church last Monday morning with approximately fifty boys and girls enrolled. Children through 16 years are being given instruction in Bible, hand work, recreation, public worship, and other related subjects. The school will continue | through Friday morning of this week and will be climaxed with* the commencement program at 8:00 o'clock Sdnday evening, to which the public is cordially in vited. Birth Announcements Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wilson, Jr. of Asheville have announced the birth of a son, John Davidson, on Monday, June 16, at Mission hos pital, Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Davis of Ly man, Wash, announce the birth of a daughter, Saturday, June 14. Mrs. Davis is the former Miss Le ona Dillard, daughter of T. F. Dil lard. When blasting with dynamite, never use an iron bar for pushing^,n the dynamite into the hole. Al- J ways use a wood tamping sti(^^ for this purpose. FREE ? ? FREE ONE NEW ATLAS TUBE With Each New ATLAS Tire Plus A Liberal Trade-in Allowance On Your Old Tire and Tube TREADWELD RECAPPING 6:00-16 TIRE f>C AA FOR ONLY ^U-WV 4." OTHER SIZES PRICED ACCORDINGLY During this Introductory Offer to MOPERN METHODS OF RECAPPING /? JACK aMi HOWARD ALLISON'S * ' ? O. K. RUBBER WELDERS Esso Products ? Complete Service PHONE 136 EAST MAIN STREET SYLyA MEN! ORDER YOUR FALL SUIT NOW Por August or September Delivery 5 REASONS WHY ? Quotas now lifted (for the summer months only) on 'fall suits. ? Hard finished worst eds (so much in de N * mand) now fairly plentiful, will be scarce again next fall. ? No-decrease in price expected this fall. ? When the demand for fall suits (about August) ? ,1 gets heavy, we will again be limited as to the number of suits we can sell. 4 ? Order tailored to measure clothes early and get the benefit of having them when you need them. Tailored Sport Coats and Slacks "Clothes Individually Yours" SCHUUMITS DEPT. STORE "Style Center of Sylva" ? Also Ladies' Tailored Suits For Fall Delivery
The Sylva Herald and Ruralite (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1947, edition 1
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