Cullowhee GI Farm Trainees Make Fi eld Trip To 3 Farms By T. A. Jackson, Arst. Teacher The CullviWr.ee \e'(i;,:". farmer traine s under the supervision of Cullowi.ee hi^.i school m. d . t'.eld trip to three farms in Canada town>hip L.st week t b>erve some oi the better practices that members or the group h.d com pleted. The past history of each farm, this year's farm plan, and the next four years' program was reviewed and discussed. The group assembled at the Clyde V. Harris farm and there discussed the various fields and the treatment of each field. Clyde has owned his land for the past eleven years. When he moved onto the farm, all the fields were largely red clay scalds and very unproductive. Since that time manure, high grade fertilizer, and cover crops have been used and now mo^t of the land is very pro ductive A very striking example of soil conservation was noticed in one hollow which had been seeded to a meadow mixture. This grass sod slowed down the flow of run off water and at the same time supplied the farm with plenty of good hay. In addition to improving cfop land, Mr. Harris plans to clear off the pasture land and apply lime and phosphate. This will bei necessary before the present num-| ber ai' livestock is increased veryl much. Live>tock now on the farmj consists of three dairy cows, ten' beef cattle, four hogs, two hor*es,! and thirty chickens. I Leaving the Harris farm the group visited Charles H. Wike's place where a twelve acre corn field was observed. Prior to his coming on the training program this field was covered with stumps.i Dynamite costing S125 was bought1 I and this was used to remove all the stumps on the twelve acres. After the stumps were hauled off, the field was turned and was fer- ? tilized with 55,5000 pounds of 4-10-6 fertilizer. On one portion1 of the field manure, lime, and side| dressing were used and the results were very noticeable. The corn1 on this portion of the field is larg er and has a better color. In another field Mr. Wike has his hay crop. This field has also been limed, phosphated, and had the stumps removed. This field had previously been in corn and was seeded to a mixture of tim othy, red clover, and red top. This! year six stacks of hay were cut. Other things observed on this farm were a fine potato crop, and seventy-five young apple trees i which appear to be doing very, well. Improvements planned con-' sist of a new dwelling and a new! JUST ARRIVED A carloiul of 4 inch (arm DRAIN TILE , ? Improve the looks of | your bathroom by replac ing that worn toilet lid with one of our new snowy white ones. Save your lawn during dry seasons by getting one of our 50-foot Garden Hose. We also have in stock a complete line of DeVoe's Paints. Inside and outside Locks; Door Butts- and other Building and Cabinet Hardwares. For economy, beauty, and longer wear see our gray stone siding, green shingle design siding, and our red and buff brick design siding. JACKSON COAL & LUMBER CO Phone 38 _ Sylva, N. C. >? f? 7 *fi M i V.? v ?' .. & ft *'k&M 4 r' ? ' and REPAIRS We are fully equipped to care for your most complicated electrical repair work. Call us at the first sign of disorder. We will then be in a posi tion to better save you time aid money. Your rr.dio was an expensive commodity new: cjet full v;ilue from it by keeping it in go.*d ?working order through our Sood repair service. Sylva Radio and Electric Shop Phone 3 Main Street By VERNA STANTON , Assistant State Agent Fof the sake of your refrigerator ar.d foods stored in it, watch the frost line carefully in summer and del'ro&t before the accumulation is a quarter of an inch thick, house h id management specialists of the U. S. Department of Agriculture! remind owners of electric or other automatic refrigerators. Thick fro>t slows down the cool-' ing of foods and may send the tem-j erature of the food-storage com partment up even though the ref rigerating system is working hard er than it does normally. Before defrosting, remove the freezer trays to hasten the pro- j cess. And be sure the drip tray is empty and in place to catch the water as the frost melts. If the manufacturer recommends it, de frosting can be speeded up by keeping the trays filled with hot water while the control is set at "defrost" or "off." This hot water defrosting is helpful to some refrigerators, though not to all. Check the direction booklet that comes with the refrigerator or check with the manufacturer be fore using hot water. Never use anything sharp oT chip frost from the evaporator or to loosen ice-cube trays, because this may injure the coils that hold the freezing fluid. Warm water is best to dampen garments for ironing as it pene trates the fabric quicker. Use a bottle cap or something that will spray the water evenly. Fold the articles carefully, with hems and double thicknesses turned inside. Cover with a heavy towel or cof ton sheet blanket to prevent dry ing out. Dampened clothes should stand a half hour before ironing so the moisture penetrates evenly. If the air is cool and-dry, dampened clothes can be left overnight. If it's hot and humid, iron within an hour or two or mildew may de velop. Pre-Session Conference To Be Held At WCTC By J. J. Booker The thirteenth Pre-Session Con ference will be held at Western Carolina Teachers College on Sep tember 3, 4, 5, and 7. This confei ence is an annual affair. The par ticipants are mostly student olii cers dI tiie dilterent classes. The puipo.-e is to determine whether any changes should be made in I the schedules, and it need be, to I change them. I The theme for this years pro I gram is "Helping Lay the Founda ! tion tor the Expansion Program '. Til is is in accordance with the ; prospective building of a science I building, library, administration i building, and others that have had I! money appropriated lor by the | state education board. i Climaxing the session, an all day trip will be offered to those who might care to go on a tour through the mountains. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many I friends?for their- sympathy and I kindness shown us during the sick ness and death of our loved one; and for the beautiful floral offer ings. We especially wish to thank the staff of doctors and nurses at the j C. J. Harris Community hospital j for their faithful work and kind 4 ness during his sickness. Mrs. Margie Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Robinson and family ! Cullowhec Methodists To Hold Bible School T.\e annual vacation B?ole school of Cullowhee Methodist church will begin on Monday morning. August 18. at 9 o'clock. .Classes will be held each morning, Mon day through Saturday, and a".I children of the community are in vited to attend. Teachers l\.r the -chool are Mrs. Lloyd Engman. beginners: M:.v Helen Bird and Mi.-s Pat Car;*.-.. prim... ir-.-; Mrs. Clinton Pods juniors: and Mr>. R. T. Houts. in termediates. V barn to accommodate the twen'.y head of cattle, twenty hogs, and two horses kept on the farm. The m xt place visited by the ijroup was the Warren W. WoodS farm. Here the group saw a tine field of corn that h. d been heavily fertilized with manure and com I mercial fertilizer. In another field a good stand of ladino clover was seen. Mr. Wood plans to do lots of work on his pasture next year, such as cleaning off and liming, phosphating, and resevding. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Henry, who were married July 19 at Scott's Creek Baptist church. Mrs. Henry was be fore her marriage Miss Bee Jane Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Harris of Sylva. Mr. Henry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henry of Hazelwood. Notice According to a ruling by the State Board of Education, no chil dren shall be allowed to reside in one school district and attend school in another school district, unless such attendance is author ized by the State Board of Educa tion. The State Board of Educa tion states that no attendance credit be allowed for children who reside in one district and attend school in another district unless they are transferred by the State Board of Education. Where there is agreement ' between the gov erning boards of the administra tive units with reference to the transfer of pupils, the matter shall be handled subject to approval by the Controller of the State Board of Education. Parents will please bear this ruling in mind when making plans for their children attending school | for the coming year. FARMERS' INCOME UP 20 PER GENT Raleigh, August 4.?Cash in come of North Carolina farmers in 1946 was about 20 per cent higher than in *945, it was report-] ed today by the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service of thej Stare Department of Agriculture. I Total cash receipts in 1946 to-j taled $764,404,000. The total in. 1945 was $638,414,000. Practically all of the increase1 came, the report stated, fromi marketing of crops, which brought farmers $633,394,000 as against $508,159,000 in 1945. Returns' from sales of livestock and live stock products were slightly low-j er during 1946, totaling $119,799,-1 000, compared with $120,910,000 in the previous year. Govern-! ment payments to farmers in 1946 were higher, totaling $11,211,000 as compared with $9,345,000 in 1945. Conservation payments made up $8,096,000 of the total Govern ment payments during 1946. Dairy production payments accounted for 63,106,000, with payments for sheep and lamb and beef produc-i tion making up the remaining! 69,000. In 1945, conservation pay ments totaled $5,897,000; dairy production payments^ $3,434,000; beef and sheepr and lamb produc tion, $10,000, and truck crop pro duction, $4,000. Cash returns from sales of to-( bacco accounted for about 57 per cent of the total cash receipts from farming during 1946, and about 56 per cent of the total during 1945. " Compared with other States, North Carolina ranks third in total cash receipts from farm market ings of crops, 28th in cash receipts from marketings of livestock and livestock products, and s 13th in total cash income from crops, live stock and livestock products com bined. The production of "Lost Hori zon" will be the highlight of the "Theatre In The Sky" season of plays in ~ Sylva. Geoffrey has spared no expense to make the production the most beautiful ever seen here. Funeral Rites For Joseph T. Bumgarner Funeral services for Joseph T. Bumgarner, 68, were conducted Sunday," August 2, at his home at Locust Creek at 2 p. m. A native of Sylva, he had lived in Jackson county since his birth on May 10, 1879. He died after an illness of three months. Ministers in charge of the ser vices were Rev. Ernest Fitzgerald and Rev. Forest Blankenship. Pallbearers were Rufe Hall, Burton Ammons, Jack Hasket, Roy Shular, DeWitt Beasley, Hayes Conner, J. R. Sharpton, Henry Hoyle, Charlie Evans, and Clyde Painter. Flower girls were Emma Bum garner, Jenny Bumgarner, Mrs. H. H. Ashe, Margaret Conner, Mrs. Chris Davis, Edith Earley, Ann Henson, Edith Beasley, and Mrs. Roy Shular. Mr. Bumgarner is survived by the widow, Mrs. Hattie Worley Bumgarner; two daughters, Sally and Evelyn, of Sylva; four sons, Jack, Robert, and BUlie, of Sylva, and Alvin of Hamilton, Wash.; and one sister, Mrs. Rufe Mills of Cul lowhee. Interment was in the Locust Creek graveyard. Moody Funeral Home was in charge of arrange ments. The Prologue and Epilogue of the play is laid in a dining room in London. Characters in this se I quence will be played by Electra ' Ballou, Mildred Love, W. Law I rence Benson and Bill Mtfrrow. i i i WOODMEN OF THE WORLD Life Insurance Society Fraternity Protection Service BRITTON M. MOORE Sylva Representative Sylva, N. C. fate, &c0rt' TOMORROW) HYDRAIiATiC DRIVE ^Optional at ?xtra cost The "drive" of tomorrow is here today! ... as ultra-modern as television, and with nearly 8 years of PROOF behind it! It's in the picture for the future?and Oldsmobile bring* it to you tmlfiy! Just as television is the big news in the field of electronics, automatic transmis sions are the iwnnher-one topic of conversation in the automobile industry. Some day . . . nobody will shift gears ? . . nobody >\ill push a clutch. But today . . . onlv IIvilra* Mntic Drive provides fully automatic shifting} Only Hydra-Matic Drive eliminates the clutch pedal entirely! What's more . , . Hydra-Matic Drive was introduced hv Oldsmobile nearly 8 years ago! Since that time it has been proved in the hands of nearly 400.000 Oldsmobile owners?proved in literally billions of miles of driving?even proved in combat use on Army tanks! Today, the lowest-priced car to offer GM Hydra-Ma tic Drive* is the smart new Oldstnobile?away out ahead auto? maticallv?away out ahead in appear? ancc. too. Owners know Oldsmohile is always in tune with tomorrow. They expect Oldsmohile to come out first with the really important advancements like IIydxa-Matic Drive. That's why so many future-minded people say, "It's SMART to Own an Olds!" YOUR DEALER Allison Motor Company Main Street . SYLVA, N. C.