Here and There By Bobby Terrell Sylva Trounces Marble Here Sunday 19-4 A 22-hit barrage behind the four-hit pitching of James Cun ningham and Luther Norton added up to a 19-4 victory for the Sylva Legionnaires over Marbles Sun day afternoon at Sylva. Sylva took the lead in the first inning by pushing over three runs when Tommy Ellis was hit by pitcher and Clyde Rector and Beo Dillard doubled in succession. Ellis and Rector scored on Dillard's double and Dillard stole third and came home on a throwaway by the catcher. Marble tied the score in the third on a walk and two Sylva errors and went ahead in the fourth on a double by Keener and an outfield fly by Palmer. However, Bob Phillips singled, stole second, and raced home when the catcher threw high over second to retie the score in the bottom of the fourth. Rector led off the fifth with a single, Dillard followed with a double and George Lee, intent on breaking the 4-4 tie, parked a home run over the centerfield fence and sent Pitcher Snake Lance off Campbeli's ICE CREAM Made Fresh TWICE DAILY All Popular Flavors RITZ BUILDING the mound. Sylva scored four more runs in the fifth, seven in the sixth and one in the eighth while Marble did not get hit after the fourth. James Cunningham, who pitched at Marble Saturday, started on the hill Sunday and held his opponents well under his thumb for the six innings he labored before giving way to Luther Norton of Cullo whee, who pitched hitless ball in his three inning stint. He regis tered five strikeouts. Clyde Rec tor with four for five and Bob Phillips with four for six paced the winners at bat. Marble Forfeits To Sylva The Sylva Legion club won by| forfeit from Marble on Marble's j diamond last Saturday afternoon. The game was a series of argu-| ments until the fifth when, with' Sylva leading 8-4, Coffey tripled with Braswell on base. The base ump ruled that Coffey failed to touch first base and called him out. Coffey refused to leave his perch on third and the ump in chief (from Marble) gave him three minutes to vacate the base and re-1 sume play. At the end of the spe-j cified time Coffey was still trying to hatch third and the upm ruled' the game to Sylva by a 9-0 forfeit score. Ben Dillard and Tilley Baker each had a perfect day at bat in the five innings of play with three for three and two for two respec tively. The box score: SYLVA AB R H Ellis, ss-c 5 2 3 Rector, cf 5 4 4 Dillard, 3b-c-2b 6 3 3 Lee, lb 6 2 2 ] Phillips, rl' 6 14 Burch, c-3b 5 2 3j Norton, 2b-p 4 2 0 Brooks, ll' 5 2 2i Cunningham, p 4 1 1 ? Warren, 2b 10 0 47 19 22 MARBLE ABRH j Rogers, lb-p 4 1 1 1 Braswell, 2b 4 10 j J. Cofley, c 4 0 1 | Kirkman, ss-p 4 0 It ! Keener, cf 2 11 i Lance, p lb 3 0 1 Palmer, rf 2 0 0 R|T "7 THEATRE I | WEEKLY PROGRAM Night Shows: 7:00 <1 9:00 P. M.?Mat. Sat.?Late show Sat. 10:30 Adm.:Adults 38c tax incl.?Children under 12 yrs. 12c tax Inc. Thursday-Friday, September 4-5 SHOCKING MISS PILGRIM BETTY GRABLE - D. HAYMS Saturday, September 6 SIX GUN SERENADE JiMMIE WAKELY ? KAY MORLEY Late Show 10:30? SWEET-GUY SONNY TUFTS - ANN BLYTHE Sunday, September 7 EASY GOME EASY GO SONNY TUFTS - DIANA LYNN Monday-Tuesday, September 8-9 REST YEARS OF OUR LIVES Myrna Loy - F. MARCH Wednesday, September 10 SPOILERS OF THE NORTH PAUL KELLY - A. BOOTH All Children not in arms will have to purchase a ticket to enter any performance at thl? Theatre. Sylva Downa HiiwiMcc ~ In Labor Day Game The Sylva Legion baseball club spoiled a Hiawassee, Georgia La bor Day celebration Monday by taking a 10-5, ten inning game from the Georgians. Clyde Rector, turning in his first mound per formance of the last half, for Sylva, held the Hiawassee squad to five: hits. Sylva went into the ninth trail ing Hiawassee by a 4-1 score and proceeded to take the lead by tallying four times on four hits andj a Hiawassee error. Hiawassee scored once in the last of the ninth and sent the game into extra inn-; ings. I Singles by Wesley Warren, Jack Cunningham and Ray Brooks and four more errors gave Sylva five run?- JP the top of the tenth and^ put the game on ice because Rector sat Hiawassee down three in a row in the last of the tenth. Wesley Warren with a double, single and three walks in five trips led the Sylva attack while Cun-| ningham had two singles in three; trips. J. C. White had 2 for 4 for the losers. The box score: SYLVA AB R H Phillips, rf 4 1 li Brooks, If 5 2 2 Rector, p 5 10 Dillard, 3b 4 2 1 Baker, c 5 0 1 Burch, ss 6 0 1 James Cunningham, lb ... 4 10 Warren, 2b 2 12 Arrowood, cf 2 0 0 Jack Cunningham, cf 3 2 2 40 10 10 HIAWASSEE AB R H C. Kendall, lb 5 0 1 Keys, c 4 10 C. White, 2b 4 0 0 Nichols, p 3 11 M. Kendall, cf 3 2 1 J. C. White, ss 4 1 2 Sampson, If 4 0 0 H. Kimsey, 3b 3 0 0 C. Kimsey, rf 4 0 0 34 ^ 5 Sylva 000 100 004 5?10 Hiawassee 110 200 001 0? 5 American Legion Batting Averages Ben Dillard took over the lead in the Sylva batting race this week with a 12 point boost to .418 while George Lee dropped three points to .405. Tilley Baker moved into third place at .385, ten points bet-! ter than Lawson Brown and Wes ley Warren's .375. Dillard also! nioved ahead in total hits with 61, two mure than Bob Phillips' 59. Player AB H Pet. Jack Cunningham 3 2 .667 Barnwell 6 3 .500 Dillard 146 61 .418 Lee * 79 32 .405 Baker 39 15 .385 Brown 56 21 .375 Warren 24 9 .375 Phillips 159 59 .371 Ellis 50 18 .360 Smith 104 37 .356 Morgan 125 43 .340 Rector 142 48 .338 Burch 72 23 .319 Brooks 40 10 .250 James Cunningham .... 75 17 .224 Henry . 8 1 .125 Norton 7 0 .000 M. Coffey, rf 2 0 0 Mintz, If 3 10 Parker, 3b 4 0 0, ' > 32 4 4 Marble 003 100 000? 4 Sylvu 301 077 Olx?19 SYLVA AB R H i Ellis, ss 4 2 2 Phillips, rf 2 10 j Dillard, 3b 3 2 3 j Lee, lb 2 1 1 Baker, c 2 0 2 | Burch, 2b 3 12 ' Norton, cf 3 0 0 Brooks, If 3 0 1 Cunningham, p 2 11 24 8 12 MARBLE AB R H Raxter, 3b 1 2 1 Parker, 2b 3 11 Braswell, lb 10 0 Coffey, c 3a 0 1 Camel, ss 2 0 0 Rogers, If 2 1 1, Keener, cf 1 0 0( King, rf 2 0 0 Robinson, p 2 0 1; Hughes, p 0 0 0, 17. 4 5 Syl^'a 015 20?8 Marble 130 Ox?4 I An announcement from the USDA states that the program to support market prices of nonfat dry m.lk will be extended through August 1947. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS American New York ... Boston Detroit Cleveland ... Philadelphia Chicago Washington St. Louis 83 47 .638 71 45 .568 71 60 .542 65 61 .516 65 54 .504 60 69 .456 54 74 .422 46 84 .354 Nauunal Brooklyn St. Louis Boston 82 50 .621 74 55 ' .574 74 55 .574 66 62 .516 62 72 .463 58 72 .446 54 76 .415 54 76 .415 New York Cincinnati Chicago .... Pittsburgh . Philadelphia CULLOWHEE NEWS All persons having relatives and friends buried in the Rogers cem etery, which is located on a part of the old Cox farm, are asked to please meet Mr. Milford Jenkins at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, Sept. 13, at Battle's store. The purpose of this meeting is to make plans to put a fence around this ceme tery. Please show your interest by coming prepared to donate your part for this cause by being present at this time and place. Mrs. Mattie Bishop is spending several days with her daughter, Mrs. Frank L. Garner, Jr., in New port News, Va. Mrs. Lucile Painter left recently for a short vacation in Denver, Mrs. Robert Cotter is visiting with her son, Frank Cotter, in Akron, O. Paul Hamilton, Carson Bryson, and Logan Taylor left recently for Miami, Fla., where they will be employed for several months. Friends of Mrs. Lewis Waters will regret to learn of her illness at the C. J. Harris hospital in -Sylva. Mrs. Allen Hembree and three children of Aberdeen, Md., are vis iting Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Brown. They will leave Thursday lor Aberdeen. Walter B. Campbell recently spent the week-end with his fam ily here. CARD OF THANKS t We wish to express our sincere appreciation to all our friends for their kind expressions of sym pathy at the time of the sickness and death of our mother and sif ter. Col. Mrs. Robert H. Cooke Mrs. A. S. Nichols Use Herald Want Ads for prolit. SCOTIA _SCRAP._BQ.QK "6y R. J. SCOFF 4wo mlcecau^m-f IN ? 8ase0au. slakc c'. RUBBER 8ELLY * A PLAYER *ho ? s fat arr?? yya/stl //v?. ? *v UNCLE. charlie's gof him* ? a pi AYE a w/zo cam'T hit a curve ? SCO!AP?, flow ytfldk is - hwf Iim? b*. ??u .?)?- ?*? > Funeral Rites For Mrs. Kidder Nichols Funeral services were held Sat urday morning at 10:30 o'clock at the Sylva Methodist church for Mrs. Kidder Cole Nichols, who passed away Thursday evening at, the home of her sister, Mrs. A. S. Nichols, following an extended ill home in Sylva for a number of ficiated. The body was then tak en to Shelby, the home of her only daughter, for burial. A native of Jackson county and a member of one of its pioneer families, Mrs. Nichols made her home in Sylca for a number of years. Several years ago she moved to Asheville where she has made her home most of the time. While living there she was em ployed by Bon Marche, Denton's, and the George Vanderbilt hotel. She was a member of Central Methodist church. \ I Mrs. Nichols had been a patient in Harris Community hospital for about three weeks and had been: moved to the home of her sister Thursday morning. She beca'me worse that afternoon and died of a heart attack in t he evening. She was the daughter of the^late Mr. and Mrs. George Cole ol Cashiers.1 Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Robert H. Cooke <> 1 Shelby, ?ne sister, Mrs. A. S. Nichols, Syl Va; an.i four grandchildren, Mr*. James Lucas, Hit kory, Mi?-: Thorn-1 is Cornwell, Clinton, S. Mrs. Thomas Chewning, Shelby, andi Jerry Cooke. Shelby; and threot great g: andcinldren. Pallbearer.- were Conrad Ni: nwail. .1.tines Lu< Carl Buchanan. Dick WMson, a.vi Tom Wilson. RETONGA BRINGS RELIEF SHE SOUGHT SEVEN YEARS "I Often Felt So High Strung And Miserable I Didn't Want To Be Around Anybody?Not Even My self," States Mrs. Redding. Veels Like Different Per son Now "A few bottles of Retonga gave me the^relief I had ^een trying to find for nearly seven years, and I have gained ten pounds of needed weight, too," happily declares Mrs. D. F. Redding, well-known resi dent of 9 Park St., Anderson, S. C. "Many days I felt so high strung and shaky it seemed to me I just couldn't make it through the day. Nervous indigestion tortured me until I never ate more than tvfo small meals a day. My weight went down twenty pounds and my elimination was so sluggish that I liver! in dread of having to depend on laxatives the rest of my life. Often I felt so miserable I did not want to be around any one, not even myself: "I tried Retonga as a last resort and was happily surprised at the wonderful relief it gave me. Now I haVe a real appetite, eat any thing, and that high strung feel ing is relieved. I sleep fine, the sluggi.-h el mi nation i.-; relieved and * I feel better and stronger than m six or eig.'it years. Retonga did more for mo 'han everything else I tried combined." Retonga is intended to relieve distress due to insufficient flow of gastric juice- in Ihe stomach, loss of appetite, Vitamin B-l deficiency and constipation. Accept no sub stitute. Retonga may be obtained at Pharmacy Drug Store, Sylva, N. C.?Adv. BETA Mrs. Cary R. Snyder find son.i "Sparky," have returned home after visiting Mrs. Snyder's par-1 en Is, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Brantley,: Jr., of Spring Hope. Mr. Brantley! accompanied them for a visit. Mr. James A. Reed is sick at his home at Beta. His friends wish for him a speedy recovery. Rev. and Mrs. Norfleet Gardner1 | and daughter, Alice, of Henderson, j were guests of Mr. find Mrs. George! C. Snyder Tuesday night of last! week. | Miss Bessie Snyder spent the week-end with her parents, Mr.1 and Mrs. G. C. Snyder and other; relatives, returning to Washing ton, D. C., Tuesday. En route she will stop in Asheboro to Visit her' sister, Mrs. L. B. ? Mauney, and family. \ Miss Lucille Dills is spending two weeks with her mother, Mrs. Lula Dills. She will then return to Chapel Hill whero she will re sume her studies at u.e University of North Carolina. Lyle Ensley spent Saturday, night with*his father. J. W. Ensley, returning Sunday morning to Little, River where he is in service. M .ss Pauline Freeman of Wash ington, D. C., was a week-end guest of relatives and friends in Sylva and Beta. USDA estimates the dome-tie. demand for eggs during the sec-' ond half of 1947 to remain strong if national income continues high.1 Prices for new crop wheat de clined from late May to .July 7,' then advanced. Prospects for a; small corn crop tended to strength i wheat. QUALLA NEWS j Mr. Jim Sitton and Miss Iris Sitton have returned from Rut ledge, Tenn., where they they vis-| ited Mr. Sitton's mother and other! relatives. I I Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Armstrong I and family of Baltimore, Md., havej been visiting Mrs. Frank Cordell and Mrs. Howard Reagan. Mr. Samuel E. Beck and Mrs. Kate Orr of Asheville spent Sat urday night with Mrs. Fred House. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Blanton! and family spent Sunday with Mr. I and Mrs. Estes Tolbert. Mr. and Mrs. Caro Jenkins and son, Hugh, spent the week-end visiting relatives in Hickory. Mr. and ^rs, Luther Hoyle spent Ihe week-end with relatives in Hayesville. Mrs. W. P. Freeman of Hickory has been visiting relatives here. Mrs. Joe Bradley and daughter, Betty, spent Sunday with Mrs. G. A. Kinsland. Read Herald Want Ads. Mr. And Mis. Allen Tail is Observe Wedding Anniversary Aug. 15 Mr. and Mrs. Allen Parris, Sylva Route 1, observed their Golden wedding anniversary on August 15th with a special dinner with only the members of their imme diate family present. The delici ous dinner and the gathering to gether ot the family made it a most enjoyable occasion. The wed ding anniversary cake was cut and served by the granddaughters, Paula Ann Parris, of Asheville, and Nancy and Landa Parris, of Sylva. Mr. and Mrs. Parris are the parents ot six children and grand parents of eight children. Their children are: Edward Parris and Mrs. Anne Russell, of Asheville; David, and Thumbs Parris and Mrs. Maggie Moore, of Sylva. The grandsons are Billy Russell, of Ashevillcf; Larry, Eddie, Allen, and Jackie ,all of Sylva. Hogs have been marketed at unusually heavy weights this year. The average for hogs slaughtered under Federal inspection in the first 5 months of the year was 255 pounds compared with 252 pounds in the same period of 1946 and the 1943 of 254 pounds. Kidneys Must Work Well For You To Feel Well 24 hours every day. 7 days every week, never stopping, the kidneys filter waste matter from tne~~~blood. If more people were aware of how the kidneys must constantly remove sur plus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stay in the blood without Injnry to health, there woul4 be better understanding of why the whole system is upset when kidneys fail to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina tion sometimes warns that something Is wrong. You may suffer nagging back ache, headaches, dizzinem, rhcumatlc pains, getting up at nights, swelling. Why not try Doan's I'illnl You will be using a medicine rpcomm?'nd?d the country over. Uoan't stimulate the func tion of the kidneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood. They contain nothing harmful, (jet l)o*in'a today. L'so with confidence. At all drug stores. DOANS PILLS THANKS TO YOU See your SKYLINE JAMBOREE Wl rs DIAL nc0 1 Grocer WLOS ? DIAL 1380 ! /A :30 AM J ? EVERYDAY 11:15 AM Todny EVERYDAY 6:: /^ //*\\ A Xs\ //\ >X Av\/X\ )X 'X\ ? Xx /k\ Earlc - CHESTERFIELD MILL CO. ASHEVILLE NORTH CAROLINA First you get a top lubrication job ? lubrication that reaches every nook and cranny. But you get a truck inspection, too. We use International Approved methods and equipment, and Inter national precision-engineered parts. When we do a lubrication job we just can't help make at least a partial service inspection. That let's us ferret out little troubles and point out how you can get them fixed before they become big ones. So get your trucks lubricated here. Complete truck service, all the way from lubrication to regular programs for preventive maintenance. ALLISON MOTOR COMPANY ?:k\