Singing Meet At Card of Thanks Cashiers Church I The family of Benjamin Queen The Upper District singing con- , wishes to express its sincere ap vention will be held with the I precia'10n '<> fl iends- relatives, and neighbors fur the kind expres Cashiers Baptist church on Sun- i . _ , , ^ sions of love and sympathy shown day, October 19, at 2 o clock p.m. during the sickness and death o'. Everyone is invited to come. j Mr. Queen. You nse In't be rich to s ~ve meat fairly often (though nowa d r & it certainly helps i. you are!). You can stretch small *.? viunts surprisingly far by combining them with A&P's sen sibly-priced cereals and canned foods. Here's how: ENJOY A GOOD, LONG LOAF! To make a man-size meat loaf at a budget-wi?e price, combine 1*2 lbs. ground meat, 1 egg, *4 tsp. pepper,2 tsps. salt, 94 cup chopped celery, 2 tbsps. chopped onion, or SUN'NYFIELD WHEAT FLAKES (slightly crushed). Pack into greased 9"x5"x3" loaf fan and in moderate oven, 75CF., 1*4 hours. 6 to 8 servings. BAKED BEANS? BY ALL MEANS 4* When finances are low, give thanks for franks-and A&P's thrifty ANN PAGE BEANS... and put them together like this: To two lfi oz. cans of beans, add 2 or 3 sliced frankfurters, 1 tbsp. brown sugar, % tsp. grated onion and *4 cup tomato iuice or ketchup. Pour into baking dish or bean pot and bake in a moderate oven, 350'F., 25-20 minutes. 6 satisfying servings. cupchopped celery leaves and 1 can tomato soup. Mix well. Add 4 cups of A&P's crispy SUNNY FIELD CORN FLAKES STRETCH IT OUT WITH KRAUTI You won't hear a single beef about ground beef prepared this way: To U?., add tsp. salt; shape into bans and cook in 2 tbsps. fat until browned, turning occasional ly. Add 1 cup boiling water, 2 onions (cut in halves), 1 c.p cooked or canned tomatoes and 1 *2 can of A&P SAUERKRAUT. Simmer about 1 hour. Serves 4. LEFT-OVER "PUSH-OVER" Two cups of left-over meat will serve 4 to 6 people . .. right . . . ii it's stretched so: Mix together 1 finely chopped onion, tsp. salt. 1 tsp, horseradish, 1 tsp. mustard and tsp. pep per. Add to 2 cups mashed potatoes. Combi ne 1 egg (beaten), *2 cup WHITE HOUSE EVAPORATED MILK from the A&P (undiluted), 1 tbsn. melted margarine and 2 cups left-over or ready-cooked meat (chopped). Add to potato mixture and pile into greased 1*2 quart casserole. Bake in hot oven, 425?F., 25 minutes. INSULATE AND WEATHERSTRIP YOUR HOUSE BEFORE COLD WEATHER Call us for FREE ESTIMATE ON COST . . . We also install. ? ?S?tVA COAL AND LUMBER CO. Phone 71 Sylva, N. C. omtAij * A fine car made finer A Product of General Motors Too Good to be Overlooked I Naturally, when you select a motor car, you can't lopk at all the cars that are built. But >>you really should look at Pontiac ? because we believe it istoo good a car, and too great a value, to be overlook .u. You should lock at Pontiac because it is exactly the right car for so many people. It is big and fine and beautiful?and it rides and drives like a million dollars! It is dependable, too?built to last a long, long time with the minimum of attention. Yet it is amazingly economical. In fact, if you can afford any new car, you can afford a Pontiac. When a car offers so much to make you happy and satisfied?and requires no penalty what* ever in the way of cost?you surely don't want to overlook it. It's one car you ought to see. ? ? ? DUE TO OUR UNFILLED ORDERS ON HAND,'you may experience some delay in getting a new Pontiac. Place your order now to avoid jurther delay. In the meantime, let us keep your present car operating af Up efficiency. *? Tun* m HENRY J. TAYLOR on fW air hhc? wmkhj, HOOPER MOTOR COMPANY Main Street Sylva, N. C. FIRE PREVENTION PROGRAM AT SCHOOL Th is picture shows a portion of the one thousand or more students of Sylva high and elementary schools as they listened to talks by members of the Sylva Fire Department and faculty of the school during the observance of Fire Preven tion Week last Thursday morning. ? Photo by Donnahoe FLORIDIANS CHOOSE JACKSON COONTY AS THEIR FUTURE HOME 1 Two Floridians, Mr. Wallace and Mrs. Doroth.e Kutella, have chos ?jn this vicinity as a future home and business site. Mr. and Mrs. Kutella lived nine years in Miami, and claim to have suffered more each succeeding -ummer with the heat. This year ? in May, the U. S. Army closed its MIAD base at miami, and released 'Mr. Kutella. They then decided tc try living in a cooler1 climate. They loved our countryside, and it is a conincidence that Mrs. Kut ella, artist and designer, chose to buy the home of another artist, Mrs. Samantha Bumgarner, whose picture is in a recent issue of Holiday Magazine. Mrs. Kutella designed Custom made clothes both at the Mercan tile Center and on Lincoln Road. Miama has an off-season and dur .ng those periods she was a worker lor the Craft Shop and also a jew elry enameler. Still she found the time to paint in oils on canvas and obtained the following merits, re-' cently: "Seminole Family," a pastel, won Silver Star International Exhibit, Miami Woman's Club. "The Reverse - Side of Lincolp 1 Road," oil, won Gold Star, Annual Exhibit, Miami Woman's Club. "Seventeenth Ave. Waterway," oil. won Honorable mention at Darrington, Wash. News By G. W. CLAYTON Well, Folks, I surely am late this time, but have no excuse to offer except that I have been waiting to get lots of news. We have had one of the best summers yet. We had good crops, good gar4 dens, and best of all, good luck. There hasn't been a man badly hurt on the job and they are log ging on the roughest ground they have ever worked on. The com pany is paying good money and the men are doing good work. We think we have the best superin tendent that has ever been here and we like him. Among our good friends from there who are working here are Fate Shuler, Ed Fox, Charley Brown, Bural Ashe and many others. I will tell you something atout our singing conventions. We have one every six months. The last one was on Sunday, October 5 at Ly man. The regular choir and a quartet and trio from the Baptist church did some fine singing. Fate Shuler's quartet with Ed Fox and his wife and Alvin Clayton and Terry School of Art. Previous to their life in Miami, I Mr. and Mrs. Kutella lived in Mil- I waukee, Wisconsin. There ^Irs.| Kutella \von^a?,ZK,year Scolarship ] at the 'Layton School of Art, as J well as the following honors: The 1st Prize in water-colors! as the Wisconsin State Memorial Exhibit. Honorable Mention in land scape, oil, at the Milwaukee Art _ .> Institute. Mrs. Kutella has attended Pen land School of Handicrafts, and also won a summer term scholar ship at Viissar College Craft Shop. She served many terms as Pub licity director of both the Mil waukee Society for the Hard of Hearing and for the Miami So ciety. She was President of the Miami Society for three and one half years, and largely respon sible for their now being a mem ber of the Dade County Commi^ni ty Chest with an annual allotment of over $8,000. She is a Life Mem ber of the American Hearing So- | ciety of Vassar College Alumnae Association. M rs. Kutella plans to design samples of handwork, making I them or drawing them herself, and ! then to allot this work of repro ducing them (never more than 12 of the same) to local residents to i be sold thru her shop. Altho' this Shop is just in (-nbyro form, she I invites anyone interested to pay.^ her a visit at the office building , of the late Dr. C. Z. Candler where Mrs. Kutella plans to open her shop in a week or ten days. RITZ ICE CREAM SHOP ? IN RITZ BUILDING ? POPULAR FLAVORS Made Fresh Daily ? Owned and Operated ? BY? 0. H. MASSIE son "also were present and joined in the singing. Albert Blanton and his folks did some fine singing, too. We meet somewhere every fif th Sunday and have an all day singing. We old folks are glad tc see so many good singers come in. They are a help to our church an*i Sur'lay school. Mr. Breedloye has surely done some good work here. We like him and Mrs. Breedlove so much I feel you will like to hear aboul Fate Shuler's garden. Though his wife and children got here late they planned a garden anyway. And, though I have be(en here e long time, I don't think I have ever seen as many beans, corn, tomatoes, squash, and other thing, grown on as little land. Some of the tarheels we saw last Sunday from around Ochre Hill were Laurel Nicholson anc* his wife and his sons and their wives; Albert Blanton and fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. Mat Snyder, Wilson Ensley, and John Blanton. State 1948 wheat goals totaling 75,095,000 acres and rye goals at 2. 458,000 acres were announced to dc\v by rrjiaflTMiwt oX Agri culture Card Of Thanks We wish to express our sincere appreciation to our friends and relatives for the many kindnesses extended to us during the sick ness and death of our little loved one, and for the many lovely flowers. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Bumgarner Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bumgarner Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Potts GLENN FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE 8ERVICE Phone 65 . . 8ylva, N. C. 8:28tf HERALD WANT ADS BUSY MAN'S PAUSE FOR COKE LEADS TO WORKING REFRESHED BOTTIED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., ASHEVILLE, N. C. ? 1947, The Coco-Colo Company BIGGEST SAVING OF All is the work and time tht Bendix automatic Washer saves you. All you do it pot in the clothes, set the dial, add soap. ?. and RELAX! All by itself the Bendix washes, triple rinses and daap-drys the clothes.;; then cleans itself and shuts off automatb cally. 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