fofr TKAPI
'fok tie suits.
S*<t L0*N
CONCRETE BLOCKS tor build
ing nomei, stores, Larns, ga-1
rages or foundations. So*d at plant |
or delivered. Call or write W. A. |
Hayt, below bridge in Franklin.
Pnone 903, Highland!., N. C.
6-2 ltf
For Your Hospitalization Insurance
see Mrs. John R. Jones, second
floor Stovall Buildirig. Office
phone 309-J, house phone 256-J-3.,
25 26 27 29 |
FOR SALE ? STRUCTVRAL
STEEL?ANGLES BEAMS CHAN
NELS. REINFORCING BARS-'
FLATES, PLATES. We also carry j
in stock a complete line of other!
structural shapes. We will fabrl-j
cate steel to your specifications.
Glazer Steel Corporation
2100 Ailor Avenue
Knoxville, Tennessee
Tel. 4-8601. 24 25 26 27
WANTED ? SCRAP IRON ?I
Automobile body tin all types
sheet iron - Metals.
Glazer Steel Corporation
2100 Ailor Avenue
Knoxville, Tennessee
Tel. 4-8601. 24, 25, 26, 27
FOR RENT ? Rooms and apart
ment with steam heat and hot
water. Apply Sylva Hotel, Sylva,
N. C: 24-31*
FOR SALE^ ? Good ary, hard
wood?12" x 14" poles. $6,00
per load any size truck. See Haynes
V. Reagan, Cox farm, Cullowjiee,
FOR RENT ? Cottage for two
people only. Rent $40.00 per
month. On Highway No. 23 Dills
boro, N. C. If interested, see Walt
N. C.
24-29*
Ashe.
25 26
FOR RENT?A 5-room house, on
Speedwell road, approximately
1 mile from the college. If inter- j
ested see or write Mrs. Burke Fer-'
guson, Cullowhee, N.
25 26*
FOR SALE?1 six-room house and
two large lots at the edge of city
limits on highway No. 19. In
quire at Sim's Grocery Store.
25 26*
FOR SALE?5 acres_oi bottom land
joining the Charlie Dillard farm
on highway No. 19. Inquire Sim's
Grocery store. * 25 26*
FOR SALE ? 1 Mare mule 3*2
years age, broken. 2 Mare mules
2*2 years, unbroken. See or write
Guy Fullbright, Lake Junaluska,
? N. C. , 26-27*
FOR SALE ? 5 room house with
modern conveniences, cement floor
basement, barn, chicken house,
and other out-buildings. 3 acres
land. See Mrs. Bertha Dyre, Sylva,
. Ht. 1, dose to Sylva Air-port. 26*
FOR SALE ? Household cleaning
aids. Call THE FULLER BRUSH
MAN. M. C. Cunningham,. Sylva,
N. C.
'i 1
WANTED ? Fresh Country Eggs
and country hams. Park Lunch
Room, Sylva, N. C. No. 50 11
GLENN
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Phone ?5 ? Sylva, N. C
8:28tf
TOR MONUMENTS See Sylva
Memorial aervici next to Ritz.
4 he a ire on Main Street, Sylva,
M. C. Mar 20 11
NOTICE
To Automobile & Truck
Owners
CAROLINA MOTOR CLUB
AGENCY
1949 License Go On Sale
December 1, 1948
ALL KINDS OF AUTOMOBILE
AND TRUCK IN8URANCE
Automobiles and Trucks Financed
on easy G. M. A. C. Terms
Waiting To Serve You:
C. B. Thompso.n - Notary Public
Mrs. Katie Nicholson - Notary Public
Miss Lucille Wilson - Notary Public
Allison Auto Parts Co.'
Main 8treet
Sylva, N. C. Tel. 41
ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as administra-.
trix of the estate of John H. Wil-.
son, late of Jackson County, North
Carolina, this is to notify all per
sons having claims against said
estate to present therin t<? the un
dersigned at Sylva, North Caro
lina, on or before the 25th day of
Oct., 1949, or this notice will be
pleaded in bar of recovery there
on. All persons indebted to said
estate will please made immediate
settlement.
This the 25th day of October, 1948.
Mrs. Madge B. Wilson, Ad
ministratrix or the Estate of
John H. Wilson,' deceased,
of Jackson Couaty, North
Carolina. 10:28?12:2
NOTICE
RE-SALE OP LAND UNDER
DEED OF TRUST
North Carolina,
Jackson County.
WHEREAS, the undersigned, act-'
ing as Trustee, in a certain deed
of. trust, executed by Lee Hooper
and recorded in Jackson County,
in Book 169, Page 133, in the Of
fice of the Register of Deeds of
Jackson County, foreclosed and of
fered for sale the lands hereinafter
described; and whereas, within the
time allowed by law an advanced
bid was filed with the Clerk of
the Superior Court and an order
issued, directing the Trustee to re
sell said land, with an. opening
bid of $1441.25:
NOW, THEREFORE, under and
by virtue of said order of the Clerk*
of the Superior Court of Jacksonj
County and the power of sale con
tained in said deed of trust, the1
undersigned Trustee will offer for
sale upon said opening bid, at pub
lic auct on, to the highest bidder,
for ca3h, at the Court House door
in Sylva, North Carolina, at 12:00
o'clock, noon, Thursday, Decem
ber 23, 1948, the following describ
ed property, located in Jackson
County, North Carolina.
First Tract: BEING and compre
hending the same lands and pre
mises described in, and conveyed
by, a deed dated 9 February, 1905,
from Henry M. McAden et ux et al
to Lee Hooper for 351.41 acr. s,
more or less, recorded in Jackson
County, in Book 38, page 175, to
which said deed and record rei
erence is had; and the description
therein by metes and bounds i$
by this reference made the descrip
tion in thfs d.ed of trust; also, be
ing a part of the lands embraced
in State of North Carolina Grant
No. 391, issued to P. L. Davis 28
August, 1857, for 1000 acres, rec
orded in Jackson County, in Book
No. 2, page 172, xo which reference
is had; this tract being known as
a part of the Lee Hooper Cedar
Cliff lands.
Second Tract: BEING and com
prehending the same lands and
premises described in, and con
NOW IS THE TIME...
?
To have?your car painted
FOR WINTER USE
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL OFFER
\
Have the dents and broken places fixed in the
body and fenders
MAKE YOUR OLD CAR LIKE NEW
We specialize in rebuilding wrecks.
Ammons
Auto Body Shop
Mill St Sylva, N. C.
MEN!
EXCITING JOBS!
Draftsmen, photographers, car
penters, stenographers, radio tech
nicians, medical technicians, radar
mechanics, weather fqrecfesters,
mechanics, w ather mechanics,
some of the many jobs for which
qualified men can be tra.ned in
the biggest business in the world?
the business of Uncle Sam. Plus
steady employment, security for
/our future. Good pay is ? only
the beginning. Food, clothing,
shces, shelter are furnished free.
And one of the most desirable ben
efits is a retirement plan that costs
you nothing. Yes, you can retire
at half pay in 20 years, regardless
of age. You will receive a gen
erous monthly income that means
real security after that length of
service! Get full facts and figures
today at postottice,' Sylva, Nr C.
Talk to qualified representatives
of the new U. S. Army and U. S.
Air Force today. Get the whole
story in person. It means much
to you personally!
NOTICE Op FORECLOSURE
North^Carolina,
Jackson County.
' Under and by virtue of the pow
er of sale contained in a certain
Deed in Trust duly executed by
Robert Ball and wife, Thelma Ball,
to C. C. Buchanan, trustee, in fav
or of George Wilkes and wife,
Dolly Wilkes, dated July 29th,
1948, and duly recorded in Book
174 at page 158 et seq. ih the
Register's Office for the County
and State aforesaid, and default
I having made in the payment of
the notes thereby secured, and the
i holders of said notes having re
quested that said Deed in Trust
be foreclosed;"
Now, therefore, the undersign
ed C. C. Buchanan, trustee, will
offer for sale and sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash at the Court House door in
the Town of Sylva, Jackson Coun
ty, North Carolina, at twelve o'
clock (noon) on December 16th,
1948, a certain lot or tract of land,
situate, lying and being in Rhodes
Cove in Sylva Township, in the
County and State aforesaid, ad
joining the lands of Fred L. Cope
and others, and more particu
i larly bounded and described as
follows:
I BEGINNING at an iron stake,
| common corner of Hum Asho and
Fred Cope, and running thence
North 58 West 121 feet to a stake
on the Southeasterly margin of a
street: thence in a South rly direc.
' t on w.ith said street 158 feet to its
intersection with another street;
thence in an Easterly direction
with the said street just named
and referred to, 121 feet to Fret!
L. Cop 's corner; thence in a
Northerly direction with the line
of the said Fred L. Cope, 159 feet
to the BEGINNING, containing
one-third acres, mAre or less, and
the same being a part of the lands
heretofore conveyed by Ellen E.
Ashe et al ,to George Wilkes and
wife, Dolly Wilkes as is shown by
deed duly recorded in Book 165 at
page 78 et seq. in the" Register's
Office for the County" a:id State
aforesaid;to which" reference is
hereby made for a more complete |
description of . same.
This the 15th day of November, I
1948. I
C. C. BUCHANAN, Trustee. ' |
Nov 18, 24 Dec 2 9 i
veyed by, a deed dated 9 February,
1905, from Henry M. McAden et
ux et al to Lee Hooper for 41.5
acres, more or less, recorded in
Jackson Co., in Book No. 38, page
181, to which said derd and record
reference is had; and the descrip
tion therein by metes and bounds
is by this reference made the des
cription in this deed of trust. BE
ING a part of State Grant No. 645
for 500 acres, issued on 11 June,
I860-, to William H. Bryson, rec
orded in Jackson County, in Book
No. 3, page 217, to which reference
is had, and this grant lands are
inside Grant No. 391. This tract is
also a part of the Cedar Cliff lands.
Third Tract: BEING the same
Ir.nds described in, and conveyed
by, a deed dated 4 October, 1905,
from Willam Shelton and wife,
Lillic B. Shelton, and others to
Le<^ Hooper for 230 acres, more or
less, recorded in Jackson County,
in Book No. 37, page 318, to which
reference is had; and the descrip
tion therein by metes and bounds
is by this reference, made the
description in this deed of trust.
This 230 acres are within Grants
Nos. 1172 and 1232, issurd respec
tively on 11 July, 1879, and 5
April, 1882, recorded in Jackson
County, in Books Noc. 7, page 574,;
and 8, page 258, to both of which ?
reference is had. Also, this tract i
of 230 acres constitutes a part of i
the Lpe Hooper Cedar Cliff lands.
EXCEPTING from the above1
lands, a tract containing 145 acres,;
more or less, heretofore conveyed!
by Lee Hooper to C. B. Webster, I
which tract is fully des-?
cribed in said deed' recorded in
Book 168, at Page 369, in the Office
of the Register of Deeds for Jack
son County, North Carolina, to
which said deed and record ref
erence is hereby had for ft full
and complete description of said
exception. .
This the 22nd day of November,
1948.
E. P. STILLWELL, Trustee.
Nov 25 Dec 2 9 16
NOTICE OF SALE
1 North Carolina,
Jackson County.
i Under and by virtue, o" th
'judgment which is duly recorded
in Bcok 3 at page 268 of T:>x
Judgments in the Office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court for
Jackson County, North Carolina,
in an action entitled "County of
Jackson vs. T. H. Queen heirs";
j I, C. C. Buchanan, Commission- !
er, will on the 23rd day of De-'
' cember, 1943, at 12:00 o'clock
' (rjoon) at th, Court House d >or
in the Town of Sylva, N. C. nffrr
j for sale and sell to the highest
bidder for cash at pubic auction
the following described tract or
parcel of land:
| Lying and being in Caney Fork
j Township, in the County and State
: aforesaid, and t^'Same being
? fully describ- d in a deed of trust
1 from T. H. Queen to Joseph J.
Hooker, trustee for the Tuckasei
gee Bank, as is recorded in Book
81 at page 104 et seq (this deed
in trust having .heretofore been
duly satisfi d) in the Register of
Deeds Office for the County and
i State aforesaid; also that land
l fully described in a deed from
Martha C. Hammett to T. H.
Queen, dated Sept. 21, 1893, and
duly recorded in Book 19 at page
494 et seq. in the Office of the
Register of Deeds for Jackson
County, North Carolina, to which
said Books and pages reference
is hereby made for a more com
plete description of said lands.
This land is being sold to satis
fy the unpaid taxes-against same.
This November 22, 1948.
C. C. BUCHANAN,
Commissioner.
Nov 25, Dec 2 9 16?CCB
FOOD PATTERNS
FOR THE FUTURE
?Continued from last week
Food Needs Cin Be Met
There is the possibility that tem
porary food shortages may develop
in the future because of droughts
! or lack of imports or because we
are called upon to supply food for
foreign populations. In such a
situation, it would be possible to
support more people with ade
quate diets by moderate changes
in the national pattern of food
production and consumption. This
shitt would be in the oppos te di
rection from that just discussed.
The production-consumption pat
tern would need to include more
of the crop products that give
relatively large output of food nu
trients per unit of resources.
Could Support .More People
The average reqirred to produce
? the products consumed per person
| has declined in the last 30 yei rs
I because of increases in crop and
j livestock-produgt yields. In recent
i years, about 2,7 acres of cropland
< have been used to produce the
average diet. Th s includes 0.8 of
an acre as an allowance for the
feed obtained from pasture. On
this basis, about 430 million acres
of croplarid- equivalent have been
used for food production in recent
y^ars.
With 1941-45 average yields, this
acreage would supply about 160
million people with a diet such as
we had during the war. Of course,
we imported some products during
the war but exports were much
larger and our population was
! only 140 million. ' . /
About 40 percent of the food
energy in our wartime diets was
from livestock products. However,
over 200 million people could have
been supported from .the same land
resources, if we had consumed a
diet similar to that described as
adequate low-cost in the recent
food plans of the Bureau of Human
Nutrition and Home Economics. In
this diet, only 30 percent of the j
energy is from livestock products:.
On the other hand, only 135 mir-j
lion could have been supplied with j
a diet plan described as liberal in I
which 44 percent of the energy j
is from livestock products.
Of coursc, very marked shifts in
consumption to crop foods in place
of livestock would involve changes
in food habits that most people
would not like to make. They
would not be necessary so long as j
productivity of land resources con- j
tinue to increase as rapidly as pop- !
ulation. i
Food producers have a very large
stake in what happens to demand
for food products. A decline in
foreign demand for food products
to prewar levels would mean some
reduction in total demand. But
if industrial employment and in
comes remain at about 1947 levels,
the lfifrger food supply probably
can be marketed at prices not much
lower than they were in that year.
On the other hand, if employment
and incomes generally decline and
demand returns to the levels of
just befofe the war, a food supply j
per person at current tates could !
not be sold except at much lower
RED-DRILLED POLICEME
CH
in
1
CONFIRMING IM1 WESTERN POWERS' charge that large number! of policemen are being given "military drill
ing" in the Red zone of Berlin is this photo taken by a hidden American cameraman The police are shown
ending their drill with a march to the auditorium (background) where they were lectured on the "blessing*
of the Russian occupation." Soviet authorities have continuously denied there was any drilling. (tnterna&Um*I>
prices.
Techniological advance has raised
output per acre and per worker
and will help food producers main
tain good incomes even if the
prices they receive are lower. Con
tinued improvement in farming
m thods make possible lower costs
per unit especially if costs of items
in production also decline. In this
connection, the gradual reduction
in number of workers employed in
agriculture which was speeded up
during the war is significant. It
means that net farm income must
be divided among fewer people.
More Efficiency Needed
More ?fficicent methods of pro
ducing and distributing food shoulc
be pushed forward as rapidly as
possible. They will help make
profitable a larger volume of pro
duction and will offset the effects j
of lower prices. And they will ?
make possible a larger volume o.'i
consumption even though expen-j
ditures for food by consumers
should remain unchanged.
* I
A shift to more livestock products!
could. help solve the problem of
maintaining the natural fertility of
soils. II most of the expansion is in
roughage-consuming livestock, it
would be possible to increase the
acreage in grass and legume crops.
The acreage of intertilled crops
which cause more erosion could be
reduced. Adjustments in land use
to conserve land resources would
help to make possible a high level
Odd Fact
While engineers of a New York
state power and light corporation
wore pondering the feasibility of
eonetrueting a dam at a certain
Kint on a river near Glens Falls,
evert completed a 250-foot dam
?iz feet high ecrose the river, flood
ing about 16 aeree ana convincing
the engineers that the project was
practice!.
Approximately 385 persons at
tended an Achievement Day pro
gram held recently by Negro 4-H
Club members and home demon
stration women irt Franklin Coun
ty.
of production on a sustained basis.
Farmers as well as others would
benefit.
Pre-Holiday
Dress and Coat Sale
Special Purchase Sale
Hundreds of High Grade Coats and Dresses especially priced for the
budget shoppers. Some. ... * .
OFF NATIONALLY
O ADVERTISED PRICES
One group of famous Dresses with names like . . .
Nan Scott ? June Bently ? Jane Evans ? May
flower ? Joan Millers ? Amerisport ?Sacson ?
Betty Hartfords ? Doris Dodson.
Values 10.95 to 19.75 0*1 sale for 10 days only
$5.00
Sizes 9 to 15?10 to 20 ?38 to 44 ?14 1-2 to 24 1-2
One large group of all wool Coats just received?
Made by some of America's best known manufac
turers sold to us at reduced "prices and we pass on
the savings to our customers.
Especially priced Values frpm
$39.50
$22.50
SCHUUH/UrS DEFT. STORE
SYLVA, N. C.
PHONE 151