w I-help ouk 1 RommwTO |^GROjV| VOL. XXIV?NO. 48 4001 "Big League" 1 fcr *' x- 3^ J|:;iOg^|a 3f. .. ^B^^R^H^?*?*'*?*'- vi*'*tvivW'NJWI^Kvi'Jr' :->i-X''.':^iij^B I ||ii?K^^I '' This It a new photo of North ( left, and Clyde R. Hoey, who have In the U. S. Senate. On 14 major i: year together, Hoey and Graham aplit only four timet Thlt record about average for the two aenatori Graham at a "great American" in a appointment. WHITTIER PTA PUNS SPRING i knuv vi iimw CARNIVAL EVENT Plans have been completed toy the Whittier Parent - Teacher Association for the annual Spring Carnival. The Carnival tee, headed toy Mrs. Kate Arkansas, of Cherokee, has met twice to discuss plans and report eluded to assure all comers of an evening of fun and entertainment. As in two previous years there will be such concessions as 4the + . Country Store, Wishing pond, Grab '"Bag stand and refreshment stand, selling bet dogs, drinks, ice :cream a ? ai t 11 ana cauau^. -i^w ieuturet win include a -House of Horrors, Bakery sh?p, where -delicious homebaked cakes and pies will be of-! fered tar isale, .a doll -show, a hat sale mid mi ?tlthely new^siSe show, of live animals and tropical birds., Competition ffor the ucrown of May King, vQibkh, Prince and Princ$3s is ahesady keen Runnerup in last years conte6tiare working Jnamd to 'win the mudi sought after vtiitVes >ths .year. A. special booth for voting will .be copen all evening until the .content closes for the coronation .of the winners! and the entertaining program that follows. The Whittier PTA .and the school fiwnite all -who :are booking for an leaning tS fun and ienter* tainment to plan now to .spend "Carnival flight" #t the Whittier school. There will be mo door .charge and the program to be held in the' auditoriuoD * also fj?e to all. | \ Farm Agent Ac rwn o rwi ~M lo spray loom The tobacco crop that Jackson i County glowers twrfitl plac? on the 1 market this fall will be no better 1 than the plants they set in the field this spring. The unseason- e Able cool temperature* and frosty i have already done considerable c damage to our plant beds. Plant t bed diseases also do most damage f to plants during cool, damp weath- J er. The diseases can be prevented s at little cost. 1 Burley and Turkish tobacco c plants are subject to two serious diseases, wildfire and blue mold t The wildfire disease gets its name o from the speed with which it 1< spreads through the plant bed. d The early stages of the disease q appear as small yellow spots on tl the leaves. Later these spots turn, tl brown and are surrounded by a d larger yellow circle. The disease s] starts in the plant bed and usually d spreads in the field after transplanting. Wildfire can be pre/ IThi abWom I earn In Senate mHBSX* : :::':':::':':^^^:?fe>5:'.j?:''v :a?>: x-:::v.' ; Carolina's Senators, Frank Graham, been termed "a Big League team" ssues facing the Senate during their have voted together 10 times and of better than 71 per cent unity is i of any Stats Hoey characterized i Senate speech following Graham's Mrs. Melton Grows Dahlias Successfully In Spare Time Mrs. Mitchell Melton of Cans- . 1a township, Jackson county, is j highly successful in conducting a ; dahlia enterprise on the Melton , farm. Mrs. Melton in addition to her beautiful and profitable en- , terprtee also keeps house and takes care lantfog. In heavily diseased bl ireas farmers have found it neces- C< ary to go up to 200 miles from r lome to find plants to set their d< rop. tc Blue mold gets its name from A he pale blue growth produced m n the underside of diseased eaves. Later the leaves curl se lownward. The entire plant is *r uickly infected and dies. Often ?n be entire plant bed is dead before he grower has realized that the he isease is present The mold nc preads most rapidly during cool, vV< amp weather c Blue mold can be prevented, (Continued on page 4) S> : Sy] Sylv ten Hen JENKINS DIES IN MISHAP AT) SWAIN SAWMILL BBV^ON CITY ? George Jen- i I 01 ... i.: 11 ? J n i K4iia, <6i, w as nixieu iuau*iiu,y a - ,out 11:30 a.m. Tuesday in an ac -ident at Jenkins and Crispe saw- ' nill at Deep Creek where he was 1 vorking. . Witnesses to the accident reported that Jenkins was employed as a ratchet setter at the mill and i vas helping fellow workmen take i large slab from the carriage. As he stood between the end of j! he carriage and the large circle 1 saw, it was reported, the log shift- ' ed against the control lever and started the carriage toward the saw again. Jenkins was pushed into the saw by the carriage, severing an arm and a leg, witnesses said. He is survived by his wife; one son, George, Jr.; the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Jenkins of the Laurel Branch community. Also 1 five brothers, Wase and Dillard of i Del Rio, Tenn., Clarence, Leroy < and Gene of Bryson City; two i sisters, Mrs. Ruby James of New- s port, Tenn., and Miss Gladys Jen- ? kins of the home. 1 Funeral services will be held ' at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Buckner * Branch Church. The Rev, Riley ( Ball will officiate and burial will be in the Jackson Line Cemetery. Moody Funeral Home was in ( charge. . Registration For May Primary Will i Start ?n Saturday i Bookstfor registration of quali-? tied voters for the May 27 pri- 1 mary will open Saturday momLng, May 29 at 9 o'clock, in each J Df the county^ waiting precincts, 1 according to an ^announcement by 1 Jackson County Election Board 1 Chairman J. C. IPassmore. After J Saturday the bw>ks will be open an May 6 and 13 for registering. J t %> Saturday, May 220, a week before *, 5 J :he primary, wiE be challenge dayj > n all precincts \{ i Many Impro Now Taking Main Street The people ctff ttSie town are an-* >perati?g liice^y ian the cleaa-uip j Irive TthHB ^wfigk, and the city rucks isawe been Jk ept busy hanfi- ^ ng away fire :ritt>bish. The firo- 1 nen bjarnad off tfhe dead vines md other flnaSh ron the river ban&E a nd around dfae ^Sylva Supply bars] s, luring their fire practice Monday? jj vening, tfai? 'eliminating a fireifC lazard and ittiiSighUy condition all j, he same time* jjc Many off the business places onSj^ lain Strert lave already, or are' ? a the process caf remodeling and g laking other iiwflptrpvemet&s. Velt's afe has just completed its annual aj iterior redecorating and jjn ad- ^ ition has installed new tables and n hairs, placed near tops on food (' Dunters and rearoeaged mudSi of r ie equipment mad booths. A fj rw front has beea put in tfie kCuire building in readiness fpr t i* opening of Elsie1* Dress Shop j a JMay 4th. Harry Ferguson is in. q ip process of rpmod^Hac thp in-\ . rior of the first floor of his . . jilding on the corner next to ^ entral Shell Station. Scbulman ^ 'cently installed solid glass front >ors to his store. Lawrence Monrth has put a new floor in the 8c P stort and this store has re- ^ odeled and installed new equip- Ir ent, converting the store into a If service store. Minor repairs Cf id improvements have been made 90 t many other buildings. be Much is yet to be done and it is 77 ?ped that unfinished work will ja >t stop with the end of clean-up eek. Why not every week, Lu lean-up week"? lei CLVA CITY MARKET .. In AAP en % / LVA ] a, N. C. Thursday, April 2 i For D Eighth Grade Students Go To Raleigh The eighth gracfe students ol the Jackson County schools left today on an educational and pleasLire trip to Raleigh and other nearby educational points. The students and faculty members, Mss Lucille Hunt, county superi'icnr IWrc Dnnlino PftU/an V lOUi , 1*1 AO* A UUllItV v/v/ If VA?? Glenville, Mr. John Crawford ol Sylva, and Mr. Murphy of Cullowhee, accompanying them, wil] set up headquarters at the dormitories of the University at Chape] Hill. The trip will include a visit to Duke Chapel, the Planitarium supper at Duke cafeteria, a visit to the Governor's Mansion, Hall of History, the museum, and a number of other points of interest FREEZlHJNERAL RITES HELD IN KANNAPOLIS Funeral services for Albert Freeze, who died Saturday morning in a Franklin hospital, were conducted at 11 o'clock Monday morning from the home of his sister, Mrs. W. F. Taylor, in Kanlapolis, by the pastor of the Kanlapolis Lutheran church, of which Mr. Freeze was a member, assisted by the pastor of the Lutheran :hurch in Lexington. Interment was in Lexington. Mr. Freeze, an overseas veteran if the First World War, was a member of William E. Dillard Post, American Legion, at Sylva, and 9l the and 8 at Cherokee. He Jvas 56 years of agk and had .been in pow health ft* about a year; but death came unexpectedly. H* is survivrd by his widow, the dormer Miffs Viola Racket, of Leidngton, two sisters, Mrs. W. F. Taylor an* Mrs. F. U. Jfcatfers, 3trtri of Kaenapolis, and a large number of nieces, nephews and !>fher relat*/es in Cabarrus. GuilBard and fflenderson comttaes. Mr. and Mrs. Freeze had lived i?t Cherokee for the past twelve .ears, having moved thnre frdrr rligh Point; but had been in SyK /a since last fall, and v?gnectedtrj emain Stiere. vements Place On Buildings funeral Services For Wxk. Callie Long rhis Morning Mrs. Callie Chastirit T-ong, SB5, nfci life-long readmit1 of 3?idkon fcounty, passed away at -ttie omt of a son, MitcheFl Long, Isn !adh?rs at 4:30 Wednesfeiy mora? r?g. !*Mrs. Long wist a native rrfl lowaitts, but had made :fcer home ?ith ;iwr son for ?be ipast four, ears. -She had been ^seriously, B ;abcift .six weeks. Funei& services wHl tiae held l law 3fa*?s Creek Baptist sflpurch,: r wflouCh idbe was a member for a i umber e the change in make of car will be understood by all those having tickets for same. All funds t derived from the disposition of , 4he car will be used to benefit thei > hospital. See next week's Herald for : further announcement. ' i Hospital Auxiliary. There's hardly a county in the 1 State of North Carolina but where there's one or more 4-H young sters preparing beef animals to ' enter a fat stock show. SinkTells T< Of Indian D And Need F * i A large number of tite mein^ ; bers of the Jackson County Tour] rtlt Association, meeting in regular wssion at the Legion 3lome Monifcay-night, heard E. Car 1 Sink, publicity director for ?Uie Cherokee Indian Drama of JC\ierokee, talk I , . . j on the progress ofttihe information I an^le^ if the summer event to be staged^ in '4>ie amphitheater, beginning July 1st this year. Mr. Sink told -of p&kns for extending the tourist drawing angle of the theater frtnm ..'lust a two months affair to iKvr fmonths, beginning! in May and ciu&ing in October. He stated tttot ithis is being consaderoH tvirjficm .fhffc c?vtinn ic aWavt filled vvt^ttmirist during July and August iregirrdless of the drama. Mr. Sink tnxplalned to the Association Chat tie Cherokee Historical Asocial ism, which is in charge of the Ukraine,, is in need of SUfffflOO with wAich its put the prod actiori into ptay un *fuly 1st. After JJ.uly 1st Mr. Sm? is confident the Drama will be self-supporting. In j order to .raw the $10,080 irt/j. needed The .Association is seek,.;g s25, $50 and $100 mem her-: ships in the ID Western counties, I of Western Kurth Carolina. Mtm-I A bers of the Jactann County Tourist' Association expressed themselves as whole-bear tally fcehind the plan and will wirrt Mr. Sink in ?he work in Jacfeaon County. Matron County his already started lykans for a memfofflship drive. jMr. Sink complimented the Association on its jsncwrth and usefittoess. D. Lee Hooper* president of the Association, presided Reports from the various committee? were heard. The advertising committee reported that 10.000 new tourist accommodation 'olders have been printed and re(Continued on page 4) Pre-School Clinic April 28 1 Mrs. Charles McMahan, chair- 1 man of the Pre-school committee ( of the Sylva Parent-Teacher As- 1 sociation, ha? announced that Fri- ' day, April 28, is the date for the Sylva Pre-school clinic. All chil- 1 dren who will be 6 years old by c October 2 and will attend Sylva [ school next fall are invited to be 1 present on April 28. Entertain- * ment for the children attending s is being planned. A number of * the mothers of the P.T.A. will be asked to assist at the clinic. % I ?08ftAM0N'8 in Sylva e \LD 8 ieeting >nstration Cli unties In All CHANGES MADE IN HIGHWAY SET-UP Changes made last week in State Highway set-up effecting ( Western North Carolina was (Tie s transfer of Zeb V. Stewart, 10th < division engineer at Asheville, to c division eight at North Wilkes- ( boro, replacing John C. Walker, j who resigned to become engineer \ for the city of Asheville. W. M.' ] Corkill, assistant ?engineer in the j l()th division, replaces Stewart. He will be succeeded by J. T. Knight, ^ Second district engineer in the ( 10th. division. Knight, a native of ; Sylva, has a period of service with j the Commission dating back t( ; 1921. j Stewart reassumes his old job ' n the 8th, which he held prior * to July 1, 1949, when general v shifts were made throughout the 1 state in top-level engineering personnel He is a native of Andrews 1 and has worked for the commis- 1 sion since 1921. i Corkill, a native of Chester, S ^ C., and an N. C. State College graduate, has been with the Commission since 1923. J Z!~ i jurist Group j rama Plans : or Funds MRS. M. B. MADISON: WILL READ CANCER FUND CAMPAIGN Continued progress in cancer ' vontrol is dependent on success of 1 rbf the counties in the District. A Vw/%n rt iUenA iifil 1 Kn rc IITn It ftp iniuug win ut mi o. mvvi ^owarts of Haywood county and Mrs. Paul A. Held of Cullowhee. A number of Sylva boy scouts wiii^le sh 'ior^ft^r/.llhe streets U> direct the visitort" to 4he church and also at the church to help with parking cars. 4-H Club pages will assist during the day, A luncheon will be prepared and served from 12 to 1:30 p.m. by the members of the local American Legion Auxiliary. This will be served in the Legion Home hall a few hundred feet from the church. Counties included in the Western district are Macon, Swaih*. Haywood and Jackson. tions: (1) the building of a nation-wide machine for cancer control; (2) the greatest" peacetime research effort in history; (3) the beginning "of aerogram to alert people to cancer while it is still curable. "Besides the American Cancer Society unit here," said Mrs. Madison, "the Society has active local units in more than 2,000 other counties throughout the country. To be most effecttive we must try to reach all the people." "Twenty-five per cent of the money raised by public subscript Lion has been spent for research nationally. Another 15 per cent vas spent on national programs; >f professional education, public iducation, information and cam(Continued on page 4) lief For Weary est Fires Ire during past few weeks. Buncombe county reports a stuburn fire in the Stone Mountain rea is now under control after urning over a large area. The ain of Tuesday helped in the fight n tHof f iro U > ?.??v aw was ic^ui icu, It is the duty of every citizen to e fire conscious during this dry ?ell. Irs. Killian Attends tate Federation Meet Mrs. Carl Killian, president of istrict 1 of the North Carolina ^deration of Women's Clubs, at* nded the convention of the Fedation at Raleigh* April 17, 18, I. Mrs. Killian gave a report to e convention group on the outanding accomplishments of Dislet 1. While in Raleigh Mrs. Killian as the guest of Mrs. John Allen' oore, the former Miss Doris Long Cullowhee. **r y * *