Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 21, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Who Is Your Grocer? In times like these it is important to know your grocer has a conscience and will send you what you order promptly and all that you pay for. I will try to give you a "SQUARE DEAL." STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES AND COUNTRY PRO DUCE. I have "Queen means. of the Pantry" flour and you know what that Miss Emma J. Snowden PHONE 132 - OPPOSITE POST OFFICE CLYDE CULLINGS Help Win the War Eat More Vegetables Canned Vegetables CORN PEAS TOMATOES PUMPKIN ASPARAGUS TIPS STRING BEANS BAKED BEANS WHOLE OKRA GXRA and TOMATOES LYE HOMINY SPINACH CUT BEETS BLACK EYED PEAS MIXED VEGETABLES Canned Fruits PEACHES PEARS APRICOTS CHERRIES PINEAPPLE GREEN GAUGE PLUMS STRAWBERRIES RIPE OLIVES Special Prices on any of these by the dozen or half dozen. It will pay you to investigate these prices. MILLER BROS. PHONE 30 BIG BRANCH ITEMS The weather has been so favorable for a few weeks the farmers hav done lots of ploughing. J. M. Massey, of Buffalo, S. C, is visiting friends and relatives in Hay wood. Charlie McCrary, who has been in School at Asheville, has come home to make a crop. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bishop, a daughter, and to Mr. and Mrs Ah! That's the Spot aioan s Liniment goes right to it. Have you rheumatic ache or a auuuuoDDinr neuralgic pain? You can find a quick and effectiva relief in Sloan's Liniment. Thousand of borne have this remedy handy for all external pains becauae time and proves taa quckaat nlicf. So rUmm mnl mmy t apply, too. No rob- MM Wllk MMten or iwtMi. If oSlnantl iiniinl.junwUl Mrrorbawita. tit. i.wwl bottlw. at all drctzma. utt-i. Vinson Sanford, a son. Miss Mary McCracken is visiting her sister, Mrs. Robert Rogers, on Up per Crabtree. Wedding bells may be ringing soon in this community. Mrs. W. F. McCrary, who has been visiting her sister at Leicester, has come home. Miss Violet Carver visited Clyde last week. J. A. Smith is moving from Clyde back to his farm where he will make a crop this summer. Mrs. J. B. Towles visited the home of V. P. McCracken Sunday. Miss Sue Belle McCrary is visiting her sister at Leicester. O. P. Kinsland having resigned as president of the fox hunters, Bob Bishop was elected. Lawson Tran- tham was selected as vice-president. Jim Smith and Dewey McClure vis ited at Mr. Anderson's Sunday, and Miss Fannie Sanford visited Miss Sue Belle McCrary. "A. BIRD." Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Terrell visited Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Bennett last Sat urday and Sunday. They will move this week to their nice home on Mul berry street. Mr. Terrell being an ex pert civil en;it:eer will be out of town mret of the time following his pro fession. Mrs. George Liner, of Ratcliff I Cove, has returned from visiting Mr. 8i rlrs. j. a. Medlorrt. We mention the following candi dates who visited our town during the last several days: R. L. Noland, W. F. McCrary, W. H. Henderson, Eraa- tus Messer, Charley Francis, W. H. Noland, R. M. Leatherwood, John Sentell and W. J. Hannah. T!ie Canton and Clyde boys have recently played three games of base- I ball, Clyde winning two signal vic tories out of three games, the last of I which was played at Canton last Sat urday where the Clyde team was vic torious. A box supper of large proportions was held at the State High School! building last Saturday evening when $64.60 was reecived, which finishes paying for the High School piano and leaves a balance of $28 in the Bank of Clyde to the credit of the school. Prof. L. S. Stamey was auctioneer. Misses Ada Davis, Ava McCracken, Nina Morgan, Mary Cathey and Valeria Medford were contestants for the prize box which brought $21 and went to Miss Nina Morgan. Rev. J. D. Moore, B. Y. P. U. state secretary, delivered an excellent ad dress last Sunday evening before the union. The B. Y. P. U. here is one of the best in all the country according to the opinion of Mr. Moore who heard group No. 3 render their program un der the leadership of Mr. Orville Haynes. Mr. J. R. Terrell, county surveyor, and one of Clyde's leading citizens, has bought an automobile. It is hoped that Mr. Terrell will be a can didate to represent our county in the state legislature. Being a good and upright man and being thoroughly competent, the county would make no mistake in electing him to represent us in the lower house of the general assembly. Rev. W. M. Howell, a ministerial student, will preach at the Baptist church next Sunday morning for Pas tor L. Q. Haynes who will preach the commencement sermon at Wood row next Sunday. Rev. T. F. Glenn will preach at the Clyde Methodist church the fifth Sunday in March on "God in History." He wants to remind the people that God ie-on his throne in these days of storm and strife, and that the Judge of all the earth will do right. "M. B. S." The American Red Cross is making a great effort THIS WEEK, MARCH 18 TO 25 to get 5000 TONS of CLOTHING and SHOES for the destitute Belgians and French Look over your wardrobe and see if YOU haven't something you can do without, something that you don't wear. DorW send anything that is worn com pletely out. Uncle Sam's ships haven't time to carry junk. Bring your packages to the Red Cross Rooms or to our store. Box to be packed Next Tuesday This Space Donated to A. R.C. by McCracken Clothing Co. for 150 feet along the track. The boy walked across, and warned his father to wait until the train- could pass. Another old man 60 years old who hauls school children from home to school and back was killed at the same place a few days before. He was on his way home and couldn't hear very well. He leaves a wife and eight children. There are quite a few in the hos pital here for appendicitis. - ' I am only 12 years old and came from Haywood county, near Clyde. ELLEN PRESLEY. Eight Million Pay on Incomes Sloan's prices not increased 25e 50c $1 About eight million persons will pay two and one-fourth billion dollars in income taxes this year. Every un married person with an income of $20 a week will pay a tax of 80 cents, and I every married person with a $40 a week salary, a tax of $1.60. The ex tension of the income tax to take in salaries above $1,000 (single) and $2, 000 (married) will include this year a large number of small income tax payers. However, what is needed to raise revenue is a radical increase in the tax on large incomes. This would get the big war profiteers' Asheville will probably close pool rooms June 1.. all FROM COLORADO Wanted 1000 Cases Eggs Also Ham, Bacon and Produce Messer and Carswell Ike Cask Grocers HAVE AN ORDER FOR 1,000 CASES OF EGGS. WE WILL PAY YOU CASH FOR ALL YOU BRING. ALSO WISH TO BUY HAMS AND BACON AND OTHER PRODUCE. WE WILL SELL YOU STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE CASH PRICES. YOURS TO SERVE, , . . - - ' . r . ::; Messer & Carswell ' irhtst Price bi Cash or Trad for Country Product The following letter from Peckham, Colo., was written by Ellen, the, 12-year-old daughter of C. W. Presley, under date of February 28: We have had fine weather all win ter up to now, when the snow is about three feet deep on the ground. It was snowing so hard yesterday one could hardly see how to travel. A Mr. Dufree and his son were moving here from Gilchrist yesterday and while driving across the railroad ; track a train killed the old man and his horses, scattering their remains I'd Keep WeH Sri Do not allow the vH food to accumulate in J 1 Tour bowels, where they frA are absorbed into your I J system. Indigestion, coo- vj snpauoa, neaaacne, Dad r l blood, and numerous lUl other troubles are bound . , . J ia rouow. reeo vour r s: system clean, as thou- I ands of others do, by V I taking an occasional dose f ' . wine oia, reuaoie, tck I v etabte, family liver medJ- liO Thedford's Li Dlaclc-Draught L5 J Y 8 Mr. W. P. Rckle, of Rising Fawn, Oa., write We have used Thed ford's Black-Draught aa a famCy mrrttrise. My mother in -law could aot take calomel as M seemed too strong for her, so she used Black-Draurfit as a auk! laxative sad tirrr regulator MIWiMit lathe family aad beiitva it Is the best awdicHe inc the Ever made." TrysL n ?J f regulator... We we at f :Jv. I tathe tamOTaadbeiiev : n I J fctoraebesnedicHeinc I - ' I Insist CM Uujtnu- 7?i I TbedJartX &sirr- f IX I as. t7i ! t I I Peckham, Colo., Feb. 22. We are having cold weather here now. It 16 below zero and everybody seems to be enjoying it We have had very little snow the past month. It warming up now and I think we will have an early spring. Most of our people visited the stock show at Denver the past week. Peckham has quite a few visitors too, as the farmers can't do much but feed their stock. 'Mr. and Mrs. Presley came here from your county two years ago and will farm here the coming year, sugar beets, beans and alfalfa are the main crops here, although we raise other things and nearly every thing that grows in North Carolina. Prices are good and wages are good, too. I would be glad to see some of the N. C. boys coming out here to farm. They could make good money at it We have good schools here and they run. nine months, and we have high schools, too. We have a lot of good women here in the Red Cross who are helping the boys in the trenches in many ways and we ' know they will do that in North Carolina. I was in the Rocky Mountains on a trip last summer and saw many won derful things to attract my attention. There are mountains where you can see snow all summer. Some are larger than your mountains and have different timber on them. There is a park which attracts many people in the summer where they spend a week or two. Yours truly. JAMES COGBURN. RAISE A PIG . (By W. W. Shay.) The hog production of the United States has fallen off to an a'nrming extent: the present unsefl'M condi tion of the bog and corn m fera ne incentive to pork ; in the beg and corn br" - Just passed a period rt meals of the 21 whi-h .-- posed to eat during r porUesa Saturday six" - meal per day ' was r . -1 owuig ta a pkantifml r- v bufratbsr because a 1 of wheat was aaeesaary metry settled upon, i preaena la ssere argent pork. - ; , -ket of .w'ueers -e have " " ,'orkless ."- ;.re sup . The t orkless j cloned ,i'v of pork, iv tr expert ..t-,1 for H'heat at iurd thaa will be reversed as related to these two extremely necessary articles. Present prices of pigs indicate the wisdom of playing safe, which is simply to "grow your own" supply of pork. Haywood county is in a position to do this as profitably as any other county in the state and the role of "innocent bystander." never a safe one, is doubly precarious as regards next winter's pork supply at this time. Get in the game! Raise some hogs. If you fear a drop in the pork prices, raise good hogs, pure breds. They are independ ent of pork prices and are good to eat. There is always a demand for foun dation stock at a premium over the current price of pork; they give bet ter returns for the feed consumed, and during these times of high prices of feeds and comparatively low prices of pork, we must use every effort to conserve feeds as well as everything else, but do not make the mistake of underfeeding the pig. Utilize pastures but feed well while on pastures. Our soldiers must be fed, we must live; you serve both yourself and the government when you produce pork.' "Raise a pig." W. W. SHAY, Emergency Worker, Swine Extension. A CURTAINLESS SHOWER We are prepared to sell you a curtainless shower to attach to your bath tub. (See sample in our window.) This shower comes at a price within the reach of all those that nave plumbing installed. Paints, tin shingles, guttering and valley tin at a bargain i Call and see us L. A. MILLER & CO. 131 HI KEEP FIT Nature provide that bodOr waats be '"'H by inaiini -LI The refreshing daily bath takes op where Nature's sroririos ceaa and keep, nil physkslly and mcatalljr fit and raady to com with lire's hit problcsM. A gUarfaaf Modem Bath room of mat hMtillsriss is proper equpmtst tor those who rain tassMsbaa, J. A. SMITH ,va. nst::c. N. C- I1 - - "rri'rTYYYYVrYYViViya'YYYYYYVVVa BETTER THAN EVER Wh b hsitdVxne new rorature. b nroved kbor sari liawcea and wth its mpaltnai In fcw. AtJ .HJ r' V WHITE SET7LNG MACHINE I 1 seyxn nSe grsiest pcasible vaJae J I . fee your ssoney. M-V, CetalreadeBotsAatmbtaaBSa TO ! I 'J I d-lrf. laooWblwrawsslor -4 catalosjief WnW awl IWy SstiU I viraszsTnGiuazxzax, a.Waa,a : If is wr nan- Id a Mand that i irdition -7. aa wheat to karrarted
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1918, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75