Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 15, 1937, edition 1 / Page 16
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JlLV TRANSACTIONS IN Real Estate (As Recorded to .Monday Noon of I his Week). Beaverdam Township I). S. Green, et al, to R. J. Lawrence. V. F. Miller to Raymond Miller. Lottie J. Mackey to J. I). Mac-key. T. Q. Allen, et ux, to Ruby anil Wade AVilson. J. K. Tate, et ux, to R. V. Ilohzclaw. Clyde Township Bon-A-Vcnturo, I tie., to K'.hel C'oeh run and Iva West. Iron Dutl' To'vnship First National Rank, of Waynes ville, to R. T. Mcsscr and M, M. No land. Jonathan Creek Township John Carver, et ux, and Johnnie Wood, et ux, to Roy I'arton, et ux. PiK'eon Township ' J. R. Hardin, et ux, to A. E, Peck, ft ux. J. R. Hardin, et ux, to Horace Peck, et ux. J. H. Hardin, et ux, to Horace reck, et ux. C. C. Hanson, et ux, to J. F. Justice. Owen Murray, et ux, to C. F. Frady. Waynesville Township J. R. Morgan, et ux, to (I. W. Colkitt, tt ux. Annie Brown to Josephine Love. Firt National'Bank to R. T. Messer and M. M. Noland. Marie, Josephine Robinson, (est of Com.) to S. H. Bushnell, Jr. Fred Nichols, et ux, et al, to Alli son Rathbone. 77ie Service that i-i. fi&)L 1 Ad txtwfioo tflfpboo m J '" ! . vjv TLV ? I addition to the mtn lutm feNw &&, ; Pu & "" will idd to the coflvtawnct J Comfort to Your Home During these hot summer days, the time you save with a telephone to aid in settling daily problems may be the difference between a day that worries your nerves into a frazzle, and a day that includes the time you need for relaxation. There are so many details in running a Household. An extra loaf of bread from the grocer a six o'clock order of ice cream from the drug store and so on. And with a telephone to run your errands, many con cerns of the day are easily disposed of. Of course, most everyone is familiar with the value of telephone service but if you are trying to get along without a telephone you may be surprised, and pleased, to know how little it costs to have a telephone in your home. AH you need to do is to ask any telephone employe, or get in touch with the telephone Business Office. Order your telephone today, and add com fort and protection to your home. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. (Incorporated) ALL KINDS OF LUMBER . . . .01' course you say that is to yard, but we have all kinds for planning to build or repair here materials. PAINTS VARNISHES HARDWARE BUILDING SUPPLIES Yes, sir- Lumber, Cement, Brick, Hardware, Roof ing, Taints, Plaster," Wall Board, Glass and Lime. Come in and let us help you with your planning. Junaluska Supply Co. PHONE 263-J JERRY LINER, SUBSCRIPTIONS The following subscriptions 'have been received during the past week: Mrs. Annie McCiacken, Clyde Route One. J. H. Karnes, Clyde. Edwin Finc-her, Clyde. Dewey Snyder, Clyde. W. W. Medford, Route 2. V. B. Noland, Clyde, Route 1. .Mrs. V. P. Ford, Clyde, Route 1. S. J. Moody, Route 2. K. F. Long, Clyde. T. A. Garrett, Clyde. Rev. P. C. Hicks, Canton, Route 1. J. C Carver, Clyde. H. C. Haynes, Clyde, i-red Noland, Clyde, Route 1. Frank Howell, Burnsville. John B. Free, City. F. M. Bolin, Hazelwood. Judge A. J. Rose, City. Weaver Price, Route 1. C. C. Townsend, Canton, Route 2. R. C. Morrow, Lake Junalusku. A. E. New, Charleston, W. Va. I). C. Bingham, Canton, Route 2. P. L, Frazier, Salem, Oregon. S. I). Rathbone, Lake Junuluska. First Navy Admiral Honored With Marker David Glasgow Farlagut, first Ad miral of the United States Navy, was born in Tennessee July 5, 1801. He died in New Hampshire Aug. 14, 1870. Lart week, on the 1.36th anniversary of his death, his achievements wcrs recalled when in Hasting-on-the-Hud -son, where his family lived during the War Between the States, ;t flagpole and tablet were dedicated in his honor. adds be expected in a lumber all purposes. If you are is the place to get your HKUSHKS STAINS Etc. LAKE JUNALUSKA Owner Steel Stacks Smoking Once More ,-x5f is mmmm H fix -ssmBmh Ipi yz Scene at liotinKstown mills Smoking steel stacks silhouetted against the sky, with national guardsmen on duty in the foreground to prevent violence, signalize resumption of work at the Voungstown Sheet & Tube Co. plants in Youngstown, above, and at other steel units in Ohio, Illinois and Pennsylvania. TO MY HAYWOOD COUNTY FRIENDS Ten years afro Haywood county did not have a county agent. The farm ers were unorganized. When I left the work July 1, this county had the best organization in Western North Carolina. This is what I have repeatedly been told by other agents. I have been working for the public more than twenty years. The farm ers and business men of this county have; given the best co-operation have over experienced. This has been appreciated all along. It is now great satisfaction to me to know that I have the friendship and confidence of more than ninety-five per cent of the people of this county. It has been my motive and purpose at all times, to do good to every one and not evil. I have put into worthy causes for Haywood county each year from one hundred to six hundred dol lars. Among other things as a result, we have better marketing for all the people. W:e have new enterprises bringing in thousands of dollars: First, our local milk plant; second. local cannery and Land O' Sky Co. operatives; third, a live conservation association. I am glad I have had the opportu nity to have served with so many good people. It is my desire to see these projects go on to full develop ment. The success of these things de- j ponds upon all of you co-operating. I'n not depend upon the small group to do the right thing. Our home is here by choice. If we can at any time be of service to any one we will gladly do it. It has been a real pleasure to have worked with all our friends. All of these contacts will remain "Apples of gold in pictures of silver" to me. W. I). SMITH. State Revenue Is Above That Of 1936 RELEIGII New record total of $i8,184,;!27.04 flowed into revenue cof fers of the state of North Carolina during the fiscal year ending June :!0, exceeding by $12,234,015.3:!, or 21.87 per cent, the 1936-37 total of $55,950, 311.71. June receipts of $4,287,707.37 ex ceeded those of the same month a year ago by $306,129.75 and indicated that recent estimates of '.Governor Hoey and others that the state's sur plus at midnight would reach between $4,000,000 and $6,000,000 would be ful filled. ' Sales tax and income levies each brought in more than $11,000,000 to set new records. The sales income was $11,325,661.48, compared with $10,184,301.57 last year, and income taxes soared to $11,013,081.59 from $7,769,809.63 last year. Inheritance receipts reached a new high at $4,009, 250.52, compared with $540,069.39 last year. Claim That WPA Education Program Reduced Illiteracy The WPA education program has reduced illiteracy in the United States by one-sixth according to an estimate recently made for the House Appropri ations committee, by Administrator Hopkins. During the past three years WPA instructors have taught 700,000 men and women how to read newspapers and write letters. More than 6,000 teachers have been en gaged in the work. The educational program of WPA goes far beyond fundamentals.: Opportunity has been given to thousands of adults, whose schooling never went beyond the low er grades, to take up the interupted thread of their school work. ::: J A 9 n Radio Road Patrol Cars Will Use Code Expect Plan To Aid In Capture Of Fleeing Criminals. Will He Ready Aug. 1st Raleigh. "Calling all patrol cars, calling all patrol cars; XY at UK at noon today; BDS heading north; wntch all RDS for BDS and stop all CHS if look suspicious." Messages such as this, only less intelligible to the average person, are what highway patrolmen are likely to hear from their receiving sets when the new highway patrol radio com munications system gets into opera tion early in August. For most of the calls which will be sent out over the five patrol stations to patrolmen and officers all over the state, will be sent very largely in code known only to patrolmen, police officers and sher iffs, Capt. Charles D. Farmer said to day. Some of the code will be known only to highway patrolmen and their officers, so that the stations will be able to communicate 'confidential in formation to them without any one else knowing what it is all about, Captain Farmer said. "Suppose there should be a bank hold up somewhere in the state and we should spread the alarm by announ cing over the radio 'Bank hold up in Greensboro at noon today, bandits heading north; Watch all roads for bandits and stop all cars if look sus picious.' That would immediately tip off the bank robbers and their con federates, since the chances are that nine times out of ten they will have radios in their cars, too. "So we will use a secret code that will have meaning only to all the pat rolmen, but which will mean nothing at all to any one who is not familiar with this code. In this way we will be able to spread an alarm in case of a bank robbery, prison break, hold up, riot or other trouble and direct of ficers to the vicinity in which they are wanted, without letting the public or those involved know anything about it." , ; The code, now being prepared by Captain Farmer and his assistants, must be submitted to and approved by the federal communication commis sion in Washington before it can be used.'' ... MARRIAGES (As IJecorded to Monday Noon of This Week) Nathan Rathbone to Kathleen Ar lington, both of Waynesville. E, J. Schulhofer, Jr., to Elizabeth Milner, both of Waynesville. William T. Mason to Hazel E. Coop er, both of Canton. Hall Keener to Edith Bumgarner; Both of Waynesville. Horace Downs, of Waynesville, to Edith Putnam, of Clyde, Route 1. Democratic King Nicholas I, who rufrd Montenegro from JSC) to 1918, was on,i of the most democratic kinss of modern limes. In Cetinje, the capital; where his suh.jectR called him ."Moss"' and Me called theni by their first Mines, he also acted, as juile. poet, physician, theater director and even postmaster, personally: wiling his stamps often" with a free drink on tlip s'e in a room of Ms palace. rollier'sWeck'v checks Malaria in 3 days Colds LIQUID, TABLETS SALVE, NOSE DROPS , T Hoadaelie, 30 min. wwsa jva sis s -s 6(56 Try "Rub-Mr-1 inn "-World Liniment Trade In State Is Above That Of 1929 Raleigh. Business conditions in Carolina during the fiscal year which ended June 30 than for the correspond ing period ending June 30, 1929, judg ing from the state income tax collec tions this past year amounting to $11,013,081, Commissioner of Revenue A. J. Maxwell said recently, in com menting on the total collections just released by the department of revenue. Total general fund collections this past fiscal year amounted to $37,089, 925 as compared with collections last year of .'528,755,425, an increase of ..::4,5ni from under the same tht same taxes and revenue act an in- crease of 28.98 per cent, Highway fund collections showed an increase of 14.34 per cent for this fiscal year over collections during the 1935-30 fiscal year, with receipts of 831,401 this year as compared with 327,194,885 for the previous year an increase of $3,899,515. The increase in the collections for both funds was $12,234,015 greater this year than during the year ending June' 30, 19307 School Dedicated To Memory Of Wiley Post As a memorial to Wiley Post, the Oklahoma aviator who died in a plane crash with Will Rogers in 1935, the town of Maysville, Okla., has dedi cated a new school building. The school marks the site where Mr. Post, twenty years ago made his first para chute jump. Kjes lOiainined Glasses fitted 127 i Main St. Save On Prescriptions At SMITH Y Special Values This Week-End iori'ON $1.00 SEVENTEEN CREAMS 39c And Tliis Coupon For Men .'0e SIIAVK. CUE AM Lavender . 29c 2.V TAI. I'M Mennens ....... S.V' SIIAVl-:. I'KKA.M Ingrams ......... si. oo i.k;i: Vitalis ro- vi ij.i. v.Ms Aqua Velva con-ox .".lie IiOYER HAT 1 1 I'OWDEIt 19c And This Coupon IJ Toiletries ( (REAMS Phillips . . . . . . . .39c ROX .500 FAIIAIj Tissues ........ . . . .19c SI.IO LIPSTICK Angelus .69c BATH POWDER Yardley $1.35 VITAM1X CHEAM Vita-Kay $1.10 itt,flilliiirJia,c iwtmw' ii.il " Jf LYKOLENE 4j TOOTH PASTE ll LowpeasGoodo 10 Phnf D-i Cowptas between toh;v, ithe last c-uha-; The pva -.. said E. C. f nomist at s--. ( produce I, , tion iurpo. . He su. . ; ., pianteil in a corn pin!;- While serve iih.,' . . , -place. Alt, . .,' ! 1 they may 1 ; , , .. ' 1 under to sidd . . Zl , '"' trogen to the ""' ''r Blair also i Or soybeans mav i. " the time of t:;t J coastal plain ai a, '-gC been already pint t"," rows with the mr. ' Corn .should' he c.:v... until it is fur ic'J tion maintain. M. l",''' moisture. loo deep a resv injure uie roots, hi.-fvw Frequent, shlua' through the month of :.;. .) ior cotton, niair comm He advised atTainst and soybeans in Juv make a full crop f 'Cin., that time, and - said that J profitable to get uudy otii crop ot small grain. rr ApixilnnJ Ti'lephuot J J Consult DR. R. KING HARPE OPTOMETRIST Wells Bldg. CamoD, J, 7 Cut -Rate Drug Store For Baby 2,-m- EM.I.i; 11KXM) Milk r.Uiii Carnation . . . 50e SIZE Ovaltine S2.50 S-l'(ltMl Dryco 50e MEADS Pablum COl TON JASMINE I-I'owniR Denial Need PI XT Ml-:?! Antiscptif SI .00 11 N I Pepsodcnt r,0- TOOTH I' A-II- Forhans ;,( tooth i'"1' Ipana . Fasteeth Mil I'ON Nil 2.V N-li Tablets 2.-- tllO" '" Tasty-Ln 100 pn.i Lapactic loo PlU Alophen 2.-e int K" Draupht 19c 22C . Ami 1 n , 5c I J i :i i m v
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1937, edition 1
16
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