:4
i
I r- ; ' '' ' '.: v.":. "J-; . THURSDAY, JtJNE 5!
J-' THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTADTEEg
I
THURSDAY, JUNE 5,1
" Mountaineer
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The Mountaineer
Plume W7
HAYWOOD
COUNTY'S
BARGAIN
COUNTER
FORI SALE 55-gaIlon wooden
barrels with covers, in good
condition, at Waynesville Laun
dry. May 29-June 5
FOR SALE OR TRADE 1 (one)
registered O. I. C. stock hog.
80 months old. H. L. Liner,
Lake Junaluska. May 15-22-29
. June 5. .
PLANTS Tomatoes six varie
ties. Sweet potatoes, yellow and
whit cabbaee. early, medium,
late, peppers, sweet and hot,
celery, broccoli, brussei sprouts,
also flower plants. D. D. York,
route No. 1, Waynesville.
May 16-22-29-June 6.
FOR RENT 4 rooms furnished,
Main street apartment.
FOR SALE 1 dining room suit
See A. T. Ward. May29-Jun 6-12
Beginning of World Mission.
HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
By NEWMAN CAMPBELL
(The International . Uniform
Lesson on the above topic for
June 8 Is Acts 12:25-13:12, the
Golden Text being Mark 16:15,
"And he said unto them. Go ye
into all the world, and preach the
gospel to the whole creation.")
YOU REMEMBER our last
lesson ended when a prophet arose
in the church at Antioch and fore
told that there would be severe
famine. The brethren, although
poor themselves, collected food
and sent it to Jerusalem by the
hands of Saul and Barnabas.
This lesson starts when Barna
bas and Saul came back to Anti
och after their mission had been
accomplished, probably around
the beginning of the year A. D. 45.
With them they brought John,
whose surname was Mark, and
who was a relative of Barnabas.
At the church at Antioch were
certain prophets, and teachers,
such as Barnabas and Simeon that
was called Niger, and Lucius of
Cyrene, and Manaen and Saul
These men depended upon the di
rection of the Holy Spirit, and
they fasted and prayed continual
ly. And the Holy Ghost said to
them that they should separate
Barnabas and Saul from the rest
and send them away to preach to
Other people.
So they fasted and prayed, and
laid their hands on them, St Luke
tells us, and sent them away. With
them went Barnabas' relative,
John. So these three, "being sent
by the Holy Ghost departed unto
Seleucla; and from thence they
sailed to Cyprus." Cyprus to an
Island off the coast of Syria. At
Salami, where Jews were plentiful.-they
preached in the Jewish
synagogues. This city was on the
eastern end of the island and the
native place of Barnabas, where
he and John were known. Some of
A XMstrfoitsd by Mag Features Syndicate, las,
the people of the Island were aJ 1
ready Christians, and the fact j
that they were amor." relative I
and friends gave them an advaa !
tage in beginning their work.
Go to Capital j
Their next step was Paphos,
capital of the island, which was
ruled over by Sergius Paulus, a .
Roman but a man of understand-
lng. He called Barnabas and Saul
to him to explain to him the new
religion.
Now there was also at Paphos
a Jew who claimed to be a magi-'
clan and sorcerer and called him
self Bar-Jesus, which, interpreted '
was Elymaa. He was a strong in
fluence in the city, and he strong i
ly opposed Saul and Barnabas 1
and their attempts to interest Ser
glus Paulus in their teaching:
Saul, who at this time is causa
Paul for the first time, realized
how much mischief this man
would cause, and "filled with the
Holy Ghost he looked straight at
Elymaa and said: O full of all
subtilty and all mischief, thou
child of the devil thou enemy of
all righteousness, wilt thou , not
cease to pervert the right way of
the Lord?
"And now, behold, the hand of
the Lord Is upon thee, and thou
shalt be blind, not seeing the sua
for a season."
Immediately a mist rose before
Elymas' eyes, which darkened to
total blindness so that he went
about grouping for someone to
lead him. .
When the deputy, Sergius Paul
us, saw this miracle, he believed,
being astonished at the doctrine
of the Lord.
Paul now has begun to appeal1
as the principal character of the
early Christian church. And this
Is the beginning of many journeys
of the first Christian missionaries
to carry the Word of God to the
This Week In Defense
LEDGER AND sheets and indexes
to fit , in all popular sixes, at
The Mountaineer. - .;
WANTED Man with car. Route
experience preferred but not
necessary to start. Rawleigh's,
Dept. NCF-245-M, Richmond, Va.
June 5.
IF BOTHERED WITH people
trespassing on your land, get
some of the "no tresspassing
signs" at The Mountaineer.
THIS WEEK IN DEFENSE .... -President
Rooseelt, stating the
European War is "coming very
Close to home," proclaimed an un
limited national emergency. The
President called upon "all loyal
citizens to place the nation's need
first in mind and in action," and
said "the nation will expect all
individuals and all groups to play
their full parts without stint and
without senshness.
Speaking over the radio, the
President said it is the U. S.
policy to give "every possible as
sistance" to Britain and her allies
by whatever measures are neces
sary. He also said the U. S. will not
accept a Nazi-dominated world and
will resist any German attempt to
gain control of the seas or bases
which could be used for ail at
tack on the Western Hemisphere.
FOR RENT Room in quiet loca
, tlofl in home of three adults.
Close1 Jn. .Welch Street, Phone
' 197-W. June 6
wpf.wRITEB RIBBONS for all
males machine, 'in solid black
n black and red, at The Moun-
taineer.
WANTED Position as steno
grapherfour years experience
in general office work. Refer
ences supplied. Write Waynes
ville Mountaineer. June S
PRODUCTION
OPM Director of Purchases Nel
son, speaking at Baltimore, said
Germany is producing war ma
terials at a rate of $50,000,000,000
year, British production is at
the rate of $15,000,000,000 a year
"and the least we can do is see to
it that Britsih and American pro
duction together will top $50,000,-
000,000. . . ."
WANTED TO BUY Second-hand
cider mill. See Roy Blackwell
at The Mountaineer. June 6
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
gratitude for the kindness and
sympathy shown us in our recent
bereavement
U. G. Moody, Mrs. W. C. Capps
and the Grandchildren.
When road hog meets road hog
it serves them both right
Start Results
MOVING
Your Way!
k USE
yant ads
To : ":"
Bay or Sell a Boose
To ::.-:.; -;,::
Rent a Room or Apartment
To
B oy or Sell a Used Car
To . :
Buy or Sell Livestock
To . .i
Hire Competent Help
TO':':
Find a Lost Article , ,
To Buy or Sell Discarded
Furniture
To -.::.Kr
Buy or Sell Coal or Wood
.To , .
Secure a Loan
25 Words -25c
tive Service Deputy Director Her
shey asked local boards to give
serious consideration to individual
claims for deferment of men en
gaged in agriculture. Gen. Her
shey notified local boards that
Agricultural Secretary Wickard
reported the defense program has
drawn heavily upon the supply of
farm labor and an adequate sup
ply is becoming a serious problem.
ARMY
Army Chief of Staff Marshall an
nounced that training maneuvers
this summer and fall are designed
to create an "all-purpose" force
capable of operating in the Arc
tic, the tropics, in deserts or moun
tains. He said every man must
be given basic infantry training
before he can "pull his weight" as
a specialist.
SELECTIVE SERVICE
President Roosevelt proclaimed
July 1 as Selective Service regis
tration day for an men who have
become 21 since the first registra-
tion on October 16, 1940. Selec-
NAVY .
President Roosevelt approved
legislation authorizing the pur
chase of construction of 68 addi
tional naval auxiliary ships. The
Maritime commission began im
mediate acquisition of the vessels,
including the 27,000 ton "Ameri
ca," largest liner ever built in
the United States. The Navy
asked Congress to grant naval
commanders authority to "take
whatever steps they deem neces
sary . , . , lor proper protection of
the naval forces" in the U. S. ter-
retorial waters. .
NOTICE OP TRUSTEE'S SALE
On Saturday, June 7, 1941, at
eleven o'clock, A. M., at the Court
House door in the Town of Waynes
ville, N. C, I will sell at public
outcry to the highest bidder for
cash, the following lands and prenv
ises, lying and being in Waynes
ville Township, Haywood County,
North Carolina, and more particu
larly described as follows:
BEGINNING at a stake on the
North East side of Government
Street 150 feet from Smathera
Street and runs N. 65 30' E. 150
feet; then N 24 80' W. 100 feet;
then S. 65 30" W. 150 feet to
Government Street; then with said
Street S. 24. 80' E. 100 feet to the
BEGINNING, being lots Nob. 7 and
9 in Block 2, of the W. R. Harbeck
Fairground Addition, as per sur
vey of Jno. N. Shoolbred, October,
1920, and recorded in Map Book
"B," Index "H."
Being the same property con
veyed in a deed from Lilly C.
Harbeck and husband, W. R. Har
beck, to C, A. Campbell -dated Au
gust 15, 1923, and recorded in Book
69, page 601, Record of Deeds of
Haywood County; and conveyed by
said Campbell to J. Yr Sumner by
deed, dated 11th of April, 1925, re
corded in Book 63, page 644.
Sale made pursuant to power of
sale conferred upon me by virtue
of a certain deed of trust executed
by H. A. Sumner (a single man),
dated April 30, 1930, and recorded
in Book 29, page 159, Record of
Deeds of Trust of Haywood County,
to which reference is hereby made
for all the terms and conditions of
the same.
This the 7th day of May, 1941.
JNO. M. QUEEN,
1071 May 8-16-22-29-June 5
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Rules Against
N. C. Theatres
In Price Case
RALEIGH Assistant Attorney
General T. Wade Bruton has ruled
that theaters giving prizes for
drawn numbers were engaging in
a lottery, whether or not the pur
chase of a ticket was necessary for
a chance to win.
He made the ruling at the re
quest of Wade A. Gardner, solicitor
of the Wilson recorder's court.
Gardner . wrote that two thea
ters were offering prises for per
sons registered in their lobbies,
whether or not they had bought
tickets of admission. He said the
drawn number Was announced in
the theaters, and on the street be
fore the theaters, and that the per.
son whose number was drawn had
two minutes in which to reach the
stages and claim the prize.
Bruton said the state supreme
court, in ruling on the state's anti-lottery
law, had held that:
"The ingredient of chance is,
obviously, the evil principles which
the law denounces and will eradi
cate, however it may be clothed,
or however it may conceal itself
in a fair exterior. It is by this
means that cupidity is solicited or
an appeal is made to avarice, for
if fortune be propitious, or chance
should favor him, either in his
selection as to the winner of its
favor or in the mere turn of a
wheel, or the throw of the dice, or
the fall of the coin, a return of
value is expected for the small con
sideration or trivial price paid for
the privilege of being thus favored."
WEDDING OF A JAILBIRD
MAUCH CHUNK, Pa Roger
Fairchild, Jr., is married but the
honeymoon will have to wait.
Authorities let him out of the
county jail ten minutes for the
wedding. He's serving Six months
for robbery.
Bethel News
Girl Gets $1,000
For A Reward
NEW YORK Ten of the 75
f 100 bills which Miss Katheryn
Loss, $18-a-week Brooklyn clerk,
found on a Manhattan sidewalk in
the noon rush-hour 10 days ago
anH nromtrtlv tunred in to
the police were her reward.
ee return on her honesty-is-the-it-policy
rule came by check from
Edward F. Dunn, real estate brok
er, only one of seven claimants
who finished her junior year at
W. C. U. N. C. Miss Kathryn Jus
tice, who is also a student there,
is visiting friends before coming
home.
The Bethel B. Y. P. U- is hold
ing a study "course at the church
each night this week. Teachers
are R. E. Sentelk, I. A. McLain
and Gay Chambers, - :
Crops, gardens and pastures
are feeling the effects of the long
drought. Yards are turning
brown and all vegetation has a
wilted appearance. The late frosts
killed beans in many gardens in
this community. It is feared
there will be a shortage of feed
for animals if rains do not come
soon.
The following attended the dis
trict meeting of the home demon
stration clubs at Hayesville last
Friday; Mrs. R. O. Kelley, Mrs.
W. P. Whiteside; Mrs Welch
Singleton, Mrs, C. D. Church, Mrs.
I. A. McLain, and Miss Pearl
Harris... .-.
I. A! McLain, agriculture teach
er, with two delegates from Bethel
F. F. A. chapter, Kay banning ana
Vernon Sorrells, leave for Ral
eigh Tuesday, to attend the State
F. F. A, convention and agricul
ture teachers conference, ver
non Sorrells will enter the state
livestock iudeine contest as one
of the representatives of this dis
trict.
TlUNSACTlONSr
Real :Estat?
(As Record to Moiula
Of Tki Wky
eaverdsm To-m..: J
Canton Building and Loi
sociation to C. H. BrownJ
WaynesvilU Tovm.k.0
L. M. Killian, et ux, t c
Frank Mehaffey.etux. to
Biryson. '
W. C. Phillips, et nx,by
Jarvis L. Palmer.
able to establish his identitl
the police property clerk 4
ox ine money. .
The bills found by Mis Loi
two bundles of three whil
uunn na arawn out of
bank for deposit m a Mail
institution on the morninji
6 ana oi wmcn be gave
description authenticated
bank cashier.
Miss Loss had never font
money before, her usual 1
having been to lose it, J
steppea on tne bills wM
jumped back to avoid an om
motor bus. Had no one A
the money in six months, am
have been hers.
Mrs. Jack Hipps, Miss Helen
Hipps and Mr. Fred Hyatt have
returned from a week's trip to
Norfolk. While at Newport
News they visited Mrs. Hipps
daughter, Mrs. Bill Blaylock.
W. P. Whitesides made a trip
to Greensboro over the week-end
to bring back his daughter, Doris,
BRI G K
" A brick home is a permanent investment that a
quires little capital and maintains its original valif
enlarge yours, or brick veneer it now. See us ft
details.
ETOWAH BRICK BUILDS BETTER HOMES
Moland-Drysdale Corp.
Truck Deliveries to All Parts of Westera Carolina
serving of meat, one egg or sub
stitute, two green vegetables,; two
fruits rich in vitamin C, bread and
cereal, butter or oleomargerine,
and "other foods to satisfy the
appetite.",
AIR
The President asked Congress
for an additional $2,790,000,000
for planes for the ' Army and
$529,000,000, for planes for the
Navy. The War Department an-
noounced that construction of new
air corps schools is "proceeding
much faster than expectedw with
eight of 100 stations already com
pleted. 'Some of the fields, the de
partment said, were completed in
three months.
PILOTS FOR BRITAIN
War Secretary Stimson announ
ced arrangement to train 8,000
RAF pilots, bombardiers and nav
igators in U. S. civilian and army
schools. The U. S. will defray
some of the cost from lease-lend
funds. , Mr. Stimson said the pro
gram would not interfere with U.
S. pilot training.
The Maritime Commission
awarded contracts for 123 addi
tional merchant vessels. To date,
the commission said, 850 ships
have been ordered 312 emergen
cy vessels,, 85 cargo ships for
private concerns, 72 tankers and
60 ships on British contracts. The
commission said the first of the
emergency ships will be complet
ed by November, a month ahead of
schedule.
NOTICE OF RESALE
Under and by virtue of an order
f resale : of the Superior Court
of Haywood County, made m the
Special Proceeding entitled "W.
H. Burnett, Administrator of Celia
Bumette, deceased, vs. Cora Bur
nett King, et al.,". the same be
ing No. 140 on the Special Pro
ceeding Docket of said Court, the
undersigned Commissioner will, on
Monday, June 16th, 1941, at elev
en o'clock a. m. at the Courthouse
door in Waynesville, N. C, offer
for sale to the highest bidder for
cash that certain "tract of land
lying and being in East .Fork
Township, Haywood County, NrC,
adjoining the lands of D. H. Pless
and others, and more particularly
described as follows, to-wit:
BEGINNING on a walnut on
.ast bank oi risgan creek at a
large rock; thence running a
Southeast Course np a ridge 20
poles, more or less, to a stake in the
old line of Isaac Ivester; thence N.
20 E. 40 poles, more or lees, to a
stake in D. H. Pless line on top of
a ridge; thence down said ridge to
a stake in center" of Pisgah Creek;
thence down the center of said
Creek as it meanders to the BE
GINNING, containing TWENTY
FIVE ACRES, more or less.
This May 30th, 1941.
W. H. BURNETT,
Commissioner.
No. 1077 June 5-12.
C OM ING!
NUTRITION
, Agriculture ' Secretary Wickard
told National Nutrition Conference
for Defense "at least three-fourths
of us" do not have satisfactory
diets. He said "we need to con
sume twice as much green vege
tables and fruits, 70 per cent more
tomatoes and citrus fruits, 35 per
cent more eggs, 15 per cent more
butter, 20 per cent more milk."
Surgeon General Parran, of the
Public Service, recommended the
following minimum daily diet:
one pint of milk for an adult and
more for a child, at least one
NOTARY
PUB LIC
Services
AT THE
oiintalncer
.NEW
SERIAL STORY
The Mandarin House
Murders
By Van Veyck Mason
An exciting adventure story based on the exploits of the famed Captain
North, Department of Criminal Investigation. This story is filled with
the color and romance of the far east, A beautiful girl, an American
Army officer deserter and the intrigue of foreign diplomats and spies, all
make this an absorbing story that will hold your interest from beginning1
to end. ''-.
STARTS TIlUnSDAY, JUME 12
f -I, i inthe