Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / July 22, 1943, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, 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
PAGE FOUR === \7ANCE\7 V Burnsville, W JL n. c. JL FRI.-SAT. JULY 23-24 Hit No. 1 “MAN IN THE TRUNK” With —s£ Lynne Roberts, George Holmes Hit No. 2 ‘FIGHTING FRONTIERS’ „ - With TIM HOLT SUN.-MON. JULY 25-26 “WHITE CARGO” With Hedy Lamarr, -v Walter Pidgeon The Year’s Sensational Romance Based on The World-Famed Stage Hit. TUESDAY, JULY 27th “BETWEEN US GIRLS” -» With Diana Barrymore, Robert Cummings, Kay Francis, John Boles, %. Andy Devine Just Between us Girls This is Very Funny Also Chapter 8 Overland Mail WED.-THU. JULY 28-29 “FOR ME AND MY GAL” With Judy Garland, George Murphy-Gene Kelly The Greatest Musical Show ever to thrill your Heart. 19 Great Songs. Coming Next Week “Star Spangled Rhythm” “Tennessee Johnson” ' m ZEEZES2EESEEEESSESSZEEESESZ r NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE In The Superior Court YANCEY COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA J. W. Howell vs. Isaac T. Bailey By virtue of an execution avr ected to the undersigned from the -=“#=superior Court of Yancey County i in the above entitled action, I will, on Saturday, the 7th day of Aug-j ust, 1943, at 10:00 o’clock A. M.,j at the courthouse dbor of said; County, sell to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution,; all the right, title, and interest which the said Isaac T. Bailey,! the Defendant, has in the follow- j ing described real estate located 1 in Green Mountain Township, of| said County and State, and ad-i joining the lands of J. Ray Bailey, J. E. Huskins, and others, bound ed as follows: ‘‘BEGINNING on top of the Bailey Ridge at J. Ray Bailey’s corner in a tract of land conveyed . to him by the Federal Land Bank ' of Columbia, South Carolina, and runs a Northerly course with the Isaac Bailey Old Line to the top of the Bailey Ridge to the line of John Huskins tract; thence a Northerly course with the height of the Bailey Ridge to J. E. Hus kins’ corner; thence down a ridge a Southeasterly course to D. D j Bailey’s comer, on top of said ridge at a Sassafras Tree; thence S. 65 E. 16 poles to a Spotted Oak; thence N, 62 E„ 8 poles to a stake;' thence N. 45 E. 6 poles to a stake; j thence N. 82 E. 26 poles to a stake; thence S. 74 E. 20% poles, to a Hickory; thence S. 8 E. 5' poles to a Spanish Oak; in D. D Bailey’s and J. Ray Bailey’s line ; on the upper bank of the Bums-; ville-Green Mountain Road; then ce with J. Ray Bailey’s straight line to the BEGINNING on tpp of the Bailey Ridge, containing 41 acres, more or less." This the 6th day of July, 1943. R. E. Neill, Sheriff of Yancey County. July 8, 15, 22, 29. Aug. sth NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION In The Superior Court YANCEY COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA C. W. Randolph. Plaintirf . - ‘ vs. - Joyce Randolph, Defendant - The defendant, Joyce Randolph, will please take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Yancey County, North Carolina, for an absolute divorce; and the said defendant will further take notice that she is required to ap pear at the Office of the Clerk of the said County, at the Court house in Burnsville, North Caro lina, within twenty days after the 6th day of August, 1943, and an swer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief - demanded in said complaint. This the 6th day of July, 1943. Fred Proffitt, Clerk of the Sup erior Court, Yancey County. July 8, 15, 22, 29 PERSONALS Born to Pvt. and Mrs. Rom Edwards a son, July » 15. Mrs. Edwards is the 1 former Miss Vivian Peter son. Pvt. Edwards is sta tioned at Camp Davis. ' G. L. Hensley, Burnsville postmaster, is attending ; the state convention” of the association of postmasters ; which is meeting this week m Raleigh. Mrs. Burl Boone, the former Miss Genevieve Bla lock, is now secretary at the Feldspar Milling Co. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Tip ton of Washington and Miss Della Tipton who is attending summer school iat Boone were called here j on account of tHe serious illness of Mrs. Luther Ay ers. Paul Ayers of the Mar ine Corps who is stationed in Philadelphia is expected to arrive today. Erma Letterman of Day! Book is visiting friends for two weeks at Erwin and > Johnson City, Tenn. John Lee Ray is working at the Northwestern Bank, Old Fort this week. Homer Culbreth of Ral eigh -was a visitor here Wednesday. Ruth Autrey is ill at her home this week. r Ralph Robinson, A- C. | Angel, Jr., and Ralph Bar • nes left Tuesday for De troit, Mich, where they will be employed. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Laws of j Toledo and Mrs. Carl Mit-j chell and children of Day Book were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arrowood ov- I er the week end. JACKS CREEK Pvt. Roy Duncan of Camp Davis, N. C. was home on a week end fur lough. The Intermediate - Train ing Union of Jacks Creek Baptist church reorganized their Union with Pres. Paul 'Elliott; vice pres. Mary L. i Laughrun; Sec. Wayne jßyrd; treas. Pat Greene; i group captain, Nellp Bailey Leslie Hensley; Bible read ers leader, Geneva Hunter; missionary chairman, Jun ior Laws; social chairman, Jack Laughrun; chorister, Harold Williams; pianist, Geneva Hunter; director,' Mrs. Craig Woody. Sgt. and Mrs. Fred Hon leycutt of Fla. have been! visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Honeycutt for the past week. The children of Mrs. Margaret Honeycutt have been visiting her for the : past week. Earl of Va., j Leonard of the U. S. Navy, Mrs. Paul Laughrun of Burnsville, Mrs. Hubert Herrel of Erwin, Tenn., Mrs. Noble Lee of Ind., Mrs. Bob Hull of Green ville, Tenn. Mrs. S. L. Hensley spent the week end with her daughter, Doris of Ashe ville. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Lee Byrd have begn visiting Mr. Byrd’s nfuitW who is ser iously ill. Mk Byrd is now serving in the U. S. Army. Sgt. Clarence Laws of Fort Jackson, S. C. spent the week end at home. Miss Geneva Higgins of Asheville has beei. spend* ing a short vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edd Higgins. Mrs. Hollis Wilson and daughter have returned to her home here. Miss Mary Elliott is now employed in Va. . ... •-7 ' More about— MEN IN SERVICE Yancey Record: Receiv ed the home town paper today. . It had been two weeks getting to me but the reason was we moved from Tennessee to Arizona where we are going to have a period of desert training. The weather here is far from the weather in North Carolina with the tempera ture from 120 to 140 -de grees and there are so many Snakes that it looks like we are going to have to claim them as pets. ) I have been serving with the 81st Division for the past thirteen months and I have found it to be a; swell outfit and it is | up of lots of fine boys. I wish to thank you for sending the paper and I’m hoping in the days to come that I will still receive the paper for I am always wanting to hear how things are going on back home. Pfc. Arnold Mclntosh, Co F. 323 Inf. A P 0 81 c. Post master, Los Angeles, Cal. Yancey Record: Since I; last wrote, my address has been changed and I am now in England. The news from home means more to me now than it ever did so thanks again for it. The best of luck td all my relatives and friends in dear old Yancey county. S. Sgt. Burns P. Gillespie Yancey Record:- I have received the Yancey Re cord for the past seven months and it has been deeply appreciated. I’m jsure the other fellows in service enjoy getting it as well as I do. i If the boys in service and on the front do their job as well as the people of Vancey I am sure we will be victorious. We are on maneuvers in La. I will be here for some time. Please send the paper to my new address. Pvt. Grayson L. Evans, Co. H. 167 Inf. A P 0 31, Postmaster, Shreveport, La. P. S. Thomas Jefferson got gyped ip the Louisiana purchase. 1 Cpl. Jack Banks is home on leave visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Banks. i MONTHLY RETORT NORTH CAROLINA, YANCEY COUNTY. , 7 The following exempt ions were issued: $289.51. i The following vouchers , were issued: , From Debt Service funds : $9,579.20. From General Funds , $1,016.08. , From Poor funds $221.25. From Refunding funds $39.45. From health funds 120.00 ’ I» Earl C. Wilson, Regis ter of Deeds, do hereby certify that the above is a! true and correct copy of the Minutes of the meeting of the Yancey County Board of Commissioners as of July 6, 1943. Earl C. Wilson, Register of Deeds, Yancey County, North .Carolina. INCOME The Bureau of Agricul tural Economics has re ported that income from’ farm marketings was 1.393 million dollars for May 1943 as compared with i 993 million dollars for May 1942. | THE YANCEY RECORD W BURNSVILLE— 1 “So They Say* * 1 The weather: We hesi tate to mention that it’s hot, after hearing from so many folks in so many oth er places. The mercury does go up and up here in the day time.but drops as sobn as Evening comes, so we get, along. . . .We’re sure that the weather colors Lee Evans’ opinion of Louisia na—he’s there "on maneuv ers and writes that: “Jeff erson got gypped on the Louisiana Purchase!”. . . . Capt. Royce Perry now at Camp Wolters, Texas and !is now assistant executive iofficer there!. . . .Letters from Pat Williams down in Florida and Mary Allison I up in Detroit and they cho rus that —Burnsville was never like this, and they’d like to be back for awhile. . Good to see Gus Fender home after being wounded in Africa, and sent back to recuperate. . .new drug gist at Mclntosh Drug Sto re. . .Trena Fox now in the : county agents office, and there’s to be a new home; demonstration agent on August 1. . Genevieve Bla lock Boone now secretary at -Feldspar Milling comp- i any. . .new arrivals: the Ottis Gibbs’ new daughter, and Rom and Vivian Pet erson Edwards’ new son. . regret to learn of Mrs. Luther Ayers’ illness, that Mrs. Low Horton received bad cut on the leg with grass hook, and. that Mrs. Bill Wray, Sr. fell yester day and broke her hip. . . marriage of Ruth Metcalf and Lt. Mclntyre of wide interest here. . . .Rush Be eler has been transferred to Arlington, Va. from Bedford, Mass. Notice: If you want can ning sugar be sure to read , ration news on page 1. You , will sign at local office in stead of the school build ings as before. And mentioning school | buildings, children, have ’ you counted the days till school opens? ij TOLEDO NEWS Mrs. Ada Elsie of Chat tanooga, Tenn. is visiting relatives here. J. E. Johnson is a patient lof St. Joseph hospital in Asheville. Cpl. I. E. Clevenger of. Camp Davis spent the week end with Mrs. Clevenger here. Mr. and Mrs. Dud John son, Mrs. Jean Buchanan, Mrs. Gladys Pittman, Mrs. Kathryne Riddle, and Mrs. Annie Roberts of Lunday vvere visiting Mrs. J. E. Johnson here Sunday. Miss Nora Padgett con ducted a Training Union study course and vacation , Bible school at 4 Zion Bap tist church last week. Mrs. Edd Wallace is vis iting her daughter, Mrs. Garrett Huskins in Green ville, S. C. Miss Lena Letterman is representing Harris Mem orial Presbyterian church at a conference in Montreat this week. FERTILIZERS There are apparently sufficient amounts of ni trogen and phosphate fer tilizers for all food and feed production in 1944, ; but there may be a slight shortage .of potash to meet j total requirements. s. GREEN MOUNTAIN Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Garland and daughter of Aninoore, W. Va. are visit ing Mr. Garland’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Garland Mrs. James C. Smith, Jr. of Erwin, Tenn. is spending the summer with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fulton Bennett. Mrs. Smith is the former "Miss Jennie Bennett. Pvt. Matthew Jones ar rived home Monday from Camp Davis, N. C. on a ten day furlough. Mrs. C. P. Randolph and children are ’visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Howell. Mrs. J. H. Burton has re turned to her home at Johnson City, Tenn. after a long visit with her dau ghter, Mrs. Frank W. Howell. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. I Young had as their week end guest, Mrs. Blanch Bradshaw of Relief, N. C. Pvt. Willard Collis of Fort Bragg, N. C. has re ttfned to camp after a short visit with his parents, Mr. land Mrs. Biss Collis. | Mrs. Ray Peterson of Battle Creek, Mich, has re turned here for the sum mer. WAR DEMANDS FOR LUMBER GSEATER THAN SUPPLY, FOREST MAN STATES Lumber production i s first in the war effort due to the fact that a shortage of eight to ten billion feet in demand for carting and barge construction exists, it was stated by W. L. Shad dix, of Double Springs, Alabama, who is in this area in the interest of the program of the Southern States Forestfire Commis sion. “85 per cent of the lumber produced in the i south is by portable mills, and of which the south has about 25,000 working part time, where a year ago we I had nearly 40,000,” he stat ed. “15,000 have shut down because of lack of loggers and truck drivers, and be cause of shortage of trucks |or parts. Many shut down | for lack of timber. It is easy to see how the govern ment should get caught short of necessary lumber for war needs, and lend lease,” Mr. Shaddix stated, and added: “Aside from labor short age, fire burnt up a fourth of the south’s stumpage in the Spring—April of 1942, and at the time the big fif es swept some of the moun tains here. “Back in 1939 we organ ized several volunteer»for est fire groups in western counties to help keep down forest fire destruction. We expect to revive and in crease the groups, and to furnish much valuable and interesting material 10 teachers of the schools be ginning this fall. “We also are inviting cit izens to join in a conferen ce to be held in Asheville •on August 6. Guests will hear eminent conservation ists from several states discuss plans for assuring that another April of 1942 will not occur with its ter rible destruction of our timber we need to back up our boys in war.” SUCCESS “Success comes in cans, failure in can’ts” say the home economists of the N. C. State College* Extension Service. J ► ■ V*- O. FRUITS • ; " North Carolina” peaches have made the “most com plete failure on record.” All fruits are quite short 1 and apples indicate about one-third of a full crop prospect. The shellac coating form erly applied to oranges to prevent their shrinkage in transit has been replaced by a w r ax coating to save shellac for war use. YANCEY THEATRE Sun.—Mon—July 25-26 ITS TRUE! By Wiley Padan 3“““"' WALTER PIDS£ON IS CAST AS WO2EL MO.-,’WHITE CAKiO'..-ONE C - the mcj* whm.nr fcmtmr human CARLSON Yfl i 1 KAYS HIS MOST IMPORTANT tLMs \V if . ill 1016 SiNC£ GOING TO V*' \ WV M 1 HOUYUKBO 'WHITE CARGO' f Vwtflt \ ~< «\ VI f ...PICTURI7ATION OF THF \ \ | ItNSATIONAI STAGE HIT I \ A \ ' , A TEMPTRESS FROM iKt TROPICS ! ( fJEW MEDV WEARS THF PERFECT PRIORITY \WMBf iY. jjStejk' COSTUME... A'LURONG'...IT WEIGHS 1 LalP> 8 OUNCES. iV. NO IBS, NO HEM, NO • Igy.. SLEEVES. NO SNAPS, U®F NOR ZIPPER, ««.• S NO RURRCR STRAPS IT'S MADE V ill CF synthetic gossamer SILK JERSEY.* «' - / VyyLi IT SUPS ON IN IO SECONDS ./ jJtf/ „ V THE TARES * ra . %) $ ill I «aS ! Prank morgaftm/ shs CHAIRS UP ANOTHER COLORFUL , ROLE AS THE RIND-HEARTED “ A RANCH ON.THE THOUGH DEGRADED DOCTOR... WHO IS A SLAVE TO THF BOTTLE ! Ptsc *T. •WHITE CARGO*. MAT 2-A ■ YANCEY THEATRE Wed.—Thur.—July 28-29 Shout out the happy " newil That glorious ro- JJ « monce of the show world % •’ ' I! \ •* here! judy at her joy- " * ous best! A screenful of „ * entertainers! Take your " iiXi I gal to see it! * guundA^ : jyiplEf ; j jMYOM : Wtit 1 : MURPHY-KELLY lIMI I MARTA BEN iMW.M & EGGERTH • BLUE O.r.C.U by »US#y BISMitY Ik. Piottuod by AHTHUft JHIID nt-ium if —iff:,:;" flay by Richard Sn»rman, Ff#d F.nhlohoffo and Sid | Original Story by Howord Emmett Rogers ‘ LET IT BE WRITTEN: * “Everything was done perfect ly.” Every detail of the funeral service is taken care of, and > carried out in away to make it a fitting tribute to the departed. HOLCOMBE & EDWARDS FUNERAL HOME ! Burnsville, N. C. Ambulance service Day & Night Jl * 1 THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1943 CLASSIFIED ADS Good Pasture for Rent. See Mrs. E. M. Banks, Bolens Creek. WANTED: Black Walnut logs for Gunstocks. Cash on delivery to Frank Aus tin Mill, Hominy, N. C. 5 miles from Asheville on Murphy road. For fur ther . information please write to Wood Mosaic Co., Inc., Box 1249 Asheville, - N. C. '
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 22, 1943, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75