PAGE FOUR VANCEY THEATrV * BURNSVILLE, N. C. " FRIDAY—SATURDAY OCTOBER 13-14 HIT NO. 1 The Man From The Rio Grande 1 DON “RED” BARRY £ HIT NO. 2 {} THE U. S. GOVERNMENT PRESENTS & _ "The Battle of Russia” SUNDAY—MONDAY OCTOBER 15-16 "Heaven Can Wait” IN TECHNICOLOR Gene TIERNEY Don AMECHE TUESDAY— OCTOBER 17th .1 "In Old Chicago” Alice FAYE Don AMECHE WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY OCTOBER 18-19 "The Sullivans” Anne BABTER Thomas MITCHELL COMING NEXT WEEK “SWEET ROSIE O’GRADY” j • t “UNION PACIFIC” “THE PURPLE HEART’ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF YANCEY Having qualified as Administra tor of the Estate of Berry Wyatt, deceased, late of Yancey County, North . Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned at Micaville, N. C., on or before the 7th day of October, 1945, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment. This the 7th day of Oct. 1944, Bert Wyatt, Administrator of the Estate of Berry Wyatt, de ceased. Oct. 12, 19, 26. Nov. 2, 9 16 1944 rw ! NOTICE OF SERVICE QF SUMMONS BY VUBLICAtION la The Superior Court Os YANCEY COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA Special Proceeding Before the Clerk Ralph Silver, Administrator of A. P. Young, deceased, Plaintiff vs. Fred Young and wife, Mira Young, Champ Ray and wife, Grace Ray, Flaudc Wilson and husband, Wal ter Wilson, Tee Young and hus band, Locke Young, Ola Mae Young and husband. Clyde Young, Gertrude Ray, Brantley Ray and wife, Cora Ray, Lyda Ray, Inlean Ray, Fred Ray, J. Bis Ray and wife, Mira Lee Ray, Defendants The defendants, Brantley Ray and Fred Ray, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Super ior Court of Yancey County, Nor th Carolina, for the purpose of selling lands in w hich said defend- 1 ants have an interest, by the ad-i ministrator of A. P. Young, de- j ceaaed, to make assets with which to pay debts against said estate;! and the said defendants will fur- 1 ther take notice that they are re-! quired to appear at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of •aid County in the Courthouse in Burnsville, North Carolina, within U> days after the 3rd day of November, 1944, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief de manded in said complaint. This the sth day of Oct. 1944. Fred Proffitt, Clerk Superior Court, Yancey C-ountf, North Car olina. ' Oct. 12, 19, 26, Nov. 2nd 1944 Administrator's Notice Having qualified as ftriministra-' tor of the estate of C. B. Briggs, deceased, late of Yancey County : North Carolina, this ! s to notify all persons having claims against' the estate of the said C. B. Briggs, daceaaed, to exhibit them to the undersigned at Burnsville, North Carolina on or before Sept. 1, 1945 i Os this notice will be plead in bar i of their recovery. All persons indebted to said es— 1 tats will please make immediate 1 payment. This Sept. 1, 1944. D, R. McKinqey, Administrator •f the estate of C. B. Brigga, de ceased. j B«pt. 1, 14, 21. 23 Oct. 612 1944 I FEEL PEPPY! * , RELIEVE THAT AWFUL (k /backache mm I DUCTOFATtOUeANOeXPOSUtf a Feel like stepping out again by relieving that backache (due to fa tigue and exposure). rub on soma En-er-co and Inatantly W m it begins its four-fold M W work of helping soothe mJy that back. Pleasant. [ M t 60c and $1 at your drug- A gist. Caution: Use only ’| ru A . as directed. National EIGAILCO Remedy Co., N. Y. C The addition of calcium arsenate to standard blue mold sprays is effective in! reducing flea beetle popu-1 lations in tobacco plant beds. S' ■■ ——■ I PRECINCT & COUNTY WIDE 1 DEMOCRATIC RALLIES 5 I I ' . ■ I I The Democratic Candidate for the North Carolina I I General Assembly and the Democratic" Candidates for the various County Offices will be at the following places in Yancey County and at the time indicated: I MICAVILLE HIGH SCHOOL, Tuesday, Oct. 17, BP. M. Hon. A. L. Bulwinkle, Speaker I BEE LOG HIGH SCHOOL, Wednesday, Oct. 18, BP. M. Hon. A. L. Bulwinkle, Speaker I BIG CREEK SCHOOL, Thursday, October 19, at BP. M. I J. W. HOWELL’S STORE, Friday, October 20, at BP. M. I CLEARMONT HIGH SCHOOL, Sat Oct. 21. at 8 P.M. i I DOUBLE ISLAND SCHOOL, Monday, Oct 23. at BP. M. I HARVARD SCHOOL, Tuesday, October 24, at BP. M. I PENSACOLA SCHOOL, Wednesday, Oct 25, at BP. M. * 9 HORTON HILL SCHOOL, Thursday, Oct 26, at BP.M. f J 1 BALI) CREEK HIGH SCHOOL, Sat Oct 28, at BP. M. | COUNTY WIDE RALLY I BURNSVILLE COURTHOUSE, Friday, Nov. 3, BP. M. I Hon. Clyde R. Hoey, Speaker I Come Out To SEE and Hear the Democratic Candidates a ■ t j (Paid Political Ad) * t BURNSVILLE— “So They Say” The weather: Much acti vity; to get corn and ’tater tops' cut, and apples picked before a heavy frost and freeze, but rain comes in -1 stedd so there’ll be a few more days before it gets really cold. Temperatures around 36 to 40 felt quite chilly tho. About town: Sailors Drate Banks and Bill Hus kins home following boot training and James Ray on leave. . . . Great soft ball game at school Tuesday be tween the Burnsville 7th graders and Micaville 7th graders. . . . Weddings an nounced: Margaret Whit tington and Lawrence King Eunice Mattson Weller and Fred* Robinson of Los An geles. . . News reports from college about Hope Bailey. Member of Glee Club and of Music Education group! Leslie and Mary off to Charleston for launching of Liberty Ship which bears the name of Yancey county on Plaque as we aid so well in sth War Bond drive. . J Watch out for these early winter colds. Among latest victims are Ruby Robinson and Grace Ray who are both back at work, and Clarence Briggs who had cold but kept working. . . J Note from Grace Dayton in Fort Worth and news of Scotty's being in Navy. Doesn’t seem possible that he’s big enough for that. . . Eleanor Rogers and com mittee are really lining things up for the Junior Red Cross. So many activi ties they can join in doing, ’:.nd if the students live through Hallowe’en they can really get going on these plans. . . . Pvt. and Mrs. H. B. Swann of Bald Creek, an nounce theJrirth of a son, Oct. Bth at the Mission hos pital. Mrs. Swann is the former Miss Hazel Pate. j Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Riddle and son from Morganton visited ‘ relatives here Sun day. - i THE YANCEY RECORD -- More about— WITH SERVICE UNIT , man factory and is turning » out repair jobs at the rate I of more than 300 a week. I Shop trucks, specially built . for vehicle repair, are seaf ,t tered throughout the build ; ing. Ordnance carpenters ( have built work benches, tool racks and grease pits to complete the set up. The building is divided into sections where special ised and skilled mechanics, welders, blacksmiths, pain ters, inspectors and clerks work round the clock in re-! gular shifts. As the Vehicles come in for repair they are care fully checked and inspected at a control point by com-| petent inspectors who make up a work order listing all the necessary repairs and route the vehicle to the sec-j tions where the job is to be| done. i “The Army-s transporta system is not suffering one bit from lack of repair or; parts,” said Captain John W. Campbell 28, of 525, South Ridgewood Avenue, Daytona Beach, Florida, the unit’s commanding of ficer. “So far we have been* able to release 95 per cent of the vehicles within 24 hours after they are brou ght in for repairs.” In order to add to its limited supply of spare parts, equipment from da maged vehicles is utilized in many instances. As an ad ditional function the com pany maintains its own small arms service and re- ! pair section which handles, weapons turned in by ord nance recovery units. SMALL GRAINS REACT TO FERTILIZATIONS When wheat is seeded following crops that are fertilized light to medium, the yield is Increased both by a fertilizer containing nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash at seeding and by a topdressing of nitro gen in the early spring, so’ ! reads the latest agronomy WANTED: Two honest,' reliable men to Buddy me in one of best Mica Mines ! . I in North Carolina. Mica : Ruby Red. See me at Win* * ‘ I . dom 1 mile below Gibson’s Store Sunday afternoon. Rex Boone information circular pre-' pared by W. H. Rankin, as-| sociate agronomist with the Agricultural E x periment 1 Station at State College. ! This conclusion is reach-i ed from the results of j eight experiments conduct- I ed on sandy loam, silt loam and claf loam soils on which the cropping system i s made up predominately of lightly fertilized crops, Rankin says. The system | was made up of corn,* cot ton, and small grains, or of ' cowpeas and soy ! beans removed for hay, he I points out. ! Tho ontir* reoort,, “Small : \ Grains, Res; ond to Fertili-; ’ "” i - i>a.-jd on ten ex periments, conducted on l fields including a wide ran ge of soil conditions, crop ping systems, and fertiliz er practices, Rankin says. Experiments were desig ned to show the responses in yields that were produc ed first from the use of 1 | fertilizer at seeding, and pocond. from the use of top dressing of nitrogen in ear ly spring. Copies of the circular may be' obtained by writing j’° ti ie Agronomy Depart ment, State College, Ral- i n igh and asking for Agro- . nomy Information Circular, Number 137. —— , , . . . d BUY WAR BONDS , . ■ 1 . 11 11 "■ ■» \ fe; ortant ia Peace I I as in Warl _ j «. ' ...„ , . . _ .—. • r Few products are playing a mom ▼ftrf’role ia win- v , ning the war than pulpwood. And the South ia proud , 1 * of the fact that about half the nation’s supply of this " ' f. essential war material comes from this area. Out of war-time developments will come a greatly enlarged field for pulpwood products the South can look forward to a vast poet-war market for this ‘ important crop. • - ' - Only the beet is good enough fur ov boye/aadyon’ * can’t make the beet munitions and supplies fronsV. 'wood that is rotted, oharred or emokmm* Vand knotty. x Make ererp cxe-etroke eonot Ont nptdlfiih fta aound and atraight -"WW.HI A WAR-TIMI JO» WITH A POST-WAR WMB *** ijnnSEEa Ck>unty Pulpwood Committee *“ " aw ttd + I FOR PROMPT TAXI SERVICE CALL A. COOPER Phone 42 I Burnsville, N. C. <Call 16 for prompt TXXI Service at all times. Cecil Higgins ;LOST: ..Gas Book and | stamps for non-Highway I motor. If found notify I Ben H. Peterson at Day 1 Book, N. C. ! : . I MAN OR WOMAN WAN TED: Good nearby Raw leigh Route now open. If willing to conduct Home Service business while ear ning good living, write immediately. Rawleigh’s Dept. NCJ-30-45, Rich-! »iio>id, Va. iLCKT: On Highway be | tweui Celo, N. C. and I Asheville, Oct. 2. Rifle-' 2.7-20 Winchester Carbine, Model 1892, shoulder strap, j Reward. Write Rev. E. J. Hu!-. Rt. 2 Burnsville. WANTED: Colored Girl asj housekeeper. Nice place to stay and reasonable pay. Write to Mrs. Tillman Ed-| wards, Erwin, Tenn. FOR SALE: Several Farms and Tracts of Land. Also The Uncle Levi Buckner j House and lot in Burns ville. See E. L. Briggs Owner. OPENING SOON: Dining room in Banks Building opposite the Theatre. Regu *ar m ‘als will be served. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1944 TOM MpINTORH TAXIS Many Years of Reliable Service. Day Phone 42 Night Phone 442 Burnsville, N. C. WANTED: To Buy ail types of used ■; Radios in any condition. Highest Cash Prices Paid. Elliott Radio Service LOST: Gas Book and ! Stamps for Non-Highway i motor. If found notify Latt Edwards, Burnsville Rt. 1. I * SEE HOLLEMON the new and-used Furniture man if in need of beds, springs, chairs, dressers and tables. We also have a few Linol j eum rugs left. But hurry, ! they are hard to keep in ; stock and can only get a few of each at a time. FOR SALE: House and lot just North of Burnsville. Close to Burns vjl’e school Good community. Lights and water, outbuildings, j Priced lo sell. See Jake j F. Buckner. FOR ! Electrical Wiring, Electrical Supplies— Glass Light Fixtures See W. L. Allen, Burnsville, N. C. i : FOR SALE: Corn MiU in . good condition . See Bar ganhous. FOR SALE: Baby Car riage. Good as new. See J. R. Bailey.

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