" ' ■ / • - - - THURSDAY/ TUNE 2, 1955 il 11 *iikn*MM» i ■■mm ».,«> Hff'f* „ Down Main Street £ Mr. and Mr®. Nathan Smith .of Alexandria, Va. visited Mrs. Smith'* mother, Mrs. Sally , Kate Butner, last weekend. - .Mr. and Mrs. Jess Styles and children returned home last week after a visit with Mrs. Styles’ mother in Washing ton, JD. O, Judge and Mrs. J. Frank Huskins have purchased and moved intfo. the Reckard house in West Burnsville. Mrs. Philip Ray who has been undergoing treatment in’ St. Joseph’s Hospital in Asheville returned home last week. Mi». -J. G. Fox visited rela tives in Spruce Pine last Weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tram mel, Jr. and daughter, Dawn, of Elkin, N. C. visited relatives here last weekend. Miss Becky Trammel and Miss Erma Styles of Meredith College, Raleigh are home for summer vacation. Miss Shirley Styles of Mars: Hill College is home for sum • tner vacation. Rev. and Mrs. Charles Tram mel returned home last week from Miami, Fla. where they attended the Southern Baptist Convention. Misses Louiseh Patten and Olin Higgins of B.urnsville and . Morris and Devoid Butner of Bald Creek are home from Eastern Tennessee State Col lege for summer vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Banks ud sons of Marietta, Ga. are visiting Mr. Banks' parents, i Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Banks, here. Mr. and Mrs. Jaek Brinkley and children of Monticello, Ga. j were the guests of Mr. Brink-, ley’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hulen Brinkley, last weekend. ' Joe Higgins and Tommy Burton are home for summer vacation from W. C. T. C., Cullowhee | Miss Sally Mcßae is hornet here from College, S. C. Claude Dellinger of New-' dale entered Spruca Pine olin ie this week for an operation. \ IH| DEYT&N FARM SUPPLY Yancey Cour t j Os Deyton and Let's all remember June Dairy Month and try to in araaaa our use of this most nearly perfect of food*,. .The nutritionists tell us that we m more of the essential ele ments and vitamins fronts milk than from any other one source and quite often its more eoono mleai. In addition to milk we have dossens of milk products— several types of cheese, ice cream, etc., and all are excell ent foods both nutritionally and from a taete standpoint We have a lot of farmers producing either Grade A or Grale C milk in Yancey County and they are vitally interested in all of you, using just a little more milk. Lets help them out and drink milk instead of some other beverage. "rear’s Outlook Bright for Hogmen on Profit Gil Pronig, manager of the Purina Research Farm hog and steer fattening units, says the outlook is still rosy for hog men who follow a sound feeding and management program. This year the experts look for the average price to be ftear the S2O mark. Peak prices • are expected soon—in early or Mid-summer. This means hog- MMtt should push hogs fast to gat them t° early markets. Let us help you ..switch your hogs to the Purina Progrr.A new. Gets hogs to market in 5 months. Takes only 5 bushels of corn or 805 lbs. of milo or 320 Ebs. of barley and 45 lbs. of Deyton Farm Supply Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Robinson, a daughter in Mar ion General Hospital, Satud day, 'May 28. { Rev. and Mrs. John Young of Rutherfordton, visited rela tives and friends here last Weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Styles and daughter have moved to Burnsville Rt.~2. Mr. and Mrs. Levi'Buckner of Johnson City, Tenn., visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Basil Preslar and children of Asheville visit ed Mr. and Mrs. Edward Buck ner here last Sunday. J Rev. Burt Styles of Kings port, Tenn., Rev. John Yelton of Johnson City, Tenn., and Rev. Arthur Sanders of Pineola, N. C., were the .guest ministers at the Installation services at the Mlcaville group of Presby terian churches here Sunday. | After tho services a picnic ! lunch was served by members of the three churches, Micaville, Newdale and Estatoa, at the Presbyterian Manse at Mica ville, Rev. Longenecker’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Long enecker of Roebuck, S. C. were guests of their son last week end and also attended the picnic Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Laughrun and Mrs. Evelyn King have just returned from Sumter, S. C., after attending the wedding of their daughter, Mrg. Gwendolyn I Smith to Mr. William J. Cherry of Shaw Air Force Base and Fayetteville, N. C. | The double ring ceremony , took place Saturday evening at | 3:00 p. m. May 28th in the St. Johns Methodist Church. The j pastor, R. 8.. Jajrris performed i the ceremony. I Now Many Woaif < FALSE TEETH | r With Little Worry i 'ltet, t*lk, laugh or sneers* without Hear of Insecure fate teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FASTsETH holds plates firmer and more com fortably. This pleasant powder has no fimmy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It’s alhallna (non-acid). Checks "plate odor** i (denture breath). Oat FiSXSKTH aw 1 day drug counter, y iQnHHwvKiiiiniiwiiiu^iiHiwmiiiniin Royce Lee Howell Hog Chow to make 100 lbs. of pork. More than 82,000 pigs raised at the -Purina Research Farm built this Program. Results thousands of hogmen get prove it to be right. June la Natoinol Dairy Month Are we, the dairymen, encour- . tfging our friends and families i to use more dairy products in our everyday living? If not, we should be. If every person in America would drink just one additional glass of cold, delicious, nutri tious milk a day, we would be faced with a shortage rather than a surplus. Let’s all en courage greater consumption of milk by setting the example in our own homes. Purina, Plan Grows Pullets * at Low Cost Many poultrymen have grown j sturdy, well-developed layers on only 18 pounds of feed per bird on Purina’s famous Growing Chow ‘and grain program. This program takes the birds from 1 41/2 weeks to 20 to 24 weeks, i Takes only 6 pounds of Growing Chow and 12 lbs, of grain on good rang* to grow the average pullet. For feeding ease and uni formity of pullets many farm ers prefer Purina Growena, a complete feed. Only 16 to 18 lbs. of. Growena is required for the average pullet. Let’s figure to see which program is best suited to your needs. ‘Wives’ Corriei 1 With Ytfhcey Homemakers by Louise Tones* We have let another spring go by without getting " any baby chicks to start a laying flock. Our two ilittle girls are getting impatient to have chick ens of our own. And so am I.* k My first years in Yancey County were so bound up with chickens that life hasn’t seemed quite complete ever since l SUNDAES fj|| I /&> SANt>WICHES and tKJ W GOFFEE /M | UNTIL 11 BURNSVILLE DAIRY BAR THE YANCEY RECORD over “Disease and Parasites of Poultry” and wondered how many of tite horrid things -that could happen to chickens would happen wfounrjr 11 - i; "'""" ! Before long one horrid* thing did happen. Some of the gullets started gasping for brea/th. Their bright red combs and wattles turned sickly purple. On opening their beaks one could see a white cheesy substance blocking their thii>ats. “Lar yngeo-trachitis’’ I believe the government bulletin said, and it was not optimistic about tho Outcome. Nevertheless II took the sick hens into the house to try some amateur doctoring holding thejr mouths open and removing part of the obstruction from their throats with tweez ers. This seemed futile, since the first two hens died. A Minor Miracle One chilly night I sat alone by the fireplace, struggling with the third dying hen by the light of a kerosene lamp, pick ing at the stuff inside her throat which was robbing her of air and life, certain that I would fail with her as with the others and see the whole flock wiped out. The job at hand was dirty, smelly, and tedious. The long-range prospect was dreary. What a life, I thought. How my time was being wasted, when there was so much Im portant work to be done in the world. Then a.thought struck me like a dash of cold water in the face: “Feeling sorry for yourself, are you? Just stop to think how many people in the world would give anything to trade places with you right now. What a privilege to be free to try to heal anything, even a chicken, in times like these i”. ___ (Immediately afterwards the mass that was blocking tde hen’s throat lyielded, to. the tweezers in my hand and came away ell at once. The hen gave a startled squawk as the air rushed back into her lungs. The red color visibly seeped back into her comb and wattles. "She stood up and looked around with a “where am I?” expres sion an] began pieenjng her rumpled feathers. She started laying again in a few days. There were no further losses from the disease. When the hens came into full production, the egg supply got ahead of the local demand. This problem was solved by a con tract with one firm to handje all the eggs I had to sell. Siz able egg checks coming in were most welcome. By culling rigor ously before packing the cases, I could still let neighbors have good fresh eggs that were off size, misshapen, or slightly cracked. It was therefore quite an unpleasant shock one day to open the egg check and find it much smaller than usual, with the grading report show ing that several cases had been graded ,‘checked” (having small cracks) and given the lowest price. My first impulse was to write a scorching letter. Then'-Fcool ed off a bit. Had I ever told the people in the company when I was pleased with the fairness and accuracy they had shown jn all previous dealings with me? No. Well, wasn’t it about notice of service of SUMMONS BY NEWSPAPER PUBLICATION In The Superior Court NORTH CAROLINA YANCEY COUNTY Eva Everhart, Plaintiff vs. Jacob Everhart, Defendant The above named defendant Jacob Everhart, will take notice that an action entitled above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Yancey County. North Carolina, by the plaintiff to se cure an absolute divorce from the defendant upon the ground that plaintiff and defendant have lived separate and apart for more than two years next .proceeding the bringing of this action, that the defendant will further take notice that he is required t° appear at the Clerk of the Superior Court of Yancey County in the courthouse in Burnsville, North Carolina, within 20 days after the of July 1955, and answer’and demur to the com plaint in said action; or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This the26th day of May 1955. Lowe Thomas, Clerk of the Superior Court. June 2,9, 16, 23 ’ - Drink more P| milk in June It >s a treat as fMI well as a whole- j sgj some food. | ~ : " . , ■ ' " ; “ (Dairy Farmers: Good housing will make both you and Iyour cows more contented. Increase your income by improving your build ings. See us for plans and building materials. Izi “ B. B. Penland & Son Co. PHONE NO. 8 BURNSVILLE, N. C. I iwiimm—ll r-inn 1111111 1 tijn£ —? So 1 my*'letter bpened with an expression of appre ciation for all these satisfac tory dealings, before going on to tell of the one unsatisfac tory dealing. A few days inter I received another check and a letter from an official of the company. His letter made me thankful that the scorching letter ll had first planned did not set writ ten, since he was evidently ac 1 Fixin’ to take I „ j I a I * ji S Vacation? I . i | Make sure it will be a f i happy and trouble fre * one by stopping in he *to have your whee * • \ balanced and your tires j inspected. | Recapping, Tires & Tin ; Repairs | U. S. Royal Tires | 1 Wheel Balancing ; I Royal Tire Service \ * ¥ * , ¥ PAGE SEVEN I custoahed t» reviving that sdr*. . of response when •‘ mistakes . were made. Having someone re i fnenlber to mention the good things along with the bad had given him a pleasant surprise. I’m not sure whether thg rest of this story adds or detracts, but anyway it is true: the check which he sent to correct the mistake made the eggs bring more, than they would have without the mistake.