J I j3 oo A YEAR IN ADVANCE OUTS I A Week I Of The War The Home Front i as the war progresses, the AlI lies are no longer caught nap ping at any point, however obI scure it may appear in the grand strategy of the United Nations. I if it is surprising that American light tanks are reported in action on the jungle-enclosed strip of New Guinea Beach, how much more extraordinary must have been the means of getting them there. On the economic front our government must be equally farseeing. More than 50 million p.mnds of seed, foir example^ have been destined for planting on foreign soil, under LendLease arrangements. Some of these seeds are supplied to areas occupied by our troops, who will raise fresh vegetables when they aren't fighting^ Grass seeds are sent to new air fields for surfacing barren strips. But'the bulk of the seeds go for foods to feed the peoples of the Allied lands in desperate need of them and to ' replant farmlands lately freed ; from Axis control. And seeds I take up less shipping space than produce in any other form. A Civilians Will Not Benefit Although American farms *r.ust raise a great deal more crops of many kinds next year, civilians must not expect to benI efit by the increase. Our armed forces will need much more of all that is raised, and so will our I Allies. England, Russia, and the I French in North Africa^ For not I only is food, as it supports fightI ing men, a direct instrument of I warfare, it is an essential bulwark of civilian population in I war time. The hatred felt by peoI pie of occupied Europe for their Na^i oppressors, fs fed by the pangs of nimger, their hopes of I liberation and of ultimately getting food from us strengthen their resistance and definitely I aid the Allied cause. I JThe plight of starving millions abroad and the fearful condiI tions under which many of our I soldiers are fighting in jungle 1 and desert should awaken in all ft of us at home the willingness to take cheerfully the slight dis comforts and minor hardships I which necessarily go with a war of this kind, especially the in-' conveniences connected with rationing and other restrictions of scarce goods. The combined savings of milI lions of Americans, in motoring I nnd heating, particularly among those living along the Atlantic Seaboard, helped our army land in North Africa and attack the Axis, but the total quantity of I these products needed for a conI tinuing campaign is enormous, and will require the service of a fleet of tankers. For this reason, the Army has sent an urgent tn nHniianc tr* cnvp gasoline i'"-" w.umlJU o and fuel oil in every way possible At the same time, the Pet r o 1 e u m Administrator has warned that several areas in the East have only enough motor gas for essential needs?supplies in storage have been drained by non-essential driving beyond ].revious estimates. Efforts Made To Conserve Oil Although fuel oil rations have been increased 10 per cent in 13 Middle Western states, every effort is being made to conserve oil stocks throughout the entire area of 30 rationed states. In order to encourage conversion from fuel oil to coal, new coal stoves have been* made available to those who will use the heaters to replace fuel oil equipment, who need to heat an unheated snapp fnr psspntial working or living whose present coal-burning equipment is not usable, or U'ho are eligible for additional fuel oil and will use a coal heater i" stead. Because of increased military needs for the "red meats," there'll be further reductions in civilian quotas of beef, pork, lamb, mutton and veal, but these reduced allowances will be Partly made up through the release for civilian use of millions oounds of cured and frozen beef, dried beef beef sausage * s II)t Jl SIDE THE COUNTY Fisher Rites At Old Field Last Tuesday Funeral services for J. Oscar Fisher were conducted at the Whittier Methodist church, Tuesday morning, and interment was in Old Field cemetery, ?^t Beta. Mr. Fisher, who died at the Community hospital Saturday, following a brief illness after a heart attack,was 62 years of age. He had beer} a prominent merchant at Whittier for a numberof years, living on the Jackson county side of the river, and taking an interest in the affairs of Qualla township and the county. Mr. Fisher was born and reared at Beta, in Sylva township, a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Fisher, and lived in Sylva several years before removing to Whittier. He is survived by his widow, Mrs., Hattie Love flisher, two sons,' Lieut. Carl Byrd Fisher, of Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, and J. O. Fisher, Jr., of Whittier; three brothers, Ed and Charlie ; Fisher, both of Beta, and Carl Fisher, of Franklin, Tenn.; two sisters, Mrs. W. H. Oliver of Sylva, and Mrs. Jerdie Sigmon, of Winston-Salem, and by a large number of other relatives. A rr^rl Wnman f T Vf Attttrnx Of Community Passes Away . Mrs. Pallie Monteith, 87 year j old resident of Sylva township,! ' died Sunday night at her home j | near Beta. Mrs. Monteith, born ! ; and reared in this county, had I lived in Sylva ttfftnship ail h?r | life. She was the widow of ! Thomas Monteith, well-known Sylva citizen and veteran of the j Confederacy. Funeral services were conj ducted at Scott's Creek Bapj tist church, of which she had been a member for 74 years, Wednesday morning, with Rev. T. F. Deitz and Rev. B. S Hensley officiating, and interment was in Old Field cemetery. Pall bearers were members of the I American Legion. Mrs. Monteith is survived by | six children, Mrs. R H. Hyatt, of Bryson City, John B. Monteith, of Sylva, O. E. Monteith, Sylva, Lee Monteith, Olympia, Washington, Lawrence Monteith, Saginaw, Oregon, and Felix Monteith, Monsey, New York; by 24 grand-children, 24 greatj grandchildren, one great-great i grandchild, and a large number I of offher relatives. (Lease-Lend commitments to Great Britain and other allies in 1942 called for large increases in the acreages of the four princi- I pal canning crops?tomatoes, | peas, beans, and corn material, and various domestic cuts not suitable for military diets. Farm Labor Presents Big Problem The supply of farm labor will be one of our major problems next year The War Manpower Commission expects that some 7,900,000 persons will be employed in year-round farm work, and additional millions will be needed seasonally in the various agricultural areas. In December of this year farm hired labor | 1 showed a decided drop over the same time two years ago. A large part of the loss was due to en- [ listment in the armed forces, the rest to the attractions offered bv war industries. The deficit in farm labor must be met by keeping labor on farms and by enlist | ing the services of an army of i volunteers throughout the couni try to help harvest next year's crop. Additional labor, too, is needed i to meet our lumber production goal of 1943, set at 32 billion feet While our civilian lumber requirements will be about 40 per cent less than for 1942, we'll need far more lumber for aircraft, ship decking, pontoon con' struction, ship and boat tim I icksor f SYLVA, NORTH .IJ mL - i uoW jiST JnBiflojraf ~ * & IHHK^K'>^iHH %?&BMHHBHHr&v ' ll IHi MRS. E. L. McK'EE Senator from the 32nd. Senatorial District Mrs. E. L. McKee, State Sena- I tor, and Dan Tompkins, repre- j 2 sentative, will leave on Monday |a | (] for the 1943 session of the Gen- j t eral Assembly, which convenes , v in Raleigh next week. ! c New Books Have j] Been Added To |] Library In Sylva j] I . I Mrs. May Stalcup, librarian, j has announced the addition of a number of new books to the li- | brary here, and has furnished ! us with a list, which we publish for the benefit of "the patrons of the library: j Fiction: "Drivin' Woman", by: Chevalier; "Assignment in Brit- ' tany", Maclnnes; "The Gay Sisters", Longstreet; Lieutenant's Lady", Aldrich; "Flare Path", Claymore; "Hostages", Heym; j "The Dollar Gold Piece" Swain; \ "Time of Peace", Williams; "Es- j pecially Babe", Annett; "Look to the Mountain", Cannon; "Gentleman Ranker" Jennings; "Big Doc's Girl", Medearis; "The Seventh Cross" Seghers; "Marling Hall", Thirkell; "The Cup and the Sword", Hobart; "Sound of an American", Ormsbee; "Coffee In? >> I ? f . i(XT DnirrVtf , uvcisucci/, i"*0 er Glory", Sperry; "The Man | Who Went Away", Wright- j "House of the Roses", Baker; | "The Robe", Douglas; "The Day , Must Dawn", Turnbull; "Mrs. ! Miniver", Struther; "How Green ( Was My Valley", Llewellyn; , "Pied Piper", Shute; "Mrs. Tim J Carries On", Stevenson; "Val- iant Dust", Mackay; "No Sur- | render", Albrand. j Mysteries: "Payment Defer- ] red", Forester; "Pinoh of Pois- I on", Lockridge; "Rio Casino In- 1 trigue", Mason; "Toast to To- 1 morrow", Coles; "With This ; Ring", Eberhart; "Affair in Death Valley", Knight; "Case of the . Empty Tin", Gardner; "Evil Under the Sun", Christie; "Fourth : Bomb", Rhode. Non-Fiction: "Our New Army", , ber, and structural umDers. 'Seal Lips?Save Ships' No one can reckon what ships, or how many, have been tor- ' pedoed through chance remarks of relatives or friends of sailors and others, or what vital inform ] ation about war production, war equipment or other confidential matters has leaked througn to Axis through careless gossip. A safe rule, applicable to all such matters, is expressed in the say- ( ing, "Seal Lips?Save Sh;ps". Fruit and vegetable growers and shippers are urged to stock 1 up on used wooden boxes, crates, 1 baskets, barrels and hampers for j 1943 crops, and cotton growers should save and recondition old cotton bale ties . . , The telegraph industry will abandon its special services to customers, but low-rate form messages may still go to members of the armed services. Production of alarm clocks will be resumed early next year .. . The nation's castor oil supply - - ? ^ * i-? ~ r is at low ebb . . . ine uireciur ui Transportation urges the abandonment of ia 11 meetings and conventions, requiring travel, that do not contribute in an important way to winning the war. ' 9 1 3' i Con 't [ CAROLINA, THURSDAY, DIEGE1V 1 C r g v 1 r I k I x t I f DAN TOMPKINS Representative from Jackson e County. 1 Many observers in the capital c ire of the opinion that the ses ion will be the shortest on rec- 5 ird. It is hoped by leaders that he assembly can be adjourned j vithin six weeks after it opens, j >r about the middle of February. Farm Security i Helps To Boost Raising Of Food .. 1 "Christmas presents to Uncle Sam, 12-months to 5-years in ;he making" is the apt descrip :ion of food produotion increases* }n the part of Jackson county . . 1 farmers, as their part in the war , jffort. Presents of Farm Security Administration bor&Jwers consist }f production increases ranging from 10 per centUo more than LOO per cent, acctAUngrj^c^^;y FSA Supervisor/ William d. Davis, in announcing year-end .Igures. "A great tribute to patriots of :he small farms and family-type farms of the county is the fact I :hat every Farm Security bor- ; rower has increased his produc- < tion of vital war foods, such as < iairy, pork, poultry products md family gardens," said Davis. These are families who have i \ seen getting ready?through bet I ter equipment, better stock and, Detter farming practices?to do | i better job of production. Some ; I started the "getting ready" process four or five years ago. A few jot their first FSA loans under the "Food for Freedom" drive ] i year ago, soon after Pearl Har- < jor, it was pointed out. There are : 299 families in the county wh0 i have been getting themselves in ! better shape to contribute to the ] war effort through Farm Securi- | ty loans and planning assistance i said Davis. "War loans for purchase of < additional cows, hogs, machinery : u-iid other opeialing go. . -,Lill nvaiJable through 1SA !..) ----- U /mi4 /-\ /4nr.v.o t" 11 , IJiilll iaiUUiCO WIUIIUUU ilUHjiiaiu ?redit resources," Davis said. < "All-out production of war i foods not only means helping i win the war but adds to the family income as indicated in -j repayment of FSA loans. Over 25 families in this area have paid their FSA loans in full, while . many others are makng payments in advance, as they attain full production for their units." , FSA goals for the new year will be to help place every good heifer calf and every good milk cow being sold for beef with a! farm family, help find tenants | for all idle farm land, encourage ; sharing of scarce farm machinery and equipment, and help plan fullest us&of all farm labor ' nf fnn/1 ,nn/^ fiKpO 1UI pivuutwmi ui luuu anu needed in the war effort, Mr. Davis explained. Andrews; "My Friends, the Apes" . Benchley; "Stump Ranch Pio-. neer" Davis; "Bluenose" Dun-1 can; "The Long Ships Passiing", Hav'ighurst; "Oommando Attack", Holman; "Red Hills and Cotton, Up Country Memory", ' Robertson; "Small Town South", Byrd; "A Time For Greatness", Agar; "My Father in China" Burke; "See Here, Private Hargrove" Hargrove; "I Flew for China", Leonard.' i - 1 jf nil) 3 i - IBER 31, 1942 \rvil Stephens Dies; Sister-InLaw On Bond Arvil Stephens died in the Community hospital, Sunday i'igond, for her appearance at the February term of Jackson couny superior court, to answer to ihe charge of having fired the atal shot. Bond was made by John Cowird, uncle of Mrs. Howell Stephens, and father-in-law of the leceas^d. Stephens was shot near his lome in the East La Porte vicinity, on December 19. The only ;ye witness to the shooting is :aid to be his widow. Funeral services for the 29 fear old man were held at Cowirts, Tuesday afternoon. Both the dead man and his sister-in-law are members of tfell known Jackson county families. Rites For Aged Citizen Held At Big Ridge Funeral services were conduct *d, Sunday rfternoon at B: Ridge churc) by Rev. Jonatha . E. Brown, fo .James E. Pruitt, 9 : /ear old prominent citizen of the county, who died at his tiome on Big Ridge, Saturday. Mr. Pruitt, for nearly a century a well known citizen of the county, is survived by four sons, Be*, Will, David and Jason Pruitt, five daughters, Mrs. J. W. Moore, Mrs. Lee Fisher, Mrs, 3am Fisher, Mrs S. C. Fisher, and Mrs. Lon Pruitt, by 39 grand ;hildren, and 2 great-grandchildren. Credit Corporation To Elect Officers t / On January Ninth Stockholders of the Asheville Production Credit Association will hold their annual meeting In the Court House in Asheville, on Saturday morning, January 5th, at 10:30 o'clock, it was announced today, by John A. Hud?ens, of Hendersonville, President of the association. Complete and detailed reports on the operations of the organisation for the past year will be submitted by, the officers. Plans will be discussed for further developing the services the association has to offer the farmers, upon whom the war has placed the responsibility of carrying on the greatest agricultural program the world has ever known. At this meeting two directors will be elected and other business will be transacted. The Asheville Production Cred it Association, a farmers' cooperative organization, makes shortterm loans for agricultural and livestock purposes to farmers of Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Clay, Cherokee, Graham, Haywood, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey counties. Springer Transferred Private First Class Clyde L. Springer, of Whittier, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Springer, of Whittier, is now with the Quartermaster Detachment, at Camp Carrabelle, Florida. Private Springer was stationed at Camp Butner, North Carolina before lis (transfer t o Camp Carrabelle. Under the command of Colonel Walter E. Smibh, Camp Carrabelle is located on the Gulf of Mexico, 50 miles southwest of Tallahasse, Fla. ia G. v Oiffhrt $1.50 A YEAR IN A] JaclLson C Send Eighty As Quota F Little Girl Dies From Head Injuries Here ? Linda Coward, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rogers Coward, died in the Community Hospital tonighit, a few hours after she was kicked in the face and forehead by a horse on her father's place at Webster. It is reported that the little girl and a small companion had started to meet Mrs. Coward, wh0 had gone to a neighbsor's home, and it is believed that they got too close to the horse, which was running loose in the pasture, and that the animal became frightened and kicked backward, striking the child in the face and forehead and crushing her skull. T'Vin ifwn nrflHirl AQmo f_r? tho HrtlU 111C '(/ldgV^UJ VUAiiL VU VAAV VWTI ard home and the Webster community this, Thursday, afternoon. An ambulance was summoned from Sylva and the little girl was rushed to the hospital; but never regained consciousness Surviving her are an older brother, her father and mother, her grandmother, and other rel| atives. Mr. and Mrs. Coward are 'w?ell knfown in Siylva,, having lived here for several years. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday, at 2 o'clock and interment wih be in the cemetery here. 1942 Is Banner Year In Producing Dairy Foodstuffs Despite many difficulties, 1942 was a banner dairy year in North Carolina, says John A. Arey, Extension dairyman of N. C State College. Production was high, but costs were great and labor problems were many. As for the future, Arey said: "Milk is an essential war food. It is the greatest builder of body resistance to disease of all foods. The need for it in this State during 1943 will be greater than in 1942. T^? ^upnlv. ?n tl~ ' * hand, will l ?' governed by the rPfPivvH fnl* it hv t,ll^ fariYl I | er. An unfavorable price will . make it impossible for him to pay present high prices for labor and feed Without a supply of both, milk production will drop." Tlie Extension mah said that scores of dairymen had either a large or complete turnover in labor during 1942. Much of the new labor, when any could" be secured, had been high priced, green and inefficient. "This condition," said Arey, "together with the ceiling price, on milk, has in some instances eliminated all profit from the dairy business and resulted in the dispersal o number of herds." Yet, interest in dairy farming ! was at a peek in North Carolina I during the last 12 months. During August, the top month in j milk proaucxion, aaixy procesa. ing plants in the State received 11,869,870 pounds of milk This j js 1,836,930 pounds more than i the 1941 August receipts and is j the largest on record. Arey said that the annual cattle sales fostered by the state Ayrshire, Guernsey and Jersey breeding associations in 1942 were tops. Through these sales 361 purebred animals, many of them hellers, were sold for a to| tal of $72,8Cfr .72. At least 380 " cows, most of which were Holsteins, were purchased from ! without the State by local dairy' men. A Hunters are expected to add 135 million pounds of meait to ; the nation's food supply in the next 12 months. * DVANCE IN JACKSON COUNTY ounty Will -Three Men or January , A group of eighty-three young Jackson county men will leave next week for an induction center for examination and induction irbt0 the United States Ar my. Those who pass the examination will be inducted immediately and then granted short furloughs to conje home and wind up their affairs, before receiving orders to report for duty. The list follows: Sherman Phillips, John Robert Nations, Henry Lee Miller, Harold Lexington Jones, Clyde Hooper, William Harley Bishop, Roy Ralph Golden, Estes Webster, Earl Fienister Fesperman, James Richard Cunningham, John Lewis Hooper, Roy Frank Green, Richard Lee Jones, Clifford Weaver Buchanan, Columbus Allison Crisp, Henry Watson, Zachriah Houston, W i 11 i a m Clyde Painter, Frank James Williams, Wayne William Dills, Benjamin Alfred Bowers, Clarence Brown, Fred Hooper, Luther Mills, Edney Robinson, Clarence Rufus Nations, Fred Bigwitch,1 Hooper Delos Price, John Coleman Dillard, Alex Lee Whitaker, Henderson Guy Crisp, Kenneth Carey Moore, Jay Ward Farley, Jr., William Clarence Browning, Harding McKinley Locust, William Perry Lark, Loyle Mac Nash? Walter Burke Painter, Raymond Mace, Richard Littlejohn, Julius George, Charlie Coleman Buchanan, Alex Wilson, Wilton DeWitt Aiken, J. C. Franks, Thom- | as Gaston Harris, Sam William Watson, Charlie Jeter Hall, Jermiah Toineeta, Coyie Shelton, Fred James Buchanan, Claude Moore,J ~ Alber^^fown, William Raymond Ashe^Arthur Burke Painter, Ernest Guy Buchanan, Harold Truett Greef, Troy Davla Martin, Boyd Littlejotyn, David Hugh Mills, Dee Shook, Calvin Wikle, Janle Ray Franks, Samuel Isaac Fisher, Van Frank Chil ders, Ray Lee Blanton, Wallace Winfred Carter, Andy Asque Frady, Lonnie Melton, Ray Cleveland Hunter, Kellie Carl Frizzell Grover Melton, Ernest William Jamison, Jr., John Paul Moss, Jerry Benjamin Parker, Robert Bairl Fisher, George Walter Hoxit Pearison Woodard Henry, Parson Wesley Kincaid, Jr., Jesse LonU Dills, John William Crawford, Jr., and Charlie Tillmian Dills. William Harley Bishop Raymond Mace, Robert Earl Fiaher, > ^earison Woodard Henry, Par . Wesley Kincaia, jr., Jesse LcMiis Dills, John William Crawford, Jr., and Charlie Ttllman | Dills are volunteers. Loyle Mac Nash and Walter Burke Painter 1 are transfers from other boards i James Wood ! Killed In Duty At Army Camp Corporal James Wood was killed in an accident in a jeep, near Macon, Georgia, and his body was returned to Sylva and 'then to hia home on Caney Fork for funeral and interment. Sergeant Austin, nf rthp samp />amr? the body to the home of 'the young soldier. Corporal Wood, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Early Wood, of Caney Fork, entered ithe army as a private, and was promoted to a corporal in an armored division. He was a member of a promminent Jackson couryty family, and had many friends here. It i is not known just howv the jeep got out of control of the driver. ' Corporal Wood was in command, j and he wa^s the only casualty of the accident. HIGHER Because of increased prices for farm products, Henderson County farmers are making a higher percentage*return on their investments (this year than usual. #