AMERICA - The Syly a Herald AND RUBAL1TE? CONSOLIDATED JULY, 1943 VOL. XIX NO. 34 SYLVA, N. C., Wednesday, January 10, 1945 TKe syiva Herald, wfcwMr ?/) First Plaoe of N. C. Frwm Association 1948 G+ntral K+ oe llence Award. / = ? - ? Annual Drive For Polio Fund January 14To 30 Cherry Inaugurated Governor, Outlines Polices In Address RALEIGH, January 4. ? R. Gregg Cherry, of Gastonia, lawyer, legis lator and former soldier, today took feus oath of office as Governor of A North Carolina and delivered an inaugural address that embraced his recommendations to the general as sembly. The legislative body, in joint session, heard the address. Speaking for an hour, Governor ; Cherry presented a program of out 1 ' lined growth and development for 4be state during the next four years when he will be North Carolina's chief executive. Emphasis was given to matters of finance, health, educa Hon, highways, agriculture, welfare, labor and the handling of veterans end their affairs at the close of the present war. Governor Cherry is the second governor of the state to be inau gurated during wartime. Zeb Vance, the other such governor, took his eath of office while the civil war -was in progress. S. Sgt, Jessie B. Cogdill J Has Arrived In Italy 15TH AAF IN ITALY? S. Sgt. Jes" fiie B. Cogdill, son of Mr. and Mrs., Stem P. Cogdill, Route 1, Sylva, N. C., waist gunner on a B-24 Liberator bomber, has arrived in Italy. The announcement was made by Col. James B. Knapp, San Anonio, Tex., the group commander. Sgt. Cogdill has been assigned to Col. Knapp's group, a veteran or ganization of this theater. This group twice has been cited by the President of the United States "for outstanding performance of duty in armed con ftfet with the enemy*" , . . Before epterjpj the army. S|t. Cog I*" 4U1 was employe 1 as of tiack driver / far the McLeafr Contracting Co. He has been stationed in England since tafft April. . t T-4 Joseph McClure Returns To States T-4 Joseph M. (Major) Allison has returned to the States after serving for two years in the European Thea tre. He is the son of Joe Allison of Webster. He is now a patient at F^imey General-Hospital at Thomas ville, Ga. He expects to get home In the near future to visit homefolk > and relatives* ? Funeral Services Held For Mrs. Henry Raby ^ Funeral services for Mrs. Cynthia Raby, wife of the late Henry Raby who died Dec. 24, were held Dec. 26 in the Wilmot cemetery with the Rev. Thad Watson, Rev. John Hyatt and 'Rev. Norman Nations officiating. 'Mrs. Raby is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Tennie Bryson, Sylva, Rt. 1, Mrs. Clark Whicker, Winston Salem two sons, John Raby Moores ville, Walt Raby, Biltmore, sixteen grandchildren, twenty great grand children and four great, great grand children; ? : ? - ? BETA TO BE HOST TO BAPTIST SUNDAY ? ? SliHOOl CONVENTION Dr. H. T. Hunter will be the feature speaker^ at the Tuckaseigee Baptist J&ffidax. School convention which is to meet with the Beta Church Sunday January 14, 1945. The program will begin promptly at 2:30 P. M. and all Sunday Schools in the Association are urged to have a delegation from their church present. The them% for the afternoon will be "With Christ On The Home Front". And the following program will be given: 2:30 ? Hymn Congregation 2:35 ? Devotion Hoy Reed 2:45 ? Secretary's Report, Hattie Hikia Sutton 3:0() ? Business^Ajid Announce ments, Superintendent^ 3:10 ? Aims and Goals for the con tion in '45, Jennings Bryson. ~3:2(?? Special Music ? Beta Church 3:30 ? Address: "With Christ On The Home Front" ? Dr. H. T. Hunter. Hymn. Benediction. NEW N. C. GOVERNOR R. GREGG CHERRY i? ? a*i? ? ? ? LIONS OF FRANKLIN, BRYSON AND SYLVA HOLD ZONE MEETING Following the regular meeting of the Sylva Lions Club last Wednesday evening, the 2nd Zone meeting of the year was held, with J. L. Woody of Bryson City, Zone Chairman presid ing. The three clubs comprising the district, Sylva, Franklin and Bryson City, made reports on past work and planned for future activities, Each club promised District Gov. Jennings Bryson four new members during the month of January, honoring Melvin Jones, International Secretary and .fcundcr. - * , Attending were Claude Bolton, president; Norman Howley, secretary and Deputy Governor, Ben McGlam cry and other guests of Franklin^J^ L. Woody and guest of Bryson City and AllineV Bryson, president, and Edwin Allison, secretary of Sylva. The third Zone meeting will be held in February with the Franklin Club. Byrnes Directive Seeks Increase In War Production The War Manpower Commission, as its name implies, is a war emer gency governmental agency respon sible for the mobilization, allocation, utilization and coordination of the nation's manpower for the express purpose of furnishing workers for war and war-supporting activities. The recent Byrnes directive, with the definite aim of stimulating and increasinng production of war-sup porting products and services, pro vides that sanctions may be imposed against estabilshments which violate War Manpower Commission regula tions, but directs the War Production Board and other Federal agencies to impose those sanctions when they find and determine that employers are no^rnaking the best possible con tribution^ the war effort. The War Manpower Commission's principal operating agency is the United States Employment Service, with a record of more than a decade of successful experience as a job placing agency, and with approxi mately 1500 offices located at strate gic points throughout the Nation. Its Operating pei sunnel ? is ?a group of specially trained individuals who re ciuit, transfer and place workers and help stabilize employment. In North Carolina the State office i is located in Raleigh, with six WMC administrative area offices in as many central cities In the State* also are 44 full-functioning local USES of fices in as many cities and towns, in 10 of which are also Divisional of fices, for Negro workers exclusively. In 36 other communities branch olfice5 have been established during 1944, two or three of which had been operated as local offices. The others are located at points formerly known as itinerant points, the number of which been reduced from 122 to 85. These are points visited on regular schedules, usually each week, for a few hours,, by representatives of local (Continued on page 6) Notice On News For The Herald News should be in this office not UUer than noon Monday. We can take it up until 6 o'clock, but this puts a strain on the entire force. ? We would' aiso greatly appreciate it if you have any news to call us at 110.^ No assurance can be given for pub lication of any news* received aftei^ 6 o'clock Monday. SYLVA SOLDIER IS RECOVERING AT ARMY HOSPITAL IN ENGLAND THE 155TH GENERAL HOSPITAL, ENGLAND ? Wounded by shrapnel in the Hurtgen Forest in Germany, ^Private First Class Theodore R. Young, 30,. Sylva, North Carolina, is now recovering at this United States Army general hospital in England. ~Lt. Joseph J. McHugh, Philadel phia, Pennsylvania, his ward officer, said, "Pfc. Young is receiving the best possible care at this hospital and will soon be ready for duty again." Pfc. Young landed in Normandy on D-Day, and has received the Combat Infantry badge. A brother, Hughes, is undergoing basic training at a replacement train ing center in the United St.ates. Pfc. Young's wife, Juanita, lives in Sylva. D. E. Hines of Stoney Point in Alexander County purchased six purebred Aberdeen-Angus heifers and they all dropped heifer calves. Ffc. McClure Missing In Germany Pfc. Jack McClure has been miss ing in action in Germany since Sept. 16. Pfc. M'cClure, the~soT5~of Mr: aiKt Mrs. Raymond McClure, entered ser vice in April, 1942, and went over seas in July, 1944. NOTICE Mrs# Harry Ferguson, Chairman of the work done in Jackson County for the Red Cross Camp and Hospital Council of Western North Carolina, asks that anyone making fracture pillows or pillow slips send them to her . as soon as possible so they can be carried to the hospital ir< January and February. She would also like to have afghans that are be ing mended returned at once. Head-line News Of Jack son County During 1944 JANUARY W. Carr Hooper, former teacher of ^Svlva is Jap prisoner, taken in fall of\Manilla. -^jK)hn A. Parris, Jr., is back on job 3t London office. Sylva has lowest fire losses in years in 1943. Mrs. E. L. McKee and R. U. Sut ton head Infantile Paralysis cam paign. 20 children aided by Lions Clinic lor Blind held here recently. Roy Hamilton listed as missing by Navy. W. E. Pettit resigns as pastor of Baptists. Sgt. Lewis Henry Shuler killed on Italian Battlefield. 56 Jackson men are accepted for service. Woman's Club to back County Li brary for 1944. The Herald given first place in General Excellence at meeting. FEBRUARY Captain John R. Irwin of Sylva at London Dental Conference. Infantile Parafysis Campaign is Success. ........ * "'< Lt. Grady R. Galloway is giv?n Citation for leading two Invasion Parties. Pic. Marion Howell killed in action (Continued on page 4) Pfc. Clyde L. Crisp llfissing Since October Pfc. Clyde, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gaither Crisp, of Gay has been re ported missing since Oct. 12. Pfc. Crisp has been in service ior more than two years but had been over seas only two months. / t Pvt. MargaretJMartin Spending Furlough With Relatives Here Pvt. Margaret 'Martin is here from Victoria, Kansas, spending a few days y>ith relatives and friends. Pvt. Mar tin was Home Demonstration Agent for Jackson County before entering the Woman's Army Corps last April. She will leave Tuesday for Johnson City, Tenn., to visit her sister, Miss Isabel Martin, before returning to Victoria to resume her duties Cpl. Winston Cabe Returns To Naval Hospital Cpl. Winston Cabe of the U. S. Marine Corps has returned to the Naval Hospital in Philadelphia after spending fifteen days withuhis sisters, Mrs. Berry Gaither and Miss Lillian Cabe. Cpl. Cabe entered service in Oct., 1942, and spent nine months overseas, taking part in engagements in the Marshalls, Saipan and Tinian. He was wounded twice. He landed in California Oct. 7 Vtid has been re ceiving treatment at naval hospitals, p Cpl. Cabe has a brother, Sgt Car lln T. Cabe, also with the Marines, who has b'6?n in service Jone, 1943. snd has spent the past seven months ?n overseas doty on Midway. Pvt. Harry J. Callahan Wounded In Action Mr. and Mrs. Bob Callahan of Sylva have heard from their son. Pvt. Harry J. Callahan, who was wound ed in action in France. He has been moved to a hospital in England where he is doing nicely. Pvt. Callahan has been m service ten monins and fya^ been overseas since Augu*t. Six Boys Have Eighteenth 0 Birthday During December Six, boys in Jackson County became eighteen years ul age during the? month of December and are now subject to call for active service in the armed forces under the selective service sys tem. In the group were the following: Ransom D. Coggins, Samuel Floyd 'Mills, Carl Calvin Fisher, William Grover Ashe, Edgar Queen and Charles Emert Cole. JACKSON PEOPLE ARE ACTIVE IN CAMP AND HOSPITALJIM J ackson Cou n ty is one of the m ost active of the Western North Caro lina counties doing work for the Ffed Cross Camp and Hospital Council of Western North Carolina. Besides the work carried on each month such as furnishing magazines and twenty-seven fracture pillows with fifty- four slips to match, the extra quotas assigned for both Thanksgiving and Christmas were more than supplied . For Thanksgiving the ladie* sent iW than 500 home-made cookies, fifty tray favors and 100 nut cups with nuts to fill them. < At Christmas the things sent were: 310 gifts valued at SI. 00 each, 15 pounds of fruit cake, fifty tray favors, 100 nut cups with nuts to fill therii and 550 Christmas cards, the most '>f these being furnished by womenN organizations ol the county. These gifts are distributed to the patients at Moore General Hospital, Lake Lw e Rest Center, .Naval Con valescent Hospital and Sand Hill He conditioning Center. Sgt. Painter Is With Supply And Construction Unit Of ATC Base Near Paris, France AN AIR TRANSPORT COMMAND BASE IN FRAN. Jan. 1.? Used by the Yanks during the last war, flattened by them in 1943 and 1944, there is rising out of the ruins of an airfield near Paris the new continental air base of the European Division, USAAF Air Transport Command. Sgt. Arthur B. Painter of Sylva, N. Carolina, is a member of the sup ply and construction unit of this ATC base. In co-operation with the Army's Corps of Engineers, they are whipping the place into shape to do its important job in the assault against-; Germany. Through this base are flown critical materials and parts, from the United States for the tanks, guns and ve hicles of our armies in Europe. Through this base comes the whole blood flown over the Atlantic in the ATC's giant C-54s, for our wounded hf,y? in tho front linps and in the hos pitals of Europe. Former Jackson Boy Makes Good In Pacific Area Of Operations Lt. Col. Fred V. Brown, native of Webster, is another North Carolina boy to make good. He has been a warded the fourth highest award the Army can bestow, the Legion of Merit, as well as the Bronze Star# Col. Brown, as quartermaster of the First Corps, worked out plans for supply during the Papuan and New Guinea campaigns. For a time he was the only American officer assigned to the Australian Advance New Guinea headquarters, serving as liason officer for tactics and supply. He was dec orated for his work in the planning and executing of !he Beak Operation. He says the training he, with 500, 000 other men, received in the Caro lina Maneuvers, led to the success of these campaigns. Col. Brown is the son of Mrs. Dora Brown of Ashe^ille and the la>te Virge Biown, who resided in Webster lor a npmber of years. He has many rela tives in Sylva, being a nephew of the tote Mrs. J. T. Gribble of Sylva. NATION EXPERIENCES 2ND WORST OUTBREAK OF INFANTILE PARALYSIS DURING PAST YEAR, Mrs. E. L. McKee Again Heads Jackson's Coftimittee t]or Funds, Need Is Greater This Year Pointing out that the 1944 epidemic ol infantile paralysis was the second worst outbreak of the disease in its history in the United States; Mrs. E. McKee, chairman of the 1945 polio . campaign in this county, issued a statement today in which she em phasized the "need to reinforce our lines of defense agairlst this insidious enemy of childhood." The annual fund appeal is being conducted this year from January 14-31 in celebration of the President's . Birthday, -and, a> in the past, most of the funds will be used to combat polio in this State. Although North Carolina had one of its worse epidemics of infantile paralysis during the past year, -the - death rate from the dread /disease was the lowest ever recoided^solely be cause the fun<^ to provide the best possible medical aid and equipment were immediately available, Chair man McKee pointed out. This record proves again that quick hospitalization of victims is impera tive and the campaign this year will be pointed towards funds to support adequate hospital facilities to serve ? he growing number of persons strick en each year, the Chairman said. "Since no one knows where, or how hard, polio may strike in 1945, we must again be ready to meet the at tack wherever it may come," Chair man McKee said. Through ' November 21 of this past year, 848 cases of infantile paralysis 'had ben reported to the State Board of Health since before the epidemic last summer. Of this number 618 patients have received. treatment at the Hickory Polio Emergency Hos pital, the aGstonia Orthopaedic Hos pital and the Charlotte Memorial Hospital. Four hundred and thirty five were treated at Hickory. Only 13 deaths were reported at* thiee hospitals, making the lowest death rate ever recorded for an in fantile paralysis epidemic. Eighty-three percent of the hos pitalized cases reported will return to normal or nearly-normal health, as a result of early and modern treat ment, while only 17 percent will re tain some paralysis. FSA Summarizes Year *s Activities The following figures on. FSA col lection activities in Jackson County ** were presented to the County FSA committee by W. T. Brown, Jr., FSA Supervisor at the test formal meet ing of the committee. The total amount maturing on livestock and seed and fertilizer lpans during 1944 was $20,196. The to^l amount col lected on these loans since July 1, 1944, through December 31, was $27,324.00. The total maturities on farms pur ihrrmgh the assistance of FSA was $2,967.00. Collections from this phase of the program since July 1, 1944, through December 21, amount ed to $12,703. x The FSA committee composed ot Dennis Higdon, R. M. Bryson, and L. T. Watson expressed a feeling of sat isfaction that FSAv borrowers are not only helping to achieve the food pro duction goals of our nation, but are repaying their loans at a time when the motley IS n WflW By the Guveni ment. Monies paid in by FSA bor rowers go back to the Federal Treas ury to help in the war effort as does bond purchases. At the same meeting the committee expressed the opinion that 800 addi tional farm families in Jackson Coun ty were eligible for FSA assistance and could be materially benefited by the supervised loan program. The V. O. Sipes' orchards of Con over in Catawba County sold car tons of ,20 selected apples each, wrapped in colored oil paper, for the holiday trade.^ More than 2,000 such packages were marketed. The Rural Electrification Adminis tration announces a loan allotment of $53,000 to the Woodstock Electric Membership Corporation, Belhavea,