w AMERICA First, Last and Always The Sy.lv- a Herald AND RURALITE? CONSOLIDATED JULY, 1943 The Herald is dedicated t? progressive service to Jack son ... A progressive, well balanced county. Ye&r In Jaekscm And~Swain "Counties ? 5c Copy Two Jackson Soldiers Reported Killed In Action With Enemy On Okinawa Island Parents of Gerald Bumgarner And Pfc. Buddy Bryson Received Death Messages Mrs. J. R. Bumgarner of Wilmot received a message last Tuesday in forming her that her son, Gerald Bumgarner had been killed May 14 in action on Okinawa. Besides his mother he is survived by his fathe-, J. R. Bumgarner, who served through World War I and volunteered for service in World War II and is how serving as Warrant Of ficer in the U. S. N. R. Fleet Service; and three brothers, K. C. and William G., both serving in the armed forces and Harry Bumgarner of Wilmot. Pfc. Maurice E. (Buddy) Bryson, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Bryson was killed in action on Okinawa Jtiay 30th according to a message received by his parents, last Thursday from the War Department. , Pfc. Bryson volunteered for duty with the Marine Corps in March 1944. After receiving training at Paris Is land he was sent to the Pacific area. He received further training overseas and was attached to the 6th Marine Corp and was participating in the bat tle of Okinawa when killed. He is survived by his parents, one brother Carol Bryson, with the U. S. Navy now stationed in Oran, Africa and one sister, Mary Cecil Bryson, student nurse at Erlanger Hospital, Chattanooga, Tenn. , Pfc. Bryson graduated from Sylva High School in the class of 1943 and | had been employed in Portland, Ore. prior to entering service. Gonther In Two-Hour Fight As Yanks In Italy Took Hill During Final Offensive WITH THE FIFTH ARMY, ITALY? I Private Ambrose ^JJcnther oi^Whit tier, North Carolina, a'rifleman, par ticipated in a two-hour fife-fight re sulting in capture of a 1000-foot hill in Italy during the final offensive on the Fifth Army front. The attack, made by a rifle platoon in Company K of the 337th "Wolver ine" Regiment, 85th "Custer" Divi sion, netted the Yanks 140 prisoners, including a German captain, and all J equipment of the enemy force atop the hill. After first flanking the height, the doughboys climbcd to the crest, where they were met by murderous fire from mortars and automatic weapons, operated by a force that had them seriously outnumbered. The Yanks dug in along the crest and fought it out for two hours before finally tak ing the hill. < , Gonther is the son of Mrs. Eliza beth Gonther, Route 2, Whiuier. Sgt. Frank Sherrill Home On Furlough i Sgt. Frank W. Sherrill, who has , served for three years and eight I months in the armed forces is spend- , ing his first furlough with his par ents, Mr. and- Mrs. G. B. Sher rill, of Qualla. Sgt. Sherrill has been overseas for thirty-three months. He j was stationed in England with the ' 8th Air Force, serving as assistant ; crew chief on a B-24. He arrived home last Friday, his \ outfit having l'lown home on the heavy bombers on which they work- : ed. j After spending thirty days at oh me he will report to Sioux Falls,- S. D., for reassignment. William C. Thompson Receives Promotion Pvt. William C. Thompson of the ? anti-tank company of the 376tn infan try has been promoted to Private First Class. Kc has also been award ed the Purple Heart and E.T.O. rib bon with two battle stripes. Pfc. Thompson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Thompson, of Sylva. Motor Vehicle Stamps On Sale At Postoffice It has been customary to place new motor vehicle stamps on sale at the postoffice on June 10 of each year. This year, however, tha date mentioned falls on Sun day so the stamps went on sale a day earlier. It is necessary that every ve hicle have ona of these stamps by July 1st snd you may sscurs one by going to ths postoffice. Seaman Brown Serving On Veteran Ship That Has Never Been Hit ABOARD A. U. S. BATTLESHIP IN THE PACIFIC (Delayed)? George W. Brown, seaman, second class, son of Jess Brown, Sylva, N. C., fought at Okinawa aboard this venerable ba ttleship, which, through 33 action - years, has never been hit by enemy shells. The Okinawa action was her fifth major engagement of World War II and one of the most dramatic in her long career. For more than a month her main and secondary batteries blasted at pin-point targets on the island. It was not a one-sided battle. At one time she won a duel with a shore bat tery that was hurling shells precari ously close. At another an enemy bomber made a run on the ship, go ing down with a terrific explosion as the Navy guns found their mark. The ship saw action in Europe and also took part in the Iwo Jima bom bardment. PLEMMONS LIBERATED 2-Lt. Howard Plemmons, according to word received by his father, R. H. Plemmons of Hot Springs, has been liberated from a German prison camp, after being a prisoner since February, 1944. Lt. Plemmons is a former Sylva boy having lived here for several years while his father served as dis trict engineer with the N. C. Highway Commission. Lt. Plemmons was serv ing as pilot on a B-17 with the 8th Air Force when captured. Sgt. Carl Williams Veteran Of Siriliaiv Italian and French Campaigns I Sgt. Carl M. Williams, son of Mrs. j Ada Williams and the late R. W. Wil- ' liams, of Sylva was inducted at Fort : Jackson, S. C., July 27, 1942, and re- ! ceived his basic training at Camp Croft, S. C. He was later seAt to | Camp Rice, N. Y., where he joined 1 the 45th Thunderbird Infantry Di- , vision as a machine gunner. He sailed for the European theater ! June 8, 1943, and made the invasion ( of Sicily, July 10, 1943. After fight- | ing through this campaign ho later 1 landed at Salerno, fighting his way up the Italian Boot and spent five months in the bloody battlefield of Anzio without being wounded. Then fight ing his way with his division, to the i north of Rome, where his division was withdrawn, to Inter make the in vasion of Southern France, Aug. 15, 1944. E e4>? a sergeant in command of a machine gun section at this time, he fcugh4 with his company up through the Rhcne Valley, into the Alp ?vlt?. to the border town of ^trasburg, Ger many. When suffering from a nervous condition caused from his many in vasion and long service as a front line soldier, he was transferred back to Italy and is now serving as a con voy commander sergeant with the 3653 GM Trk Co., which is doing a great job, commanded by Capt. Trinkle of Fillmore, Idaho. Sergeant Williams, who will have ,seen three years army service July 27, two years of this being overseas duty, states that he is ready and willing to j move to the Pacific area and throw his fighting skill at the Japs. But better then anything else would like to come back to the U. S. A. , I < Gen. And Mrs. Hodges Vacationing In High Hampton General Courtney Hodges, com mander of the First Army, who has recently returned from the European Theater of Operation and Mrs. Hodges, are spending a vacation at High Hampton Inn at Cashiers before Gen Hodges and his unit leave for the Pacific area. General Hodges has recently come from Atlanta where huge crowds turned out to welcome him in parades and celebrations. MISS WISE ARRIVES AS FULL TIME COUNTY PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE Jackson county has succeeded in j securing a full-time public nurse. Miss Ethel Wise of Asheville arrived June 1st to begin her work. She is a graduate of the General Hospital in Greenville, S. C., and has recently been discharged from the army, hav ing spent eighteen months in Fort Siber^, Ala., and six months at Fort Bragg. She succeeds Mrs. Earl Pad gett. Miss Wise will be in her office at the county courthouse Saturday mornings from 9 until 12 o'clock and alJ day on Thursdays. On other days she will be in the field. Miss Wise states that much of her work will be devoted to preventive hygiene. At a later date there will be a program of immunization clin ics set up. Jackson county is to have a tonsil clinic at the Sylva High school June 26-27. In September Miss Wise will go to ! Chapel Hill for a course in Public j Nursing, which the state of North | Carolina requires. Roosevelt Memorial Series A special series of four United States postage stamps has been . authorized as a tribute to the the late President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The series will include stamps of the 1-cent, 2 cent, 3-cent and 5-cent denomi nations and will be inaugurated by the placing on sale of the 3 cent stamp on June 27, 1945, at Washington, D. C. Dates and places for the first day sales of the remaining stamps will be an nounced later. Bumgarner Advanced To Watertender 2-c Joseph William Bumgarner, 20,. oi Sylva, N. C., has advanced to water tender, second class, USNR, aboard a destroyer of the Atlantic Fleet. He wears the? American theater ribbon and the European-African-Middle Eastern ribbon with one bronze star. The .-.on of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Buirw game** of Sylva, he has a brother, Leonaid Alien Bumgarner, who is an apprentice seaman, in the Navy. 1 Jack Skene, C.E.C., Reports To West Coast For Reassignment i Corp. Jack Skene, C.E.C., who has boon spending a thirty-day | furlough with his wife, left Tuesday [night for the west coast where he will | report for furiher assignment. Skeiie | had served in the Pacific area before j coming to the States last month. Tommy and Sis, They Can't Miss Through his profits as a junior street salesman or a Kansas news paper, nine-year-old Tommy Jtovalis is the proud po-.scr.sor of a $100 and a $S3 War Bond. But he doesn't own I them alone. He asked the man at the po^t office to make them out in his name with his two-year-old sis ter, Frances, as co-owner. He prc ^sented them to &er on their jo'nt i birthday last month. Tommy has been "in business" since last July. Every afternoon after school, he plies his wares ? up ' and down Kansas Avenue in Topeka. "It was his own idea to save his ' money," according to his father. 1 "As soon as he started, he began bringing his money home to his mother, and asked her to save it for j him. He wanted to put it into War Bonds. He wanted to do something for his America." Asked what he intended to use the bonds for, Tommy replied, "Some day I want to go to college, and I want Frances to go, too." Water-proof packaging of many military supplies is needed because they must be floated ashore and kept in the open, exposed to tropical storms. Pfc. George Richard Ensley Killed In Germany Pfc. George Richard Ensley, son of Mrs. Mamie Ensley, of Dillsboro was wounded March 7, 1945, and died of these wounds March 8. Pfc. Ensley enxered service Feb. 13, 1941, and received his basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. In service four years he spent thirteen months of this time in the European Theater. He was with the Medical Dept. of the 60th Infantry. Surviving are the mother, three brothers. Pvt. Ray Ensley, now over seas; Pvt. Robert Ensley, who is home on furlough, and Junior Ensley of Dillisboro and one sister, Mrs. Glenn Bowman, of West Virgniia. FAIRFIELD INN PLANS TO BEGIN SEASON JUNE 16 Recently Announced Pur chase By Wheeler, Bird Not Consummated Fairfield inn, the famed 100-room resort Vctel on the C, COO-acre E. H. Jennings estate in Jackson county, will be opened June 16 by Walter J. Reid, well-known hotel man, who I will be lessee-manager, it was learn ed today. The recently announced purchase oi Fairfield inn nnd the Jennings estate by Albert C. Wheeler of Ashe ville and F. M. Bird of Miami, Fla., vas not consummated, the deal hav ing been abandoned, it was announced by representatives of the estate here. The original announcement of the purchase was made here by Mr. Wheeler. It was announced however, that 'the resort house will be opened for the summer under the new manage ment of Mr. Reid. The new manager said he is prepared to send descrip t:ve booklets and rates, as well as to br.uk reservations for the- summer months. The inn has been well known for many years as one of Western North Carolina's mo>t attractive vacation spots. It is situated on Fairfield lake, Sapphire, on U. S. highway No. 64, midway between Brevard and High lards. The inn stands at an elevation oi approximately 3.000 feet and is in the heart of one of the most beau t ' li 1 _ soots of the Western North Car olina mountains. Mr. Reid has been in the hotel business for many years and has orrr.Vcd in various parts of1 tftn c'.p~try? He is a native of Jackson county. D lily Vacation Bible School At Baptist Church Has Enrollment of 1 0S Th" rl; i!v vacation T'iblo school b" l. i at -'"o Sylva P' V i.-t church Mon c'r.y moining with an enroiimen4 K'3. It will continue through Jl'i.h 2?rd. All childr'-r. a.-e invited to at ? c n cl . Revival Services At Sylva baptist * Church Rcviv 1 ;.er' ices started at. the Sylva Bc-.pti.st '.h'veh Sunday and will con tir.ue through Juno 24. Much interest is bein^ shown. The public is invited to attend each evening at 8 o'clock. Sgt. Alvin Cabe Given Bronze Star Sgt. Alvin W. Cabe, son of Mr. &nc! Mrs. Oscar Cabe of Dillsboro, serving in the Philippines, has been awarded the Bronze Star medal for gallantry in action against the Jap anese, according to a dispatch re ceived here. Sgt. Cabe is serving with the 11th corps troops on Luzon. Cpl. Henry Walker Twice Wounded On Okinawa Island Mrs. Lee Walker has been notified ! I i that her husband, Cpl. Henry Lee Walker, has been wounded on Okin I awa. He received shrapnel wounds on April 23 and alter a few days return ed to combat, and then in May he re ceived other wounds. He h now re- j covering in a hospital. Cpl. Walker ente. ea service in the Marine Corps in December, 1943, and received his basic training at Paris Island, S. C. He was then sent to Camp LeJune for further training. He was sent overseas in May, 1944, as a replacement in the first Marines, | fighting in the South Pacific and has I seen combat in several tough cam- i paigns. His wife, the former Miss Helen Ensley and small son, Henry Lee, live in Sylva. FARMERS FEDERATION DECLARES SEMI ANNUAL DIVIDEND Directors of the Farmers Federation j have just declared the 26th consecu- j tive semi-annual dividend to stock- i r.olders, James G. K. MeClure, presi- I dent, announced. This dividend will | be payable July 1 to stockholders ' of record June 15, 1945. The regular semi-annual dividend i on common stock is 3 r/< , he said. This I will be paid in cash at the warehouses after July 1, and members of the I Farmers Federation should call for their money there. The regular semi-annual dividend on preferred j stock was declared, and cheeks cov- ! ering the payment of this dividend will be mailed to stockholders. I |Pvt. Wilson Wounded I I I | Pvt. K'MTrut L. W i 1: on, above, oi l X(',Vion was wounded in action on Okinawa on May 14. according to ' letter receiveri from him by his win I the lormer Lola Wi;:c. \ Pvt. Wilson is servirr.? with the In- j fantry. He? entered i rvlce July 10, I J 1944. took his basic ti . ? i * ; i n i? at C :mp ; Walters, Texas. He h : . . * been on ore ;ot the Mariannas I.mw.'.o bel'oro UJ> i' l; :?) Okinawa and .,v<.re;s * ft ur months. His w .'. v ar.:l t ?.*.* > I P t ; * r, ? iJVtt-J Willi lltl* I],, i\ . Mr. a . .d ??i . . M.i Wikc I , 1 1 . ,C ."^VA ?.i 1 lull . . Mrs. Davidson (men J)<*??rce In Science At University of Kentucky Mr. . W ;:i XeM . ? n ;) ; vidian (.f , Sy : ?. i \\ ; : m ? : ?. . 2"') i-'-rriert I '.V.. ) .arCCi \'C 1 r\t the 7?>th ?li: ?. : neet.iCTV e\a . ci.\. s June 1 I ; no Uniwv.a'. \ ?: 'v it k ;y. Mrs. Davie! on i*eeei'. v'd r.er decree of i Master in Science m H^me Eco nomics. Whittier Crew Chief And Unit Cited T. Sgt. William G. Baumgartner, son of Mrs. J. R. Baumartncr of Whit , | tier, serving with a 12th Air Force B-25 group in the Mediterranean , theater, helped his unit contribute, ? importantly to the tremendous aerial offensive that sped victory in North ern Italy, according to a dispetch re ; ceived here. He is an airplane crew chief. He holds the Purple Heart. c> 1 7th War Loan Bond Premiere To Be Held At R i t z Theater Friday Night JACKSON COUNTY FAR FROM OVER TOP IN 7TH WAR LOAN DRIVE On Friday, night, June 15, the Ritz * Theater, in cooperation with the theater industry Und the 7th War Loan Drive, will admit customers by j the purchase of a bond of some de nomination, only. The picture, "Belle of the Yukon", will be shown. There will be an authorized person | in the lobby of the theater for the sale kof these bonds. Only bonds that are bought that night will count toward admittance. Attend this important premiere and help make this vitally important drive a success. Jackson county has yet a long way to go before ! their quota is reached. JACKSON SOLDIERS HELP BREAK GERMAN ARMIES IN ITALY, FRANCE AND GERMANY SIXTH ARMY GROUP, GER MANY ? First 36th "Texas" Division j troops on German soil were dough boys of the 141st Infantry Regiment who, in 10 days, battered the jWehrmacht from strong positions along the Moder River through the 'Siegfried Line. I Engaged in bitter nouse-to-house fighting in the torn city of Hagenau. ;these U. S. Seventh Army infantrymen j broke out from a small bridgehead across the Moder, clashed with Ger man rearguards and finally knocked out 35 pillboxes and forts in cutting thrpugh the Siegfried Line. The doughboys, commanded by I Col. Charles H. Owens, of Wallace. II da ho, have left landmarks to | a defeated Reich from Salerno, Italy, t ) the Rhine in Germany in 353 days of conflict with the enemy. Among the most veteran infantrymen in General Jacob L. Devers' 6th Army Group, Ihey captured more than 6,000 Germans in France alone. Several Nazi lenders have been added to their bag in Austria. They were the first Americans to assault now-crumbled Fortress Eu rupe with the Salerno landings and later fought in the Rapido River's "Battle of Guts" below Cassino. The mountain city of Velletri fell to them when they took part in the spectacu lar 36th Division infiltration maneu ver that opened the gates to Rome. Spearheading a beach landing in Southern France, they struck north to aid in the destruction of the Ger man IDth Army near Montelimar. Other battles included rugged war f; re in the Vesges Mountains, the defense of Colmar passes, and com bat against Germans emplaced in. Maginot Line fortresses near Bitche. Members of the regiment include: Pie. Charlie L. Hoyle of Balsam, Pic}. Tom Kelly, Sr., grandson of Mrs. T H. Hastings, of Sylva and P:c. Vrilliam R. Conner. CAP!. MALCOLM BROWN NOW AT MIAMI RE DISTRIBUTION CENTER MIAMI REACH. Fla.. .Tunc 1.? Cr.pt. M 1 1 c- ? ? I m H. Brown, 2p?, Sylva, X. C., has arrived at Army Air Force1; Pcd : i'outl.>n Station No. 2 in Miami Be; eh i'or reassignment processing pfer L\>mnlot ing a tour of duty out s'. ie the <-ont inental United States. Me-iu :L examinations and elnssifi 0 ca tion interviews at this post, pioner of several redistribution stations op crated by the AAF Personnel Dis tribution Command for AAF returnee officers and enlisted men. will deter mine his new assignment. He will remain at the redistribution station about two weeks, much of which will be devoted to rest and recreation. He flew 30 missions as a heavy bomber pilot during 23 months in the European theater and holds the DFC, the Air Medal with three clusters, and a Distinguished Unit Citation. He is a graduate of Carson-Newman col lege, Jefferson City, Tenn., and work ed as a teacher and athletic director before joining the AAF Jan. 5, 1942. His mother, Mrs. E. E. Brown, makes her home in Sylva* ? $