LpAYE 11, 1912 THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER Page II QiHesHeldFor Uy Afternoon to i cervices were held nel service -vioct fc 'SSS BaPt church lilt- n Adelaide Craw. Lis. Ior ouniin Oawford. l - at ner ii",c sn " Rpn Cooke. Rev. Rev. L. H. s Rnrial was KUrdete ive. Da beaieia grandsons -r-..",fl-i t;S;pHc;ordand Ldaughters were in charge I J,ujr4 L rrawford was a native of ' .... u-aa hnrn in f:an county "u ,arv, 1846. She had been re- at tne sa'c . -- The first house was t-ucted 'of logs, whiclrwas torn down anu on the same site. , Crawford is survived Dy two G C and William Crawford, l.'.m'- three daughters, Mrs. L ,nd Miss Addie Crawford, all reat grandchildren. JlOW TO GET MORE IILEAGE OUT OF LIFE .' ii Lr,,m-n nhvsician-writer Lout that you can keep your in shape Dy eating muswe iing proteins and minerals bones and teeth must have, t miss this revealing illustrat rtfrle in the June 14th issue of The American Weekly- Big Magazine Distributed With The BALTIMORE kXDAY AMERICAN In Sale At All Newsstands : nergy Is Ammu- liition In A War Of Nerves! "Old Man Washday" is a ue health saboteur who fps your strength, leaving lu worn and weary. Set fcurself free as other busy omen have done , . . by nding us your laundry. ou'll find yourself feeling ktter . . . looking healthier . and really having more me lor the war work ou've been wanting to do. VAYNESVILLE LAUNDRY PHONE 205 Japan's Bombing Shows How Much War Has Changed By CHARLES P. STEWART (Central Press Columnist) OLD-FASHIONED professional fighters, on land, and, even more emphatically at sea, are beginning a reluctantly that World War No. 2 is about as different from No. 1 as No. 1 was different from our. American War of Inde pendence, about 150 years ahead of it. Its a transformation wrought in a couple of decades in comparison with the preceding 15. They don't like to admit it be cause it makes them seem like back numbers. Aviation is what's poisoned their original system. , It was a mere adjunct in 1914- 18. They thought it was vroirnr to be the same thing again. Instead, it threatens to supplant them. The groundlings still have hopes. as to the future. When it conies to OCCUPYING an enemv Country. they reckon that surface troops will have to do the business. They are getting ready for an actual in vasion of the European continental terrain. Flyers can come down via parachute, but not in sufficient numbers and at a rapid enough rate to escape being chewed up about as fast as they hit terra firma. Groundling invaders simply can roll in, in irresistible waves. That presumably is what our A.E.F. is in Ireland for to swish,' plus the English, across the Chan nel and swamp Germany, in co-operation with the Russians, from the other direction. Sir Stafford Cripps told parliament about it, as Wins ton Churchill's spokesman, a few days ago. Flyers Pave the Way But the aviators are expected to prepare things for this surface movement, in advance. During World War No. 1, of which I saw quite a bit, as a news correspondent, the airman was an observer mainly. He might spill a few bombs. German airships were something of a nuisance over Lon don, but no serious worry. They damage they did was negligible. That was what orthodox war riors anticipated this time. Instead My! they raise hades. It's reciprocated, too. But what German air bombers have done over England and what British flyers have done to German centers like Rostock and Mann heim isn't a circumstance to Ja pan's vulnerability as a target for our own airmen. Brig. Gen. Jim my Doolittle and 79 other Ameri can flyers proved this a few weeks ago without losing a single plane. You need to have lived in Japan, as I have, to appreciate that kind of a raid's effects in the Mikado's realm. On a second thought, I slightly qualify that reference to the Mikado-''. Some unquestionably American ly loyal locally-born Japs, whom I know, assure me that Emperor Hirohito didn't want to get into this war and that a lot of his coun trymen didn't, but that they were yanked into it forcibly by Nippon's war lords, the crazy Samurai. Their dope is that we ought to propagandize decent Japan and Paris Housewives Walt for Meager Food Ration SPECIAL OFFER m. OLD GLORY to Every Reader of the Mountaineer m it Would You Like This ' 3x5 FT. AMERICAN FLAG? Ai a reader of this paper, we are offering you n amazing opportunity to own a glorious, '"ge "Stars and Stripes". Made of fine, durable cotton bunting, with individually Mwed stripes. Stars stamped in fast colon n rich, blue background. This beautiful g. when opened to its full majestk spread,' me"wes FIVE feet long by THREE feet wide. OUR SPECIAL OFFER TO YOU J The MOUNTAINEER - ij J TRANSACTIONS IN Real Estate (At Recorded to Monday Soon Of Thit Week) I After two years of Hitler domination, this picture made In Paris shows French housewives standing in line outside a dairy to receive their meager ration of food. Although the store advertises butter, cheese and eggs, there is none to be had by these women. The tins exhibited in the shop window are empty. The milkman carries away the empty milk cans which are placed there by order of the ruling Germans. HOSPITAL NEWS Mrs. Johnny Norris, of Canton, Operative case, is improving. Mrs. Frank Suttles, of Waynes- ville, operative case, is resting more comfortably. McLean Smathers, of Canton, op erative case, is better. Mrs. Jesse Reed, of Waynesville, route 2, operative case, is resting more comfortably. Miss Nettie Kuykendall, of Clyde, operative case, is improving. O. E. Stamey, of Canton, oper ative case, is better. The condition of Mrs. Way Whit aker, of Canton, operative case, is better. better. Vee Jones, of Waynesville, route 1, is resting more comfortably. Baby Odell James, Jr of Can ton, medical case, is resting fair ly well. Mrs. Glenn Davis, of Waynes ville, route 1, medical case, is resting more comfortably. Mrs, Lewia Burress, of Lake Junaluska, operative case, is better. Mrs. R. H. Gibson, of Canton, route 3, medical case, is improving. Mrs. Lee Ledford, of Waynes ville, operative case, is resting more comfortably. Miss Edith Hoglan, Clyde, route 1, operative case, is resting more comfortably. Ralph Ford, of Waynesville, route 1, operative case, is some we'll win 'em over to our side in due course. Just now, though, is an emer gency. Momentarily the poor cusses re quire extermination. So do the Germans, but they're not so easy to exterminate. ' Germany is substantially built. Its factories and things can have sizable chunks blasted out of them and still function. A Jap factory, though, resembles one of our ' tem pos" in Washington. Set it afire and it's a goner, for a whole group of city blocks. It isn't confined to that one; others catch quickly. Planes Have Advantage It can't be done naviatorially. Most of the places aren't close enough to the seaf ront. Yokohama is, and so is Kobe, but not farther inland. They call for aviation. And it must make 'em holler to have bombs dropped as close to the im perial palace as LaFayette Park is to the White House -just across the street. I know that imperial layout a palace, with a big park around it, a wall around that and a moat sur rounding the wall. Well, it's nearly impossible to worm in on an alleged defense of that kind with a naval force. It's gotta be squashed from overhead. Plane-carriers are fine, to get close up. Transports are vital, to land ground forces, and supply 'em. Cruisers and destroyers are essen tial to run errands. But big ships are getting to be superfluous. Aviation protects 'em, more than anything else does. Aviation appears to be IT in modern warfare. NOTICE SERVING SUMMONS BY PUBLICATKJW vnPTTT CAROLINA I HAYWOOD COUNTY. i IN THE SUPERIOR CUUKT. BEFORE THE CLERK. T. N. LEATHERWOOD, VS. BEULAH RUSSELL, et al. The defendants, Bessie Leather wood and husband, Fay Leather- wood: Brown Messer and wife, Refa Messer; Burr Messer Angel ..j OTiUnn MpsRpr. will take notice anu ,i -"-'-- f that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Supe cmirf of Havwood fJountv. N. 1 LUl v""- ' C to sell real estate for division; and the said deienaania wiu iurcn . toia nnticp that thev are reauir- ed to appear in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Uurt 01 said County in the Courthouse in Way nesville, N. C, within ten days after the 25th day of June, 1942, and answer or demur to the peti tion in this action, or the pectioner will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said petition. This May 25th, 1942. KATE WILLIAMSON, Asst. Clerk Superior Court. No. 1189 June 4-11-18-25 DISCHARGED Among those discharged from the Haywood County Hospital dur ing the past week here: Miss Betty Sue Whitted, Mrs. John Broyles, Miss Priscilla McDowell, Miss Catherine Jones, Frank Massey, Elza Moore, Master Dent Ensley, Jesse Ross, Miss .Edna Hall, Miss June Scroggs, John Cagle, Jua nita Stevenson, (colored). Mrs. Roy Phillips, Mrs. Walter Underwood, Master Wilburn Wells, Miss Wihla Gray, Mrs. Gordon Muse and baby, Mrs. Luther West and baby, Troy Dbtson, Mrs. Neal Carter, Mrs. Claude Trantham and baby, Mrs. Norman Arrington, Master John Richard Hipps, Mrs. James C. Adams, Miss Dorothy James, Mrs. Frank Pressley, Mrs. Ralph Wright and baby, Mrs. GroVer Robinson and baby. Mrs. John Blanton and baby, Mrs. Carol Miller and baby, Mrs. James Clark and baby, Mrs. D. West and baby, Master Edward Israel, Miss Shirley Dene Parham, Miss Shelly Jene Parham, and Luther West. BIRTHS Mr. and D. S. West, of Clyde, route 1, announce the birth of a son on June 2nd. Mr. and Mrs. John Williams, of Waynesville, announce the birth of a son on June 2nd. Mr. and Mrs. James Clark, of Clyde, route 1, announce the birth of a daughter on June 2nd. Beaverdam Township Theodore Huddle, et ux, et al to J. Sam Vance. : J. W. Carson, et ux to Adrian Schenck, et ux. Hugh Liner, et ux to Lester K. Smathers, et ux. E. A. Cabe, et ux to J. W. Cabe, et ux. Adrian Schenck, et ux to J. W. Carson. C. Guy Hipps, et ux to Char lotte H. Reece, Alden Liner, et al to Hugh Liner. Hugh Liner, et ux, et al, to Lyda Smathers. E. Z. Boyu, et ux, to W. A. Park er. C. Guy Hipps, et ux to Olive N. Cothran. Cci7 Township E. F, Burnett et ux to Ira Mas- sie. Mary M. Gibson to Earl Gibson. Clyde Township Burr Caglfe Cole to Claude Thompson, et ux. Burr Cagle Cole to Forest Har din, Gordon Rhinchart, et ux to R. L. Henneull. East Fork Township D. C. Waddell, Jr., et ux, to R. L. Prevost. Fives Creek Township Grace W. Hinton, Com., to Cecil Brown. Cauley Rogers to Frances Rog- route 1, announce the birth of a son on June 5th, Mr. and Mrs. James Gaddy, of Waynesville, route 2, announce the birth of a daughter on June 7th. Buchanan Cemetery To V He Cleaned Off 13th - AH persons who have relatives buried in the Buchanan cemetery are requested to meet Saturday, 13th, with tools and be prepared to spend the day cleaning off Iota, and constructing a road to the place. Fred Buchanan, who is in charge of the cemetery, pointed out that lots had been given free by George Buchanan, with the understanding that the place be kept up. "Unless it is cleaned at once, and the road built, we will be forced to, make a charge for all lots," he said. There are about 100 grave in the cemetery. ers. '. Iron Duff Township J. E. Downs, et al to Flossie Downs. Jonathan Creek Toicnship R. T. Boyd, et ux to Robert T. Boyd, Jr. Pigeon Township Worth Webb et ux "to T. H. Wells, et. ux. Thomas L. Michal, et ux to Ma jor Burress, et ux. Marian Rickards to O. T. Hen derson, et ux. O. T. Henderson, et ux, to Mar ian Rickards. T. H. Wells, et ux to Blake C. Wells, et ux. Waynesville Township J. R. Morgan, Tr to A. T. Ward. Alma Irene Goodwin to Hoyt Tatum. W. K. Chandler, et ux to Myrtle M. Ray. W. T. Lee to F. D. Messer. G rover G, Leatherwood, et ux, to Hugh E. Leatherwood, et ux. Jessie C. James, et ux to Hil liard Jones, et ux. Fred Farmer, et ux to Joe Tate. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Muse, of Waynesville, route 1, announce the birth of a daughter on June 3rd. Mr. and Mrs. John Blanton, Jr., of Balsam, announce the birth of a daughter on June 4th. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lowe, of Waynesville, route 2, announce the a daughter on June 3rd. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford White, of Maggie, announce the birth of a son on June 5th. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Ingle, of Canton, announce the birth of a son on June 6th. Mr. and Mrs. Gold Fish, of Clyde, ITS CAMELS WITH ME ON EVERy OHM TUPV UAVP r THE MILDNESS II THAT COUNTS AND FLAVOR APLENTY! THERE S NOTHING LIKE CAMELS FOR STEADY PLEASURE ffiSe- a. ''r Camel cigarettes are "standard equipment" with veteran engineer Frank Dooley (left, above) and his fireman, BUI Lyons, Jr, of New York Central CAMELS LESS NICOTINE 1 M !f. other ttem - according to indc Pendent ici'muJC-. tbe smoke ititlfl 11 M Quality and Real Service, see These Firms! SAVE TIME- SAVE MONEY- Time to Cook with Gaa the Perfect Fuel Economical Clean Quick Essotane Metered Service City o eonvcnlanc iniUHwl anywher Brading Gas Service Church Stmt Phon 202 Real Home Cooking If you like real healthful, ap petizing, home cooking, then here's the place to get it. DINNER PARTIES MRS. II. W. BURNETTE Phone 317-W Brookmont Dr. BUY WAR BONDS From Uncle Sam and Your Insurance From Atkins Insurance Agency 58 N. Main St Waynesville NOTARY PUBLIC Services AT THE Mountaineer Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted CO N S V LT DR. R. KING HARPE OPTOMETRIST 125 Main Street Wells Bldg. For Appointment Telephone 2483 Canton, N, C. FOOD PREPARED AND SERVED AS YOU LIKE IT CHARLIE'S CAFE A Modern Seating Place With the Open-View Kitchen Delicious Appetizing Regular Sizzling Breakfast Plate Lunch Dinner Steaks Sunday Dinner For Entire Family Phone 196 See Service Cleaners For Service First Satisfaction Always In the Basement of the Boyd Building Entrance through the Boyd Furniture . Store See The Mountaineer For Fine Printing Junaluska Supply Machine Shop Phone 88 Specializing In Welding Brazing General Repair Garage Work LATHE & PLANER WORK Do You Like Fine Foods? If you appreciate food that is carefully and expertly prepared and tastefully served, if you like courteous service and fair prices youll enjoy eating here. Come in! Green Tree Tea Room "Your Meeting Place" Phone 9165 f-.X ir f ef J .' -

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