Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / March 4, 1943, edition 1 / Page 8
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(One Day Nearer Victory) THURSDAY, MARCH 4, Page 8 THE WA YNESV 1LLE MOUNTAINEER 194, r-r. " 2 Haywood Boys Were Aboard the U. S. S. Chicago ' (Continued from page 1) for us. We sat there knowing that at fewest three or rour would hit us," said Lieut. Edward H. Jar man, 25, of Staunton, Va., the Chicago's air defense officer. Lt. Jarman stated that one tor pedo hit the forward magazine, which already was flooded. Three truck aft where the cruiser had been hit the day before. She laid over on her starboard side and went down fast, but smooth, in 19 minutes. She fired a five-inch salute to herself as she went down, shells exploding from the heat of the torpedo-set fires and with her colors flying. "We got off every survivor on rafts," Jarman explained. "We had nearly ,S00 recruits, but all were orderly and waited orders. There was no panic." Lt. Jarman reported that "there was just enough light to silhouette the ships, and that fire was open ed at 7:25 p. ni. One torpedo miss ed the cruiser, but the first wave of Japs dropped float lights to light us up and marker flares to designate the position." Several Jap planes were shot down. One torpedo plane was sh"t 0 full of steel that it almost ex ploded on t he Chicago, reported to have missed only l feet It burned four minutes. bio! all the engine rooms and Was lost. The fires won ions and thev had lim them out in 2"i or .'Id minute. Bhip headed for port while task force resumed its patio Sixteen of the Chicago's ca ties were men who had been wound ed in the first attack and were trapped and drowned in the sick bay during the second-day attack. The senior medical officer, Lt. Commander K. X. Jones, of Boise, Idaho, and the hospital corps tried vainly to rescue all the patients. They carried out a number, but before they could go back down the in-rushing water made it im possible. Heroism was reported from all accounts. Wounded men remain ed on duty at anti-aircraft posts and continued firing despite ser ious injuries. The ship's carpenter, A. A. Bartholomew, 27, of Philadelphia, went deep into the ship trying to shut all valves and prevent sink- HOW TO MAKE YOUR MEAT GO FURTHER Meat Cut First Meal Second Meal Third Meal ( ?ik 5sSl3l ,ll3? PlggF ilPP" xtESfy Beef Brisket B BwM with Boom Broiled Tootfwichw""'''' Stuffed Green Peppfrs ic S' .in Njfat- JlSPl (mSm? XilP wsm$ $SR?y i Blode End of Pork Loin'- Roost fork with Drettinq J&&r Barbecued Pork Slices Pork Shortcole I Lomb Shoulder Cmbion Shoulder ith Corn StuffingV Pasties Scotch Pancakes I Around 100 Men Will Leave Here In March Quota (Continued from page 1) 2nd, Edgar Lon Amnions, Hillard Bolderi Sutton, Wilson Noil Phil lips, Billy Curtis, James Kerr Boone, (volunteer), James Wayne Trull, Sam Dewey West, (volun teer), Samuel Henry Sherrill, Vi vian Ward, Robert Lee Jordon, Jr., Mont M. Putman. Odas Verge Shelton,' William McKinley Hampton, Jr., Ernest Coleman Ledford, Clyde Louis Smith, Robert Walton Sutton, Sikes Ledford, John Henson Mes ser G rover Hogan Fullbright, kinteei), hrnest Monroe oui- A. J. Garrison, (volunteer;, Mattie Messer, Ernest War- (volunter), Ernest Melvin James Wallace Burnette, ton. Kosi'oe lick, Messi r. shoulders of reporters and rewrite men and make them incapable of spelling names right particularly Sin the matter of middle initials. The list is long. i We recommend that the Nieman foundation at Harvard, which is studying the problems of journal ism, make a definite report on the i mergenfellers. It was ! the boat three or e out in ill power : not si r- 1 to put The the I sual- ' Nutrition authorities say that j Wrfl A m ti f !i r Hniicourifa'c nf ' .....v.. ..vuvnwv i, feeding her family is one of the most important in the war effort. For nourishing food is going a long way toward building strength fnd morale on the home front. At the same titno, women are be ing called upon to conserve food as a wartime necessity. This means they must use every incemuty to eliminate waste and get the most out of the food they buy. How to make their meat r!o fur ther teems to he a subject of espe cial ii. lei est, since building meals nroni. I tiiir. food is an American tradition. So home economics ex perts have come to the rescue with all sorts of ideas and recipes de signed to o teiid the meat purchase as far as possible. Here are a few of many practical Ideas along this line. BEEF BRISKET First meal. Brisket cooked with beans is a delicious dish for the first serving. The beans are soaked over night and brown sugar, onion and seasonings added, then placed in a covered kettle with brisket on top. Brisket and beans should be covered with water and cooked in a moderate oven for about three hours. Second meal. Broiled toastwiches suggested for the second meal, are prepared by slicing lefi-ovrr brisket and making into sandwiches. The sandwiches are dipped in beaten egg and milk and broiled until I brown. Third meal. The left-over meat from the brisket may be ground J and combined w ith boiled rice and j seasonings to make a slutting for green peppers. These are baked in a In it oven until d ,1:0 a In ut 4.") minutes. : BLADE EM) OE J'OKK LOIN ' First meal. I'.I.n'n end , f t'.e pork i loin is excellent for a roast. The I end cut is lower in ju ice than tlie center cut. Roasting is easy when a few simple rules are followed. The roast should not be covered and 110 water added. A low temperature -ves both meat aie' fuel. A bread (iresslng, shaped in balls and placed around the roast half an hour be fore it is done, will exten 1 the serv- Third meal. The the roast make a trimmings surpn: j .m dish when combined 1, ith sauce and served betv. n and over Che top el L - a ,. Short Cake. lamb siiori dim Firr.t meal. A stuffed i n.ib der is a thrif'y 1" a-!, 'ill may be used to sea: 0:1 eg. 1 n: n I mgg. This roast rcn'res ,'iO min utes per pound. Second meal. The cold slices of roast pork are delicious heated in barbecue sauce. or t .stubine w lin.V ' 1 l.e! ( SCI : ' -S . : per. T'" r : t ; - ,, .... s !"'r I' Scroti d met'!. mam t'.i-U, c 1 roast with i.'f'-i enough grow Place im. uiH s squares of p., si make a tn.i'ii:; together. '., These are calk .oup bo lee 1' ' ! '; .1.1 s i.iid liier. e oil I Third meal. The rem ii' "bits" may be e.rou'id ;rin '"i With coo1 "d oatmeal, an i'pi! a seasonings to make Scoun l'.i cakes for supper or t or break fa. ing. He reported that his .dam age control, party.-''worked,; , like dogs to keep us afloat!.; T.hqy Warn ,10 feet in water chin neep, dodg ing heavy tables and chairs as teh ing heavy tables and chairs us the H. E. Smith, shiplitter, third class (address unknown) sacrific ed his life to stive George Tabor, a.Tejian, .RfMitb, ,vynt down five Newspapers Have Gremlins, Too FrotjiTBt) New York Herald Tribune h'or the 'millions who are slight- decks and helped out Tabor, who Wiis carried upward by the floating water. Smith, however, was trap ped and drowned. He was award ed a medal posthumously. New Photographic Overseas t'erter Service pdi. Now Recdv Vlr"'m o fll m Ww To Soldiers and Sailors Overseas THIS IS WHAT YOU DO: 1 Use official"VMair'form only. Don't mark your regular moil "V Mail" as it won't get you this service. 2 Seal letter and address in usual manner. 3 Put on same amount of postage as on regular domestic letters. 4 Drop in any mail box or post office. THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS: 1 "VMail" gets preferences all other classes of overseas moil. 2 Government photo graphs your "V Mail" letter at their expense. (No one else sees it.) 3 Film is flown overseas or goes by fastest available means of transportation. 4 letter is delivered in a fraction of the time usually required. ? MAKES THE iijU S I DIFFERENCE jfJi l The Mountaineer Stationery and Supplies For Home, Office and School ly pixy-minded, the discovery of the gr. mlins, those devilish little (sprites who mess things up for the fliers of the royal air force, has jjrovidijd on of the major excite jtients of the war. Come to think ((f'itj-it i as easy to believe in gVcmlins its in banshees and lep rechaun's of in imy of the creatures Unit il.-inee iicross the pasres if that line Irish writer, Mr. James Stephens. I'.ut gremlins were not enough. The alert though Sometimes' o lisp rating minds that conduct the radio industry have come forward with their set of cute little people. Those are called grohms. One type of grohintlie slohnik, "lousis up" the copy of scrip writers; an other, the lafllnz) flattens the lines of comedians; still another, the foobus, makes noises in micro phones. This, also, is an interest ing discovery, sure to provide much merriment among the people of radio, to whom laughter comes rather easily. But why the excitement? Journ alism itself has long had its own set of little rascals who for gener ations have messed up one thing or another. Various phenomena observed in newspaper offices leads to the incapable conclusion that journalism is haunted by as per nicious a set of strange folk as ever harassed an airplane pilot or made life in a radio studio mis erable. These troublemakers have been I tentatively named mergenfellers, and they come in many guises. Most puckish of the lot, perhaps, are the eternally playful twins, ctaoin and shnllu, who have great fun slinding up and down the keyboards of linotype machines. They can inject a note of nonsense and confusion into the most sol emn discourses. There are the slantites, the tin iest and meanest of them all, who have been known to bite all the members of a newspaper staff, from publisher to copy boy, giving them a depressing low-grade infection known as slantites. Victims are afraid of straight facts; they hoot at the ideal of objectivity; every thing they touch must be given a "slant" or "angle." In time they begin to walk sideways. The final result is almost always fatal. Then there are the fixpixies, who are responsible for putting the picturs of Mrs. Plantagenet in the spot where a cut of Lizzie the Chimp was supposed to go; the cacklin old greeleybums, who cause people to write unintelligible or abusive letters to the editor; the orthagreves, who light on the (v. lunteer), ( harles Koper ieaiu eiuo'i'l, 1 volunteer), James Frank lin Albright, (volunteer), and Charles Ray tiaddis( volunteer). Transferred from other boards for delivery from the Waynesville area were: Robert Lawrence Downs, James Rogers, Jr., and Os car Thomas Victor Barker. There are also four more vol unteers yet to have their prelim inary physical examinations and to be classified that may leave with the jr-oup. Five Iowa broth, cruiser are lost in PUI it batu wines c 'ate rates . ForcetShemakesrai.. " ;". with RUMFORD the Bak, V der that assurei itv.s,,L P01 baking. Mo alum no h",n.r '"W original baking Dowder ..:. FREEi Cm Rumiord'a Tim.i Racip Mat.riai.Wnte toda, Rumford Baking Powder B E, Rumford, Rhode hu"a The Food Store Brings- 3 Not Rationed Pound JFG Peanut Butter - 25 fSSS-i JlDMiDjl Large ir Small 27c :S Oz. Jar APPLE B U T T E R 200 Advance Or Jewel Shortening 4 71c 2J Lb. 15aj Yukon's Western FLOUR-- $1.25 21 Lb. iK Vukon's Jes FLOUR $n ift Your I 'res.li FRUITS VEGETABLES Here Always Indian River Grapefruit 6 for 25p Nice Juicy Oranges- - 19p up Hating or Cooking Apples 10 lbs 37(1 California Carrots 2 bunches 17c SEK I'S FOR 0 and S Frozen Foods Buy Seeds Here Certified Seed POTATOES GREEN MOUNTAIN & IRISH COBBLERS Yellow Danvers ONION SETS 271 lb. GARDEN SEEDS WW Octagon Laundry sm. 2 for 5f Octagon Laundry, reg. 4 for 19( Super Suds - - Ig. 230; sm. Octagon Toilet - - - 4 for 19 Large Klex. half price sale - 15( Octagon Powder - - 4 for 19( Palmolive, med. - - - 3 for 20( Palmolive, Ig. ------ lOf In Our Grade A Market You will find the best cuts of meats. Cut By Bob Fie and Abe Cope The LEON HENRY, Manager We Have An Extra Large Stock Of These Are NOT RATIONED - And Are Priced At ASSIE'S Usual Economical Prices IPU4V MA Dept. Store , ('. J. REECE, Owner Sid
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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March 4, 1943, edition 1
8
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