V, OCTOBER 21, 1943 (One Day Nearer Victory) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 9 W Recruiter to Women iv - for The Wavy on IV 1C Maw 1 be in the court I"1 , .,vm-sville on each Fn- & " .. .,i I1 10 J-'1' nterviews to ested- in service 'm.nV reserve has a need fl wl .. :.h nil tvnes of train- on" k" ""-. - v. nnlllV OUCIvSiuuiiua . u-.'.nu-n can serve in the nianv scores of types of 1 t i th- Navy. Each woman leases a man from .nlS j0b tor aui.y ai c ui wot In Iceianu nwsiM" ivus ha been received heTe Cert KOIKTI UCC ilv of Waynesville, has been ill 'hospital in Iceland since Sep Juber first. His illness is due to ,mach trouoie. Set Ledford entered the service Lember. 1941. He receivea nis L training at Fort Bragg and U Jackson, before being sent to present base. ge has been in Iceland since rest, WW. but was unaoie to rven his location until recently, 'gis wife, the former Miss Eula jgle and thirteen-months-old dau ber, whom he has never seen, E-e residing in Canton. CORSICA-ALLIED SPRINGBOARD DEATHS Lament On A Rock (The following poem was sent to Charlie Buchanan by his cousin Ben E. Harrison, who is serving somewhere in the South - Pacific.) CLARENCE M. QUEEN Funeral services were held at Long's Chapel Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock for Clarence M. Queen, 42, shift foreman in the sodamill department of the Canton Division of the Champion Paper and Fibre Company, who died in an Ashe- ville hospital Thursday morning. ; The Rev. V. H. 1'Iess officiated. Some WITH THE WITHDRAW Al of Nazi forces from Corsica, the Allies now possess an excellent springboard (or landings In France and northern and central Italy Id addition, bombers operating from airfields on the strategic Mediterranean island are within effective flying range of many vital enemy targets Black arrows show distances that would have to be covered to various Invasion points; circular lines, the varied ranges for light, medium and heavy bombers. (International) fpl, Harvey L. London leturns From Overseas Corpora Harvey L. London, son Mr. and Mrs. R. L. London, of Jyatt Creek, has recently returned Inni three years and nine months Hrseas. He volunteered in the iirvice in km;, and enlisted at lirlotte. From there he was sent Fort Moultrie, and then overseas. He will be here for a week's irlough. Prior to entering the mice, Cpl. London was employ- Won construction work. ii U) About Our Many Gas Services. Alhevillt Road Phone 202-J Reclassifications For Week Announced I Eighty-three were reclassified I during the past week by the local i draft board as follows: I In class 1-A were: Johnnie I Thomas Messer, Norman Wayne Silvers, Rufus Lee Greenarch, Ern est Milford Greece, David Frank Troutman, Nolan Jeffirson Reason, Rot Fate Sheri ill, Wilson Rath bone, Edgar Joseph Walls, Rich ard Carl Duncan, Gilbert Raymond Inman, Roy Albert Oxner, Neil Robert Pressley, Norman Mitchell. Noble George McDonald, Herman Franklin Arrington, Julius Baxter Hoyle, Thomas Roger Walker, Cass Lee Constant, Ashbury Homer Green, James Edward Hall, Gor don Earle Muse, Junior Clyde Clark, Tommie Clyde Caldwell, Glenn Norman, Willard Howell, Troy Lee Hannah, Lloyd Shelton, Jr. Class 2-A were: Wade Hampton Frazier, Jr., Lloyd Cline Jordan, Wiley Williams, Clarence Theodore Taylor, Robert Vaughn Hoyle, Her bert Hugo Braren and Virgil Sum- Burial was in the church ceme tery. Active pallbearers were: J. Med Williams, Charles A. Mooney, Howard Leatherwood, Alvin Ford, T. V. Williamson, Homer Hannah, Walter Amnions, and Newt J. Cole, all fellow employes in the sodamill area where Mr. Queen had served as foreman for several years. Mr. Queen was a member of the Junior QJe Timer's Club of the company as a result of his con tinuous service. He was also a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge of Canton. Surviving are his widow, the former Miss Dolly Hall, of Hay wood county; two sons, Eugene of the U. S. army stationed at Flora, Fla., Carroll Queen, of Canton, and one daughter, Miss Margaret Anne Queen, of Canton, and one brother, Raymond Queen, also of Canton. IF YOUR DEALER IS OCCASIONALLY OUT OF CAMELS it's because hundreds of mil lions of Camel cigarettes are being sent to men in the ser vice. In addition to the govern ment's own purchases for our fighting men, veterans' organi zations, fraternal orders, clubs, friends and relatives every where are sending them Camels. Yes, Camels'. After all. Camels are the favorite cigarette with men in all the services. mey. Class 2-B were: Walker Gillett, Walter Otis Henderson, James Beaufort Birchfield, Ben Henry Hannah, McKinley Reed Sutton, David Russell Riley, Frank Charles Rathbone, Joseph Howell Walker, Leon Marcus Killian, Jr. Ed Haynes Davis, Weaver Lee Rathbone, Hamilton Meshan Akers, James William Swayngim, Charles Page, Aaron Russell, Alvin Jus tice, Joseph Way Howell, Oscar Toaster, Rufus Wilson Melton, Woodrow Wilson Beasley, Edward Earl Thomason, Harry Swayngim, Fred Walter Wright, James Jack son Clark, James Robert Plott, Thomas Fred Ratcliff, Charles Jackson McFaniel, Samuel Henry Bushnell. Class 2-B(H), Mallie Woody. Class 3-C: William Vaughn Han ey, Hughes Messer and James Ralph Sisk. Class 3-C(H): Rufus Garrett Hill and Fred Elmer Coward. Class 4-F: James Dedrick Frady, Jr., Henry Author Price, William Rufus Conard, Lloyd Cecil Green, Roy Lee Mills, Clyde Styles, Clinton Moss Truitt, Willard Rufus Setzer, Keith Dale Hill, Dallas Grayson Hodge, James H. Leop hard, John McCrary Davis, and Al bert L. Mathis. Class 4-F(H), James Lee Rathbone. -AND THE SERVICE COMES FIRST! While we have pushed Camel's production to new peaks to meet this overwhelming demand, yet if your dealer does not always have Camels, m asks you to be patient, believing you will agree the men in the service should come first. tA on actual sale records, the favorite cigarette with men m army. Navy, Marines, and the Coast Guard is Camel. eT....rZ!!!L 1 Pvt. Cecil E. Mann Home On Furlough Private Cecil E. Mann, who is stationed at Camp Gordon, Ga., is home 0n a furlough. Pvt. Mann is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion T. Mann, of the Pigeon section, and was inducted in the service on Nov. 1, 1941, at Fort Bragg. From Fort Bragg he was trans ferred to Camp Edwards, Mass., and then to A. P. Hill, Va. From the latter he was transferred to Camp Hood, Tex., and then to Camp Forrest, Tenn. From Camp Forrest he was sent to his present post. Prior to entering the service he was engaged in farming in this area. Buy War Bonds and Stamps. Stop TOMS JOHN II. WATSON Last rites were held at the Bethel Methodist church at U o'clock Sunday morning for John H. Watson. (51). Haywood county farmer, who died at the County Hospital Thursday afternoon. The Rev. Lush Rogers officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. Surviving are: the widow; four daughters, Mrs. Oval Williams, of Atlanta, Ga., Mrs. Rettie Lindsey, of Fletcher, and Misses Ruby Janie and Donnie Watson, of Bethel; three sons, Dennis ut Camp Track Henry, Newport News, Va., Harry, of Camp Blanding, Fla., and James Troy, of Bethel ; two brothers, E. B. Watson, of Canton, and Bill Watson, of near Waynesville; two sisters, Mrs. John Early, of Hazel wood, and Mrs. John Huffman, of Lake Junaluska; and five grand children. The Wells Funeral Home, of Canton, had charge of the arrangements. Some where on a South Sea Island where the sun is like a curse. And each long day is followed by another slightly worse, Where coral dust blows thicker than the shifting sand And the white man dreams of a finer and colder land. where in the Blue Pacific where a woman is never seen; Where the sky is never cloudy and the grass is always green; Where the goony birds fuss nightly robbing man of blessed sleep, Where there isn't any whisky and but two cans of beer a week. Some where in the South Pacific where the mail is always late, Where Christmas Cards in April is considered up-to-date Where we always have the payroll but never have a cent, Though we never miss the money 'cause there's no place to get it spent. Some where in the South Ocean where the gooney's moan and cry, And the lumbering deep-sea tur tles come up on the beach to die. Oh, take me back to North Caro lina the place I love so well, For this God-forsaken Island is awful close to hell. Pfc. Ben Ferguson On Furlough In County Private First Class Ben Fergu son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ferguson, who is stationed at Fort Benning, Ga., is spending several days furlough with his parents. 1 Pfc. Ferguson was inducted in the service in March, 1942 at Fort Bragg. From Bragg he was sent to Camp Polk, and from there to California for desert training. From the latter he was sent to his present post. Pfc. Ferguson was employed at Pvt. Perry Burchfield Home On Furlough Private Perry Burchfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Burchfield, of the Pigeon section, is visiting his par ents. Pvt. Burchfield is now sta tioned at Fort Benning, Ga. He entered the service in March, 1942 and was inducted at Fort Bragg. From Bragg he was sent to Camp Polk, La. From Camp Pdlk he was trans ferred to Camp Coxcomb, Calif., and from there to his present post. Prior to entering the service Pvt. Burchfield was employed on con- tne Newport iNews ompou.iu.ng struction projects with the state and Dry Dock Company prior to. n entering the service. I Capt. Geo. E. Plott Home On Leave Captain George E. Plott, son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Plott, who is stationed at Camp Robinson, Ark., is spending a . 12-day leave here, Capt. Plott left here with the National Guard in Sept., 1940, and was first stationed at Fort Jackson, and from there to Camp Carson, Colo. From Colorado he was sent to Camp Blanding, Fla., and from the latter to his present post. Prior to entering the service Captain Plott was engaged in farm ing and stock raising. W. E. WORLEY Funeral services were conducted at the Beaverdam Methodist church near Canton on Friday morning at 11 o'clock for W. Erwin Worley, 71, well known farmer and stock raiser of the Beaverdam section of the county, who died at his home at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening from a heart attack. The pastor, the Rev. W. H. Pless, and the Rev. V. A. Morton, pastor of the Rockwood Methodist church, officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mr. Worley was a life-long resi dent of Haywood county. He is survived by three sons, Andy, George and Ray Worley, all of Canton; two daughters, Mrs. Mae Robinson and Mrs. Mirah Wilson, of Canton; 13 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. The Wells Funeral Home of Canton was in charge of the funer al arrangements. ARTHUR McLEMORE Funeral services were held at Long's Chapel Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock for Arthur McLemore, 43, of Canton, who died suddenly at a veteran's hospital at Roanoke, Va., Wednesday. The Rev. Thom as Erwin and the Rev. Oder Bur riette' officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. Members of the Veiner-Rhine-hart American Legion Post 61, of Canton, had charge of the services at the grave. Surviving are: the widow, the former Miss Lillie Haynes; four daughters, Mrs. Earl Bumgarner, Mrs. Bill Xeal and Misses Lois and Kutn McLemore, all of Canton; two sons, Eugene and Jimmy Lee McLemore, both of Canton; and four brothers, Henry, Edward, Charles and Amos McLemore, all of Columbia, S. C. Pvt. Fagg Sawyer Visiting Parents Private Fagg Sawyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. C- T. Sawyer, of Waynes ville, who is now stationed at Salt Lake City, is here for a 16-day furlough with his parents. Pvt. Sawyer, volunteered in the service two and a half years ago and was inducted at Charlotte. From there he was sent to Tampa, then St. Louis, later New Orleans. From, the latter he was sent to March Field, Calif., then to New Rock Lake, Calif., and later San Diego. He was transferred back to Marchfield, and then to Topeka, Kan., Salina, Kan., then Denver, Colo., and from there to his pres ent post. Prior to, entering the service he was employed by the Pet Dairy Products Company at their plant here. Pvt. W. W. Willett, Jr. Spends Furlough at Home Private W. W. Willett, Jr., son of Mr .and Mrs. W. W. Willett, who is now stationed at Spence Field, Moultrie, Ga. He volunteer, ed in the service in April of 1942. At the time he entered the ser vice he held a position at the South eastern Shipyards at Savannah, Ga. Mr. And Mrs. Galloway Have Two Sons In Service Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Galloway, of Waynesville, route 2, have two sons in the Bervice. Corporal Davis Galloway has re cently returned to his post at Fort Bragg, after spending a ten-day furlough with his parents. Private Fred Galloway is now stationed at Camp White in Ore gon. He whs inducted in the ser vice on Sept. 23, 1942. He was home on a furlough last February, when his wife accompanied him to Oregon. Cpl. Melvin A. Lanning Home On Furlough Corporal Melvin A. Lanning, who is stationed at Camp Hulen, Tex., son of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Lanning, of route 1, is spending several days furlough here with his family. Cpl. Lanning was inducted in the service on March 11, 1941, at Fort Bragg and from there was trans ferred to Camp Wallace, Tex. From the latter he was sent to Fort Crocket, Tex., and then to his pres ent post. Prior to entering the service he was employed as a miner at the Big Ridge Mica mine. May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with ita hurry and worry, irregular habiu, improper eating ana drinking -ita risk of exposure and infec tion throws heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxed and fail (o filter excess acid and other impurities from the life-giving blood. You may suffer nagging backache, headache, ditainesa, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder are some times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try l)oan'$ 'flf. Doan'a help the kidneys to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have had more than half a century of public approval. Are recom mended by grateful users everywhere. Atk ypur neighborl Tseiey 'rom where I sit . . Ay Joe Marsh "Ytxir outfit looked mighi.y in the parade," 1 told Ed Carey, our fire chief. "Everything pol ished within an inch of ita life, and the men pert and snappy!" "That's how it should be," said Ed. "We have Thursday turnout inspections . . . and Bur prise inspections in between!" That sort of supervision is well repaid in the efficiency of our town's fire department. It's like the way the brewers do in this state. They watch all the time, not becauea tiic ie looking for things to be wrong but. ..well, just an ounoa of prevention 1 The brewers' self-rejulatiosi program is just a form of vigi lance that protects everybody. Like the fire department's in spections, it keeps things the way they ought to be. From wheiy I sit, most people approve of the way the brewers run things these days. (P lOaS SRSWINO INOUSTKY FOUNDATION. North Edgir H. Sals, Stale Director. 606407 Imvrance Bldg, ReMgh. N. C You say you are a patriotic American! Here's your chance to prove it-to help your country win thfs war. Here's a job you can do. Cut pulpwood. Pulpwood is as essential fo war as ships or tanks or planes. Right now there is an acute shortage. More pulpwood Is needed desperately. $o if you can cut it. don't wait any longer. Gt busy now Don't let our boys down. Newspaper Pulpwood Committee MRS. OEY SHELTON Funeral services were conducted at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon at the Dellwood Methodist Church for Mrs. Oey Shelton, 43, wife of Lloyd Shelton, who died at 12:30 o'clock Thursday at her home on the Dell wood Road. Rev. Stevenson, pastor officiated. Burial was in the Dell wood Hill cemetery. Mrs. Shelton is the daughter of Mrs. John W. Russell, and the late Mr. Russel, and is a native of this county. She is survived by her husband, her mother, one son, Lloyd Shel ton; Jr.; two brothers, Joe and Barton Russell, tall of Dellwood; five sisters, Mrs. Howard Robinson and Miss Pearl Russell, of Hazel wood, Mrs. Talmadge Hoglen, of Canton, and Mrs. Fred Smith and Mrs. Amos Morrow, both of Dellwood. Hayes Alley, who was honorably discharged sometime ago from the army, and is now employed at the North Carolina Shipbuilding yards m Wilmington, is spending a week here with his parents, Judge and Mrs. F. E. Alley. 7M When you want to read the paper don't hesitate to use all the light you need. There is plenty of electricity for all needs, and lighting is essen tial for reading crhd eyesight conservation. cd fmtfe'- When you have finished reading, or leave a room, don't permit electricity to "loaf." Turn off lights when they are no longer needed. Carolina POWER & LIGHT Company f 1 4 - mm TltNTY TO VSE...NONS TO WASTt

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