Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Jan. 6, 1944, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
( Pace 8 THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1944 (One Day Nearer Victory) THE WATf NESV1LI.E MOUNTAINEER Motioning, OP A News GASOLINE A-8 coupons are od through eDruary SUGAK Stamp No. 29 in Book hur IS Kuou iu " ' kuary 15. Ce is or one pair- Stamp f I on mc 11,1 k""w ... jie is good for on-e pair. iTS, FATS Brown stamps ,t, s are good through January i Irown stamp T becomes good ;; ry 9 and remains good iroug January 29. KpROCESSED FOODS Green Lmps D, E, and F in Book Four !-e good through January 20. SUGAR RATION REMAINS SAME I Supar ration for home use will Lfmain the same for another two fLiti one half months. Sugar stamp liifiD'r 30 in War Ration Book nd will be good for buying five Lends of sugar tnrougn ine ena J Xfarch. Sugar stamp 29, now L ise, is good through January 15. Items no longer rationed Pressure cookers ana ieea grina- L-s and crushers have been remov- L from rationing. TIKE, TUBE SUPPLY STILL LOW Tire and tube quotas for Jan uary reflect ths continuing short- rrl . t OIG COO ((TP. 1 qUUl Ul IVJ.u,.,? new truck tires is 13.F90 less than the December figure, and the quota of 230. 1(10 new truck tubes is 27,787 onder th: December figure, bimi- larly, a lessening in demand which occurs during the colder months accounts for lower January quotas for farm tractor and farm imple ment tires , nad tubes. The tire quota is 27,600 lower by 4.600 than the Deesmber figure, while the January tube quota is 23,000 lower by 9,200. PLENTY OF ANTI FREEZE The nation's motorists are being oversold on anti freeze and told of shortages that do not exist, ac cording to ths War Production Board. Production of alcohol anti freeze for this winter is 60 percent more than last, WPB said, and ask ed motorists to watch their own needs and not to overload. Alcohol from which anti-freez? is made is a critical war material. RELEASE PEACHES TO CIVIL IANS Approximately 750,000 cases of canned peaches, previously set aside for government purchases, have been released for civilian sup plies and will reach some retail markets within a few weeks. TO GET MORE CHILDREN'S WEAR To insure sufficient production of infants' and children's wear, the industry has been included by ths War Manpower Commission in its list of essei.iial activities. Also, WPB has ordered approximately 18 million yards of cotton fabrics and cotton yarn will be allocated for manufacture of knitted outer wear and infants' ribbed long hose, half socks, and anklets. Such goods will not arrive on retail counters until Ftbruary and March. RATION TOKENS FOR RE TAILERS Retaijers selling rationed foods should file their applications for ration tokens by Saturday, Jan uary 8, to be sure of having a sup ply when the token plan starts Feb ruary 27, OPA says. The applica tion form is being distributed to re tailers by trade associations and also is available at local ration ing boards. CHANGES IN STOVE RATION ING Eligibility requirements for ra tioned heating stoves have been widened. A consumer who has a heating or cooking stove that can not be used satisfactorily is now eligible for a stove rationing cer tificate. Ration certificates also may be issued for stoves to heat premises where essential commu nity activities, such as volunteer Red Cross work, are carried on. A ration certificate now may be issued to a landlord who wishes to buy a stove for the use of an eligible tenant. TWO MILLION FLATIRONS COMING A program to make two million flatirons for civilian use in 1944 has been approved by WPB. This amount will not come up to normal production but it will east the hard ships caused by two years of al most no production. It will prob set aside for the manufacture of i ably be six months before many of certain specific it:ms of infants' and children's clothing. Worsted For Relieving Miseries of More thnn two generations iigo in pnindmot tier's day mothers first dis covered Vicks VapoRub. Today it is I he most w idely used home-ren ed y for relieving miseries of child icn's colds. A i id here is the reason . . . ' lie moment you rub VapoRub on ; ,e throat, chest and back at bedtime it starts to work two wavs at once and keeps on working for hours to case coughing spasms, help clear con gestion in cold-clogged upper breath ing passages, relieve muscular soreness or lightness. It promotes restful sleci. Often most of the misery of the cold is gone by morning! That's why VapoRub is so good lo use when colds strike. Try it I these irons shelves. will reach dealers' s NAP HOTS BY FRANCES FRAZIER Stall" Writer THE CLOSED DOOR We have just walked slowly across a very long room and have come to a large, firm door that opens outward. In ou- travel across this room, whch has taken us three hundred and sixty-five days to make, we have had to sur- Farmer Can Grind Corn For Hog Feed In feeding pigs, it will not pay a farmer to have his corn ground at a commercial mill but, if he has his own hammer mill, he can grind it to advantage, says F. H. Smith, animal nutritionist with the State College experiment station. Recent tests have shown that grinding gave a better utilization of corn, with about 15 per cent less feed being required to give 100 pounds of gain. "Medium-find grinding of corn gives better results than finely ground. A gritty-feeling product is superior." Smith says. He points out that wheat, bar- mount many obstacle; dodge many rve, and other such feeds LOOK AT THESE One Lot of 36-Inch OUTING 100 yd. In Grey Navy Black. 2 11 Lb. Batt QuiHf Cotton 59tf 3 690 Lb. Bleached, Tacked - 79f (Ready for the Quilt) 3-Lb. Bleached Batt 790 BeSk-IMson Co. "Home Of Better Values" RUBBER HEEL PRICES SET Retail ceiling prie s of 10 cents :ind 15 cents a pair on rubber heels sold to consumers who desire to at tach them to shoes in their own homes have been established by OPA. GAS RATION FOR SERVICE MEN To aid servicemen in recuperat ing from illness or wounds receiv ed while on active duty, OPA has announced that th y may be issued special gasoline rations for use in traveling to and from their homes or other plac s of convalescense. This special ration will be issued i .pon presentation of leave papers to a local rationing board and a letter from the attending medical ollicer certifying that transporta tion by automobile, rather than by any other means, will materially assist in the recovery of the ser viceman's health. issues; tread carefuuy to avoia falling; wipe away tears so that we could see our way and prevent seem to carry us on clouds, so stumbling; and, at times, our steps bouyant were they. But here we are at this great door, marked Nineteen Hundred and Forty-four, and we slowly open it and pause on its threshold. A few days ago we passed through this doorway and started another long, slow walk. We have no idea ahead of our foot steps; no conception of what lies waiting; but we must go through that door, and close the door be hind us. Let's close that door and keep it firmly closed. We will never for get, the pleasures we viewed in that room; we do not need to return to again live those happy days we spent there. That is one of the finest thirgs of life; we always remember the pleasant things and forget the unpleasant unless we force ourselves to bring them back to mind. That is why we should never allow ourselves to open that closed door, if only for a peek. There are scars hidden there that will heal if not looked after to the I point, of irritation. There are I weeds of discord in that room that j will wither and die if not given at j tention. We will find that we have plenty to keep us busy and occu ' pied if we give all our attention to this great rocm into which we are stepping to again take a long walk. So, let's keep that other door tightly closed forever. TO SELL SOME SHOES RATION FREE Some women's footwear, mostly novelty types, will be sold ration free at $3 or less a pair from Jan uary 17 throup;h January 29. This does not m an that the shoe sup ply picture has improved. It is intended to help dealers dispose of limited quantities of wearable shoes which have hi en lying on the shelves. weighing nver ''70 pounds. The hog support program previously applied to good and choice bogs we gliing L'tld to :'70 pounds. WFA request d that lings weighing less thin 2(i() pounds be kept off the market un'il congested conditions are n lievi d. CAM El. HACK PRODUCTION SETS RECORD Production of 25 million pounds j of canielbaek in November was the j largest on record and an increase of approximately 25 per cent over! lie; on: r. inougi demand still ex ceeds production, future production is expected to meet all essential needs. The material produced dur ing Novi'ttil) r was enough to recap to :i million passenger tires 500.11(10 heavy dutv commer cial tires. be ground because tile hog does not crush the small grain with his Ueth as readily as the larger grains. Also, the animal is unable to use the food values of the whole grain Jbecause the hard, outer lay ers protect it from the digestive juices as it passes through the di gestive tract. Small grains should always ke ground for hogs but with corn it only pays where the farmer ha his own hammer mill. "A three sixteenths inch screen in a ham mer mill will give the correct fine ness in grinding corn," Smith says. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The annual meeting of the stock- I holders of Haywood Home Build ing & Loan Association will be h Id on Tuesday, January 18th, at 7:00 o'clock p. m., at the office of the Association on Main StrVet in Waynesville, N. ('., for the purpose of electing officers, reporting prog ress and for the transaction of such other busin ss as may proper ly come before the meeting. ' This January 1st, IPli. L. N. DAVIS, Secretary. l.'!:17 Jan. C l.'t. Be Quick To Treat Bronchitis Chronic bronchitis may develop if your cough, chest, cold, or acute bron chitis Is lie t treated and you cannot ufloni to taken el in nee with any medi cine less potent than Creomulsioii which rocs right to the seat of the trouble to help loo en and expel germ laden phler.m and aid nature to soothe niid heal i .. .. . tender. Inilan.d bronchial mucous membranes. Creomulsioii btenil.s beechwnod creosote byspeel: 1 process with other lime tested nun Vinos for coughs. It contains no narcotics. No matter how many mortlcin. you have tried, tell your (Irugni.M to sell you n bottle oi Creomulsioii with the understanding you must, like the way It quickh- alluvs the cough, per mitting rest and sleep, or you are to have your money b,(ck. Ativ.) Lovely Selection Of DRESSES For The Little Miss Guaranteed Fast Colors. Sizes 1 to 16'2. In patterns and styles that will thrill the little women and their mothers too, be cause of the wearing qual- ity. ON SPECIAL SECOND FLOOR $ a to One lot of Cinderella Dresses, sizes 3 to 6, in all colors . . . some two-piece styles. Special $1.48 A beautiful selection of floral, stripe and check pat terns in Dresses. Sizes 3 to f. Special . . . $1.79 Something new Shantung Shirt Sizes 1 to ! Suits for boys . . assorted colors Corduroy I'anta und $1.48 BELIi-EIUDSON CO. "Tic Home Of Better Values" - 2 and MAY ADD COST OF JAR Housewives will have to pay ap proximately 2 cents more per jar for fruits, berries and vegetables sold in glass containers where the processors incur greater labor costs. r'""iii'ii'n'i "mmmmmmm""" "" f"?."y " L"W"I"'J' 'mi'mT""'1""-'" ' EXTEND HOG PRICE SUPPORT Good and choice butcher hogs i weighing from 270 to 300 pounds I directe will be included in the price sup port program, according to WFA. This temporary emergency meas ure became effective December 23 and is expected to encourage th most orderly marketing of hogs and to relieve the congested condi tions existing in many of the prin cipal markets. Th: action is in tended to protect farmers from pre vailing heavy discounts for hogs Haywood Tobacco Farmers Sell The Rest Of Your Tobacco with ernard-Walker Warehouses Where, Before Christmas, 1,547,228 Pounds of Tobacco Wey? Sold For An Average Of $SIeSS) cwt! This is a matchless record. No market in Tennessee or Kentucky can beast such sales. For extra dollars Sell the remainder of your your crop with .... Bernard-Walker Warehouses "Headquarters for Highest Prices and Quicker Sales". Located In BUtmore, "On ' Ihe Banks of the Swannanoa River." I OPA I I'll El. I) ItY (OCRT Refusal by the U. S. Supreme Court to review the cns(. of OPA against Mars, Inc., is a significant victory in OPA's Pght to prevent inflationary price rises through hidden price increases, Thomas 1. Emerson, OPA deputy Adminis trator for Enforcement, said re cently. A previous decision by the Eighth Circuit O urt of Appeals I that an injunction be is- su il against Mars, Inc., to prevent it from reducing the weight of its candy bars fiom the weights used in March, 1 'M2. Mr. Emerson said the court's refusal to review Ihe cal'e v.afea l,e rnntcn tion tgoMvt;fy or w rht re duc!:o i r:icie which has a fixid price for a given weight or .piariity without a corresponding price reduction is in ,reali!y an inflat irnary price increase and "one ef the most vicious forms . . . inasmuch as it is not readily de tected by the ul'imate buyer." CHANGE RATION FOR EATING PLACES More than 40f000 commercial and institutional eating places will be affected by a new OPA ration ing program to go into effect in 191-1. At present, the size of an pa' ine- establishm nt's food ration depends unon the number of peo ple served, regardless of whether they are s rved food or refresh ments alcoholic and soft drinks m'lk drinks, coffee, etc. Under the new plan, the establishment 's fiod allotment, will bp based srlely op in ths number of persons servpd food,' Rations for refreshments will be based on the number of servings of refreshments alone. TO SPEED VETERANS' PAY MENTS Action has been taken to eli minate delays between the date b soldier is discharged for physical disability and the time he ma begin to receive a pension or othei veterans' benefits, according to thr War Department. Steps have b er taken so that before the soldiei leaves the Army, he may get not only competent advic? on the mprit of individual claims, but also a de cision on them. i, , Back the Aittack " Bonds and Startups. Buy War How American Farmers Are Meeting the Pulpwood Challenge ARLY in 1 943 when the country was faced with a disastrous pulpwood shortage, the Secretary of Agriculture said, "The only place we can look for additional supplies is from the farm woodlot". And the farmers of America did not let him down. Their patri otic response helped a lot to supply much needed pulpwood for war industries. Now, as we enter 1944 It is clear that a serious pulpwood shortage will continue. But farmers have learned that pulpwood cutting is good business as well as sound patriotism. Now is the best time to thin wood lots when pulpwood prices are at their peak. And recent rulings of the War Manpower Commission encourage farmers to cut pulpwood in off seasons by counting it as war unit credits to ward deferment. And so the farmers of America are asked to make pulpwood cutting an important part of their 1 944 work program. It is off season work; profitable work; patriotic work. Do all you can. Your country needs every cord you can cut. Keep in touch with your local pulpwood committee. , VICTORY PULPWOOD COMMITTEE Howard Clapp Ira Cogburn Jack Uipps Tom Alexander Chas. B. McCrary Vinson Morrow Ray Orr
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 6, 1944, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75