Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Sept. 21, 1944, edition 1 / Page 9
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
V YSEPTEMBER 21, 1944 (One Day Nearer Victory) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 9 fZ r.TS-Red SUmps A8 ffzSd A5 through G5, 'SED FOODS - Blue flhrough Z8 and A5 il -B . j ofin telv. Blue only through Septem i .t-ons with your VVN and FARM in WARTIME by OFF1C1 Of WAI IWQtMATIOH Assigned To Sea ,A-pns wltn your JO. rW nltinlpR Of 10. Vhors to 1 r " : : ' each good for five pounds E" iv Sugar Stamp , KWu ! founds of canning sugar I! February, next year. P0LINE-An coupons, good En OIL PTiod 4 and 5 cou" PJ I new period 1 coupons throughout the coming heat- Ai,plane Stamps 1 and L indefinitely. IjSTIt L L r uu - Ly FLEET DAY, SEPT. 27 Elans will do honor on Vic- I fleet Day, nwv nv.. Lber27,to the ship operators ..ye helped 10 give w-v. tya highest and most ki one vi i'"- - . Lting standards of living m world Mercnam snips uuhjs jee from Central and South Irica and Araum wn. America anu wesi ' , TJ. I Y , 1 fr n; ceyion, inuia, xncukji ... rrtina Java. Burma and America bananas from the .. Mhiip." Cuba and Mexi- inper from the Ivory Coast, and Jamaica riueniJicB from Hawaii, Mexico and Cuba. GASOLINE SITUATION IS TIGHT The average civilian motorist should expect no increase in his gasoline ration for the next several months, at least not before the end of the war with Germany, the Office of Price Administration gays. Ci vilian stocks of gasoline built up last winter have been greatly re duced despite increased imports and record domestic production. Civilian grade gasoline stocks have decreased approximately two mil lion barrels in 30 days. " ONIONS GALORE, THIS YEAR Your hamburger sandwich may have gone without its onion last year but now there's no excuse for such a deficiency, because the War Food Administration estimates that this year's onion crop will be 45 per cent above the 10-year average, 1933-42. TO HOLD DOWN FOOTBALL TRAVEL To restrict football travel, foot ball team managers have been re-, quested by the Office of Defense Transportation to confine sale and distribution of tickets to residents of local areas of cities or towns in which games are to be played. Don't Neglect Them I Hiure designed the kidneys to do a wnloia job. Their task is to keep the iM blood stream free of an excess ol Kimpuruies. The act of living f.e JjLi, constantly producing waste uttir the kidneys must remove from it blood if good heath is to endure, fbm the kidnevs fail to function as ,'itw intended, there is retention of nti that may cause body-wide dis naOne may suffer nafrging backache, wsctnt headache, attacks of dimness, rtini up nights, swelling, pufflness ata the eyes feel tired, nervous, all run out. FWqui-nt, scanty or burning passages ik Kmcnrocs further evidence of kid leyor bladder disturbance. The recot;niz.'d and proper treatment iiiunlic raidirine to help the kidneyB K nd ol excess prisonous body waste. K loan i ('.lis. They have had more bu forty years of public approval. Are cdorsed the country over. Insist on m'l. Sold at all drug stores. GO ON TO SCHOOL, Gl'S ADVISE The GI's overseas who are usinj; their spare time to "crack their school books" in the hope of im proving their possibilities when they return to civilian life, advise the boys and girls back home to ; keep on with their schooling. As 1 Cpl. Kermit Greason of Atwood, Kan?., put it: "Any boy who's in 1 high school now had better finish : right away. Because if he doesn't finish before he's drafted, or be fore he takes a full-time job, chanc es are he never will. That goes j for girls too." ! HOWARD SAMUEL MED FORD, S 1c, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Medford, of Waynesville, has been assigned to sea duty. He entered the service on May 18, of this year and was sent to the Great Lakes Naval Training Cen ter, Great Lakes, 111. Upon com pletion of the course there he was sent to a service school in Gulf port, Miss., and then to New York and to sea. Before entering the service he was employed at the Champion Paper and Fibre Company in Can ton. His wife, the former Miss Effie Caldwell, is residing in Can ton while her husband is in the navy. weighing 200 to 240 pounds, ef fective October 1. will be contin ued until June 30, 1945. DANISH ADVERTISER IS OPTIMISTIC The Danish Information Service reports the following advertisement that appeared recently in a Copen hagen newspaper: "Apartment of three rooms and bath wanted at the end of the war, not later than October 1st." HOG CEILINGS TO STAY UP Ceiling prices on live hogs will not be reduced from present levels before June 30, 1945. OPA and WFA have announced. Present ceilings are $14.75 a hundred pounds, Chicago basis, for hogs weighing 240 lbs. or le ss and $14 a hundred, Chicago basis, for hogs weighing more than 240 pounds. WFA also said the support price of $12.50 a hundred, Chicago basis, for "good to choice" butcher hogs ROUND-VP No rumors of Germany's surren der should be accepted unless con firmed by General Eisenhower, caution the War arid Navy Depart ments and the Office of War Infor mation. Five per cent of the 27 million Christmas packages mailed to Army and Navy personnel last year was lost because of faulty packing and addressing. Begin ning September 22 all gasoline fill ing stations may accept off-high way "R" coupons. Production of corn pickers for this year's crop PICKER IE WANTED Haywood's Apple Crops Must Be Gathered Immediately. Even Part Time Workers Can Be Used, By Working After Other Work. ' No Release or Work Certifi cate Necessary For This Work Apply At Any HAYWOOD ORCHARD Lt. And Mrs. Allen Davis, Jr., Are Visiting Here Lt. and Mrs. Allen Davis, Jr., are visiting the latter's grand mother, Mrs. D. V. Phillips. Mrs. Davis is the former Miss Margaret McRorie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. McRorie, now of Washington, D. C., but formerly of Waynes ville. Lt. Davis is the Bon of Allen Davis of Franklin. He has recent ly returned from duty in the Cen tral Pacific and after thirty days in this country is being sent back to duty in the same area. Lt. Davis entered the service in August, 1941 while he was a stu dent in the Franklin high school. He volunteered and enlisted in Asheville. He first reported to Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and re ceived his training at a number of fields before being sent overseas. Lt. Davis holds the Distinguished I r lying Cross, with two oak leaf Friday Is First Day Of Autumn Tomorrow is the last day of sum mer, and the official beginning of fall, although the weatherman got ahead of the calendar several times during the past ten days, when the mercury dropped down into the for ties. Last Friday the day the third quarterly payment of income tax was due was also the last official day for wearing a straw hat. That don't mean a thing, however, since many straw hat fans maintain that the old sun shedder does not feel exactly right until it begins to flop around and lose the stiffness. is larger than for any previous year, the War Food Administra tion says. More than 4,000 auto mobiles a day are being scrapped, to leave an estimated 23,760,000 privately owned passenger cars in operation at the end of the year, according to a report issued by the Office of War Information. clusters, and the Air Medal with seven oak leaf clusters. He took part in the battles of the Gilbert Islands, Marshall Islands, Caroline Islands and Marianas. GAS is silent modern inexpensive for Refrigeration Brading GAS Service Athevlll Rout fh 20& Buy War Bonds and Stamp. 69th Series Nov Open - - Series opened July first, and still open, at $1 per share a month. Building and Loan Is a good investment for your post-war plans. HAYWOOD HOME Building & Loan ASSOCIATION Phone 17 Main Street S(SuTl POOD HiOHGuSiy if, fir v, v -" -r School' Shoes SEND THEM aclk to ScDnooD WELL-SHOD WITH BELft-MIUDSON Children's With Leather or Cord Solos Sizes glx to 3 $148 $395 Boys' Red Camel and Terry Shoes and Growing Girls' Oxfords In leather or cord soles. Mocasin and plain toes. Sizes 3 to 9, Widths A to D 53.98 kDxfords I Black and Brown Sizes 1 to 6 $248 $395 Growing Girls' Brown Loafers For School or Dress Sizes 3 to 9. All Widths $3.98 Children's Edgewood Oxfords Brown and Black In All Sizes $3.98 Boys' Tom Terry Oxfords In Brown and Black Sizes 1 to 6 All Widths 3.98 Weyenberg and Tom Terry OXFORDS For young men. Brown or black. The season's most popular styles. Sizes 6 to 12. $3.98 $4.95 $5.95 $6.95 eDUidlsoDi COMPANY 'Home of Better Values"
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1944, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75