f age 8 THE WAYNESV1LLE MOUNTAINEER (One Day Nearer Victory) THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 TUWN and FARM in WARTIME Of r r.pord t, OFFICS OF WAI INFORMATION REMINDERS MEATS, FATS Red Stomps A8 through Z8 and A5 through P5, good indefinitely. The four red stamps validated October 29 totaling 40 red points will have to last for at least a 5-week period. No new red stamps until December 3. PROCESSED FOODS Blue Stamps A8 through Z8 and A5 from existing paper shortages un til about the middle of 1915 be cause of the heavy wartime re quirements of newsprint, magazine and book miner and the manDower Production Board reports. OPA CONSUMER NOTES ( tiling prices of plug tobacco have been increased by 20 per cent through W5, good indefinitely. No j at all sales levels as a step to help new stamps until December 1 SUGAR Sugar Stamps 30, 31, 32 and 33, each good for five pounds indefinitely. Sugar Stamp 40, good for five pounds of canning sugar through February 28, 1945. GASOLINE On November 9 A-13 coupons in new ration book become good for four gallons run ning through December 21. FUEL OIL Period 4 and 5 coupons and new period 1 coupons, good throughout present heating year. SHOES Airplane Stamps 1, 2, and 3 in Book Three, gcxnl indefinitely. OP A TO HELP LOCATE CARS Holders of certificates for the purchase of new cars can get help from the Office of Price Adminis tration in locating that automobile. Any certificate holder having diffi culty in laying hands on a car is urged to write to OPA, Inventory and Control Branch, Empire State Building, New York 1, N. Y. manufacturers overcome the in creased cost burden under which they operate. Leather-soled moccasins with a house-slipper type of construction will continue to be stocked by stores as ration-free footwear through December 31. After that date, OPA advises, this type of footwear will be classified as rationed. Buyers of coal and other solid fuels are entitled to receive from their dealers an invoice, sales slip or receipt that contains full in formation about the kind of coal sold to them and the price paid. This is required of dealers by an OPA provision effective November 11 Reminiscences A happy memory of days long ago as told by Dr. E. W. Gudger, American Museum of Natural His tory, native of Waynesville. TO NOVEMBER TIRE QUOTA INCREASED The November quota of new au tomobile tires allocated by the War Production Board will be 1,850,000 or 250,000 more than in October, it is announced by the Office of Price Administration and War Production Board. TO PAPER SHORTAGES CONTINUE The public can expect no relief MOST BOX MATCHES ARMED FORCES Hold that light, mister, will con tinue to be the popular phrase in coming months, according to a War Production Board report which states that about 90 per cent of all penny box matches and 25 per cent of all book matches produced in the next six months will be deliv ered to the armed forces. Although few penny box macthes will be available to civilians during this period, matches of the household "strike anywhere" type will be produced in sufficient quantity to meet all civilian needs, WPB said. (SSI ..." . ioo , n i i pin i '" , . 1 LESS DUSTY ROADS IN PROSPECT I'rospects of less dusty inter mediate and county roads next spring and summer are decidedly improved as a result of action by the Petroleum Administration for War in permitting the use of resi dual fuel oil for road building and maintenance. The permission ap plies to all parts of the country except the West Coast. This ac tion is possible because of current supplies of residual oil. The re strictions were lifted at this time to permit states, counties and lo cal governments to plan next year's road programs now. Helen Plott Mull Spends Leave Here Helen Plott Mull, Hospital Ap prentice, first class, WAVES, dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Plott, spent a several days leave here with her parents. She entered the service in Au gust of this year and took her boot training at Hunter College, Bronx, New York. From there she was sent to the Naval Hospital at Beth esda, Md. Upon completion of the course offerrd there she was given a leave of absence. She will go from here to Parris Island where she will take special nurses training at the Naval Hos pital there. At the time she entered the ser vice she was employed at the New port News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. When I was a boy of about twelve, my mother went for a short visit to an old lady, a great friend of hers. When she came home she called me and said: "Son, my old friend is sick, bed fast, and will never be well again. She has no appetite for ordinary things but thinks that, if she had something wild, the gamey taste might tempt her. Do you think that you could get her a squirrel"? "I don't know, Mother, but I can try," I replied. So I got out my father's old muzzle-loading ri file (such all guns were in that day), hung the powder horn and bullet-pouch over my shoulder, and started out. This rifle (perhaps the most accurate in our part of the county) came from the sun hop of the Lam Brothers at Jamestown, between Hifih Point and Greens boro, in Guilford County. It had been made to order for J. H. Robe son, Prof. E. J. Robeson's fother; and his name is engraved on the barrel. This gun is now in the possession of my brother, David Gudger. With this gun on my shoulder (I must have been about twelve years old) 1 started out. There were two nearby places where I was sure of a squirrel in the hol low behind the C, E. Ray place, and in that beyond the Brown tanyard south of the Clarence Miller house. Thinking the latter the better chance I went down the hill, through the blackberry-briar-covered old field, past the tanyard and up into the woods. It was in mid summer and the trees were in full leaf; so it was hard to find a squirrel. But presently I located one in a tree just about the edge of the present road in front of the now Adger house. But I had no one to "turn" the squirel for me, and no matter how litrht-footed I moved, he always kept on the other side of the tree from me. Presently, however, I outwitted him and got him in the "sights" of the old rifle and down he came. I carried him home, and Mother called me "good boy." I then skinned and dressed him. Mother put him on a plate, lightly salted him, and covered him with a white napkin (I can see it as I write.) Then I, the happiest and proudest boy in old Waynesville to do this thing for this old lady, the dear friend of my mother and my fath er, took the squirrel to her. And as I write these words, there is a warm feeling within me of this happy recollection of the old past. In France i-y- j' 1 o 0 r TmrnTT-nfr nfit ii Aaii.MaiMiiiiil Pvt. Arthur W. Corbin Now In Belgium Private Arthur W. Corbin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Corbin of Waynesville, R.F.D. No. 1, is now in Belgium, according to informa tion given by his parents this week. Pvt. Corbin entered the service in the fall of 1942 and was inducted at Camp Croft. He has been sta tioned at a number of training centers in this area prior to being sent overseas where he has served a year next month. He was first stationed in England and then went to France with the first Invasion forces. Prior to entering the army he was employed by Barber Orchards. SGT. JAMES MAUDLIN, son of of Mr. and Mrs. Will Maudlin, who is serving with the Anti-Aircraft branch of the army, is now in France, acording to information received by his parents. Sgt. Maud lin entered the service on Sept. 26, 1942 and was inducted at Camp Croft. Before being sent overseas he received his training at the fol lowing: Fort Sheridan, 111., Camp McCoy, Wis., and maneuvers in Tennessee and Alabama. He has been overseas for the past year, serving first in England for seve ral months. At the time he enter ed the service he was engaged in farming in this county. In a recent letter to his mother he enclosed a greeting gent to him from his commanding officer of the 456th AAA Aw Bn., on the occas ion of the second anniversary, written in France, which in part read; "Today marks the second an niversary of our Battalion. As its commander I wish to express my personal greetings to each and everyone of you. The rapid pace of this war allows little time for personal visits to each unit. Hence I take this method of saying, 'best wishes to you all.' In these two years of existence you have estab lished a brilliant and enviable rec ord in the annals of this war. I know this record will be even great er as time goes on. Keep up the excellent work." Sgt. Wm. R. Stillwell Wears Gold Overseas Bar Sergeant William R. Stillwell of Hazelwood, who has been in Italy for the past eight months, is now entitled to wear the gold overseas service bar under recent War De partment orders. Sgt. Stillwell, who was a furni ture representative before entering the service of the Army Air Forces, is now a cook with a B-24 Libera tor heavy bombardment group which has flown more than one nun drerl combat missions against the enemy in Southern Europe. YOU'RE NOT TOO OLD TO FEEL YOUNG This is a message fur men who huve known life but no longer find it thrilling because of the luck of certain vitamins and hormones. Tromone, a recent medical discovery combin ing vitamins and hormones may multiply the vim and zest nnd enjoyment you once knew. Your whole approach, your whole attitude to ward life, may improve when you begin to use Tromone. Now it may be possible for middle aged men to again enjoy the same pirit, vitality and pleasures that made their youth thing to remember. Added years may not Mibtract from your pleasures when you use Tromone. the new medical formula combining vitamins and hormones. Follow directions on label. Tromone for sule by Smiths iJrug Store ;uid druggists everywhere, WORE OUT TODAY I REGULAR CARE WOULD HAVE SAVED MANY- BE SURE YOUR CAR GETS REGULAR. CARS AT YOUR ESSO AWUMU Mum mi ASOUN POWERS THE ATTACK - PONY WASTE A PROP! iLMUsruiBRireAs CAR MILE. CHANGE TO pg5rt, WiMTERADE peso MOTOR OIL NOW ' DUE TO THE MANPOWER SHORTAGE, ITU HELP A LOT IP yOU CAN GIVE US NOTICE BEPORE YOU COME IN FOR YOUR PRE- WINTER CHECK-UP UM MEANS TROUBLE ASK ABOUT ESSO 'KCTO UPPER CYLINDER OIL. n works mo ways: 1. HELPS PREVENT GUMMY PBPOStVS ON VALVES. 2. GIVES REAL UPPER CVUNDER LUBRICATION. StANOARD OIL COMPANY OfHMOttSCf let your esso dealbrqoit! tsstf CAAC SAVtS WCA NOTICE OP SALE On Monday, November 13, 1944, at eleven o'clock A. M., at the court house door in the Town of Waynesville, Haywood County, North Carolina, I will offer for sale at public outcry to the highest bid der for cash, the following lands and premises lying and being in the County and State aforesaid, to-wit; BEGINNING at a stake on the North Side of TJ. S. Highway No 19-23, at a point six feet from the edge of the pavement, T. L. Frank lin Southeast corner, and runs thence N. 75 7' E. 257 710 feet to a stake at a point six feet from tne edge of the pavement, and in the West margin of a roadway and 20 feet West of the center of a ditch; thence along the West mar gin of said driveway N. 8 60' W. 54 feet to a stake in center of the creek; thence up the creek two calls as follows: S- 78 41' W. 107 feet; N. 81 30' W. 107 feet to a stake, T. L. Franklin corner; thence with his line S 2 30' E. 400 710 feet to the BEGINNING, contain ing 1 910 acres, more or less, as per survey and plat of W. H. Hinn, INCLUDING the right to use said road on the East and all rights to the center of the Highway. Being the same parcel of land conveyed in a deed from Gladys M. Kuchler to C. F. Muse, dated No vember 5, 1941, and recorded in Book 114, page 38, Haywood Coun ty Registry. Sale made pursuant to the pow ers conferred upon me by that cer tain deed of trust dated May 12, 1942, executed by C F. Muse and recorded in Book of Deeds of Trust No. 42, page 476, Office of the Reg ister of Deeds of Haywood County, to which instrument and record ref erence is hereby made for all the terms and cenditions thereof. This October 12, 1944. A. T. WARD, Trustee. 1398 Oct 19-26 Nov. 2-9. j Urgent Call For Workers To Make Surgical Dressings An urgent call for workers is being sent out by Mrs. Ben Colkitt, chairman of the surgical dressings rooms of the Red Cross here. The local group has been assign ed 18,000 four by four dressings that must be completed by Novem ber 30, according to Mrs. Colkitt. Unless there is a larger number of women working in the rooms the chapter will fall down on the quota. Mrs. Colkitt points out that never has there been so great a need since the war started as at present for surgical dressings in the combat areas and she is mak ing this appeal now so that the quota may be reached on time. Hazelwood Honor Roll For October Is Announced The honor roll for the month of October of the Hazelwood school has been announced as follows by Lawrence Leatherwood, principal: First grade, none. Second grade, Eupene Davis, Bobby Hooper and Doris Buchanan. Third grade, Barbara McClure, Juanita Kelly. Mary Sue Morgan, and Wanda Su Mills. Fourth grade. Betty Lou Korbler, Glenda Lee Berry, Nancy Bischoff, Johnnie Sue Allen and Grace Blan ton. Fifth grade, Ardith Wyatt, Caro lina Wyatt, Cairoll Swanger, Terry Swanger and Ann Elizabeth Mintz. Sixth grade, Jimmy Swift. CHOICE Canning Apples GOLDEN DELICIOUS STAYMAN's RED WINESAPS BLACK TWIGS ROCK APPLE SERVICE STATION At Barber's Orchard In Person Miss Isabelle Ferguson of Way nesville, who holds a position with the Department of Labor with offices in Nw York City, p.nt several days here during the week with friends and relatives. Miss Ferguson is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James W. Fer guson and the graddaughter of the late Judge and Mrs. Garland S. Ferguson. Mrs. Carl Hagan and young son, Edward Hagan of Sylvania, Ga., have returned home after visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. McCracken. ? 1 PERmA)EI!T UttiwiiKim WAVE KIT Complete with Permanent onlt fi2? J Wave Solution curlers. wSrmir f shampoo and wave set nothing else to buy .Requires no hent, electricity or mi chines Safe for every type of hair iver i nn1 lion sold Money back guarantee (let a 'harm hurl Kit tocfav THE EAGLE STORES 0ST JOHN AND HIS Allied Kentuckians IN A BIG I JAMBOREE Friday, Nov. 10th 8 P. M. Waynesville High School Waynesville, North Carolina Sponsor Wellco Employee's Club Admission 25c and 50c-Tax Inc. co 10s for m RECENT CHANGES in the Wc, .a Hon on both fronts have skyrocketed demands for pulp wood products. The Pacific timetable has been stepped up and so have the needs for packaging materials and shipping containers made of pulpwood. Prospects of a Winter War in Europe require many additional tons of supplies packaged in pulpwood products. Because most packaging materials for the Armed Forces come from the South, the nation looks to us to step up the supply of pulpwood immediately. Tfie importance of qualify Make every axe-stroke count. Cut only wood that is sound and straight. VICTORY PULPWOOD COMMITTEE HOWARD CLAPP TOM ALEXANDER IRA COG BURN CHAS. B. McCRARY JACK HIPPS VINSON MORROW RAY ORR I