MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. I9S^ ^ WAYNESVlLLE MQ U^T Al^ EER Draft Board Classifies 83 County Men Eighty-three Haywood County men were assigned new draft clas sifications by Selective Service Board 45 last week They were: Class 1-A (available for induc tion) ? Wiley Carroll Gibson, C^iarles Thomas Bridges. Willie Roe Smathers. Kenneth LeRoy Palmer. Ruben Franklin Rich. John Jackson Shuler, Wilburn Edward Roberts, Robert Earl Jones, R. G. Garland, James Everett Ray, Mar vin Eugene Mitchell, Richard Tiford Bryant, Arnold Theodore Jones. Thomas Edward Rhinehart. Class 1-C (enlisted) ? Frank Crawford Morrison, Jr., Herman Lee Mathis, Thomas McKenley Landrum, James Henry Brown, Kenneth Edward Bradley, George Dale Pressley, William Alney Leatherwood. Class 1-D (reserve) ? Charles WaltboMuj>enter. Joseph Lauris ton ir^Hih. John Phillip Gibbs, Frederick Mitchell Earley, Jon Ray Morgan. William Newton McCrack en, Eugene Belt. Felix Virgil Rob inson, Jerry Thomas Smathers, Gerald Cowan Medford, Ralph Marion Glance. Gerald Anson Chapman. Clifford Leon Bolin. Earl Jennings Hardin. Troy Neal Pax ton, Donald Eugene Co. dell. Earl Joseph Creasman, Claude Jeffer son Reece, Jr.. William Neal Cald well, James Keith Long, Jerry | Conrad Brandt, William Calvin - Crisp, David Hannah. Jr., Grady Steven Walker. Ralph Donald Wor-1 ley, William Richard Boyd, Wil- ] liam Burton Wells, Daniel James j Cole. Dee Vel Havnes Cole. Phillip Parks Allen. Forrest Glenn Pace, Howard Edward Rich, John Brooks Carter, Curtis Bernard Gans. Wil liam Louis McElro.v, Rufus Neal Ensley, Edward Cornelius Whitak er, Jr., James Harold Messer. James Robert Williamson. Phil Lenoir Bright. Larry Neal Hardin. Harold Buddy Reece, Jackie Lee Setzer. Class 3-A (hardship)?Guy Wal ter King. William Fountain Nix. Jr. Class 4-A (prior service or sole survivor) ? Charles Alvin Mease. Robert Eugene Fore, Duke John Aster Wells, Charles Boyce Green. Jesse Boyd Welch, Robert Eugene Pless, Stanley Ray Phillips, James Sydney Woods. Class 4-F (rejected)?Robert Lee Burgess. James Turner Timmons. Major offenders are drinkers who strew the highways with liquor bottles and beer cans, and others who love to deposit paper cups, napkins, and plates to mark their trail. It has been found that the eost of cleaning a heavily traveled high way averages $14.60 per mile each Bobby Lee Stamey. Class 5-A (over age) ?. Bernard Hugh Singleton. Johnny Richard Rose, James Harold Stamey, Ern est Joe Greene. Paul Edwin Frank lin, Harold Edward Jones. 'BEWARE l.lTTF.RBl'GS' is this warning: con veyed by this sign on the four-lane highway be tween Lake Junaluska and Clyde. The Highway Department recently has erected such signs * throughout North Carolina in an effort to halt littering of the highways, which costs the state hundreds of thousands of dollars annually. (Mountaineer Photo). Road Signs Warn Motorists About Throwing Out Trash Motorists on Haywood County highways and those in the state's j other 99 counties are being reminded by recently erected road signs that North Carolina law prohibits throwing of trash on highways, and provides for fines up to $50 The keeping of highways clean is believed to be especially im portant in Western North Carolina because of the scenic beauty of the area and the fact that millions of out-of-state visitors travel through here each y ear. year. Mowing machines are seen regu larly keeping the highway shoul ders well trimmed. The bottles and caas are the most bothersome for tile men operating these machines. The right-of-way on both sides are cleared periodically, the side ditches are kept open. All this is done to make them safe and beau tiful. The cast of all this is borne by taxpayers, and that is everyone who buys gasoline and other auto supplies. Governor Kodges says it might be wise to establish small garbage dumps near cities. He said, "We might as well recognize human na ture. Plenty of people have beer cans and liquor bottles they don t want to send out through the reg ular garbage collection. So we may as Well be realistic ? they will throw them on the roads.v These people are called litter bugs. Many ways to educate the people to keep the roads cleaner have been tried by the Highway Department in recent months, and they have had their effects, which j w'as to stop some of it. But the one per cent doesn't pay any attention So the Department aims to use the existing laws to enforce this \ W"/ (. . ... / BLISTOSOL 69c IiLslerine Halo tooth shampoo r? PASTE . ,,.. ?\Jj Regular 45c R*'l!',lar ' $1",# 2 for 50c Sj.19 | Woodbury's Cream DEODORANT 50c ALKA SELTZER 54c BAYER ASPIRIN 62c DEPEND ON US JUST AS YOU DEPEND ON YOUR DOCTOR! YOU CAN ALWAYS RELY ON US FOR EFFICIENCY, PROMPTNESS AND ACCURACY IN SERVING YOU. DANS DRUG STORE S. A. Dantzler R. L. McKittrick Garden School Is Scheduled Oct. 1 - 3 In Canton A Slate Garden School will be held in Canton October 1-3, it has lx-en announced by N. C. State Col lege's Extension Division, with Ed ward W. Ruggles, director. Eac fall and each spring, the college's Extension Division in co operation with the Garden Club of North Carolina and its local or ganizations gives garden schools throughout the State. The first in the fall series will be Course V in Canton Oct. 1-3. Speakers will be Mrs. John Salois of Dallas, Texas, chairman of the flower show schools committee for the National Council of State Gar den Schools, and Mrs. Earl White of Winter Haven. Fla. Chamber Of Commerce Directors To Meet The Board of Directors of the Chamber of Commerce will hold their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, September 11. The meeting will be held at the Town Hall at 7:30 p.m. small minority to get in line with the "Keep Our Highways Clean" program. Warning signs are being placed on all highways so that you can't say, "I didn't know it was against the law," if you are hauled into^ court and fined $50 and costs. Highway experts look for a wet-' j come decline in litterbugging as j stricter enforcement of anti-litter laws, combined with successful ed l ucational programs, drive home to the average motorist the fact that he must cooperate to keep our i highways clean. j General Electric TV BUY! 2C1 square inches of viewable area ? W Model 21 TOj? As (rtfli m ? ur-noan njNINO my M Ht and mcM ? XT-AND-FOROET VOLUME CONTtOt -n? C OO I mW for tootiooof imf odprtlniill ? M VV ? CLEAR AS A MOVIE SCREEM-wifb tborp. b<>ghl pMlmt I ? POWERFUL O-E CHASSIS - oloawiod sic oftor vnoll dewa peyaow I DON'T SETTEE FOR LESS THAN A G-EI SEE US TOOAYI ROGERS COMPANY Dial GL 6-6351 i Main Street1 Hazelwood Students Get First-Hand Lesson On Japan, i By BOB CONWAY Textbooks are helpful, but pu pils at Hazel wood School found that first-hand information is still better when they heard a talk on Japan by a native of that country ?Methodist minister Hiroshi Shim mi of Tokyo. Opening his talk, Rev. Mr. Shim mi pointed out the position of Jap an on a world map and mentioned that his country consists of four large islands and numerous small er ones. Rev. Mr. Shimmi said he sailed for this country from Yokohama and was at sea for two weeks. En route, he explained, he "lost" one day in crossing the International Date Line. Arriving on the West Coast, the minister said, he traveled by train to Chicago and New York and was "amazed" by America's wide-open spaces and the relatively low dens ity of population in the hinterland as compared with the crowded islands of Japan. Although Japan is smaller than one American state (California), he said its population is more than half of that in the U. S ?90.000.000 as compared with 165.000.000. Over-population and the neces sity of importing 20 per cent of its foodstuffs are two of the major problems facing Japan today, he pointed out. Rev. Mr Shimmi said Japan has to import part of its food because only about 15 per cent of all land in the country is suited for culti vation. This problem was further aggra vated, the speaker said, by Japan's loss of 42 per cent of its land in World War II when its overseas possessions were taken away. Rev. Mr. Shimmi said that Japan is the most highly industrialized country in Asia, but he disclosed that the average wage there is $40 i per month, and that the per capita income of his country is $192 as compared with $1,989 in the U.S. (Low wages, he explained, are par tially offset by the low cost of liv ing, For instance, he said, a good meal ran lie had in Tokyo for 40 cents or loss.) Despite its high state of indus trialization. unemployment is a ma jor problem in Japan, the minis ' ter related, citing a study showing that only 40 per rent of the gradu ates of one college in the country were able to obtain jobs. Rev. Mr. Shinimi told his audi ence that Japan had its first contact (Continued on Page 6) , FIRST-HAND INFORMATION on Japan was given to students at Ilazelwood Sehool Thurs day afternoon by a Japanese Methodist Minister, the Rev. lliroshi Shimmi of Tokyo, who is now attending the World Methodist Conference at I.ake Junaluska. Here Rev. Shinuni points out the location of Japan on a world map. (Mountaineer Photo) Thanks... ON THE OCCASION OF OUR 21st ANNIVERSARY FROM OUR ENTIRE STAFF "Wolf" VVoodard Hen Hridges (iuy (Jrasty Hill Mehaffey Roy (I rooms Ray Robinson Elmer Lemming Faye I)uda Peggy Fra/ier ' Doris Scruggs Helen York B, J. Mehaffey Hilda Woodard Frances Williams (Jeorge Rupp Kenneth Presnell Louise Snyder Faye Angel Harold Scruggs Gail Woodard Our entire staff expresses their We strive to offer the very best in thanks and appreciation to our many everything we sell . .. We also try to friends and customers for the patron- give you the best service our facilities age we have enjoyed during the past will permit, in an effort to make your year. Since we moved into our new visit with us a pleasant one. Again home eight years ago this week we we say, many, many thanks . . . and thought this would be the proper time may we serve you often, to express our sincere appreciation to all of you who trade with us. The Management CHARLIE'S Charlie Woodard and Jimmie Williams, Owners Asheville Road 24-HOUR SERVICE Waynesville