?hi4 (ChrrnluT ^riuit Published every Thursday at Murphy, N. C. ADD1E MAE COOKE Editor and Owner ROY A COOKE Production Manager MRS C. W SAVAQE Social Editor SI KM liiri IO\ R \TKS Cherokee and surrounding counties: One Year uO Six Months $1.00 Four Months ...... 75c Ou:side above territory. One Year S- J Six months $1.25 fcii . i d in t::e Post Oifice at Murphy, C2?' ' Soi li Carolina, a-. inrotKl class matter ? - niiir t;ie Act ol Ma:ch 3, 1897. MEDITATION "On. tr.ul> a it great opportunit. s. Too often we look on thetn as great obstacles. It would Ik ? a haven of rest and an inspiration of unspeakable power it each of us would hence forth reeogni/e evcrx difficult situation as one of ChhI's chosen wa\s of proving to us His lo\ .? and look around for the signals of l!i?. glorious manifestations; then, indeed, would ever* cloud l?ecome a rainbow . and even mountain a path of ascension an da scene of transfiguration." Hii?;h Hopes Of The Future A grown man was walking along the street and saw a woman with a small baby in her arms. He remarked that he wished he had been born when that baby \%as, saying that the infant will grow up in the greatest age the world has ever known. The high sc hool graduates who are receiv ing their diplomas now are not babies; they are from I 6 to 19 years removed from that state, but they are graduating in a period that is dif ferent from any the world has ever known. There are great tasks, sacrifices, and opportu nities facing them. Accomplishing the tasks, with the necessary sacrifices, and grasping of the opportunities that are new and untried, will create for the youths now graduating a new world, different in almost every respect from the one in which they have come this far in life. The graduates are the future hope of our country. Their advantages have been great, but their responsibilities in the future will be greater. They will guide and be a part of America s great business, industrial and agri cultural life of tomorrow perhaps not only( America s, but the World's. 1 he world is pret tv badlv battered up and full of headaches. These boys and girls did not cause them but curing them will be their job. Flven before these youths start their job of helping to rehabilitate the world, many will be called to the frcnt t tight. I hey will go. with the courage of all vouth. and help win the war. returning to spend their influence and energies in the new America of post-war davs. W e extend to them our best wishes for good fortune, success and happiness, with oppor tunity for usefulness and attainment of their many ambitions, in the years ahead. Bonds Better Buys Than Farm Land For the farmer with surplus money to in vest, War Bonds are today a better buy than land believes Dean 1. O. Schaub, Director of the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service and Chairman of the North Carolina War Fin ance Agricultural Committee, who points out that for the nation on March 1 , 1 944, the price of land was up 38 percent from the average of the five pre-war years 1935-39. While the person buying land today runs the risk of heavy loss. Dean Schaub points out that the farmer who puts his wartime profits in War Bonds will, at the end of ten years, get four dollars for every three invested. He believes it would be much wiser for the man who wants to buy more land to invest in bonds now and wait until values and conditions get back to nor mal after the war to purchase the land. Then land values will be back in line with peacetime prices for farm commodities. Don't Let Down The Victory Gardens One of the big private activities in Washing ton surrounds the local Victory gardens. The Secretary of Agriculture has made a statement showing that Victory gardens contributed forty per cent of the fresh vegetables grown last year, and he has made a plea for more gardens. This is due to the fact that a recent survey indicated a ten per cent drop under last year. Don't give up the Victory gardens ? there is a lot of fun in Qua UcMQCRA CY - by Mat O'hc of owl CiaA ! o> i o toted on t t'ncc pti+ici)tCe4 : IDEALS,ENERGY,THRIFT. HOME CHURCH SCHOOL MOLOERS bF OUR. /DEALS , FARM FACTORY TRANSPORTATION ^ SYMBOLIC OF OUR. ENERGY ^ - J, ? - ff - ? ,W mm m m m - mm ^ - fcj INSTRUMENTS OF OUR THRIFT * ^J| - ALL MUST BE STRONG IN EACH OF US TOO AY - TO WIN THE WAR AND TO PRESERVE OUR DEMOCRACY. the game if you get into it and follow it up as faithfully a sthough it were golf. Forest Fires Up In '42 Forest fires last year burned over a total of 3 1 ,854, I 24 acres of United States woodlands, compared with 26,404,385 acres in 1941, ac cording lo the U. S. F orest Service. Eighty-six percent of the total acreage burned was on areas not having organized fire protection. Price and Ration News MEATS, FATS Red Stamps A8 through Q8. ood indefinitely. PROCESSED FOODS Blue stamps A8 ihrouh Q8. good indefinitely. SUGAR Sugar stamps 30 and 31. each good for five pounds in definitely. Sugar stamp 40. good for five pounds of canning sugar through February, next year. GASOLINE In 17 East Coast States. A-9 coupon, good through May 8 A- 10 coupon becomes good May 9 and remains good through Augu 8 In States outside the East Coast area, A-ll coupon, good through June 21. FUEL OIL Periods 4 and 5 coupons, good through August 31. 'HOE'-> Airplane stamps 1 and 2. good indefinitely. Bona fide candidates for public office are eligible under gasoline rationing regulations for gasolina essential to the prosecution of their tmpaigns. and their paid campaign managers are eligible for not more than non-preferred "B" occupational rations. Mr. Driscoll. dis trict director of OPA at Charlotte has announced. Chief objective of the uling, he said, is to give voters full op portunity to observe at first hand the personalities, programs and policies of the candidates who see to serve them. Rations for candidates are issued by their home boards and are based on actual needs, taking into consideration the availabilty of public transportation and the exact mileage involved. Mr. Driscoll said. Campaign managers who meet the requirements for alternative means of transportation and share-riding provisions, qualify for non-preferred ' B" mileage only if they are employed and compen sated for their work as their occupation. If the reading public dec'dts for itself whether there is gen uine sociological significance be cause of sheer realism in a book, or whether the writer is trying to write a sensational best seller 'and make money, it has judged pretty fairly the importance of a book. This brings us to say that it is not always the best seller which is to t? acceptcd as the cream of the crop in books of the year. It also brings us to say that it is pretty generally conceded that -ealism in a novel can lead to constructive thinking along socio logical lin?s and toward possible solutions. It is well for us to have General knowledge of books, gain ed by consistent browsing, rath er than permit ourselves to be come reconciled to having com piler* of best seller lists do the choosing for us. It takes a varied and large collection to build tastes. That is the main reason for libraries increasing their stock. By the way. have you read the following novels each of which has come out. within the last five years? Alderson. A bride Goes West: Barnes. Wisdom's Gate: Bristow. Tomorrow Is Forever: Buck. The Promise: Fedorova. The Family: Ferber. Saratoga Trunk: Forbes. Mama's Bank Account: Griswald. Sea Island Lady: Kantor. Happy Land: Keyes. Also The Hills: Llewellyn. How Green Was My Valley: McDonald. Old McDonald Had A Farm: Medearis. Big Doc's Girl: Mason. Three Harbors: O' Hara. My Friend Flicka: Ostenso. O River Remember: Seifert. Sur- j geon In Charge: Seton. M. Theo dosia: StandLsh. Three Bamboos: TteinV \ck. Moon Is Down: Dav enport. Valley Of Decision: Wal pole. Katherine Christian. ROTEXONE Victory gardeners should use rotenone only when absolutely necessary because of limited sup plies. says J. Myron Maxwell. Ex tension entomologist at State i College. Try cryolite or nicotine sulphate on insects. Task Force ISeao Hear Admiral Arthur W. Radford, USN, commanded a Pacific Fleet carrier task force at Tarawa. He is shown on the bridge of his flagship. America's No. 1 Ace Official U. S. Navy Photograph? OWI BONDS OVER AMERICA * * * Unknown Soldier When Spring trips north and scents the budding apple trees of Virginia's Shenandoah >Valiey the folk of Winchester brinR flowers to Stonewall cemetery where stands the figure dedicated tc the "unknown and ur. recorded dead," of tl Civil War. Buy 'Em and Keep 'Em Our "unknown" dcuc are being buried today on many battlefields but the "un known" who will never be honored is the worker whose name is "unknown" to the rolls of War Bond buyers. YOUR LIBRARY By DORA RUTH PARKS. Librarian Xantahala Regional Library "For Whom the Bell Tolls" In movie version was another ex ample of "dirty book" being clean I ed up for the screen. There is movie censorship in this countrv but freedom of the press leave; tis to choose as we will t,he thing! ws read. Libraries face a vcrj definite problem with regard to s( called "dirty books". Sometime' ropular demand makes it neces sary for the library to buy som( titles against the judgment o! professional book selectors. PIQUA, OHIO ? Soundphot . This is a recent photo of Amei Foremost Ace in flying tops cording to current tallies. The !.? i is 23 year old Capt. Dominic vatore (Don) Gentile who so f* has bagged 30 planes 4 more tha Capt. Rickenbacker. I ft'lr Jack Horner M hit %n$ in the t* .net Is no longer ntnffi ng on pie; I Hi* rim dor a not taper, III- gnlhera iranle paper . . . > 1 "Oh, u-liui a good boy am I /** Emitting LILACS are among my favorite flowers. One of the prettiest lilac bushes I've seen his year is the one in Mr. Joe Axley's flower garden. Mr. Axley has beautiful flowers blooming from early spring until late fall. He loves to cultivate and care for his flow ers and the pretty lawn at his home. He is generous with the blossoms, making many of his neighbors and friends happy with large bouquets frequently through the summer. * * * The following little verse on ? Lilacs" appeals to me: Lilacs are always memory flowers. They grow b?side old country places. Closed doors and windows blank of faces: They guard old secrets, hushed and grave. Through early summer's singing hours Heavy with fragrance of the brave. CPT WALLACE ARRANT of Ftmona Ordnance Base. Pamona. Calif., recently wrote me an in teresting letter about Staff Sgt. Horace Ramsey, who has done a big job during this war. He writes: "My buddie. Staff Sgt. Horace Ramsey, and I joined the service over four years ago. I was home on my first furlough in over two years last month. Most of our friends around Murphy have for gotten about us. "I noticed in the Cherokee Scout some nice write-ups on the boys who have been drafted. I am writing this for Staff Sgt. Horace Ramsey, who has done much and more than most boys to win this war. I think if any one deserves praise and credit lie does. "He went overseas with the first division in August 1942. Since that time he has seen over ni?e months of actual combat in North Africa. Tunieia. and Sicily. He has been a great fighter since the invasion of North Africa. In Sicily he was one of the first .o hit shore, and fought 28 days without relief. In all he has gone through 14 major battles, and that is more than most any one soldier in this Hayesville A largo attendance was present at the all-day meeting at the Bap tist church Sunday. The Metho dists. led by their pastor, the Rev. Clark Benson, worshipped with the Baptists. The Rev. J. H Wilson of Bryson City spoke cn "Come-Tarry-Go". A basket lunch was served on the grounds at noon. The next fifth Sunday meeting will be held with the rest of the churches of the Western North Carolina Association. Four-H Club Sunday will be ob army has been through. Fourteen major battles in the infantry will equal 200 combat missions in the air corps. He went through over nine months of actual combat without injury. "Staff Sgt. Ramsey went over with a company in which there were 85 boys. Of that original number only two are left in the company Ramsey and another boy from Knoxville. I have kept in touch with Set. Ramsey ever .ince he went over, and I suppose I am about the only one who knows what he went through and has done to win this Bar. I am writing you in hopes you will print this in the pa;*'i the people in Murphy may see what one of the home town boys has done, and so he at least can get a little credit for all he has done. "Please say hello to all our friends in and around Murphy. We hope to be back some da? " I LIKE to get letters about the boys and girls in the service and wish t -at we knew more of the heroic stories that could be told about them. THE GOOD CONDUCT medal for excellent character, efficiency and a year in the army was a warded T 5 G Willa Nell Elster, recently. Corporal Elster's home is in Atlanta, but she lived about ten years at Letitia and went to the Walker school, which was named for her grandfather. She also attended Murphy high be. fore moving back to Atlanta. She then joined the WAC. She would like to hear from her Cherokee county friends, and her address is: "Cpt. Willa N. Elster, A406358. WAC Detachment. The Cavalry School. Fort Riley. Kan. ? * * INVITATIONS that I'd give most anything to be able to ac cept frequently must be declined. Last week an invitation came from W. G. Crawford, Jr.. S 2/C. to the commissioning ceremonies of the W. S. S. Abercrombie . at the city docks. Orange. Texas. It would have been a uni que experience to have attended, and I appreciate Billy's thought fulness in sending the invitation and attractive etching accom panying it. served in many of the churches of Clay county during thus month. The Rev. R. Lane Akins is di recting a Daily Vacation Bible school in Andrews this week. Mis. Ray Williams continues ill. TERMITES Keep the soil under the house dry and remove wooden supports from contact with the soil in pre | venting termite damage, says J. I Myron Maxwell. Extension en tomologist at State College. Bonds or Bondage by F. D. Cornell, Jr. Associate Agricultural Economist West Virginia University FARMERS are playing a vital role in the Victoiy drama. Most farmers are doing their utmost to insure that our armed forces and our civilian workers are getting ample supplies of the right kinds of food for continued maximum efficiency. All of this is being ac complished under unusual circum stances such as labor shortages, scarcity of essential feeds, fer tilizers, gasoline, spray materials, and limited machinery repairs and replacements. On the other hand, we must ad mit that our extra effort is being more adequately rewarded than previously and that along with such sacrifices and hardships as are encountered, there is some gain; and justly so. The farmer deserves every bit of credit and money he gets for his part. In that knowledge, however, lies real danger. Are we apt to become complaisant and feel we are doing our part? CAN we do more? SELFISHNESS OR SELFLESS NESS: War is selfish business. No war ever began from purely phil anthropic motives. To the aggres sor, the gain always outweighs the sacrifice. To the defenders, the violation of human rights and liberties forms the common meet ing ground of joint agreement and effort. However, victories are not won by selfishness. They depend on selflessness ? a willingness and desire to sacrifice individual good for the good of all. That is why both sides always must try valient ly to establish in the minds and hearts of their peoples the justice of their cause. That is the will that wins. OPPORTUNITY? If each of us were faced with the necessity of answering honestly the question ? Am I doing everything within my power to speed the day of victory ? the answer in most cases would be "No." Some of us can't forget or forego things which in a time of crisis matter little. The two things most essential to waging successful warfare are food and money. The farmer recognizes his responsibility in food production. Does he fully rec ognize his opportunity* to help pro vide the munitions of war? OBLIGATION? Government Bonds offer the farmer an opportunity to have a part in providing our fight ing men with ample and effective training and equipment. They also are an opportune way of laying aside reserves to meet needed re p.-iir and replacement costs after the war. Are they an obligation? Oh yes! The obligation of the gov ernment to pay back the loan with interest is no greater than our ob ligation to LEND the government our support. Remember? WE ore the government. "WE THE TEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES'* . . . PRIVILEGE? The greatest joys in life come from the privileges we enjoy, and which' we are now fight ing to defend. It is not only an opportunity and an obligation, but also a privilege to have as great a part as possible in insuring to ourselves, our children, and to generations yet unborn those free doms which distinguish the bond and the free. BUT BONDS AND BE FREE BE FREE TO BUT BONDS U. S. Treasury Department