RE THAN BEFORE N/-' * * ** * *«•****«***# p TAT* Q Buymote#,i^nw ^ ^ for/wforsecurity, too! AND STAR-TIMEN- iCONSOLIDATED ON SEPTEMBER 2, 1941) —ALLEGHANY COUNTY’S ONLY NEWSPAPER. VOLUME 56, NO. 7 $1.50 a Year in Alleghany County SPARTA, NORTH CAROLINA $2.00 a Year Out of County 1HURSDAY, NOV. 23, 1944 County Farmers To Vote On AAA Leaders Friday Community Committeemen 'To Be Named On Friday; County Meeting On Sat. Farmers are again reminded this week of the election of AAA committeemen to be held through out Alleghany county on Friday, C. G. Collins, chairman of the county AAA committee, pointed out. Farmers from each of the twelve communities will choose three committeemen, two alter nates rand one delegate, who will represent their community in the county committee. These dele gates will in turn attend the coun ty meet, which will be held at a later date, to name three commit teemen and two alternates to rep resent Alleghany county in the Agricultural Adjustment Agency of the state, it was pointed out. A schedule of the meetings in each of the communities follows: Cherry Lane—10:00 a. m., Miles* Store; Barrett—1:00 p. m., Bar rett Post Office; Blevins Cross Roads, 3:Q0 p. m., Blevins Cross1 Roads; New Hope—10:00 a. m., New Hope; Stratford—1:00 p. m., (Continued on Page 4) Sale Of Seals Underway Here, Miss Clyde Fields Is Chair man; To Aid In Fight Against Tuberculosis 31 sSi The sale of Christmas se^ Alleghany county is now iij ' eress with Miss Clyde ] superintendent of school j as ehairman and all school ers conducting local campaigns. Miss Fields said that 15,000 seals have been sent out to all the , schools throughout the county u with the request that every stu ' dent co-operate to make the sale a success. ‘The sale of these seals for the benefit of the county, state and national Tuberculosis association, is conducted only once each year,” Miss Fields stated, “And in this TContinued on Page Four) Piney Creek Man Gets Bronze Star With the 8th Infantry Division In Luxembourg—Corporal Reggie W. Van Hoy, Piney Creek, North Carolina, has been awarded the Bronze Star while serving over seas with the 8th Infantry Di vision in Trance. His citation reads: “For heroic service'in connection with mili tary operation against the enemy. CpL Van Hoy laid two lines over a route exposed to constant enemy artillery, motar and sniper fire. “Throughout the day he ex posed himself to the same danger ous fire in order to maintain these wires. Through his untiring de votion to duty and disregard for personal safety indispensible com munication was maintained." i Before entering military ser vice, Cpl. Van Hoy was engaged in farming. He is the son of J. P. Van Hoy, of Piney Creek. Yellow jackets Beaten By Elkin The Sparta Yellow Jackets lost to Elkin a football game which was much closer than the score of 13-0 would indicate last Fri day-afternoon on the Elkin field. When the whistle stopped play In the first half Sparta had .the ball on Elkin’s two-yard line with a lint down. Again a scoring op 1 portunity was lost when the final ' whistle caught the Yellow Jackets on the Elkin fifteen-yard line with another first down. Estep, Hincher an?K Poole played excellent foot ball ut the line. Billy Sexton In tercepted a pass and returned it for a thirty-yard gain. This along wills a pass completed to James set up the first scoring op portunity for the Sparta boys. Elkin scored in the first and periods and made an extra after the win by a Entire Nazi Army Is Threatened By Allies; Stop Japs On Leyte PACIFIC SEA CHIEF Adm. Royal £. Ingersoll, commander-in-chief, Atlantic fleet, has been appointed com mander of the western sea frontier. His job will be to keep the supplies flowing for bigger and better blows at Japan. Chinese To Study Conservation Of Soil In County Allegh9qy ounties eek Dr<*Walter.C. Lowdermilk,. As sistant Chief Soil Conservator, and at the present time loaned by the United States to the Chinese as agricultural advisor to the Chungking government, will be in this county Monday and Tuesday. With him will be five important Chinese agricultural leaders, who will visit here to observe and study at first hand the program of soil conservation and related work in Alleghany fend Ashe counties. This party will be accompanied by E. G. Garrett, North Carolina Soil Con servationist; J. E. Caudle, State Soil Survey Supervisor of the Soil Conservation Service; Staten (Continued from Page 5) Eye Clinic Will Be Held Nov. 28 ■ Miss Doris Wagoner, acting Al leghany county welfare superin tendent, announced that appoint ments for examination at the eye clinic to be held at the welfare department on Tuesday, Novem ber 28, have been coming in this week and that only a few remain to be filled. Miss Wagoner urged that all those who are interested and have; not done so, make an appointment as soon as possible through the welfare 'department. Only those: who have appointments can* be examined. An eye specialist from' Winston-Salem will have charge of the clinic. Russians Have Started New Push In Czechoslovakia Making Gains French and American troops of the Sixth Army group battled into the citadel city of Mulhouse and drove well beyond Sarre bourg to within 27 miles of the JRhine yesterday in great encircl ing movements that threatened to pocket the entire German 19th Army with its back to the river. French First Army armored forces speared into Mulhouse in a race northward from their foot holds on the French side of the Rhine near the German-Swiss French border to cut off the Ger mans between the Vosges Moun tains and the river. Unconfirmed reports said the French already had continued on to Colmar, 22 j miles north of Mulhouse. American troops slowly and painfully loosened the Japanese hold on northern, approaches to the Ormoc Valley today despite miserable weather and an ap parent Japanese decision to sacri fice an entire division if necessary to hold present positions near the village of Limon. Weary units' of the 24th In fantry Division—which has borne the brunt gf the entire Leyte bat tle—yesterday repulsed bloodily the third determined enemy at (Continued on Page 4). . -_1.....—__ Goat Devours OPA Certificates For . - Tires With Gusto Robert Edwards Gets Replace ment After Action Of His Pet Goat Goats will be goats, but Robert Edwards, of Society Hill, S. C., and well-known former Alleghany man, probably wishes that one particular goat had satisfied its appetite on tin cans rather than paper. Mr. Edwards had an unusual experience last week when his pet goat craweled into the cab of his truck and proceeded to con sume a certificate from the Marl boro county ration board which would have allowed him to pur chase two new 32 by 6 truck tires for his vehicle. Mr. Edwards made affidavit before Henry A. Rogers, clerk of the court, to this effect, in order to get a replacement cer tificate. According to OPA rules it seems that a lost certificate cannot be (Continued on Page 4) Sparta Grange To Meet On Mon. The Sparta Grange will meet oh Monday, November 27, at 7:30 p. m. ih the courthouse for the installation of officers. State Grange deputy Av Clouse Jones wilt'be present to assist with the work. All members of other grange units in the counter are cordigbrjnvited to be present. Public Is Urged To Mail All Christmas Packages Early Public response to the Post Office Department’s “Shop Nowl Mail in November” campaign k good but needs to be better, ac cording to local post office work ers'. ' ..•* “Extraodinary wartime condi tions face us, Unless more people buy and mall this month the Pos tal service cannot do its. job of delivering all Christmas gifts on time, one official declared. "» ignot pleasing to us to have to ask the American people to mail packages so far in advance of the delivery date. We do so only because it has to be done. The job is a tremendous one, but we are confident that it will be done because we know from ex perience that given sound reasons Americans cooperate magnificent ly, Postmaster General Frank C. Walker declared. “Unprecedented shortages of man power and transportation facilities growing out of the war compel early mailing. The postal service has given 90,000 exper ienced employees to the armed forces and 300,000 railroad work ers have gone to war. Equally serious is the fact that rail and and other transport facilities are taxed to the limit with the great burden of war traffic which all of us know must take precedence. “I* a great number of our 43, 900 post offices the man power (Continued On Page Four) Alleghany Is Big Contributor To Thanksgiving Here are two groups of the flock of 1,223 bronze turkeys raised by Bert L. Edwards, of Whitehead, this year. Most of these have already been ship ped to military centers and are perhaps the chief reasons many men in service are thamcful today! Mr. Edwards, Alleghany county’s largest turkey grow er, ofters convincing proof that these kings of the feast can be raised at a profit and that Al leghany county is well adapted to them. He predicts more and more farmers will be “talking turkey” on a larger scale in the near future and for in creased income, too. The tur keys shown here are of the Wiigon-wheel bronze breasted iWbfcty aid are heavier thah the average. (Staff Photo) 182 County Men Are Classified By Local Board Most Of The Group Placed In 4-A; Other Classifica tions Listed The local board this week an nounced classifications of 182 county men for military service when 138 were placed in class 4-A and 44 were placed in various other classifications. The classification list is as fol lows: 1-A: Elmer R. Sparks, Joe W. Finney, Andrew K. Jarvis, Clyde R. Gillespie, Zaac L. Rutherford, Gwyn E. Blevins, William T. Hig gins, Dewey G. Edwards, Glenn M. Brinegar, Glenn C. Cochran and Clifford G. Pruitt 1- C(Ind): Herbert C. Haw thorne, Burnette J. Wilson, Ray mond L. Toliver, Russell P. Brown, Linville M. Richardson, Charles F. Warden, Chester W. Maines, Earl L. Joines, Rufus C. Edwards, Clayton T Sheets and Bert I. Wagoner. 2- C: John Holloway, Roy T. (Continued on Page Four) -i-_;---_ CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EDITION NEXT WEEK In co-operation with the merchants, this paper will pub lish the annuel Christmas shopping edition next week, November 30. At this time, the public wiH be, reminded of the man* ad vantages of tradini and will b leetioa of the The largi feati feati to Alleghany Farmer Raises Flock Of 1,223 This Year; Good Profit Is Realized Many Turkeys Are Sold At High Price By Growers Income During The Past Week Is Estimated At $22,720.00 Alleghany farmers have re ceived several hundred dollars during the past week for the sale of turkeys to be shipped to north ern markets for Thanksgiving. Largest buyers in the county this year have been the Produce j Exchange, of Galax, Va., who j has bought around 2,000 turkeys;! Smithey’s Store, who purchased around 1,250 and Carl M. Ken- j nedy, who purchased around 1,000. Kern Wagoner,, manager of Smithey’s, said the turkeys are1 of better quality and larger thanj in toe past few years. The hens averaged around 13 pounds and the Toms averaging around 20 pounds, Mr. Wagoner pointed out. The fowls brought the ceiling price of 35 Vt cents per pound. | The total estimated income rea-j lized by turkey growers of the] county who placed theirs on the. (Continued on Page Four) I B. L. Edwards Makes Record In Production Of Thanks giving Fowls BY STAFF WRITER “We are trying to get away from the idea of turkey only for Thanksgiving and educate the public to thinking of it as a year round meat,” Bert L. Edwards, Alleghany county’s largest turkey grower, said. Mr. Edwards, who has a flock of 1,223 turkeys on his Whitehead farm this year, experimented with his first flock in this county. He has been connected with the Cowan and Edwards Hatchery at Mapel Hill for the past ten years and brought the “late hatch” to Alleghany this year as an experi ment. t Most of Edward’s turkeys were dressed and sold this year to the army and navy for Thanksgiving dinner at local camps around Nor folk. They were contracted by a Norfolk firm and dressed there. Edwards started in the hatch ery business at Maple Hill with his partner, Mr. Cowan, on a small scale; but the business has grown until the hatchery has already contracted for next year 16,000 polts and orders are booked for (Continued On Page Four) Thanksgiving Expected To Be Quietly Observed Here Thanksgiving in Alleghany is ^expected to be observed as quiet ly as the first one on the Ameri can continent when the Pilgrim fathers gathered in response to that first Thanksgiving proclama tion issued by Governor William Bradford in 1622. All stores in Sparta will be Closed, including the bank. Coun ty offices will also be closed for the holiday. The drug {tore and bus station will observe Sunday hours while the ttoet office will also be open a pint of the day. The Spartan theater will be open tonight. Due to rush orders from the Pipe tkm government Works H| for the day. mad P. will be closed for the holiday to day, and tomorrow. The annual union Thanksgiving church service was observed on Sunday night at the Methodist church when Rev. C. W. Thomp son, pastor of the Sparta Presby terian church delivered the ser mon. A combined choir from the Baptist, Methodist and Presby terian churches furnished music. There will be no church service here today. Hunting season for rabbit, grouse, quail and pheasant open ed today. A large number ol Alleghany sportsmen will haul out their guns and take to the fields. (Continued on Page 4) $18,918. Reported Sold Yesterday; Need Cooperation S. R. Nichols Special Drive Chairman Asks The Help Of Everyone Alleghany county ended the first three days of the Sixth War Loan Drive with sources of sales reporting $l8,0i8.75 through yes terday, leaving $55,081.25 yet to be sold on the county’s quota of $74,000.00 “The co-operation of every per son in the county is needed to make the drive a success,” Chair man S. R. Nichols stated and he urged that all township chairmen turn in reports of bonds sold as soon as possible. Much interest is being shown throughout the county and since Christmas is near, officials urge that all who can, purchase bonds for Christmas gifts this year. A number of rallies and enter tainments will be sponsored by the various townships in the coun ty, the dates of which will be announced later, it was pointed out. Sources of sales yesteday show ed the following: Northwestern Bank, $15,168.75 and Sparta Post Office, $3,750.00. Minor Accidents Reported Here Some Cars Are Damaged But Individuals Escape Injuries Five cars were wrecked in thg vicirity Sparta last Saturday!* * * night, officers reported, with all occupants escaping serious injury. An automobile driven by Lloyd Hudson and a pick-up driven by Reuben Hash, colored, ran to* gether one mile west of Sparta on the Twin Oaks road about 8 o’clock Saturday night. The Hash truck was damaged about $50.00 and the Hudson car about $100.00 officers reported. No charges were made and each agreed to fix their own car. Late Saturday night a car own ed by Kyle Watson and driven by an unknown driver hit a car parked in front of the Blue Ridge Tourist Home, in Sparta, knocked down a small tree and came to a stop against a rock wall tin the sidewalk. The driver escaped, leaving the car. The car that was hit was empty and owhed by one of the guests at the tourist home. Officers estimated the damage at abount $30.00 with the damage on the Watson car about $100.00. Of ficers are tin the lookout for the driver tit the Watson car. Derol' Atwood drove into the Little River Bridge, damaging his automobile about $150.00. No charges were made against him, officers stated. SPARTA PASTOR IS HONORED BY GROUP Instead of the customary “pounding” the ladies of the Methodist W.S.C.S. gave Rev. and Mrs. C. R. Allison, pastor of the Sparta Methodist church, a Thanksgiving basket, consisting of turkey with all the “trimmings,” fruit cake, cranberries, pumpkin pie and Traits for salad. Rev. Mr. Allison will spend Thanksgiving in Concord with his family, this year. Piney Creek hi^fi school boy* and girls were the victors in two double header basketball game* played at Piney Creek last week. In the tint game against Glade Valley, the girls won with a score of 31-16 and the boys piled up a score of 34-14. The second game against the