lDVANCE OUTS $smsmm$$sl EVENTS fj D II xuWKINS S889SB I SOCIETY NOTE; Mr. Winston mChurchill and eighty other Eng ;ishinen are visiting President m Roosevelt ;lt tlle White House m during the Christmas season. I THE SUPREME COMMAND of Ijjj the nations fighting the ag- I m^ssor nations will probably be I m centered jn Washington. This ; Mn 11 provide a unity of action > ?t is apparently necessary in I II ^ war that has no front ana I n(J rear, in which every continent and every sea is either an [actual battlefield or a potential | j 4 p submarines, operating I along the California coast, within sight of land, have been at- . tacking shipping. One tanker, I empty and returning to its port for another load of oil was torpedoed and lost. Survivors tell 0f machine-gunning of boats Med with men trying to get I to shore. I jap attacks in the Malay I peninsula are causing a great I ija:tle for .the preservation of I ie Malay states and to hold I ;e fortress of Singapore is I <;uted to be the most strongly I -riified naval base in the world. ficcessful Jap attacks on the , Repulse and the Prince of Wales, ' I reakened Singapore and greatly I strengthened the Japanese poI stion throughout the east. I THE PHILIPPINES are underlying heavy attacks from strong I landing parties of Japanese at I various points, and the American I and. Philippine defenders have I oeen showing much stubborn?3, I cess, as they refuse to give I sound before the Nipponese. Just how many soldiers, sailors, | aarines. Philippine scouts, . inks, planes, and other means j s staving off the attackers 1 rere engaged has not been dis- j :!osed. HONG KONG, the British colony, defended by Canadian and other empire troops, has been another scene of a great epic of heroism in this war. The British refuse to surrender, although few people in London hope that | they will not eventually be ioTted to surrender. THE CHINESEl^noving down I from the North are putting pressure upon the Japs in an attempt to relieve HongKong. The success of the Chinese and the heroism of the defenders ire the only hopes that any one j h/LS that Hnr rr Vr\\~\ rr xirill nnt hp " *? "vw wv I occupied by the Japs. ! I THE DUTCH naval and land ^ I forces have done much effective ^ I fighting in the war in the far | ^ I ^t, against the Japs. They I ^ I have repeatedly attacked and ^ I sunk transports and Japanese | ^ I *ar vessels, and have joined ^ I hands with the British in the I defense of the island of Borneo, * I *hich is owned half by the ^ I Dutch and half by the British. ^ I RUBBER is already a big probI in the world. It may grow c I ^arger. for the Japs are in the ^ I Malay peninsula, which is one I of the largest sources of the maI terial. If they capture the rubI country and hold it, the r I supply will go to them. If, on c I lhe other hand, .seeing that they | ? I to to be driven out, they desI tr?y the trees, a serious rubber I shortage for several years will ^ I -n$ue, for it takes seven years I >l0 grow a rubber tree to the E I Wint of production. 0 I IYBIa is being overrun by the fl I ^ti^tpas they drive the Ger- v I ^ans and Italians out of that t I Part of North Africa. This ap- i e I ^ars to be a real and substan- !1 I llal victory to mark up for our i c I tause, and the end is not yet. 11 ( I I ?vtican made tanks have J I $&yed a large part in the de- r. ll&t of the Axis troops in Africa, j I RUSSIAN thrusts continue I gainst the Germans, and the I Jerman retreat from before I Moscow is reminiscent of Na- U I Leon's similar experience. It U I r*mains to be seen whether it 11 I ^ prove to be as disastrous to s I Germans as it was to Na- < I toleon. We can only hope that it II I ^Wer-stockton College, at! I iKr!?n' lvl0-> is campaigning for ' I ^.000 for a library building. I v - ; ... ' tyc la IDE THE COUNTY The "1 AS the shadow of war lengthens over the Pacific, a new inland, fog-free, airway to Alaska, rushed to completion by Canada, places the military might of the United States and Dominion forces within five hours of this continental outpost. Within twenty-four hours men and aircraft could be mustered from all oyer the United States and Canada for concentration in Alaska. in November or mu tne united States-Canada Joint Board on Defense recommended construction of a chain of air base* Unking Alaska with air fields close to the Amerl* can border. Today, little more than a year later, U. S. and Canadian transport planes are winging their way over the new skyway. Built by Canada at a cost of $6,000,000, the airline will serve In the days of peace as the foundation for a commercial air route to the Orient Much credit for this achievement should go to the Air Services Branch of Canada's Department of Transport. But the men who made the forests blossom forth as airports were the tobacco-chewing, tractorcussing, frost-bitten sons of the wilderness who tackled the job with typical Canadian gusto. The plans called for main ports to be established at Grand Prairie, Fort St. John, White Horse, Fort Nelson and Watson Lake. The first three were near enough railways to eliminate transportation problems, but Fort Nelson was 300 miles north of the end of steel and Watson Lake was just a dot on the map surrounded by wilderness. Bound for Fort Nelson, Tractor Train No. 1 started out from Dawson Creek in two sections on February 9 last. Mile by mile the caravan bunted and battled through the brush. Sometimes it moved ten miles in 24 hours, but more often only three or four miles. A week after its departure it had covered 35 miles. 1 Tractor Train No. 1, leaving a trail which others might follow, arrived at Fort Nelson on Macch 31, 1941. Thus ended the first skirmish ' with nature, forty-six days after it left Dawson Creek. i\ CAL cauie me BUIIIUIBI uauipaigu. To hew a road Into Watson Lake in the summer oyer rocks and muskeg bogs was out of the question. But, , why couldn't men and equipment be < floated in from WrangeU Alaska, via 4 - the Sttkine and Dease rivers? This , involved 350 miles of river travel and a 75-mile portage. As soon as the river was open, barges were loaded with trucks, i tractors, grading machinery and i equipment for two saw mills. The'1 GOVERNOR 111 ME BOARD : RATION TIOES i The Governor of North Caro- I ina will ^appoint a board to I of; onfr?mnhilp t.ires in Jack CltlUll OL *** WillVM-av on county, before January 5, t was learned today. The three nan board will have charge of he tire rationing system that vill be set up throughout the Jnited States. Every prospective mrchaser of a tire will make ipplication through his local ?oard, and the board will either ipprove or disapprove his ap>lication. Armed with a certifiate from his local board, he pill then go to his dealer and >uy his tires. These regulations have become lecessary, it is pointed out beause of the extreme danger of i rubber shortage by reason of he Japanese control or capure of areas producing rubier. Governor Broughton is ex >ected to name xne mmucio f the boards in the counties md cities of North Carolina yithin the next few days, and hey will be ready to begin op- ^ iration by the morning of Janlary 5, the date when the present ban on the sale of tires is ifted. TOM JONES DIES AT I HOME ON SAVANNAH P B Tom Jones, well known farmer G )f the Savannah section of thie w jounty, and a member of the A Farm Security Committee, died suddenly at his home, on Mon- ~ iay afternoon, it was learned here. Mr. Jones appeared to be in pr his usual health when he was suddenly stricken. Funeral and tii Interment were on Tuesday. sc.1 * 9 1 i K .. 7 V ckson SYLVA, NORTH IIIII III ill I Where, a few month* ago, tree tops! filled the eky, wireless towers stand toL guide planes on the new Alaska airP route. B Dease and Stikine rivers were so tl shallow that the barge crews had to w - a At. _ a J ?aII *1 waae 11110 tae icy waters ttnu run u rocks oat of the way to clear a passage for the little fleet. do At the end of this stretch there si ?ras a portage and then the last ti water trip across Watson Lake to b the airport site. On the shores c< af Watson Lake a saw mill was t? built. By such means these men, en- ol WINGS OF 1 '' gfailvl B Hjjjj ' ?fl; WL W^mm :&afl ^ wkH 'iti^^l m j " ^ywi :tt!B3IB |lfl H^MfflHffiPBI iaS^^B^K &? 2?$* r' ^B^.j : tmmmmm^m^ ? mum " - -, I ERE in a Canadian factory, final i f\ touches are being given to s ings which will be part of thy ex< lanes in which the youth of 'he ritish Empire are learning to fly. Jjjj reatest of all flying schools in the ^ orld,^ the British Commonwealth thi ir Training Plan now has 124 pn ihoois and establishments operat- Ca LAUNCHES NEW SHIPS (19 hi Navy Secretary Knox told his ess conference the Navy's ipbuilding program "is con- n( luing to beat all projected & hedules." Since January 1, sfc \ j p. V o' .. v I cmnto J i . , . , . CAROLINA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1941 } ige" Now A i Reality : 1 L -H**???_ "1 / LEGEND A stern wheeler briskly putts along ^V [SSM??Z^Sau?.J' Dease Lake, transporting construction ^ j -^'v C# uvotrs equipment by barge to the Watson ' . f ^ u Lake airport. In shallow waters of tho n /^*-.^, 1 _,_| mtmt Stikine River boat crews had to re PmVs,/ ... move rocks to make passageway for ^e8e Cra^#'^ i ^ Well equipped work shops were set up $?? x' for repair work as well as centers for r extensive construction at the airports. ion goes ^ rely Isolated from the outside V - | orld, cut their lumber and built * lelr houses, boats and roads. * ' A vast section of North Amerldh *^4^4%p lay now be considered by military :rategists in terms of hours of / avel rather than days. Within the _ ^ rief space cf less than a year the ^ ^ ^ #; Dntlnent's \ciflc barriers have ^ een knitt 1 ' to a defense pattern M' t form id oportions. y0UTHfk iBODYOFHER[ hswwwi^n i 10 HOT-mil Mil jfc. I a\ id nui ruuni III IW FROM JACKSOft H t ? ^^^6 I Harold Monteith, J a c k s o r B ^ I ,;I1' * i County's first hero to give hii Ht| - Ilife in ^e present war, waj I l?st on his twenty-second birthB f* f||flnK > day, when the ship on which he plli i { was stationed, was sunk at Pear! 8\\ j .' 1 Harbor, on December 7, in the J j treacherous Japanese attack, acm MHHHB >=| cording to his mother, Mrs. OsI f fl^HR car Monteitl1' who was in SylvE m j on Monday, from her home neai ill GlenvilleMrs Monteith stated that th< I Navy department gave her anc 1; her husband no details of the loss of their son, but that th< message stated that his bodj h? not been recovered. It alsc stated that his remains will b( returned to Glenville for .interment, if that is the desire of hi." parents, and if the body is reMrs. Monteith and her daughter, Miss Elise Monteith, teache: in the school in Cashier's, weri Estelle Overcash to the train Miss Overcash, who was thi naval- hero's sweetheart, ha. . been visiting his parents a f Glenville, and was returning t( mMMmvmMMmmiumm: m TririTA.T r?n*^*/rnnno Passed by censor LEGION REMEMBERS , and is producing pilots, observ- li/inVTFTTH'S PAf?FWT< ; and ground forces at a rate far o imvrii^iik seeding the original schedule. \ out 600 American pilots are serv- The American Legion Post fo j as instructors and about 8% i of Jackson county, remembere( i pupils dome from the U. S. A. ... . f TT m, e cost of the plan in the first ! Parents of Harold Mon ree years of its operation will ap- 1 teith, Jackson county's first soi jximate |824,ooo,ooof of which to give his life in the presen nada will supply $531,000,000. war a note 0f sympathy and a boquet of flowers, oi 41, Mr. Knox said, the Navy Christmas. is ordered 5,334 vessels at a - * ?_i. m nnn nnn j Dr. Charlotte Boatner, assist T3.I CUM UX ?p l ,Ui/u,vv;v,uv/v auu ;arly one billion dollars has'*"! Professor ?r * Tulane university, has discover ;en allocated for expanding, ecj an allergy preventive to re ilpbuilding facilities. lieve hay fever and asthma. / ' ,1 J ourtta $1.50 A YEAR IN A County's Gei ProvideAni] Needy And HOLIDAY TRADE GOOD IN SYLVA TfflS YEAR Storekeepers of Sylva have all reported that the holiday trade .in Sylva town has been good" this year. At first, when the . Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor shocked the folks, their minds were upon the war situation, and it seemed that the Christmas trade would not be so good. But, the people recovered from the shock, and snapped back to normal, as they realized that the Christmas spirit of giving, of cheering, of loving, is one of the precious things in American life that we are fighting to keep alive, and the crowds in the shops soon became as usual. Each day, as Christmas drew nearer, the congestion in the shopping district became greater, until the great throng swamped the stores on Christmas Eve and well nigh emptied them of their wares. ISSUE BOOK ON BILL OF RIGHTS A 38-page, illustrated pamphlet on the sesquicentennial of the Bill of Rights, which will be celebrated throughout the nation under the sponsorship of the Office of Civilian Defense, is now ready for distribution. The pamphlet, which was prepared for the Office of Civilian Defense-with the assistance of the Library of Congress, gives a I historical summary of the writing of the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution Y\n\xr lrnrra/n qj? t.hp Bill of I tiUli) 11VS TT ftMAV Vf M Eights, excerpts from statements of famous Americans on the various amendments, and .material which may be useful in connection with the obsery^ ? ? ? ? ?' iv* ^ o ty Iance ux tuc u?*jr. A selected list of old and mod- I ern patriotic songs, famous (marches, books dealing with the Bill of Rights, and plays, radio dramas and motion pictures on the subject is also included in I the pamphlet. ' RED CROSS ASKS FOR $1500 FROM COUNTY 5 The American Red Cross, 5 faced with one of the greatest " tasks in its history, has ordered J a second and special roll call 1 throughout America, to raise J funds for its war relief work, in the new war that has broken " out involving the United States. 1 Jackson County's quota of r the huge new sum that is being called for is $1,500 it is stated, ; and Dr. Grover Wilkes, county I chairman, will put into motion * machinery for raising the coun ty's quota immediately after 1 Christmas, it is stated. > The county recently raised - nearly $900, in the annual roll call; but this applies" only to 5 the regular work of the Red Cross, and the new roll call will be for the special war chest, to - be used in work among the servr ice men and their families, and g for relief work in areas affected s by the war. I"**** a riii.i ? WILL i. Hi t GOLDEN WEDDING 3 Mr. and Mrs. Dillard L. Bryson will celebrate their Golden Wedding anniversary on Sunday, December 27, at their home 5 near Beta. A number of their friends will r call during the afternoon and i evening. l HAS BIRTHDAY PARTY t y Master Pat Montague celei brated his eighth birthday on Tuesday afternoon, with a party and Christmas tree, at which he - was host. Games and decorat tions centered around Christ mas, as did the .refreshments, - served by his grandmother, Mrs. J. F. Freeze. "# * I DVANCE IN JACKSON COUNTY aerous Folks jleCheerFor Service Men The generous people of Jackson county have provided amply for the Christmas cheer for the needy folks in this county, and for sending gifts to the soldiers, sailors, and marines from this county. The packages for the boys in service were dispatched by mail, last week when it became apparent that the appeal for funds was meeting with a hearty response. Thus Jackson county people remembered their young men who are in the service of our country, battling for the freedom of us all, or training to assume that battle. The baskets of provisions for the needy will be delivered from the Community Christmas Tree, by members of the Sylva Fire Department, Christmas Eve. Every day the dime board has been on the streets, with men and women appealing to the . people for contibrutions to the fund, and everybody has had a hand in providing for the Christmas Cheer, dimes have < been deposited by the rich and the poor, the old people, the middle-aged, and the little children, as the mile of dimes grew day by day. LEGION HONORS OLDEST VETERAN Matt Carroll, the oldest veteran of the World War living in Jackson county, perhaps the oldest in the State, and one of the oldest in the United States, was presented with a handsome box of provisions on Christmas Eve, by William E. Dillard Post, American Legion. Oscar Norton and Lawrence Wilson, members _ of the post from Cullowhee, took the box to the home of Carroll, in Hamburg township. Carroll, who enlisted in the Radio Company, North Carolina National Guard,, at Sylva, in July, 1917, has been a patient in Oteen hospital for several months; but has returned to his home, after suffering a partial paralytic stroke. MEANEST THIEF GETS CHRISTMAS TREES A candidate for the title of . "The Meanest Thief in the ? i ? A 1.1.-1 -J _ world" stoie two completely aecorated Christmas trees from the porch at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Huffman on Avery avenue. Within twelve hours after Mrs. Huffman finished the decoration of the two trees, completed with strings of electric lights, a night prowler disconnected the light cords and hauled them away. The trees were placed on the porch at each side of the entrance, and constituted the cen- . tral holiday decorations for the Huffman home. After long hours of work, Mrs. Huffman completed the decoration about 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon, and lights were turned on that night, remaining illuminated until some time after 11 o'clock. Early the next morning, Mrs. I Huffman looked, out to see her handiwork gone, with., nothing left but a few slivers of tinsel which showed that the trees and their decorations had been dragged out as far as the street, at which point there was no further trace. To the police department Mrs. Huffman reported the theft as the work of some "rogue", but sympathetic friends, less ladylike, could think of other-and perhaps more appropriate names?Morganton News Herald BREEDERS The 26 breeders of purebred Hereford cattle in Watauga County are doing an excellent job of building the beef cattle N _ industry in their communities, says Farm Agent H. M. Hamilton.