5 , 4 ' ?V ? AMERICA First, Last and Always T he Sylva Herald \ ** The Herald is dedicated to progressive service to Jack son ... A progressive, well balanced county. VOL. XX, NO. 34 SYLVA, N. C., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1946 $1.50 A Year in Jackson And Swain Counties ? 5c Copy ARNALL PROMISES COMPLETION OF HIGHWAY NO. 60 According to the Cherokee Scout, Murphy's progressive weekly newspaper, Governor El lis Arnall, of Georgia has prom ised to complete the 8 mile link of unimproved road of Highway No. 60 from the North Carolina liije through Mineral Bluff, Ga., to the junction of Highway No. 2 which leads from Blue Ridge to Blairsville. This is a link of road all western North Carolina is in terested in as it is a direct route into this section from Atlanta and other southern points. Tourist travel has been avoiding this route due to this bad piece of road. In stead of coming into the Smoky! Mountain area through Murphy, Bryson City and Sylva, they have been going arouiid through Chat tanoga and Knoxville and into Gatlinburg. Governor Arnall told the Fan ' nin county representative and the Kiwanis club of Blue Ridge last week that the road would be com pleted this summer. M'PHERSON OFFERED BY SHELBY ROTARY CLUB FOR GOVERNOR OF NEW DISTRICT The Shelby Rotary club has en dorsed one of its members, Holt McPherson, for governor of the new 194th District of Rotary In ternational. The new district em braces 27 clubs in Western North Carolina from Charlotte to An drews. The old 190th district of which Stanley Black of Bryson City is Governor, included clubs in upper South Carolina and Western North Carina. " McPherson is vice-presiclerft and managing editor of ? the Shelby Daily Star. WASHED-OUT BENT DELAYS TRAIN 18 Passenger train No. 18, Murphy to Asheville, was delayed here an hour and twenty minutes Monday morning while section men re paired a weakened trestle in the Sylva yard. Excessive rainfall Sunday night sent Scotts Creek on a wild rampage causing one of Ihe temporary wooden bents to wash out making the trestle un safe for trains to move over it. Workmen have been engaged in putting in a new steel trestle at this point and had not completed the job when the heavy rain came. A coffer-dam built around the trestle was also washed out. The double header freight going to Murphy was also delayed several houx$. Lt. Com. E. J. Duckett Released1 From Navy Lt. Commander Edgar Duckett, Mrs. Duckett and two children spent a few days last week visit ing friends in Sylva and Cullo whee. , Lt. Com.-. Dockett, USNR, sta tioned for more than three years in California, has been released to inactive duty and after spend ing about two months in North Carolina will return to Northern California where he will engage in growing seed potatoes. Before entering service he was employed as electrical engineer at Western Carolina Teachers Col lege and later served in the same capacity with the Mead Corpora* tion in Sylva The Ducketts left Monday for Waynesville to visit his parents and will later go to Goldsboro to visit Mrs. Duckett's mother and other relatives. Hugh Monteith To Address Webster PTA An address by Hugh Monteith on "Parental Delinquency" will feature the meeting of the Web ster Parent-Teachers Association which will be held in the Webster school house on Tuesday night, January 15th at 7 o'clock. v It is hoped that as many parents as can will attend this important meeting. Receives Discharge T-5 Lesker D. Buchanan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Buchanan of Gay, and husband of the for mer Miss Alice Rogers of Cullo whee received an honorable dis charge from the U.-S. Army Dec. 16th at Fort Bragg. T-5 Buchanan spent thirty eight months in the Army, nineteen months of this being overseas duty ? in the European theatre. He en tered service Oct. 20, 1942, first going to Fort Bragg and from there to Camp Campbell, Ky., whehre he was stationed for about ten months before going to the Tennessee Maneuver Area. Re turning to Camp Campbell he was sent to the Port of Embarkation and landed in England in April, 1944. T-5 Buchanan saw action in France, Belgium, Holland, Czecho slovakia, and Germany. He was stationed in Mannheim, Neurnberg and Wurzberg. Going to Marseil les, France, he sailed for home on the SS John Ericson and arrived Dec. 10, 1945. He holds the Good Conduct medal, the ETO Ribbon with five battl? stars, and his company re ceived the Presidential Citation. He served in the 315th Infantry of the 79th Division and Tor a time | was a member of Gen. Patton's Third Army. Prior to entering service he was employed at Fontana Dam. Mrs. Roy Tritt Returns From California Mrs. Roy Tritt of East La Porte recently returned from Palm Springs, California where she spent several weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Jack Lasley. How ard, the small son of Mrs. Lasley, accompanied his grandmother to California and will remain there with his parents. v ... COLE ENSLEY, 84 PASSES AT HOME Funeral services were held Tuesday morning at 11:00, Janu ary 8, at the Scotts Creek Bap tist church for Cole Ensley, 84, who died at his home Sunday morning following a brief illness. Rev. B. S. Hensley, Rev. T. S. Deitz, and Lawrence Crawford of ficiated at the services. Nephews served as pallbearers and deacons of the Scotts Creek church acted as honorary pall bearers. Surviving are two sons, Humph rey and Bedford Ensley of Sylva and four daughters, Mrs. Charles Crawford, Mrs. A1 Anderson and Mrs. T. C. Bryson, Jr. of Sylva, and Mrs. Carl Campbell of Can ton, 28 grandchildren, and 11 great-grandchildren. Major Harold S. McGuire Resumes Denial Practice Major Harold S. McGuire and family arrived last week from Winter Park, Fla. and both Ma jor McGuire and his wife, Dr. Pat sy McGuire have resumed their dental practice in Syiva. Major McGuire has been in service for 41 months, stationed at Orlando, Fla., where he was con nected with the Regional Station Hospital Dental Clinic. He is on terminal leave until February 26th when he will be placed on inactive status with the U. S. Army. NATION DOUBLES VICTORY LOAN The Treasury Department in Washington has announced that Bond sales in the Victory Loan campaign almost dou bled the quota. The department's figures in the final report on this, the eighth and last war loan, showed sales reached $21,144, 000,000 or 192 per cent of the $11,000,000,000 goal. Individuals purchased a to tal of $6,776,000,000 or 169 per cent of the $4,000,000,000 suota, and E-bond purchases $2,204, 000,000, or 110 per cent of the $2,000,000,000 sought by the treasury. The wprld carry-over of cotton stands at 26.5 million bales as compared with 22 million bales before the war. ? NEW CITY TAGS ON SALE AT CAMPBELL'S Sylva citizens can get their new 1946 city auto tags at Campbell's Ice Cream shop in the Ritz theatre building. Mr. Campbell, chief of the Sylva Fire Department is handling the sales of these 200 tags for the department. All funds de rived from the tags go into the treasury of the Fire de partment to help defray inci dental expenses. The tags are the same color as the state tag, yellow letters on black background. They sell for $1 each. Buy one and help the boys of the department with their big job of protecting your property. R. N. HENSON RITES HELD AT COWARTS R. N. Henson, 71. of Cowarts, well-known Jackson county live stock grower, died early Friday at the Sylva hospital following a brief illness. Funeral services were held at 11 o'clock Saturday morning at Cowarts Methohdist church, with the Rev. E. A. Fitzgerald officiat ing. Graveside rites and burial were in Pole Creek Baptist church cemetery, near Candler. Active pallbearers were Louis Bumgarner, Luther Stfephens, Benjamin Nicholson, Blaine Nich olson, Bernard Brown, and How ard Wood. Mr. Henson had long been a leading member of the Methodist church in Jackson county, and for many years served as superin tendent of the Methodist Sunday school at Cowarts. He was a son of the late Wiley Henson and Deborah Mease Hen son of Haywood county. Surviving are six .children: Mrsr D. M. Hooper of Asheville, Frank Henson of Canton, Grady Henson of Sylva, Hilliard Henson of Ashe ville, Way Henson of Cowarts, and Mrs. John W. Summers of Cow arts; his stepmother, Mrs. Lethia Sellers Henson of Candler; two brothers, Matt Henson of Long Beach, Calif., John Henson of Wil mington; 'six sisters, Mrs. Lydia Rhodarmer'of Canton,. Mrs. Lona Clemmons of Hayesville, Mrs. J. C. Clark of Candler, Mrs. Tallie Massie of Candler, Mrs. H. P. Is rael of Candler and Mrs. Glenn McFee of Asbeville. mmm rv Sy * ?> ? AsV! *?? fi # ? ?JW? VICTORY PULPWOOD CAMPAIGN tElje ^Ceralft In recognition of the valuable contribution this newspaper has made to the nation's war pro* gram by its efforts to increase the production of pulpwood. WAX PRODUCTION FUNERAL RITES FOR DR. W. H. WOODY HELD TODAY AT 2 P. M. Prominent Cullowhec Physician Failed To Survive Operation Funeral services were conduct ,ed Wednesday, Jan. 9th' at 2 o'clock at the Cullowhee Methodist church for Dr. W. H. Woody, 48, who died at the Franklin hospital January 6th after a brief illness. Burial followed in the church cemetery. The Masonic Order No. 358, of which he was a member, had charge of. the rites and the Rev. R. T. Houts, Jr., of Cullo whee and the Rev.- E. A. Fitzger ald of Webster officiated. The body lay in state at the church for an hour before the funeral. ! Dr. Woody was a native of Yancey County, a son of the late A. A. and Lydia M. Woody, of Green Mountain, N. C. He was a graduate of Berea College, Berea, Ky. and the University of Louis ville Medical College. Receiving his M. D. degree in 1924 he prac ticed medicine in Pike county, Ky. and Bakerville, N. C. Coming to East La Porte in 1924 as physician to Blackwood Lumber Company, i he also did private practice in the I county and moved to Cullowhee a year ago where he continued his work. Dr. Woody was a member of the Methodist church and the Masonic Lodge No. 358. He is survived by his widow, three daughters, Betty Jean, Mary Joy and Marjorie, all of Cullo whee; two brothers, Dr. L. W, Woody of Spruce Pine, John P. Woody of Green Mountain, three sisters Mrs. Boyd Johnson and Mrs. Cluade Hughes of Green Moun tain, and Mrs. Joe Witson ol' Tip ton Hill. Active pallbearers were: Thomas Wike, Felix Hooper, Ralph Hunter, Roy Hamilton, Edward Battle, and Fred Hamilton of East LaPorte and Cullowhee. Honorary pallbearers were: Dr. Edward Angel, Dr. D. Justice, Dr. Corbin and Harvey Griffith of the Franklin hohspital staff, Dr. Grover Wilkes, Dr. A. S. and A. A. Nichols, Dr. D. D. Hooper, Dr. Roy Kirchberg, Fred Hooper and John Norton of Sylva, Claude Parker, John Wike, Dr. C. A. Peterson, Dr. W. L. Williams Dr. Harld Bacon, Dr. E. A. Gouge, Dr. H. T. Hunter and John Painter. Flower girls were: Dorothy Sue Sutton, Ruth Sutton, Rebecca Smith, Jaunita Dills, Edna Hughes, Mary Marguerite Hughes, Mary Alice Cowan, Mrs. Edmond Long, Mrs. Fred Hamilton and Mrs. Davis Zachary. CIVIC GROUPS URGE REPRESENTATIVES TO BACK PRESIDENT In accordance with the request of President Truman that individ ual efforts be made about the la bor and economic situation, mem bers of the Sylva Merchants As sociation and Chamber of Com merce dispatched wires Thursday to North Carolina Congressman Zebulon Weaver and Senators Clyde R. Hoey and Josiah W. Bailey, asking them to legislate laws toward the control of strik ing, in an effort to avert a more critical shortage of merchandise. An impromptu meeting of the Association, following the address of the President resulted in this action. Jackson merchants, feel ing the nationwide shortage made their first step toward alleviating it. Hogs need ui be treated for lice during the winter months because the lice may tite carriers of twine pox. Secretary of. Agriculture An derson has tabbed the U. S. farmer with the "refpoM^bfiitiet" of plen tiful production and market ex pansion in 1946. Jackson Named Meeting Place For New Health Unit Set-up Western North Carolina Cullowhee January 14th The Western North Carolina Rrp'ist Confcrcrc0 which is meet ing at the Cullowhee Baptist church on January 14th has se lected as the theme of the day's meeting "The Preacher and His Call." The yearly theme will be "The Preacher and His Mission." The morning conference will include: 10:30 ? Devotional, Rev. John Freeman, Bryson City. 10:50 ? Business and introduc tion. 11:10 ? Explanation of program, C. M. Warren, Sylva. I 11:15 ? "Considering God's Call,"1 Rev. Edgar Willis; 1 11:35 ? "Answering God's Call," Rev. Cardine Green, Canton. 11:55 ? Message, Rev. J. Alton Morris, Murphy. 12:30 ? Benediction and lunch. At the afternoon conference the program will be as follows: 1:45 ? Devotional, Rev. C. C. Welch, Franklin. 2:00 ? Report of committees. 2:10 ? Round table discussion. "My call and response" led by Rev. L. G. Elloitt, Waynesville. 2:50 ? Special music and hymn. 3:00 ? Message, Dr. H. T. Hun ter, Cullowhee. 3:30 ? Adjourn. MILAS PARKER IS CLAIMED RY DEATH Funeral services for Milas Par ker, 72, well known retired Sylva business man and farmer, who died Wednesday night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Tilgham Bass, were held Saturday after noon at 1 o'clock at the Sylva Bap tist church. The Rev. C. M. War ren and Rev. H. M. Hocutt were in charge of the rites and mem bers of the East La Porte Masonic Lodge participated. Members of the Ruby Daniels 1 class served as flower girls and buiial waS in the Cowarts ceme tery. , I Honorary pall bearers were James G. K. McClure, Dr. A. S. and A. A. Nichols, Church Crow ell, J. B. Ens ley, Frank Jarrett, B. C. Campbell, Ellis Super, John McElroy, Houston Moffitt, E. P. Stillwell, HugU Monteith and R. L. Madison. Mr. Parker, long active in civic affairs of the county has been in ill health for some time. A na tive son of the county, he had lived most of his life in the Cowarts section. At one time he was an employee of the Asheville Citizen Times and also served as United States Deputy internal revenue collector. A graduate of the Cullowhee Normal School, now W. C. T. C., Mr. Parker taught school for a number of years in the county. He was instrumental in bringing a branch office of the Farmers Federation to the county and one time served as director of the or ganization. He is survived by three daugh ters, Mrs. Tilghman Bass, Mrs. Edgar Queen of Portsmouth, Va.t Mrs. Charles McMahan, of Sylva and one son, J. B. Parker of Syl va; one sister, Mrs. A. A. Stephens of East La Porte and one grand daughter, Donna Gail. Many Farmers Have Not Filed Practice Reports According to Mr. D. C. Higdon, chairman of the Jackson county A. C. A. there are a number of far mers who have not filed their re port for practices carried out in 1945. All farmers are urged to come by the AAA office at once and do this if they wish to receive aid through the program in 1946. Also any payment that maty be due them for practices carried out in 1945 must be signed for. In recognition of agriculture's vital interest in the disposition of surplus property, an Agriculture Policy Committee has been ap pointed by the Surplus Property administration. Five County Unit Organized Under New Act Of 1945 Legislature At a meeting at Jarrett Springs Hotel, held last Friday night, January 4, a five-county health unit was established in compliance with the ruling of leg islation passed by the 1945 gen eral assembly of health clinics. George A. Brown, Jr. of Hay wood county was elected perma nent chairman of the group, Dr. C. N. Sisk, who has served as district health officer since the work was organized_several_years ago, was named district health officer under the new set up, and I the four ex-officio members to be appointed by Dr. Carl Reynolds, secretary of the state board of health were: W. L. Latham, of Bryson City, Superintendent of Swain County schools, T. Walter Ashe, Chairman of the Jackson county Board of Commissioners, W. E. Baldwin of Franklin, chair man of the Macon County Board of Commissioners and Verne P. Clement. In addition to the above mem bers the law requires that four s other members be named, a physi cian, a dentist, a registered phar macist and a public spirited citi zen. Thsoe members rae Dr. Har old Bacon of Bryson City, physi cian, Dr. A. P. Cline of Canton, dentist, and Dan Moore of Sylva, public member. Due to the ab sence of ex-officio members from Transylvania and Macon the druggist which will be named from one of those counties has not yet been appointed. JACKSON. COUNTY NAMED AS MEETING PLACE Jackson county has been select ed as the meeting place for this unit due to its strategic and cen tral location. The reorganization of the health plan was made in order to better I .serve the counties involved which arc Macon, Swain, Haywood,. Jackson and Transylvania. Prior to this set-up each county had its own public health system, operat ing under a county board of offi cers. With the change an inter exchange of health practices are I made available. ASHE AGAIN HEADS CLOTHING DRIVE IN JACKSON T. Walter Ashe has again been appointed chairman of the nation wide Victory clothing drive which started January 7th. The Sylva Lions and Rotary club will spon sor the drive. In an effort to relieve the crit ical shortage of clothing in war torn countries, the United States is making the second drive to pro duce garments for these countries. The first, in April, was completed successfully, both in the county and nationwide. All garments should be in us able condition and clean and should consist of wearing apparel, bedding, household linens, shoes, and lengths of material. It is par ticularly requested that infants and children clothes be sent. Cot ton garments must be clean but do not have to be ironed. All shoes and hose should be securely mated and tied. Mr. Ashe has not yet named co chairman and committee members who will work with him, but an nouncement of these will be made next week. Collecting depots and agents will also be named. While his six brothers were in the armed services, Bryan Coates, a 4-H club boy of Johnston Coun ty, won a $200 scholarship in the national 4-H field crops contest. Sunrise has proved to be the ; highest yielding strain of barley > over a three-year peroid at the ' Piedmont Experiment SUfka at Statesville.