Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 2, 1942, edition 1 / Page 10
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THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER ' THURSDAY, JULY , Page 10 rinVPrniriPn i Will flpn United Nations Commander Confers With Staff Major Part of Output Of Hazelwood Plan t ! Large Percent of Every Pound of Beans and Toma toes Will Go To Armed Forces. Produce canned by the Haywood Mutual Cannery at Hazelwood this summer will play an important part in the all-out war effort, as the government has already requisi tioned a large part of each bushel of produce to be delivered to the cannery. There is a possibility that the amount to be turned over to the government for feeding men in service will be increased later, ac cording to J. E. Barr, general man ager of the Land of the Sky As sociation, which is the sales organ ization for the Haywood and three other canneries in this area. The quality of the products canned by the Land of the Sky group has often been commented upon most favorably in trade cir cles, and the government is known to look with favor upon taking more of this pack and less of some inferior grades from some other sections of the country. The Haywood Cannery and the Land of the Sky Association are today in a page advertisement pay ing tribute and telling the story Home Agent Sets Meeting Dates For County Home Clubs The schedule for the home dem onstration clubs for the month of July has been announced as follows by Miss Mary Margaret Smith, county home agent: Aliens Creek club met yesterday afternoon at the school house at o'clock; the Dell wood and Maple Grove clubs will meet with Mrs L. C. Stevens at 2 o'clock this aft ernoon. - 1 he Jonathan Creek Club meets with Mrs. Dick Moody at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon, 3rd; Beaverdam club with Mrs. Sam Robinson at 2 o'clock on Tuesday, 7th; Francis Cove club with Miss Marion Boggs The tines Creek club will meet at 2 o'clock on Wednesday, 8th. with Miss Cecil Brown at 2 o'clock Thursday, the 9th; Iron Duff club with Mrs. Roy B. Medford at 2 on Friday, 10th; Morniner Star NOTICE OF SERVING SUM MONS BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA, HAYWOOD COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. HAYWOOD COUNTY vs. E. L. BAIN, if he be alive, or if he be dead, his heirs at law, and his wife, if any, by what ever name she may be known. The defendants, E. L. Bairi, if he be alive, or, if he be dead his heirs at law, and his wife, if any, by whatever name she may be known will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Haywood County, North Caro lina, to foreclose liens for taxes due Haywood County; and said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the Office of the Clerk of the Su perior Court of said county at the Courthouse in Waynesville, North Carolina, within thirty (30) days after the 1st day of August, 1942, and answer or demur to the Com plaint of said action or the plain tin will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said Complaint. This the 1st day of July, 1942. C. II. LEATHER WOOD, Clerk Superior Court, Haywood County. No. 1203 Jul v 2-9-1 fi-M : Board With Buck Rogers 78 12 Main Street CANTON, N. C. Board & Room ( ( per week ........ Jmf 3 Meals 25c by listing the names of the 152 farmers in Haywood who have signed contracts to provide beans and tomatoes for the cannery this summer. The 152 growers have contracted to grow 245 acres of beans and 14 Ms acres of tomatoes. The can ning of beans is expected to start at an early date according to Mr. Barr. The growers have pledged them selves to deliver the entire crop from the contracted acreage to the cannery. Commenting upon this phase of the contract Mr. Barr said: "This places our growers directly in the war work; The men at the front need the very items which the cannery here will can, and inas much as a part of every .bushel' or fcou'nd delivered to the cannery are playing a vital part in this united drive for victory. The farmers are working hard to make an extra good, crop as it will mean better food and more nourishment for the men who are fighting to protect those of us back home." The advertisement also calls at tention to the fact that where there is a need for getting extra help to harvest the crops growers should contact the U. S. Employ ment Service office here, as a re cent registration was made of available farm workers. Mr. Barr is optimistic over the prospects for a good crop, and tnat jneans a lot, because every ounce 01 lood canned for the armed forces is of utmost importance at this time. The cannery at Hazelwood will buy some blackberries at the ad vanced price over recent years, i ne price wui tie a Vi cents per pound or around 21 cents per gal- ion, These will be limited to some extent due to the tin shortage. Anyone wishing to deliver black berries should get in touch with the manager at the cannery. Black berries look like a good crop and pickers should make good money gathering: the berries. ' if r? . it t t --sssrzf frrS, J - - - . T , .t ; ... ; ...... From Much ot TWl "India at War" Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell, commander In chief of United Nations forces in India, Is shown as he discussed plans for the defense of India with members of his staff in a commander conference, at New Delhi, WSTell is preparing India's forces to meet the danger of an air attack. Large convoys of troops, tanks and planes have arrived to bolster the defense of India. United Nations war vessels are using bases in India for repairs and maintenance sines the fall of Singapore and Dutch naval bases there. DEATHS mrs. arbie Mcelroy Funeral services Were conduct ed on Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Liberty Baptist hurch on Jonathan Creek, for Mrs. Arbie McElroy, 54, wife of J. Harley McElroy, who died on Sunday at her home on Jonathan eek. Burial was in the Yarbor- ough cemetery. The following ministers officiat ed: Rev. Eugene Moore, Rev. Doyle Miller, Rev. Dock Russell, and Rev. arvis Teague. Mrs. McElroy is survived by er husband, one? nnughter, Mrs. Hobert Hoglen, of Cove Creek; her mother, Mrs. Abigail Miller, of Oakdale, Tenn.; :,ix sisters and five brothers. King and Archbishop squrebMce At The Armory EVERY FRIDAY AT 9 Sam Queen Calling y Boney Franklin's Band Playing Admission 25c MRS. FLETCHER KING Funeral services were held at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the brick Methodist church on Sandy Mush, Buncombe county, for Mrs. Fletcher King, 48, Haywood county resident, who died at the Haywood County Hospital at 3:50 Saturday morning. The Rev. Foster McElrath of ficiated, and burial was in the church cemetery. Mrs. King was before her mar riage Miss Elura Keener. She is survived by her husband, who re sides near Canton; three sons, Moody, Garnie and Robert King. all of Canton; two grandchildren; one brother, Jim Keener, of route 1, Canton; seven sisters, Mrs. Steve Pinkerton, of route 2, Can ton; Mrs. Nellie Surrett, of Swan- nanoa, Mrs. Grace Capps, of Can ton, Mrs. Meda Bryant, of route 1, Canton, Mrs, Annie Bryant, of Leicester, Mrs. Herman MeClure, Clyde and Mrs. Sallie Suttles, of route 2, Leicester. V ..-4'J .?!'" - 1 7 4: King George II of Greece sips a glass of wine while listening to Archbishop Athenagoras who is the Greek bishop of North, South and do any better in following a "strange animal" in the water, or even on land, than a man could. They would just run around and around, and wouldn't even bark ex cept when their masters would rear and beat the bushes, and tell them to 'sick him. There were no tracks, and they didn't know what to "sick." Uncle Joe would go to the spring and back to the tracks Hee-Haw had made in the sand, and then he would follow them down to where the stream crossed th- road, and the hard, rocky bot tom began. And there he would stop, for there the tracks had stopped, and he pulled off his hat and scratched his bald spot, and said, "Well, if that don't beat all!" And Mr. Man kept on showing them just how it . all happened. He even took them back up the road, and showed them the very spot on which the big owl dropped his hat and the other spot where the lima fvli when the man shot it off right over his head. And Mr. Man agreed with his wife by say ing that the strange mah really Central America. This olcture was taken at a dinner given In honor of was as high as a house, and had A. - ir : i xt v 1. 1 -.. 1 ' . u t .11 i . FSA Haywood Supervisor Advises Home Gardens Advisability of laying their farm plans for a long war was urged today upon small farmers who are Farm Security Administration bor rowers by J. Yates Bailey, FSA county supervisor in Haywood county. . . "Home gardens," Mr. Bailey said. "will achieve their purpose better if they are laid out with at least a five-year war in mind. We still have a long row to hoe, and com placency is out for the duration." He cautioned against a tendency to plant in home gardens only veg etables which can be harvest ed this year. Perennial crops, like asparagus and rheubarb and small fruits such as straw berries, raspberries, blackberries, quince, grapes and cherries, should be included wherever possible, he added, even though they will not yield a crop for two years or more. Bailey pointed out that the gov ernment is asking every farm fam ily to grow as much as possible of the food needed for home use. He said that fruits and berries are especially adaptable lor canning in these days of sugar shortage. An important feature of Farm THE J i n n. . Out in Hollywood, mg for an actor '4 part, and ,K V - -- ' 11UL n r "ley can 11 Tinf fi j 1 It is not th, ;u"ua. just that no one cover anyone irooH 1 ' iust that IWd eno It is not locate M But after all, fe!tlL drick, the late Na "0" bo Popular with the . loans hrnj. support for a lni. " -- n a weil-rni.j.i balanced farming pro fet awav f . 6 "year-at-a-time" awav fr,,m j" ing, Bailey concluded. crop the King at a New jfork hotel. BLACKIE BEAR By D. SAM COX club with Mrs. Jim Allen at 2 o'clock on Monday, 13th. The Bethel club with Mrs. W. P. Whitesides at 2 o'clock on Wed nesday afternoon, 15th; Maggie cl ub with Mrs. Jim Plott, at 2 o'clock Thursday, 16th; Crabtree club at the school house at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon, 17th. Ratcliff Cove club with Mrs. James Hendrix at 2 o'clock on Mon day, July 27th; Clyde club with Mrs. Levi Morgan and Mrs. R. L. Hermessee at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, 18th ; Cecil club with Mrs. Ruth Farmer, at 2 o'clock on Wednesday, 29th: West Canton club with Mrs. James Hyde at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon, the 30th; Junaluska club will meet on Friday, the 31st, with place and hour to be announced later. THEY MAKE HOUND DOG LAUGH Story 134 Do you think you could tell which way a wagon went, or if it wsnt EITHER way, if it rolled into a stream about as wide as a house, and that stream had a hard, rocky bottom that wheels couldn t leave any track on? And if you had been away out in the woods, and running the other way, when that wagon went up the stream or down the stream, or just went away, it wouldn't be easy for you to come back after several hours, and find out which way your wagon went. Neither could Mr. Man nor Uncle Joe nor Tom tell which way Hee Haw and his wagon went, even if they could guess that that awful man with the gun had driven it away.: There wasn't a single bit of sign of the wagon turning around, or of its going anywhere. Certainly there had been plenty of time for it to go a long way in any direction, for even if Mr, Man did run nearly all the way back home for his gun, and then did hurry all he could to get Tom and Uncle Joe, it was late in the day when they got to Cool Spring. Uncle Joe and Tom were not a bit anxious to come back with Mr. Man. for they couldn't see any fun in hunting for a man who had a gun, and who had taken a donkey and wagon away from somebody, tbu, after a lot of talk, they all got their guns and dogs, and came to Cool Spring. I hey tried to get the dogs to follow the tracks, but a dog couldn't i arms I hat would reach away tip in mc ii co tupa. jx course JOCKO has long arms, but not THAT long. Anything looks a lot big ger when you are afraid of it. "No, sir, I'm not ashamed of run ning from a man like that, even if he didn't have a gun," Mr. Man said. "He is a giant, that man is." It would have tickled Billie Pos sum to see the way Hound Dog, who had come with Tom, would keep running down to the stream to drink water. It was the best excuse Hound Dog knew for get ting away from the crowd so he could laugh. Nobody had told him about what Blackie had smoked out of his pipe, for he hadn't seen any of the Creek Folks for days; but there isn't a bit of doubt that if he had really wanted to find Hee Haw, he would have been saying howdy to him, away up near the Big Tree, before bedtime. And he would tell you today that he had a hard time holding himself down there on a cold job that he knew wasn t helping anybody. Mr. Man and his neighbors fooled around Cool Spring till nearly night, stopping everybody that passed along the road, and asking if they had seen Hee-Haw, tut of along towards sundown. Uncle Joe said he just had to go home, or Aunt Judy would think somebody had stolen him. And home seemed the best place for Mr. Man, too, and so they all headed that that way, with Hound Dog taking the lead. And whether he was laughing or howling, he did make a lot of noise. (To be Continued) notice of sale Under and bv virtu . of the Superior Court of Hi J County made in thB s...: ?1 ceedmg entitled "T. L. r,Z tninnr.rflr.nii tv , u.e estate of O. Young-, derrac Young Hanev. et i ZJ on the St. the undersigned Commissioner ""My, we zuth day 0 1942. at eleven o'clock a , 1.110 vuuimouse aoor in ff ville, N. C offer for sale k highest bidder for cash, that tain lot or parcel ftf Lj , and being in the Town of ffa,' vuie, naywooa County, f more particularly described lows, to-wit : BEGINNING on a stake : i-Nonneast comer of the old pital lot and on the North n, a street and runs N. W 30' H xeei, wun siae line of street stake; thence N. 67 30' t ieet to stake in line of lot V thence S. 20 W. 53 feet with i line 01 Lot No. 12 to suke is pital lot line and corner of Lot thence S. 67 30' E. 90 feet line of hospital lot to the GINNING. This June 16th, 1942, t. l.gree: Commissi No.l 198 June 25-July 2-9-11 MAGIC SILK Snd NYLOX HOSE Preservatite Makes Your Hose Last From 3 to 4 Times j As Long I Another Headache for the Axis aL a - t , -; ,- , nil m . - S -i T t 1 Tun .lwni H1MI 111 mm T- iml A new addition to the U. S. undersea craft fleet, the Badde, is shown sliding down the ways at the Electric Boat Company yards at Groton, Conn. The sub was sponsored by Mrs. Charles F. Russell, wife of Cap tain Charles F. Russell, administrative assistant to the chief of Navy personneL (Central Preu) BUY HERE SAVE HERE PRICES GOOD THROUGH JULY 4th! J. C. GALUSHA .Owner Phone 106 Main Street I term For I home, car: workshop. GARDEN one OUTDOORS AT or Med. Racknt J'f 98 Pull-Sill I 01T-( PLU Y FOR HEALTH! i"t0Q9 Pure Pei"isy,v0flj Champion-Builder" Sport Goods UOOU rtHII MOIOr At Big Savings! fftiwoa r O 1.0 V B OH06 8f4ball GLOVE Horaehide. Q1374. RcsalatiM BALLS Imiw G1612.. . StbJI 01538... RKlatla BATS Saftball 01 4 f Lcwrac G 1 4 1 S ... 1 .6t CrtMt St Full SODS is for 4 G1964 -C"U 1 $220 59c 70o 47 om Kui-ivmfimi 1 aui nm.!'vf,Tf n - v ,i 0mWi: Bum 82 ; fix-Up' 0 Your Bike HARD GRIPS 36c PKDALS PADLOCK " long-. iAc FENDERFUP To u K h . . I b o r 1 JC FK710... FREE HOUSE PAW 1 rtAitnu free WITH 5 3 GALLONS FREE WITH M Bouaht t our resulaf low Prl P1J20 Money-Back Guarantee! Similar Quality 111 for $2.98 all ovir the nation undir different nnmo. GALLON In 5 Gallon Lots Our low Price. . . Buy 8 G1 Oct t Vrtt . You '6 gal., to' ..f 13 L : nimenta known Industry. G u a r a n teed Wizard Fans Precision Built for Long- uuiea tnicient Operation Quiet Running $1.82 With Deluxe Fibre Auto Seat Covers Co ape 'BW-"! ; ": N5l,,4, ; ' ""t-SSS1 -''"V Conch Front n -S!&f.W' f T. V , ---BHt -aj 4.10 N6S03.11 Sedan Front NB50I.R4 3M $. Fatll Seta SrS.a A Coach K5S0I.4J S40.6i Holly wood" SllKhtly Higher tPBC To 0M !. show your com t irtnm . ,5 Fit on 1 PROTECTielJ STURDY Chrome GRILLE GUARD $025 a 1 rrOSf raiu.m
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 2, 1942, edition 1
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