Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 6, 1942, edition 1 / Page 15
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f. AUGUST 6, 1942 Itate Leads In Fight n Bang s . ti Wilson. disease, a Pi t, the nation's dairy M ? ::j...trv. has been con- ISvorth Carolina by a corps i,M who have estab- hTtiart.I record for the Id t-,i anlmnl-dlH- THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER I Disease Page 15 Victorious Veterinarians . in . uuai . .. ..orl anlmal-dls L.. kuin a'AMl Tor war tii ix " "v" M ..- - of Agriculture W. r.jt.r.l , oft V'l S 1131. ;v stale r,i w ..-... rave ut?cu icsicu . m - .ifngs indicating an iniec- e5S than nan m uuc jict .a mireau oi aiu i: tali to sain u'""' , r ' . . . L.. iiofui'ina.v 'j.i. state Department of '.culture and Dr. A. A. Husman, barfre of tne .noiui taiumm e ef the Bureau of Animal In- i-nr, "jnf k"' - fj better ami more prosperous I stock indUjiiry, r--.ncm.ioi in vm , ,j.e preat ar and necessary IMintinnin(r a balanced agricui- I prof ram. 11 . ..A.i.tixf-vicrnrv nnase. as relates to the cattle industry, It, on new significance with the Ijsl elimination oi Bang s dis- ' Commissioner fccott empna '' ''Bane's disease is a malady 1- seriously interferes with ani- Kproiiuctiori of milK irom le diseased herds has been a ce of the 1 leaded and some- fatal undulant fever. By Ifing Banc s disease under con- ! in North Carolina, minions oi 1 1JJ A- J-1- Iiars nave Deen auoeo io wie in- ;tantiai contribution has been lit tard the protection of the l:es neaitn. (BEAT ACCOMPLISHMENT R. Mohler, chief of the United :ts Bureau of Animal Industry, med the control of Bang's dis to Dr. William I'taVj&flr And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par - It may be caused by disorder of kld iey (unction that permits poisonous nit to accumulate. For truly many people (eel tired, weak and miserable, wbto the kidneys fail to remove excess and ind other waste matter from the blood. lou may suffer nagging backache, rtfutnitic pains, headaches, diszinesa. frttin" tip nights, leg pains, swelling. MtmefimM f ran Hunt an A mr-txn -r i i rt a boa with smarting and burning is an- tnorntgn mac lomecning is wrong wita the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt that prompt tmLmpnt i uriour than ncMrlonf TTm Dmm'i Pill$. It is better to rely on a ntdicine that has won countrywide ao- provil than on something less favorably tiiowrj. Doan't have been tried and teat- ad Hlanv Voirt Arm at all lm w Doan t today. ease in North Carolina "a great "Secretery of Agriculture Wick ard has been deenlv the control of animal diseases as a major influence in the success of the national food-for-frnoHr. gram." Mr.hlr wrote Commissioner ocott, tsy suppressing bovine tu berculosis and Banc's Hi peooie oi your state have contrib uted greatly to this - - rf resources and to a growing public confidence that disease nf tic animals can be conquered by ciifiKeuc co-operative action." North Carolina's Bang's disease has not been won without sacrifice, but indemnities have been paid bv both th lToHoi I and state governments to owners of diseased animals that have been slaughtered. Slaughtering is nec essary for the control of Bang's disease and "20,402 cattle have been killed for which owners have been paid $523,381.24 since 1934. Incidentally, Federal and state governments pay owners of dis eased animals killed nn-th;vi ooi. of the difference between the ap- praisea yame ana the salvage of cattle slaughtered. Pi animals are paid for on the basis of ou maximum per head and grade animals at the rate of ss ho.j Federal payments between 1934 and 1942 totaled $464,069.77 and state indemnity payments began in May, vj-v.k EXTENSIVE TESTS In .establishing North Carolina as the first "Bang's-free acredited state," veterinarians have tested 249,084 herds containing 601,149 cattle, rrecessitatinir lh nrntnrw tests totaling 1,1140,668. In addition to testing the cattle in all of the state's 100 eountw the NCDA and BAI have given special attention to a large number oi pureDrea neras, many of which have been awarded "accreditation certificates." A herd, under rules adopted by the State Board of Ag riculture, is entitled to an "nnnrnA- ited certificate" if no reactors (to Bang's disease) are revealed by tests made at least annually anrl if no untested animals are added to the herd "and the herd is other wise maintained so as to nrvpnt the introduction of infection." ' A highly trained neraonnol hsa been essential to the victory over Bang's disease. In thn rtVt-iiHl bat program, blood samples ar drawn from each animal by a train ed veternarian and fnrivnrHoH tA the department laboratory, To de termine the presence of the dis ease, a small amount of serum is taken from each blood sample and placed in a sterile test tube to which is added a measured amount of antigen, (a saline solution con taining Bang's organism), The mixtures are then incubated in an electric incubator kent at a enn- jstant temperature for 48 hours, at ine ena oi wnicn time each sample n 1 ( sl s; ; If A Weef Of The War Price Administrator HnHprxnn announced that maximum gasoline prices in the rationed area of the 17 Eastern States and the District of Columbia will be reduced 2V4 cent a gallon beginning August 5. He also announced reduction of 0.9 cents for kerosene, 1.1 cents on aisuuaies ana ngnt heating oils and IS cents a barrel on residual fuel Oils. CONSUMER SIT PLY AND MAX IMUM PRICES President Roosevelt issued a j statf ment that every user of fuel and heating oil on the East c'naat j "should face realistically the fact jtnat there can be no guarantee that I he will get enough oil even to inset his minimum noeds." Petro- ileum Coordinator Ickes asked all sellers of fuel and heating oils in the East to requost their cus tomers to convert oil burners to the use of coal or -ether available fuels. The Office of Solid Fuels 1 Coordinator reported bituminous (coal ptocks in storage in the TJ. S increased an estimated 5,650,000 tons in June, to a near-all-time rec ord. The '-'office said consumer stockpiles,' however, continuitl. in surlick'nt to provide ademi itection' against possible shortages 'during the fall and winter. ' The OI'A established a whole- .Bui, I . -II i -. rSR,lth Carolina is now the first state in the nation to be "accredit- cream, sold in bottle or paper con ed as free of Bang's disease, a malady of cattle that lowers milk tamers, at the distributor's high production, interferes with reproduction and spreads the serious dis- est March level. Th .-fi,.n iiiuii iimj ii an hi it i in mt-1 i i pvnr i i r wi nam runMA i rr ' ii iiuaui ihwv'i o lcii w:i I chief of the veterinary division of the state department of agriculture and duector of the state-participation in the Bang's war, is drawing a,itc 1IU, a line. uairy-animal, one of 601,149 tested in the aye-year ; battle against Bang's. Dr. W. A. Hornaday, of Greensboro (left) sterilizes his hvnotWmiV avrinm ...i ji ,..;i: to draw blood samples, 1,240,000 of which were analyzed in the labora- i-nu muinia won lis victory over Bang's disease. is observed carefully for indica-i for the patient to carry on any WE OFFER MANY FEATURES! One of our many features is Prompt service. We cater to active people who want their clothes back in 24 hours. W? are able to do this with- the loss in quality work manship by ur trained force f experts. Call on us. Central Cleaners Main Street Phone 113 tions ci the disease THIS IS SErnNn Historically, bv becominc n - credited, Bang's disease-free state, North Carolina has attained a dis tinction of brineinir under enntml "two major diseases seriously af fecting both humans and cattle." In October. 1928. North became the first state in the Nation to accredit all counties in the lvin tuberculosis control program. Bangs disease has existed fnr many years and was recorni.nH in European countries even hpfnn th theory of the transmission of dis eases by bacteria was recognized," Dir. Moore explained. "Bang's oc curs in all countries where cows are kept for milking purposes and no country ha.mad any satisfac tory progress in eliniinalintr tVii. disease, which was probably intro duced into the nM Stat.. through the imfiortati nn nf nttla from Europe. The disease now occurs in every state in the nation and in some sections the percent age of infection is nlnrmincrltr , r , .. Rv nigh." HOW IT SPREADS Technically sneakinir. Dr Mnnra explained that "Bang's disease. commonly spoken of as abortion or contagious abortion, is an ihfo tious disease affecting practically au animajs ana man.'' Bang's is caused by a small or ganism or germ and is usually transferred from animal to animal or from animal to man Kb aAAoA "It affects all farm animals hut ii particularly important in cattle and nogs, in cattle it often results in premature birth, lowered tion and interferes with reproduc- auction. in hogs, it produces abor tion and intereferes with reproduc tion. The disease in mm U Unwr as undulant fever and while not usually fatal, the patient is usually sick over a lone period of tim. with a temperature that and down and makes it impossible fHereTs How to GeT 0andy FREE GIFTS! IM rttti TnOM and Variety .Too. Try Miller's CORN FLAKES Valuable coupoa ea vary paekag redttmabl for aiasy tbiagi yea Rtcd Re eaihl A wealth ef geod- 1 every package. Try 'en bath of all aod grocer's. (, , . or Miller's foL POPPED WHEAT ' "... s NOTICE STATE OF NORTH CABnr.TMA COUNTY OF HAYWOOD. , ' IN THE SUPEIOR COURT. BEFORE THE rr.FPir T. HENRY GADDY. Adminis. trator d. b. n. of the Estate of IW. A. Herren. Deceased, et 1- VS. JESSIE HERREN, et al. The defendants. William A TToi-. I ren, Judson Herren and wife ' Jess i a I Herren, Isabelle Herren Stewart Marjone L. Porterfield. and hn. I band, Oscar Porterfield, Roderick I Tt 1 m ' nerren ana wiie, Julia Herrpn I Bertha E. Siwnford and husband. Robert L. Swinford. Jean Herren. I Dexter Nora Slier. Terrv KiW unA I wife, Mrs. Terry S:!cr, wiU take no- Itice that an action entitled as above has beea commenced in tha Snna. Irior Court of Haywood County, North Carolina, to sell lands ho. I longing to the estate of W. A. Her ren, deceased, for the purpose of creating assets and lor the further purpose of partition among the heirs, and that said defendants have been made parties thereto by order of the Court dated June 27. 1942: and the said defendants will I further take notice that they are reauired to aDDear at the nffioa nf I the Clerk of the Superior Court of I Haywood County, in the court I house in Wavnesville. North Cam- I lina, within ten days after the 16th day of August, 1942, and answer or demur to the petition in said action, or the netitionora will I apply to the Court for the relief J 1 J . 1 . . Iaemanueu in me original ana sup plemental petitions. Clerk Superior Court, i Haywood This July e, i4Z. C. H. LEATHER WOOD. I County. No. 120e-JuIy 16-23-30-Aug. $ work. The disease is transmitted to man throuo-h the rinkino' r.f milk and the contact with infectedl animals. I "Since Bang's disease inteifesi-s with reproduction in animals, this causes a severe loss and in addi tion it definitely lowers the pro duction of the dairy cows," Dr. Moore said. , - MUST KILL THEM 'A number of remedies hava b en tried on animals but no ef fective preventative or cure hn been found and since an animal once infected may always be dan gerous to other animals, It has been found that the onlv pffpptivo method of eliminating this disease &om- a herd and controlling-it is b'y the slaughter of infected ani mals. Such animals, if otherwisn eulth'V. produce wholenomn mint which, of course, is always cooked before being used and in that way is made safe," he added. North Carolina presidents of i well-known breed associations have been generous in their praise of the department's Bang's control ach-' itvement, including: Dr. Howard W. Odum of Chapel Hill Jersey Cattle club, T. Holt Haywood of Winston-Salem Guernsey Breeders ; association, Carl E. Rankin of Morganton Holestein-Friesian as,-1 sociation, Leonard Tuft of Pine- nurst Ayrshire Breeders associa tion. Dr.-J. 'M- Lynch of Ashovilio Hereford Cattle Breeders associa tion. W. B. Austin of .Toffunnn Shorthorn Breeders and James g! R.. McLlure Of Ashpvilln taken to prevent a price "squeeze" on milK retailers by some milk distributors. The office set a ceiling price of four cents a pound for waste kitchen futs now being sold by housewives in the salvage program, and a ceiling price of nve cents a pound for the sale of me same rats from meat dealers to renders. President Roosevelt told his press conference the rt Urn tliyitA shortaire in the East un.i .. -- owihc Alid-W estern states: (1) It is the off season for beef. Z) People have a good deal more money with which to buy more and better cuts of meat. (3) This country has around 4,000,000 men under arms for whom meat supplies must be prepared months in advance. Mr. Roosevelt department reported. Income from crops was ud 36 ner cent nnd in come from livestock and livestock products was 48 Der cent creator The department said a record vol ume of marketings is nvnectorf in me laiier nan or 1942. Total cash income from farm marketings dur ing 1942, including government payments, probably will exceed $14,500 million, the report said. RATIONING The outlook for obtaining sugar supplies from the Caribbean has "taken a turn for the cause of submarine wirf inJ the amount of hipping diverted to war purposes, the OP A said. The office asked sugar refiners in Louis iana and Texas not to .ship to sugar markets in Indiana Illi now and Ohio until at least September 1 because of a shortage in their home states. OPA said these re strictions will have to be continued if receipts from Cuba and pHr4n Rico are below expectations. Asphalt Sought For Highway From Soco To Cherokee J C Walkpr fiiviaistn h!fl,kw. engineer for the state hichwiv mnA public works commission, hag filed aoDlication with thn public roads for sufficient asphalt to complete the surfacing of Sw Gap road to Cherokee Indian Reservation. The road has alreadv hon rrA- ed and stone has been placed on it, Mr. Walker said. The contractor is now engaged in a general dressing; up of the right of way. This is expected to take about three months. Oricinallv plans were to nrfa- the road late last snrinfr hut th curtailment of asphalt by the gov ernment necessitated a change in plans. The new road is one of th most scenic in this area, and when com pleted, and travel back to normal, it is expected to carry the greater part of travel from here to the park. WA R HON D PITRPIT ASKS July sales of War Ronds tntnl.,) $900,000,000 second highest month ly amount on record and $150 million above June sales, Treas ury Secretary Monrenthau said TRIALS OF NAZI SABOTEURS The Supreme Court rules that eight Nazi saboteurs allege an eight Nazi saborteurs allctre an offense "which the President 1. authorized to order tried before a military commission," that the Commission is lawfullv eonstitnf ed, and that saboteurs are held in lawful custody." The saboteurs were brought again before the military commission. ' THE ARMED FORCES The President signed a bill ereat ing the Women's Auxiliary Reserve in the navv. which will he maHn nn at first Of 1,000 commissioned of ficers and about 10,000 enlisted members. He also signed a bill to permit the CAA to train air plane mechanics in its civilian pilot training centers. The army has asked for training of 31.000 mechanics. Selective service head said the people will have to ex-l,uttrter!' SS local boards to induct pect new shortaires fmm" I during August some men classified -."Ml blllic Mil. . ... . time because that is part of the I in '1?H wltn certa,n type of phy price of winning the .war. FARM INCOME During the first half of 1942 cash income from farm marketing totaled $5,773 -million compared with $4,012 million in tho amn period last year, the agriculture sical defects. HOUSEHOLD HINT Heat, light, oil and grease are the enemies of rubber. To prolong the life of garments and household articles made of rubber, guard against these things. Improved glass-making methods have produced milk bottles weigh ing one-fourth less than the old fashioned bottle and averaging 45 per cent more round trips before they become unusable. NOTICE SERVING SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION . NORTH CAROLINA, HAYWOOD COUNTY. . IN THE SUPERIOR COURT. HAYWOOD COUNTY . vs.-- J. A. CRISP, if alive, or. if dead, his hiers at law, and wife, if any. bv whatever name she may be known. The defendans, J. A. Crisp, If alive, or, if dead, his heirs at law, and wife, if anv. bv whatever name she may be known, will take notice that an act jon entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Haywood Countv. North Carolina, to for- close liens for taxes due HnvwnnH County; and said defendants will iurtner take notice they are re auired to appear at the Office nf th Clerk of the Superior Court of said county at the Courthouse in Wav nesville. North Carolina, within thirty (30) days after the 31st day of August, 1942, and answer or demur to the Complaint of said action or the nlaintilT will nnniv to the court for the relief demand ed In said Complaint, This the 29th day of July, 1942. KATE WILLIAMSON, Asst. Clerk Superior Court. Hav. wood County. No. 1212 July 30-Aug. 6-13-20. NO TAPE LINE FOR FRENCH RUNNERS A baseball team without n plate is in somewhat the same tlx as a runner without a fin sh HnB But in Vichy-France that is the sitiuation. The commissaries of sports ruled todav that hoBii.o oi the shortage of textiles, spon sors of track meets are rplpnaoH from the responsibility of furnish-1 ing nnisn line tape. : From now on, says the commis sariat, if a runner wants to cross the finish line he must bring his own nnisn line to cross. NOTICE SERVING SUMMONS, BY PUBLICATION NORTH CAROLINA, HAYWOOD COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT HAYWOOD COUNTY ' vs. KELI.EY BREEDTNfi A M n I WIFK if ANV rv whatpvipo1 NAME SHE MAY BE KNOWN, WAt.TFR lWAT.nVTTIW AM nil WIFE. LESLIE MALONFTT r. N. WALKER, TRUSTEE, AND TOWN OF WAYNE S VILLE. The defendants. Kellv Breedinir and wife, if any, by whatever name she may be known, and Walter Maionee, and wife, Leslie Malo nee will take notice that an action entitled as above has been com menced in the Superior Court of Havwood County. North Carolina. - -. , to foreclose liens for taxes due Haywood County: and said defen dants will further take notice, that they are required to appear at the umce oi tne uierK of the Superior Court of said county at the Court house in Wavnesville. North Caro lina, within thirty (80) days after the 24th day of Aucrust. 1942. and answer or demur to the Complaint or said action or the plaintiff wul apply to the court for the relief demanded in said Uomplaint. This the 21st day of July, 1942. C. 11. LEATHER WOOD, Clerk Superior Court, Haywood County. No. 1209 July 23-30 Auf -18 .FnirtHie Costs The Law Requires That We Advertise and Sell All Prop erty On Which Taxes Have Not Been Paid TOWN of My JOHN BOYD, Tax Collector
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 6, 1942, edition 1
15
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