LcBSDAY,
JULY 1, 1943 (One Day Nearer Victory)
THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER
Fist 9
OSPITAL
.r van. uj. .aiwi,
oative case, is better.
, ;f .rp cf Canton, operative
frrrc'ting more comfortably.
, ..,fonl. of Waynes-
Jtiv eae, is improving.
, i r Early, of Hazelwood,
. conJm.n of Luther Bur
, in. operative case,
Lou Davis, of Clyde, route 1, oper
ative case, is good.
Miss Hazel Styles, of Canton,
operative case, is better.
Mrs. Robert Kelly, of Canton,
operative case, is resting more
comfortably.
Talk Things Over
Mrs. Larry Kelly, of Canton,
operative case, is better.
Mrs. Sam Noland, of Clyde,
route 1, operative case, is resting
fairly well.
... 4 MyitK Smith, of Clyde, op
is improving.
c.vi. nf TVll-
. i utive case, is better.
.' .Q.p is resting more
i li - TIT
ur. Htnry CampDen, i
i V .....mtivo case, is improv-
ikr J. R. Gillett, of Canton,
Ma
.!....! ,-n.i 1
s some better.
- ... PflnliW
(-lpr,,',t lU M'MUOII, VI v.iiiuii,
' ... ,'a-r. is improving.
.... -
JJr J ! tilt' -7
... . i m. ,li, al case, is better.
).. .Maggie JMiKpaiiicii, vx
an., - , - '
'inrlv well.
.. r, in Mathis. of Maeeie.
rtlal vh-. is some better.
!, lit ion of Miss Georgia
Mrs. Carroll Glance, of Clyde,
route 1, operative case, is improving.
Mrs. L. A. Smith, of Clyde,
route 1, operative case, is resting
more comfortably.
DISCHARGED
Among those discharged during
the week from the hospital were
the following: Master James Sor
rells, Charlie Carver, Miss Frankie
Morgan, Miss Wanda Coleman, W.
P. Mehaffey, Miss Helen Rainey,
Miss Nancy Abel, Mrs. R. C.
Looper, Master Neddie Wells, Mrs.
R. C. Sheffield, Miss Theora Cook.
Miss Patsy Jansen, Margaret
Lowery, colored, Jimmy Dimgler,
Keith Leathei wood, Miss Kather
ine McCiary, Bob Phillips, Baby
Finney, Mrs. W. A. Palmer, Ern
est Trantham, Mrs. N. M. Davis,
Mrs. Charlie Woodard, Roy Lester,
Mrs. J. W. Webb, and Jack Chambers.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Truitt, of
Hazelwood, announce the birth of
a daughter on June the ISth.
Mr. and Mrs. Athel Jones, of
Waynesville, route 3, announce the
AWASHINGTON
Aviation May Be Subject of
Next International Conference
United States, Great Britain
Chief Air Transport Nations
licked Axis
To Get late
Start
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Columnist
THE NEXT INTERNATIONAL conference apropos post-war
world relationships Is likely to bear upon the subject of aviation
Next jjeacetime's major aviatorial powers naturally will be the
United States and Great Britain. However, all the other nations,
even if they do not do much actual flying of their own, each will
have its convenient little patches for our own and John Bull's planes
to alight on, and these ports will have to be bargained for.
The dickering will be in competition between ourselves and the
British, with the governments we will be rivals to make terms with.
In a couple or three generations perhaps we will have today's Axis
aviation companies trying to horn in on what will
then be our pretty well established Anglo-American
monopoly, but they will amount to nothing immedi
ately at the war's end. For one thing, their coun
tries will be licked into financial quiescence and sub
mission. Secondly, they will have no commercial
juipment for a long time to come, and we are building ours now
to move our supplies of fighting material aircraft that can be con
verted in short order Into passenger-carrying and freight-carrying
utility.
There will be no delay as between ourselves and the British,
though.
In two respects there are whispers that the Britons are consider
ably ahead of us.
Overseas monopoly was one of their great advantages before the
t'r.ited States ever was invented. It was surface navigation but it
was overseas, anyway. So they have experience, centuries of it
Overseas is overseas, whether overhead or simply on top of them,
at sea level.
Secondly, from all accounts the trans-Atlantic islanders are cre
ating their air establishment largely at our expense.
They are doing it on a lease-lend basis. We are footing the current
bills. The theory is that we will be repaid ultimately, but everybody
to.ows how international obligations string along, as they evaporate
Into futurity.
Not even an expert, to be sure, can calculate how, in the long run,
inter-oceanic and inter-air will pan out in opposition to one another.
Surface transportationists say they are not worried and aviators
we, with their claims, conservatives in so far as it is possible for
M aviator to be a conservative.
It appears that passenger-toting by plane is admittedly more ex
pensive than riding in a smoking car unless you are in quite a
flurry Aviation does not dispute it. Baggage, though, can wait a
tot- Yet, if you are in a heck of a rush, it is readily conceded by
toe surface folk, that they cannot keep up with the astronomical
outfit. Ditto, scraniron and cielead are more eco
nomically moved close to the terrestrial surface.
In wartime NOTHING matters but this discus
0T1 relates to post-war days.
The next international conference will see it pawed
over.
It may be as secret as the Hot Springs, Va., discussion. It will be
5-ore business-minded in its nature. Industrialists will boss it, and
2 are more practical than politicians.
Their aviation discussion may shape the ultimate heavenly world
for us.
, It is likely to shape the terrestrial world, also.
is a discussion that is Impending.
The food question Is not any hotter than that one is. Every little
Pewee of a country is hit by It. - -
J me big ones? Gosh'
Speed Vs.
Costs Are
Factors
WANTED
BLACK WALNUT
LOGS FOR GUN
STOCKS Cash On
Delivery
To Mill, Hominy, N. C.
Any Length 6 to 16
Feet 12 - Inch Dia
meter and up.
Wood Mosaic
Co., Inc.
Box 1249 Asheville
North Carolina
r v N v .. -sit
E x x
SITTING beside a Flying Fortress'
waist gun. Capt Clark Gable, for
mer screen star, gives some tips to
Sergt. Phil Hulse of Colorado
Springs, Colo., at a base somewhere
in England Gable is serving as
gunnery instructor with the U. S.
3th Air Force (International)
birth of a son on June ltith.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Messer, of
Waynesville, route 2, announce the
birth of a son on June 21st.
Soldier What would you say if
I asked you to marry me?
Girl Nothing. I can't laugh and
talk at the same time.
About one-third of family pur
chases of food in England are below
cost, the government subsidizing
certain commodities.
-TIMELY-
Farm Questions
and Answers
Question : How can I reduce my
suckering expense on tobacco?
Answer: Extension experts say
that high topping, or simply pinch
ing out the bud of the tobacco
plant and leaving a number of
leaves at the top of the plant
as an insurance factor against sec
ond growth late in the season, re
duces the number of suckers that
appear and hence the expense of
suckering. Many growers lose a
large portion of their profits each
season by not keeping their tobacco
suckered as closely as it should be,
with losses both in weight and in
quality. Under average conditions
it should be suckered once a week
and more often during wet weather.
Question: How can I control ants
around my baby chicks and turkey
poults?
Answer: Entomologist J. Myron
Maxwell of the extension service,
suggests the use of carbon bisul
phide at the rate of 2 tablespoon
fuls to the ant hill. Pour the
material into the hill and close the
entrance with mud. Some ant
baits, which are prepared with
sweet material, may also be effec
tive in killing out the ants in the
area.
Announce Home
Club Schedule For
Two Weeks Of July
The following schedule of meet
ings of the Haywood county home
demonstration clubs for the first
two weeks in July have been an
nounced by Miss Mary Margaret
Smith, county home agent:
The Dell wood Club will meet
with Mrs. Frank Henry at 2 o'clock
on Thursday, the first; the Jona
than Creek Club with Mis. G. V.
Howell at 2 o'clock on Friday, the
2nd; the Beaverdam Club with
Mrs. Frank Ensley at 2 o clock on
Tuesday, the Cth.
The Allen's Creek Club will
meet with Mrs. Hiram McCracken
at 2 o'clock on Wednesday after
noon, the 7th; the Fines Creek
Club will meet with Mrs. Cecil
Brown at 10:30 o'clock Thursday
morning, the 8th.
The Iron Duff Club will meet
with Mrs. J. S. Davis at 2 o'clock
on Friday, the IHh; the Morning
Star Club will meet on Monday,
the 12th, with the place of meet
ing and hour to be announced later.
The Francis Cove Club will meet
with Miss Marion Hoggs at 2
o'clock on Wednesday, the 14th;
the Maggie Club with Mrs. Jack
Campbell, at 2 o'clock on Thurs
day, the l.Mh; the Hyder Moun
tain Club with Mrs. KesMe Robin
son at 2 o'clock on Friday, the
ICth.
Morris says that knives of stain
less steel should be used and that
utensils of copper, brass, and iron
should be avoided.
The conservationist advises that
one to two gallons of tomatoes
should be handled at the time and
that there should be no delay in
any step of the canning program.
The tomatoes should be precooked
at about 170 to 180 degrees Fahr
enheit or, if no thermometer is
available, let the tomatoes simmer
until softened. They should not be
boiled.
According to Mrs. Morris, the
softened, hot tomatoes should be
put through a fine sieve at once.
A bowl or cone type sieve is recom.
mended because it allows the least
amount of air to be incorporated
in the pulp. If the tomato juica
is to be given to an infant or an
invalid, salt should be omitted.
Otherwise, one-half to one tea
spoon of salt may be added to
each quart.
If tin cans are used, Mrs. Morria
advises that the juice should be
heated to 180 to 190 degrees, pour
ed into the cans, sealed, and allow
ed to process for 5 minutes. So
head space should be left in either
the glass or tin container.
Question: How can I control
worms on my cabbage?
Answer: Extension entomologists
at State College say that the best
method of control is a dust mix
ture of one part of Paris Green
and nine parts of hydrated lime.
The mixture should be dusted on
the plants when there is a small
amount of dew on them. The ma
terial is poisonous so, in cutting the
cabbage heads, the outer leaves of
the head should be removed. These
leaves fit closely around the head
and their removal takes care of all
the poisonous residues left on th
plant.
Tomato Juice Good
Source Of Vitamins
Tomato juice is a healthful
drink and, it' properly prepared, is
an excellent source of vitamins
"A" and "( ", Miys Mr. Cnrneliu
C. Morris, home economist, State
College.
She suggests the use of fully
ripe, firm tomatoes of a bright red
color, which have been washed well
and cut into small pieces, after
the removal of the core. To pre
serve the natural flavor and color
in the canned tomato juice, Mrs.
Woolens Should PAMial
Be Given Expert UCnirai
Care In Summer Cleaners
Every garment worth sav
ing is worth cleaning. Wool
ens should never be washed M&in StfMt
with soar and water, as it
often causes shrinkage and
the finish of the material
SEND YOUR CLOTHES Phone 113
TO US
Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y.
Tepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Asheville
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I call this a Statue of Liberty, too !
I
T'S a weird-looking contraption, I'll ad
mit. But when you think what aviation
gasoline and synthetic rubber mean right
now, it begins to look pretty wonderful!
"It's a plant for a new-type process for
making aviation gas and synthetic rubber
material from petroleum. It makes more gal
lons of better gas than any process ever did
before. It make6 both the gas and the
synthetic rubber material at once,
which is mighty important right now!
"It's a fluid catalytic cracking unit. Our
Esso research workers who developed it call
it a 'cat cracker.' But we did that long before
the war, back in the 1930's and that's why I
call it a statue of liberty.
"It's a working monument to the power of
American freedom and progress.
"It's another of those keys to vital war
production that got discovered in the
regular peacetime hunt for better goods
for America."
Where America gets the icorlcTi
foremost petroleum research
THE FIRST "E" AWARDED TO PETROLEUM RESEARCH WORKERS
STANDARD OIL
COMPANY
OF NEW JERSEY