Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 22, 1943, edition 1 / Page 10
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GREETINGS TO THE MEN IN SERVICE GREETINGS TO THEJHEX L SEJ THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Dr. and Mrs. Stringfield Have Four Sons In Service In World War I Pfc. Gerald Gaddis In North Africa J!ePh How "v, ill, I. c . I p5 ' 4 f. l: 1' i 3 ' I 1 -I J f 1 ' '1 1 , i - Jti ' i ' 1 i Pi t ? I- I f f - If ! ( . . 1 1 I 1, . . - ! I : i .r. -k h1 Int. ? V Dr. and Mrs S. L. Stringfteld. have four sons in the service as follows (left to right): Lt. Thomas Stringfield, Medical Corps U S. Navy, is stationed at Camp LeJune, New River. He volunteered in the service and was called to active duty in April of this year and was inducted at Raleigh. From Raleigh he was sent to the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Fla., and from there to his present post Prior to volunteering he had served with the American Red Cross under the Bri.i h Ministery for Health for a year at Botiey's Park War Hospital in Surrey, England. Lt. Stringfield is a graduate of the 1 cal high school, Wofford College and studied two years at the Uni rorsity of North Carolina and holds an M. D. from the Medical College of South Carolina. Prior to his service in the Navy and in England he practiced in Waynesville. 3 Lt. Samuel Lanier Stringfield, Jr., Army Air Corps, was recently graduated from Selman Field, Monroe, La., as a navigator He volunteered ,n March, 1942 and was inducted at Fort Jackson. From Jackson he was sent to San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center" and from there to Selman Field At the time he entered the service he was employed by the U. S. Engineers at Sumter S C He is a graduate of the local high school and attended the University of Nor h ( urn: n for three years ' ' Private First Class William Williams Stringfield, U. S.Ai,- Cors. i stationed at Lowery Field, Denver, Colo. He volunteered while a student at the University of North Carolina and was inducted a For, i.Vagg in January, 1942. He first served in the armored divi sion at Fort Knox and was transferred to the air corps and sent to Mitchell Field. N. Y. Since that date he has been stationed at Keesler Field, Miss., Fort Myers, Fla., Nashville, Tenn., Buckley Field. Selman Field, La. He is- a graduate d Darlington Preparatory School and studied two and one half years at the N C University u aim.-.-, ixuik 01 1 1 ng i ieui, voiurneer in tne I. . IS. -Navy, is attending the Naval R. O. T. C. """. e.i in .-e,m',rm i . i:m, aim was inducted at l hapel Hill, while attending the Univer; and oi uarlington .Ncnool, ot Home, (Ja. -tudent training courses at Chapel Hill. ity. He is a graduate of the local school Pvt. Charles L. Wells Here On Leave Recently December 22, 1942, and was in ducted at Camp Croft. From Croft he was transferred to Miami Beach and then to his present post of duty. He was educated in the Way service ! nesville high school and was em ployed by a rooffmg division at Buffalo, N. Y., when he entered the service. Seaman Lloyd Ke:-ver Now Serving at Sea. Private Charles L. Wells, son of Mr. and .Mrs. T. F. Wells, of Can ton, whose present station is un known, has been in the since December 15, 1942. He was inducted at Fort Jackson and from there was sent' to Fort Eustis, Va., for his basic training. From Eustis, Va., he was sent to Shenango, Pa., and then to his present post of duty. Pvt. Wells was educated in the Seaman Second Class James Bethel hiph school. Ho recentlv Franklin Albright, son of Mr. and -5 . . . . . . ' TT..1. AIL..' Li 1 spent a lo-day furlough here with Seaman James F. Albright In Newport, R. I. his parents and his wife, the for mer .Miss Margaret McConibs. Pvt. John Lewis Moody Stationed At Fort Brap Private John Lewis Moody, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Moody, of Dellwood, who is serving in the air corps, is now stationed at and at th Pope Field Air Base, Fort Bragg. J employe d by : He has been in the service since 1 ducts Company Mrs. rrank Albright, is now at tending the U. S. Signal School at Newport, R. I. He volunteered in the service on March 11, of this year and was inducted at Camp Croft. From Croft he was sen to Bain brige, Md., for his boot training and from there to his present post. He is a graduate of the local high school in the class of 1942 time he volunteered was Pet Dairy Pro- t In Pacific Area Sail On, Sail On, You Brave From Haywood County YOU ARE DOING A GRAND JOB The folks back home are mighty proud of the job you men are doing in putting the enemy in their place. Keep up the good work, and those of us on the home front will continue to meet our quotas, and do every thing that we are asked to do. IN SERVICE HAROLD MASSIE Massie Furniture Company PHONE 33 MAIN STREET Seaman second class Lloyd Keever, of Clyde, ward of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Allen, who volunteered in the Navy in Sept., 1942 and was inducted in Asheville, is now at sea. He took his training at the Norfolk Naval Training school and at the DE school. At the time he entered the service he was a student in school. He has made his home with Mr. and Mrs. Allen at Clyde, route 1, for the past ten years. Pfc. John Perry Gaddis Serving Overseas Private First Class John Perry Gaddis, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Gaddis, of Waynesville, is now with the aimed forces overseas. He was inducted in the service in March of 1942 at Fort Bragg. From Fort Bragg he was sent to Camp Claiborne, and then back to Bragg. Pfc. Gaddis was educated in the Waynesville high school and prior to entering the service was em ployed as a painter. He has two brothers in the service. ... x x Pfc. Clarence G. Caldwell Stationed In Kentucky Private First Class Clarence Gilmer Caldwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Caldwell, of Waynes ville, route 2, is stationed at Camp Breckenridge, Ky. He entered the service on November 2, 1942, and was inducted at Fort Dix, N. J. Following his induction Pfc. Caldwell was transferred to his present post of duty. On April 12, 1943, he spent a ten-day fur lough at home. Pfc. Caldwell attended the Way nesville high school and prior to entering the service was employ ed by the Delaval Turbine Com pany as a machinist. Captain Jules C. Welch, son of Mrs. J. C. Welch, and the late Mr. Welch, who is with the Medi cal Corps, somewhere in the South Pacific. Captain Welch, who was inducted in San Francisco, where he was practicing his profession entered the service early in 1942. He as connected with the Chil dren's Hospital in San Francisco where he had been located for the past several years. He was educated at Columbia .Militarv Institute, University of North Carolina, Leland Stanford University of California, where he took his degree in medicine. He served his internship at Joh Hopkins, Baltimore. He has been overseas since last October. Lt. Samuel Joseph Sloan Stationed In Texas Lt. Samuel Joseph Sloan, son of I Hugh J. Sloan and the late Linda Stringfield Sloan, who volunteered in the army in July, 1940, is now stationed at Camp Howze, Tex, He was a member of the National Guard that left here in Sept., 1940. He was first stationed at Fort Jackson, and from there was sent to Officers Candidate School at Fort Benning. After receiving his commission he was sent to his present post. Lt. Sloan was ed ucated in the local schools and at the University system of Georgia at Douglas and at Emory College, in Oxford. Prior to entering the service he was employed by the Town of Waynesville as superin tendent of the water department. Pvt. John C. Summerrow Now At Camp Swift Private John Calvin Summerrow, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Summer- row, of Hazelwood, who volun teered in service on February 12, of this year is stationed at Camp Swift, Texas. He was inducted at Fort Bragg and from there sent to present post. He was educated in local schools and at time entered army employed by Home security Life Insurance Com pany. ferred to Norfolk for basic train ing. He was at Pearl Harbor when the Japs made their attack and has been on combat duty for some time in the Pacific area. He graduated from the local high school and was sports editor for The Waynesville Mountaineer for several months. Gordon E. Hendricks Was At Pearl Harbor Yeoman First Class. Gordon El- bert Hendricks, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hendricks, of Way nesville, rout l, is servinn some where in South Pacific. .He volun teered on Feb. 9, 1937 and was in ducted at Richmond and was trans- For You To Feci Well 24 hours every day, 7 daya every week, never stopping, the kidneya filter waste matter from the blood. If more people Were aware of how the kidneys must constantly remove sur plus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stay in the blood without injnry to health, there would be better understanding of vhy the whole system is upset when kidneys fail to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina tion sometimes warns that something is wrong. You may suffer nagging back ache, headaches, dizziness, rheumatic pains, getting up at nights, swelling. Why not try Doa'$ Pilhl You will be using a medicine recommended the country over. Doan'i stimulate the func tion of the kidneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood. They contain nothing harmful. Get Doan'i today. Use with confidence. At all drug stores- lr lid' Private J dis, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Gaddis, of Waynesville, is now sta tioned in North Africa. He vol unteered on November 5, 1940, and was i -ducted at Fort Benning. From Benning he was transferred to Fort Bragg. Pfc. Gaddis was educated in the Waynesville high school and prior to his entering the service was em ployed as a truck drived by Al bert Bros. He has two brothers in the service. J. H. w Ht Major George F. Plott, who served as a First Lieut, in World War 1, and is with the army air corps, is stationed at Dyersburg, Tenn. Major Plott entered the National Guard in 1904, and during the first World War served over seas 11 months. He volunteered in 1940 and left here in command of Company "H" National Guard. He was stationed first at Fort Jackson, then sent to Fort Bragg and back to Jackson. In January, 1941, he was sent to Washington, D. C., and transferred to the army air corps. Since then he has been stationed at Patterson Field, and Springfield, 111, and from the lat ter he was sent to his present post. He was engaged in farming nrior to entering the service. September 15, 1940, and was in ducted at Fort Jackson. From Jackson he was transfer red to Camp Blanding, Fla., and from the latter to his present post. Cpl. Williams was educated in the Sylva high school. Prior to his entering the service he was employed as a truck driver by Hyatt and Company. U. S. Army Mr,Jica,' Waynesvil!,.. tr in Richmond. V the Denta! s -College of y Pvt. Y.,v " Schools. ; j,, Hill College aV at Wake Fo; Deen a studen; Medical colL frf r" , Upon completion "f will be coninii..;,,K lieutenant m ical Corps. tit r U. 51, d 10 Check Liquid for Malarias,, Cpl. Harold B. Massie Serving In California Corporal Harold B. Massie. son of Mrs. T. N. Massie, Waynes ville, is now stationed at the Oak land Airport in Oakland, Calif. He volunteered and was inducted in the service on April 20, 1143, at Camp Croft. From Camp Croft he was sent to Miami Beach and from the air port there to Oakland, Calif., where he is attending a school of aero nautics for 18 weeks. Cpl. Massie was educated in the Waynesville township high school and was a member of the firm of the Massie Furniture Company at the time he was inducted.. Cpl. Wiley Williams Stationed In Tennessee Corporal Wiley Williams, son of Lewis Williams, of Waynesville is now stationed in Nashville, Te'nn. He volunteered in the service on T.T- We're Still Pulling For You, Haywood Warriors! Tl 1 a ? . me mie reports oi your work in squshing the Aj tnrills us every day. Keep up the good work. We Ain't Complaining ROY'S ROY MOSEMAN Lady Fayre Beauty Shop Phone 113 SERVE - Nutritious Meals From Our Modei Store and the His Quality F o o d s t Handle . . . Visit Our Grade 'A Market FOR MEATS KEEP FIT AND KEEP PRODUCING FOR OUR Brave Haywood Men In the Service "To Whom We Pay Highest Tribute IN SERVICE BOBBY COIN FREDERICK NICHOLS NED GLAVICH KENNETH RICHARD BOONE EDWARD HANEY CORDELL CHAMBERS CLEMENT GIVE THEM THE BEST WE LL TAKE WHAT'S LEFt THE FOOD STORE LEON HENRY, Manager 1 1
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 22, 1943, edition 1
10
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