. J1I'E 14. 1945 (n Day Nearcr Victory) THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Section On-Page 7 1iry Hunting Our ;porled incomes Men koines u. icans. ,gton ijn arni Wml , , Truman and Lf the re- i:,llS M ,, .-x-S.TVIl-l- Treasury Mrt!i-n- "tW h.. ...rsiJont " ...i ...rlallllV k '"... ,h,. black ,i nini'i i in a .j.. arnll'll pwwll. s-ir, ili- tavily ' mp"''iI;,)""vjI ' .... iii i inn 111 Jl H. ""v. fur-we ,'favuml i-lass when lord's, .inn I pro (siieai"1' fcni1"" SUllllMI jihI sakl civil rccniitinti aR- Ilrrs I" army tlis- lisi cx-liHlilinK (I at To f1' an(i 'nylvin8 millions of dollars in Morgenthau, Mr. Truman said, had told him of "truly shocking cases." It was, the president said in com ment outside his forma! statement, a terrific crime for people to hoard money and live on black market products while sons of other per sons were being killed, "I anf entirely in sympathy." he added in the statement. '"with the treasury's plan to enlarge the bu reau of internal revenue forces to whatever extent is required to in sure full compliance with the law." "It will be a good business for the government because every dol lar we spend in collection and en forcement will produce $1111 or more in tax revenue," he said "The American people under stand that sacrifices are necessary They know that the war is still far from being over. The one thiiifj that might break down their will to keep on to complete viclnry would be a feeling that a few were profiting from the sacrifices of Uie many. We must see that there is no justification for any such feel ing, and that is just what we arc going to do." Morgenthau explained that the servicemen he hopes to recruit will be those discharged under the point release program. As a result of the intensified en forcement drive started several months ago, he told the committee, "we are finding 'pay dirt' 'in trans actions involving food, liquor, auto mobiles, furs, jewelry, gambling and cabarets, just to mention a few Many cases combine black market operations with a criminal conceal nient of income." The secretary asked for $1(1. 5(10. 000 to go forward at once with a program to recruit 5,000 investiga tors, and added he probably would ask for an additional $20 000 000 later. Morgenthau gave the committee la statement citing these i-;i. typical of what his agents have found: California investigation indicat ing concealment of between $10, 000,000 and $12,000,000 taxable in come in certain raisin operations in which food intended for the armed forces was diverted to wine ries." The investigation, he said "indicates a widespread conspiracy involving the use of large amounts of currency and fictitious names " A New York case in which a pro serving company obtained approxi mately 30,000.000 pounds of sugar for the avowed purpose of making jams and jellies for tluvnavy. The secretary said thai so far as can lie learned "not one pound" was used for those purposes and most of it was diverted to beverage concerns. A liquor black market whose op erations used large denominations of currency to conceal their acti vities, with "side money" payments of nearly $2,000,000 representing above-ceiling prices In one ins tance, the secretary said .$00,000 M meanwhile asked the j, uiimmttee to give tu finance the op ,pmal squads already ufgrnthau said, have un- siluation uiai nus profoundly." He jooir 3 ')" cases "in- Lstaiilial tax evasion investigation, in autn- Ift than 7.IMKI leans jr when manpower is They included tin class 1-C 1 inducted Buchanan. Thomas K ell. Luke Joseph L. Only Seventeen ! Men Reclassified During Past Week,; Iteelassilieations during the past : week by the loeal draft board dropp-.'d to only seventeen, accord ing to information fioin the clerk of the board 1 following in ': Klmcr J. William It. Taylor. IHirney. Hilly J. How Kie. John F. Cillett. Leopard, Kolert N Dhehan. Mollis It. Hampton. Theo dore T. Muse. Jr . Richard 11 Franklin, ti nil Willi.- L. Uieks. I'laced in class 2-V was Klbert T. t'onard. Continued in elass 2-A was Jesse K. Sutton Continued in class 1!-C were Wil liam Hubert (uitii and Woodrow VV Messer. 3tali College Hints Use sugar sparingly. Instead of cake Irostings and fillings, which call foi- considerable sugar, spread warm cake with marmalade, jam or preserves. Serve jelly rolls, custard -filled rolls. or Boston cream cake instead of frosted cake Sheet cakes require only half as much I rusting as layer cakes. cake with chopped rich in natural sugar. nuts, and moistened or corn sirup. Make dried fruit into fruit fillings for pies, turn- U Bulging Hass Ln cited eases of bags tS money, and of kntions in uquoi . black sugar ill p;v USH DAHKINIH pes and liruws bewitch- and alluring . . . even (Ding, crying or perspir irk Eyes". This indel- ;er nerr runs, smarts One application lasts i . . . thus ending daily ip but her. CAUTION: 'iireeted on 1 lie label. t a package id "Dark- t SIM Plus Tax IS DltK. SKUtK 1 KEEP PIGS GAINING WITH THIS FEED Fend LIFE GUARD Pig & Sow Ration tc sows und pigs. Ke.p towl milking aud healthy whil. pigs ar luckling. Pigs will wtarl eat ing UFE CUAHU at t.n days, in a creep. You puck them t market quickly by UeUitig giain ut this early age. M P., 4 Sow is a real double our. wnn proteias. vitamins. JJ i .the, lri.ni. i COfc, bolanc. (CfV " ' pmduc. kig. k.al1k, 7k rr. I - r"g grawrag lar YATT & CO. Fill layer dried fruit, mixed with with honey steamed whips, i overs and tarts. Instead of sugar in the center of baked apples or pears, (ill with raisins and corn sirup or honey Serve fresh fruits often as des surt. FYuit salad may take the place of a sweet dessert. And add a bit id salt to 1 1 list ings pie fillings and puddings to accentuate the sweetness. Less sugar is needed to sweeten cooked fruit if sugar is addetl after instead of before cooking Use honey or maple sirup in stead of sugar to glae sweel notaloes or baked ham: to sweet en baked or soft custard: and with nuts to make sauce for ice cream. Cornstarch or tapioca cream pud ding may be made with half the usual measure of sugar if a table spoon or sirup is put in the bottom ol each serving dish before filling with pudding Jar rings for home canning this vear will have better sealing final ity and less tendency to impart olT-llavors to food. However, home canncrs are advised to continue last year's recommended practice of boiling rings 10 minutes in one quart of water containing one ta blespoon of soda for each doen Tings and then water. rinsing in boiling was deposited in a New York bank lor transfer to a men in a South western state, and of the total, fifty $1,000 bills were identified as having been issued at Richmond a This Morgenthau said, indi cated "extensive operations of the syndicate in Virginia " An agent ul the same syndicate was reported lo have deposited nearly $:il)0.(IOO n $f)0 and $100 bills. In another case a liquor syndi cate collector "traveled with a glad done bag completely filled with large denomination bills" and when lie received another $12,000 pay ment "his bag was so full that be bad extreme difficulty in si titling I he additional, money inside " a case against "a midwestern war'conttacting concern." the sec retary told the committee, is ex pected to net almost $5,000,000 in taxes, interest and penalties plus prosecutions. The secretary cited as "sympto matic" the case of a large South ern automobile dealer alleged to have omitted more than $100,000 from his tax returns through an elaborate system of records. ( filler cases he mentioned in passing involved a merchant in a small Pennsylvania town and black market meals sales in the Wash ington area. Have Limited Quantity C " 3D No Ration Certificate Required msTBir elaffieiry(Di NAZI U-BOAT FOUND INTACT IN PEN -i L4fH0JJ V. A. Mr ,i?-t-J iy i , FA fc? -f t $ Li ! x i v ?, hXA 1 I Waynesville's Beautiful, New Residential Seciion Absolutely Restricted a Will Be Offered For Sale Soon Property Overlooks Waynesville- High Elevation Few Feet Off Main Street- Good Street- Ample Shade Trees Near School r .. ft- 5-.. UNDAMAGED BY THE SURRENDERING NAZIS and taken with others In the giant submarine pens at St. Nazaire last German-occupied city in France to be yielded by the enemy this U-boat awaits its inglorious end in Navy study rooms and then the junk pile. ( Iiitcrnatiunul I D-DAY A MAP TO STIR MEMORIES This Is Part of Lovely n n n n n MS H3 GREAT BRITAIN Or , L J I mn Kim oui i - . r- 0 tilOIUM iv It ' H I n . IS NETH I SPAIN ON THE FIRST ANNIVERSARY OF D-DAY, thousands ot men of th U. S. Ut Army are either on home soil or headed this way. For them and for those wJio followed the invasion trail to the Rhine the above map briefly tells the story of what happened from D-Uay on. On June G the Allies landed on Cherbourg peninsula (1). By Aug. 6, they had pushed into the Brittany Peninsula (2). Paris was liberated (3). and then Brus sels and Luxembourg (4). The "Battle of the liulo" (5) proved to be th last important Nazi wallop west of the Rhine. (JnternalioTial) THE ANSWER , IS Ved! Yes, sir! Conditions arc improving! Now, we have more functionul parts and can still sup ply many non-lunctionui parts you may need. ARE FORD PARTS AVAILABLE? Because of the all-out war production at the Ford plants, we have iu some instances been limited in supplying parts promptly. But mora Genuine Ford Fails are avail able now. GOOD NEWS W are maintaining a bal anced lot k of GenuiiJ Kurd Keplfttement Pyrt tu ervn your car qui kly uud krp it on tl. job. BETTER SERVICE Our ttained mH-hanici, tpn-ial tcola, plut Oanuin Ford fartt, mrm your aiauranca of acrvic autivf ttctioa. So, brion your car "back boaa" to ua . . . lat ul b)p ywu kt it IT PAYS TO INSIST ON DMIS-LINER MOTOR SALES .SALES-SERVICE I'hone f2 Asheville Hoad Drive Out Today and Look This Property Over For Details or Appointment To. Visit Property, See . . . HENRY GADDY Agent BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS JU On Famous Makes Of MATRES and SPKDW(G!S Sizes I" Hiili- l lni'i' fn:u(ris .mil I nil Si.r featuring . . . SIMMONS lk';iul.v-Kest Itftx Springs LOGAN i Springs and MaKrosscs, KINGS DOWN Mitllressos. SEALY Tufted and Tuft less Mattresses. Other Mattress SPECIALS 50 M. Cotton $13.95 SO M. Felt Plate .. $16.95 100' All Felt From $19.75 MASSIE FURNITURE COMPANY I Phone .11 Main Street ED SIMS, Owner Waynesville BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS I