Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 11, 1945, edition 1 / Page 6
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER U( THE WAYNESYIIXE MOUNTAINEER PAGE SIX' (First Section)' y " f ' - ' f Mi ;.r. ;- f n i ? ! " 4 .? i i. r 1 ; f1 . i1 1 , i ;jl t t 1- I " 3 4 , ' i; . I i 1 -i "i til r , . 'I ft I h f, ! . 1 mi 9' 11 1 n - f ' .il 1 v - 1 3f 1 1 3' ' ( t i 1 1 ! 1 L I if ;1 11 Ml i-1 t." j 'i r. . u i J i 4 ill K t i 'Alt:-; i , ' 'if- i 1 k.'f, '''.lit 1 Don't Coiint On New Tires SAVE YOUR TIRE BY i Materials and Workmanship Guaranieecl EXTRA TRACTION . . . AND LOMJKK MII.KA(JE Onlv C.r.uW "A" KuWkt I skI Vaynesvillc mill Service 0 "i1" W ct lire Main Street Wavnesville LA WALNUT S $3.75 Per Hundred See FARMERS EXCHANGE WALTER KETNER. Manager Phone 1.!0-.M East Wavnesville The Veterans' Guide CAPTAIN JOHN F. WILLIAMS Raines Brothers Serve In Pacific County Service Officer Digests of House Document No. GH2- 78th . Congress 2nd Session. The purpose of this column is to give the veterans a correct picture of the rights and benefits available to them and their dependents. Without attempting to answer all the fin st ions anvone could ask. it I ciinnlv eivin; Hie hifh sndfs ;inrl tells them where the answers can he found. Education Educational aid for veterans is available from the Veterans' Ad ministration provided: ill you were discharged under conditions other than dishonorable; '2l you were not over 25 at the time you entered service, or can demonstrate that your service; or if you desire a terrupted or interfered with by your service; or if you desire a refresher or retraining eo use; i'i you served 90 days or more inot counting the time in Army Special ized Training Program or Navy College Training Program, which course was a continuation of a civilian course and which was pur sued to completion, or as a Cadet or Midshipman in a Service Acad emy i or were discharged or re leased from service because of an actual service-incurred injury or disability; and i4) you start such education not later than two years after discharge or end of war 'whichever date is lateri. Length of training: One year (or ils equivalent in part-lime study. If you complete these courses i ex cept refresher or retraining coursesi satisfactorily, you will be entitled to additional education or training not to exceed the length of lime you spent in active service alter September lfi, 1940. and be fore the end of the present war inot including ASTP or Navy Col lege program). No course of educa tion or training shall exceed four years. Types of courses: You may select your own course at any educational or training institution which ac cepts you as qualified to undertake them, provided the institution is on the list approved by the Veterans' Administration. Types of educational institution: Public or private, elementary, or secondary and other schools fur nishing education for adults; busi ness schools and colleges; scientific and technical institutions: colleges, vocational schools, junior colleges, teachers' colleges, normal schools, professional schools, universities, and other educational and training institutions, including industrial establishments providing appren tice or other training on the job. Kxpenses paid: The Veterans' Administration will pay to the edu cational or training institution the customary cost of tuition, and such laboratory, library and similar pay ments as are customarily charged, and may pay for books, supplies, equipment and such other neces sary expenses (exclusive of board, lodging, other living exepnses and travel) as are required. Such pay ments shall not exceed $500 for an ordinary school year. Living allowance: The Veterans' Administration will also provide subsistence allowance of $50.00 a month if you have no dependents. $75 if you have. (This may be re duced, however, if you attend on a part-time basis or receive compen sation for work done as part of your training). You may also want to apply for school or college credit for what you learned in the service or a record of it to show your prospec tive employer. For further information apply any facility of the Veterans' Ad ministration, court house. Let's tear your electric bill to pieces Go ahead, lady tear your electric bill apart and see what it's all about. This little piece lights all your lamps. This one plays your radios. This cools and keeps your food. This washes your clothes. This takes care of the cooking and ironing and cleaning. And so on. That's a lot of different jobs to be covered by one small bill. And hold on! You've paid for more than just electric-' ity. About 25c of every dollar you pay for electric service goes in turn for taxes which benefit your com munity and help pay for the war. Taxes UP. . . General cost of living UP. . . . You'd think the cost of electric service would be up, too. But it isn't. It has even come down a little since the war began, t Actually The average family gets about twice as much elec-. . tricity for its money today as it did fifteen years ago! , . This welcome fact comes from the careful planning and ( progressive spirit of America's fcusness-managed, self-, supporting electric companies. ( Hear Nealson In The "Electric Hour" With Robert Armdruster's j Orchestra, Every Sunday, 4:30 P. M. EST, CBS Network Sgt. William Hill Honorably Discharged Sgt. William J. Hill, of Waynes ville. has recently been honorably discharged from the U. S. armed forces at Bear Field, Fort Wayne, Ind., at the First Troop Carrier Command base under the provi sions of the army point system. At the time of his entry in the service Sgt. Hill, who is gradu ate of the Waynesville Township high school, was employed at the R. N. Barber Orchards. He has a brother, Private Noel Hill, who is serving in the U. S. army. The Jap die-hards aren't satisfi ed, but they should be patient. They are the ones who will die hard at the end of a rope. BOWEL CLEANING POWER OF INNER-AID MEDICINE i -fv r j$$w 1 1 -'ymm 2r -7) " ) r2 Mrs. .Vvsen quills has two sons now serving in the Pacific theater. Albert Raines, Seaman first class, and Gordon C. Raines, seaman second class. Seaman Albert Raines witnessed the entrance of the Fourth Fleet into Japan's Ominale Hay on the tip of Northern Honshu, while serving aboard the destroyer USS McUermut. His ship, christened by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson in 1943, and chalked up her first battle star for taking part in the raids on the Patau Islands and Wolei. Following the initial invasion of l.eyte, the MeDermut took part in the great naval battle of Suringo Strait in Philippine waters, helping sink one battleship and one (lest rover. Seaman Gordon Haines, who entered the service in February of this year is en route to Japan. He took his boot training at Camp Perry, Va., and from there was sent to Shoemaker, later San Francisco and then he was assigned to his present mission. He was formerly employed in a shipbuilding plant. Discharged Vets May Get Income Tax Reduction WASHINGTON There is a pos- oiA c.I's will have a sizeable income tax reduc tion for their first year of civilian life. At least, that is the idea of the chairman of the tax-writing senate finance' committee, Walter George. Under bis plan veterans will have only the smallest of payments to consider, and some will not have to file reports at all. The senator's program vould in clude a continuance of ae $1,500 exemption allowed all r.en in uni form under the present law, and a married man with two children would have a total exemption of $3,500 a year. Two other clauses propose extra consideration for overseas service, based upon the length of time spent abroad. Blackheads, Too, Went Fast . iM23T5s V.-b. it in tnn lli'-r,- in a w;i(f. - I' ir;ul'-s, itu-.li, ..t',1 lHin.,1 railed ovrnii;!,t ;til .1, !h 10 lou-..-ti jikI n-rnove iikIv l,h,i Uif.iU. I 1 101- w l.u til.m 11 hiiii ,tr dnx tioiiH arnl .1 KlMsFM upon rtlMllti W, I,' UHl.lilllwl, T..1 I ! I . "I !l''U tt""f Iciunil Ll.i ii , rni.l, h ; ,id 1 ,1 j. k I . I i- ,,.-arnl. I uarts .j,(l,.ihM,l ally in .11 " Kleerei und 1.1,111 t ii, v ,ir nu Imif-r i nil,., r ( d nd tf now ',.llJ(.y u:. ll"-ir . U.ir .oiiH'l' 1101, , V Kleem. II uiif ai,.lti ;-lion dtx not . ,n t.' t double juur diom y bjtk. Auk lui Kleerei lod.o . sine. Smith's Cut-Kate limit Store Expert Watch Repairy One To Two Weeks Service ALL WORK GUARANTEED! RELIABLE JEWELER Expert Garage Service I NORMAN BROTHE At HAZELWOOD GARAO ON MAIN HIGHWAY Also Dependable TAXI SERVICE Phone 1 7 1 - J Buy Victory Bonds - And Hold T One man recently took INNER- AID three days and said afterward that he never would have believed his body contained so much filthy substance. He says his stomach, intestines, bowels and whole sys tem were so thoroughly cleansed that his constant headaches came to an end, several pimply skin eruptions on his face dried up overnight, and even the rheumatic pains in his knee disappeared. At present he is an altogether differ ent man, feeling fine in every way. INNER-AID contains 12 Great Herbs; they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggish liver and kidneys. Miserable peo ple soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering! Get INNER AID. Sold by all Drug Stores here in Haywood County. v I mnioirgeinicy From Our Millions Still in Service Y ES, the war is over . . . but not the work of several million G. I.'s! Ask any soldier what "Occupation Duty" means and he'll tell you it may be the most important job in the army right now, but one of the drear iest ones. He'll tell you the novelty wears off soon, being in a strange country among strange people. That the Main Drag in Tokyo or Berlin can't compare with Main Street in Topeka or Boston. There are millions of boys thous ands of miles from home who'd give song, hear American jokes, or talk to song, hear American jokes or talk to an American girl again. That's why the U. S. O. cannot and must not quit. Your dollars must keep it going. For if ever those boys needed a lift and a laugh, they need it now. The need is so urgent that General Eisenhower asked U. S. O. Camp Shows to quadruple its activities after V-E Day to take care of the boys in Europe. And similar entertainment plans have been made for our forces in Japan and throughout the lonely Pacific outposts. But that's not all . . . U. S. O. Camp Shows also entertain the troops in transit ... at debarkation and separation centers. U. S. O. Clubs and lounges in the States, Alaska, Hawaii, the Philippines, and many other bases, give the boys "a home away from home." Some 500 U. S. 0. Clubs are located near military hos pitals . . . and special Camp Shows tour the wards ... to keep the wounded on the sunny side. Yes, millions still in service are de pending on YOU for a bit of cheer. For a large part of every dollar you give to your local Community Campaign goes to support the U S O. The need is greater than ever. So try to give more than ever, won't you? Show the boys you haven't forgotten them! Give Generously in Victory ... to Your United War Fund Representing the National War Fund Haywood County's Quota is $11,500
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1945, edition 1
6
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