THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER FAGfc. TWO (First Section) B. F. Nesbitt Talks At USDA Council Monday B. F. Nesbit, vocational agricul tural teacher of Crabtroe school was in charge of the program at the meeting held on Monday night of the Haywood County USl Council which was held in the county (arm agent's office. Mr. Nesbitt told I lie p.roup of the part the vocational agricultural department in the count.', was play ing in the training of veterans under the G. 1. Bill of Kighls. It was brought out that inaii veter ans are making application for .ig liculture training under the (. I. Hill of Hights. Keports were made on I he work which has been done by dilfereul cuininitlees on the product ion ol more food and saving of food and fats. Keports showed that much pi ogress has been made, however, a follow-up program will be in augurated in the county to further assist the people in doing their part in teeding the starving, people of the war torn countries. Announcement was lu.icle 1 ti.it Dr. C. N. Sisk, county health of ficer will have charge of I he pio gram tor the month of June. H. M. Stamey Aids Hereford Breeders In Planning Sale H. M. Stanley, animal husbandry extension specialist from Sl.de Col lege, Raleigh, was in the counts during the week helping the llav wood County Hereford lireeders and the county farm agent to ''elect cattle for the Haywood Counts Hereford Breeders sale to be held this fall. Tentative plans now are to hold the sale on October 9. This sale is expected to be an even larger sale than those held in the past. Some outstanding cattle are hemp consigned from this county and from neighboring states. SQUARES HIS CONSCIENCE CENTRALIA, Wash Centralia's city commissioners received a $l.ri check from a former resident for light pole insulators he said he broke 25 years ago. Tho port of New Orleans is t lu largest single activity of the State of Louisiana, and its facilities aie valued at approximated $:ill,0(HI -000 4-H Club Members And Their Pigs f4 3,u v; I Wit t.t. j j flrf'Ui.'I'Jait hA The II. 1'lg Show of the (I place in piellire i seeond pi of lirsl ! extreme fourth pi ( 'oi'pellill 4 . vk'-J2m rj"8't Xr v1" in llM I h Mil are. ,l:,( e. . L,!ll od 4-11 club members won prizes in the recent district sheville. Shown here, left to right, are Hetty .loe Gorrell, 4-11 club, winner of third place in the county, and second district on her record hook. Just barely shown in the ihlnil I'crgiisori. of the fines Crick 4-11 club, winner of The boy w ith his hand on his pig is Howard I'less, winner . He is from the Bethel 4-11 club, and the hoy on the s lieu Pills, also of the Bethel 4 II ( lub and winner of The members were accompanied to I he show by Wayne iiml v agent. Carrots in Dress-Up Dishes Just Received BOLL ROOFING 35-lh. 6;-,.b. ))-!. ORDER NOW By BETSY NEWMAN VEdETAdl.ES are the subjec of today's menu. There is a fairly good variety if them available at almost any time of the year, although, of course, the summer and fall season (jives i s the most. Combining two or more vege tables gives them a different flavor and appearance, even the familiar one of carrots and peas. 1 your family isn't too fond of carrots, tlu peas help to make them more palatable, and a carrot ring with the center filled w ith creamed peas or beans is attractive and tasty. Today's Menu Baked Potatoes Meat Hash Carrot Ring or Carrots and Celery Raw Giocns Salad - -Spong" or Spice Cake . with Whipped Cream Coffee Carrot Ring c. cricked, c bread mashed crumbs c. i iota Vi tsp. salt 1 c. milk l'i tbsp. butter 3 epsis or margarine 'j tsp. sugar Lr.nre carrots .nay be used in this dish, and about 6 will be seeded. Scrub and scrape, cut in strips lengthwise, cook in boiling water until tender, adding salt during the last part of cooking; drain and mash. Use one medium sized ring mold or 6 individual molds. Grease them and prepare a large pan that will iiolj them all for setting in o bake. Add bread crumbs to mashed carrots; beat eggs and blend them in; add milk, seasonings, butter, and turn into molds. Set the mold or molds in a pan containing 1 in. of '.nt water, and bake until firm, from 30 to 40 mins. at 360 deg. F. You may add nut meats to this mixture if you like, but they are not needed. The center of the ring may be filled with buttered or creamed green peas. CarroU and Celery 5 diied stalks medium of celery carrots Wash celery and dice. The large outer stalks may be used, leaving the more tender ones and the hearts for salads or eating raw. Cook in a little boiling, salted water until tender, drain. Wash, scrub and dice carrots and cook in a very little boiiing, salted water. Mix vegetables and season with salt, pepper and butter or margarine. SEEK TRIPOUTANIA PACT OIL 0PPLY CO. (T JrfSSfcyWr ALEXANDRIA ) V-4kms i 3E BIG FOUR REPRESENTATIVES, meeting In Parft, were reported !o have worked out a new formula for solving the controversial qiic-tion of Tripolitania (indicated in the map's black area). A compromise agree ment is said to caU for a joint trusteeship but with Italy included. Italy had previously demanded guardianship over her former African colony. Britain opposed both Italian and Russian trusteeship and a deadlock has beeD threatened. The U.S. has held out for joint control of the disputed area fur a period of ten years. (international) Just Arrived--- Beautiful Array of DINETTE SETS Two Distinct Types To Select From Sturdy Solid Porcelain Top Aluminum Tables Leather-cushioned chairs White, with red trim. Legs of table and chairs . . . Top of table is plastic seats and back of chairs of vari-colored plastic. Massie Furniture Co. -v ;? jt-ss ft .?' t,.. v Phone 33 Main Street J. L. Palmer, Retired Farmer, Buried Tuesday (ConUnucd From Page One) Anne Caldwell. Honorary pallbearers were mem bers of the Mi-r's liible class of i he Sunday school of the First Methodist church. Mr. Palmer was a native of the Cataloochee section of the county, lie was the son of George Lafay ette Palmer and Nancy Jane Cald well Palmer, and was widely con nected throughout Western North Carolina. He has been an out standing breeder of registered Hereford cattle and for years uiw of the leading farmers of Hay wood county. Surviving are the widow; one duughter, Margaret Palmer, stu dent at Brevard college; one son, Linton, at home; three sisters, Mrs. Laura Jarrett, of Lakeland, Fla., Miss Maria Palmer, of Waynesville, and Mrs. William Jus tice, of Elmer, N. J.; four brothel's. Will Palmer, John Paimer, Jim Palmer and Hardy Palmer, all of Has wood county and a lai'Ke num ber of nieces and nephews. The Garrett Fnueral Home was in charge of the arrangements. Anderson Says Food Situation Is Peace Threat MEMPHIS, Tenn. Agriculture Secretary Anderson says food is becoming an increasingly import ant world political factor as hun gry people in various nations hold their "It-el ions. America is not I'me-tened by food scarcities, Anderson .says, but this nation must do more than its share to help feed a hungry world if serious political repercus sions endangering Hie peace are to be avoided. The agriculture secretary says I here is no possibility that food rationing will be resumed in this country, at least not until after July 1st, when the first crucial period of world food shortages ends. After thai dale, he declares, America will have to re-examine the whole food .situation from every angle. Anderson criticizes rumors of resumption of food rationing. Such talk, lie says, only serves to bring abou! widespread hoarding of can ned foods. 'HAPPINESS CHARM' FOR BYRNES Apple-Moth Control Probably the one practice In apple orchard sanitation which helps most In codling moth control is removing rough bark by spraying. V( wf:" - J, Fu, and s.vrui SLIL i Ut"M!l y Cine. s's See Us For... (Licensed) ' Electrical Repairing of Allj PHONE 472 Howell Electric cl J. W. HOWKI.I., Owner 1 Shop and Office Under Ilcn.lerson ACCORWNO TO AN ANCIENT French legend, anyone who wears alilyoi fh vaJJeTaorav on May 1 will be assured of a year's lappinesst. And whVS KSjKuttook better than Secretary ot SJ Byrnea-what with the trial, of the Foreign Ministers Cm" he accepts the symbol from a pretty maid in Pans. anternottonoi Hoey Would Force Keeping Records Miners to Return For OPA Costly, To Their Jobs Says Hotel Man Theater Manager Offers Pass For Living Quarters WILSON A new plan to find a house to rent is being tried out here by Dawanna Stallings, mana ger of the Wilson Theater. Stall ings advertises on the screen be tween shows that he wants to rent a homo, offering a year's pass to I he person who finds him a place to live. Is it not strange that the very people who never do anything never have any time? Arkansas is the producing state States. largest bauxite in the United WASHINGTON "If I were pres ident, 1 would have taken charge of the coal strike situation and had the mines back at work by today at least," Senator Clyde I!. Hoey of Shelby said. North Carolina's junior senator said the termination of John L. Lewis' coal miners' slrike was a matter of "vital importance to the country as a whole, and il is some thing which is no longer just be tween the miners and the mine op erators. Something has got to he done to bring it to an end. If I were president, il would have been ended by now, because I would have taken charge of the mines." Hoey added that if the Senate had "passed the Case hill or some law similar in purpose, there would be ample law lo back up the Presi dent in anything he did, and this coal strike is proof I hat the Senate erred when it rejected the Case bill." Hoey said that although he is an active supporter of the British loan, he will vote against cloture when Sen. Ball's 'cloture petition to cut off debate 'on the measure comes before the Senate for a vole at 1 o'clock this afternoon. "I am not in favor of cloture," said Hoey, "and although I earnest ly hope the loan hill soon will be passed. I shall not vole for cloture in this connection, because I do not think it is any way to settle mat ters. What the cloture vote will do will he to delay even further the passage of the bill, because the time spent in voting on cloture could otherwise have been used in finishing the debate on the loan." Hoey predicted that the cloture petition would be rejected. Tire rubber compounds are constantly improving mil know you are buying the latest.. Tfattjmtfo Beit When you purchase new tires, be sure you are getting: the latest jmprovements. Find out when tires were made. Because the date tells you when the tires were made you know you are buying the latest improvements in tire rubber compounding . . . therefore the best! n TH0R0BREDS 9- SIMS TIRE & BATTERY CO. ED SIMS, Owner Phene 48ft Main Street WASHINGTON A youthful Mississippi hotel owner complained recently that he lias to pay $150 a week "just to stay out of jail," that is, hire enough clerks to keep records for the OPA. James S, Love, of Biloxi, asked the senate banking committee to help him stay in business so he can keep on running his "fine little hotel." "Finest service in the world," agreed Senator John Bankhead of Alabama, wistfully. Then he glow ed, and Mr. Love knew that Bank head had no love for OPA. FISHING TRIP LASTS 2 YEARS SAN JOSE, Calif. The wife of Durward L. Frazier, 25, had a right lo leave home when he went on a fishing trip lasting two years, ac cording to Superior Court Judge John 1). Foley. At least Foley refused to grant Frazier an annulment after he testified he was married April 1, 1!)4(), and left the same day for Alaska on a fishing trip which ended in 1942. Frazier said hifi wife wasn't home when he returned. 3 Anno uncing, KAY'S Beauty Now OPEN r u TV v r or vv umen ui men wno cars Complete Beauty ServiJ 0 Permanent 0 Facials Hair Tinting Manicuring Scalp Treatments All il. I . . . "i- ir r i lie lie I nl mm line ol uni'l; 1 1 .r iH'iuiiifyn dividual. Su ph-.-ise w. II Will pie;, r 11 !u kno pleased yi. ii. For ap)eintn,pnt( tail Marie Edwards, at Canton, Manaw Kay's Beauty S Opposite Masonic Tern pic Church Street Start Saving Today By Pnrchas They are Profitable. They are Safe. They are Easy to Buy. Mo Red Tape to Buy or Css $10.00 OPENS AN ACCOUNT BUY OTHER S1IAIIFS AYHFN Yl NO OBLIGATION Current of Interest Paid Let Thrift Shares Work For I Now For Sale LIMITED AMOUNT OF PAID-UP STOO See Our Secretary HAYWOOD IIOUE BUILDING AND ASSOCIATION Phone 17 MaiB

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