PAGE FIVE Pint 1 I . 8- 1946 THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER ' NEW ARRIVALS In WAYNESVILLE (iuests Who Have Registered Recently at Local Hotels and Hoarding Houses. M 11 Hasans. Bud Morgan and J. P. Mauldin. Albemarle; Mr. and Mrs. Kcece Graham. Pinehurst; L. C. Kigdun. Perkasie, Pa.; William M. Voungblood. Wesson. Tex. John K. Elkins and son, New tun. N C.;J. L. Sides. Concord; l; -v. A W. Farnum, Asheville; E S Butterley. Jacksonville; Esther Pry son. Cove Creek; James M. Harrison. K. Brown, Asheville, and 1 li Osborne, Pinehurst. bin - .. C Mi , :, K -" I .miler V.si'xii :, l h.i! ii' ' . The Wayside Lodge Miss Betty Jane Kay. St. Petersburg; J. C. Penny. Charlotte; Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Broome, Dallas, N. C; R. I! Hayes and James Parker. Char lotte: Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Norris, , Memphis; Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Kirk inaii and son, Toccoa, Ga.; Jvlr. ! and Mrs. L. H. Miller and family, : Manchester, N. H. Ir . .-Ml (fill .:!!. I ' '" V IVlln'-.i ,;,,,, l , l I. I ;j ;., l,;!i,l--..n. ! ..iv 'A'.Hii DNEY URINE Ally from famous very that relieves down feeling due idity in the urine t ire finding amainf ll (ymptoms of bladder bv excess at ic! ity in the IlERS SWAMP ROOT ftjnm to rase discomfort flow ol mine, i his pure ii fspeciali welcome bitation due to excess id for "getting up at Mf bonded combination vtptablcs. balsam; Ur. nothing harsh, is ab lermirtf. Just good in- toy prople say have a rpaid sample TODAY! others you'll be glad flame and address to liber & Co., Inc., Box una. Offer limited. Send gutiKll Swamp Root. Wilderness Hikers To Visit Mt. Le Conte The Wilderness Hikers, a group urbanized l hike to points of interest in Western North Carolina, composed of many Asheville peo ple and others in this area have planned a uip 10 mi. L.e v.ome 10 see the rhododendron, it has been announced by Dr. Robinson. The party will leave the bus terminal here at 8 a. m. Sunday anil drive via Soco Gap and Grassy Patch on the Tennessee side of the Great Smoky Mountains. They will hike up the spectacular trail past Alum Cave and CHIT Top to the summit of Le Conte. The l et urn trip will be made by Myrtle Point and by the Boulevard Trail over Kephart to New Pound (Jap. The hike will cover 14 miles. Anyone wishing to join the hikers may call Dr. Hobinson at ti2(i or ."iilii!) Asheville. China Asks UNRKA Tor New Supplies Premier T. V. Soong told the Tinted Nations Relief and Re habilitation Administration's Far Eastern Committee today that the 500,000 tons of UNRRA supplies delivered to China was "far less" than the nation needs and that rice deliveries have fallen "far short" ol the allocation. -Fur Full One Blaze May Eat Up Your Life Savings! Is your property insured for fire and other casual ties? urination Call 100 iVc handle all types of Property Insurance Withers Ins. Co., Inc. PynMie's Oldest Insurance Agency. HM KILI'ATRICK, Mgr. Main St. itli I ' m Pfc. Carver Is Awarded Soldier's Medal In Europe Private First Class John A. Car ver, U. S. Armv. who entered service on April 23, 194G, has re cently been awarded the Soldier's medal. Pic. Carver took his basic training at Camp Kucker, Ala., and frem there was sent to Fort George B. Meads, Md., from which he was sent overseas. Before entering the service. Pfc Carver was engaged in farmim; and also working with the KEA in Haywood county. He is at present attached to the Bomb Disposal Slid. in Lambarh, Austria. The award read as follows: John R. Carver, private first class, Ordnance, United States Army, for heroism not involving actual conflict with an enemy in December, 1945, and again on 2(i February, 1946. On the former date Pfc. Carver was siiucrv isine a group of men loading into trucks five tons of incendiary bombs with explosive charges. When two of the bombs were accidentally drop ped and set afire, Pfc. Carver un hesitatingly and with complete dis regard for his own safety, picked up the burning incendiaries and threw them over a nearby bank where they detonated. Again on 8 February. 1940. Pie Carver disposed of four anti-per sonnel bombs containing lour armed and highly sensitive fuses. Pfc. Carver, seing the necessity of sandbagging these bombs to pre vent hot shrapnel from burying itself into nearby stacks of ammu nition, performed this task, know ing full well a slight jar would mean the loss of his life. His quick thinking and complete dis regard for his own safety reflect with credit upon himself and the armed forces of the United States." PROBES MYSTERY OF BABY MALADY fcJ jmt " uw' CrIi-iM.n,iiaJ DEATHS ONE OF THE U. S. MEDICAL EXPERTS seeking the cause of the malady responsible for the death of 14 babies of GI brides, Capt. Wayne Kayson is shown here in Tidworth, England, holding a baby while Its mother, together with other mothers, is interviewed, (international) Wool Producers Are Offered Market Pool In Asheville July 2 JOHN JASPER JORDAN Funeral services were held at Pleasant Hill Methodist church, Buncombe county on Wednesday afternoon for John Jasper Jordan. 55, of Candler, father of Mrs. Hugh Campbell, of Waynesville, who died in an Asehville hospital on Mon day at 11 a. in. Rev. Oder Burnett, of Haywood county, and Rev. T. A. Groce, of Asheville. officiated. Burial was in Laurel Hill ceme tery. Buncombe county. Mr. Jordan was employed as a painter for many years by the American Eiika Corporation and prior to his recent illness had op erated a grocery store at Luther. Surviving arc the widow, Mrs. Zona Mann Jordan: one son, Wil liam Jordan. Candler; four daugh ters. Mrs. .1. Hill, Mrs. Pinery Al len, both of Candler, Mrs. Earl C. Haselden. of Society Hill, S. C. and Mrs. Campbell, of Waynesville; two brothers, Jake and Walden Jordan, of Murphy: three sisters, Mrs. Betty Falls, Mr. Claman Hughes, both of Murphy, and Mrs. Herman Green, of Ensley, Ala.: nine grandchildren. One son. Cor poral lien Jordan died in 1942 in a Jap prison camp. The Crawford Funeral Home of Way nesville, was in charge of the arrangements. Residents Are Arriving For Summer Season Among the summer residents who are now occupying their homes are: Judge and Mrs. Frank Smothers of Miami arrived yesterday and opened their home on Smathers street for the summer. They were accompanied here by their grand daughter, Lura Myers. Mrs. Bradley Haviland has open ed the Satterwaite residence for the summer and has been joined here by her mother, Mrs. S. C. Satterwaite, of Atlanta and Way nesville, and her aunts, Mrs. Eva Moffitt and Miss Ella Smathers, both of New York. Mr. and Mrs. James Mann, from Miami, will arrive tomorrow and will again occupy the Woodson Jones residence near the Waynes ville Country club. Sheep growers in Haywood county are advised by W. A. Corp ening. county agent, to take ail vantage of the wool-pool being set up in West Asheville July 2 for shipment of wool from this section to buyers. Prices are again being supported by Hie Commodity Credit corpora lion, and first payments are expect ed to range up 1 4!U- per pound for the best grades of wool. The West Asheville Builder- Supply and Coal company is the assembly point for the wool All that is collected will be shipped through the United Wool Growers associat ion. Wool received at the pool not tied with paper twine will he pena- j lied 2c per pound, and Ihat tied with a sisal or binder twine will ' be penalized 10c a pound. Growers Refrigeration Service... 20 Years Experience Call Phone 465-W FIRTH REFRIGERATION SERVICE llox 321 Waynesville Grains saved in the ill) per rent reduction in brewery allolment will lie used as feed i.'. this country, releasing wheal for foreign .shipment. New political activity by labor unions embraces yet-unorganized sect ions of farm labor. are cautioned to double tag all hags of lleece with their name and address, both on the inside and outside of the bag. Neighboring growers can go to gether in hauling their product to the pool, it was pointed out cr. vn.L-i bv rt m I . I m i t mrm v jm .s FOLKS 1HCT DON'T HAVt ANV PRIOt FER1WE.M- SELVt.8, CERTAINLY DON! HAVE ANY FER OTHERS. Take pride in the appear ance nf your ear, the condi tion of the motor . . . Let the SLMS TIRK .VI- I5AT TKUY CO. take care of your summer lubrication problems, now . . . We're experts. :i) SIMS, Owner Senate Sends Bill To House Calling For l Year Draft WASHINGTON The Senate passed a draft extension bill last week which would continue the act until May 15. 1947. permit 11! and 19-year-olds to be drafted again after this month, and raise the pay of enlisted men. The vote on final passage was G9 to 8. It came after the Senate defeated. 63 to 14. a proposal that actual inductions be halted while the volunteer systm got a further trial with the pay of an army pi i avte raised from $50 to $75 a month. The main features of the Senate bill, which grants most of the ad ministration's requests, are subject now to House action. That cham ber voted an extension only to February 15 with a ban on teen-age inductions, and approved pay in creases in a separate measure The Senate and House, in seek ing to adjust their differences, will work against a July 1 deadline when the temporary draft exten sion expires. Feint Meeting Next To Armory June 16 - 30 ACH EVENING - 8 O'clock jvangelist Rev. Fred R. Horlon Stnc' SuIrintendcnt of the Free Methodist Church. Atlanta, Ga. lme Bible Preaching Congregational Singing Your Cooperation Will Be Appreciated Ziebel WM-Le TvTnrv Gladys Tubb n - " - Wa tt '.-J-3 4 ' fh 1 1 sr'' lai"'" I t 1 1 ; too 1 I " 11 Reliable Jewelers Phone 35 Main Street The Store That Guarantees Everything Tie holder, col lar pin and cuff links in mod ern, matching designs. $2.50 up iJn wilt., is' - f. I ;l i 1 ' it. .- it . ; I) I i;f 1 ; i i 't i l f I' I t f I I I I t i- ' I f i "i . 1 ,i . I .' ' i I l i , !V ! t V i f ' 1 f .' j ! - ft - I i t . I V:

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