il THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE (Second Section? I " ( Fv.Setvice Men Turn fhe-Iob Training i" 3"! ..n.ihejub to W. . .... Kk' . h,.r. ol '"? "... K . . ..! 'I L-J" . ... ,. the Ie- tin' apPl'ca 1 i. .. v ..l atiollul '".:: .,.,.r.K 5,1 uti'i-J"5 l" rar.'-. is I10- HJ J thh' Hi' tin 1,-iilnnati' ' . i the work liy intcri'sti'd k1 ,-an Vrlf"- k in 1 objective before planning to enter this, program. "It is important that they enter a trade or business that they expect to follow perma nently, and not go into this merely to get the financial benefits." The laws under which the train ing is provided are written to give every advantage to the veteran and at the same time see that he is yetting something worth while for the Federal aid involved. Those w ho start training in one trade, il they find themselves not adapted to that, may change into something more suitable. But changes are discouraged as much as possible. I All veterans honorably discharg i ed who are not skilled at the work I they shall earn their livelihood by I learn l-JUUl Unix Offers action and lilted Protection! Ion gives you retia- about your termite Ttrmimx, world's control organiza inspection of your obligation even if tad. U GUARANTEE Elves vou a tested nt that ends eostly trds against further nice is triply guar- Terminix licensee. :Co., world's largest tdwuod flooring. Office, Ltd. INSPECTION, m PHONE: MX CO. tt. Pbone 7C9 Ut, N, C. tiMiHii"riPof" are eligible for on-the-job training Disabled men come under Public Law 16 which provided assistance from the Veterans Administration in getting placed on a job. Those not disabled are under Public Law 346. These men are advised by Mr. Howell to first find an open job and to learn from the employer if his place has been approved as a train ing agency. If not, he should sell the employer on the idea of be coming approved, and that he can do this by making application to J. D. Taylor, N. C. State College, Raleigh. The local U. S. Employ ment service office will assist the employer in this. After getting the employer in terested, the veteran should then bring a certified copy of his dis charge and, if married, his mar riage license, to Mr. Howell. The county service office can be found on Main street in Waynesville dur ing the week except on Tuesdays and Fridays, when Mr. Howell goes to the City Hall building in Can ton. The two papers are necessary to forward with the veteran's appli cation for training. Once both the employer and em ployee are approved the trainee will be granted his subsistance al lowance. The amount is determined by making up the difference in what he is paid by the employer and what that firm usually pays a skilled worker up to the limits previously mentioned. The veter an's length of service determines for how many months he may draw the allowance. At the present time, 238 employ ers in the district composed of Haywood, Madison, Henderson, Buncombe and Transylvania coun ties have been approved to train G67 veterans in 304 job classifica tions. In addition are the men train ing to become farmers. Their pro gram offers similar financial assist ance, and is administered under the State Department of Agricul ture with direct supervision of oice m ys t Save NEW SERIES OPENS IULY FIRST . . . ' MAN'Y SHARKS AS YOU WANT . ' I'-i: PAID MONTHLY. THRIFT SHARES MAKE SAVING EASY . . . iv ,hl. m when you like, as many as you mv time. They earn the current rate "! "''v-'t-now THREE PER CENT. PAID-UP-STOCK. NOW AVAILABLE . . . IK , i l"f K hns not been available until re 1 A A limited amount of this stock f'ffiT.-(. "XSULT WITH OUR sf'HKTARY ON ANY 0F THKSE MATTERS p HAYWOOD HOME ! 1 l - Wing-a Loan I A C n '4auCIATION Main Street Sheer Sheers Are On The Way Very sheer in Ion Iiomci . made of finer than 30 demei yam, will be coming back soon at special ceiling prices. State OI'A Director Theodore S. Johnson ahl today. When the price si heciule !,,: nylon hosiery was set up. Johnson explained, nylon yam i.ner Ui.m 30 denier was not untamable. Now. however, fine yarns arc .mam be coming available. Very-sheers, he said, are under price ceilings in line with the ceil ings on the regular weights that have been made riuht aloim. For example, he said, ;1-lmic.;c all nylon, less than Mil denier .,rn. will be $1.70, OI'A ,.. :Hmi. Th. compares with the cum in ceilnv. of $1.55 for Sl-gaiie nylons. ,",i denier or coarser, and the S1.4U ceiling for 45 gaupe nylons. SENATE GROUP APPROVES SNYDER $242,000,000 Alien Property Seized WASHINGTON -James V. Mark ham, the Alien lropcrt Custodian, reported he had taken little for the United States to properly of enemy nationals valued at S24. 000.000 as of June lid. l!45. Of this properly. (oTinans own ed by far the mcalcst part ami Japanese were next Mr .Markham. whose report was submitted to Congress hv president Truman, observed thai Italians' property has been withheld Ikhii sale at the request of the State Depart nient. Mis figures on seized piopertv did not include am valuation lor 46.000 patents. :(O.Pl)il copyrights and more than 400 trademarks Mr. Markham said the enemy-owned properly was good use . for the Tinted during the war. The custodian said he Ik or liquidated $:!). 000 noil ol properly by June Ho. I!M collected $13 OOO.oon as from such properly. More than $!oo.noo uoo of tl ST J 1 -vt'"'Nf IK- si f t Hni fe. l y AiH.i s.ss- ss AFTER THE SENATE Finnncs Committee had unanimously approved the nomination of John W. Snyder (left) as Secretary of the Treasury, he is shown being congratulated by Sen. Walter George, of Georgia, the committee chairman. Snyder, former Reconversion Director, replaces Kred M. Vinson, new Supreme Court Chief Justice. (iiiternulional) Square Dance Caller Gives Bus Riders Pep termer put to Slates vested . anil ncoine properly which sale cannot be future or for years' 'because legal action, the is scheduled lor sold ill the near "pet haps se i ral il is Mihle. I lo report ..aid . One cily of the nation came Ihroiieh wilh a new trolley song this week as other oddities in the news ranged troin special verill i cation of the left-handed check j book to a CU.'s interlude of slum j her among I he shoes of a display w indow. ! liallimore recently reported hill j 1 1 i 1 1 music finding a new place in I jliie tempo of city life through the. musical and square-naming in ibnations of George Sinorse. a sli ce! ear iiioloi man, who has in mated a system of not telling. look II to con s of the I hat I ported, meanwhile, that lan advertising campaign I vince suspicious customer Mississippi Valley Trust Co there realy is such a thing as a left-handed check book " The bank issued the books to satisfy left handed customers, who prefer cheeks which have the stubs on the right. Chauffer Licenses Must Be Renewed ly June !50 Samuel L. Gaynor. Jr. Assisl ant Director of the Highway Safely Division, announced that all Driver License Examiners in this slate are now ready to issue lil4(i-47 Chaf fer's licenses. The present Chauffers' licenses will expire mid-night June :(o. 1946. All persons operating a mo tor vehicle as a common or pub lic carrier of persons or proper! or employed for the principal pur pose of operating a passenger mo tor vehicle, must apply l or I be 1946-47 Chauffers' licenses on or before June 1946. All Haywood county taxi and bus drivel's as well as other drivers ol public vehicles should contact the N. C. Department of Motor Ve hicles in Haleigh. V ('.. regarding renewal of their licenses. high school agriculture teachers. "I recommend Ihis highly to men who intend to slay on the farm and are not skilled farmers." stales Mr. Howell. The agriculture teach ers give the trainees instruction that they would receive in school plus personal help with individual problems on the different farms where they work. Since the Canton school docs not have an agriciillnre teacher now, veterans in Beaverdam tow n ship are advised to contact the one in the nearest other school. The Haywood teachers now working on this program arc: Robert C. Kvans, Clyde: I. A. McLain, Bethel: lhirge Nesbit, Iron DulT and Crablree. George Nesbit, Fines Creek: and W. E. Pursley. of Waynesville high school. On-the-job training is not new, but was tried with success follow ing the first World War. It is simi lar to the apprentice program which trade and craftsmen for gen erations have followed, II has its present advantages, its difficulties but its purpose is to meet the needs of the country for skilled producers and to help the veterans fill in the gap that came into his career when called to his country's service. hut dling" the passengers off his Sinorse. a war veteran, who used to "call off" the square dance "sig nals" in Kentucky, said he grew weary of hying to reason with passengers to prevent crowding and undue confusion in the trolley. Then he remembered that he used to ( bant lor the dancers: " Ulanien left and then to the right. Swing your partners all through the nighl." This he c hanged to his own ver sion to fit his daily problems on l he cars and he now chants: "(Jet on at the front and off at the hack And speed the traffic along the track." Smorsc said that at first people stared open-mouthed at him as he chanled and some cluttered the car entrance more than ever, but as soon as they got the idea, they walked or even danced along oblig ingly. Meanwhile, in Milwaukee police were called to behold the sight ol a soldier wrapped up in slumber and a lot of shoes at one of the city's stores. They learned from Hie soldier. Pvt. Jerry Shcrrin. 17. who was in the city on furlough, lhal be did not know how he got into the window. Police were also halllcd at the size of the hole wilh tls sharp edges of glass, through which the soldier apparently got into the window, and said Ibey could not understand how he es caped serious lacerations. The Milwaukee Journal in re porting the incident, .summed up the story in this jingle: "Jerry Sherrin look a snooze In Ihc window full of shoes. I.alcr asked. 'How do you feel?' Jerry gulped: 'Just like a heel'." The St. Louis Post-Dispatch re- AT LAST... RELIEF FOR RHEUMATISM LUMBAGO, SWOLLEN JOINTS ARTHRITIS. BACKACHE. NEURITIS Soy, do I feci fwcllf Nt on och or pain anywhere." Thof who you'll loim joy fully when you've tried this marvelou new discovery which Is bringing undreamed -ot rcttet to thousand! who had suffered tor years, who had tried everything, end were beginning to think relief wos impossible. Try LAKEN'S 9 DROPS On Salo At All Drug Stor Smith's Cut-Rate Dniff Store- -.,nOT HOT OR Senators Find Enough Nylons For Millions WASHINGTON I'roiluelion ol nylons is soaring, lour senators noted here in a report expressing their views on ( out iimal ion of basic price control. 'Since Jan 1. 1!)4I. the total output of nylon hosiery is esti mated to average more than three pairs apiece tor the IkMHIO.iHIO women and girls in America who are 14 years old or older." the senators said. The four were senators Koberl V. Wagner il) ol New York: Sheri dan I )ounev M)i ol Cabloi m.i: (lien li. TaWor I) ol Idaho, and Hugh H. Mitchell ' I ) 1 ol Washington. Capital Letters (Continued from I'age "i extent. Owe day last week, one State employee broVight around Ja pounds of sirloins and roasts in from N Wilkesboro. crammed them in liis freezer locker. In that re gion between Klkin and Ashevillc. meal is relatively plentiful- il one hits the market sufficiently early in the morning. Agricultural experts believe a great deal more meat will move through black market channels than in the regular routes of trade during the next six months if some thing isu t done about meat ceiling Meal handlers' patriotism is being pushed to a low ebb. They watch the nefarious traders make money while they lose business by at tempting to operate on a legitimate basis. Kves are on Congress! HKAH1) AN1J SKKN The State Highway Commission still practices the old "closed door" arrangement now and then despite the efforts of the new publicity 'man to keep them open l.asl week, a highly controversial meeting was held and lis said the newspaperman .tidn't know there was even to he one. However, as a mailer ol fact, things probably worked out belter than if those particular discussions had followed the "open door" pol icy Chairman A. II. (iraham said 'asl week that "all-weal her " treat ment will tie applied to IIO.OOO miles of the State's 48.000 miles of country roads. This to come with in 10 years. . . .Treasurer Charles Johnson last week said thai teach ers need higher pay . . . Hut here is a Irui'-as-gospel statement: In proportion to their living expenses. Haleigh stenographers, on the aver age, are among the lowest paid em ployees in North Carolina. Some of them are weekly receiving money from home in order lo make a go of it! DR. W. KERMIT CHAPMAN DENTIST orncc IN BOYD BUILDING PHONE 363 WAYNESVILLE, N. C. Always Ride A Twin-City Bus Safe - Comfortable - Economical Regular Schedules Throughout Community Including Lake Junaluska Pruning Trees Pruning of fruit trees should be done primarily to increase the hearing of quality fruit and to keep the tree In a healthy, vigorous state of growth. Dusts That Kill For Bean Beetles- S-A-50 For Cabbage- udi Kill Overnight -k-.. iiiil.iiiiioi'. a Strong Hepellcnt I'lcvenlini: Moths from l aving l'or Worms WHY BE FAT Eat plenty yet lose weight with delicious candy reducing plan Have more alender, graceful ng ure. Nocvcrriitng. Nolaxativra. No drugs. With It umpl A YDS Vitamin Candy Rcduciug Plan you tion't cut out any mcaU, tarchet. potatoes, moatior but ter, you simply cut tlinn down. It 'actuicrwlien you eniuy drlii ioua (vitamin fortified) AY US candy 'iirct-ien. Anwonitfiy nnrmlran. Iti .'lliifciil ti'HU coniiucl.'d by imdintl Uoim mkiim Limn lOO paraana loat 14 to IB Him, avarKa to a faw waahs with AY OS Vitamin Cn.fy ll V? uiMjIy o( A Yt)i& .ml -Y if ij...t,,i .. ... . t.-.v., mupr.i rtn n. nn n lit jiO Smith's Cut-Rate Drue Htorc l'or ;ind ll.ll Icqllill Itilgs, I.e. id Hoppers Worms DDT SA1JA DUST For Tomatoes. Potatoes and Cucumbers- TOIUATO DUST ll,.l.t rontrol Only COIMM'Jl CAL-AR llllehl and Insert Control Southern Agricultural Insecticides i:7 llenuVrsnnville, Distributed By Farmers Federation 'hone N. C, Use The Classified Advertisements 'LGive Them 'Tl Jm PFT Wi fj PASTEURIZED MILK m 7 frS? Milk . . . nature's perfect food B yCZ: Z ...is delightful . . . refreshing J0 Jhd ... and packs a healthy punch fyS idzsh ' ... So keep the milk pitcher SX ytrlfuiiof--- ' ft Pet Pairized Milk '