Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / April 6, 1944, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO m i* * V ' . v rt •’* !.'■ ; ” ** fHK YANCEY) KECUKU ESTABLISHED JULY, 1936 • Editor Mrs. C. R. Hamrick ‘i Published Every Thursday By „~ ~ YANCEY PUBLISHING CO 1 v -. A Partnership 1 < ■• Entered M second-class matter November llth, 1936, at the Post Office, at Burnsville, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. , Health Department News DIPHTHERIA TAKES A YANCEY COUNTY BABY The Health Department is saddened today to report the death of a twenty mon ths old baby of Diphtheria. We wonder if these par ents know that this child could have been saved thro ugh vaccination; we won der if they knew it before the child got” sick. We won- < der how many other par ents in Yancey county are neglecting this life saving measure that costs them nothing. wonder if all parents in Yancey county and in North Carolina know that there is a State law, passed in 1939, that re quires that every child in the State be vaccinated against diphtheria during the first year in life. We were hoping that not one baby in Yancey county should die from diphtheria, but our hopes have been blasted and a family sad dened for the rest of their lives through neglect. It is nothing short of criminal to let a child die from dip htheria. Please take your baby to your doctor at once and have it vaccinated. For those who do not have the. money to pay a doctor, we will give the vaccination free every Saturday morn ing throughout the year. Please realize that often you cannot get a doctor when you call him. We do not have many doctors, and they are very busy. _ And don’t forget that a child may have diphtheria for several days before it gets really sick and thait anti MORE MILK NEEDED More milk and milk pro ducts Are needed for civi lians and the armed forces. Milk subsidies have been in creased. The State College Extension Service suggests that all dairymen make full use of such grazing crops as small grains, lespedeza, soybeans, cowpeas, ' Sudan grass, and Italian rye grass [AMERICAN HEROES I I BY LF.FF Tlie Marauder bomber Jczabelle had just completed a liomli run over Boauvais-Tille airdrome when a I'ocke-Vulf I‘MI swept in, pumping two cannon ahells into the plane and killing the tail gunner. Ilis fare torn liy I ahrapncl, Staff Sgt. Donald (j. of Hooper, Neb., wuii>t gunner, lathered up exploding incendiaries set afire hv the hit, and saved the plane from destruction. Are you fighting with that extra War llond? t±s: *3- " “ ( .V. Treasury Depaitment ——— - BUY BONDS FOR VICTORY toxin may not save it then. Don’t blame your doctor if he cannot save your baby after you call him. The < fault is your own, not your doctor’s. The only way to j be safe is to have your baby vaccinated. Don’t de lay. Your baby may be next. There is an epidemic of •measles in some sections of i Yancey county now. Many) people do not have a doc-! tor for measles, and for this, reason we feel that the* following points..should be; known by every one: Important Points About— Measles Most deaths and serious cases of measles occur in children under school age. j We should make every es-j i fort to keep these children 1 away from measles. When, measles attacks, call the 1 doctor. If he cannot come, then follow these points: 1. Keep the patient in bed until the rash entirely clears up. 2. Keep the room dark, with shades pulled, until the patient is up. 3. Give plenty of water, fruit juices, light diet. j 4. Do not let the patient read, look at books or do any close work that can strain the eyes for at least 10 days after vhe rash is i entirely gone, V 5. Keep children from . school for at least two weeks after rash is entirely cleared up. 6. Report the case to your Health Department. i 7. Follow quarantine in • structions. to reduce feed costs. Silage crops furnish excellent win ter feed. Permanent past ures should not be grazed too heavily in early spring and not over-grazed during the long-dry periods in summer. Where dairy ani mals are permitted to har vest their own food in pas tures and on temporary grazing crops, much labor is saved and feed is pro duced more cheaply. woailxxjjuiuas io xied Cross -100 Per Cent State Highway Dept., Prison Department, Prison Camp Guards, Cane River Lumber Co., Yancey Coun- 1 ty Welfare Office, Yancey! County Agriculture Con servation Association. Contributions Bolens Creek church $106.52. South Estatoe Baptist! church SIO.OO. Pleasant Grove church, B. T. U., $4.95. Yancey Theatre collec tions —High school girls, 1 $47.85. Camp Mt. Mitchel 1 for girld, $20.00. V v Paint Gap Church $22.25. $30.00 Miss Bess Lewis. $13.60 Bowditch Community. * $25.00 and Above Cane River Lumber Co. $20.00 Holcombe and Edwards Funeral Home SIO.OO Mr. and Mrs. Garrett D. Huskins, J. W. Holcombe. SB.OO Edd Gibbs. $7.00 L. G. Deyton. $5.00 and Above Zeb Fox, O. E. Edge, L. D. Thomas, Mr. & Mrs. Lowe Thomas, Mrs. J. H. Black, R. 13. Ballew, Doris Young, Agnes M. Rice, R. H. Bailey, D. M. Hensley, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Silvers Ruby Robinson, Lee Grif fith, Jay Styles, Mrs. O. R. Lewis. $4.00 and Above John Whitson. $3.00 Contributors Mabel Banks, Myralee Ray, Georgia Harding, Ben 1 Brost. $2.00 Contributors Maiissa Garland, G. D. Turbyfill, C. R. Presnell, Mrs. A. L. Mattson, Mary Curtis, Fred Curtis, Roy 'Banks, Vonno Anglin, Ar thur Ball, Thermon King, Coy Phillips, MaiC'Horton; Andy Edwards, Mack Ledford, Hilliard Bradford Sam Ball, Mrs. Bertha Banks, Grover Westall, Utah Blankenship, Brant ley Shuford, Verney Shu ford, John Fox, Edna Ingle, Troy Taylor; Vergie Shepherd, Ellis Ray, B. G. McMahan, Mrs. B. G. McMahan, F. H. Hu ghes, Missouri Dale, 'Fran ces Dale, Gay Sparks, Sher rill Whitson, Joe Blanken ship, Herman Patton, J. D. Porter." '* SI.OO and Above Donna Sparks, J. H. Ed wards, J. A. McDowell, John Hylemon, George Byrd, H. W. Presnell, W. A. King, A. C. Fox, Charlie McCurry, Mrs. Jennie Rid dle, Mrs. Tom Davis, Car mon McMahan; Mrs. Arcemus Simmons, Mrs. G. W. Anglin, Mrs. C. C. Higgins, Mrs. Mark Ben nett, Katherine Snyder, Paul Garland, Earl Hughes, Guy Robinson, Andrew Johnson, Vaugh .ohnson, Jason Woody, Rosa John son, Pauline Randolph; J. Willard Buchanan, Madge Thomas, Dove A. Hughes, Mary H. Hughes, Jobe Beaver, Cling Thom a®, Arthur Boone, Wesley Hoilman, W. Bristoe Rob inson, Dewey Thomas, Brad Thomas; Mrs. Thula Haney, Car ter Hensley, Mrs. Carter Hensley, Mrs. G. A. Fender Birdie Tilley, Moscoe Towe, Cleo Higgins, Mrs. J. N. Wilson, Mr. & Mr s Hollis Wilson, Eugene Harrison, Earl Gurley, John Pritch ard. Gay Dillingham; THE YANCEY RECORD i , Mrs. Teague, Mrs. Julia Westall, Mrs. E. A. Brown, 1 Fred Webb, Lawrence Car- ( roway, Frank Whetstine, 1 ' Bale Hensley, John Webb, 1 C A. Hensley, George Wil-j son, Clarence Wilson; Robert Gouge, O. M. Rob-!' inson, Charles Parker, G. 1 E. Silver, Fred Harris, J. C. ' !Whitson, Sam Ballew, ' Frank Ray, Hugh Mein- ' tosh, Bill Buckner, Mrs. R. H. Bailey, Bbrry Hensley; ' Flora Phillips, Mrs. D. M. Hensley, Mrs. S. M. Hen sley, Elizabeth Tiptoon, La ura Tipton, Mrs Sam Tip ton, Sam Tipton, Mrs. Char les Anglin, Mrs. Lillie An glin, Charle% Anglin, Mrs. Edna Hoylman; Mrs. E. D. Wilson, M. A. Bailey, Bessie Silvers, Car Briggs, Charles Buckner, , Edna Metcalf, Tommie Buckner, Peggy Jean Hus kins, J. H. Bennett; Leonard Boone, Bill Smith, K. L. Anglin, Bulo Gortney, Geter Webb, Ed Wallace, Miss Osma New ton, J. A. Letterman, Mrs. Ed Wallace, Lee Wallace, Mrs. R. A. Peake, W, N. Horton, Bessie Mclnturff; Mrs. Walser Penland, Mrs. E. H. Styles, George Roberson, J. W. Maney, John L. Penland, Fletch MePeters, Mrs. Brooks Ten land, Mrs Hubert Penland,! Mrs. Arvel Penland, Arvel Penland, Hattie Penland. IF YOU CAN NOT GO TO CHURCH— One of the best Sunday' morning programs that the* writer has been able to get on Sunday morning comes over Radio Station “W. P. T.F.” Raleigh, N. C. at 10.05 each Sunday morning broadcast f£om the Taber nacle Baptist church, Brou ghton Memorial Bible class. His Excelency, Governor Broughton teaches the, class each Sunday morning and when he i s personally un able to teach it he has some other notable person to teach it. This past Sunday in the absence of Governor Broughton, Clyde Ervin, Supt. of Public Instruction was the teacher and it surely w r as a grand lesson. Our Governor is very in teresting and gets the les son to you so clearly and j precisely when he is there that it certainly is worth | listening to. Os course there are many worthwhile programs on Radio Sunday mornings but this one for folks in N. C., is especially good and if you have never tried it, listen next time you can’t be at church. News comes on at 10:00 to 10:05 a. m., then for the next 25 minutes is the Sun day School lesson. Os course this is not a suggestion to keep you away from your own chur ch or Sunday school where you belong each Sunday morning if you are physi cally able to get there. The suggestion is made only for those who are sick or can not be at their church. Be it clearly understood that our first duty to God and our community is our pre sence at our own little church wherever it may be on Sundays. Because of conditions, the writer has been unable to attend Sunday School and church services on Sundays and consequently gets a good Radio program which he is able to listen to most of the time. So if you find that you aOLEDO news Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Gar- j land from Erwin visited Mrs. W. M. Randolph and other friends over the week end. | Hugh' Gornto and Edd Wallace are spending a few days in Shelton, S. C. j The Woman’s circle had a very interesting and in-' structive meeting recently j at the home of Mrs. Dos'3 Wallace. .1 I Mrs. Joanne Wallace is visiting her children in Erwin. ; MONTHLY REPORT NORTH CAROLINA, YANCEY COUNTY. r . The ' following • e'Op tions were issued: $51.24. The following vouchers were issued: From Deb Service $62.50 From health funds 120.00 From Poor funds 174.70. From General funds: $2,568.43. ■ -T, Farl C. Wilson, Regis ter of Deeds, in and for Yancey County, North Car olina, do hereby certify that this is a true’and cor rect copy of the Minutes, of the meeting of the Yan cef County Board, of Com missioners, as of April 3. 1944. Witness mv hand and of- ' ficial seal this the 4th day of April, 1944. Earl C. Wilson, Register of Deeds, Yancey County, North Carolina. | can t be at church for any * reason try Station ‘ “W. P. T. F.” Raleiyh, N. C. and hear the lesson* Oscar L. Young. r* r ATTENTION FARMERS AND VICTORY GARDENERS USE SAFF ‘ rt - I TO ! T .. Keep Bean, Tobacco & Cabbage Plants Free From I BEETLES, FLEAS and WORMS I ■ , f i ■ We Advise Early Dusting to give your PLANTS The Chance to get a Good Start L —— ; - ~ ' ~ — — - I / t * I I "+**■*- | i. Manufactured by 1 THE SAFFORD COMPANY BURNSVILLE, N. C. . . I 1 ‘•' . , ' I Buy a Y ANCEY COUNTY PRODUCT From Your Local Merchant • —— / ZT ™ fl Pqpur supplies <r » limited! 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Liberty 3.80 True Story 1-80 [24 ml National Digest Monthly .... 3.30 Your Life 3-80 I|WpS'TlllTr£^idHig| ® We Can Take Your Subscription For Any Magazine M isl Gentlemen: I enclose .. ...... ... •, Please send Ito me Gub Ofet Number. j., LV .i...» Dpi [■l STREET^ I TO FOSTOFFICB U| ' uriiii■uiTMrniiiiifgUwßliuiMimrmW THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1944
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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April 6, 1944, edition 1
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