Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / July 25, 1942, edition 1 / Page 4
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■1T w I..I, r- w I: PACB inocm TBE dAROLINA TtMfiS OILING ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 ANNOUNCES MAJOR-GEN L PARKER I ' Camp Butncr — An informal coDferenc-; wtt held Tuesday in RjUciifh for discussions, iKjrtaining to he foi-mkl opening of i>mn Butncr on Aug^ust Ainonp those present were: Gowrnor Broughton at whose office tl.o confcrerioife took place Major-tieneraJ Edwin P. Parker, Jr., commandcr of the T8th «» Division at the cdmp, and Lt. Col. A. L. FViIton, assistant to the chief of staff. The meeting was arranged lo inti-oduce the commander of stationed thcrc» at present. Construction of the camp, how ever. is sclitxiulcd to be completed by August 15th at which date the formal opening of Camp Butncr has bccn'planned. RUBBER CHALLENGE ACCEPTED Private industry is attacking the rubber problem with full vigor todaiy. And, according to authorities, production in 15)43 may be greater than we expected even a short time hgo. One oil company alone is building 34 plants with a total capacity of ,599,000 tons, .Wnd they will be in operation in less than a year. Other oil companies are pursuing similar pro* I grams. Oii top of that, great progress is being made in the development o other kinds of-Wnthetic rubbers, such «o those which are produced from coal and coke. CAMPBUTNER GAS BOARD PLAYS NO FAVORITES Camp Bntn«, K. V. — T#o privartefl and « civilian iBompriBe this camp’s new gas ratioaing, board nndw the sipen'iitimi of Lieut. Ro«b E. MaeOrtider, Qmir- tcrmaster Corps Om Batiuniag Officer. batodat, JULY 25tH, 194B HOLD EVERYTHINGS All America N^ro troops are preparing their part in the fight to establish more per manently in the world the Pour Freedom re cently ennunicRted by President Roosevelt. Pictured above .is a group of Colored soldiers juid^ their officers ready to embank for ♦ where in the world in an attempt to hftlt the advance of Nazism and the enalavezaeat pf free men, Oowifi To Flay In Sat Birmilighani, Ala. — Birming ham fans' will -faare their first seasoii'B opportunity, this Sunday afternoon, ■ July 26, of witnessing tke Kegrb Major lieague leading CiBcinnati (Miami) > Etfaiiopian ClowQS in action at ^ickwood Field, 'wheu make a sptciAl trip from Toledo, to meet the Birmingham Industrial Cit>' Lea- gu| A^Stars, in a double head- er4 commencing at 2:00 o’clock sharp, ^o be followed by an ap pearance at Sulphur Dell Park, Nashville, Monday nite, against the St. Paul Minneapole Gophers,' managed by Jim Brown. The Clowns, champions of Inst year’s Denver tourney, are the Bcngations ol the Nepp® kasebalL world this season by virtue of their stellar play and shownman- ship, and bring with them three former Birmingham stars, Dan Bankhead, A1 “Greyhound” Say. ler and “Big Jim" Johnson. Other wdl known stars with the Clowns this season are Leo “Preacher” Henry, Jimmy Eve rett, Eugene “Goat” Smith, I amb Barbee, Dave Hoskin, Lloyd “Pepper” Bassett (who will pre sent his Rooking Chair speoiality) Sloppy Lindsay, Greene Farmer, '^alph Coles, Fred Wflson, * and ^he great and inlnfitiarie “Pea- imts*’ Nyasses, who bears the cognomen of the “Clown King of Baseball,” and bendes a *tar comedian, is the oiriy piteher who has coasisteSitly defeated Satchel Paige on the laoBnd. ^ir- m^ngbam and Nashville fans are in for some stellar baseball per formances in the only games to be- piajed by the Clowns in these parts. foolTsT" PREDICTION The prediction of the Hon. HUlpaKj. May, chairman of the Houst fliifitary Affairs Com mittee, that the war will end ‘probably in 1942 and certainly in OoBgreasion- al intelligence at its worst. Mr. May, who may posses in formation not available to ordin ary citizens, bases his statement his -upon his knowledge of a “milit ary secret.” This makes his a- mazing utterance the more repre hensible because its weight will will be increased by his official position. If some “military secret” is to Scarboreugh & Hargett * FUNERAL D.I SECTORS « AMBULANCE SERVICE Phones: Daj J-3721. Nijtlit 1-3722 522 E. Pettivreir St. give us victory, there would seem ,to bo good reason to keep quiet about the matter in order that it ^tkrpTifceV an ' tuistispecting foe. If the forecast is based upon nothing but Mr. May’s opinion, which may be accepted by the un- suSpectini the natronal will to win may be softened, which would he 4angerpus if n_j^ disastrous. We have no idea that the Ken- twcfcian has my secret dope about strM^h of otrr enemies. There aite few “talkers’' in Ger many and Japan at this time when it comes to matters dealing with the present war. Mofaaadafi M. Gandhi, Indian Nationalist leader, changes his tun about British and American armed foroes in ladia, saying that '* foreign troops are necessary for the defense of India ” and that they ate Welcome provided they leave' as booh as tke «rSsis is 6vcr. The lofn-dothed apostle of non-, violence ha not yet progreiwed.^^ the abandonment of iicttsen^. He advo^tes Indian ambaesadora to Rome, Berlin and Tokyo,'“not to be peace^ut to show llinii fA^s Powers) the futility of war.” I This idea is about as practical as advocacyy of the j^inninj; whe'el aiid * abandonment of ihod- ern textile machSnery. Like many religious fanatics and spiritual ignoramuses, Gandhi is net a-ble to harmonize spiritual and material worlds. There is no greatdr mistake than to stubborn ly apply the rules of spiritual grov^h to the developpieut of mundane matters. A physeist, iii the same stage of silliness, would attempt to harmonize the proper ties of.iee and redhot steel. We have been very often a- mazed at the far reaching con clusions drawn by si-called mili- j tary experts as to the results that ' win follow a certain defeat. For example, after the fall of T®hfttk and when Genera Rom-, mel’s army was dashing precipit ately into Egypt, the prediction wjfs~bften seen that unless the British saved Alexan'drin, the Axis would capture Egypt, the SueB Canal, Palestine, S.vria, Iraq, Iran, India and wipe out the British Empire at a stroke. This was obviously nonesenae. The loss of Egj'pt would be fC Alone Ytsterday... fmm TODAY! AM YKJUtmlintklllUmttt I .Don't Im tttr hair make s "cmr^ac^homc' •wofjroo. Color ] iftf look •BMk liKiMM dfwwMhout. •w of jroo. Color your hair iriA GoddrM't “ ' - - - . fun ■OW Ml . ranJts PI mmnlTt doesn’t rub IHIWPiiniii martxlt Uaed foe M«r 4J yeari. -You __ or 4s«ler wffl reftmd money. ^ ieiBi’ltiiwlarii—I direct •o;$«Gd«*i6y Co^ }SlO CHive St.. ftiUmtiMo. UK ONIT At tmofa ON lAM. MOI ORAVHAtt 2 lASY mrs jifJMvnov'f CQUmiNG , .-■MT, r.^1. •toiwonr AM Ml spwe MU SI mmosi «M |» ^ i| am Ml »q» I* nAB *M«V •M «MB aqtMB no irsito NOTIL' THERESA Wtnmim NEWYOim ytw TtbiliniriZMktt \^J9th4H4mf0fHaiUnf M* tiaeieiM, *a e«t*ida roeoM: lulttnoui taitM. Th« baaatlful OnkUl Itooai Ihr^toiagi oockuU Mtfi oM k^jr Uf- in* tor nteMtieii. Ideal atino*- nr r«M, ttttdy, and comfort. tuS9 fOom* wUh prlrMt0 AafA OnMi Ml w y«iuiV/k MM*Ar The average individual, in our cotinty arid elsewhere, is hon«!Bt and will pay all debts if possible althoi^h we are ivilling to admit that some of them are easily con vinced of the impossibility con cerned. Unfortunately, price coTtrtrol cannot work on the thiilgs that you buy without operating upon the things you sell. Let’s buy War Bondg this mon th and "pupt our county on the honor roll of those which reach serious blow to the 'hopes of the United Nations but it Would not necessarily mean the loss of Syria, Iran dir Iraq, much less India. As the battle develops, it seems possible that Alexandria, Cairo and Eg.\T»t will be eld by the British Army. It is even possible, given time for prepara tions, tha^ the Axis invaders will once more repeat their march for ward only to exceed its speed in Marching back. their quota early. The reason some people des pair of the improvement oilman- kind is that they are fully •‘.wafe of their own failure to develop themselves. It i^esn’t occur to Marshal Pe- tain tnat France wasn’t beaten; the nation just cpiit. References; the Dutch, the Belgians, the No*- fegians, etc. People who deride the “ninety- day wonders,” now serving in the armed fdrcCa of the nation have the opportunity to perform the game service. Every business concern should see that its workers get a holi day, with pay. In fact, fcmart businesses demand that the boss take a vacation. It pays. A copy of our paper in a local home, is eviderft that the family pays for what it wants; isn’t there by accident. American farmers might won der what would happen to Rarity paymentg if the Axis wins the SvIawrenceI Wl.s. AftMY DIYE-BOMB£RS HAVEf ■BRAKES^ WHICH. ARE'aI^LIED WHILE THEY FL Y / W SUCH brakes NECESSARY « IHE U.S.. , , IS BUILDWO AN ARMY f ROM 9 TO lO MllLlON MEN f HOW MANY U.S. SOLDIERS JuTHORITiESlSTATEimt THE EARLIEST..MEHT10W.0FJ WERE ENGAGED-IN THE 5l % WSEMBLANCE-TO A‘i«X)aUl _ ^ ESEMBLANCE-TO Aij ^ mOVAJWATCH^/ {UHETSEl^OFXGATCEEfg'J FRESH WATER fALTHOUGttiff . FEJT-BELGW.SEAl . JIWH€REjSJTllOCAT£0:g Members of this board have the power to say “No” to even the highest rankini; o/ffioer here. Both privafc«B are attorney*, whfle the civilian Is a school teacher. The board judges all ease# iai- partially with the individoal’s importance to the war effort in full consideration. The h%lK*i>t ranking offieer hire, as well as enlisted Btien and eivHian eivil ^*0^11 Am att* vTvrKVTcf* siraW aUTTV l-uv* * rationing credentials. Tlie camp Board handle! this plro- blem. t- ■ Officers using their own atito- mobiles in military service, na turally have preferred creden tials; carrying either “fi” or “C” books. Officers living in nearby eommunities and who use their automobiles to travel to and from the camp have “A” books, just like civilians. In compliance wilh {he pur pose of the Federal law gwern- ing rationing the board has en couraged the development of “group ridiog” as 'advocated by Leon Henderson of OPA to great suc4;ess. Here at Oamp Butner, the plan has been found to work admir ably. As one civil service worker here puts jt: “I’ve cut my trans portation costs by one quarter. I QNLV WANT PIECES THAT YOU, can't use-' 4 fx: BOND DAY BENEFICIARY CHILD SELF. North Carolina fanners who atili are gathering aerap metal on their farms for use in the'nation’s arteel'mills are cautioned not to sell for scrap any pieces which are usably for farm purposes. The North Carolina USDA War Board, with headquarters at State College, says many pieces of ficrap metal often contain parts which may be used in re pairing farm machioerj. The board says, however, that every git of sirap not usable for ether purposes is vitally needed in mak ing arms and munitions to fight the Axis, and should be plaicd in trade channels as rapidly as pos sible. The scrap collection cam paign will continue for the dur ation. It is no more o one-week or one month campaign than the war is a one week or one month confJict, the board points out. OCCO-NEE-CHEE . Seif-Rising Flour Takes the Guess out of Bakiii^ and&A«s you Monoy Lawyers more concerned with precedents than with justice do not add prestige to their profess ion. . , ‘ Before 1942 ends the people of the United States will have a faint idea of what total war means. All Insured In One^ Policy COSTING ONLY ONE CENT PER DAY $3.65 PER YEAR In Immediate Benefit from date of Premium Receipt First Tiitte Offered By Any C^nipany $250.00 to $1506.00 at Death $250.00 to $1500.00 at Death Children $20.00 to $200.00 $10.00 to $24.00 Weekly Benefit Registration and Indentification $100.00. See the policy before paying, read it, understand it; then pay $3.65 for one whole year. Send your name, age, addiess and beneficiary's name and a poli|/ will be sent you for free inspec tion. Southern Fidelity Mutual Insurance Go. . DURHAM, NORTH CAROUNA TAKE See LocnlJ^gQnto£ BANKERS* FIRE HiSURAKE COMMNY DUIWAM. NORTH CAROLIN/V rnNi;FRVATIVE - SOLID “-DEPgNQABLE GENERAL IN^RANCE AGBNCY - - Darham, N. (X UNION INSURANCE & REALTY CO., - - Durham. N. CX ACME REALTY COMPANY, - - - Raleigh, N. C. BISHOP DALE Charlotte, N. C. H. C. DUGGS I Charlotte, N. C. ■••••••••••••■•••a ••••••••••••••••■a COUNTRY PRODUCE Hams, Shoulders, Middlings, Eggs, Country Butter and All Kind of Vegetables Fresh Daily 'x Chickens Dressed and Delivered Vi^it t)r caU us and be Convinced FRIENDLY GROCERY E. O. PEOP^, Bfanii^er PHONE F-9383 108 HILLSIDE AVE. 0.- PEOPMS Proprietor oos"* t’fcr I Qei Oid ojf %elft f^(m When the great sunburst of vicloi7 cornea, will &ere be a per^mal ahadow falling across it because of your failure lo get out of debt? Don't let the brighter years that are •head for America be cloiided by fi* pyyifiial burdens which you have th* povfer to clear away now. Take advan tage of your special opportunities at this time. Organise your financial affairs. Start a definite program of debt reduction. In Ihe years ahead, will you have yourself to blame, or yourself to thank? MECUmeS t FARMEIS BAM
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 25, 1942, edition 1
4
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