THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872 i LATEST MODE OF CHRISTENING BATTLESHIPS When a new warship is launched by the United 1 States Navy, the time-honored custom is, amid the cheers of the gathered thousands of specta tors, the crash of a bottle of champagne over the bow by some appropriate and beautiful lady. But when a destroyer was launched at San Francisco last week, Mrs. Sullivan, the sponsor, after throwing the champagne as a matter of tradition, really christened the ship with hei tears. Mrs. Sullivan is the mother of five sons who died aboard the cruiser Juneau which was lost in the battle of Guadalcanal. The new ship was named "The Sullivan?" who went down glorious ly with the Juneau. ( The Associated Press account is as follows: I "They enlisted together on Jan. 3, 1942; train ed together aboard the (cruiser) Juneau, fought ( together, and when their ship was lost, they ,4* were together at the end", said Rear Admiral Clark H. Woodward. It was then, on the launching platform, amid much navy gold braid, that Mum Sullivan's tears began to flow. And Genevieve, sister of the five Waterloo, la., sailor heroes, cried, too. There was nothing Thomas E. Sullivan, husband and father of the clan, could do about it except squeeze Mum's hand. "The ships of our navy are built with sweat and toil," said Admiral Woodward, speaking to the Sullivans and to the 5,000 workmen and their families. • "They are launched with anticipation and pride, fought with coolness and with courage, and when lost—ours go down with honor and * with glory," he said. So perished the cruiser Juneau last November during the battle of Guadalcanal. Among- the , crew who manned her were five brothers — George Thomas Sullivan, Francis Henry Sulli van, Joseph Eugene Sullivan, Madison Abel Sul livan and Albert Leo Sullivan." Admiral Woodward said it was the boys' spe cial request that they sail together on the same ship, and when he told how they died together. Mum Sullivan lost the composure she had shown during the tour she and her husband have been making to the nation's shipyards and war plants to urge increased production. She was so unstrung she had to miss the ban quet staged in the family's honor at one of the city's big downtown hotels. TO THE RESCUE—CHICKEN, PIG AND COW It makes no difference whereof the blitz comes, whether from suddenly metamorphosed citizen ry alarmed over tightening and encroaching draft regulatjons, or what not. What we are interested in is food, and with de , lightful pride we see the chicken, the pig and the cow marching to the rescue. Never before has "essential industry" so profusely blossomed. The prowling wolf may as well slink back from the door, we shall not starve with so much fried 1 chicken, ham and eggs, butter and milk on the cuisine for the months ahead. i Volume 72 Current Comment Danbury, N. C., Thursday, April 8, 1943 * * HOLDING THE INFLATION LINE President Roosevelt has been the friend of the farmer and the laboring man. He has been es pecially wideawake to the interests of the farm ers and during his administration farm produce has sold high, placing the farmer in the strong est position possibly in the history of the govern ment. But when the President vetoes the Bankhead farm bill, he will doubtless incur severe censure and criticism from several classes of farmers. It may possibly be that as between farming, la bor and business, adjustments are not yet ex actly equitable or fair to the farmer in some in - stances. We do not know about that. But we do believe that the President has acted , wisely in his veto of the Bankhead bill. It is j known that under the present conditions of war the country stands on the rim of a most danger ous inflation. Everybody knows the colossal threat of infla tion—how if you start increasing the income of one class, you must continue up the dangerous spiral. There will be no end to the cries for help. Give Mr. Fanner more, and Labor will say, give me more; then industry says, give me more and so on. It is simply not the time now to begin equitable adjustments. The nation needs every effort and every thought turned to the work ahead of winning the war. THE ARCHANGEL OF MERCY "I know not where His islands lift Their frondied. palms in air; I only know I cannot drift ' Beyond His love and care." We have heard of a man who refused to giw to the Red Cross. It is inconceivable that in the human cosmos an intelligent being should exist so lost to the ideal of the Christian Bible that he could withhold as sistance from the greatest agency in the world to bring relief and consolation to the sick, the suffering, the dying. On every field of battle on all the war fronts of the world, in the wake of fire, storm, pesti lence or flood, there you will always see the Red flag waving—symbol of practical help—its of ficers, doctors, nurses, working, day and night in the heat or cold, in the storm or flood, under bombs under the raking fire of death and de struction. I The Red Cross is not a money-making system. Its head, one of the great business men of Amer ica, a man who is able to command a fabulous price for his service, directs without money and without price. The boy,, far from home, a prisoner, sick, wounded, disconsolate, heartbroken, finds in the Red Cross a never-failing friend who sees to getting his letters sent home, sees that he gets his home mail, sees that mother or friends back home get the message of hope and cheer. If there is an agency inspired and ordained di rect from the Master, it is the great Red Cross that is- everywhere in its power, its beauty, its mercy and sympathy. EDITORIALS * Published Thursdays WHAT SHALL WE DO ABOUT THE FOREST FIRES? Dangerous forest fires have raged in different sections of the county this week, fanned by high winds. Two of these fires threatened Danbury serious ly for awhile, one to the south, the other to the north. It is learned that each of these vicious conflag rations was started by persons well known among the people. Whether a flame is started maliciously or through careless ignorance, the effect is the •ame on property-holders. i The law requires that before you set out a fire, you must notify adjoining landowners. I The persons who started these fires notified no il tody. The people who owned farm homesteads, tobacco barns, etc., on adjoining lands were not notified, but were iei't alone to take care of them selves. Many hundred acres of valuable timber was destroyed. A number of tobacco barns were burned. Many people had to go out and fight the flames to save homes and other property. At Danbury watchers stayed up all night on guard. It is time the grand juries took notice of these dangerous and destructive fires that occur reg ularly every spring throughout the county. In the Reporter of March 25 the District Game war den impressed on the people the constant men ace from forest fires which he said, burned over 5,300 acres of forest land in Stokes county last year, representing a loss of over SIB,OOO. A suit ;'oi damages lLs against any person iwho through either ignorance or careles -tiess 'nuts out fire which damage-, hi; n> ighbur. Any inerson who maliciously or cave!' Ay i»uis out ifire in the forest, is subject to a term on !by roads at hard labor. Let the legislature tighten up on this iru-t im portant matter in the life of the rural communi- !ties, and let the grand juries make investiga tions followed by indictments and rigid enforce ment of the law. i A NOBLE RIDDANCE | The Ruml tax plan met the same fate that the Rommel fight plan is about to receive in | Africa. When the British Bth army, the Americans and ; the French catapult the "Desert Fox" into the Mediterranean they will do the suffering public ; about as much relief as old man Bob Doughton (has done already by placing the skids under this | crazy tax scheme. ! One of the leading commentators remarked that nobody this side of Einstein could under stand the Ruml income tax monstrosity. None of the congressmen knew what it was all about. The present income tax blank is headache enough, God knows. Let congressmen evolve a fair and less complicated system, which will bear equally on every citizen. * * * * Number 3,701