PACE TWO THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1942 Church Services SUNDAY, MAY 10 MOTHER'S DAY FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. C. F. Rogeri 9:45 a. in. Bible school. 11 a. m. Morning Worship. 7 p m.-rO, A. T-i rr T T p. m. Lveninv worship. FRANKLIN METHODIST CHURCH Rev. J. L. Stoke II 10 a. in. Church school. 11 a. m Worship service-. 6:00 p. in Young Peoples lowship. Fel- PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Hubert Wardflaw 10 a. m. Sunday school. 11 a. in. Services. 5 p. m. Christian Endeavor. MORRISON PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2nd and 4th Sundays: 10 a. m. Preaching. 11 a. m. Sunday school. ST. AGNES EPISCOPAL Rev. A. Rufus Morgan 2nd Sunday: 5 p. m. Evening prayer service. and MACON METHODIST CIRCUIT Rev. J. C. Swaim 2nd Sunday: 11 a. m. Mt. Ziom 2 p. m. Maiden's. 7:30 p. m. Gillispie's. FRANKLIN METHODIST CIRCUIT Rev. Philip L. Green 2nd Sunday: 11 a. m. Snow Hill. 7 p. m. Iotla. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC PARISH Rev. A. F. Rohrbacher Every First Sunday: 8:00 a. m. Bryson fifty. Every Second and Fourth Sunday: 8:00 a. m. Frankliro Every Third Sunday: 8:00 a. m. Cherokee. Every Sunday: 11:00 a. m, Waynesville. CULLASAJA PENTECOSTAL Rev. C. W. M odder, Pastor 10 a. m. Sunday school. 11:15 a. m. Morning worship. 8:30 p. m. Evangelistic service. Mt. Sinai Church, Burningtown. 10 a. m. Sunday school. 2nd Sunday, 3 p. m. and 8 p. m. 4th Sunday, 3 p. m. A cow without roughage is like a soldier without ammunition. John Arey. Home drying is a satisfactory method of preserving certain fruits and vegetables. Rinby Scholz. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of Elsie Stiwinters, deceased, late of Maco,n county, N. C, this is to notify all person having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of April, 1943, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 28th day of April, 1942. WILEY CLARK, . . Administrator. A30 6tp J4 NOTICE In The Superior Court North Carolina Macon County F. H. Potts. Trustee for Stock holders of Highlands Bank vs J. R. Sullivan J. R. Sullivan, the defendan above named, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Macom County, in which the plaintiff claims the sum o $2094.92 with interest on the same from February 15, 1933, based on note executed by the defendan and owned by the plaintiff. Said defendant will also take no tice that he is required to appear at the office of the undersigned Clerk Superior Court, of Macon County on the 15th day of May 1942, and answer or demur to the complaint or plaintiff will apply to the Court for relief therein de manded. Said defendant will further take notice at said action a warrant of attachment against the property of said defendant has been issued and the following property attached: All the right, title and interest of J. R. Sullivan in and to eight shares of Highlands Bank Stock and in and to all assets of the stockholders of the Highlands Bank, said assets now being ui the hands of F. H. Potts, trustee for Stockholders of the Highlands Bank. And the said warrant of attach ment is returnable before the un dersigned Clerk Superior Court at his office in said county on the 15th day of May 1942 This 15th day of April, 1942 HARLEY R. CABE Clerk Superior Court, Macon County 4tc- A16-M7 I I Unemployed Farm Labor To Be Regis tered And Classified Immediate registration and classi fication of all available unemployed farm labor throughout North Caro lina is planned by the USD A State War Board and the U. S. Employment Service, it is announ ced by G. Tom Scott, War Board chairman. The registration, to be handled through the Employment Service for North Carolina and the County War Boards, with the coope'rtaion of various Department of Agri culture agencies, is designed to help meet an increasingly severe shortage of such labor in the plant ing .cultivation, and harvesting of food and feed crops. Representatives of the Employ ment Service will arrange to sche dule meetings at once with the County War Boards to make pre parations for the registration. Voluntary workers handling the assembling of the records not omly will classify labor now unemploy ed, but will list labor presently employed but which will be avail able for other work at certain sea sons when present peak periods have passed. Women And Youths To Be Listed In order to widen the pool of available farm workers, the can' vass is to include v jine,n, school youths and college men, and Boy Scouts are to be contacted through their scout masters. A special phase of the registra tion is to deal with vagrants, Mr. Scott pointed out. Local law en forcement officers will be asked to cooperate with the War Board by prosecuting known vagrants under the laws of North Carolina. Local Selective Service Boards are to 'be asked to cooperate by agreeing to consider vagrants, who refuse to accept employment, for the active service of the U. S. Army. A second phase of the registra tion will be that of listing the prospective labor needs of indivi dual farmers, Working in cooper ation with the Uses, the , local Agricultural Adustment Adminis tration offices with the clerks in County Agent's offices, will keep lists of available labor. Still a third listing will be of farmers who own machinery avai able for custom work, in order to spread such machinery and keep it active during the shortage. In order to facilitate the regis tration, various USDA workers in the counties will aid the Employ ment Service in making the sur veys. The Employment Service will conduct the work in large cities, but most of the work in rural sections will be done by such officers as County and Home Demonstration Agents, Soil Con servation Service representatives, Farm Cecurity Administration sup ervisors and Triple-A committee men. The need for , registration of la bor, for 1942 and with increas ing importance for 1943, has been emphasized by the fact that esti mates are that war industries, when they reach their peak development, will require 14,000,000 more work ers than they now employ. In ad dition, Selective Service will make increasing inroads upon laborers of suitable age for active .service. Mr. Scott said the registration would get underway as soon as the i M ON MY WAY to that new Purina Dealer's for some good Omolene, the famous horse and mule feed for every feeding need. It helps keep both fine horses and work ani mals in good form all the time. FRANKLIN Hardware Co. W.VW.VJ 9 SwM necessary forms can b prepared in the counties in accordance with instructions of the War Board in cooperation with the Employment Service. Poultrymen Warned Against Negligence This is the season of the year when a small amount of negli gence may prove costly to the farm poultry raiser or the commercial poultry man, says, T. T. Brown, Ex tension poultry-man of N. C. State College. . Improper management of the lay ing flock or the young pullet flock can easily reduce profits now and during the next 12 months. Since eggs arc already improving in price, indifferent management of laying flocks or chicks during this Season will prove expensive. If the flock is well cared for, the poultrymani can expect a satis factory margin of profit from his eggs in a few more weeks. This will necessitate careful culling, a job that should be done each week. Hens that go broody should be banded with a spirolet .and placed in a broody coop. Such a coop should have a wire bottom, and should be ' suspended at least two to three feet above the floor to permit free air circulation under and around the hens. If broody hens are confined to such a coop at the first signs of broodiness u,nd both mash and grain kept before them, they will not usually require more than five to six days to come back into pro duction. If allowed to remain on a nest several days before con finement, it may require weeks to break the broody tendency. Brown also advised poultrymen to open laying houses at the back and ends so as to give the flock plenty of ventilation during the summer season. If the birds are not kept cool and comfortable, feed consumption will drop and so will egg production. In case the birds .stop eating to a noticeable extent a wet mash at .nooh will stimulate greater feed consumption and hold egg production more steady through the hot weather. The Michigan State Highway Commission) made a survey to dis cover just how fast America's auto tires are wearing out and found that the average tire was using up its rubber at the rate of three and a half per cent a month. i i - - j Mm J The Home Front The General Maximum Price Re gulation which was ordered last week by the OPA is the most drastic, the most far-reaching step ever taken to control the American economy. ,It throws virtually .ill prices and rents with specific ex ceptions under a ceiling for the duration. The High Cost1 of Living no longer was a vague threat. It had become a grim and uncomfortable reality. Action had to be immediate. The Regulation touches the lives of almost every manufacturer, wholesaler, retailer, consumer landlord and tenant. It is expected to mobilize our eco nomic resources for victory just as the Selective Act mobilized our man-power. The Selective Service Act brought forth relative ly few evaders and the price or der is counted on to receive simi lar support. iBut there are teeth in the law for those who try to dodge it. The rent-fixing order is equally important to the war effort. It af fects rent in 301 defense rental areas housing 76,000,000 in addition to 21 areas previously designated. It "reaches into every state except North Dakota and Idaho and ex tends into Puerto Rico. It touches enormous cities such as Metropo litan New York and such small communities as King George coun ty, Va., with 5,431 souls. "A progwm as vast as this," said Leon Henderson, "will need the fullest public suport and we know that we shall have the back ; ing of all landlords who have not attempted to take advantage of j aibnormal conditions." In. the final analysis, as the Pre sident pointed out in his last fire ! side chat, we should consider it a "privilege" inot a "sacrifice'' to shoulder this small burden for I ultimate victory. Business men will j recognize the importance of these I two weapons for the war on the , Home Front. They know that their soas and inephewg in the war theatres must be furnished the tools of destruction at the lowest possible cost. They know the dan I ger of runaway prices from the WBfc memories of post-war America and post-war Europe. They know that civilian security and morale must be kept intact. They know the fu tility of winning tlie war across the seas and losing it across the conn ters. We must have total mo bilization for total war. PEARL HARBOR CALLS MACHINISTS Machinists; boilermakers, elec tricians, coppersmiths', want a job at Pearl Harbor Ehe United States Civil Service Commission, charged with the responsibility of filling key positions, in the ever expanding .navy yards, jvjwder plants, and other establishments directly under government opera tion, has announced that Uncle Sam needs the services of many Journeymen workers, skilled in trades vital to the war effort, for duty at the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard. Splendid opportunities also exist for individuals who have. completed v uidii.o,nai ieiense i raining Lours es administered by the Federal DANCE Every Saturday Night Music by Rudolph Carter and His Band From 9 to 12 O'CIock Admission 50c Per Person (tax included) PANORAMA COURT WAKE UP AMERICA! THE CIVILIAN POPULATION HAS NOT REALIZED THAT WE ARE IN AN ALL-OUT WAR Thousands of typists, stenographers, and secretaries are needed for defense work. Urgent demands are being made on our school to fill this demand. We are rushing our studen.ts through jusl as rapidly as we can to meet this emergency. We are in need of many more people to train for these defense jobs. Who is willing to help his country in these perilous times? Our prices and terms are most reasonable. If you want to help your Country, get in touch with us. Government jobs pay good salaries. For full information write or phone the ATHENS BUSINESS COLLEGE ATHENS, GA. (Fully Accredited) ...... --" m u XSi . nav.l ft-ndJiess tnciu-w- . -jBuner, " , ioter " i iu tight to kick ofl U' ead od iathe recoil kP P"TSH" 52 opeVatioS " frd cTLy rfectrve at au op the cures CtfPm p-r , arrets and gu" . ? ZLV nks ng- - Tim -r S. forces . . -Essornade cr.un product tnited States . 1935. 0,00 .i iinUari States fights better mm v.,! this wo OWH"" ' Offices of Education, or by the Na tional Youth Administration. Help er positions are open to workers who have had at least six months f experience ire a trade for which lligibles are needed. Wages are 78 cents per hour for helpers and from $1.02 to $1.3f per hour for journeymen. Transportation costs are borne by the Government. The. Commission urges all those who feel that they possess the nec essary qualifications and are de sirous of appointment to make ap plication immediately. Full de tails concerning positions open, conditions of employment, and sal ary offered, may be secured from the U. S. Employment Service rep resentative or by writing directly to the Manager, Fourth United States Civil Service District, 930 F Street, N. W. Washington, D. C, aoedes. North Carolina offers possibili ties for growing some of the herb supplies now cut of from foreign countries by the war. L. G. Mc- Lean. . used to control advantage- lp unes trom jjw turn hage lically P" Korcbmg olU keeP red I