N. C. Weekly Roundup TOWN AND FARM IN WARTIME" A weekly news digest prepared by tlu* rural press section (),YVI News Bureau. ST A HI LI Z AT ION HIGH LJGHTS .Highlights of recent significant economic stabilization orders in clude (a) President Roosevelt's or der tJiat 'the 48-hour work-week be generally adopted, (b) Econo mic stabilization director James F. Byrnes' . program stipulating that there shall be no increase in wages except to rectify "gross inequi ties" and "substandard" wages. Mr. . liyrmes also said that changing the parity formula would affect fann ers adversely in the long run ? that farm and dairy workers who had gone into industry should be urged to return to agriculture and that recalcitrants should be depriv ed of their of their deferred draft status. All Americans were urged to obey, price controls and ration ing regulations as part of their contribution to winning the war. High taxes, Mr. Byrnes s^id, are absolutely necessary, but he be lieves firmly in limiting profits to prevent exorbitant costs to con sumers and government alike. RULES POR DISCHARGING ? MEN OF 38 j. Men over 38 years old will be discharged from the Army accord ing to these rules and require ments: 1. He mu>t be at least 38 years old; 2. Enlisted or inducted on or before February 28, 1943; 3. Ha> submitted voluntary request for discharge .to his com manding. officer; 4. Has submitted statement from responsible persons showing that he will be employed in essential industry, including ag riculture. 5. Release of soldier must not seriously effect the efficiency of his unit. Some kinds of shoes are not covered by the rationing order that went into .effect February 9.* Un rationed are soft and hard-soled slippers' and bedroom slippers, in fant's soft-soled shoes, ballet slip ? pers, ordinary waterproof footwear, gaiters, work, dress, clog, and toe rubbers, and lumberman's over shoes. ? Those rationed (one pair per person between now and June 15, obtainable through stamp 1? of war ratiotr l>ook oine) include all types of boots and shoes mode irt whole or in part of leather, ami all rubber- soled shoies. Shoe stamps are transferable, (and can be used by ' any member of the family. In emergencies locail ration boards will issu,e a shoe purchase certificate. 18 MILLION VICTORY GARDENS Victory gardens ? -18 million of them ? will be needed in 1943 to help meet expanding food produc tion goals. Plarmers are pushing for th,e biggest food production in history under handicaps of labor and material shortages. A victory garden is every family's direct contribution to the wiar effort. FARMERS PAY OFF LOANS Farmers repaid $28, (XX), (XX) on loans administered by the emer gency crop and food loan offices in 1942, compared with $19,500,000 they borrowed during the yeaa*. V-MAIL FOR SAILORS You V-Mail letter to a sailor will have a better chance p f get ting to him without delay now, for the Navy has expaind-ed it* V-Mail services. Four new V-Mail 'stations, have beejn sent abroad. Small, portable machines that can be quickly set up in remote areas ?will now be available to speed up the delivery of V-Mail to sailors. RECRUIT FARM HELP Labor to Ivelp, with production ami processing in canning- areas will be recruited in ?a campaign beginning immediately, says the U.S. Department of Agricultural agents, the U.S. Employment Ser vice, the Office of Civilian tl>efense and looaJ operators of canning plants will all cooperate. Urgency of the situation makes necessary the help of local clubs, businesses, churchs and schools. COMMITTEE ON SUBVERSIVE \ ACTIVITIES President Roosevelt, by execu tive order has created a five-man inter departmental committee, func tioning within the Justice Depart ment, to pass on all complaints pi subversive activity by federal employees. Members of -the com mittee are assistant treasury sec retary Gas-ton, solicitor Brown of the Federal Deposit Insurance Cor poration, assistant interior secre tary Chapman, Rudolph M. Evans of the Federal Reserve Board, and legal adviser Cannon of*?he Civil Service Commission. ? Continued From P?f? On? ? rate records and better breeding. The meeting was dominated by the earnest effprt to develop pro duction, placing emphasis on poul try, egg?, milk aad iriih poutoei MGNUTT ON MANPOWER . RULES Three requirements have been enunciated by War Manpower Chairman, McNutt. They are: (1) Persons now .engaged in essential work must stay where they are or transfer to siill more essential jobs where their talents are need ed. (2) Persons unemployed or working in non- essemtiaJ jobs must transfer to essential activities. (3) AH persons must raise their pro ductive efforts to the highest pos sible levels. MOKE HARNESS LEATHER Harness leather, demajnd for which has increased greartly be cause of enlarged food production goals, will be taken from the arm ed forces to supply farmers. WPB Order M-273-A will have thait ef fect, in an attempt to meet farm ers' serious need pf haimess for horses and mules, more ? of which are being used because of drastic restrictions on manufacture of farm machinery, including tractors. J>AVE 400,000 TIKES About 400,000 passenger car tires were saved by tire inspections dur ing thev first two months. Those tires aeeded immediate repair and* would have been beyond rej>air for future in^e if they had not been taken out of service. NEWSPRINT CUT COMING Readers may find it hard to get a copy of their favorite newspaper after April 1, when the second 10 percent cut in newsprint paper is likely to become effective. WPB's printing and publishing* divison be lieves the supply of newsprint, if equitably distributed, will prevent undue hardship upon any publica tion. A newspaper's essential ser vice in wartime is important and it is hoped will not be materially lessened by ithis necessary reduc tion in materials. HAVE YOU ANY MANILA ROPE Mamila rojue, 3-16 of an inch or larger, is indispensable for cer tain, military purposes. The gov ernment will pay 10 percent above owner's net cost for all it cam get in lengths of 200 teet or more. Owners, whether business men or others are requested to communi cate with Murry Cook, 155 E. 44th St., New York City. PRICES FOR ONIONS AND | POTATOES Prices have heem established by OPA for dry onions as follows : Maximum price for all varieties of early dry onions except white, $2.60 per 50 pounds ? for those har vested Feb. 8, 1943, through March 1913 ? $1.65 per 50 pounds for those harvested June 1 tp June 30, 1913. For white dry omions, country shippers may add 15 cents per 50 pounds ito maximum staged above. For early dry onions of white boiler or white pickler var iety, country shippers may add $1 per 50 pounds. If onions are sold in bulk or the purchaser's con tainer, country shippers mnst de duct 15 cents per 50 pounds. WHO VOTED FOR ALARM CLOCKS? Alarm clocks styled for "war time" will be on the market by April I. They will bie spring-wound to save critical materials, and enough will be made to take care of civilian ineeds. The alarm clock has. been found to be a "tool" erf production for ithe war worker: U. S. Cauaualties Total 65,380 Men The office of war information reported today that announced cas ualties o the armed forces have reached a total of 65,380 kilted, wounded, taken prisoner, missing and interned in neutral countries. The combined total for all the armed forces was reported as 10, 1 50 dead ; 10,959 wounded ; and 44, 11 missing, plus 90 interned. The army list was complete through February 7 and the navy list up to February 19, but the navy totals included only casualties whose next of kin have received notification. Army casualties after 14 months of war were 41,948, of which 3,53 3 were killed and 6,509 wounded, there were 25,684 missing, 6,132 prisoners of war and 90 interns. Of the wounded, 743 have returned to active duty. ' . The army's casualty toll includes >2,500 Philippine scouts, most pf whom were assumed to be prison ers of war. - Navy department casualties ag gregated 23,432. They were divided as follows : Navy ? Dead, 5,0R3; wounded 2,1 087; missing 10,197; total 17,367. ? Marine corps ? Dead, 1,483; wounded 2,344; missing, 1,9W; to tal 5,281. Coast guard? Dead, 51 ; wounded, 19; missing 174; total 244. "So you met Alice today?" "Yes, I hadn't sees her for ten years." "Has she kept her girlish fig ure?" "Kept it ? She's doubled it." "You must find debt collecting a thankless job. Nobody wants to see you, do they?" "On the contwry, they all wk mt to a!' *f?i? " Classified Advertising 1JAVE you anything around the house * * or farm you would like to sell? Try a classified ad. The cost is only a few cents and there are probably a lot of folks looking for just whatever it is you no longer have use for. -> CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS Rate*: One and one-half cents per word ? 30 cents minimum. FOR SALE ? White Spring- a*nd Columbia seed oats, onion sets and garden seeds. "Nitrate of soda", "Knox Potato Grower" and other grades of fertilizers. Also carry complete lime of Way ne dairy, hog, and chicken feed. Timothy hay, C. S. meal and soy bean m,eal. Ray Grocery and Feed Co. F25 ? tn WANTED TO BUY? Late model used cars, trucks and pick-ups. l>uncan Motor Co., Franklin, N. C. Tn. LOST ? Child's silver bracelet stam ped with flowers, Sunday after noon, between Angel'* Drug Store and Postoffice. Finder call 95 for reward. ltp. LOST ? Between Baptist Church and Main Street, a coin purs* containing biUs. Return to the Franklin Press. ltp. T ? / FOR RENT? Garage aiaartnient. See Mrs. Bill Bryson, Bank Buildifng. ltp Last Rites For Henry C. Bates . Henjry Creaton Bat.es, 72, died at the home of his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Guest, in east Franklin, last Thurs day, February 18, at 12 p. m. He had been in declining health for over a year. Mr. Bates had lived in Ma^cou county practically all his life. Jlis wife, who was Miss Ada Clocr, died some time ago. They were the parents of 14 children, nine of whom are living. He was a mem ber of the Coweta Baptist church. Surviving are four daughters, M\-ith Lynrn Bari in a 20th Century-Fox production. A beautiful, daring girl and a flying, fighting Yank in the battle-scar red Ea.st provde the thrills of this picture. "Gentleman Jim" is a Warner Bros, film based on the life of James J. Corbet t, prize fighter of the gay nineties, tp whom the famous johpi L. Sullivan lost the heavyweight championship. The pic ture stars Errol Flvnn as Cnrbett and Alexis Smith as "Gentleman Jim." Miss Tim Sloan, director of ed Atlanta, (ia., visited her mother, Mrs. J. S. Sloan, and other rela tives over the weekend. Corporal Elizabeth Setser of the WAACS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Setser, of Fort Ogle thorpe, (ia., where she assists in ttainkng recruits, is visiting her parents this week. Press Ads Pay EXECUTOR NOTICE Having qualified at executor of Laura K. Bryson, deceased, late of Macon county, N. C.. this is to notify all persons having claims 1 against the estate of said defeased ! to exhibit them to the undersigned on or befbre the 24th dliy of Feb ruary, 1tp ? AI About three- fourth of all sports equipment now being manufactured goes to members of the armed services and to those receiving pre indiictbn military training. ? ADVERTISING Makes a Small Business Bigger and a Big Business Better From where I sit . . . Joe Marsh The other day we were talking about George Washington ? who besides being a great gen era] was a surveyor, a farmer, and a wise statesman. "And he made mighty good beer too," says Grandma Hos kiiih. "His private recipe's filed in the New York Public Library." Now Grandma Hoskins knows her history? and she told us how other famous men believed in beer and modera tion. William Penn, for instance, who had his own brewery and James Madison, who "urged the manufacture of beer in every State of the Union!' When the dark years of Pro hibition came along, they proved how right those early American statesmen were ? that no law ever takes the place of moderation. They were right about a lot of things? Washington and Adams and Penn ? and the others who founded America. And from where I sit they were certainly right about moder ation too. MACON THEATRE WHERE WHOLESOME ENTERTAINMENT COSTS SO LITTLE WEEK DAYS? 3:4S ? 7:1S ? 9:30 SATURDAYS? Continuous ? 1:00 P. M. to 12:00 Sunday and Monday, Feb. 28 and March 1 HEART FLAMED WITH THE FU*Y OF HATE . ... AND IOVS1. ? "? "? ?rfc*a 6ENE TIERNEY GEORGE MONTGOMERY LYNN BARI ? Also News and Comedy Tuesday and Wednesday, March 2 and 3 "The Great Gildersleeve" with Harold Peary Freddy Mercer Also Captain Midnight ? Last Chapter ? and Comedy Tuesday Night ? ONLY ? March 2 On our stage ? IN PERSON ? The 50 1st Parachute Infantry Swing Orchestra from Camp Tocooa Ga. All Admissions will be 30c. DONT MISS THIS! Thursday and Friday, March 4 and 5 ERROL ALEXIS WTnm ? smith f jsssa r '4a',A|%l i I / 1 1 '? yjl The Story of James J. Corbett 1 a J ff .. *.M*m mtm t .... LrtQvi '?? i-? ? -??? t? - ? Saturday, March 6 ? DOUBLE FEATURE Johnny Mack Brown In "Silver Bullets" and JINX FALKENBERG, Kay Harri., In Luck Leg* Alao Jungle Gir,l No. ,11 OWL SHOW 10:30? Out 12:00 Ann Miller Jerry Culonna In "Priorities On Parade" BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS