Inflation Can Bring Disaster To Farmer* Inflation, or a runaway price situation in these postwar days because of an unprecedented demand for civilian goods and services, can easily spell dis aster for many farmers and their families as they struggle with reconversk>n problems that come after the war. Farm management specialists of the Extension Service at State College point to the dan gers of inflation as outlined by postwar policy committee of the Association of Land-Orant Col leges and Universities In a re cent release. The committee declared, "Any decided rise in prices and wage rates during this period will greatly add to farm costs. . . . When war demands taper off, shortages of farm products are likely to be replaced by sur pluses. If prices are allowed to get out of hand 'now, farm prices may nose -dive while many items of farm expenses stay up." Many farmers still remember what happened after World War I when farm land prices soared. Savings of a lifetime may be tost if price controls are lifted before dangers of a speculative boom are past. Not only farmers but also return ing war veterans may be the victims of exhorbitant land prices. "As rapidly as the war ef fort permits, the threat of In flation should be tempered by speedy expansion and resump tion of production to meet civilian needs," the committee said, "But controls are needed until supplies again are ade quate to meet requirements at reasonable prices. Additional controls, particularly to limit and discourage land speculation, are in order." Two Receipei Given For Making Soap Making soap at home is be coming a necessity in these soap shortage days. Extension spe cialists in home economics at State College present two stan dard recipes for uncooked soap. Six pounds of fat with 2J4 pints of cold water, and 1 can of Jye will make about 9 pounds of soap. Six pounds of fat is equal, to 13^5 standard measur ing cups of liquid fat. Pour water into a small enamel, stone, or glass contain er. Dissolve the lye in the water, stirring with a wooden spoon or paddle until dissolved. Mix in a well ventilated room but not In a breeze. Let the lye water cool until the container feels cool to the hand. Melt the fat in an enameled pan and stir with an enameled spoon or a wooden paddle. Cool the fat to the correct temperature throughout the pan. Cool the fat until the spoon begins to leave a track In the mixture. Pour the lye solution into the fat in a small, steady JOIN Bryant Mutual Burial Association ? OkU?t and StnonfMt In lb* County Gneiss By Mrs. F. E. Mashburn (Thursday, August 23) Dear Readers: So many little changes have been, and are be ing made In this section I hes itate to begin to tell you lest I leave out some vitally Impor tant one. So will you Inform me if I have omitted something worthwhile. Often overhead you see a plane diving earthward, or ris ing again. Tls Elbert Hedden flying. He comes so low you wonder if he is Inspecting the sanitary condition of your back yard. He and Mrs. Hedden and two small daughters live in a nice new home which has been constructed near the site of his father, John Hedden's old home. This house is not only well fin ished and furnished inside and painted on the out, but has a kitchen sink and running water. Near the house is a good saw mill. With the aid of two trucks and cooperative workmen Elbert has been able to deliver ties, logs, and many cords of acid and pulp wood during the present emergency. Quince Hedden and workmen with one truck have done a splendid Job of getting out acid wood. Ed Crisp and Ous Hed den have also labored in this work In the Walnut Creek sec tion. I know not the report to give of the important work done by the Champion Fiber company on Buck Creek. Terry Bollck of Buck Creek has driven a bulldozer making roads to the top of the moun tain above Tom Fore, also on W. A. Keener and Ben Hedden place and up to the Burgin Moses Place, and elsewhere has he been building roads for the truckers to haul over. He works for the Champion Fiber com pany. "Aunt" Ann Jones is about as usual ? sailing a king In her nineties. George W. Gregory, who has spent sometime in the Baptist Hospital at Winston-Salem and also at the Angel Hospital at Franklin, is critically ill. Mrs. Luna Jefferies has re turned to her home In Tennes see after visiting her friends, Mrs. Gertrude Strain and Miss Molly Trentham at Mrs. Strain's summer home on Walnut Creek. stream, stirring slowly In one direction. Continue stirring un til the mixture is a honey-like texture. Let it stand for 10 to IS minutes until the mixture beoomes thick like salad dress ing and then pour into molds or wooden boxes, lined with waxed paper. After 24 hours it is ready to cut. Cure soap for several weeks before using and never let it freeze. The- formula for cooked soap is 2 quarts of melted fat, 1 can of lye, 1 cup of liquid ammonia, 1 quart of water, and 1 table spoonful of borax dissolved in one-half cup of hot water. Dis solve the lye In water and let stand until lukewarm. Add slowly to the fat, stirring con stantly until jelly like. Cook slowly. Add borax water and mix thoroughly. Remove from fire, add ammonia, and stir un til about the consistency of honey. Pour into molds and cure for 6 weeks. NOTICE The Auction Sale for the Feed Grain Bins will be held Saturday morning, September 1st, at 10:00 o'clock. SALE MY ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD EQUIPMENT One cook stove, one oil stove for cooking; four heating stoves, two full beds, one three-quarters, one cot? all steel, mattresses, pillows, linoleum and wool rugs, chairs, tables, curtains, minors, shades. Enamel slop Jars bowls, pitchers, cooking utensils, dishes, solid oak ice box? hundred pound capacity, two zinc tubs, one dresser. ~ one wash stand, one electric waffle Iron and other art icles. I am moving away but It Is only temporary, and I will surely be back. No auctioneer? every article will be reasonably priced for your Inspection. Sale begins Sat urday, September 1st at 12 o'clock and continues til sun down, and may continue through Monday, Sep tember 3rd, beginning at 12 o'clock. Cut out and pin this ad on your calendar and don't mias sale. MRS. W. L. HIGDON Asbear Bouse, Back ?f Baptist Church N. C. Firms And Workers Aid In Atomic Bomb Production Several North Carolina firms, at least four or five, have been and are still engaged in mak ing component parts or supplies and materials used in the por ductlon of the atomic bomta, some of which have spread hav oc in parts of Japan, it is re vealed by Dr. J. S. Dorton, state director of the War Manpower Commission. Dr. Dorton admits that he knows very little about what was being produced in this State for use in connection with these bombs, since their pro duction has been one of the greatest secrets of this war, but he does know that some North Carolina firms, as a part of the so-called Manhattan District secret project, have been so engaged. Due to the veil of secrecy little is known about this work and Dr. Dorton is not sure he is at liberty to reveal what he does know, at this time. He has revealed that 6,208 North Carolina workers have been recruited by WMC's Unit ed States Employment Service offices for the Oak Ridge pro ject in, Tennessee, 792 as con struction workers in building the plants and 5,416 in making some parts of the bombs, in 1943 and 1944. Most of them Mrs. F. E. Mashburn and son Samuel have returned ' Irom Marietta, Georgia, where they were visiting Mrs. Edward and Miss Annaiee Mashburn. Kenneth Clark of Cullasaja spent the weekend with his friend "Richard Mashburn. A number of our boys who have seen duty on various bat tle fronts have returned to this township. On August 12, a decoration day was observed by the people who have relatives and friends buried at the Strain cemetery and the Walnut Creek cemetery. Basket dinner was served. Rev. Frank Holland had charge of the services in the morning and afternoon. On August 19 Mr. Hull of Franklin conducted the Sunday school at Walnut Creek. The sweet music of the organ was wafted through the verdent trees on the gentle breeze call ing people to worship and praise the Great God, who has so marvelously given us victory over our foe. Let us follow the teachings of the Savior, the Prince of Peace. Eugene Mclntyre, a Future Farmer student under Mr. Whit mire, of the Franklin high school has . just marketed his bean crop at Dillard, Ga. John Fore recently brought his seven children back to his father and mother, Mr. ana Mrs. Tom Fore, returning to the State of Washington, where he and Mrs. Fore plan to work for some time before returning to North Carolina. Patrons of Walnut Creek and Buck Creek schools will be in terested in knowing that both schools will be discontinued. Pupils will be conveyed to Gneiss by bus. Children up to the eighth grade will go to Pine Grove school. Other pupils will transfer to another bus and be taken to Franklin. This year our Legislature passed a oom pulsory school law which will bring back into school children who have not been attending much, if any, for some time. were from the western part of the State. It is likely, he be lieves, that many others went into Tennessee for work on the project. Recruiting for this project has been difficult, and the turn over in workers large, due, ac cording to reports, to the prac tice of putting a man on one job and keeping him there, without change or promotion., on the theory that if he work ed at more than one place he would learn too much about the secret weapon. Work for the secret weapon is done in some of the carbon plants and machine tool plants in North Carolina, and probab ly in other plants, some of which very likely did not know they were contributing to the production of the bombs, Dr. Dorton said. . North Carolina thus had im portant connection with the new destructive bombs, by sup plying some of . the materials used in their production, by furnishing several thousands of workers for plants actually producing them and by furn ishing the man, Major Thomas W. Ferebee, of Mocksvilie, who actually launched the first bomb from a superfortress on its way to the destruction of the city of Hiroshima in Japan. i National Forest Timber for Sale Sealed bids will be received by the Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina, up to and not later than 2 P. M., October 1, 1945, and opened immediately thereafter, for all merchantable live and dead timber designed for cutting on an area embrac ing about 1075 acres within the Dryman Fork Unit, Little Ten nessee River Watershed, Macon County, Nantahala National For est, North Carolina, estimated to be 5,000 units ( 160 cubic, feet per unit- of chestnut extract wood, more or less. No bid of less than $0.75 per unit will be considered. In addition to price bid for stumpage, a deposit of $0.10 per unit for all wood cut will be required for sale area betterment work. $500.00 must ' accompany each bid, to be ap plied on the purchase price, re- : funded, or retained in part as liquidated damages, according to 1 conditions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids reserved. Before bids are submitted full information concerning the timber, the conditions of sale, and submission of bids should be obtained from the Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Car olina. | A30 ? 2tc ? S13 National Forest Timber for Sale Sealed bids will be received by the Forest Supervisor. Franklin, North Carolina, up to and not later than 2 P. M., October 1, 1945, and opened Immediately thereafter, for all merchantable live and dead timber designed for cutting on an area embrac i. v about 1075 acres within the Pryman Fork Unit, Little Ten nessee River Watershed, Macon County, Nantahala National For Hayes and Gilmer Gregory are visiting their aunt, Mrs. Ed Gregory, at Holly Springs this week. Sale of Real Estate for Taxes *? Pursuant to an order of the Board of Aldermen of the Town of Franklin in regular session on August 6th, 1945, I will on Monday, September 10th, 1945 at 12:00 o'clock noon at the Courthouse door in Frank lin, and thereafter until said sale is completed, sell at public auction in the manner provided by law the property hereinafter described, belonging to or listed in the names of the persons designated for the Town taxes due for the year 1944, in the amounts set forth with cost of this advertisement and sale to be added ; to-wit : This August the 9th, 1945. . E. W. LONG, Tax Collector. Name Property Amount Angel, Zeb, 1 lot 412.08 Arrendale, John V., 1 lot 70 Arnold, Lester, 1 lot 1.05 Bigger*, W. B., 1 lot 98 Burnett, C. F., 1 lot 56 Carmack, Ma]. J. F., 1 lot . .3.31 Collins, John, 1 lot 52 Collins, J. L? 1 lot 2.24 Enloe, T. B., 1 lot ..... 1.43 Enloe, 8. W. & Son, 1 lot ...28.00 Fisher, Noel, 1 lot 35 Orasty. Mrs. Bertha, 1 tot . . 4.97 Hedden, O. D., Jr., 1 lot 13.23 Holmes, D., 1 lot 1.05 Jones, Tom, 1 tot 98 Klnsland, Roy, 1 lot 4.62 Leatherman, Everet, 1 tot....l.75 Lenoir, W, B. estate, 1 lot..,. .08 Moody, J. N. estate, 1 lot 70 Powers, Effle L? 1 lot, bal 11.55 Reece, Chas. estate, 1 lot 1.75 Reece, David, 1 lot 70 Reece, Geo. W., 1 lot 11.30 Tallent, R. L., 1 lot 1.05 Tallulah Falls Ry. Co., 1 tot 14.60 Tlppett, Lee, 1 lot _...18.38 Wilkes, W. C., 1 lot .6.77 Colored Burgess, Belle, 1 lot 18 Burgess, Fannie, 1 lot 39 Hayes, Nelson, 1 lot 1.75 Moore, Mabel tt Nobla, 1 lot 1.40 Porter, Mattie, 1 lot 1.40 Ray, Mark, l lot .70 Wlltle. Charley, 1 lot 1.40 est, North Carolina, estimate'! to be 5,000 units (180 cubic feet per unit) of chestnut extract wood. more or less. No bid of less than $0.75 per unit will be considered. In addition to price bid for stumpage. a deposit of $0.10 per unit for all wood cut will be required for sale area betterment work. $500.00 must accompany each bid. to be ap plied on the purchase price, re funded. or retained in part as liquidated damages, according to conditions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids reserved. Before bids are submitted full information concerning the timber, the conditions of sale, and submission of bids should be obtained from the Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina. A30 ? 2tc ? S13 National Forest Timber for Sale Sealed bids will be received by the 1 forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina, up to and not later than 2 P. M., October 1, 1945, and opened immediately thereafter, lor all merchantable live and dead timber designated lor cutting on an area embrac ing about 1075 acres within the Dryman Fork Unit, Little Ten nessee River Watershed, Macon County, Nantahala National For est, North Carolina, estimated to be 5,000 units (160 cubic feet per unit) of chestnut extract wood, more or less. No bid of less than $0.75 per unit will be considered. In addition to price bid for stumpage, a deposit of $0.10 per unit for all wood cut will be required for sale area betterment work. $500.00 must accompany each bid, to be ap plied on the purchase price, re funded, or retained in part as liquidated damages, according to conditions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids reserved. Beiore bids are submitted full information concerning the timber, the conditions of sale, and submission of bids should be obtained from the Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina. A30 ? 2tc ? S13 The use of yellow cuprocide has proved of great benefit in controlling tomato diseases in the Mountain area, says Howard R. Garriss, Extension plant pathologist at State College. The firing of corn during the exceptionally wet weather is principally due to a lack of nitrogen, say Extension agro nomists at State College. Wheat crops can be protect ed by all-risk crop insurance. The county AAA office has com plete information. Peace brings reconversion * problems in agriculture as well as In industry. Farmers are headed for post war disaster, it price controls are relaxed now. Guard against a runaway price situation. Food production still remains a paramount problem because millions of hungry people must be fed. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER EXECUTION IN THE SUPERIOR COURT North Carolina, Macon County Earl Emory j vs. Floyd E. Snow By virtue of an execution di rected to the undersigned from the Superior Court of Macon County in the above entitled action, I will on Thursday, the 6th day of September, 1945, at 12 o'clock noon, at the Court house door In Franklin, Macon County, -North Carolina, sell to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy said execution the fol lowing described real estate: BEGINNING on the Northeast corner of C. A. Setser-Baird tract, runs in a Southerly di rection with said line to W. L. Setser's Northwest corner of the Dolph Baird tract; thence in an Easterly direction with said line to M. D. Billings' tract; thence in a Northwesterly di rection with the Billings' line to the BEGINNING, containing 7.0 acres more or less. This 6th day of August, 194S. J. P. BRADLEY. Sheriff of Macon County. A9 ? 4tc ? A30 NOTICR North Carolina. Macon County. Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore ex isting wherein MILDRED STOCKTON and PAUL POTTS were partners, trading and do ing business under the firm name and style of Potts Funer al Home in the Town of Frank lin, in the County of Macon, North Carolina, has this day been dissolved by mutual con sent of the partners. The business heretofore con ducted by said partnership will in the future be conducted by said PAUL POTTS under the name and style of Potts Funeral Home, and the said MILDRED STOCKTON will have no fur ther interest therein and will not be liable or responsible for any indebtedness contracted by said business. And the said PAUL POTTS will collect all accounts and indebtedness due to said business and will pay all accounts and indebtedness due by said business. This the 11th day of August, 1945. PAUL POTTS MILDRED STOCKTON A23? 2tc? A30 YOUR Eyes examined in the modern way will mean better and more comfortable fitting glasses for you. EYE-EXAMINATIONS as a side line to some other activity, seldom are satisfactory. CONSULT a specialist who devotes all time and interest to examining eyes and fitting of glasses. FOR fast, accurate, oansiderate service see: DR. LON BURROUGHS Specializing in examining eyes and fitting of glasses ELLIOTT BLOCK CLAYTON, GA. Hours: 9:30 a. m., to 6:30 p. m. CLOSED Wednesdays. I 2S&* * THE BEST PART OP THE MEAL