A Week of The War Chairman Nelson announced a "continuing national drive" to in crease production immediately wi'l entail 168 hours work per week for every machine in war plant-*. The Prevalent m a radio addr< - Mid w Am1 Scans have been com pelled : eld ground, but we will 1 n - n. Gei many. Italy, and Japan art? \ > iose to their maxi mum output of planes, guns .tanks and ii ? I . Unii d Nations are no ? ? Jl> the United States of Ann nca He a>ked Americans not to *;? ^ ?rk a single day ? imtil MBBUtt laByofr** not to demand pi ? any one coup. ana to give u; r . ? tih sice. cheerfully when m my. ID! I l(i.\ IlKLATIONS Undt i ot dt'tary of State Welles announced two agreement?- signed with Brazil to .strengthen hemispher ic solidarity and to provide lend-lease aid to Brazil. Lend -Lease Adminis trator titet ' inius reported lend-lease aid for January reached $462,000,000. ami u ill shipments have now ex ceeded two billion dollars. Allocations for land -lease purposes totaled more than twelve billion dollars as of Feb. 19. The U. S. and Britain Sigurd a pact postponing indefinitely final settle ment of lend-lease costs. The pact commits both nations to virtually free trade. It also provides finil terms of the settlement "shall be such as not to burden commerce be tween the two countries." Mr. Welles announced the Vichy French Gov ernment has given the U. S. assuran- j ces it will not aid the Axis beyond j Verms of the Armistice agreements. RATIONING Price Administrator Henderson stated National Registration for su sugar rationing books will be held over a four-day period. probably during the last week in March. Ap proximately 1.400,000 school teachers -will serve as registrars, and 245.003 nchools wil' be used. One adult may ireglster for each "family unit." The WFB announced a rationing program March 9 for 186,000 new truck an d truck trailers which will be available for rationing during the next 23 months. State quotas pro ride 120,000 new 1942 pasenger auto mobiles for eligible buyers during March. April an dMay. Total number ?f cars ear-marked for civilian pur rfiase during the next twelve months la 340.000 No passenger car retreaded tires will ?e avaiable in March, he said. T1IE WAR FRONT The Navy reported U. S. Naval ! forces sunk 53 enemy ships between December 10. 1941, and February 24, 1942, probably sank seven more and damaged three additional. The Army announced from Dec. 7 to February 27, it probably sank at least 19 Japanese ships, seriously | damaged 31 others, and shot down 345 enemy pianos ? not including 165 Japanese planes shot down by the 1 American Volunteer Oroup serving In the Chinese Army. The Navy said In the flrat two montlu of this year 116 ships of United Nations registry were attack ed in the Western half of the Atlan tic .and 56 attacks were made by the Navy on enemy submarines. Three U-boats are believe*! sunk and damaged. ARMY Tlu- House passed Legislation in ?n.i sinc from one month to one yea the payment to dependents of the .ilar ; of members of tin- armed foi - cap. tired by the enemy. Tne I i :is]ation would also increase the pay of offices and men serving out ntinental U !S. by from 10 iO JO percent. The President established the Army specialists Corps, a unit of unl m. d civilian employees who may be appointed to War Department urns regard!)-- of Civil Service .atus. 'iino ti i w policy by which men with dependents may enlist for the sole pu.pose of qualii fylng as officers, and if they fail to make liu grade may o< transferred to tlie enlisted reserves. Tliey would not be called for active service until ' their previous classifications in the draft were called Age limits are 18 to 45. All candi- | dates must serve four months in Rt - i placement Centers or Field Units be- I . fore being eligible for officers cand!- i dates' schools. Tlie New policy is de signed to meet Army needs this year' of 75,000 new officers selected from ! 95,000 candidates. AGRICULTURE Tlie Agriculture Department an nounced farmers 1941 cash income reaced almost $12 billion? highest since 1920, and 29 percent greater than 1940. I TheWPA said its employment | schedules for March will be reduced | 62,000, with an equal or greater re duction tentatively set for April. Agriculture Secretary Wickar'd asked State and County Department of Agriculture War Boards to aid local draft boards in determing oc cupational deferments of farmers. o On The Home Front Rugged, independent, but free, Mac Arthur's men stand on Bataan, a daily living sacrifice to democracy. There, on the wild mountains battle fornt with the impregnable rock of Corregidor at their backs, in what military experts almost unanimously regard as a hopeless situation, these indomintable Americans and Filipi nos refuse to recognize defeat. MacArthu's men fight on. Filipino and American alike, because they are willing to sacrifice their lives ? not just face a little discomfort ? to re main as free and rugged in their thoughts as the rocky-grown penin sula where they make their stand. And because they are freemen, born of American democracy, it is not in them to accept their situation as hopeless. Not when they can lash out against the treacherous over whelmingly powerful foe as they did last week and with a few tiny planes blast ta the bottom of the sea 30,000 tons o J .shipping and hundreds of Japs. STOCKS BOUGHT IN ADVANCE Make It Possible for Us Still to Meet All Plumbing and Heating Needs We Also Have a Large Stock of Electrical Appliances As Always, Our Skilled Worker# are the Finest to be had ? with all work Guaranteed 100% This Guarantee is Backed by our 20 years of Service ROGERS PLUMBING COMPANY ?*<*?*. c. at < Phone 166-J TOCSIN SOI'NDED President Roosevelt sounded the tocsin (or all-out work. He said: Now," he said .in this "crucial. "Our plants must hum 24 hours a da;', seven days a week, producing tiie materials an dmachines being so rapidly absorbed in the war effort. In line with Nelson's directive for njunr ioroH CCHtTSCtS. J . Vwnwl son, director of the Division of In dustry Operations, blocked the sale at auction of machinery valuable to wa rproduction so that it might not be dispersed. On top of this. George C. Brainard. chief of the WPB'x Tools Branch, called upon owners of idle machine tools to offer them for sale lo be placed in plants engaged in wa rproduction. NEKD OF SACRIFICE For a long while shortages, except in tires an dautomobtles. were Just somethin gto talk about. Output might be curtailed, but at the fac tory, but there was still plenty of stock .and also on the retailer's shelves. Now these shortages are working their way down. Men's clothing, for instance. After March 30 trousers will be cuffless, suit-coats will be about an inch shorter, there'll be no patch pockets, pleats, tucks, bellows, gussets. And no vests for dougle-breasted suits. It means a saving of some 40.000.000 pound* of wool. The copper mining industry has offered full cooperation, to increase output. The mines have gone on a continuous-operation, seven day week, operating under labor-man agement production committees. PROTECTS SPORTSMEN "Sporating goods are needed for civilization recreation and are im portant in th maintenance of civilian morale." said Price Administrator Henderson in calling upon manufac turers o fall sporting goods and fish ing equipment to prevent prices jumping above those in effect on January 10, last. And he made it plain that, while his letter was di rected to manufacturers alone, he meant to control retail prices as well. This "request" followed close upon the heels of an order freezing the supply of shotguns, pistols and other firearms at the manufacturer's door. Many of these weapons may find their way into the hands of the mili tary an dlaw enfrocement agencies. CEILING ON RENTS Landlords in the Hampton, Roads. Va.. and Washington, N. C., have been ordered to reduce rents to the level of April 1. 1941. This is only a beginning. Price Administrator Hen derson says he intends to move swiftly and o strike hard to correct the rent situation in more than 100 additional defense areas. Among the developments last week which affect most of us, in one way or another: OPA's action in placing temporary price ceiling over eleven canned fruits. 15 canned vegetables . . . OPA placed bedding equipment under temporary control . . . The Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services has begun a drive to see that we eat proper food, adopt ed the slogan : "V S. Need* Ds Strong . . " o Several Greek coastal ateaaaers. which escaped the Mail Invasion forces, are now operatise with the Russian fleet In the Slack Sea. I mx ram axxm WASHINGTON SNAPSHOTS At Hip rate at which Congress has \ been appropriating funds for mill- j lary purposes, this war will have to I be every man's war . . . because ' in terms of dollars *nri the ' cost is terrific. Since Congress met oil January , 5tli. a bill has been enacted to pro- | vide $12 525,000,000. primarily for I airplanes and the expansion of air- ( craft production: another has been! enacted authorizig t26.495.000.000 1 for the Navy: and a third has been j acted upon by the House to appro 1 priate $32,000,000,000 for arms, lease-lend aid and ship construction. This brings the total for the three major bills to $70,000,000,000. or 70 per cent of the estimated national income for 1942. Net result, according to statisti cians, is that since Pearl Harbor. Congress has appropriated or au thorized appropriations for the war effortat the rate of $369 for every ' one of the 130,000,00 persons in the country. This does not include some additional $200 per capita which the Senate is considering Letters to Congressmen from the folks back at home indicate thi>t ' they are willing to pay whatever the ; war costs ? there is no question of 1 stinting ? but. they ask. what about ' the Administration's getting down to business? Fury and frills in the Office of Civilian Defense, Congressional pen sions. the proportions of the aver age American woman. iShe turned out to be dumpy. So what?) un earthed by the Department of Agri i culture, and projects of similar Ilk turns out to be more than a tempest in a teapot. In the House the other day a Rep. resentative described the reaction of the people by relating a story. A newspaper in a medium-sized Mid Western city was selling defen.v stamps through its carriers who de livered papers to the customer's home. Sales fell off. Upon instruc tion from tho newspaper, the news boys asked why and found out thai was a manifestation o fpublic re ll was a manifestation of public re. It was 111; employment by the OCD people deemed unqualified ..n<2 Congress' voting itself pensions thn: time. S?m< of this i.s on its way to b - lng straightened on.. Dean Land., director of the OCD. seems to have thai agency well in hand. In the opinion of man? observers here the OCD l- setting (iuv. 11 lo the business of air raid shelters, war den- i:.is masks and first aid. Con gress. too. has seen the errors of its i ways and is repenting 011 the pen 1 sions. . IS Privately, commentators here ars sayinp that there's nothing wrong with the morale of the people that better moralr in Administration cir cles can't remedy. Which brings to mind a story worth repeating. A candidate for Oovernor of one of our North Cen tral states (this was some time ago> discovered an item on a travel ex pense account of a fellow politician, it was 80 cents for a baked potato. This candidate took up the question of the potato and made a campaigm issue out of it. He acquired a repu tation as watchdog of the state treasury and was three times elected Oovernor of the state. Some of the economists here have been clamoring for a watchdog of the federal treasury for a long time, be cause. they point out, there aremur 80 cent items being paid for which the country could do without. Favorable comment has been elic ited not only here, but also in th* press throughout the country, at the "conversion," step by step, of th# federal government to war work: The almost unanimous reactiom hails this as a necessary economy measure and as a conservation ot energies for the more important task of winning the war. Some of teh measures, already ac complished .which are being talked about are the President's direction to the heads of non-military agen cies to determine hom many worker* they can release for war work, the lengthening of the federal work week to 44 hours, and the pointing up of the work of older agencies 1* the direction ot the defense effort. This does not mean, however, that anyone feels that all which can be done along these lines has been done. It means only that the signs are encouraging. HEADQUARTERS FOR "STAGS** The Only "Strictly For Men" Cafe In All This Section WE SPECIALIZE ON WINES, BEERS AND GOOD FELLOWSHIP We have the largest stock of Wines in the mountain Counties, ranging from vintage, Champagne (Imported) to domestic Clarets, Sauternes, Ports, and Burgundies. Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer on Draft ? at a Penny an Ounce ? other brands of beer and ales in cans or bottles at the bar, in a booth, or take it home. 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