FAGE FOUR
THE CAROLINA TIMES
SEPTMAS27th 1941
POPEYE, THE RECRUITING OFFICER, HANDS OUT A ROUGH
UTHCRN
WILDLI
Th*y Start ’Em Yotin^ in
* Texas!
In ihf Looe star iState thry!
dont’t eoant yon in the popula
tion finlew you fwh ur hunt. Ant'
it’s to whpro tliey kIh \
out boinf: a qualified citi ii
pretty youuir these day^.
F. C. (Fishfatdi«*r) UhH of-
La Foria. Texjis, purchasol «j
licenHO fur his s»ii one hour af-,
ter the yoi*ig«^ter’s arrival at
the Mercedes hospital. When,
Forest fires illuminated the ski(>y
“Just as socMi as the woather
eleam,’* the proud father an
swered.
OKIOES VA KIN
UEA»1 ANW 04E OF
FORTV ODD SWLLED
TF^OeS IN
- U’.CLE SAMiS
7 MAVW/
-AM* SA CiGT FREE A41DIKAL AM*
DENTAL CARE Nsl TH' Hi
-AN* TH' -SlueLLFOOD PILLED
Ulirr VtTAMlNKS MAICES
MXIKVES «0Bie~O
DIDWT
THAT
MEAN
0¥AH
poPBve.vou
CAK)«I«(N
ME UP.
RUHTMOW!
£*EE-THfcN \
SOU CAN
»G PAV
UUHEN 'iOU
CjCTOUTI
IDEA!
■Ill ■ IlSI
YmII litlt pNt Ii • Hmff ntfinil
Evaiyon* lodu Nao«r, handtomar, in
liiat wnibnN WncU Sam'* Novy fiv«* you.
And rtwl‘» only a ttort. Undo Som lakat
graol mm of hb toflon.
Ffoo nook, ftm boord frs* iravsL
Free modtt^el end denlol core. ft«ekain>
ing in osy one qf fifly-odd ihflM trades.
And the Newy poys yew oood money
WiMrt on opporMiRyl if yoworelT or
over, gel 4 free copy of the Mustroted
booklet, nite in Ae as. Navy", from rtw
Nowy'Mlor of lliit newspaper. ^
wmym hour couMtityl
BUU47 NOUKPimiMEI .
«rr IN Tve NMt/v noiw!
The SoU mad Consenration
Conser\'ation of the soil it>
iaIlKsiF * nustter of usinf? the
laud-^ accordance with Uie dic
tates of nature.
One of our "conservation de
partments has in its position an
“House-Keepers”
Of Army Have
Important Job
SILK SHORTAGE
BEING FELT
IN NORTH
CAROLINA
Much has been said in these
strenuous times of the new ■
wea]K>ns of defense and offense i
.I KP K labout one of the hardest, most^—RALEIGH The silk shortage
I important, and most fascinat- |‘a^ affected the j()hs of approx
intr jobs in this defense effort
of ours.
Pew wOrds of praise have
m 1854 denying the pos
sibtim* of any wildlife “carcity.
would he take the boy flshinp?
no
at ni^ht and did no harm.; jjeen said of the task of cloth-
Tweh'e tons of quail were ^hip-jin|f and feeding the men, fur-
ped market. A sliootin^ matfeh ! nishing transportation, gasoline,
was held with prizes for hunters'and routings for the army—the
who dropped the largest number “house-keeping” of our all-out
They ^oold haA*e had just effort.
tk|8 one conservation measure in [ This job is that of the Quar-
th«e days—a law enablin;; frame; termaster Corps of the Army.
In the current maneuvers in
iniatelj' 10,(K)0 Nortli ('arolini-
•ans, tlie state employ?)jcnt serv
ice (liselosecl Tliui'sday in an-
nouccing the results of a survey
ecmducted as of September 1.
The industry normally employs
about 30,500 Tar Heels.
Because of the sliortaire. 4,300
workers have lofet their jobs and
more than 5,000 others are on a
part-time basics, the survey
HEETo«»NEI6H
^Anod. Jk«>do0»
1617 - lO^a.
LEADEO. Of 7WC QBXHJJTION
THAT MADE BGAZiLAREPUBUC.
HE WAS THE HE»DOF THE
RJEPUBUCAN PQOVi SIGNAL
e*OVEQNMENT.
Louisiana between the Second E**iP.loj*‘i's expect 1,4W
ho{^ to shoot each other thus ob-
Um th^ expired hunter’s eanie.“-"“:- ’the'Q'uar“|«^‘^‘**‘’»«^ workers to k,ge thfi-r
(termaster of the Fourt,h Corps ;j«bs by September 15 and 3,250
Area has the gigantic duty of by the end of the month.
tj?p, iWby didn ’t someone
ot^tr
* What an Ideal
^-Look, fellows, let’s get this
started! One of our large east
ern citities is conduetitig a cam
paign to open a fishing pond
for yownfFsters in each of the
city’s f«rks. The idea .is to stock
them w^ith pan fish and allow
ouly kids aader 16 to fisli. The
NTA is snppoiied to supervise
the fishing and teach th« young-
aetrs sportsmanship.
This is the best idea we’ve
heard in a long time. Every city,
town and village should have it.
'Why not get the sportsmen of
joor town together and see what
they think?
TnnspUnting Game
It’s a pity to see so much avail
able forest lands fields and
supplying the 303,000 men of
the Third Army with subsist
ence, clothing, and the gaso
line needed for a mechanized
Array.
The amounts of food that,
will be consumed in these ma
neuvers is stupendous. !^ough
coffee will be drunk to float
a 20,000 ship. A freight train
two and one-half miles long
would be necessary to carry the
6,696,300 pounds of beef the
boys will eat, I
It would take a champion, |
egg-a-day hen 100,000 years to'
lay enough eggs to supply the|
boys with breakfasts.
The silk mill eniployei's are
uncertain as to future operations
the tmployment service said in a
how much substitute fiber can
statement. “Tfiey do not know
be obtained aiul^o-^u if
plV" S snfficiieiit, no one can
foretell the trend of the future
tastes of the Aniericau woman.
Will she accept mesh, nylon or
rayon hosef”
The employment office is at-
temping to place the workers in
related occupations.
QUALITY
The bombing and fighting
planes of the Army are equal
! in quality to any in the world,
thickets that would support j according to Robert A. Lovett,
Kame—and one thing authorities | Assistant Secretary of War for
have been increasingly success
ful] of late in “ transplnating ”
Henderson Tobacco
Market Again Using
Half-Day Sales Plan
Smith H. Young, Sales Super
visor of the Henderson Tol»cco
Market states that the hal^ay
from districts
game animals
where they are n.umerous to
places where thejr’re unknown,
scarce. By the use of “catch-’em
-iliw” traps, even full-grown
elkABd'«ntelope have been trans
planted. Seven beavers were'state all came from
mdred into Kentucky several
yeaxs ago where none had been
seen £or a long time. This may
&ot aeem enough to repopulate
Air. He says that production ’ selling system is again in effect
is beginning to roll and that on the Henderson tobacco mar-
the United States is now able | ket during the 1941 season. Since
to equip combat units at the its adoption three years ago the
rate of about one squadron ev-' warehousemen, buyers and far-
ery other day. Imers have been so well pleased
with it that it has been used
vers now found
seventeen
beavers which were brought
there from Yellowstone Park in
1907. If you haven’t much to
hunt for, get sportsmen of your
the state, but remember ttat the vicinity together and “trans-
many thriving colonies of bea- plant” some game!
iUHiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii|^^
Theatre
Sunday and Monday
Johnny Mack Brown
in New York,e«l“sively since.
By selling on the* Henderson
tobacco market, the farmer is
assured of prompt sales of his
tobacco with no blocks. There
fore, his tobacco will reach the
buyers in the best possible con-
dition, free from damages re-
sulting from having the tobac-
to carried over on a block sale,
the necessity
SI for long stayovers in town while
ss: waiting for the sale of his leaf.
Sp I On the Henedrson market with
ss I its two sets of buyers, four full
as j half-day sales are guaranteed ev-
^ ery day throughout the season.
By‘eliminating the blocks,
It
The “egf show” vyjB be in
ehitrf^ of C. W. Sheffi«ki, iMf*
betiBff qjecialist of the Stat^ de
partment of Agricultnve; Dr.
Roy 8. Dearstyne, head of the
polutry department, State Qdl-
lefe and C. P. Parriidi, Btatc
College extension poultrymau.
««ar R3on QiVEa CtSuEL IN HAHIA 60AZU.
A WOODEN BOWL,SKAPeO
UKE AN OLD FASHIONED
CHOPPIN& aowL,is mn
Wi/UAn's only UTtNJIL.
WITH A ROTAOy MOTION
CAC£K/tl.y
cuy AND ilLT FODM THE
SffAU. PB66LES .ANDPKKS Ot/T
THE DIAMOND®* ' ‘ : V' " i
AOE u6ET> »N hany
FOR- CUTnN6AN0 OOJNDINO TOOLS, POO.OQILUNOCXL-MO
MINERALS V LAJS'ING U)N©EC. AND WOQXINO SPEePIEfl. TWAN
STtEL-iNSTRUHBNTSjINDOSrWAL D/AMONOS PROM BRAZItAfif
IN0ISPEN6ABLE IN U. 5. A. DEFENSE INDUSTRIES.
Released hy Publishert" Reciprocal Program, Inc.
THE HERITAGE
OF HISTORY •
By Dr. Charles Stelzle
Historians are familiar with
what happened thousands of
years ago. They know that even
at that time there was almost a
complete framework for all our
present-day experiments in poli
tics, conomics, literature, drama
and government.
But the average man of today
has an idea that the ancients
were simply “a bunch of hea
then”^ ignorant and depraved,
unmindful of the fact that how
ever limited they may have been
in some respects, without the use
and enjoyment of the telephone,
the radio, the motion picture,
the automobile and the airplane,
they were really very similar to
ourselv^.
‘Historj' repeats itself” only in
whatever may have been the out
ward form of culture and man
ner of living. What is of great
est interest and value today is
not so much the actions of par-
'ticular individuals in history, as
it is the movement and trends of
the peopfe as a whole, as hu
manity kept marching on.
Just what historians 5,000
ye^ hence will think of our pre
sent civilization, no man can tell.
It would probably be a confus
ing picture if they should deal
exclusively with what many of
us regard as the most important
events of the day. Some of our
leadera in journalism, politics
and industry are saying tliat the
second w’orld war w’ill be “the
end of civilization”. There have
been many such “ends”, but the
world has gone on, because be
neath these ‘ ‘ catastrophes ’ ’
there has been a basis for pro
gress which could not be halted.
On the whole. Democracy has
steadily made prgress—in reli-
HOME
.OUJNERS
fe) FORUM
ABIMES aCMDOM
.^T^YWCXM) to proving the pnctlca]
a aolirtkm to nmaj booM nnoT«>
. ik«i pieblaix, both Inside and out
stTQog Mid mtOj inatallcd by,
I tftawc* neiltaf to th* sindi axtd Joiits,
tit Id eqotfljr ■erfkeebl« for wallt
ea well tm pertttlom of ‘
fraatnaMB
•M'PCMlbl* wMh fdniKX>d as It fomM 1
■m 0Koanmt bew or"peln4ing. Fol-|
lewiac the MUe#. topinc ■&« tand«j
•ing of Ihe a eoii0l« of coati^
,»tedu» * Uieatlfu! ftnfa*. rlvaliaf'
tmr mate expeoatv* ptattMr or paneli
And, ytfmt to
• 0M paint a^(n oah b« ;
, pertedtoally at low ooal ae-'
■eM41v ^ ilacoratlvc trcnde.
Fo*- cl>»ntineu as as malnta*
•>aii 11 nconomjr, mix aU the paint on*
)ob from soft pasta white lead
'«ad tha pare vafaida infradients aar.
."tfovd according to tba ftniib and
■^0>iov onlrad.
white lead paint to tha idtaJ
aami decoration as it is impervious
a^e to thf action of moisture, dirt*
areaaa, any stains whicM mfjr
tewilt being readily removed by aim-
|iki wishing. This assures cleanl)^:
. eer! as well as the utmost in service'
md durability from every styliaf
*w*iaeot
9^-How can tom awnings be baa
, vpalred?
Undoubtedly the-moat dura-
pJIa repairs are achieved by sewiny
'.j%«Mias to tba underside of torn.
factiotis.
Horwar, rubber cement patchc*
Pi^alre far leas time and lol^ an*!
‘tppear equally effective for all prac-'
ticfl purposes. Lay the awning fac«.
4own on a flat nirface and apply
the cement fraely to the patch as
well as to the awning area which ii
is to cover. When the cement bos.
. /ot sufficiently to become strongly,
'^cky, force tba patch Into firm ad- j
^sian by heavy pressure. ,
IVize Hen Eggs
Will Be At Fair
'IJale;gh, September— North
Carolina hens will have some
thing to cackle over this year—
their eggs will be on display for
the first time at the State Fair
to be held at Raleigh, October
14-18.
Dr. J. S. Dorton, manager of
the fair, today, announced the
“Egg Department” as new di
vision of the fair, e^^ressing the
hope, that the exhibits will stim
ulate greater interest in promot- Admiral Land reports carffo
ing Uie production of “more eggs'ship output stepped up 25 per
for national defense”. cent.
HHBMBmHHHHraMBk.
BREVARD ST. BARBER SHOP
^wer Baths... 15c
N. G. EDWARDS, Prop.
231 South Brevard St. QiarlottCtN.G.
This is about the time of ywr
when every youngster still Imu
a chance to lead his srrade. '
Many individuals are bo aitt-
ious for something that
haven’t got that they haven^
sense enough to appreciat w^at
they have.
TEACHERS JOB
EXCHANGE
—in—
S i World series officially set to
ss: I open at Yankee Stadium Oct. 1.
the application or the results of ^*on, in education, in industry,
certain fundamental principles politics, in clasa distinctioni*
of human behavior. It does not the democracy of sexes. These
mean that the world is going on part of the same move-
li^e the endless swinging of a History has simply been
pendulum, getting nowhere in repeating itself. In every case
particular. The whole character people have M'on, although
and life of the people as a whole progress of Democracy must
have gone steadily upward, judged by a long-time view—
“LAW and ORDER”
Tuesday and Wednesday
Bette Davis
—in—
“THE LEHER”
THURSDAY — Bargain Day
5 & 10c — 2 Features and Serial
“ONE CROWDED NIGHT”
i also
MURDER CRUISE”
iliiUUiHr
YOUKHO
IS INSURED-YES, BUT
f
me /joQAi J^g^nt QC ^ »f ^
BANICB& FIRE IHSUMJia (^RMiYi
.4DURNAM, NORTH CAROLINA I
eowscBvart VE —soup - oEecHDAftLC
realty; company
X-
RALEIGH, NQR-m CAROUNA
union INSURANCE and REALTY CO.
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLir^A
BISHOP DALE A INSURANCE AGteNQY, CHARLOTTE
IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIUHIIiUllllIM
r’.
There is one sure way for
young people to get ahead in
life: Work and save.
EMTOR^ NOTE: This clohimn is published for the benefit
unemployed teachers desiring ptMitions, %jnployed tea*ers ^
siring better positions, and superintendents and princii^
in search of competent instructora. Address '•11 corre«p»md-
enCe to Teachers Job Exchange, Bo* 59, .Durham, N. C.
’ ^ «!)...
Cost oif listing your desires for a position in this column
will be furiiished upon request* Principals may list thair desires
for instructors without cost.
No. 125—ELEMENTARY TEACHER (Female) with 16
years grammar grade and elementary teaching experience with
a grammar grade A Certificate desires position. Cm play »i-
ano and teach public school music and playgrouud aotiy-
ities. • ' * '*** ♦
No. 126—^ELEMEINTARY TEACHER (Pemalfe) with ele
mentary “A" certificate and 15 years teaching ^perionce ki
grammar grade and elementary work desires position! Holds
A. B. degree from accredited college*
No. 127—HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER (Male) with A. B.
degree from accredited college, English Major, French Minw
and six years teaching experience. Has high school "A” certiii*
cate.
Please metnion number when making inquiries. Address all
correspondence ‘Teachers Job Exchange’, Box Durham*N.C.
Who Beneths Frinii Lite Insnraiice
Have you ever asked yourself the question — “Who
benefits most from life insurance?^ Consider the fol
lowing points carefullyt then decide ^this question for
yourself: ^
What investment offers the advantages of protec*
tion, plus financial security should sickness or any
accident create a financial crisis?
What investment wiil guarantee the education
your children and keep the home intact—^whether
you live or die?
J
I
What investment wiU provide old age security «nd
safeguard the mortgage on your heme against loss?
What investment will protect your loved ones,
should illness or death cut short your plans?
To all these questions the answer is—
YOUR LIFE INSURANCE
Can you afford to be without a North Carolina Mutual
policy? See your nearest agfent and have him explain
how he can bring* financial security to your home.
NORTH CAllOUNA MUTUAL
omj
Pr«ali*r^ * OURMAM.NORTH CAROLINA
Qiarlotte District Office
404 E. First Street
A. E. SPEARS, Manager
ac.SM
Durham
809
W. ; L.
Office
Street
Manager