Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 16, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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•Wl IWmsiHT, JANFII? t Hi9 mk CABMSSk TlMfti BATTTRD’AT JJtNTIjUlT Mr 1043^ Must Grow More Food In New Year Gov«niD«it W9i Need Commerical Foods For 1943 “If Nmtli CaroUnians waut to eat in it is imperative for farm and urban families who haw the land to grow a ga^deu and ^actice hoiue rauninf^ next ye*t,’ ’ Dr. I. O. S«4iatih, dirc«?to’ of State i'ollege Extension Ser- ’riee, told farm feadera at « meet TnjT WeinejSa?; Dpaa Schaub said tiiat approri ireieuoMd tlw visitors, matdj one half of the eStiiiiuted 1943 ommen-ial puk of canned Tffretables, fniits and jnices hat baea rsereTecf for the Govem- meat. A~"re«ent War Production Board Xkrder specifies that jil* of the eommarriallj caiuied cariots, hhtebeiriaa, fig^. and blended cr- asgt> and ^apefmit juice mast be reserved for the armed forces and lend-lease shipments. In addition, said Schaub, the UorerdlKUl wiir raS&i ~S4_p£JL Wirt of b1i the be«fe, 71 per cent ■ of the tomato puree and frait cocktail,-70' per oeot of the ' eherries and pineapfrie, 63 per Rooms For Rent Must Be Registered. Prod Davis, Rental administrn- tor, annonhced yesterday that there would be nrf extension of time for registration of rooms after January lo. He was verv em phatie about "that time limit and requested that all persons reiit- iof die or *>ore rtjoms 'attend to this matter at once. -Failtt*® ta eowply with thia iiu; quiremont will invoke severe penalties from the Federal flov’ernnipnt. Davis ^stafeii that his office was ready and »nxions to eooperate with all persons who wish to register thefr rooms nt the earliest possible coBveni-'’ enee. 90,OM Tons Food Go to Creece But It Is Not Enough eent of the peaches and apples, P0T east of the tomato cacsup 58 per eent of the snap beans, 56 per cent, pi the lima beans, 49 per cent oi the tomatoes, 43 per cent of the spinach and pea® and 42 per cent ef the sweet ««ni canned by commertial pack- CN. “Few of us realize what thesa reKtrietiona will mean,'’ the Ex tension leader declared. “UnfcJr-^ tmately, a tefge percentage oar tobacco farmera have in thfe past relied on cash from their leaf crop to pay for canned fmits and vesetables from the groccrv store ahelreS. These canned g^ood will not be available in 1943, «t least not in sufficient quantities. “All of us must, therefore, set aside part of our land for a Vis- tory Garden and ten make ar- ranf:ements to can the sorp'us. We should stait now to prepare the aoil for the home garden aad lay in equipment for the food conservation job.’ Conefemiag the production of dairv' products Mr. Arey said: “Milk is an essential war' food. It is the greatest builder of body resistance to disease of .iJI foods. The need for it in this State during 1©43 will be great er than in 1&42. The supply, on the other hand, will be govfirned by the price received for it by tte armer. An unfavorable pri^e will make it impossible for him to pay present high prices for labor And feed. Withotlt a stjp- piy of both, milk production will drop.’’ The Extension man said that aeorea of dairymen had either a large or complete turnover in labor dnring W42. Mnch of the labor, when any could be secured has been high priced, green and inefficient. “This Condition,” aaid Arey, “together with the ceiling price on milk, has in seme instances eliminated all profit from the dairy business and resulted in the dispersal of a nambei' of herd.” More than 80.- 000 tons of foodstuffs plus quart-' tities of vitamin units and medi cal supplies have been shipped to Qi^ece in the last liine mon th.s from Canada and the Unit ed States through aid from the Greek Wai* RK^Hpf Assowiatior, BCi'nvdiiij' to Spyros P. Skouras, Piesident. Mr. Skouras stressed that the need remained tremendous, pre sent shipments providinir only barest subsistence to portions of the population. Greece in normal times impaitak 100,000 tons of foodaiaf^^thly to sup’^lo- i^ftes, it was add ed. A cablep^ram from the Interna tiona] Red Cross Committee at Geneva said presenl relief ship ments askured bread to 3,000,- 000 Greeks on a ration basis of 200 prrams, or seven ounces daily adding that the monthly suppliPR arriving were sufficient to pro vide somewhat less than half the population with ahoiit half the nnmljer of calories normally need ed for existance. The first vessel to Greece was the Swedish motorflhip Sicilia, which arrived from New York April 16 with more than 2,000 tons of food. Ei}ht Swedis^i ships* are now regfularly engaged in transporting to Greeee from Canda monthly -allotments of 15,000 tons of wheat, 3,000 tons of dried vegetables, and 100 tons of powdered milk. JANUART I2M11£ Picture Career Ends WiienU.S.Calls Clarence Muse’Son . FORT SILL, QKLA. — Whe-i 30-ye*r-old Pvt_ Dion Muse of a Field Artillery Regiment here entered the Army in January, 1941, he intcmipted a fledgltng ■stage and motion picture cai'eer which might have eiKiiilated that of his father. A son of TTarewe Muse, one of HollywoOil’s busiest and best- known colored character acXn.i, Private Muse says he “w a s practically brought up in .shoA*' bus^ess. ’ ’ lie^is a native of New York City, where he studied journalim tor a time at Columbia Univer sity, but he finally adopted the 4tage 88 his. ohosen profession. Private IVfuse was a member of Little Theatre groups and the Lafayette Players — an all Ne gro professional group — in (ho Past tiritil 1933, when he went t« Los Angeles to join his father. There, hs had “'hit" parts In' j^sevFTal mtrtion- pirtttrps, t>n»; of TaWWir Laler he A MESSAGE FROM MR. J. P. MORGAK VBSeisAi C.b.Xfmidii P»pt.': SAFE INVESTIVtf^t Uma^ekni whU ai% iot^na For a aa^ u well as ■ means of bdpinc the Government to win the war, can weU beed the idx>ve atatement alwut War l^mda fitom Am^eaiu wbe a^ iookli hoping 1 J. P. Nla^an, on* of the natMi*a leading bankws. **N«where in these dava,** aaira Mr. Morgan, *Saan a safer Investmeiit be found for savings than 17. S.; nt bonds and of afl tke issties the war savings bonds seem to me the most a^vantageona.’^ Farmers of Sampson County will join with others of North Carolina and the entire nation in mobilizing their full resour ces to fight the Axis on Tues. Jan. 12i which has been design ated by President R'odsevelt as Kational Farm Mobilization Day. On this day, farmers are ask ed by the President to meet with representatives of the United States Department of Agricul ture and other agricultaral agencies t(^map farm plans de- sjigned to give maximum produc tion of food in 1943. Meetings are being sponsored over the State by State and County USDA VVar Boards and highlight of the day will be a nation-wide fadio program emphasizing the importance of food in wartime to be broadcast over all net works from 4:00 to 4:30 p. m , fcastern iVar Time. —I H— in ^attending to details, srfiall and large, in connection with thc*^ handling, fitting, feeding and Showing dairy animals. In the se cond place, to the guidance furnished him through the coun ty Extension agents and the dairy Extension specialists; and thi]^ and perhaps the most im portant of all, to the sympathe- the State College Extension Ser-1 tic understandiii^ and the full vice, announced the award and i cooperation of his parents.” Wake Boy Winner Of Dairy Contest “Dairy King” among 4-H Club boys of North Carolina for 1942 is Kenneth Myatt, of Ra leigh, Route 3._ L. R. Harrill, in charge of 4-H' Club work for Chalybeate Cow Has Twin Clives Miss Dora Matthews of Chaly beate Springs reports to The News that her Jersey cow gave birth to twin calve« on Decem ber 18th. Both calves are males. was at a peak in North Carolina during the la»t 12 months. Diir ing August, the top month ii. milk production, dairy process ing plants in the State received 11,869,870 pounds of milk. This is 1,836.930 pounds more thdn the 1941 August receipts and is Yet, intereat in'dairy farming the largest on record. mmmmmrnmmmnimmmmmmi RENTING - REMODELING AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT mSURANGE OF ALL KINDS If you have houses of apartments for rmt or safe list them with us. If youj haw ipisuraiice problems call u& Advice wMlitottt cost> Mm httraate & iMity CMnpny said that the Wake County boy will receive a one-year seh:ilai‘- sbip to State College, offered by the N. C. Cottonseed Crushers’ Association for the outstanding? 4-H dairy project in the State each year. “Kenneth’s record is not one of jjthe “fly-by-night’ typf>,” ^*a4i4lan’ili, “because the Wake County boy began his first 4-H dairy calf project in 1933, when he was 140 years old. Note he' owns 12 registered Jerseys. His record is one of continued ira-^ proveinent and progress from year-to-year. ” The records submitted to Harrill by the boy and .T. D' Thompson, assistant Wake County farm agent, show that Kenaeth has won a grahd-coni : panionehip, a junior companion ship, seV);n Wue ribbons, one red ribbon, four third place a-' wards, and two fourth place, ribbons at State and local’dairy shows during the past ejght years. MfliM On two occasions his work has ■ won for him the coveted Arro- j wood Award, a registered Jer-; sey calf. In 1927 he was award-^ ed the American Jersey Cattle; Club Silver Med&l for shownian-i I ship, and a bronze medal fijr' fitting animals tat the show ring. Tn 1939 and 1942 he was awarded a gold medal for being a member of the winning eOiinty 4-H Dairy ProdoctiOn Demontstra tion team. Kenneth ’a father is one ol ^Y«ke County’s leading dairy men. In commenting on the ac complishments of his son in 4-H daii'y club work, Mr, Myat Said: iygHa f Ty bO 77ybor . . . “^^e began our dairy herd in 1924 with one grade cow. As the years passed the number increas ed gradually. When Kenneta en tered 4-H Club work we had 45 head of cattle, of wliich 18 ,were in production. In 1934 these 18 cows averaged 4,786 pounds of milk and 246 pounds of bntterfat each. They were ehiefly grade Jerseys. “As time went along, we be came more interested ia pure bred Jersey, rather than in grade stock. This was dtie, we think, to the point the'4-H Club playt?d In 1942 we kept a herd of CO cows, and 38 of this number were in milk at the end of the yea”. “I think the heid has been greatl.v benefitted by . Kenneth’s 4-H Club work. The herd has shown a great improvement, in production and a tremendous ini- provement in type. The - 4-H Club cyffered a si^endid oppor tunity for father and son to work together to the same end. In conclusion, Harrill pointed out that “Spotted. Royal Com- mandressi” one of Kenneth’s re gistered Jerseys, prodnced 7,- 943 pounds of milk and 397 pounds of botterfat in 1941 with te bntterfat testing 5.01 per was s»t«rred Bette Davis t6 Denver, where,he was a neiall^ of the «*a«t in a stngc’ production of “Petrffied For est,” ^tarring Ketineth M‘Kc>jina at Flitch’s Gardens. Privafe Muse’s father, a ve teran"oT 35 years’ expefienc> m stage and iriotion-pioture work, has played supporting character roles in numerous Paramount aind Monogram motion pictn’’e.‘> since the advent of talkies in ^928. , ’ ; He also' has qualified as a popular song writer by collabcrat ing on the composition of Sle^y Time Down South” and '•^hind a Cabin Door.” jAinong Bluse Sitior's better picture performances were the CollJred minister in “Maryl uK!" and Joe Louis’ manager in tli; all-colored cast of the m-jtion picture “Spirit of Youth,” Jr. W'hich Muse co-starred witH Louis. Private Muse is now much too busy with what he'terms his biggest job” — that of winnimj the war—to look far into fho future, but when it is finished, he thinks he -will “get back in show business.” CHILD’S PERT JUMPER starting nine years agO with ^i*cent. Wl pounds more bntterfat ealf named “Commandress Dairy than the average for the 18 A UALJ-tSn ftM Fayetteville Street Maid,” Kenneth has gradually bnilt up his herd to 12 registered Jerseys, five of which are^ now j production and on herd improve-, jment testa. During 1941. theae ifive cows produced 42,158, ponndi of milk and 2,114:83^ pounds of btitterfai The ai¥r- b«tterf«t itti -jwte ^5.1^per cent. ' . ' KetuMthUi Success to several. fad|jr», “tJlrst V of all, says ihe 4-H Cltih/ leader, A • ‘to his^love foi^ -1 mtlA eows Mr. Myatt owned when Kennpth entered 4-H Club work. erve(r2S¥ears^ Onited States Army CAMP SUTTON, N. C. — A man who has made the modt of what the Army has to offer as a Qireer is Master Sergeant John Q. Reed, serving as sergeant- iftajor in a Chemical Warfare Service unit stationed at this North Carolina training center. His more than 28 years of milit ary duty which have taken him to Mexico and the Philippine Islands have made him an ex pert practical chi-m&^st, hiw.* giyen him the training of a re- seK’e officer arfd have put him into such varying occupations as college instructor and guani ut the San Francisco International Exposition of 1915. Sergeant Reed joined the Army to begin with on March 27, 1915, at St. Louis, Mo., and was sent shortly to the Piiilip- pines with *the 24th Infantry. He served there and ou the Mexican Border in the period proceeding, the United States en try into the World War. Some months after his first reenlist- ment he was accepted as a candi date for Offic'er’s Training School, and sent to Camp Pike, Ark-, for his training course. In asmuch as his class graduated four days aiier the Armistice, their temp(>raT'y commissions we#?" gfren them in the reserve, and he never saAv active duty as> an officer. His first teaching assignm.*nt was a BOTC instructor in Tuskegee Institute, Ala., and lasted frqni 1920 to 1923. He liked it well enough to reapply, whereupon he was sent in the same capacity to A and T Coll ege at Greensboro, N. C-, for another three years. Following that he took another kind teaching position, that of sei- geant-instructor with the Uhio National Guard, giving instruc tion in actual field procedure t(- guardsmen ,from Cleveland end ( olumbna unitft. Terminating his teaching viih that, he returned to his organi- ization, the'24th Infantry, in 19J2 aiuPsfayFu'^lmir —TT--€igH In 1940, with the prospect of war becoming clearer, Serge.Mi’t Beetl transferred to the Chemi cal W’'arfare Srrvice, He servrd his apprenticeship with the 1st Chemical Company at Fori Eustis, Va., then was moved for advanced training!: to Chemical Warfare lleadquarters at K(i;^e wood Arsenal, where he remain ed until TiTs present outfit -v.TSI Ohio, his real home town. He activated and he was assigned to lived there most of his life as a it as top non-com. «Js a ?.vjd | considering his unit, which he hkffl. It has few * long-term ItcgnlaT Anny unS, but the inductees, ihotKh green are intelligent, being hand picked from among Negro co^' ge tudents and technician.^ for their johs. Ser^anT~ Reed *pl^~ diets that it will stand arfiung the first of all Negro outfits if the war goes on long enough to break his boys in properly. Sergeant Reed waB boMi in Pensacola, wh«re he still has an aunt, Mrs. Katie Green, who mails him the local paper regul.ir Iv. 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Send MXTECN CeNTt In coins (or this Marian Martin Pattern, yrlte plainly 8I2E, NA^f, AD- MBW ihd STTLK IfUMBER. Our Winter .Patidra Sack covat-g :he entlN Am$rlcaa faahton from, with fmart, pfac^yetil. ^a^-to-spW Uyliftw «t«tir6li»..It1»8 gitt tips; i basic wartime wardrobe; school year. Pattern Book, ten cents. Send orders to Newspaper let 'em West 18th bU^eti ST. JOSEPH A.M.E. CHURCH REV. J. A. VALENTINE, Minister Sunday School 9;30 A. M., Preaching 11:00 A. M. and 7;00 P. M. ARE YOU DISCOURAGED, DEJECTED, HEART BROKEN? If you are—St. Joseph A. M. E. Church Ex tends to you without price an invitation to join its mem bers and friends in the renewal of your hope and faith. A Hearty Wefconw Awaits Yeu □ □ □ □ □ o □ □ □ □ 0 □ 0 □ □ o Q .□ ‘D □ 0 0 0
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 16, 1943, edition 1
2
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