Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Sept. 13, 1943, edition 1 / Page 6
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THEJOy^ . lag tlw coastry from tie Kwboard to ^sel feed ehortMt® J»»t >ori.on, grower.- »re^ore to ; ■feai-ket s anJm.18 coaid nb, loM^ be held beck. Slaughterer, were taking every laat hide and permitted them t/under their ' quoUs. Only way to break tlto jam, which'waa backing «h “®’' Cn iiiiiiun,.i.'V »—'•-'"t-’ eL Trt-Cfee]t.,,.8oa,Coq^rf»^ . tk» Dlatrict h»*re«abie tor ue»^^ ChedtoMi B^ore Fall br ,f*nhec. «wer^ .man te"»« - lag toachlnea for terrace con*triic» -f: ^ rm- The MUIeni Creek _mmy am- ojatretfon club.., held^ Ita Jk^guir meeting on, the 28 th as ^^wm^ m unity picnic. Around 26 ^we^e jam, wnicn wa» uiuui>.j vivui>^- ^ -j- mala on farms no longer able to ■ present. Pfc. Jim Watef. waa a Aatt-r«Bii fhe a tiA WAS hnvnA nn Washington, D. C., .Bept. 10.— . uvi oattle raging in the Rural will reconvene neat ‘ Blectrlflea tion Httl the quiet I Chairman Slati.c>.; « — Senators and of this knock-down-drag-out scrap, are returning from ^es reported in this column many : r. K~ ' will reconvene neat Electrification Administration. . ¥® Capttol Httl the quiet {Chairman Slattery is the center Of ananer is gone. “—— ---• * ■■ ■ • ’— * Congreai ttelr t&lb-'vlewlhk expeditions hack bogisr The'aarble corridors clank and dong to hurrying feet. Press statements are again the order of the day, smd newspaper 'Slattery’s resignation. . boys and girls who ‘*coVer the' Hill" are dusting off their type- weeks ago. The Senate Commit tee hearing should bring things to h head—unless the President intervenes with ' a demand for It’s a bet ter than even bet that he will, despite the Supreme Court decl- aie auBueg oil ineir type- despite the supreme uouri aeci- wrlters in the House and Senate sion in the Humphrey case, where Press Gstllerlea. - r “'it waa founud that the President The AgrienUnre Committees of could not dismiss a Senate-con- both Houses are stripping for ac- firmed eppointee. Hon. On the Senate side, wit- Other items scheduled for iui- wwu. v/*i Auc ocuacts Biue, w»L- uiner ueiua »k;ut3uujcu iv/i mx- nesses will shortly be called to te'.i t mediate probe by Senate Ag. are m. «„awates ■what they know-about the inter-j the muddled gasoline situation, ' consideration severa c - ».• .... . , , will not make tne support them, was to ash-can the quotas. So that's what WFA d«- However, maily, fear that the ‘‘big ®3ts" in prospect for this tail and early winter may spell thin fare later on. Responslb e re ports tell of brood sows going to market In growing this continues, next years litters won’t be anything to write home about. BAliDWIX RESIGNS— ‘‘Beany’’ Baldwin, chief of the much fought-over Farm Security Administration, has resigned, it Is understood that a new place In government Is ready and waiting for him, possibly In the State De partment. Baldwin’s sucressor has not as yet been selected, but it Is known that there are inder which has been raising more or less hob with farm work and rural transportation especially in NOTICE OF. SALS OF REAL BS-PATE ' rural transportation especially m Under and l»y virtue of the au-|the East, and a full dress parade thority vested m me .in a certain of witnesses to tell what they deed of trust Axidented on.the 2nd o i-,si This is the so- whose records will not make the Farm Bureau Federation chief FSA opponent—happy. WPB (xk)pbir.ates vhth FARM GROUPS— Beginning last fall with some “ think of S. 1331. This is the so- . j called Aiken Food Stamp Plan i quiet meetings spdnsored by one WilL -hicVwas tossed | “ejSy" Dotard SUte of North Carolina, aame be- ‘slaUve hopper just before Con- UuUants in the country, ing recorded in the office of Reg-|vress recessed. Tied into the pro- Nelson and top men in his W ister of Defcds for Wilkes county, posed Act is a prohlblUon against Production Board have been co in book 169, page 545, to secure | payment of subsidies for the “pro-1 operating 100 per cent with tn.. the payment of the'Indebtedness Auction, processing, distribution, | farm groups and their leaders, therein mentioned; and, ’ default „r handling of agricultural com- Result of this cooperation has having been n^e in ^ .payment; mojitjes except «s specifically au- of ^rac, and demand having been Congress”, made upon me; r I win, therefore, offer for sale: FULLER CALLS WFA at puUic auction to the higrhest j JONES AND OPA BROWN bidder for cash in front of the | over on the House side, Con- Courthouse door in , Wilkesboro, j ^regguian Fulmer. • Chairman of "Wilkes county, North Carolina, oni.jj Agriculture Committee of the Saturday, * October 2, 194.S, at 1 o’dwk p. m„ the following de- directed to WFA Ad- ^'"Sg knowm *^d de.signated as n’inistrator Marvin and Lots 38. 34, 35 and 36, as shown OPA Director Prentiss Brown re- on the Map of Ridgecrest Devel- -questing both of these gentlemen opment, subdivision of J. W. Dar- tn anpear before his Committee nell, J. W. Mathis, C. B. Franklin, qn the morning of September as recorded in office of Register 20th. Wrote Fulmer; of Deeds of 'Wilkes county, N. C., ■•Parniers (helievel the tim" which reference is made a part of arrived that they should be this conveyance. Sale made to sati.sfy the princi pie, interest and cost of same Lower Branch, made public a let- This 1 D. 1943. 2nd day of September, A. 9-27-4 tM GORDON MATHIS, Trustee Dr. E. S. Cooper CHIROPRACTOR Office I.ocated Next Door to Reins-Sturdivant, Inc. .given a definite proanim in black ■Tiri white ... at the earliest pos sible date . . . concerning produc tion. distrihutinn and price fix ing of the various crops . . . •‘My coinmittf" as well as th" * M-niers of the country, are anxi ous to ascertain the real facts as to just who from now on will hove definite powe, in connection oith nvodnetion. distribution and fixing on farm products. SI.AUGHTER QUOTA OUT Kemoval of m''’'* c'o....ht„- tas by .WF.A has caused much has shown In the farm raechinery program which was stepped up on steel alocation from 23 per cent of 1940 consumption to 40 per cent, then to 80 per cent. While it is expected that rationing will be necessary at county and farm levels, even under the expanded program, the situation should im prove rapidly from here on In. It is planned to set aside 20 per cent of the increiased production for emergency calls. Apparently the Lehman Relief and Rehabili tation administration have crash ed the gates for 1.5.000 tons of machinery originally scheduled for domestic use. The raid by R. and R. was forecast exclusively by this column te.st week. Now WPB is hoping to find extra steel some where to plug this new domestic gap. WIRE APPF.AR.S hardwood SHORT BARGFJ4 .MOVF— Also reported by WPB is move- m«'nt of 'arbo'i wire in good vol ume to ret®'' outlets. Details on calvanizlng and giiage are rioj immediately available, hut it is lelieved for the country as a speolsl gusst. He was home on furlough. Everyone joined In the gnmee. .', Several were heard to aay ’‘Why don't we have meetings tike this more often?’’ Tke meet ing adjourned to meet again on September 18tb at the acbool luiichroom at'2:09 p. m. ' eliack Buihgarner has . returned from the Charlotte Memorial Hos pital, where he hah" been under going treatment. Jack Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Bumgarner of Wilkesboro route one. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Martin and family, of Greensboro, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. W, Martin. Mr. J. W. Martin had the mis fortune of breaking ftis leg Aug. 14th. and is confined to his bed. Miss Avis Deian Martin, of Mor ganton, visited her / parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Martin, last week. Miss Martin took the State Board examination In Winston-Salem, along with doxens of other stud ent nurses the last of August. Pom to Mr. and Mrs. Claude B. Higgins, of Wilmington, a daughter, Virginia Blvtalena, Aug. 29, at the Wilkes Hospital. Hke.Iiltriiilmplements, tlon anil mAlnteaiAce, liIoBg wltj > hard^yedr’s work khd showl^ the ; proper Work Unit. donservkUonl^^lt P.. nre nlao (BWtflable to Conservation .ttervlee,r , tofW* f MOTOR •a. prpperiy cons^c^'.ana maintained terracing syHnm,'com-; tojrt^g bined with good crop rotniion and polntoa ont . y^ ■ ■., r contour ttltage, is oft^ble of ln*‘ «.-r——V* vuuLuur LiiLaKe, » iu«' y.- " creasing crop yields froni 10 per Money can fight, buy benus cent to 30 per cent wlth'*very Ht-, , , • i":- tle additional Dnnn. > labor” Since next yearns - production goals will in all pro^blllty be ■ higher than laat year^ with no ad ditional labor available, terraces should be - maintained . In good working order. Iksm \ ' • >2 ■ J./: 'I A«i> T8i ■ PaV c«tl for M ^ Wree]^ed Cara atid timSU ,. Electric and Are3jp»^'?f*MiBg ,’Phoii(sSS4;F !,i ■ ■ ■ npci-Utinn hpi ealmuts. Everyone' whole these important points wU Telephone 205-R Office Closed Every Thursday Afternoon known that the pressure of show improvement over the use- our enormous animal population less stuff put out test year, —greatest in the history of th- A shortage of hardwood foi country—would rip the hinges plow handles and a multitude of loose sooner or later. Now, with other farm equipment uses has i broad strip of drought devasi- reared its ugly head. Explana tion seems to be that price ceil ings on logs are so low that few logs are being cut. As one means of meeting the feed shortage, lauthoritive sources say that barges are being made available to haul molasses from Cuba and up the Atlantic coast. Also, boats are stated to bring wheat from the Pacljlc states and the Western Provinces of Canada. The shortage of sodium nitrate is another shipping grief. Farm fertilizer groups are asking that the import of the Chilean product be upped from 700 thousand to a million tons next year. , In the meantime, it is hoped that amonium nitrate in powdered form will take sodium nitrate’s place. Dealers have their fingers crossed: amonium nitrate soaks up water like a sponge, then lumps. If it can be gotten on the ground in powdered form it does the job O. K. Problem is to get it there. NEW FORM OF SURSIDY HEADS FOR MILK— The severe drought in the 1- state urea surrounding Washing ton has developed a new form of ipilk subsidy. WFA has authoriz ed the SputherEL Cooj(erative As soclatiom to buy hay—sell It to farmers at from ten to fifteen dollars below cost. CCC will bal ance the Co-ops’, books at the end of the program—then pay the dif ference. Only thing the farmer h«HS to do is sign a statement that the hay will be fed exclusively to CHEVROLET DEALER>^ EVERY «AR AND TRUCK MUST SERVE AMERICA T—"- SCO CROS5 ACTtVIfliS FOR THE SERVICE OF AMERICA’’ See us for skilled service on all makes of cars end trucks dairy cattle. If this program is carried out across the entire drought strip, it wii; amount to c dairy subsidy on a whole-sale cale. IRONIC TWISTS PEEK OUT OF CORNERS— USDA whoops it up with an optimistic food production state ment. Inside twenty tour hours the U. S. Weather Bureau repor's crop-damuging drought of the first magnitude from Atlantic coast to Texas. Last winter USDA Secretary Claude Wickard was put on the hot spot by the Senate Ag. Com mittee over a clause in applica tion farmers had to sign in order to get muchinery. equipment. This clause was a promise on the farm er's part to lend or rent said ma ll inery or equipment to his neigh bors. On refusal, the local War Board was empowered to seize same. Senators asserted this was little short of communism, de manded that something be done about it. The Secretary said he d never seen the offending clause, would report back. There, ap parently, the matter dropped Now comes a report from a Massachusetts poultrynian. O’.i applying for a War Board order tor chicken wire, the lend-rent item hit him between- the eyes^ Would he promise to lend or rent the wire to his neighbor on penal ty of having it grabbed back ly I the Board in case of refusal? Such a clause on such an item was rt- i ' culous on the face of it. Visions 0 neighbor toting off his wire I while some twelve hundred hens ' started prowling the neighbo ,hood was too much. He wrote a “No!’’ after the required pledge! back thi AnicK VBIH WAR BONDS Jamaica ia establishing agricul Til centers and building new roads. AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR DEALER SERVICE ORGANIZATION POULTRY The U. S. Department of Agri culture reports that puUorum dis ease has been.reduced about one- third since 1936, when official j testing of poultry breeding stock began on a Federal-State basis. Motor Company Ijlbifi'Wilkesboro, N.^C. _ \ FOR WAR PURPOSES! • Highest Prices Paid For # Old Field or N.C. FOUR-QUARTER Pine Lumber J. E. Caudill, - NORTH WILKESBORO, - - Buyer NORTH CAROLINA % \ K ■■WSSS'-" E very t’a? INVASION bailies are taking the lives ol gallanl boys lighting under the Stars and Stripes. Your dear ones—sons, husband, sweetheart, father, brothers, relatives and friends—are, or soon may be, engaged in those bloody battle, where the scythe of the Grim Reaper flashes in every volley of the guns. The 3rd War Loan of 15 biUion dollars nmsf pay for the equipment, ammunition and food oar boys need an desperalely-and you mull raise fhe moneyl Buy at least one EXTRA $100 War Bond in Sep tember besides your regular bond purchases. Go aJl-out with every doUax you can scrape up and keep right on alapping every cent into the world’s safest Investment-War Bonds! Make the 3rd War Loan a quick suocesa-baek up your foldier, stUor or nuine AIL THE WAY! s/iciK ATmcK mn wo/rvs This Advertisement Is A Contribution To America’s AH-Out War, Effort By
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1943, edition 1
6
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