r PITOUSHED THUfeSbAYS
|g "3§?y^^P.;jgWißL Wmfttßtm&iim
"We're Facing the Future j
With Security...
because a monthly check from our
Security Life Income itill take care of
us as long as ice live."
The sooner you plan your future, the
better your future will be.
SECURITY LIFE !
and Trust Company
Your Security Representative
W. M. FULP, General Agt
Walnut Cove, N. C.
S wutiTtews 1
an out tfic AAA and otJieiy ( V»i at
€XT€NSION WORK \
>• cJrom -ifia y« ""*• J'j rj j
I ouwatMf JJfjontr s|p|^» r
Buttermilk is good for chick? I
and should be fed where avail
able. Feed a little each day. It w.ll
help to ward off d.seases and
feed deficiencies.
Lime and phosphate are fine 1
for pastureland, stated Mr. Paul '
Taylor. He has just completed *
putting one car of lime and sev- ■ 1
«*1 tone of phosphate on his 1
grassland. Some fine young 1
Cuernseys are grazed "on the
farm- One registered Guernsey 1
.Male is for Bale. t
Irma Hawkins, Sandy R'dge s
4-H Club Member, sold $54.77 jt
worth of milk from his cow be- 1
filming September 23 to last of c
Money is taken from c
JBiffi ch?ck to pay feed bills, J 1
wblch amounted to $24.40. She i
mMkt> the cow morning and |
jri«ht. N.! [«
Zt is t>me to begin thinking I
about planting hil&ge torn. Win*- t
tar si lag* ft Mighty good for '
milk cowk It cuts the cost of
feeding too. We will be glad to ,
I
kelp you plan a silo if you do not i
kave one. I suggest you see the
tme nearest your farm.
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE
Having qualfiied as Executor
•f the estate of Mrs. Lula May i
S. W.) Pulliam, late of King,
Stokes county, North CaroUfta,'
this is to notify all persons hav
ing claims against the estate of
said decedent to exhibit them to
the undersigned on or before the
21st day of May, 1943. or this
notice' will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will please
make immed'ate payment to the
undersigned.
This May 17th, 1942.
WACHOVIA BANK AND
TP.UST COMPANY,
Win3ton-Salem. N. C.
Executor of the estate of
Mrs. Lula May (S. W.) Pulliam.
Cre'ge & Craigc, Attys.
"WANTE D—Man with car
Route experience preferred but
aot necessary to start. Rawleigh's,
Dept. NCD-55-M, Richmond, Va.
Meet The Appeal
Agent At His Office
At Danbury
a.
John L. Christian requests the
Reporter to advise those wwo
wish to consult him about drat
tees, and other problems connect
with the Selective war Serv.ee,
to see him in hie office in Dan-
Mr. Christian, who is govern
ment appeal agent for the coun
ty in the matter of the selective
service, says many people come
to Bee him at his home at Pin
nacle, which la largely a waste ■
of time. The records and all data, I
correspondence, etc., are in the'
local dfaft boat's headquarters i
i. {
Mr. lays he will t*i
at the local board'a office in Dan-1
bury every Friday from 1 p. m. I
to 4:30 p> 88.
, I
ADM IN ItfTRATtJKH NOTICE
The undersigned having quali
fied as admlifitratof of R. Left Ben
nett, lat» of Stokes coUftty, this
is to notify all persons having
claims against the Said tettfetfe to
present them to the unctetsigned
on or before March IS, '1943, or
this fcotice will be pleaded in bar
of recovery, Aft persona owing
Baid estate will please make im
mediate *ettte«Aht.
This March 12, 1942.
£X M. BENNETT, Admr.
of Lee Bennett,
Postoffice King, N. C.
Cigars, Cigarettes, Cold Drinks
, 1 . Magazines.
E. P. Newsum,
King, N. C.
1 Men, Women Over 40
Don't Be Weak, Old
f Feel Peppy, New, Years Younger
Tuk«* Ontrex. ConlullW Kcnerml tonlra. ■tlniuUDU
often timled 40—by bodltfllarMtt4Nfc|«it
rluin nhnnphxtr and \ltnmln Bi. A 73-yflM*olu
UH'inr write*: "It did #o much forj»»y took
It mvarlf Ronultn were flne " Bpocial fntroWWWT
Hltr Ontrex Tonic Tablet* comln owfr M«, !»■£
• 'M'WTUI u»t»oter und yean younger. thU w»
t Fsr sale at all good drag store
i, J everywhere— * -life Mm a*—
ELLINGTON CUT-RATE DMJC
THE BANBURY REPORTER
Training for Victory
• "~ — ~™~ t
By Rufus T. Strohm
D«», International
Correspondence Schools
WITHOUT machine tools there
would be no war of the present
type. Without skilled men to build
and operate machl- es there could
be no war like the one that engulfs
the world.
War-production labor must be 40
per cent skilled,
§35 per cent semi
skilled and 25
per cent un
skilled.
Industry is
straining every
hour of the day
and night to pro
— vide the man-
I Rufus T. Strohm power that must
support the men
in the armed branches of service.
I It must be repeated time and again
| that the best training is training
on the job in the plant.
There is little time to train
skilled workmen. Management has
instituted all types of training pro
grams, many of them brought out
and dusted off after they have been
experimented with in the years be
fore the war.
Time is of the essence. Speed Is
the cry of management. But when
all has been said and done, the
individual must provide the an
swer.
The American workman of his
own volition and free will must
provide the answer. He can be
drafted into labor, enticed from one
job to another, but he must have
the ambition and the energy to
train 'himself. Management can
offer all the inducements known to
mankind, but It is the worker who
must make the final decision. m
The most important *ob of all,
right now, is for every man and
woman engaged in an industrial
capacity to learn to function at hla
very best until the war 1* won.
lllfl- Ml
Training For Defanso
a *
By Rufus T v Strohm
Dean, International
Correspondence Schools
THE shifting of workers from one
job to another so that they can
acquire new skills and handle sev
eral different jobs in one plant if
necessary. Is called "up-grading."
Experienced personnel managers
say this system keeps men from
going stale, Improves morale, in
sures skilled labor for all opera
tions, and frequently produces all
around skilled men for foremen and
other top production jobs.
Short refresher stuay' courses are
being used increasingly to hurriedly
train men and women for industrial
jobs. Many such courses, supplied
by various institutions are financed
by the government Other study
courses are financed in part or en
tirely by employers. »
• rhe cry is for skilled men, and
tae supply is far too short in some
Industries now engAged in national
defense projects. Some educators
■re confident that plenty of skilled
labqr cm be trained for the defense
program if etup!jyuid will rEalue
that they Can no longer hang out a
"help wanted" sign, but must ar
range their operations to utilise
specialised skills and then take the
time ani tjroutjje U> train new work
ers for these skills. *
We have stepped almost overnight
from a narplaa of workers to a
shortage |jt workers, especially
■killed and semi-skilled worker*.
Recently one of the nation's fore
most educational authorities said,
"We will have the taak of convinc
ing parents and children that a
high school education may, and
gftbably should, lead to a w-hlue
shop rather than a dank." *
Tha Youth in Bmlnwa
«'C. By B. Johniton •
Dees, Schmlt ml Brnth**
fiMimstiswal Correspondence
| Schools
! mHB youth who for the past sev-
X tsral years has been eagerly
Vwaitlng an opportunity to get
I ahead on the Job should take a
self-Inventory now. The state of
affairs which has developed recent
ly m the United States a* the re
suit of the war In Europe means
that more and more highly trained
people will be needed by bsstaesa
and Industry. There will he no
great number of new types of Jobs,
but there will be an Increased de
mand for skilled and trained per
sons. 0
Of course, It la not. possible for
the youth to acquire great skill
and technical training overnight,
but he can begin a program ot
study and self-improvement which
will make him a decided factor la
the nation's plan of preparedness
and self-defense. With the steadily
increasing tempo of business, jobs
will appear and he who has the
rteitsSAfy (ralnJ.'.g and background
will be given the first call. -
Our great factories and plants
are beginning to hum with activity
and thousands of men who have
been "marking time" until they
could get back to a regular Job,
are returning to work. Some ol
these men, many, In fact, have
gone Into other fields ot work.
There will be a certain number of.
vacancies at the bottom of the
scale, but the great demand will be
for men with special training. Here
is the chance that the young man
with ambition has been seeking—
the chance to show what he can do
. with the knowledge he haa been fco*
Hairing« Much depends upon these
yanng men in this hoar of concern
13 air our American wajr ot Ills, a
' Jap U-Boat Challenge Met by Canadian Navy
. .. \V\TH Ihe grim war brought to ~~~ 1
" Canada's Atlantic doorway by
'{j® operation of «meir.y U-bo^ts,
through
are keen spen at deli
i ciali Lre pijizkd aJ to^hovJ
CNMMHI subs are able to operate in northern ~®
RENEW
YOUR
r
SUBSCRIPTION
NOW!
Thursday, Apr. 16, 1942