: THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872 Volume 72 ahotit the AAA and, othefo ( W itkj ' (XTCNSBON WORK • ch-otn. /M m V r w 'A 1 GwmtyJigei A.'JIWS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO THOSE WHO MAV APPLY FOE NEW ALLOTMENT All applications for New Grow ft Allotments must be filed at the County AAA Office in Dan bury not later than Feb. 1, 1941. The requirements for such al-1 lotments are as follows: 1. Person who is going to grow | the tobacco must live on this par ticular farm; 2. The farm operator or person who is going to live on the farm must have a tobacco history of one year out of the last 5 years, or for five years. There will be no extension of time for the purpose of filing thij, application therefore, if you are ( planning to place your application , Mfor a new grower allotment, do so as soon as possible. *— ' I 0 REPORT ON LATE , SOIL RUILDINO PRACTICE i i All persona"'who have not re ported their late soil build ing practices and signed ap plication are requested to do this at the very earliest convenience. All limestone that was delivered on the farms must be spread not later than January 1, 1944. If' this material is not spread and' | reported by January 2, 1944, you ( will not receive credit. Those j people who received material un der the 1943 supplemental pro- ; gram will have their material to Vpay for unless they get it spread I and reported by January 2nd. J. MOIR HAWKItfS, Chm. ' Stokes County ACA. * BLACK SHANK RESISTANT ' • TOBACCO SEED AVAILABLE Applications have already been placed in the County Agent's Of fice for two pounds of Black j Shank Resistant tobacco seed. i These seed will be available to farmers in the next few days. If j there are other farmers who want ■ these seed, please" notify T. M. I Lewis, Walnut Cove, or notify the j County Agent's Office. The seed will cost $1.50 an ounce. One ounce is sufficient seed for 300 ! yards. Each ounce contains a, little more than three tablespoons- j ful. A " 4-H CLUB SCHEDULE TTlie 4-H Clubs will meet at all *he schools in January, according to the following schedule: , January 4th—Danbury ( January sth—Lawsonville I £ ' January 6th —Meadows , S- •* January 7th — Francisco January 10th Germanton January 11th Walnut Cove January 13th Pine Hall January 14th Pinnacle January 17 th Reynolds January 18th King January 20th Sandy Ridge January 21st Dillard. Tne January meetings will ba devoted to 4-H Club project plan ning for the next year, j Our government is asking for increased production of all food i crops, also of eggs. Stokes coun-1 ty must produce plenty of pork and more feed for all livestock. The 4-H Clubs will be called upon again to grow a Victory Garden. If we are to win the war, we must fight on the home front. Each 4-H Club member has a i duty just as clearly as the sol ' diers in uniform, i Stokes County 4-H Clubs have just completed a successful year. Each member fa to be congratu lated for the part he played. The following summary is taken from I the record turned in by the 4-H Club boys: I • * COMPOSITE PICTURE OB] 4-H CLUB WORK Ui STOKES Scrap collected—Bo,s4l pounds by 142 boys; rubber collected — 3,281 pounds by 31 boys; farm buildings repaired 699 by 193 boys; home equipment I built—4l7 articles by 193 boys; wagons repaired l6B by 150 boys; plows repaired 523 by 193 boys; mowers repaired—2oo l by 193 boys; planters repaired— -202 by 193 boys; fire patrol mem bers—l 9 boys; Civilian Defense activities—24 boys; bonds and J stamps owned —$7,172 by 126 boys; tobacco income—$18,964 by 110 boys; hens owned —3,440 by 60 boys; swine owned—l 32 ani mals by 100 boys; calves owned— owned by 68 boys. ,Kini!r Observation Post tie Disbanded By THEODORE NEWSUM, i ChioT Observer ' Sin;e ui.r service is uo longer j needed and in orJer to give va more time for other war activ ities, the King Observation Post. . along with all others in the Ra- I leigh and Charlotte areas have been disbanded. I wish to thank each member of our Post, many of whom have stood guard day and night in all kinds of weather for their heroic service and all the citizens of King and the surrounding com munity for the many ways in which they helped to maks ««r work more enjoyable. ~ , . i Danbury, N. C., Thursday, Dec. 30, 1943 (An Editorial) A Lcose-Tongued Luce Clare Booth Luce is said to be very beautiful. She is a very beautiful liar unless, forsooth, she is short on information, and is only innocently loose-tongued. The congresswoman 'from Connecti cut, as you have probably noticed, is one of President Roosevelt's most caustic critics. Her speciality is foreign policies, and as the President is and has been without one of these most useful implements, Clare tries assiduously to supply the need. At this time Clare is busy trying to justify the isolationist policies of her party by shifting the blame. She says: "The American people could never have been branded as isolationist if President Roosevelt and his state de partment had disclosed to the nation the danger of which they themselves were fully aware. The administration suppressed the facts because 1940 was an election year." For the information of Mrs. Luce, President Roosevelt began rebuilding the navy in 1933 as soon as he took office. (At that time Mrs. Luce was writing fa shion notes for New Yo*k social butter flies, and did not know that the Harding administration had sunk 15 battleships and 7 heavy cruisers left to them by the Wilson administration). Neither did she remember that her party had cut down the army to the sta tus of a Boy Scout troop. Yet this congressional snake-charmer says Roosevelt had left us unprepared. We wonder if Clare remembers 'way back in 1937 when Roosevelt warned us that our frontier was the Rhine, and that her party replied to him when he urged the quarantine of the "maddog" nations Germany, Italy and Japan— "the President is a war monger." She says Roosevelt suppressed the truth because 1940 was an election year. But the fortification of Guam came be fore congress in 1938, and Clare's party voted 138 to 15 against it. And in June, '39, when the bill came up to increase the construction of military airplanes, Clare's party voted 122 to 5 against it. Also in June, 1939, it was proposed to sell munitions to England in her war against "maddog" Germany, and Clare's party in the lower house of Congress voted 150 to 8 against it. Then in November, 1939, the bill to re vise the neutrality law came up, a law to provide the British, Poles, etc., with wea pons to hold back the nations against which Roosevelt had warned us. Clare's party voted 140 to 20 against it. That wasn't an election year. But 1940 was. And in September of that year, on • ly 60 days before the election, President Roosevelt disregarded political danger and demanded the passage of the con scription law. It passed. But Clare's party voted 112 to 52 against it. If Clare is not a beautiful liar, she is a beautiful innocent. PUBLISHED THURSDAYS LAWSON VILLE NEWS [ Dy MRS. E. G. LAWSON Lawsonville. The Christmas holidays have passed quietly hej>.. j Frank Lawson, who has a war ! job at Baltimore, was here for the 1 j . Christmas holidays. Kermit Sheppard of the Navy spent a few days here last week i with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Z: 1 R: Sheppard. Mrs. Hampton Lawson spent I several days here with Mr. and « I Mrs. E. G. Lawson during Xmas. j Mrs. Lawson returned to Char-! I lotte Tuesday and was aceom- 1 panied to the bus by Mrs. E. G i Lawson, Glenn, Annie Mae and Junior Lawson. There has been considerable j eases of flu around this section recently. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Tuttle' and family and Mrs. Weldon Smith have been on the sick list. Mrs. Herman Lawson and child ren are visiting Mrs. Lawson's parents, Mr: and Mrs. Bud Spen cer. Ruby Helms spent a few days here with Betty Jo Lawson this week. Lawsonville school opened Wed-' nesday, 29th, after having been closed for several days on ac count of sickness, and for Christ- j mas. Death Of John W. Shelton ji Funeral services for John Wil- ', liam Shelton, aged 74, prominent'] farmer of Lawsonville, who died' late Sunday, were held Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at North' View Baptist Church. Elders' Watt Priddy and Edd Priddy con-1 ducted the services. Burial war. in the church graveyard. Mr. Shelton was one of Stokos county's best-known men. He had served as a tax lister in the coun ty for more than 10 years. Surviving are the v.idow, th. | former Miss Mary Williams; fotu ! daughters, Mrs. Bud Smith of Madison; Mrs. Bud Frye of Lib erty; Mrs. Joe Hazlewood of Wal nut Cove and Mrs. Willis Shelton of Lawsonville; four sons, Char- j lie, Cecil and Dewey Shelton cf ' l.ruvsonville; nr.d Harry Shcltoa ' i >f Tuo:msvir ; 53 ;;raiv;lchi!dr.-:i 13 £rc four k:. I hers, Jim Shelton of SU-I;.!:.!. 11 ;Everctto Shelton of Liberty; T. C. j Shelton nf Madison and G. R. jfhelton of Lawsonville; and two "istois. Mrs. Jennie Flynt and j j Mrs. Emma Richardson of Walnut | Cove. 1 Mary Jane Mabe Passes Away Monday Mrs. Mary Jane Mabe, aged 82, j died Monday at the home oI a ( daughter, Mrs. Jerry Matie, on ; Danbury. Route 1, aftefl an ill- Number HJo.'J. TWO DEATHS IN KING SECTION xJy K P. .'•! William 1. i.a:..i-y, i;g«-d i»-l, eiied Saturday i;.ur;.iii 0 111 -e Winston-Salem hospital. The d • coaa.U is survived by the widow, several children and a number of grandchildren. Funeral servic • Was conducted at the First Bap tist Church on East Main Street Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and burial followed in the church I cemetery. ! Mrs. Herbert Mar-shall an I small son, Wayne, of Wilkesboru are spending a few days 1; re the 'guests of Mrs. Marshall's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Cladic New sum, on West Main Stmt. ! There is noted improvement in the condition of Spencer Tuttle, who has been quite sick at his home on Ohio Street. The stork's report is light due to the bad weather: to Mr. and Mrs. Ed Styers, P son and to Mr. and Mrs. James Boyles, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steme of Richmond, Va., are here for a few days, the guests of relatives. Mrs. Debs Holder and Mrs. A, M: Caudle are spending the hol idays with relatives at Ports mouth, Va. • Press Sally, aged 75, died at his home, the old William New sum place, Monday. He had been in failing health for some months. I 5 jHe is survived by one son and three daughters, and a number of grandchildren. Funeral and in terment were at Mountain View Church Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock, j Lt. Grady E. Stone, Jr., wa.3 for the holidays: He is sta tioned at Richmond, Va. He was accompanied by his wife. Tech. Sergeant T. D; Tuttlj of Camp Van Dorn, Miss., spent the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs: Gabe Tuttle at Rural Hall. t j The following men of the Navy | spent the Christmas holidays here: Monroe Alridge of New Or leans, La.; Robert News urn of Great Lakes, 111.; Frank Sisk oi Charleston, Suuth Carolina; Bill I Helsabeck of Charleston, South (Carolina an ! Donald Curye of Great Lnhes, 111. | Tee folkr.vin n.cn of e!.■■ Aran | (Sl.i-.il Cl'!here: Hei.eant Li - 1; v K: (f :,J) Atterber ry, 1./ i, err' 0 f Cahl'orni >. i cv.alned to her ihonie on Soma Lopot St roe t 1" ihni' s, her f tends will regret learn. uess of 14 hours. The fuueral was hrV -ft; .. Nelson Funeral Chapel Wee." u day afternoon a'. 2 o'clnck. Eld era W. J; Brv n m l J. W. Tut tlo conducted the servl. :s. Bu rial war in the Dimttt family (Cor.i: *u;' C n . ~c 8)