MARION PROGRESS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY THE Mcdowell publishing co., MARION, N. C. TELEPHONE 64 S. E. WHITTEN, Editor and Prop. Entered at the Pogtoffice at Marion, N. C., as second class matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months .75 Strictly in Advance 'Nonh Carolina MESS ASSOCIATION1 \©, MARION, N. C., JULY 13, 1944 THE WOUNDED COME HOME Last month a plane arrived in this country from the British Isles. It brought home a full contingent of wounded, one officer, twelve men and a Navy Seabee. Several of the men were part of the first contingent that went ashore on D-day, including a paratrooper who broke his leg landing, several were wounded before they reached the shore and others were hit by snipers as they advanced in battle. One of the paratroopers, hit by a mortar shell six hours after be made a safe parachute landing, was cap- i trued by the Germans and later re- j captured by Americans. Another! had his broken leg set by enemy soldiers but was liberated by an ad vancing patrol the next day. The stream of wounded begins to flow homeward. The men will be distributed to general hospitals clos- i est to their places of residence as soon as their condition permits. | Here, it is hoped, they will recover j from battle wounds. Nobody knows how long the flow; of casualties will last, or the num- j ber of Americans who will come home wounded. They represent men who have suffered in the ser vice of their fellowmen and they de serve the consideration and prayers of all Americans. 1 WAR PRODUCTION IS VITAL ! If the defense of Minsk, like the. defense of Cherbourg, is the best. that the enemy can do then the Hit-j lerites are closer to complete defeat1 than most of us suspect. With such news from the fighting fronts it is easy for the people of the Allied nations to become over- j optimisti.c Our own General Staff has cautioned Americans not to ac-i cept the idea that the war is won! and they are right, because any let-up will prolong the struggle. Already, military leaders are call ing for sustained production of munitions, weapons and implements of warfare. They know that this is not the hour to cut off the pressure that keeps up the flow of supplies to the fighting areas. Now is the day! when every American on the home front should exert himself, or her self, to the utmost in order to reap : the greatest gain from favorably de-: veloping oportunities. HEROES ON EVERY FRONT The news of the week has cen tered around the fighting in Nor mandy but we must not overlook the intense fighting that has mark ed the efforts of our soldiers to wrest the island of Saipan from the Japanese. In the distant waters of the Paci fic brave Americans are facing the foe and they are exhibiting the same courage that has marked our fighting men in France and Italy. In fact, there are no side-lines in the two wars that we fight. There are some fronts which receive more attention in the newspapers and on the air but we should not permit our thoughts to be centered exclusively upon one area. NOTES AND COMMENTS This is not the time to let-up on the home front. * * * Buy bonds regularly; the war goes on even when war bond drives end. * * * Women, who want to serve the nation, have opportunities at home, as well as in the armed forces. * * * A vacation-at-home, recommend ed this Summer to Americans, is one substitute that costs less. * * * Religion is not a commodity that one can buy over the counter at a bargain price. * * * Men on the fighting front are not concerned with vacations; they are trying to save their lives. NAZI MANPOWER DWINDLES The defeat of the German army will be accomplished by the killing of German soldiers. There is no other way to break the military power of the Nazis and it is imma terial whether the enemy suffers in France, Italy or Russia. Recent news dispatches indicate that the Allied armies are doing some effective work on the German army. The Russians report 150,000 slain and 75,000 captured in White Russia. The Americans, in Nor mandy, have buried 5,000 and cap tured 50,000. In Italy, since May 11th, the Ger mans have lost around 100,000 men. In addition to casualties inflicted by the Americans in Normandy the British have also punished the foe whose total losses in the invasion may total 100,000. Certainly, the month of June was not a profitable month for the mast er race. Despite the fact that they were on the defensive everywhere, with the advantages that go with j the defense, the Nazis have lost; many more men than the United Nations. This is important because the' Germans cannot match the manpow er of the United Nations. While ! we, and our allies, bring up fresh j troops in every-increasing number! the Hitlerites seem to be scraping j the bottom of their reserves. When i they reach the end, the war will be i about over, regardless of where the j contending armies struggle for vie- i tory. From France comes information that German units, fighting in Nor mandy, have been identified as "coming from Russia." This indi cates, very plainly, that Hitler's cen tral reserve in Germany is exhaust ed, or he would hardly transfer men from the eastern front where the Red Army is on the move. A WARNING IS USELESS A demand is growing in Great J Britain that the government warn the Germans that if the robot bomb is employed against England, the Allies will systematically de molish some 1,000 Nazi cities. i The robot bomb, it is reported, j flies through the air at random and strikes targets that are impossible; of selection. The British denounce the Germans for using a weapon j that blindly destroys without being j subject to directional aim for mili- j tary purpases. i There is only one thing wrong with the suggestion of the outraged j British. There is nothing whatever, to be gained by warning the Nazis. The act would delight the Nazis, giving them what they would consid er as proof that the robots are caus- j ing great and important military damage. If the Allies decide that the use1 of the robot bomb represents cal- j lous destruction, regardless of mili tary use, and that retaliation is ad- j visable, then they should proceed to j blast a dozen or more German cit ies. This is the only language that j the Teutons understand. SAIPAN OPENS THE WAY The importance of the capture of Saipan can hardly be over-estimat ed. It will enable us, in the words of Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal, "to project surface and air operations that will include the mainland of Japan, the Philippines and the greater part of the Dutch East Indies." It is well that the fleet has at- j tacked Saipan because the Japanese, in their Chinese offensive, have tak en one of our airfields and, presum- < ably, will be able to capture others. The possession of Saipan will give us compensatory bases with in easy reach of Japan. MAY SHORTEN THE WAR The British Ministry of Economic Warfare says that five years of ec onomic warfare and bombing may cripple the operational mobility of the German armies this summer and consequently shorten the war. German-occupied areas are pro ducing less than half of the Reich's oil requirements and the recent bombing attacks upon oil plants have intensified the shortage. While the Germans are expected to make strenuous efforts to repair refiner ies, Allied bombers will continue to comb the plants as fast as they are put back into operation. Price control will be necessary af ter the war ends; otherwise the de mand for consumer goods will lead to inflated prices as every American tries to buy, at the same time, what he has been waiting for. What has become of the man who said that the nation had plenty of rubber for automobile tires and enough gasoline for every possible use? Results from advertising are con ctantly reported by those who use The Progress but we are not sur prised. Vitaminizing On the Farm ik T1 (WNCtonto^ ) USE CARE IN BUYING FARM REAL ESTATE Growers should be particularly careful in buying farm real estate at this time because present land values are based on what crops are selling for now rather than in nor mal times, say Extension farm man agement specialists at N. C, State College. They point out that when a de pression comes farm commodity j prices drop first and lower than the prices of the things the farmer has to buy. Following the first world \ war prices of things the farmer bought were relatively high for a period of 21 years as compared with prices of things he sold. In the years 1934 and 1936 farm commodity prices were up some but the farmer had much less than usual to sell due to drought conditions. The beginning point in estimating the value of a farm comes with a careful estimate of what can be produced under normal conditions and what that production will bring j at normal prices. A reasonable al lowance should also be made for poor crop years. The specialists point out that the family must live and that taxes, fertilizer, labor, machinery and other farm expense items must be met every year from the proceeds of th farm. After allowing for j these necessary items, some idea of the amount available for paying in-1 terest and principal on the farm! can be had. • I Health and j| • I !"Beauty ... I Dr. Sophia Brunson J DENATURED GRAIN PRODUCTS No one ever heard of pellagra in j the South before the War Between j the States. People sent their corn j to water mills and had the whole j grain ground into hominy or meal, j Wheat was generally ground on the plantation. The fine white flour that is so generally used now to make breads was not in such com mon use as at the present time. Every negro cabin had its sweet potato patch near, and the families all had gardens for summer and win ter vegetables. The big orchards of the planters supplied fruit for all. The heads of the colored families were privileged to plant their own melons, of which they were very fond. It was the duty of the planter to see that the colored folks raised pigs chickens, and cows for their fami lies. Decayed and yellowed teeth among the negroes were almost un known. As time went by, after the Con federate War, the corn meal was bolted, that is the oil, minerals, and vitamins were removed. Corn and j wheat products were still the staple 1 articles of food in the South, the j people were eating them as before, j but their health was being impaired, j The difference was this. The ■grinding (except in a few instan ces) was done in the city mills. Fine white flour was being turned out. The bran and dark part of the wheat were sold mostly to feed the farm animals. You see, by taking out the wheat germ and the proteins, the white flour keeps indefinitely, for the bugs will not bother it. The same denaturing process was resorted to with corn meal and grits. You can eat it until you are starved to death. Now they are claiming to be enriching the grain products and j putting back the vitamins. Don't j you believe it. In Canada they do not allow j these chemicals to be put into their j foods for they do not restore the j valuable constituents that have been j removed by milling. Neither can j they be restored any more than you j can put something into a sterile egg to make it hatch. Formerly the rice j that was raised and cleaned on the plantations was unpolished. Now: everything is removed from the rice but starch and the people who largely subsist on such devitalized rice suffer from a disease like pel-; lagra which is caused from under-; nourishment. I Some of the finest vitamins in the world are manufactured from the parts of the whole grains which have been removed. The devitalized starches are then fed to civilized hu man beings. WHO KNOWS? 1. What is the distance between1: Saipan and Tokyo? j 2. How far must a bomber fly to go from England to Russia? I 3. What is Moscow's estimate of German casualties on the Eastern j front? ] 4. What is "Task Force 58?" j 5. Who is Assistant Secretary of State? 6. Has any President gone into ' office despite the fact that his op- j ponent received a larger popular I vote? j 7. What was the Luftwaffe's ; greatest loss for a single day in the Battle of Britain? 8. Who commands the Fifth | Army, advancing on Florence, | Italy? 9. How many decorations have been won by Americans in the present war? 10. What official, who urges the j people to buy War Bonds, has not purchased a single bond? . (See answers on page 6) I — k in7days 666 \ ^ Liquid for Malarial Symptoms. BONDS OVER AMERICA ♦ * * | Devil Dog &. H. Q. Since 1805 when Franklin Wharton was Commandant, this residence near the Navy Yard, Washington, D. C., has been the home of the man who directs the United States Marines, "From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli." Marines, soldiers and sailors are seeing all parts of the world these days and not through a porthole. We expect them to take strategic positions and hold them. They expect us to buy War Bonds and Hold Them. Hang On to Your War Bonds FACTORY.™ YOU • * Mcdowell Cut Rate Drug Store I "• Here is proof again that Rexall offers you the "Best Values— (Always." So take time now to check thescvalues . . . then boy ' ONLY WHAT YOU MEED. Your savings can go far in buy ing War Stamps and your War Stamps can help you buy that extra War Bond that is so urgently needed now! TOUR riuii u tuuh FAMILY PHYSICIAN — PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS AND YOU Years of research and experience have qualified your dependable Rexall Pharmacist to fill any prescription that your doctor may write. Even the new est drug "miracles" are stocked here for use as directed by your doctor. So when sickness strikes and there is a prescription to be compounded, bring it to the Rexall Drug Store. For here only full-strength in gredients of the high est quality are em i ployed with accuracy ' that has earned the i confidence of doctors -nd patients alike. Purctest T/ I o"e ;^e%etest 1 •rs corcve and ^V°co^d,nCt lSe^rvuR St°tes,', _.„U DcU» n m-. TABLETS The quick-acting aspirin. 100'j Lamion's ■RAL OIL The favorite mechanical laxative. excess stomach acidity. 140' -*9e 39* 35# Full Pint Lamjon' MINERAL Reg. 25c Puretett SODA MINT TabUts For Res. 89c Bottle of 100 CARICA BILE Brand Tabs. *«c Rexall the CARICA Ren. 69c Rexall MILK of MAGNESIA Antacid, mild laxative Reg. S5c Rexoll CORN SOLVENT Hard corns go in a few days—no pain! IM£SE ARt ?sssa PBODUC1S of^e" ■ \oH coSt" 19< 7qc 59* \9C ytfpiCtMi; CA8INEf MSS9S ABSORBENTCOTTON iiliiikill 4 oz. size "Double Sterilized" absorbent cotton for medicine cabinet and nursery. Wai&a. ADHESIVE PLASTER fjjjgl 1" x 5 yd. spools. Also other sizes and prices. liiitHiii Choice of white or flesh color. illli FIRST AID KITS36 PIECES Also other kits 59c and $1.39. Each with up-to-date 24-page "FIRST AID" Manual. pygHi; A medicine cabinet 'MUST' jpijjl! SiAAlatdj QUtK-BANDS For kitchen and workshop, too. With sulfathiarolc, mercurochrome or plain, these are Tss^a PRODUCTS ONLY ?&*a^ DRUG STORES OFFER YOU BAHCXINS Unskilled Workers WANTED In A Rayon Plant In Western North Carolina Time and one-half for all work over 40 hours. Double time for work on seventh day. Assistance provided to get a place to live. There are also a number of vacancies for women to replace men at the same rate as paid men doing the same work. Apply on and after July 10,1944, at the United States Employment Service War Manpower Commission . McDowell County Court House MARION, N. C. These Are Essential Jobs In A Permanent Industry Persons in other war work should not apply ADVERTISE IN THE PROGRESS Best Advertising Medium