PAGE THREE g- TIMES th Carolina AND THURSDAY BY lishlng Company r Established 1881 mes Established 1929 ■haw, Jr Associates Adv. Manager 'ice With U. S. Navy JG RATES 3ents Per Inch ) Cents Per Line Responsible for Views • Jorrespondents flee at Roxboro, N. C. lass Matter UARY 19, 1945 lOURIER-TIMES says it, says it because it is true. ID WAR TWO ) we all were talking about lid be over, especially the it. Some of us named one s thought it would last two ally everyone thought that ing rapidly to an end. Now d a man that will tell you lat it will be over, oks much better now than but the American people d that this is no time to of the war. They feel that out for some time to come ians are rapidly approach s not mean that the end of ■ is about here. We have nany can hold out for some erlin has been conquered seting of the Big Three in indicates that the Euro i over by the time of this tainlv does not mean that a number of soldiers who thick of the fighting we lot expecting a sudden end ow something of the pow army and they are inclin tiese Germans are capable ►hilp !oe* hot mean that we are rapidly" Our Armies are, going to town and before it fall. —Let’s make no plans yet 11 of Germany. That time i we think, but it will not lake plans just as soon i the meantime the thing r bonds and work at your as hard as you can. X)WS ANOTHER son has just ended in Jan ne ends another starts al ’armers are now busy pre fer the coming season. As lany have the beds ready will be of fair size and a 1 be put in the ground and be on its way. Then will season. 'riter can tell tobacco will this season. There seems y it should not be as high e past year. No one can there is a shortage of to can deny the fact that ' more than usual if they o to smoke. he new season with high prices and with a determ labor to work the crop by other. IRING LOSSES l Life Insurance Company it company computations tely 8,000,000 men had d War II up to the end of ires are unobtainable, the > boundary changes, Rus suffered far heavier loss ious war. tality toll exceeds 200,000 >3,000 in World War I, the Japanese fatalities have mark. nd French battle fatalities in World War I, the report s current list at 325,000, former 900,000 loss; and ating 150,000 against 1,- figures show that we are paying a price for this war. Not only the United States but practically every nation in the world that is of any size. So far oar losa«- es have been small in comparison, god we hope that they will grow no more—-But — Practically every week brings more mess ages from the war department stating that j another Person County boy has been killed, ! wounded or is missing in action. An awful I message to receive and one that only those who have received one can know exactly how bad it is. Over and above everything else that we might do as regards this war. we are of the opinion, that the people of this nation and every nation should fall down on their knees ias often as they can and pray to the Lord that this war be brought to an early pod just 1 end. The price in human life and suffering is really staggering and we think that the Lord can help us in our problem. o LOOKING AHEAP A few days ago it was the pleasure of this writer to sit in on a mating of the county board of commissioners. Members of the I board were in session for about two hours ; and they along with the county attorney did 1 quite a bit of talking. The thing that pleased us very much was that we found out that all of the commission ers as well as the attorney were looking ahead. They were not only concerned with the problems of today but were very much ! concerned with problems that they knew were bound to arise when the war is over. Right now they are trying to make plans to meet these problems and to meet them in an excellent manner. Os course they do not know all of the prob lems that will come up but they do plan to be prepared for those that they know about and for this we wish to conßnend them. Your business and mine, your church and ; mine, your club and mine is going to have many problems to face after the war. Are you. am I, making plans now in order to be ready to meet these in an intelligent manner? Are we building now for the future? If not, why not? o WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING IT SPEAKS WELL Bladen Journal, Elizabethtown, N. C, Figures recently released show that out of 304 boys at the Thomasville Baptist orphan * v 4 -A age examined for the armed forces, only three have been rejected. This speaks well for the orphanage when one recalls the fact that a total of 56.8 per cent of the men call- j ed in the state as a whole have been rejected for physical reasons. It is a fine tribute to orphanage training, and while we have not seen the figures, no doubt the rejections from other orphanage-trained young men rune much lower than the state average. Based on the state average the rejections of men from the Thomasville orphanage would have been more than 150. While it is pitiable for children to be denied parental care and association, children rear ed in a reputable orphanage in a great many instances are better prepared for life than those reared in the home and by their par ents. The wholesome food, plenty of milk, physical activity, regular hours and spiritual training fit the orphanage-trained youth for a life of service, whether it be in the armed forces or in every-day activities. POSTWAR RADIOS Christian Science Monitor Despite current objections from the radio manufacturing industry concerning the pro posal of the Federal Communications Com mission to move frequency modulation sta tions from their 42-to-50-megaeycle band to a higher 84-to-102-megacycle band, the pres ent would appear to be the best time for the reallocation—if it is §yer to be done. One Chicago radio manufacturer says that the FCC proposal would render obsolete ap proximately 500,000 FM sets “of the latest and most expensive design.” The argument might have more validity if the times were normal and great quantities of receiving sets were to be made useless by such a move. It cught to be pointed out, bewever, that fre quency modulation was only in its experi* menial stages when the war broke out. Pos sibly gi-oater r.tlvnnces have been made io FM since 1942 ujujcr !*>/> spur of ipilitayy de velopment. But even the nrvryjt civilian FM receiver is at least three years oU. In the higher frequencies, there is for many more stations. Growth of FM radio casting was due, perhaps, in great measure to crowded conditions in the standard radio casting band. The frequepcy-TOO » SAME THING HAPPEN/ WHO IS THE PAPER...IF WE SEES 7 WORRY/, 'OJ'RE MASKED... ) WASN'T THE NJ THIS MAN COMING ACROSS j—' MDU HERE, HE'LL— HE WON'T lr s " -s-ei If," te A PROOF- LET ME SEE IT l) ?»»• \r —. W ellj L % 1 I CAM HARpAIT'S TH£T«UTMi 1 WAIT- URGENT BUSH j DID X VES... i \ .« L*/BELIEVE ) I WASTHEgg ARE*>OU / NESE/GQ >OU I MEANS WE Vg