Pace two Nantahala National Forest Did You Know That The signs used on . the National Forests throughout the South are made in Franklin. There is located in Macon county 'at the Wayah, Depot, eight miles west of Frank lin, the Nantahala Sign shop of the Southern . Region ot the U. S. Forest Service. Sigas of a wide variety are man ufactured here. Tin signs, carved signs, stenciled, signs, free-letter signs, cardboard signs all are made here. Signs are constructed for a va riety of purposes. Directional road slat signs are turned out in the largest quantity. Carved shield type signs commonly used to mark the boundaries of National Forests along highway are built at the Wayah Depot. Embossed metal signs are constructed on a special machine and are used for labeling plants and trees. Carved rustic in formational' signs are .built, the "carved" fetters being cut but by a special electric routing machine. Cardboard free-hand lettered signs . in artistic makeup are also . pro duced. Four sign painters and carpen ters are continually employed in the production of signs.. They work in a well-equipped shop contain ing a . band saw, planer, ripper, sander, spray guns, and a variety of special equipment. Approximate ly 65,000 board feet of lumber are used annually. Local grown woods are used exclusively. Yellow poplar is used in large quantities, with the native oaks coming a close second. The Nantahala-sign shop is truly one of the mast interesting indus tries located in Macon county. It is also a medium of advertising native woods throughout the south. STATE" OFFERSPRIZES ' Farmers And Housewives Invited To Send Exhibits The North Carolina State Fair in Raleigh , will be held this year October 8 through 12, as announc ed by the N. C. Department of Agriculture. Many premiums are being offered of interest to farmers, stock rais ers, farm women,' students of vo cational agriculture and other groups. . Ham And Bacon Prize Offered Premiums totaling $75 will be of fered in the "Ham and Bacon di vision of the 1940 exposition, but emeries will be limited to North Carolina farm-cured meats, Swaf- far said. Exhibitors winning prem iums will be required to furnish their curing recipe and handling information. "Hams weighing from 10 to 20 1 pounds will be given preference, the meat specialist! said. Hams shoulders and bacon will be judged on the basis of weight, trim, sym metry, flavor, color, texture, pro portion fat to lean ant marbling." Prize For Homemaker Homemakers skilled in cooking, canning and preserving are invited to show canned fruits, vegetables, pickles, relishes, jams, preserves and calces. Premiums will be offered in the Women's Department to the amount of $1,099. Vocational Day "Vocational Agriculture Day" will be October 10 and all students will be admitted free who are wearing the traditional "skull caps" designating .their membership in a vocational school. More than 10, 000 students will participate in ex hibits. Ten booths featuring home pro ject work of students, livestock and livestock judging contests will be features of the vocational program Two large silver loving cups, to be awarded in the judging contest, will be presented by Commissioner of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott Displays by Future Farmers of America will, be judged on the basis of educational value, attrac tiveness pd simplicity. The voca tional exhibits will include swine, dairy and beef cattle. Home economics, rehabilitation and industrial education programs will also be, featured in the vooa tional education departments. The Fair management has also "booked" prominent entertainment features. Expenditures In N. C For National Defense Contracts and expenditures for the period June 13 through Aug ust 31, 1940, for National Defense work in the State of North Caro lina amount to $7,223,357.74. This makes a total of contracts awarded for the Army of $3,642, 479.96, and for the Navy of $3, 240,700.78. From Work Projects Ad ministration funds, $310,177.00 have been awarded, and from the Office of Education, for the Defense Training Program, the awards have amounted to $30,000.00. Cartoogechaye By MRS. JOE SETSER Mr. and Mrs. Wenfred Brendell left Sunday for their home in Drexel, N. C, where Mr. Brendell is employed in the Drexel Mills. Mrs 1 Brendell (the former Miss Josephine Martin) has 'been spend ing some time here with her moth er, Mrs.. Jeff Martin. Mrs. Chas. Nolen is quite sick at her home. The ladies of this neighborhood who have been filling cans with tomatoes and tomato juice for the flood victims in Jackson county wish to extend special thanks to Miss Moody and the boys, in her room for their help in gathering the tomatoes. This was a big part of the work and the boys helping were : Sanford Dills, Fred H. And erson, George Crawford, Dale Docey, R. L. Roper, J. L. Kirby and Maiden McConnell. Miss Lucy Slagle, accompanied by Miss Mae Culpepper, spent last week-end with her father, T. M. Slagle. Agnes Waldroop Displays Find Of Snake Eggs Agnes Waldroop, daughter of Lester . Waldroop of Prentiss, brought in an interesting specimen of snake eggs last Thursday. Her brother, Neil Waldroop, discovered them while ploughing near their home Wednesday afternoon. Nine white eggs, sticking togeth er .in a cluster, and each about the size of a partridge egg, furnished an interesting specimen for study in Miss White's biology class of which Agnes is a member. Three of the eggs were broken and live snakes found in two of them. The. remaining six. were brought to The Press office, where we are glad to put the story in the paper but not the eggs in the window where it is the custom to exhibit various other, kinds of natural phenomena. The owner of the eggs stated that Mr. Whitmire of the agricul tural department, who said the eggs were King snakes, would hatch them in the department's in cubator. Of the 39 CCC camps now operat ing in North Carolina, 13 are under the direction of the U. C. Forest Service and eight are under the National Park Service. OUR DEFENSE (One of a Series Prepared by National Defense Advisory Commission) The United States Navy The U. S. Navy, which stretches' round the world, from the lush har bors of the Virgin Islands to the bleak reaches of the Aleutians, is truly our first line of defense.' To hold that line requires trained per sonnel which includes men who command the bridge of a battle ship and others who can fit dental bridgework. There must be airplane pilots and submarine commanders. There must be men who can ma neuver a fleet of battleships across a million square miles of ocean, and others who understand the care of feeding of sump . pumps. Prac tically every known occupation is needed in the Navy. And the wherewithal to carry on that ac tivity must te on hand, ready for use. It is the function of the Na tional Defense Advisory Commis sion to see that the Navy gets the supplies it requires. All the Navy business originates in a twenty-one acre building, hast ily erected in 1917. In this build ing is the Secretary .of the Navy, Frank Knox, and Assistant Secre tary, Lewis Compton. They are surrounded by sailormen who have reached the top of the heap on the ' long voyage that started tween decks as midshipmen, by way of the quarter deck of a de stroyer, to a cruiser, to a battle ship, to Commander-in-Chief of the fleet, and eventually to the number; one sailor s job, Chief of Naval Operations. The Naval Bureau The Chief of Naval Operations oversees 'the activities of the nine major naval bureaus; His word can send hundreds of U. S. ships to any ocean on earth. To his desk comes the intelligence information gathered around the world. The closely guarded war plans are in his care. He, is the center of the Huge organization. The next biggest eun of the xavy is the General Board. This body represents the wisdom of the Navy, the Senior Admirals: avail able to the President and the Sec retary of the Navy for advice on naval affairs. Then come the nine Naval Bureaus. Each bureau exists to serve one or more needs of the fleet. the largest is the Bureau of Navigation. It educates the offi cers at Annaoolis. It mn h Hydrographic Office, and the Home tor iwulors in Philadelphia, It keeps time at the Naval Observatory. And it has the service oath of al legiance of John Paul Jones and the complete record of every sea faring man who has served the Navy since. It is responsible for the training, assignment, and wel fare of all Navy men. The Bureau of Ordnance arms the Navy both offensively end de THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND CONSERVATION MONTH On The Farm and in The Home Here are timely suggestions from State college specialists for the month of October: A. D. Stuart, seed specialist, says early planted small grains have a distinct advantage over later plant ings in the matter of yield, a fact on which growers should capital ize. If the wheat, oats, and barley sown are, not resistant to smut, the seed should be treated. Then, too, all seed planted should have germination and purity tests. Robert Schmidt, associate horti culturist of the experiment station, reminds growers to harvest their sweet potatoes before the heavy frosts which come first during the last days of October. Careful har vesting will prevent much bruising, which, in turn, will reduce storage losses. The potatoes should be grad ed in the field, packed in crates or baskets, and placed in storage with as little handling as possible. Farmers who are interested in bet ter .seed could improve -their own stock by selecting seed potatoes in the field at digging time. Lloyd Weeks, extension tobacco specialist, says tobacco growers can make substantial savings by taking apart their tobacco flues and treating them with waste niotor oil. After receiving a coat of oil, the flues should be placed on tier poles in the barn. Such ' treatment will cause them to last three to four times as long, fensively. It designs, buys guns and ammunition, armor and torpedoes, depth charges ' and chemicals of war. .;.- The Bureau of Ships is respon sible for the general design, struc ture, strength, and seaworthiness of all ships in the Navy, and for the engines that drive the vessels. In addition, it designs such items as machine guns and gas masks, mine sweeping equipment, and op erates the new experimental model basin built with WPA funds near Washington, where the new types of war designs may be tested. The Bureau of Aeronautics must provide the fleet with powerful and efficient naval air service. The Bureau of Supplies and Ac counts must acquire the material, fuel, and other necessities of the Navy. ..".'. The Bureau of Medicine and Sur gency provides medical care for the Navy and Marine Corps, and is represented not only in this coun try, but in outlying territories and aboard every Navy vessel in active commission. . The office of the Judge Advocate General, who really ought to be called the Judge Advocate Admiral, is the legal part of the Navy. Aside from keeping the Navy out of the toils of the' law, this office interprets the bills and resolutions of Congress and helps with the proposed legislation arising in the Navy Department. Th. Naval Rm Like the Army, the U. S. Navy has a Reserve. It consists of 16, 000 officers and 65,000 enlisted men (including the Marine Corps Re serve) ready to step into their positions on fighting ships. First is the Fleet Reserve, men who have served with the fleet. These ex-service men, with the regular naval forces, are the backbone of our expanded fleet. There is still one branch that can't be overlooked in running the Navy. That is the Marine Corps. This component of the naval serv ice exists primarily to support the fleet, but in case of national emer gency the marines are called on for duty. Members of the , Marine Corps are really seagoing soldiers respon sible to the Commander-in-Chief. Of course, there must be a large establishment ashore to keep the fleet afloat, and ready for any thing. The National Defense Advis ory Commission helps the shore stations get what the fleet needs in steel, in machinery, in fuel, in arms and ammunition, in food and clothing. A SHIP IS BUILT A fleet is an organization that comes alive when men have sweat and strained, trained and calcu lated deep in the boidi of their THE HIGHLANDS MACON IAN John Arey, extension dairyman, passes along a couple of . sugges tions. First, he says dairy herds should be culled this month. Me dium to low producing cows which paid only a small profit on pasture this past summer will not pay when placed on high-priced winter feed. Second, he urges farmers to attend county and .state dairy cat tle shows this fall. The show ring, he says, is the place whert 1 breed type standards are fixed. It is al so a splendid place for breeders to compare their animals and to ad vertise their surplus stock. E. C. Blair, extension agrono mist, adds a good word for winter cover ' crops. "Farmers who have not seeded winter cover crops and annual legumes, jsuch as Austrian winter peas and hairy vetch, should do so by all means this month," he says. October is a' busy month for poultrymen because the old poultry year overlaps the new, says T. T. Brown, extension poultry man. Some of the things the poultry (grower should do how are: Select next year's breeding pen or mark the birds -to be selected later; keep the hens and the pullets separated ; house the pullets; make a gradual change from a growing mash to a laying mash; check for drafts in the laying house; and don't over crowd birds. fighting ships across a million square miles of ocean, across a space of years. A fleet is an or ganization of men and ships. A ship is a cross between a fort ress, a bridge, a locomotive, a rock ing horse, a skyscraper, and a human being. The ineides Of a fighting ship are more complex than those of a human being, but no 'work, of man has an exterior more ponderous and formidable. It is put together otj a set of building ways, with two or three cranes Those cranes, with a thousand men, lift a, billion pieces of steel into place, and weld them fast. Under the blue white hissing heat of the flaming arcs, a ship is forged from the first stringer laid for the keel, till she comes fully alive, a unit of our fleet. The story starts a long way back of that point. It starts in the Navy Building in Washington, where the General Board sketches out the needs of the fleet. The delibera tions of this august body go to the President, who embodies them in message to Congress. The Congress approves the money. Ihe scene moves back to the white concrete Navy Building, wnere the naval designers dream, calculate, and sketch the new ship. Before the designers here and at the yards are through, thev will nave arawn a.uuu exact pictures of a billion pieces that make ud the ship. When they finish, they have designed something that will float right side up. But more than that, tney have designed a rigid vessel, but one which will yield when the sea twists its frame. Two waves may lift her ends like stretcher carriers, leaving thousands of tons of machinery and guns hangin? un supported. Nothing must hreak. The punch of a gun that kicks a ton shell twenty miles, the more than 100,000 horsepower heave of the engines all must be balanced, loreioid, and provided for. Thirty Tons Of Bkmrint The final result of the pencil pushing is a set of general draw ings which will be expanded to cover some thirty tons of blueprint paper, before completion. These general drawings are send to a building yard which may be a navy yard, if there is space on the navy yard ways. Or it goes to one of the private shipbuilding companies that have the hard-won 'know how' experience in building a vessel of this size. Ihe plans come to rest in the mold loft, a huge open room where the outlines of the ship are laid down tull size on the floor. Over this floor swarms a small armv of a . - lottsmen, men who have spent their uves on their knees, buildintr up wooden templets. Templets are full size models of every strineer. every plate, every piece that makes a ship's hull. These templets em body every hole, every twist every bend that goes into the curves of ship. What Make A Ship? A ship is 93 percent steel. But it is also copper, aluminum, lead. sine. It it wood and cork. It is asbestos, cement, glass, plaster, wall board, and insulating board. It is awnings, mattresses, and springs. It is doors,, shutters, and window sash. It is heating' and ventilating equipment. And it is that little pump, tucked away 23 feet below the deck, that delivers three squirts of oil every minute to ,onic vital portion of the machinery." When all the material for the million and one different parts is assembled, - construction can begin. To see a ship being built, figure on settling down at; the yard for two or three' years. Building ships is not a production line job. It is a job involving the skills of thou sands of men applied to putting to gether the most complicated mov ing object that man can build. The job starts with 'the ceremo nial laying of the keel, with a frock-coated, high-hatted, white gloved "Honorable", jack hammer operator. .That is about the last glimpse of the "riveting hammer, for today more and more welding is being used in ships. Not that a shipyard is the quietest place on earth, for in the order business of the boiler shop; the hammering bell of a travelling crane will echo the thunder of isledge on metal, as a hundred men beat machinery from raw steel. In another shop, a half thousand skilled machinists polish steel blades of the whining tur bines. Others polish the twenty five foot bronze petaled flowers that will be propellers. A roaring torch smacks to life at a big steel tube, a "jim crow" bender warps it to the exact twist of a templet. Meanwhile, on the ways, the steel framework of the ship begins to grow by a young forest of steel arms reaching skyward. Six months pass. The inch thick steel plates begin, to. form the bottom skin of the ship. As this covering ap proaches the water line, it grows heavier and heavier with eleven inch thick blocks of shell-resisting, specially- fabricated, heat-treated steel going into place to stop enemy shells. Above this point, the armor thins down again until it reaches the deck, where it thickens up to catch dropping shells, dropping bombs, and other falling metal. The welders, the riggers, and the Steel workers have almost disap peared. Far down below decks the ship painters are worming their way through every compartment. These are followed by the electric ians and the plumbers, fitting the miles of wire and more miles of Pipe necessary to keep this floating fortress afloat and moving, to keep it lighted, heated, an ventilated. She looks like a ship now. She is ready to .launch. The shin- wrights and carpenters have built a cradle -under her, and she slides down - the greased ways, into the water, pushed by a champagne bot tle, followed by the cheers of friends. She is half way along the road to being a unit of the United States Fleet. CATTLE SALE Wednesday, October 9th MARK DOWDLE BARN ON GEORGIA ROAD Buyers From Many Sections BRING YOUR CATTLE SALE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 11 O'CLOCK SPE 25 Off A certain lot of young men's suits, single and double breasted blues, greys, and brownsvery stylish. Sizes 34 to 42 TO CLOSE OUT WE NEED THE ROOM 25 Off $19.95 Suit for . . . ... $14.98 $17.50 Suit for .. . . .. . .... $13.12 Get your Suit from this special lot and save money WE HAVE OTHER SUITS FOR YOUR SELECTION Joseph Ashear "We Clothe the Family" FRANKLIN, N. C THURSDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1940 Mrs. Franks Leaves For Week Of Conferences Mrs. Eloise G. Franks, county superintendent of public welfare, left here Sunday to attend the fol lowing welfare conferences and in stitutes: Twenty-first annual public wel fare institute, Chapel Hill, Sep tember 29 to October 4. Annual convention of the national society for cripple children of the United States of America, Inc., Battery Park Hotel, Asheville, Oc tober 5 to 10. Meeting of county welfare board members, county superintendents of public welfare and state board of charities and public welfare, Ral eigh, October 9. Examinations For Civil Service Positions The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open competitive examinations for the positions listed below. Applications must be on file with the Commis sioner's Washington office not later than October 24- if received from persons in states east of . Colorado, and October 28, 1940 from persons in Colorado and states westward. All salaries given are . subject to a itimmviu ueuucuon oi oyi per cent. City planner, $3,800 a year, Na tional Capital Park and Planning Commission, Washington, D, C. Ap plicants must have completed a four-year college course in archi tecture, civil engineering, landscape architecture, or city planning. They must also have had professional and city planning experience. Plant pathologist, $3,800 a year; also associate, $3,200 a year ; as sistant, $2,600 a year; associate plant geneticist, $3,200 a year; and assistant plant geneticist, $2,600 a year; various .optional branches. Employment is in the Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture. Applicants "must have had appropriate college study and experience. Junior engineer,. $2,000 a year. Employment is in all branches of engineering except aeronautical and naval architecture and marine en gineering. Applicants must have course at a recognized college. Full information as to the re quirements for these examinations, and application forms, may 'be ob tained from the post office here. Good Food Whether a full course dinner or a sandwich is prepared here to suit your taste.' CAGLE'S CAFE! A. G. CAGLE, Owner. FRANKLIN. N. C. )We Appreciate Your Patronage CIAL