fAfcib 1WU (Third Section)
THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER
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Rules Covering
Veteran's Housing
Program In County
Under the Veteran's Housing
Program designed primarily to
furnish housing for veterans, res
trictions have been placed m the
construction of buildings costing
more than $1,000 and all dwellings
costing more than $400, K C. Fran
cis, chairman of the Haywood
Countv AAA Committee said here
wsterday in explaining that the
main objective of the restrictions
at this time is to get low-cost liv-
tat units fast as possible.
"Applications for the construc
tion of all farm buildings in llay
v.ood county should he filed at the
local AAA otfice," Mr. Francis said,
"and the final approval of the ap
plications lest with the Stale AAA
Committee in Raleigh."
"Data such as materials needed,
total lost of all new materials,
labor costs, and the necessity for
the building will be reipie.-lt il."
Mr. Francis explained.
The AAA chairman pointed out
that approval of the proposed coii
rtruction will be based on whether
it is essential to inci easing or main
taining production of food on the
lann; whether present facilities on
the farm are being utilized to maxi
mum capacity and whether the
proposed constriu i ion will be fully
ntilivd upon completion.
A copy of the approved applica
tion will be returned to the appli
cant accompanied by a placard to
he posted on the construction silo
In the case of farm dwellings, pri
ority ratings for the purchase of
needed materials may also he is
sued by the State AAA committee
The county and State AAA com
mittees have the final approval of
all farm constructions up to $111
(jOO for a single dwelling; $17,000
fur a double family dwelling, and
SfiO.OOO for barns and other con
structions. G. T. Scott, chairman State A A
Committee, reports that approxi
mately 300 applications haw al
ready been received in the state
office and are now being processed
as rapidly as possible
OPA BATTLE IN FINAL STAGE
133 r.v tff
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WITH THE FINAl WEEK OF HEARINGS in the OPA fight under way befor
the Senate Banking Committee in Washington, William Green, pres
ident of the American Federation of Labor, is shown testifying. Green
argued for continued price controls. With hundreds of thousands ol
wires and letters flooding the Capitol, some sort of compromise on the
controversial Issue is soon expected. (International Soundiihoto)
Extension
Service Cites
Care Of Wood
Petition Two Miles
Long Getting Sigs
PHILADELPHIA P h i 1 a d e I -phians
will be asked to sign a
two-mile-long petition to save the
OPA.
The petition is being offered
by the American Veterans' Com
mittee, which is sponsoring a "Save
the OPA" rally here. Committee
officials say the rally is one of
many sponsored by the veterans'
organization throughout the country.
Merrie England
"Previous to the reign of Henry
VII. king of England, which began
in 1485, there did not grow in that
country any vegetable or eatable
root, such as carrot, parsnip, cab
bage, etc." The Date Book of Live
Stock and Agriculture.
Lemon Juice Recipe Checks
Rheumatic Pain Quickly
If vnu suffer from iLcumati, arthr
5 f r neurits x nn, I r v (h.i m::.;
j-t usirifc t a i-Hk.L i Hit:.
Cmr'''J. tu;'v in.!-.'. Mi
it u.i!t, a t4u.1t ..f .'.if. - :J t!i -ju,.,-
of 4 k-Cot. ts'i . 4-v. S-V...M
ai.J 1 . trouble jt jl!. You : J :iiv
lai r--.orifu!s p.w onus a ihv On. n
.:rbin h..iJi K-mtlii:.. L..r-
iut;bt pplenj.j r'su!ta ar. oLt.ai. J
It tbo jju.s Jo i.ut tji...U,' I....1
i.J if you do r.ot in-! Ixtt.r, R . L.
,'t ytu r...thiri t., tiy ji it u
e!J Iv luiit Uni.it uriut-r u:i jl (,
liiic n.i.nt-y t atk guuai.t.e Ru t
ColLrjour.d i lui ttulc tfttj !.tuiollit:lid. J by
Smith's Cut Rate Drug Store
I The follow in! instruct inns ro
i gardnig the 1 are and preparation
of wool lor the market are rivoui- :
mended by tin- Stile Intension!
! serxicc, act m 'ding to the county
fa 1 111 agniK
I W ho! 11111 -t be pioperlv clipped,
c.i 1 . I ;i ! I 1 1 ' 1 . 1 1 1 - I : 1 1 1 i lianilled for
, :l to hi ,n:- it . I nil value. Sonie
' one has the wool is the most
valuable crop produced on the
jfaiin and the most carelessly han
dled, the following suggestions,
if tollowed by sheep men should
insure inure money for the wool
clip:
i Have shearing equipment in good
j order well ahead of shearing time.
For repairs send equipment to fac
jtor. Also 'end old combs and
j cutters to factory for sharpening.
For new 1 iiiipiiient see your local
deah r.
wr hear when wool is wet.
II wool uels damp spread il out to
dry before bagging it.
Shear on clean floor and avoid
getting straw, manure or trash of
in the wool.
-econd cuts. Cut close
Urn e unbroken.
1 I leece w ith paper twine
out. There will be a
premium p. ml for wool properly
!n.' i.'ii '.r. llon't use sisal or
binder twine. This will result in
a (!i duct ion et in t cuts per pound.
Take ail lag-, dung locks, out
ol ll e II. " i". I', irk these together
Willi sV 1 epmgs 111 a separate bag.
I'.n k 111.. 1 :.. 1!iiit . Dead, Coiled
Wool or 1 ' ji 1 I - ol any kind in
sepal ah bag ; pioperly marked.
Keep line or half blood wool
' 1 1 "in u e -Ii : n. sheepi and lambs
wool separate from medium grade
9 Vets Arrested
For Playing Ball
In School Yard
BOSTON Nine ''orld War Two
veterans and a com, anion are back
, in the good graces of the law after
1 being arrested for using a school
yard for a Softball game.
After the former GIs had been
freed by the district judge of
charges of trespassing on tulips
Sunday evening, City Councilor
Thomas llannon of Dorchester
quipped:
"It looks as though there's too
much attention paid to tulips in
our city and not enough to our
veterans."
The youths were seized by six
policemen while they were prac
ticing for an impending park de
partment league game. The clerk
of the superior court, Thomas Dor
gan, who had bailed all the vets
in $f)0 each, observed acidly:
"All promises to veterans these
days are like a Killarncy rose -soon
forgotten."
.01tl
and keel
Tie ea.
II. -h Mil
Circus Due To
Show Here Today
The Beers-Barnes Cirrus is due
to show here tonight on the lot
next to the Armory. This is the
first circus to come this way this
season.
The advance promotion man
pointed out that a number of ani
mal acts, acrobats and clowns made
up Hie featured performance.
wool.
SI ore wool in dry place, never
in wet basement, on ground or
cement floor.
Paper twine can be secured form
your local dealer.
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fta-,ni-innMi-ui .fit'nii m irfrrfiftry.?tM-i1i.i-.ahT'4 (fe t:;gs 1
Announcing New Hours For
ROGERS l-STOP SERVICE
ON THi: HKillWA Y NKAR DAYTON RUBBER
Service Station and Cafe 5:30 a.m. to 1:30 a.m.
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Grocery Store
7 a. m. to 9:30 p. m.
Week Days Only
Rogers
1-Stop Service
ni oood
Farmer Rocen Oliver Rogers T. H. Rogers Vcrlln Rogers McLain Roger riUJilt! OUvl XL
i s i$
V V L, ,i i i'i I , mimiiiii v ft rr ' ' "
Farmer Finds New
Inexpensive Way
To Dig Ditches
Just about the only farm op
erating item which now costs
North Carolina farmers less money
is the construction of the inevit
ablt drainage ditch and dynamite
is responsible, according to How
aid Ellis, agricultural engineer of
the State College Extension Serv
ice. Ellis, conducting a recent ditch
blasting demonstration using 50
per cent nitro-glycerin dynamite
and electric firing machine, set the
charges and blew the ditch In less
than an hour. In a few seconds
the flying earth had settled and
there was the clean ditch, all fin
ished with 45-degree sides and no
sign of a spoil bank. The 120-odd
farmers watching the blast we're
A Sloppy Job For
Rural Mailman
WINCHESTER, Va A Winches
ter rural mail carrier found this
note attached to a mail box along
J his route: "I've gone to the Mount
I Olivet picnic. Would you please
slop the hogs? You'll find the meal
in the barrel behind the pen. Mix
with three buckets of slop. The
slop is in the barrel in front of
the pen." The mail carrier obliged.
amazed at the rapidity of the dem
onstration and, when asked to es
timate the cost of the ditch, turnod
in figures ranging between $40tt
and $750. The ditch, three feet
deep, about seven feet wide and
several hundred feet long, actually
cost $48.
Ellis, who has conducted 21 suth
blasting demonstrations on farms
throughout! th state during the
past three months, says that farm
ers can and are using dynamite
in blasting their own drainage
openings and clearing fields of
stumps. He says that the practice
is safe, practical and inexpensive
in addition to saving long hours of
hard-to-get labor. He lists two
prime safety precautions: use the
electric method for setting off
charges, and use a wooden, rather
than a metal rod to tamp charges
into blast holes.
The average cost of a ditch
two and a half feet deep is eight
cents per foot, three and a half
feet deep, 13 cents per foot, Ellis
says. Either he or , any county
agent will advise farmers about
dynamite ditching or will arrange
farm demonstrations.
MUST GO SOME
Big attendances are predicted for
1946 major league baseball, but to
top the 1945 figures the 16 clubs
must draw more than 11,000,000.
No Shortage Of
Pork At One Farm
JACKSONVILLE Somehow,
the prospect of a serious meat
shortage apparently was conveyed
to B. Z. Morton's spotted Poland
China sow . . . because, the sow
gave birth to a litter of 18 pigs.
Eight is the number usually con
sidered a good litter.
Morton, who resides near Jack
sonville, was in town recently seek
ing information on how and what
to feed the little pigs, all of which
are still living but presenting a
definite problem at feeding time.
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Turkey Serving
In judging the size turkey needed,
allow from three-fourths to ore
pound in the weight of a dressed
turkey for each person. A 15-pound
turkey makes about 20 generous
servings.
s "I Rat,
Smith
Some of the NATION'S Leading Business Men
Warn Americ
To Imcrea
so
Hi
e
V. S. Chamber of Commerce Officials
April Survey Provides Convincing Evidence of Need for LarJ
Amounts by All Property Owners
Replacement Costs of $10,000 Building
Compared
Cost in 1946 Increase Over Percent
CITY 1939
Atlanta $16,000 $0,000 60
Boston 13,200 3,200 32
Denver 12,900 2,900 29
Hartford 13,800 3.800 38
Milwaukee 13,900 3,900 39
Omaha 13,500 3,500 35
Richmond 13,700 3,700 37
Washington 14,400 4,400 44
The Time To Insure Is NOV,
Before Disability Comes
AFTERWARDS IS TOO LATE
E. L Withers Co.
Incorporated
Main Street Phone 100
Definition of Co-Insurance
"A coinsurance clause is, in effect, an agreement ')' ''lf
holder to maintain his insurance up to a specil'ieil pi i-n niaire
netnnl viihm nf tVin rvrmmvtxr Tlr mnb-Ino tbw ;i I'Tri'lllt'llt 1H1 4
a lower insurance rate. But if he fails to keep his in iii'lliie Jl'
amount required by the agreement, he will only lie ;ill'' l''Hf,i
of his loss.
"For example, an owner who, five years agi, w. adi'iinai'lyi-
by a $40,000 policy with an 80 per cent coinsuramv i 'lain1
find that the present value of the property is . million instoi
$50,000 and in a settlement of $10,000 partial loss, lie w.nikl ler.
to receive only one-half of $10,000, or $5,000 on a i-.t.ntiO claim.
"Underinsurance armlies with like force to every lim1 01 H
.Tiirv Awards i;.-.h;iitv cl'iim.. wliiehfol
J - - v. 111511V 1 , 1 Hit U LJ llttlMH',' ,
could have been settled for $2,000 now require $:!.(i'i i' more'
"Thirty claims under burglary insurance policies. m k"latnl
showed the total property stolen exceeded $1()tUn. The i"H
company paid the full policy limit but because I he "Uiiors
carried enough insurance, they recovered less than $"'l,'ll0'
ATKINS
Insurance Agenc
Phone 100
JIM KILPATRICK. Manager
c t