PAGE SIX THE NEWS - JOURNAL, RAEFORD, N. C THURSDAY, JULY 2Wh, 1943 good must Wartime Rationing Guide BLVE STAMPS (For canned, frozen and certain dehydrated foods) Blue Stamps N, P. Q, are good ;hrough August 7. Coffee Stamp No. 24 expired June 30. Stamp No. 21 good for one pound of coffee became valid July 1 and expires July 21. GASOLINE "A" book coupons No. 5 for three gallons each and last till July 21. RED STAMPS (For meat products, canned fish most edible oils and cheeses). Red Stamps "P" and "J" now good and expire July 31. Shoes Stamp No. 18 now good for one pair of shoes and expires October 31. Sl'GAR Stamp No. 13. good for 5 pounds becomes valid June 1 and is good through August 15. Stamps Nos. 15 and 16 in War Ration Book One now are valid for 5 pounds of sugar each, for use in home canning. They are good through October 31. Housewives may apply at local boards for sup plementary sugar rations for home canning, is essential. MAY rSE OIL STOVES North Carolina householders may use their oil cooking stoves this summer regardless of the avail ability of coal or wood-fired stoves OPA has announced. The present restriction denying fuel oil rations for domestic cooking and water heating, if adequate "stand-by" equipment is available, has been lifted because of the shortage of all fuels, and to encourage home canning. BOW YOUR HEAD American citizens should not over look the fact that John L. Lewis called off his coal strike only on condition that the government would operate the mines. The government strictly obeyed Mr. Lewis' terms. The implications involved in that capitulation of government to labor leader dictatorship, are staggering. The pattern is now perfected to set aside the right to private owner ship and operation of property and establish state socialism, strike by strike. Discussing this situation, the New York Times says: "Mr. Ickes may declare that the government has "no desire and no plans for nationiza tion' of the coal industry. He may declare that it hopes to return the mines to private ownership "at the earliest possible moment.' But mean time the government does precisely what Mr. Lewis has demanded. ' Even Mr. Ickes, after saying that he hopes government operation will be exceedingly brief,' adds, 'but I regret to say there is nothing that leads me to believe that this will be so.' And he emphasizes the fact that the government is settling down to a long tenure of operating the mines at Mr. Lewis' insistence by announcing the appointment of Mr. Newton, president of the Chesa peake & Ohio Railway, as head of a government organization being built up to operate the mines. "Thus the United States govern ment, whatever its verbal protesta tions may be to the contrary, has in its actions accepted the terms of John L. Lewis. It has done nothing to enforce the War Labor Board's or der for a contract. And the govern ment will continue to operate the mines, according to Mr. Ickes (mean while collecting Mr. Lewis' duas for I him) until there is reasonable assur ; ance that the miners will work for 1 private owners. This means that not : only the miners, but any other group i of workers, can force gov eminent operation of an industry simply by ' -J....I iU... Ill .,,. uviuumg hiitii uiij' niu nui nuin for private owners. "What the Administration is say ing, in brief, is that it must accept John L. Lewis' terms because it is I powerless to do any thing else. It I might review its labor policies of the I last ten years, the one-sided set of ! laws it has placed on the books, and i the one-sided enforcement policies of its agencies, to learn how it came to be so powerless." And that is a picture before which every redblooded American should bow ) lis head in shame government impotent before a labor dictator government violation of private property rights for a labor dictator government collecting dues for a labor dictator government power less to exploy a workman not sane-J tiened by a labor dictator govern- , I merit the puppet of a labor dictator. ; ' O ! WHILE OTHERS CHEER j When the prospect of peace be i comes more real, literally hundreds of millions of people will stand ready ' to join in a deafening tumult of re lief and happiness. Victor and van- i quished alike will revel in a reunion with loved ones But there is shouting will be muted, the doctors For them the job of rebuilding the Washington, July 21. Paid news shattered wreck that humanity has j paper advertising by the government made of itself and of the world, will j to aid the war stabilization program begin. Many of them will not be able and the war effort is strongly favored u return nome. iney win nave 10 . uy senator iiarK iu-aioj. Molly Pitcher Tag Day , August 4 v - ,--4 . v f -. '-'. . j ' . - ' ' 1 ': .. X'. ''. V- ,. m s , - . - . ; ' . 1 . V; , f J i L::jf . ' - - describes the gigantic and wholly un necessary fire waste in the United States. What is more ghastly than the waste itself is the fact that the country accepts the wiping out of several hundred millions of dollors worth of homes, factories and farms as a rutine annual occurence. The still more ghastly fact of 10.000 lives going up in smoke with costly prop erty, is also callously taken for grant ed. A man, a woman, a child here and there; they die by two's and three's in the ashes of a nation's carelessness. Occasionally public complacency is ruffled by horrors, such as the Boston night club tragedy. Tlren agencies like the National Board of Fire Underwriters can get tempor ary cooperation to- put in force fire prevention measures which lethargy has lng blocked. And so, slowly through the dec ades, the science of fire prevention has moved ahead. Steady progress in fire prevention depends upon con tinuous public education. Individ uals must learn to recognize com mon fire hazards anri iear them suf ficiently to remove them. Full and effective fire prevention is impossible otherwise. O Nearly 200,000 acres in India will be planted to rubber this year. I THEWA MM IUNG WALL! mil ABOUT advertising LEGAL NOTICES The modern Molly Pitcher will greet you throughout the nation on August 4th when brigades of Mollys will tag every buyer of War Bonds wa aiamps. iney will carri heroine wno nas gone d the battle of Monmouth rtuca ui muii.vs win iafr every ouyer oi ar isonas ill carry on the tradition of the Revolutionary War down in history because she aided her tighten at h in 178. f COTTON QUIZi Clark Favors one group whose ' Advertising stay in far away places battling as they never battled during the war, against disease and starvation. They will have to work against time to develop new aids and new techniques in a world-wide struggle to control the spread of fearsome maladies. These men ii white know that the war has medical problems which if not solved could easily make the war itself look like a pink tea. No, the doctors will not cry out in care-free happiness when this war ends. Laymen, who know s little of the grim task endeavor t It is ridiculous to say this would be a subsidy or would lead to govern ment control of the press," he declar ed in remarks inserted in the Con gressional Record. Supporting a bill introduced by Senator Bankhead (D-Ala), Clark Clark said: "Every manufacturer of munitions, every purveyor of any other kind of war supplies, expects to be not only paid for what he furnishes but a rea sonable profit on top of it. I see no reason why the newspa- he doctors face, should pers should not equally be paid for ea.e their burden where-' the only thing they have to sell that ever possible. The standards of our is, their advertising space when it is medical men are high. They serve j devoted to the government's interest." rich and poor alike to the best ofj The Missourian. asserting that their ability, and the ability "of j newspapers already have contributed American doctors is not surpassed. greatly to the war effort by free in Wc should reflect soberly on these sertion of government rcleasses, said things in the years ahead when the that while some large newspapers doctors will be fighting the greatest have been able to recompense them battle of all tin e for us and pause selves by getting their own large ad heeding an insatiable howl for an im- vertisers to back various war activi possible medical Utopia under the ' ties, smaller newspapers have not banner of social reform. , been able to do this. THEY DIE BY TWO'S AND THREES Fire losses for the nation during the first five mcnths of this year are; estimated at $163,660,000. an increase of $15,578,000 over the same period in 1942. When anything less than a billion dollars is small potatoes, many people will scarcely notice these fig ures unless they happen to be a mong those unfortunate souls whose property contributed to the ghastly total. And make no mistake, ghast ly is the only word that adequately fHY 1$ THf COTTON INDUSTRY ? THE MOST NEURIT, PjRfECT ? . FROM EACH tOO rOUNDS Of CLEAN RAW COTTOM- IT MODUC- f s mom $5 to 5J let Of COTTON YARN. - f n Fnvnn mm INSURE LOSS EK AGAINST FIRE ON TOBACCO in Curing Barns in Pack Barns This is the season of loss through these hazards. A little money now may protect you from a loss of a barn and its tobacco contents. Don't put all your tobacco crop in a sin gle pack barn without insuring it. THE JOHNSON COMPANY Phone 2191 Raeford, H. C. - k U-S-SOLDI ER IZJZSli EATS NEARLY 3 yiWmF 467 ess .. V&fpi- m1 f-TKr vf.rw i You taste its quality til'! V NOTICE North Carolina, Hoke County. In the Superior Court. Eunice McGhee Thinney vs. Guil ford Phinney. To Guilford Phinney, Defendant, or his Attorney: Take Notice: That on August 2, 1943, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. before Honorable J. B. Cameron, C. S. C. Hoke County, North Carolina, at his office in Raeford, N. C, the de position of Sarah B. Phinney, and Mrs. Nancy Young, taken in this cause, will be opened and passed upon by the Court. .This 17th day of July, 1943. Eunice McGhee Phinney, Plaintiff, 7-8 By J. C. Pittman, Attorney. DISSOLUTION OF CORPORATION State of North Carolina Department of State. To All to Whom These Presents May Come Greeting: Whereas, It appears to my satis faction, by duly authenticated re cord of the proceedings for the vol untary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stock holders, deposited in my office, that the COLLINS DEPARTMENT STORE OF RAEFORD, N. C, INC. a corporation of this State, whose principal office is situated in the Town of Raeford, County of Hoke, State of North Carolina (W. A. Col lins being the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom process may be served), has complied with the requirements of Chapter 22, Consolidated Status, entitled "Cor porations," preliminary to the issu ing of this Certificate of Dissolution: Now Therefore, I, Thad Eure, Secretary of Stale of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 6th day of July, 1943, file in my offiee a duly executed and attested consent in writing to the dissolu tion of said corporation, executed by all the stockholders thereof, which said consent and the record of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file in my said office as provided by law. In Testimony Whereof, I have hereto set my hand and affixed my official seal at Raleigh, this 6th day of Julv, A. D. 1943. THAD EURE, Secretary of State. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. COI NTY OF HOKE. The foregoing certificate of Thad Eure, Secretary of State of the State of North Carolina is adjudged to be correct. Let the Instrument, with the cer tificate be registered. Witness my hand, this 13th day of Julv, 1943. J. B. CAMERON, Clerk of the Superior Court. ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE The undersigned, having qualified as administrator of the estate of the late W. D. Smith of Hoke County, hereby gives notice to all persons in debted to said estate to come forward and make settlement with the under signed immediately; and all persons having claims against said estate will present the claim duly verified to the undersigned, on or before the 25th day of June, 1944 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. This, June 25. 1943. James Johnson. Administrator of W. D. Smith, deceased. 4-10 Garvin. ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE The undersigned, having qualified as administratrix of the estate of the late James Wiley Hewitt of Hoke County, hereby gives notice to all persons indebted to said estate to come forward and :rake settlement with the undersigned immediately; and all persons having claims against said estate will present the claim, du ly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 30th day of June, 1944, or this notire will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. This June 3nth, 1943. MRS. JAMES W. HEWITT, Administratrix ol James Wiley 4-10 Hewitt Bottled wndcr authority of The Coca-Cola Compony by COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY Aberdeen, N, C. NOTICE OF TAX FORECLOSURE SALE Pursuant to an order dated July 6, 1943, by the Clerk of Superior Court of Hoke County, N. C, I as commis sioner will offer for sale at public auc tion at the courthouse door in Raeford, N. C, to the last and highest bidder for cash at 12 o'clock noon, on August 3rd, 1943, the following property, known a.i the Mary McAlister, de ceased, estate: In Antioch Township, Hoke County, N. C, and being the 10 acres devised by Ben McRae to his daughter, said Mary McAlister. as appears at page 44 of Book of Wills No. 1 in the office of Clerk of Superior Court of said County, to which reference is made for further details and description. Posted July 6, 1943. ARTHUR D. GORE. 5"' Commissioner