Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Oct. 3, 1946, edition 1 / Page 2
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1946 PAGE TWO THE NEWS-JOURNAL i 8 i 1 i Let Us Haul Your Tobacco Our truck makes two trips per week to Mt. Airy hai'Sg apples. Let us haul your tobacco to Durham, Wi."on-SaIem or any market in that direction at re duc I rates. G. G. FAIRCLOTH v TRANSFER Box 566 South Main Street Rat-ford :-a;.w:-aB:4'..4e-.-e. : :;:: .: : WE LUBRICATE YOUR CAR BY CHART, NOT BY CHANCE. ROD & GUN By Tom Walker take no chances missing a single place on your car - what ever the make that needs lubricating. And of course we use marfaK because it's a tough, stick- t :-job chassis lubricant. Resists squeeze-out and wash c vtakes your car "feel" better as you drive. And we check O the whole car, too, to stop troubles in their tracks! So don't take a chance. Let us give your car thr.t "marfak feeling" today! Farmers Worked 75.4 Hours a Week V & W MOTOR RAEFORI). N. C. : :r CO. (W) VIOLATORS JUMP THE GUN OX HUNTING SEASONS Pro secutions for game and fish law violations are mounting as re ports from fish and game pro tecturs continue to come in, and tiie total may equal or even sur mount tiiu 312 convictions for Au Lju.it. A glance at u still incom plete compilation of September prosecutions reveals, however, that 1 any of the game laws have been violated. The offense topping the list was hunting out of season including taking rabbit, raccoon, bear, deer, fox and squirrel during closed seasons on these species. Hur.tirg without a license ran ked second in the total number of prosecutions which included hunting on Sunday, hunting on posted land and on game refuses, falling without a license, fishing out of season in trout streams, seining, fishing with nets, ex ceeding bag and creel limits, ta king unciersize fish, possession of; game out of season, night hun ting of deer, and hunting with automatic shotgun capable of hol ding more than three shells. Several violators were held on as many as three counts, such as hunting on Sunday, hunting out of season, and without li cense. DEKR TRAPPING BEGINS Deer trapping under Federal Pro jects 21-D of the Division of Game and Inland Fisheries will bein soon on three trapping a rearj: the Pi.-S-h Game Preserve. Mt. Mitchell Gp.me Area, and the Elizabeth D. Reynolds estate. Deer trapping and transplanting from these areas is a part of the plan for deer restoration Sn cer tain sections. For the past month, traps have been set up and baited allowing the deer to enter and be come familiar with them; Project I.e-.d Frederick Mahan may be gin the actual trapping within the next week. day as his, and who were stiU "t few days and assert that in bed. activity stimulates a better blood Dr. Leith-auser, impressed by,uPP'y which promotes rapid tha licident anJ recalling t.i: children cannot be kept quiet but usually recover despite post-operation activity, persuaded a few patients to get out of bed the first day irter an appendectomy. Re assured by theT "accelerated con valescence," he was soon hand iii g append. cilis cases in this manner. Three years later, the article says, he published the "Highly satisfa. tory" records of iir.) patients thus treated. Average Hours of Work Per Week 1939, 194S, 1944 American farm operators aver aged 75.4 hours of work a week during a recent three years, accord ing to a nationwide survey of work ing habits in agricultural centers. In the name period, according to the American Iron and Steel lnstl tv'c, workers In steel plants aver aged 41.6 hours of labor a week. Tbe operators of the six million American farms spent nearly 4000 work hours a year, per man, plus the use of mechanized equipment, to earn a living and to produce the crops and food needed to meet tbe urgent wartime demands of a hun gry world. Farm operators In the West North Central area worked the longest hours, putting In an aver age of 83.2 hours a week. Second were the farm operators In the East North Central area with 82.5 hours a week, while farm operators in the Middle Atlantic worked-79. hours a week. Farm operators In the Pacific states put In the small est number of weekly work hours,, averaging 72.1 for the three years of 1939. 1943 and 1944. k-:" : : : -x ;. s x x :; :- :; Deer trapping w-.- rcjur. cn the Reynold? estate in the fall of 1914. The e.-'a'.c. containing 8.000 acres within n fenced enclosure and T.uvll) acres oulsicie it, was slock ed with 73 deer by Reynolds in 1934. Little hunting was carried on. and the herd increased rapid ly to create an over-browsed con dition. This fact helped to mak the first trapping program suc cessful. Success this first year led to expanding the original project to State-wide deer trapping and transplanting which will include the two new trapping areas. Deer .viLl lc released .-olely on sites where hunting is prohibited, refu ses and management areas. From the time trapping on the origina project was begun in October 1944 through February 1946, the release sites and the nurber of deer re leased are as follows: Camp But ner, Ci; Little Buck Creek, 17; .VH. Mitchell Area, 4; Uwharrie, 12m; Kitty Hawk, 8; Blue Valley, 28; and the Murphy Area, 15. During the first year of trap ping, there were 13G deer trapped and in the 1 94-46 season, 86 deer were taken. v. Iff 0 Veryth!ng . , Mtj r Evening Gowns E-.. eaned and ressed BOARD MLT-TS AT BRVSON CITY The anr.u.'. fall meeting of tiie uoaru of Conservation and Dee'o,:.rc:i-. ".h: he hc'.'l ir. Dry- son City, October 7th and 8th. Special proposals to be brought up by the Division of Game and :il Fisheries include amend ments to the present game laws in order to strengthen the laws, ; a.-.ieulai!..- concerning the mini mum " ner fnr ?e. tain classes of violations. Other amendments will concern the use of automatic rif l y hur.Urj a:id the storage of r-mc in freezer loclecrs. The meeting will be attended hy t .e bva;-U n.einbe.o and all '..ads e.f ('.:p:tmenta! divisions nr veil as 4"U citizerr -,vho desire to appear before the Board at. -hl.i- h.c-:l"2s wringing up prob lems or offering suggestions. p.rr.x service meeting The National Park Service held a hearing in Asheville, October 1, towns in this vicinity, it is pos sible that the work will be begun as a joint investigation. A pos sible source for th epollu'.ion has been cited as the gas manufac turing plant at Rocky Mount. The Department has always . en vitally interested in the pol i. tion problem and among other iinea oi uCtivity has been show : g recently m several places : r.ovie entitled "Clear Strea i s." Dealing with a solution to pollu tion, the film has met with fa vorable comment wherever it has been shown. 0 Appendicitis Patients Now Walk, Drive Cars Day After Operation Doctors oi.ee were appalled when a willful patient got up and walked a few hours after an ab dominal operation or childbirth. Today this practice, called "early arbulation," is insisted on in many hospitals. How tl'.is "streamlined treatment" came to be accepted by many surgeons as a regular feature of convalescent care is told by Miriam Zeller Gross in The Reader's Digest for October. Applying the new treatment to other ca.-es, Dr. Lethauser found among hi- patients a faster re turn j nor I al kidney function ing, l.'.-s need for pain-relieving drugs, better appetites, and abili ty to return to the.r jobs in less than half the calculated time. "Freedom from the pneumonias which ordinarily would have en dangered the lives of nearly 10 per cent following appendectomy, and an even larger percentage in other abdomial operations," was noted. At the Mary Imogen Basset! .ospital, at Coop?rstown, N. Y., pulse rates of 108 patients who waiked the first day after vari ous abdominal operations were found to be r.o higher than those of ion who stayed in bed one to three weeks. Among the early ri.-ers no wounds opened, the au thor reports, and a higher per centage of hernias remained cur ed. "Eurly-rising advocates point out that stitches are stronger the healing. One hospital now has a record ot more than 2,000 abdo minal operations in which pa tients were up within 24 hours, without a single wound opening. The exigencies of war, the ar ticle explains, extended "early ambulation'' to lying-in hospitals. I In t'-e London blitz many mothers I were sent home two days after jelelivery. nccarsc of the danger 'of bombs. Worried physicians were relieved to find no 111 ef fects and were surprised that deaths from blood clots dropped I to a new low. First Securities Corporation Durham Raleigh We muintuin an active market in: Carolina Power and Light Carolina Tel. and Tel. Piedmont and Northern Railwy. For further Information a bout these securities, call our representative at SOlTIIERN riN'ES Telephones: 5192 or 5341 :;:. xxx xxx;:t;-x SPECIAL DOUBLE-DUTY NOSE DROPS forks Where Alost Golds Start When a head cold strikes, put a little Va-tro-nol in each nostril. It's a spe cialized medication that- lQuick!y Relieves sneezy.sniffly. r -1 ' stuffy distress of head colds. Makes breathing easier. l Helps Prevent many colds from " r developing if used at the first warning sniffle or sneeze. So keep Va-tro-nol handy- end use it the Instant It is need ed. Follow directions In tha package. VATElO-rJOL Miss Gross' article, condensed from The Saturday Evening Post, attributes the origin of the new treatment to an Incident in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospial, Detroit, eight years ago. One of Dr. Daniel J. Leithauser's patients, whose appendix had been removed a few hours previously, was disco vered in the act of carrying water up and down the hall to other patients. Warned by a startled nurse that his wound might open, tr.e patient was neither fright ened nor impressed. He slept that .iie Battery Park hotel, to dis-(night untroubled by the usual gas u.a several proposals concerning pains an;! nausea, and feeling well the use of the Blue Ridge Park-1 .he next day, he got in his car way by hunters. Issues such ns'r.-d drove ho.Te. The following uie carrying of dead game overiiwo aays he worked in his gar "hc Parkway, parking ears and' -'cn. On the fifth day he drove '.he handling of doss and guns on ' 40 miles for a medical check-up. Set sweeter, tastier bread! use FLEISCHMANN'S FRESH P3 si YEAST To keep your wardrobe in order See U We make 'ou look your very best. And if we satisfy you-tell others-if we don't -tell us. McHAIR'S DRY CLEANERS IVERY McNAIB, Prop. Phone 253-1 P- O. Box 533 Raeford, N. C. the Parkway were brought up for j ddcassion. The Division of Game and In- lard Pisheiies which has worked with the Park Service and is vital ly interested in this matter was represent i d at the hearing by Co i mi-sii.ner John D. Findlay. K. B. Armfield, Supervisor of $ I Wildlife Areas, and Dr. Willis King, Divi.-ion fisheries biologist. The delegation heard from 1 great many of the persons in the vicinity through which the Park way has been constructed. Hun ters have taken the position that they would like to make use of this road just as they do of any other highway for the transpor ting of killed game. DEPARTMENT INVESTIGA- TES STREAM POLLUTION The . Department of Conservation and Development which recently re ceived word of a report of the Grand Jury of Edgecombe County concerning the pollution ot the Tar River between Rocky Mount and Tarboro is making an inves tigation of this complaint. Al though this Grand Jury made a report in June on the condition, word was not received in this Depart rent until the latter part of September. On September 26, i representative of the Depart- j rr.ent, Dr. Willis King, attended a hearing on this matter in the courthouse in Tarboro. Definite steps have not been taken, but since the matter has been called also to the attention of the State Health Department, The inspection found him in mucn oeiier shape than other appen dicitis patients whose operations had been performed the same FULL-STRENGTH I Fleischmann's fresh acfue Yeast starta working right away! All the strength of the yeast brings out all the flavorful goodness of your bread. Be surer of sweet taste light texture fragrant freshness every time! IF YOU BAKE AT HOME, insist on Fleischmann's full-strength, fresh acfiue Yeast with the familiar yellow label. De pendableAmerica's favorite yeast for over 70 years. COFFEY'S SHOWS RIDES-SHOWS-CONCESSIONS TO REAR OF HOME FOOD MARKET 1 MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, THROUGH I SATURD A Y.OCTOBER 12 A Clean Show For The Whole Family Open Every Night Next Week and the ciy officials of the two !"!!! I!!!!!' iIlIIL'lHllllllllliifiniiiiniT inn i ""''iiiiiiiiiiiiiij i
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1946, edition 1
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