Newspapers / The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.) / Jan. 6, 1944, edition 1 / Page 6
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State’s Top 4-H Dairy Foods Demonstrators Win War Bonds CIX of North Ca i • dina' - tutal rills have been awarded stair honors in tiro l.'M.'i . national 4-11 daitv foods i.Ctmoiyst,rations |j —two as inilividuals, and f..nr enurpiisinj; two teams. Each re. ; s a $50 War i Bond from the Kraft Cheese Company. j. The individual (Class A) winners arc Vera Lamm. Ifj (top tight), ,p.f l.uc.tma. and Irene Melvin, IT i second ; an lop, t right), of Fayetteville. . . . The team j (Class B) winners arc (1) Madge juries. I 15, of Latiimorc. and Kraiu-ys Cornwell. 15 (top, left), of Shelby. and i.Ji Violet Carr, 16, of Clinton, arid, Jean Mel..unit, 15 (bottom, right 1, of Clinton. . . . The purpose of the t'en-ottsnati is to show rural resident s lo w to no,C •:t • ’ • sible use of dairy nutritious did'. for tint (■• : • "Keep Amnios Strai .;." IK* CARE AMD MILK IN °THL HGMF. Sii|>ji!\ ]:i!4 MnrinO" <*n \j i M.iimi'S »»«4l |-J> 4 vrjl.ri^ (till ill 11111 s At n.itiii Hi.-i .1 \.I.. „i,. ... l M ini's. III. ,1,-1,I.,I.IT.-I . cl mill mvidris Jl IIiis ixuni. i] POOR IAN") No ill: CROPS TODAY tad TOMORROW Bv DON ROBINSON —-V \\ ASlIlMi 1 ON. I' I'.l.VWNSl i .1 u ii eoniniainlers l ,-iy |- in,- week's \\ , ,,L i. _; !. l ilt' iiiDUafis liivolveii v,... k< • - a ml l tit- it fin .,.>fi-. li.it iifi want's appeareii ,, '.,v t ii f fair tit' the flint I'iU't iMAii-iViiia iHt- iantiiati vnr ., . .. mia; ui wl'.oin were 'iheil Aeij ol: strike Llfftllilifi . I 1VI i :. lln- jli fl workers' t on . ;;i'1 :.o: I'MMIfll 011 V Ii list nia ait'i i:t>tr• i: latuni- hail tailfil o a Ml'w olif, Vims wtlfil •jcsiiiti Koosevi'li rc'ti.riifii ; oil! k:- coll ft-reiices ill liu» Near . |V|. was fllllt'l olitfil with tllr ,, o-pfi". of tari yir.n' on his war ,Mo o:,,t: i air without, tin' \ Hal 0 . olin: of approximate t\ 1 on i .oil worker'. or of * ■lore tiif tun :iii I-1' I a it e possession ot i s l alii nans. V\ IIP ilu ll "Or tin* till lit; min me i I a. t-.; 11 n'ny fiiiptoy ■ -I I 1 It i II o a o it II1 si UP in11 i. a i; i-ouiipainlf rs nr lit; . posit am- in tin- pen i M,r:i-Ii ami l. mti ii ' 11-1 s : i; i 111 i 'I to cOlpiucl a.waut'ii "second Iront' i-i ma.sy from Kiijrljitni. Ill'll. ! lu ij>iit 1). Is fils iimaam : la cl,let ol tip 11 ii i i Ii* >111 armies. ain| ail A. Spaal. chief of ■mint rt i.'f pi fillet ions in are. left his ! ter- in Air Ai Hies vile relieveil Kiselliiow s llt-Xt sent.'life seemed almost • piietit- "Tin- only ti n tr peed I’or ii' t'o uis tin- Kuiopear. i in I..!* t I is for' e\ ei t man ami man. all the Wat from tin ml line to tli- remotes: hamlet oar two - oiln11 it-s. to do Iris->i Town of Cherryville TAX LISTING Begins January 1st, 1944 STATEWIDE LAW ALL REAL ESTATE AND PROPERTY OWNERS ARE REQUIRED TO LIST ALL POLL TAX MUST RE GIVEN IN PLEASE LIST EARLY AT THE CITY HALL E. E. McDowell TAX LISTER FOR TOWN OF CHERRYVILLE I "HOW TO WIN FRIENDS and Author of INFLUENCE PEOPLE" DO SOMETHING FOR OTHERS AND FORGET YOUR TROUBLES A cripple who has spent most of her life helping oth ers is Mrs. Anna Lehman Bock. Mrs. Bock was born in a little town of Bohemia—born with a ...crippled hip. As she grew up. she spent most ot her time in a hospital for crippled children, walking with crutches and a heavy brace. She entertained the other children by telling them ; stories. They listened open - mouthed, spell - bound., [The stories were so succesful that they were pub-: ; lished in book form under the title of “Old and New Bo-, hemian Tales." Her hip condition improved and she could walk with out crutches. Using only a cane. She borrowed money and came to America, where she got a job as chamber maid and payed back ihe money she had borrowed. Later sin1 went to Chicago, and one day as she was driving through the country, she saw something which changed the course of her life—apples rotting under trees. Thou I sands—million—of people have seen apples rotting un I der trees and done nothing about it. But Anna Bock did. [This was her process of reasoning: Why not have the I unemployed can the fruit, and sell it at a low price? Driving through Michigan, she saw a sign on a farm fence which read: “For sale or rent." She went in and looked around. The house had a windmill in the yard. She rented it. and proceeded with her idea: she em j ployed cripples, and people otherwise handicapped, to do' the work. Renaming the house "Friendship House." she started in. using only the best fruit, tree-ripened. But she had to let people know about her enterprise so she began lecturing.'She spoke before clubs and orga nizations. telling them what her handicapped people i were doing. Orders came in slowly at first, then with more and more frequency—some by mail from individ uals. some from restaurants in Chicago. Mrs. Bock has 20 people at Friendship House, who. instead of being a burden on the community, are working and self-supporting. What a fine achievement! Instead of worrying, Mrs. Bock got out and did for others. There is no better way in all the world to forget your troubles than that — do [something for others! Farmers Can Grind Corn For Hog Feed In feedine pitts it "ill not pay ;i fnrnici to have Ins corn "round nt a commercial mill 1 • ut ii lie has Us own hammer mill lie can i i imi it to advantage. says F, II. Smith, animal nut fit ioliist with tile State College Kxperimenl Station. Recent tests lave shown that ai iit*:lutr m.Vd a hettei utilization oi corn, with about I."> tier cent less feed I > c* i 11 tr retiuiretl to v.ive 1 to pounds of iiniit. ■'Medium-tine L'Tindiiii of corn yiies better results than than fitteiv-e rouinl. A yritt v-feelin t I product is superior." Smith says. He points out that wheat, halier, ree. and other such feed.0 should I e around because the hoy does not crush the small strains with his teeth ;.'s readily as the larger strains. Also, the animal is unhide to use the food values of the whole main because the hard, outer layers protect it front the diuestiv'e juices as it passes throne'll tile digestive tract, Small mains should always he •- round for hoys ■ hut with corn it oitl\ kivs where the farmer has his own hammer mill. "A three sixteenth inch screen in a ham mer mill vril! yive the correct lineness is yrindiny corn." Smith Collision Which Killnl 72* • - • Wreck of the Atlantic roast I.incx two streamlined trains wl killed It and injured approximately 100. Workers using torches shown attempting to reach trapped victims. Cars of one train P»r ailed and a few minutes later the second train crashed into the Jo "Behind The Scenes In American Business —Bv John Craddock -NEW YORK, Dec. ^0—It ha* often been said and litjlitiully *< that tlie backbone of our eco nomic system is small business. Duj* large nmnul'aciuiing plant .v■ tii their imlt-s-long production lines, could not turn out the thou sands ui . countless goods if i. v< tie not for the hundreds oi thousands of small shops t-pc m.-ine-s establishments seat'le»-ec . hroughout the codiitry who met •liaiiuise these {foods to the pco •It ol" la rtf e ami small eoinmuni 1 here has been a lot i>l" tain about tb.e all ••gadget-" dietin' vi'i’ld in which we arc to lie ir -oinelime "tom.oii-i»w" This ha< <1 most of to wonder just wjiat .ill be the pattern ot our living liter the war. The National .As ocialion of manufaelureiin t amphlet entitled “Industry has ; i'roKhim lor a lletu r America,’ imints out that a continuous lul in oduction must he maintainei f we are to achieve lull employ ment. prohperity and a steady md assured flow of income. "liiU-rmitleni periods of pros neiitv will not be enough." says 1 be XAol. “We have all id' the nliysii-al reipiisites for stable ami ■ndurintr prosperity, and we shat ot be satisfied with liss” Em phasizing that our better A uteri a must be a more productivi America, tin- report slates: "It must keep oupr men, materials md eouipnient regularly and •ontinuously employed for the roniolion of our ■•eonomic wel TIN CAN'S TO A HALS At list mance it may seem strange find plants that turn out the millions of tin cans used lor the items essential to tin American •vuy of life also thundering to lie rhythm aof \\ a production. *ut this is just another instance d' truth proving stranger than In a report prepared I'm the War Department during contract . cncj-'otialion and - t-cciuly sent o stockholders and Customer', ■’n sident Al. .J. Sullivan, of ti e American Can Company, review 'd contributions of ills organi/.u ion to the war proximo. Air. m.divan's letter also disdoscu lint, after reviewing all of its war conn acts and orders for A'IN no unreasonable pi-mils .ere remitted I >\ the company ini no refunds will be rei)uiicd Older renegotiation Among the items that have a-eii rolling olf tlie company s 0 iduclion lines since I'earl llai lur are cans foi bomb fuses. 1 XT. cratering 0X| ruaives uml uceiidiary gnmatlet ^leanwldle hrmigli conservation of critical car materials by u. of substi ute plates, coating', solders and compounds. the company succeed •d in bolstering the number of an* available for civilian foods \! ile supplying billion- of cans or use of the aimed force, and .end-lease needs. Till\(?S 111 CO.dE Anti riclion bearings, like those now ised in the (ly i o l’ilol, for baby arriages. sawing machines and .vashintr machines Siphons for • i i i.uui ion projects made of 0:1111 less Tenite tubino fextile ina oriai mailt* from feathers. _ Synt hetic ■shellac that saipasses nat ■ oral product in adhesion to met tl and wood and in esi-tancc 10 -UHTIOX .MIKA'.l KS —Judus 1 ial chemistry lias once aipain • roved tlie point at the impor .1 net! ol a component of a diem cal "iniMute" is not dependent • n its -l/.c. Take the case of the aluminum hydrate 110a produced y the Aluminum Company ol .merica. ]ji tinctive pm pert y ol Ins hydrate is its uuiiormly line larlicle size: the larger; particles f this powder are less than onc alf micron in diameter. • Actually, a micron is l-^.'>,00(* if an inch, nr 1-ltnlO of a milli n lir jet the ttse of this pow er in today’s warfare is coin lotoly out of priiportion to it. Localise it imparts to ruhher dah icsistauce to tea; and makes til.her more elastic, those inlin lesiinal particles are mukiitif teller eas masks, rnhlnr jfloves .ml other medical mhher aptili anees. The tiny {fruit.s, invisible 0 the naked eye, are even play li{f the same sort of role in •liemistrv that l'onit* tie l.eon •ntisoned foi the' fountain of, youth: they retard the ape ol ruhher. Example of this phenom ena is hroujfht in the use to which tlie powder i< heinsr put I hy one of the largest ruhher 1 uhher companies. The "youthi-j fyinjf” powder is {roii{f into the concern’s highest jrade truck I tire innertubes to extend life and wear on the country’s hijrh ' V . .STIC PROTECTION lanuiaeiurers ol machinery aits have tor yeais souam ai. ..sy way to pack ttuir product.-| o that they would :.oi . is, m 1 orrodc winle eii route. If until ■ c war, the customary million as to treat each {.ait wiui reservative. wrap 11 in papei mi then package it With the coniine (jf tlie war, .veil paper proihats hecaint ‘ciitical” material, and it was accessary to devise new way o protect metal parts that weft einjf shipped to the armed for ces. Technician!! of the Llow hemical Company capie forth ith a hot melt in which Kt ho cl, a water repelUm plastic, is he essential ingredient. harts IB. and L. Payment* $4,100,000 in 1943 Distribution of % 1 ,y 00,00(1 of earn inS'S lot too last o nionths i of lLtf-'j to members of tin- 174 Building, Savings, and Loan As , sociations of tin- State will be coinpie.ed by January 1st, it is announced bv the North (. arohnu Building and Loan League ( rosiin j*. M Aihciiuu li* Bresitlent iif the League, said .his brings to 5.4,100 0, 'll total oivuletuis paid o> lay so ununc-iog instilutioiis in ii'Li, l Atoui d-u.UOM separate divi dend enecks or creuas are invol ved in the distribution, -Miller pointed out. v. nu n inocaux, a substantal number ol institution-, .u investors ale ieeeiv.Hu ti.is years end the hist oiviuelid llom a Building, Sawiigs. and l.oau .association. Aullough tin re 1ms eontinued throughout the year a it'.'imtion ol tuuliling Ol nouns, w nieh has severely reduced me lending volume of the liislnu .loiis, .Miner stales, iiivestois, who are planning a read lor home ownership, are most welcome by tiie association. 'tills years dividend will help pay lor the bar elion by seveial inherent uses to vllicli it will be j.til, said rrtsldelil -Vldier. in | me main, tt.e bulk of tbe pa.V i ii ell Is will be on regular savings I or investment snare accounts in ! the associations, tin me -avuins ! accounts, tbe dividends will no | credited and w ill flow nack into ithe Same use to which Hie legu lai eapital ot the institution is directed. Durintt tbe year tbe institution purclu.-ed in excess ol ij 1 o.ubp.lnpi in bai Bond is llivitlends paid in cash in a pleat many eases will lie used to increase the indivioual War Bond holdings, The Cherryv die Building and Loan Association, t lierryviile, substantially participated in tbe dividend distribution ami the pur ehase of War Bonds lor their iiw n pordoho. A MERCHANT SPF.AKS OUT JVople don’t life 0l*A. So lei's aboli-h Ol/A. What would ,voUiifip- much ■ — -Except prices would boot op. A few people with tbe most money and a lew dealer- wi.h highly paid customers would pet n»0>t «»1 mu m uia* >viu mm* si.u• Million v\»» li i * t .\h«*>ut hall’ “in st«ni \><n: «1 close. • except our lull ailllon dol lars worth ol" v.ar puietiases next year would cost -0(1 or 1 Ml I it .ion. War debt- would ;r.>vv two or three times as fast. Our war taxes would I'l.'tv tu Me two three times blither. except sky i uel.yi ii - pric s would force new demands for higher wanes. Employer.' would 1-avV to bid frantically against against each other for worker-. Labor turnover would oe dev:. luting. Wal ploduelion would -except e -eiiiial war mate rials would be held lor hie,her pi ices expected to next month and both scarce muter.ais and w ould move into w hatever pi e j ects raid most instead of into crit ical war industries. .More of opr liehtiug men would he killed lor lack of Weapons. -evc». pt re ill - would soar so high ihat essential vvoikeis could pot atlord to work in war indus ■ I ;• cities. Except tl at doubled or trebled pine- would cut the value of o r earnin'.;-, savings and insurance to half or a third of their va> • except that about IJOO.tlttil American businesses would he forced to replenish exhausted -loefs with double-priced (fowls if they could yet them, and go bankrupt when the win boont is over and tie bottom fall- out of gravy tr; in in ices. - -exeynt tha* we could hal'dlv i. op- the bewildered uinniploy cd who would stare at their lank I uio i-o",lovers. Xo'1 tl-o PVc’ ' •- o’ Id bapoeu. o i •. , i . <\ OlH \'T. CARRY A FULL LINK OF ii I'A 1 luNtKV IN KA.l l l.l. Ml Alll S tACLt OFFICE if •.finally nipped ii. tiio mot , ijoi immtniuiely forms a skit:* Tin.' loti^h plastic conlinn can >i- easily >iii,.|)fil oir' l»y i.uiul .ml the. pii.it emerges dean, un oi.ooiil iiiill isailv lot servlet*, ilesides its simplicity, company niciuls point out that the meln •d saves uncounted man-hours. MIS OF UUSfNESS — T. meet competition of rayon in ire casinos, cotton mills have developed a specially twisted ^ 'Old which they claim is superi oil . l.inepln Electric Company, i -leveland, is sponsoring ^ Con iest union* its employees t0r postwar planning ideas!.
The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 6, 1944, edition 1
6
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