THE EAGLE Published Every Thursday in the interest of Cherryville and surrounding Community ■ ___ - Entered as Second Class Mail matter August 10th, 1906, in the Post Office at Cherryville, N. C., under the Act ot Congress March ird, 1-Si9.___ - FRED k”"uoOSKR Editor and Publisher \Ii;S. ( KEOl.A HOl'SER ll.ucal and Society Editor) Telephone - UltV. . J 1 U l Residence. 2bUl SI KSi Rl 1’ 1 ION R \ CIds Put .tide in Advance One year Six months Four months Three month $ 1.50 .60 .60 Motional Adv#rtl»l«« «opro»ontoll»* /\mer:cam Press flssociAiioii Now York • CH.cc.9c. • Dolto'rt • fhilod.lphlo t AWAITING DAY OF INVASION Will it 1 e nil will that flash name tought tin all minds as we all wait the final battle for Ian Only a small The civilian sweats hut in his own !asn he goes about the vanning and as at- j that load ot i'1'.a.' abroad the e.i \ I ha n a lock, eleven o’clock, six o’clock—when ■ : that the invasion has begun. With that . .lay , each hour is a little more strained .a.-a emem that the opening gun in the luts begun. dial of men know the day and the hour, with them. Not lit the soldier's way, P - a though: uppermost in his mind as :|., |mititie. as he sees the seasons ad laxe'. the ration points, or waits for f.,t■.■news from those who are : , ndei goes an ordeal that is all their MEAT SUPPLY We weir g! was; wi.Rinp t'<> <: it was found 11 till the neeils billing tills cut down slit;!;: hardly worth* But tills I who l(link that tubing urlitu a: inveiumg dim It IS ailla/u'l al.road, tee. he aide In ;|U 1 i e l a. t' faith ii " 1 I at ;he Office of Price Administration • v. nil ad meats except heel' when a at; ample supply of uthei meats to u population. mpnitaiu whether civilians have to , nd u nipt ion nr Whether they don't, au ra with the war itself that it is ■ | ■ \ does a'li'Wei some of the critics t in arc engaged ill munufac la- people in order to make them i nirm was creating shortages or ,i| huildiiig up the home trout .. aid; do would lie 'o permit an in ,1 riioi iiious. qnanf it ies of food nee- tie liest food any soldier of , o;' a u,a or manpower shortage ad the food they can eat. .. if,, h aid give us even greater ,!.i .1; ;he in paries of production a ..ft. w i on peace comes again. MOKE WACS NEEDED Proha'iu . li e n has . he ell that . a : - ■ needs hundred.- - 1 difficult ' I he "re'a.- ..id un the enlistment of v idea of drafting v... below the minimal! — 18 or u\. i i to the pi of a n be inter, "led a mg ill an nllVi itant to change Ji.a The chief murid in offices, factories, of employment is s which way to I uni. peal seems so fa r t. of the United Slate a a;-i■, nting of all enlistment campaigns a .i[ i, tiie- V\ Aid Idle army has said it . ds -..•; additional Women for noiu a.ai 11,,' mi niliei o f fathers drafted can be d : i -a .in.■ i: Join op. Ii.nl it seems to he very a. ai.;e tt,nmnei of women to enlist. ; j i; a t-i nf-t-ii claimed. Polls made t i .Vi I/., in..unity of the fairer sex favor i.mt'ii and a large number even favor the .a. out \ ’miliary enlistments still are far , limit a. include gills just out of school ,• i . a -uje! .'d and inav he the answer • , ■ ! -ok Mae foi he I first job might VsAi v.aeiva alter she has been Work 1, a : w. >t-ars -lie will he more hes •\ay of life. is that the'' .damurid for feminine assistance restaurants, schools and every other place , great that a voting woman doesn't know And -omeliow the Rosie the Riveter up hove a greater attraction than the uniform THE NEW ORDER This war, Ma? most costly in history, with its constant threat to stable prices ami civilian supplies, should have taught the country the necessity of an efficient retail distribution system No other nation the size of the* t inted States has a distribution system remotely comparable to ours for efficient, low-cost consumer service. American retailing lias made its greatest advances so far as scientific operation is concerned, within a comparatively few years. Its development would have been far slower but for the pioneers of the business who founded what have come to be known as chain stores. The chain stores deserve most of the credit for es tab lulling the high volume, low-cost technique of today’s merchants. IS t range as it may seem, tlie* chains were forced to develop mass distribution in the face of almost continuous political op position. Even now. after the improved system has demonstrated through more than two years of chaotic war conditions, that it is instrumental in maintaining price stability and an equitable flow of good- to every far-flung eortier of the nation, attemps are still being made in legislative halls to handicap it through special taxes against chain strores. A few weeks ago such a bill was submitted before tfie New York state legislature. Short sighted politicians are agitating for similar proposals in other states. There is one certain way that post war unemployment and depression can lie assured, and that Ts by crippling distribu tors responsible for passing on to the people the tilings produced in the factories and on the farms. Those who work against ef ficiency indistribution are working for unemployment and high living costs. t . rmsftaMMAd■» Swastika With a New Meaning __ O WASHINGTON, D.C. (NWNSj Hitting at what he termed the j “smugly optimistic assumption of i assured victory" held by civilians, Robert Paterson, undersecretary : of war, said that the hardest part! of the war is yet to be won and : that the growing complacency of the people must end. His sentiments have been voiced by many other military spokesmen here who see real danger in the growing disinterest in the war I among civilians. This disinterest, j they point out, is shown by the movement of men away from war jobs, by decreases in enlistments in the armed services (including the problem of getting women to enlist in the WACs and WAVH, by the decrease in the number of Victory gardens planted, by in creasing talk about postwar plan ning almost to the exclusion ot the war itself, by the growing po litical-mindedness of congress, by efforts to put ail end to wartime legislation such as the wage sta bilization act, and the emergency price control act, by increased spending of money tor luxuries, by an increase in the number of war bonds being cashed in, by the growth of black markets, and by a hundred and one other things in which the people take the attitude that the war is "in the bag and it is time to get back to normal, peace-time living. To combat such attitudes, army navy and war production leaders are pointing out that the nation faces a manpower crisis greater than any experienced so far dur ing the war, that there is grave danger of inflation unless our na tional spending spree ends, that the threat of food shortages has in no way been lessened, and that i invasion plans may be imperilled i unless the people in this country I get back the spirit they had after | Pearl Harbor. i .Urging congress to pass a draft j law to assure 1,400,000 replace-' ments for men who must be taken from war jobs for the armed ser vices this year, Secretary of Navy Knox, Secretary of War Stimson and Admiral Land of the maritime commission issued a statement in which they said; “False public in terpretations of what are only lo cal victories on the perimeter of the enemies’ strongholds may in deed imperil victory when we thrust at the foe’s heart. Someone must step up to the bench, the lathe and the desk of every war worker who leaves to fight for his country.” In spite of their pleas for a national service act, it is not con sidered likely that congress will pass such a’ measure. This was in dicated when the house military committee recently dropped con sideration of a bill to draft 4-Fs for war jobs. Although the com mittee said that such an a-*t seem ed unnecessary because the great majority of 4-Fs are in war jobs already, many news analysts here feel that congress, because of po litical considerations, will try in every way to avoid passing any additional “drafting” legislation because of the possibility that it would be unpopular with the pub lic. Since most everyone is in agreement that the needs of the armed services must be filled, it seems evident that drafting of fathers over 26 will again have to be speeded up if congress refuses to pass any “draft labor” legisla tion. The only other possibility is for the War Manpower com mission to test its power to draft labor without further legislation. TODAY ! tad TOMORROW By DON ROBINSON MORONS .... radio lietore leletision arrives in full force. it seems tu me you and 1 and tne suine hundred million other adult." of the unseen audi ence ought to explain to the In oaueast i ng people that they are wrong in assuming that we are a nation of morons. It is the common understanding among the self-styled super-intel lects who prepare our radio fare that our average intelligence is that of a Id-year-old child—and practically all programs, particu larly the advertising spiels, are written with the ld-yeat-ohl ap peal in mind. In older that television, which can he a great educational anti en tertainment vehicle, does not suf fer from the same misapprehen sion. a is time that we admitted that we respond to namby-pamby radio ad\ert ising, not because out minds are only halt ,t row n up.hut because we listen wi.li only half of our minds. \\ e should let the who people know that. because the average program is far beneath our aver age intelligence, most of have long found it necessary to read books, play cards, converse with friends or engage in some other occupa tion while listening to the radio. We learned early in radio history that tne shows coining over the ether were not solid enough to warrant more than a fraction of our attention. TELEVISION . . danger Those radio people who have now tinned to euiieueLiiij* me ideal recipe for television prob ably are under the impression the added ingredient of eye-appeal is all that is needed to keep us enraptured before our receiving sets day and night. Hut it seems to me that tele vision can turn out to be the greatest Hop in entertainment his tory, after the novelty of it has worn off, unless the program pro ducers are convinced ahead of time that we have a smattering of intelligence and will lose interest unless they offer us Something more substantial than the ordin ary radio program. This matter of eye appeal can work two ways. It can gain a greater grip on attention if it gives us something worth opening our eyes over, but it can also I throw the limelight oil the inani ties of radio. Radio can insult out intelligence through the single channel of our auditory nerve hut television is equipped for a doolde-hui i eh d insult. He can only hope that the tele vision experts will awake to the fact that the willingness of the li! year old to watch and listen to anything called entertainment | won't work for long with the ad ult population. Most of us have never been satisfied with radio and we're apt to he even more critical of television INFLUENCE . . lazinesi ++++*++< {LEAVES < • LAUREL ELVIA ORAHAM MELTON New York, N. Y. — LOVE AT FIRST FORECAST. This is for the record: I love the new weath erman. 1 do 't know him, but that doesn't make any difference; he’s a man alter my own heart. Now some go for Sinatra—and that's strictly Okay, but this man who gets my rave isn’t in the groove for only one mood—he's on the beam for solid, aiound-the clock consumption Ah! What a man! He's diff erent! He's sensational! He's rev olutionary! He's something new under the sun and moon and cu mulus clouds. He’s a combination of poet and realist. In his veins there runs real human blood in stead of ink with which to draw those Inch-pressure, low-pressure urea lines on graphs and charts, And in his mind there dwells the realization that with our weuthei we want to know whether . . . well, all sorts of things . . . This rhapsodizing was sparket I official weather report which read into life when that man issued an official weather report which rear "Moonlight and warmer.” Honest [hat's what it said! Cosh! had the staid, super caul ions. practically enigmatic, 7a year old F. S. Weathei bureau gone berserk! Or had some May merry young apprentice, given toe uucli responsibility, thumbed his nose at tradition and let loose an unorthodox report? .\ope. .\either of these tilings. File answer was Donald ('arm eron, aged .ii), veteran of ‘I'l years fil'd now chief forecaster for the Southeastern United States. It seems that Donald Cameron lias held the idea, for a long time that, weather reports ought to in form us of what weather to expect fall it—humanizing forecosts. He heorizes (and rightly) that most people don't care much about what degrees of temperature and hu midity are about to happen—they want to know what they are going to feel. Hallelujah! and at last! after 75 years we've got one weather man (may his ilk grow fast and flourish) who realizes that “fair and warmer” doesn’t tell us much That “increasing cloudiness” does 1 have saiu that we are not a I nation of morons, but I can see that if television as well as radio treats us as such we may event ually reach that status For although we may resist mentally against listening to the worst programs, we are often ex posed to them, and, like bad com pany. they leave their influence. Out of sheer boredom we are apt to tune in on the installments of a poor program in the same spirit that many of us, with hardly any perceptible interest, turn eueh day to the comic strips in the newspa pers to see what the pen-and-ink characters are up to. Hut if the great forces of radio and television are used primarily to appeal to the lazy part of our minds, the part that doesn't think, there is no question that in time our gray matter will become flab by. Picture magazines, comic books, digests of reading matter and moving pictures all attempt to give us entertainment or edu cation with a minimum of mental effort. Perhaps all we need to re lax permanently into a moronic mental state is a couple of long winters of ’teen-age television. not give me the low-down on whether or not to tote my umbrel la along’ or hopefully (and usual ly mistakenly) leave it at home. That “clear and colder” can mean | anything from a moderate winter | day to one where a bitter wind | has me jiving grooves in my tooth i enamel and wishing for an anti-> freeze solution for the marrow in i my bones. WEATHER, WHETHER, AND WHOOPS! Donald Cameron gives us real hope for the inline, lie i lull ot possibilities. Of course lie s starting relorm, or rather —ex pansion—-in a mild way. At this lime when he perks up with his ‘•moonlight and warmer'' predie-1 tion, who knows maybe he has i wonderful plans for later when j such a bulletin will read: “Moon-j light and warmer; too nice.to go i to the movies or to sleep early. Really special. Maximum ellect iveliess the hours 10 till 1. Don't miss them." Now everyone knows what a little hit of moonlight can do! Hut mostly it’s accidental. Think how j marvelous if one could count on it or build strategy around it. I Think of lovelorn maids, bashful swains, and despairing, spatting, spouses. If this moonlight stuff leaves you cold (and there are those it does, and jeepers I feel sorry lor them even if they don't know what they’re missing) there are lots of practical advantages too. Like knowing what to wear. when. Instead of that hackneyed, un informative “warmer"—Cameron plans to add phrases like “fairly comfortable” or “uncomfortable". See what a help that will be! And I can imagine a time when hep forecasters might say: “Sticky hot and how! Wear as little as the law will allow.” At piesent, for week-enders, our new friend will not limit him self to "cloudy and warmer” but will add: “a few light, puffy clouds with probable clear weather ahead Sometime soon the advice might might go like this: "Swimming, fishing or picnic hour's'.' Go ahead, gamble on short, light showers." Or like this: "To go—or not to go? If rain will spoil it — save your Why doggone! I can foresee the time when we’ll all be reading weather reports with delight—for both information and entertain ment People will turn to that por tion of their newspaper with all the enthusiasm and anticipation they now exhibit over baseball scores or what comes next with Buck Rogers and Fiat-top. And as for results: romance will flourish, frayed tempers and disap pointments be staved off, new clothes kept unruined, goosepimp les abolished-_the list is. endless! So now you know why I love the weatherman. I’m convinced he’s got something! WOOL | The value of the wool clip makes j up about one-third of the profit from the farm flock and hence it should .receive special care, sug gests H . M. Stanley, Extension animal husbandry specialist at N. C. State College. 4-H A new 4-11 contest, whose chief objective is to prevent soil wastage and deterioration by practicing approved methods of protection and conservation, will be known as the "National 4-II Soil Conservation Contest.” I J Conservation WFWQ Bv R. J. SEITZ --< H. I). Ftonef.erger, Gastonia, plans tu establish a two'acre seri t'i;i meadow strip on bis farm lo cated neat Bessemer City, lie has the seed ready and just as soon as the strip is graded by the coun ty unit, lie will sow the meadow to eomplette the water disposal system. This meadow strip will also he used l'or perennial hay. Terrace lines were staked this past week on the following farms to he built by available farm equipment and the county terrac ing units: X. M. Carson, R-l. Cas tonia; Walter Oates, R-l, Casto nia; T.R.E Oates, R-l, Castonia; Ernest Pearson, R-l, Castonia; F. F. Allen, R-2, Bessemer City; W. W. Rutled.ee, R-l, Dallas; and, M. A. Stroupe, Cherr.vville. Miss Martha Torrence, R F 1), Bessemer City, has been realizing some splendid grazing from a two acre field sowed with a mixture of small grains and ryegrasses for grazing. A notable increase in milk production has resulted and she plans to follow this ypractieve .1. M. Robinson. R-.1, Gastonia, turned a tine crop of vetch undei and is following with cotton. Tim is a splendid practice before cotton or corn in increasing crop yiehb 1„ A. Thornburg, High Shoals, received shipment of 1000 kudzti plants this week and planted ap proximately two acres of steep of steep land to be used for per ennial hay. \V E. Brewer, R-l. Dallas, re cently ordered some borax for 2 i acres of alfalfa on his farm. He plans to apply about 25 pounds per acre, to stimulate the growth arid increase the quality of hay cut. NITROGEN Twenty thousand tons of the May production of ammonium ni trate have not been requested by the fertilizer industry and it is Uoubtful if .1 utie production will be taken, say Washington reports. CORN About 2 pounds of nitrogen will give an extra handful of corn Extra fertilizer for the corn crop is one of the quickest methods of solving the feed shortage, say the • ••••••••••«| USE EAGLE ADS* tm FWST c oh? USE M4 TABLETS. SALVE NOSE DHOW Ids the Quality of leadership that 7nakes Leaders •> sssssasssssss *- wmw Atlantic ('ompanp—Breweries in Atlanta, Charlotte, Ckattanoooa. Norfolk, Orlando HELP FEED AMERICA FRtJIT Our Government asks every family in America with available space, to grow some Fruit and help in the War effort. Home Owners are urged to grow more fruit. Fighting men, our 4-iui^o, auu me un uie r.ume front need the vitamins, minerals, sugars of fruit for health and strength. Let me rfrtow you how you can plant now—enjoy delicious fruits amuzingly soon—increase the value of your property —help hurry our Victory. Call me. No obligation. STARK’S YOUNG-BEARING TREES ‘ ( Grow More and Finer Fruit—Quicker Plant fruit trees and plants you can depend on to live and bear good fruit—QUICKER! I will show you Stark’s famous RECORD-BEARING STRAIN TREES—vigorous, sturdy, young trees. They are quick bearing. They are heavy bearing. They are the cream of 128 year* of Stark-Burbunk fruit and# tree improvements. Call or write me without obligation W. R. CARPENTER Cherryville, N. C.-Route 2