> THE EAGLE PsbUdMd Erary Thursday in the interest of Cherryville •ad aurreundlng Community._____ Entered es Second Glese Mail matter August 16th, 1906, la the Post Office at Cherryville, N. C., under the Act of Congress March 3rd, 1879. __ FRED K. HOUSER_Editor and Publisher MRS. CREOLA HOUSER (Local and Society Editor) Telephones Office, 2101 — Resilence, 2601 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance One year - Six months - Four months Three months - $1.60 .86 .60 .60 Hefteael AdveMiiina Amuicu Pius Ahoomioi W Nw York • Chico*o • Detroit ■ Shilodolohie THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1944 PRE-WAR PROBLEMS As we remember it, these were a lot of national problems still unsolved when our nation went to war. ,Since then they have become rather vague, for we have been tackling a prob lm so much bigger than any of them. But before Pearl Harbor, as we recall it, there was still a good deal whicn needed to be done about unemployment, relations between business and government were in a terrific tangle and farmers had found no permanent solution to making a profit out of the food they raised. It is the hope of a good many people that the war will somehow end with these problems solved. But we see no rea son, at present, why this will happen. It looks very much to us as if, as soon as the war ends, all of the pre-war problems will quickly congregate on our doorsteps and be just as puzzling to handle as they ever were. We can’t escape from the pessimistic philosophy that war doesn’t solve problems—it just makes new ones. 10% FOR THE DURATION Because the war loan drives are carried on for a few weeks and then stopped, a lot of people seem to have come to think of patriotism as a sort of seasonal affair. Just as some of u$ confine our religion to Sundays, a lot of good Americans will chip in during the bond drives, help their town reach its goal, and then, when it is over, take a vacation from thinking about the cost of war. Because of the temporary nature of enthusiasm, the total sale of bonds is probably greater, as a result of these spurts, than it would be if an attempt was made to keep us continually worked up about bonds. But the high sale during drives may also have a lot to do with the increasing number of bonds which are- being cashed in each month. The 10% plan—whereby we all make up our minds to put at least 10% of our weekly earnings into bonds for th? dura tion has more lasting value than the “drive” plan. As long as the war goes on there is no reason why each of us innot consider 10% of our wages as money to which we are not en titled until the war is won—and which will then be handed to us with interest. LETS LEAD THE PROCESSION Surveys are being made over the nation for the purpose of determining postwar demands for air express and air freight. When one looks at a map showing the design for America’s worldwide air routes, the importance of such preparation and coordination of the facilities to be offered the public becomes ■elf evident. According to postwar plans now on paper, the United Stat-^ es expects that its international airlines will fly 140,000 n.iles, 60,000 of those miles over new routes. Where, before the war, passengers were the principal load, it is expected that air ex press and freight will add tremendously to the future cargo of the airlines. Just as an example to illustrate the possibilities, air ex press handled through La Guardia field during May, averaged more than 1,800 shipments a day , a 27.8 per cent increase over May, 1943. For the five-month period, January to May, at the same airport, express shipments increased 23 per cent over 1943. Fortunately, the United States has express facilities in al most every hamlet, which, under a coordinated pick-up and d« livery system, are rendering universal service that can be ex tended to meet any future air transport requirements. As usual, private enterprise in our country is one jump ahead of demand. We can never afford to be the tail-end of the procession in future air developments for either passengers or cargo shipments, as this war has so dramatically demonstrat ed. § Efficient Retailing Stabilize* Production In no other nation in the world has the average citizen been ms well served with the necessities of life, and even lux uries, during this present terrible war, as in the United States. There is a reason for this—no nation in the world has had as many free and independent business men seeking to supply the needs of the people, as has the United States. War restrictions on production and distribution were in evitable. Hastily drawn as they were, many of them have been confusing and some actually damaging to maximum production and distribution. Nevertheless, American business adjusted it •elf to the rules and regulations and kept the supply stream going to consumers. This never could have been done, nor would government rationing and ptice n i trol have been successful, except Ur the eflteient retailing system this nation enjoys. Chain stoves play ed b tremendous part in results that have been secured. They b*ve been a stabilizing influence in maintaining production and distribution on an even keel. Such stores were built up on the basic idea of a minimum profit on each sale, in order to create a maximum turnover. That policy is probably doing more to stabilize prices than any man-made legislation can accomplish in the face of rising wag ee a*d material coats. Hopeful Nesting BEHIND THE SCENES JN AMERICAN BUSINESS jgrJTOPN CRADDOCK)' NEW YORK, July 24.—A fav orite topic of serious discussions today is the possibility of a post war depression. It may be of in terest, therefore, to report a point of view which departs wide ly from current pessimism on the postwar outlook. Dr. Melchior Palyi of Wiscon sin and Chicago Universities points out in Barron's magazine that the fear of postwar depres sion is generally based on what happened in 1920-21, when there occurred a sudden break in com modity and securities prices, ac companied by a wave of bankrupt cies and unemployment. But it seems to be forgotten, says Dr. Palyi, that this slump lasted only about a year or less, and guve place to the longest peacetime boom in American history. Nor is it remembered that even the 1920-21 slump was not at all an immediate post-war depression. It actually followed two years of post-war boom. Historically it is a fact, he says, that major wars (and earth quakes!) breed booms, not de pressions. The Crimean War in 1857 and the Austro-Pi ussian War in 1866 were succeeded by waves of prosperity for all the belligerants. A boom in Europe followed the Franco-Prussian War of 1871. Another example, which he cites in the Barron’s article, is the boom that resulted in Ja pan, after a recession of only one year, from the 1923 earthquake. JEWELRY RESCUE—The part that the jewelry stores of Amer ica played in saving the aircraft program is the latest “now it can be told1’ story of war production. Back before Pearl Harbor, these jewelers bought a good many old watches for the gold cases. The movements were mostly tossed in to drawers to serve as banks of spare parts for watch repair. Then, came the crisis. The world’s largest aircraft flight in strument manufacturing plant, operated by Bendix Aviation cor poration in Philadelphia, was fac ed with only a 30-day supply of jewel bearings when the fall of Belgium and France cut off the jewels from Switzerland. Without these bearings, which reduce friction to a minimum and are so tiny that 100,000 could be held in the palm of the hand, it is impossible to make aircraft flight instruments precise enough to serve in modern planes. Without these instruments, aircraft—from trainers to super-bombers—can not be safely operated. So Ben dix sent out a crew of men to scour the jewelry stores of the nation—and even pawnshops—to buy old watches and watch move merits. The jewels thus obtained were used to tide production of instruments over until sources of jewel production could be built up in this country. THINGS TO COME—Dehydrat ed pineapples for convenience and economy in making pastries and pie-fillings . . . An improved cot ton picking machine, developed by International Harvester com pany, which is said to pick clean and not leave any useable cotton in the balls ... A mechanical tree planter which requires a crew of only three men to plant 2,000 seedlings an hour. Perfected at Wisconsin College of Agriculture, the device may revolutionize re forestation activities. ONE AND ONLY TASK—Tin automobile industry has rejectee unanimously a War Prouuctioi Hoard plan for the manufacture of 2,000,000 new cars upon ter mination of hostilities with tier many because it feels that wai production is still the one and on ly task. , Meanwhile, the auto con cerns are strengthening the per sonnel structure of their organi zations -o that they will be ready for the |" -iwar competition when the time arrives. Attontiei was focused this week oil U illys Overland Motors by the | election to its pro idetic*' of Char 1 les E. Sorensen, international!» famous production genius, erea tin at the automobile assembly line and Willow Hun's renowned bond er-an-bour man. Regarded by many as the outstanding authority in America on the mass produc tion of low-cost, lightweight, eeo nomical-to-opei ate vehicles, Sor ensen is expected to give the Tol edo concern which designed am: developed the "Jeep” a prominent spot in the postwar picture. COMPETITION—One thing w. can be sure about in the postwai world, competition is going to oi keener than ever. The urge will o,. strong for companies now operat ing at double and triple their pre war volumes to make new lines o, I civilian products. Thus they wil | hope to provide more jobs that | i efore the war and to utilize plant ! capacity which has been expander ! for war production. Consumer: | of course will benefit too, sinct I lowei prices, better products ant I mere service would be a natura j sequel. General Mills, Inc., ha: j announced definite plans to aup: , i. ent its food processing busine*: > by manufacture of electrical up pliances for household use. \V< may expect that plans of othei companies to engage in produc tion of new types of consumer: goods w ill come to light in inert as ing numbers the nearer we movi to the day of German’s fina pal ciuck-up. DO YOU NEED A— RUBBER STAMP ? "WE HAVE EM” THE EAGLE PUBLISHING CO. DIAL 2101 BUY MORE WAR BONDS AND STAMPS WORK SHOP Agricultural engineers suggest that every farm should have a good work srop and that all ma chinery should be kept in repair. Chicks produced by commercial hatcheries in the U. S. during June decreased (35 percent from June, 1943. USE EAGLE ADS 0 "HOW TO WIN FRIENDS and Author of INFUJENCE PEOPir SOLDIER MAKES HIS OWN JOB This is the true story of a soldier'returning from the first World war. John Spencer RedshaW, returning to (iranyille, III., near w here he was born, looked around for an onening None was to be had. So lie made an open., ing. One day he was m The post office when he saw a man trying to fill out a money order with ari old rusted pen— you know the kind of pens they have in post oil ices. 1 he mail became disgusted with the pen and reached into his pocket and hauled out a fancy-looking pen and filled out the money order. Redshaw stared at the I aitcy-looking pen and finally he asked the stranger where he got the pen. The man told him, so ex-Soldier Redshaw sent to the company and bought a dozen for three dollars. lie traded those fountain pens to the men lie knew for any old thing they wanted to offer. He found lie had a natural ability for trading. He ended this swapping spree with a shotgun and $15. He rented a little hole-in-the-wall place and got some other odds and ends and swapped them. Then he establish ed an astonishing principle; he didn’t want money; he Iust wanted to trade; and that’s exactly what he did Trailed. Traded with anybody who came along. I’retty soon he became known as Traded Red slid v. Peo ple outside of the state heard of him. He prospered, bought an old bank building. One day an opportunity came along to swag for some diamonds;. He didn’t know any more about diamonds than a dog does about Deuteronomy. But he swapped. And he made money. He has grown rich by just swapping- Only 1 •"> per cent of his business is money business. His know ledge of hu man nalure is what makes him a success. But one day he got taken in. A man appealed with a cote of nice-looking pigeons and said he wanted to swap ’em. “Trader" Ked shaw told him to look around and find what he wanted. The man chose a shotgun and the exchange \^ns made. But the pigeons were homing pigeons—and in a few days “Trader" Redshaw didn’t have any pigeons. Redshaw has ow ned 10 yachts—and has never seen one of them. He'd trade for them on description and photo graph, and then sell ’em. Each time he made money. Now the richest man in the county, he has so many diamonds and jewels in the vault in his store that he has to keep an armtd guard day and night. In one day he received let ters from 11 different counties. On top of this he's had a wonderful time. CHEVROLET BEAIEH SERVICE Today--when every car’s continued service counts to the utmost, ^ America prefers to count on the L leader for dependable car service! BETTER SEE YOUR LOCAL CHEVROLET DEALER TODAY IN SERVICE NEW CHEVROLET TRUCKS FOR ESSENTIAL USERS Chevrolet it producing a limited number of new trucks for essential civilian users. See your Chevrolet dealer for complete information. Homesley Chevrolet Cov Inc. CHERRYVILLE, N. C. DIAL 2521