THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1945 WORLD TRAVELERS EVERY mother aiul father in town naturally hopes that their boy will be one of the lpcky ones who will arive home in the next few months. We have all breathed a huge sigh of re lief, khowing that the shooting has stopped, but we will still be a little uneasy until we see our sons right on the doorstep. But it teem* to ut that parent* should try to "re convert” their mental attitude at much at they can during thii waiting period. If these were normal tim et, many of your ton* would be longing to travel to the far corner* of the earth and many of you would contider it a valuable aid to their education if tuch travel could be arranged. Well—now they are having the opportunity to see the world and to see history in the making, unhindered by gunfire. They will learn invaluable lessons on how other people live and they will see the famous cities and sights which many of us have always longed for the opportunity to see. FILL ER UP’ '~I IN'T it wonderful? We mean this business of driving' up i\ to a gasoline station, saying “Fill ’er up, Joe," and in 1 even having to fumble around for a single ration coupon. It’s almost as if we’d been told, “You don’t need money anymore . —everything’s free!” Not quite everything, though. We still have to keep our ration currency for meat, shoes, sugar and some other scarce items. But that is all right with every body, we feel sure. If we got everything back at once we wouldn't enjoy it as much. Watching the shortages all gradually fade away will be a thrilling sport during the next few months. It will make us really appreciate many of the things we used to take for grant ed. And let us hope that, even after everything is back to - normal, we will still hang on to a little feeing of thankfulness for the countless things which are provided for us. %-* SCHOOL VS. JOB (The Shelby Daily Star) Shelby city schools open a week from today and between now and then some teen-agers must make an all-important de cision if, in fact, they have not already made it. We refer to the question they face of whether to return to their books or stick to the tools which war-time opportunity has placed in their hands. All the logic, the government, the labor organizations and common sense seem to be on the side of their going back to school. With several million veterans returning to their places in the community, with war contracts cancelled, it would be foolish to assume that the places in business an industry which these youngsters' were able to get under war pressure will go on forever like the brook. Our country owes these young peo ple, who have ably stepped in the gap while their older brothers were away in the army or war industries, a debt of gratitude for the way they rose to the occasion. Now the time seems to have come to lay down theii tools and pick up their schooling wherever it was left off. Now is the time to equip themselves for being even more useful in peace than they were in wartime, if that is possible. The schools hold the answer and the teen agers the right to make the decision. Secretary of Labor Senwellenbach has given impetus to this decision which the young folks must make by revoking as of September 4 the wartime order of former Secretary Frances Perkins which dropped the age limit on government contracts from 18 to 16 Years. Supplementing this government order, heads of both of the large labor organizations in the country, the CIO and the AFL, have cautioned teen-agers not to sacri fice educational opportunity for the weekly pay envelope. * We suppose there are very few Shelby young people who are affected by the Secretary of Labor’s revocation because there are not so many war contracts handled in this territory. But there is many a young man and woman of this community, who on account of the scarcity of help in late months, has work ed himself into the workaday world and has had the taste of regular pay. It will require a measure of self control to fore go the justifiable satisfaction of making one’s own way to take up disciplined study again. However as he faces this issue, he will remember that a job, no matter how well paying it is, is shorter than a life. He will remember that a school bell is meant to sound for him greater opportunity and wider horizon, not to count him out. BUY MORE WAR BONDS AND STAMPS With a FirmGrip and a Steady Wheel ;pi;A