* r*f) AfTT) A C T Quite a contrast is furnished by LL/iY 1 Ix/lul these two vehicles proceeding down a Cairo street — an American jeep car, being driven by Master Sergt. Kindle Walston of Louisville, Ky., overtakes an Egyptian donkey cart. Since then this jeep car has undoubtedly seen much sterner action, as Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's mechanized forces have swept towards the Suez. V ( Elkin War Bond Sale Thus Far Is $40,462 _ • Employees of Chatham Co., Boost Figure With Surry county’s quota of War Bonds for July set at $79,700, Elkin has to date sold War Bonds and stamps totaling over half that amount, it was learned Wed nesday from P. W. Graham, lo cal postmaster. Actual figures on sales of all agencies up to Wednesday amounted to $40,462.50, Mr. Gra ham said. Of this amount $38, 062.50 worth were bought by em ployees of the Ch&tham Manufac turing Company, who purchased 2,030 twenty-five dollar bonds during the past week, according to information from Chatham of ficials. i, With July only about one-third gone, Elkin should register an im pressive total in bond and stamp sales for the month, Mr. Graham stated. ACT TO RESULT IN BIG SAVING Three and One-Half Interest Rate Will Save Surry Farmers $6,650 350 WILL BE BENEFITTED (Tribune Washington Bureau) Washington, D. C., July 8.— Recent Congressional action con tinuing the 3 1-2 per cent inter est rate on federal land bank and land bank commissioner loans will result in saving more than $6,650 to farmer members of the national farm loan association in Surry county in the next two years, according to best estimates available here. Although first mortgage loans have been made 'at 4 per cent the last six years and many before that at higher rates, the member is required to pay only 3 1-2 per cent, regardless of the rate at which the loan was drawn. The special rate will benefit directly approximately 350 farm ers in Surry county. This means an average saving of about $19 in interest per farmer for the next two years, FCA officials say. Many members of the farm loan associations already have said they will invest their interest savings in war bonds, or will put the savings in the association’s reserve funds for meeting future payments on loans, FCA said. Registered Heilers Are Sold At Dobson Fifteen registered Jersey heif ers which were bought recently from the Biltmore Jersey herd at Asheville for distribution among farmers of Surry county were sold Tuesday afternoon at Dob son. These heifers were part of a purchase made jointly by farm agents of Surry and Wilkes coun ties at a recent sale at Asheville when 25 heifers, all registered Jerseys, and 11 registered Jersey bulls were purchased by a group made up of B. F. Folger, Surry county treasurer; A. P. Cobb, Surry farm agent; A. W. Huff, assistant farm agent, and J. B. Snipes, Wilkes county agent. Ten of the heifers are being placed in Wilkes county. Salvage Rubber Drive Here Nets 125,000 Pounds Although figures are approx imate, it is estimated that over 62 tons of salvage rubber have been turned into' local service stations here thus far in the President’s salvage rubber campaign. A. O. Bryan, member of the Surry salvage rubber commit tee, said Tuesday that he be lieved the amount would total 125,000 pounds. Nation-wide results of the campaign are said to be disap pointing, although the drive was extended by the President for 10 days. Under present plans it will come to an end Friday. ANNUAL MEET IS TO START Revival At Ebenezer Metho dist Church Will Begin Sunday HOME COMING PLANNED The annual revival services for Ebenezer Methodist church will begin Sunday with a Home Com ing Day for the historic old church. There will be an address at 11 o’clock a. m., following the Sunday school session at 10 o’clock. Special music will be furnished by a visiting choir of singers. Lunch will be served on the church grounds. The afternoon session will be in charge of the pastor, Rev. G. C. Graham, and there will be a spe cial program of singing. Beginning Monday, the 13th, at 9:30 o’clock Vacation Bible school will be held each day. This will include courses for all children above the age of four years through the Young People’s group. All children are invited to attend. Rev. N. G. Preston, Jr., under - (Continued on last page) EXPERTS PLAN FARM EVENT Will Show How to Grade Poultry Products and Produce Here E. H. S., TUESDAY, 14TH A grading demonstration of poultry products and produce will be staged at the Elkin High School home economics department Tues day, July 14, at 2:00 p. m., for the benefit of those who plan to sell on the new Elkin Crub Market, which will be opened here July 18, it has been announced. T. T. Brown, poultry expert, of State College, will demonstrate how to grade poultry products, and H. R. Niswanger, also of State College, will give the produce demonstration. The demonstration is sponsored by Mrs. Grace Pope Brown and Miss Irene Browr., home demon stration agents of Suny and Yad kin respectively. The Elkin Tribune VOL. No. XXXI. No. 35 * ELKIN, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1942 PUBLISHED WEEKLY Registration For Gas Gets Under Way Today Places, Hours Are Announced By War Board Owners of motor vehicles will register for gasoline ration cards under the permanent rationing program which becomes effective July 22, today, Friday and Satur day, July 9, 10 and' 11. The local War Board has an nounced the places of registration and the hours for the territory under their jurisdiction, as fol lows: Rockford, 1 p. m. to 7, p. m. Little Richmond, 9 a. m. to 5 P. m. Mountain Park, 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. Elkin Elementary school, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. North Elkin school, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. These hours will be observed each of the three registration days and are for owners of pas senger cars only. All owners of trucks, fleet owners and non-us ers of the highways will register at the local War Board at the city hall each of the three days. No sugar registration will be held on these three days. Numerous local merchants and others have volunteered to help in the gas registration. Car owners will be required to present their state registration card before books can be secured. The rule this time makes this compulsory. Without the card no book can be secured. A federal use tax must also be purchased before a book can be issued and car owners will be required to fur nish the serial number of their use tax sticker which is recorded on the gasoline book. Different colors of stickers will also be given car owners to be put on a prominent place on their car (Continued on last page) HEARING HELD AT WILKESBORO Eldridge Boys Offer No Tes timony in Alleged Rob bery Case BROTHER IS IMPROVING At a preliminary hearing held Thursday morning at Wilkesboro for Hasten and Bill Eldridge, of Elkin, on various charges grow ing out of an alleged robbery of a Wilkes county filling station a week and a half ago, Bill Eldridge was placed under a $1,500 peace bond for alleged threats against Fred Jolly and Theodore Mayber ry, and $1,000 on the robbery and other counts. Hasten Eldridge, who at the time of the events which led to his arrest was under parole from the state prison, was not allowed bond. Neither of the Eldridge boys took the stand at the hearing and their story of the events at Fred’s Place was not learned. Bill Eld ridge had not made bond at last reports. Dan Eldridge, brother of the two young men who was critical ly injured at the time his broth ers were arrested when he was crushed beneath the rear wheels of a heavy oil truck, was reported by Hugh Chatham hospital here to be slowly improving. B. & L. Authorized To Sell War Bonds The Elkin-Jonesville Building & Loan Association has been named an authorized agent by the Federal Reserve Bank to sell United States War Bonds. Under this authorization, the local association has the same status as The Bank of Elkin and the Postoffice in U» sale of the war securities. 4 Pursuit Leader Col. Robert Seott of Macon, Ga., who has been assigned to command the American army’s first pursuit planes in China. Colonel Scott is 34 years old, and a former West Pointer. W. A. DARNELL DIES SUDDENLY Well - Known Elkin Man Stricken At His Home Tuesday Afternoon FUNERAL RITES TODAY William Arthur Darnell, 52, well known and esteemed citizen of this city, passed away at Hugh Chatham Memorial hospital at 4:45 Wednesday morning from a brief critical illness. Mr. Darnell was stricken suddenly Tuesday afternoon about 4 o’clock at his home in North Elkin, and died only a few hours later. He had complained of not feeling well earlier in the day and had left his post at Chatham Manufactur ing company. He was sitting in the yard at his home when he was stricken. Mr. Darnell was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Darnell and had spent his entire life in Elkin and this vicinity. He was a member of the Elkin Valley Bap tist church and for several years had been a member of the board of deacons of the church. He had been a valued employee of the Chatham Manufacturing com pany for 30 years. He was a member of the Elkin Junior Or der. Mr. Darnell was twice married, first to Miss Pansy Smith and af (Continued on last page) JULY 17 NAMED AS MAJOR DAY Retailers to Observe It As “National Heroes Day” in Bond Drive TO SELL STAMPS, BONDS July 17 has been set as the big day in the “Retailers tor Victory” drive now under way in Elkin stores and in all other retail stores throughout the nation, which is to continue throughout July with a national goal of one billion dol lars in War Bond and Stamp sales. „ On July 17, the Treasury De partment has requested retailers to put forth a special effort to sell bonds and stamps, and every lo cal merchant is urged to join in the campaign wholeheartedly and do his utmost to push the sale of the war securities. This special day will be observed as “American Heroes Day,” and every stamp and bond sold will honor the many brave men now serving in the nation’s armed forces. TIRES MAY BE REQUISITIONED BYGOVERNMENT National Welfare Comes First, FDR Says AT PRESS CONFERENCE Would Strip Every Auto in Nation if War Conditions Warranted BELIEVES IN PEOPLE Washington, July 7.—With the flat statement that the national welfare must come first, President Roosevelt said today he may have to requisition every automobile tire in the United States if world conditions grow worse. He conceded at a press confer ence that the gasoline rationing rubber shortage problems are in extricably intermingled and that efforts to solve either separately had made little headway. But he said he was attempting to solve both in an effort to save the na tion as a whole and he was firm in his statement that neither problem would be permitted to hamper the war effort — not even if tire requisitioning becomes necessary. He believed the people are ready to make any sacrifice nec essary. It still is too early for a de cision on the necessity of nation wide gasoline rationing as a rub ber conservation measure, he said, although the current rubber salvage has reachedsa point where the government is beginning to find out where it stands. BRYAN TO HEAD SALVAGE DRIVE Government to Seek All Kinds of Junk to Aid War Effort TO FORM COMMITTEE A. O. Bryan, of'Elkin, has been named as chairman to head a Salvage Committee here whose duty it will be to take part and direct Elkin’s effort in the gener al nation-wide drive for junk that is needed for war. This general salvage drive is to get under way later this month and will be announced with a pro gram of national advertising that will be carried in practically every newspaper in the United States. Sponsored by the Bureau of In dustrial Conservation of the War Production board, the salvage program will seek to round up materials of many kinds, includ ing old scrap iron and steel and other metals, rubber, rags, Manila rope, burlap bags, cooking greases, etc., all badly needed in the war effort. The committee to work with Mr. Bryan will be formed shortly and full details will be announced. Junk useful in the war effort may be sold to junk dealers or given to a charity. Waste cooking fat, when saved until a pound or more has been collected, may be dispos ed of through local meat dealers under present plans. It was pointed out that al though the production of steel in America is higher than that of the rest of the world combined, unless at least 6,000,000 addition al tons of scrap steel is uncover ed immediately, the full rate of production cannot be attained or increased; the necessary tanks guns and ships cannot be produc ed. A feature of the salvage pro gram will be a Junk Rally, the date of which is to be announced later, according to present plans. More Soldiers Are Hurled Into Battle By German Generals LATE NEWS IN BRIEF STATE ASHEVILLE, July 7—Bishop William Newman Ainsworth, 70, a Methodist circuit rider’s son who became one of the de nomination’s leaders, died of a heart ailment here today. He came here yesterday from his Macon, Ga., home to spend the summer and died at Vanderbilt hotel. His wife and a son, Mal colm Ainsworth, secretary of the Asheville chamber of com merce, were with him. The body will be returned to Macon for funeral and burial arrang ed for Thursday. Bishop Ains worth was a strong: advocate of Methodist church union when the matter came before the southern branch of the church and was approved in 1939. He retired in 1938 before the for mal vote of unification. NATIONAL WASHINGTON, July 7. — Secrecy shrouding the trial of the eight nazi saboteurs before a special military commission deepened to mystery as one of the U-boat landed spies, George John Dasch, was granted a special army defense counselor. Col. Carl L. Ristine, an official of the inspector general’s office, confirmed that he had been assigned to defend Dasch and confessed the rea sons for this extra-ordinary procedure were rather puzzling to him. “There must have been a conflict of interests,” Colonel Ristine said slowly, adding that he wondered himself why he was chosen to defend the con fessed axis saboteur. NEW YORK, July 7.—Strik ing to “put the bund out of business,” the federal govern ment today announced indict ment of 29 German-American bund leaders on charges of conspiring to defeat purposes of the selective service act and to violate the alien registration act. If convicted, they face maximum penalties of five years imprisonment and $10, 000 fine on the selective service charge, and two years impris onment and $10,000 fine on the alien registration charge. From the State and Nation INTEKJNATIOJNAL VALLETTA, Malta, July 7.— Royal Air Force fighters de stroyed 24 enemy warplanes during the last 24 hours, the RAF reported in a special an nouncement tonight. In the last six days of intensified axis air raids 41 enemy aircraft have have been shot down. The axis lost 15 planes in three at tacks yesterday and nine in two raids this morning. Anti aircraft gunners also lifted , a deadly barrage, using what was described unofficially as Am erican shells, each of which produced a series of minor ex plosions after the major burst. LONDON, July 7. — Maj. Gen. Carl (Toughie) Spaatz, a flying general who was a hero of the fledgling American air force in the world war and who piloted the “Question Mark” to its historic endurance record in 1929, has been appointed com mander in chief of the United States army air forces in the European theater of war. Gen eral Spaatz, a Pennsylvania redhead who has been an army career man for 32 of his 51 (Continued on last page) SOVIETS DENY BRIDGEHEADS ON RIVER DON Widen Salients West of Strategic Towns ARTILLERY MOVED UP Hun Losses Are Reported Heavy in Lives and Mechanical Equipment AIM TOWARD VORONEZH Moscow, July 8. — The Ger mans’ relentless offensive toward the River Don gained momentum today as th§y threw in additional masses of men and machines and widened their salients west of strategic Voronezh and south west of Stary Oskol. The latest Soviet advices said the enemy still was storming the approaches to the river, but they did not confirm the establishment of bridgeheads, let alone the cap ture of Voronezh, which the Ger mans claimed yesterday. The front-line correspondent of Izvgstia, organ of the Soviet supreme council, said all evidence pointed to the German belief that this was one of the most de cisive battles of the war, and that the Nazis were sparing nothing that might endanger its success. While uniterruptedly pushing forward their wedge west of Voro nezh, through which runs the last important rail link between Mos cow and the oil of the Caucasus, the Germans took a series of pre cautionary moves to forestall at tacks on their flanks. Artillery Moved Up They moved up heavy artillery immediately behind their tanks and kept up a terrific bombard ment from the edges of the sa lient. They simultaneously at tacked from their flanks. But the German losses were heavy. In the last two days, in fighting on a river bank, dis patches said, the Germans lost 200 tanks. Soviet air reconnais sance yesterday reported that 10 trainloads of damaged German tanks and armored vehicles were moving westward for repair. The strongest blows of the Ger man offensive were directed — for the fourth straight day — at the central sector before Voro nezh, although the entire battle field was more than 100 miles long. Dispatches described a “mam moth cemetery of German men and machines.” ELKIN’S SHARE IS $2,740,000 Figure Represents Share of National Debt on Per Capita Basis AS OF JULY 1, 1942 (Tribune Washington Bureau) Washington, D. C., July 7.—El kin’s share of the national debt on a per capita basis was approx imately $2,740,000 on July 1, be ginning of the government’s 1943 fiscal year. Twelve months from now, El kin’s share of the national debt will be approximately $4,565,000, on the basis of present official es timates. Of that total, it is estimated Elkin residents will in effect owe themselves something over $502, 500, the amount they are expected to hold, a year from now, in war bonds and stamps.