if -;,: rr::v?-v . PAGE EIGHT THE JOHNSTONIAN -sun; : 1 1 ii i . ... v t ' f SOPTI and FJlEtM f, ' in rrrnnTinis C( ftaparad by OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION rai-X NEED FOR MANPOWER CONTINUES Although the United States Army has reached its planned for peak strength of 7,700,000 persons,. need 75,00 to 100,000 men monthly the War Department, and the Navyffhis fish will be available for con Department said it would need 400, 000 additional personnel by Septem ber 1 to get the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard up to peak strength of 3,500,000. Meanwhile, the National Selective Service System has aban doned the war unit plan for determin ing agricultural deferments. Provi sions concerning a registrant's agri cultural occupation or endeavor that will govern are whether he is neces sary, whether he is regularly engaged in it, whether that occupation or en deavor is necessary to the war effort and whether a replacement can be ob JOBS FOR DISCHARGED VETERANS For men discharged from any of the United States armed services, a summary of job opportunities in 114 major industrial centers will be plac ed in nearly every local U. S. Em ployment Service office, the War Manpower Commission announces. These job summaries give informa tion on types of jobs, scheduled hours of work, hourly wage rates, avail ability of housing, cost of living, and the adequacy of community facilities such as schools, hospitals, and trans portation. The summary will be re vised bi-monthly and will indicate the expected labor demand six months in advance. or 2 boxes for 25 cents, at chain stores and super markets . . . Retail prices of fresh dressed halibut were recently reduced for consumers in eastern States, and for the first time in almost a year adequate supplies of sumers "living west of the Rocky mountains. , . . Prices for used auto motive parts usable without rebuild ing must not exceed 75 per cent of list price for the parts when new, and for parts which must be rebuilt before being usable, must not exceed 30 per cent of the original list price. The War Shipping Administration says: Arrangements are being made to enable America's 125,000 merchant seamen to vote in wartime elections. , . . Manufacturers' have been granted licenses to produce authorized serv ice flags and lapel buttons which soon will be on sale to accredited families of American Merchant Ma rine officers and men. SPECIAL GASOLINE RATIONS Full-time paid employees of farm organizations operating to increase food production are eligible for pre ferred mileage under gasoline ration ing, the OPA announced. Their or ganizations must be chartered by the United States, or by a state and have a membership of at least 100 persons, the majority of whom aro farmers. Also, qualified Victory gardeners again will be granted special gasoline rations for up to 300 miles of travel to and from their plots this summer. BEHIND THE SCENES t ' : Vkfw .. ( Ga a i -"T ' 1 " - r- - t . . i I A A 111 tf TS ,V 0 I'V :wwnV th f VI 11-14. 1ITj iftrHV -w . sun- Calcium 1U0 1 ,.., ..,,.,....,..,. v VltaminG 76 fT , "" ' ? rl Pbsphorm 70 TJ - ' Vitamin A AA fi """j fi ' vitamin o jj,,! i j JmT , Vitamin C 30 3 f Iron 16 f , I IS WdcuiL meal. 1 te r 1 First their tninil Weir I "f' r nilirv! n ntaff wnn in tht l hptr ntg H. VnaaniioT in haSlu. t wero ready at any moment W Egypt, to be pilgrims In .the neas. '.Thpir icft had nhoei oni is, they were j hot runaway b! They were . consciously sons ofi-. Only free men went about hdaer vant were barefooted. : , All the household,- representing JiT type local churches, tormed togethet "the whole, assembly of the congregari ,ton of Israel" (v. 6). There are many Churches,: but v all thdfce funder thf i mood and gathered around Christ as their eenteiy. form one. Church. , Hare Wb hav Involo nirfilrfl' nf the church. Do rei today answer, to Mim aescription i i A 17. TI.e J Ute col i 11 in I. r t xes tor r of 1941, according to i by tLe Krewing In-; uon's North Carolina ; f i v . r monu s amountea to $2- ? ' - January;. X "7t174S,;- :eb4ry and 7 '1,4 IC 5 March. ii5 vuiaia iiiti.i' j voi.uuiions ironi. ' l!X sources on -lur incla ling crowd - . D tl J .-J t: t . ' . v nnu nu uuo aim uifit 3. . , 1 N f, in American Business By JOHN CRADDOCK New York. April 17 With over 100,000 service men being discharged monthly from the arned forces, in dustry and local communities are showing . real progress in helping veterans get back their old jobs and into the groove of civilian life. The present Selective Service Act pro vides that upon completion of mili tary service, employees are to be re stored to former positions or to posi tions of like seniority, status and pay unless an employer's circum stances have so changed that it is im possible or unreasonable for him to do so. This much is law. However, many communities and business con cerns, anxious to do as much for vet erans as possible, are giving addition al personal aid. In various leading industrial com panies this aid often takes the form of correspondence with the men while, they are in the service, placement ac cording to tested ability and physical condition, refresher training and ! orientation classes, and periodic in terviews concerning progress after I nlsrompnt CVmimunitv nlans. in most i dreds of them without finding bene- caseg sp0nS0red by a local industry, ficial results in any case. the chamber of Commerce, or the ! (Committee for Economic Develop- MERCHANT MARINE CALLS Lent usually beg!n with a complete RADIOMEN survey of jobs in the community At least 500 first and second clas.y available to veterans. Then a Service commercial radio telegraphers. lich- men-s Placement Advisory Board or sed by the Federal Communications other similar organization is set up Commission, are needed for mechant tn arrange for interviews for muster- "Milk does more for the body man any otner 100a ana does it more cheaply." That statement Dy the Bureau of Home Eco nomics of the U. S. Department or Agriculture is forcefully illustrated in this National .Dairy Council chart showing the high percentage of each of ine daily iood elements which are provided by a quart of milK and the other foods neces sary to complete daily dietary requirements. The average cost of a quart of miik delivered to the home in the United States is 15.1 cents. The average cost of other foods needed to complete an economi cal diet and provide the balance of the nutrients needed daily is about 44 cents. Rising food costs together with the necessity of maintaining the best possible wartime diets are now giving added emphasis to the economy of milk. The foods making up the meals used as a basis for this chart are as follows: Breakfast: fruit, whole-grain cereal With milk and sugar, Whole-wheat toast with butter, milk, and coffee with cream and sugar. Lunch: macaroni with tomato sauce, whole-wheat bread with butter. fresh apple, oatmeal cookies and milk. Dinner: meat stew with vegetables, cole slaw, whole wheat bread with butter and jam, coffee with, cream and sugar, junket and milk. eral year? ago, about 20 per cent of Pullman space is still unoccupied, with ticket cancellation failures ac counting for a substantial portion of this figure." TEST MOTOR FUEL "DOPES" Shortage of gasoline, says the De partment of Commerce, has led mo torists to use fuel "dopes", reputed to increase mileage and otherwise im prove the automobile operation. The Bureau of Standards has tested hun- J THINGS TO COME "Lapkins," hemmed oblongs of cloth that are said to fit the lap better and slip to the floor less frequently, will shortly make their aebut in restaurants Electronics in food procession will make possible eggs charged with vita mins A and D and with uniform yolks, milk and cream that can be kept fresh for months before use, rye bread with texture and lightness ap proaching that of white, and chick- marine service within the nejft three months, the War ShiDDingAdminis tration announced. Qualified men snoald telegraph, collect, at once to U. S. Merchant Marine, Washington. D. C. Registrants will he placed on active pay status as soon a? accepted and must attend a Navy school on wartime procedure for one to three weeks. ed out servicemen business men. with the city's MARITIME COMMISSION REPORTS Maritime Comm;ssion sbinvards ROOM FOR MORE The Truman Committee of the Senate recently found that Pullman space, which every one knows is being given the most intense use in history, is still not being fully utilized. This may sur prise travelers who have seen the heavy passenger loads the trains aie moving today, but the Committee's findings have now been corroborated by The Pullman Company itself. The delivered 410 ships of 4 115 951 dead- I aer reports that if cancellations of Weight tons during the first quarter of 1944, the commission announced. Liberty ships continued to dominate production but there was a growing tonnage of military and other fast type vessels, including the new Vic tory ship. In March, 152 merchant ships were built. ROUND - UP The War Food Administration says: The public should consume more eggs, at least through mid-May. to take care of an anticipated record production amounting to at least 350 eggs for each civilian during 1944 . . About 70 per cent of the 1944-45 sup ply of dehyrated vegetables will he allocated to U. S. war uses, 23 per cent to Great Britain and Russia, 5 per Cent to U. S. civilians, 1 per cent to liberated areas and 1 per cent for other exports. WPB says that: A "farm" is a property used primarily for the rais ing of crops, livestock, dairy prod ucts, poultry, etc., for market, and on such property $1,000 or less may be spent for construction, including the farm house, without approval . , . . In view of the continued critical shortage of pulpwood for paper and paperboard, farmers, as well as every full-time woodcutter, should continue to cut as much pulpwood as possible , . . . Some electric alarm clocks and 1,200,000 war alarm clocks (many for military needs) will be produced and distributed during the second quarter ef 1944 ... A cut of 10 per cent in civilian leather for shoe repairs and IS per cent for new shoes has been made for 1944 . . . Production of cut lery made of stainless steel has been permitted and products should be available at retail counters in three or four months. OPA says that: Consumers buying meat directly from farmers may con tinue to use the red stamps, A8 thru M8, plus the next 18 stamps in Book Four . . . The Over-all 1944 retail prices of " early onions will be some what above those of 1943, but below the current "going" prices . . . The retail ceiling price for book matches with non-commercial designs on . the cover is 14 cents per box of 60 books at independent stores, and 13 cents reserved space were more effectively made by ticket holders, "several hun dred thousand additional passengers per year" might be carried1! A substantial number of accommo dations are going unoccupied because thousands of travelers who fail to make trips at the last minute either do not cancel their reservations or do not do so early enough to permit re sale of the space. "In 1940, when Pullman delivered a little more than eight billion pas senger miles, it would have been con sidered unbelievable that with practi cally no additional equipment we would be able to deliver 26 billion passenger miles in 1943," a company spokesman says. "And yet although Pullman is already far beyond theo retical capacity limits estimated scv- TRE-HARVEST PREPAREDNESS Farmers w-ho will need between 45 and 60 million more wooden contain ers for their 1944 crops than they used last year are being urged by the nation's leading buyer of fresh fruits and vegetables to begin accu mulating used containers or run the risk of not getting their produce to market at harvest time. Harvey A. Baum, head of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company's produce buying operations, tells us that many mills, hit by lumber an-i labor short age, have abandoned container manu facture. Meanwhile, growers are striving to meet government demands for an acreage increase of 10 per cent. He advises farmers to build used container stockpiles, distribu tors to intensify their salvage ef forts, retailers to exercise greater care in opening containers, and con sumers to return to dealers all boxes and baskets used for home deliveries. Only such cooperation can relieve the shortage caused by heavy military demands and growing civilian needs for lumber. the United States as the 9,118 which rolled off assembly lines last month, C. E. Wilson, vice chairman of the War Production Board, indicated re cently. The peak is believed to have been reached because production will be concentrated more on heavy fight ing planes and bombers and less on the light training ships. WEEKLY SERMON The First Picture Of The Church By Max I. Reich, D. D., Director of the Jewish Missions Course Moody Bible Institute, Chicago SHOOTING ENGINES Shotgun shells which "shoot" engines into starting are now being substituted for storage batteries to start air plane motors during testing. The shotshell, fired electrically by an in genious fuse assembly located in the head of the shell, starts the motor with a single powerful impulse. This new use for the humble shotshell has just been revealed by the Winchester Repeating Arms division of the West ern Cartridge Company, which is manufacturing cartridges of this special type. BITS O' BUSINESS WPB allot ments of leather together with plas tic and composition rubber soles will be adequate to fill consumer shoe needs during 1944 if careful rationing is continued . . . Wrapping paper and paper bags available to civilians will be materially reduced in the next few months . . . Never again may as many warplanes be manufactured in I$n iTnnouneement Koudly announce that wm nave been elected dealer in I II tnu area lor tke nationally iaraoua IUI v cnHHt.HtriM fill . Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS I Tae traditional Quality of Keefrtaka . I uphold In every way tne kifth stand- I arda tnat kave oeen aaaociated witk - I talis store since Its founding. : IUI . e cordially Invite your (nswo- , 1 I tion . , , no obligation o course. ' IJ Lansley'si Jewelers SELMA, N. C. . ... .. I Ill I A In Exodus 12 we read the instruo- tions given to Israel concerning the first Passover. It is here the idea of the Church first appears. It was a house entered through a door which had the blood of an unblemished Iamb sprinkled on the lintel and on the two side posts. The hyssop of repentance and faith had applied the blood. There is no condemnation to those who are in such a house, sheltered by the blood. What was inside this house? First, the roasted lamb. It was an unbroken lamb. This means the Church needs the whole Christ - divine, yet human; human, yet divine. The lamb was roasted with fire, "which typified Christ passing through the holy fire of the wrath of God against our sin. The blood of Christ is over the door for protection. The person of Christ is the feast for those inside. Second, unleavened bread was there. This means separation from all evil, in doctrine, in behavior, and in one's associations. Third, bitter herbs were there. This refers to self-judgment; no self ad miration or self-adultation, but a humble estimate of oneself. How did those inside the house ap- 1 m A . " T Aft'' , if " ' f 9. ' O ' J'-ifi y '1 "'if" a doc !,a it, - t IPIliiODiiavS Careful Dri n rivers V r selma;tx v t WA t- I ' ' - V. Repairing of All Kinds of Cars ASpepialt, All $Vork Guaranteed Gulf Gas and Gulf Pride Oil At AU Tints ' "WORLD'S FINEST MOTOR, OIL" Open from 8 til 9 on Sunday and all day during the weeky Your Patronage Is Always Appreciated ' ' ; , WARWICK'S GARAGE V. SELMA, N. C1 or FAIMT mifiiiTHis aiid :mms r) be smart. hje u:,:iIIK;':., PAINT THE PERFECT WAY 7ITM STANDARD INCE 1 ; -; Superior Finishes for Interior cr.d tnicric Let us contrcct yenr cc"!:b Erfiit ..Dun EM 1 rnf 1 t " ; V... .. . .