■n-j"-. I PcL e i v;o THE HYDE COUNTY HERALD, SWAN QUARTER, N. C. THURSDAY, FEB. 15, 1945 Hyde County Herald , oUR DEMOCRACY by Mat PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Ai 5V\/AN QUAR 1 ER. 1 ^ "" NORTH CAROLINA. BY TIMES PRINTING CO., !nc. {U FEBRUARY TWELFTH FEBRUARY TWENTY-SECOND THOS. E. SPENCER i Editor j 5 Ekitered as Second CLiss Matter at the Postoffice at .Swan Quarter. N. C Subscription Kates; tine Year S2.; Six Months $1; Three Months 60c MEMORIALS 4to w, great., Vcl. VI THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15 ,1945 No. 24 ':^r ,'\\\ \\\' LOAFERS AND HOARDERS The Mead Committee has made public glaring examples of loafing on the jdb and labor hoarding. j-L * I t- L Stories of a similar nature from unofficial sources have ^ 1 hat mAKCS long been common knowledge. Private citizens can recount from their own experience, disgraceful examples of delib- rate loafing on war jobs. Many conscientious workers have the end,d3irc fo rV Abraham Lincoln- ‘*Lct us h&ve f&ith and in that ^ faitk let us to quit war jobs because they could not stand the waste of time they were required to endure. The answer to criticism of labor loafing and labor hoarding ^ is always, “We have produced the goods.*’ That may be true, tout at what a price How much more could have been pro duced otherwise! We have now reached the point where both (money and man-hours are growing scarcer. Let us hope that if the Mead Committee is not able to penalize or punish labor loafers or labor hoarders, that revelations which it can make will arouse the nation and shame the offenders into a cor rection of their ways. o » do our duty AS we understand (f AMERICANS K7 George WASHINGTON- W: I can promise, lli Y_ These, be the ; ^ Iniep-it^ and firmness are all ,,, oouatie lon^ or neper fail me. ** W 9 w w Cure> HOMER, ^CROY (gW.N.U. SERVICE CHAPTER XIV With the secrecy of youth, I said I nothing to anyone. Even when Ma ; asked me how I liked the city boys I and girls I said. All right. I had no I friends, yet I liked people and yearned desperately to make friends. every penny they coiild see. jcTvery. body would try to take advantage oi me. But he never mentioned wom en. And Ma did only once, and that was when we were alone for a mo ment on the depot platform. “Ho mer, I am going to pray you won’t have anything to do with bad girls." Pa stood holding the telescope and I wore shoes, except in stormy ' stood with her arm around me weather when I wore boots, as I did The train thundered in. W' \\' .v\\' //V WAR TEACHES FIRE PREVENTION “Fire protection in the war effort has not been restricted to the work at established posts, camps, and stations,” says W. E. Mallalieu, of the National Board of Fire Underwriters. “Fire Fighting has, and is continuing to play an important role in the theatre of operations. The urgent need for trained fire fighters oversea/ was' recognized early. In response, for example, the Army engineers established a school in this country to train men in fire fighting and in the use of the latest firedighting equipment. Since the invasion of Africa,! more than 6,000 men have undergone this specialized training. I “Few persons in our sheltered home life in the United States realize all that has been accomplished in this connec tion. The record of low fire loss in the theatre of operations is one which has already proved the value of such schooling. This training will have an effect on fire prevention and fire protection in civilian life. The very fact that thousands of AND TO THE AMERICAN IDEALS OF FAITH-COURAGE-INTESRITV- HUMANITY on the farm One morning, as I was saddling Dave, he bumped my foot. That day at school my foot was sore and I quietly slipped off my boot. “Colonel’’ Cox, who sat behind me, saw that I had it off and got it away from me. In a few minutes the teacher told me to come to the board and explain some thing. I said I didn’t know how, but she told me to come and try. I j limped up, one boot on, one boot > off ... a humiliating moment. People were fascinatihg to me. But I had seen very few, only our relatives and neighbors; now sud denly there was a whole new world. I listened to the students recite, in- i trigued far more by them than by what they were saying. I would discover some item of interest about one of the students; the next day I would discover something else. Ev ery day I added to my collection of tacts about each student. No longer were they a formless horde, all lined up against me, each was an indi- Ma kissed me and whispered, “Don’t forget what I said” Pa handed up the telescope. “■Write whenever you can, Homer.” I leaned over and looked back and there they stood as far as I could COAST FOLK SHOULD PLAN FOR A GARDEN ‘but if properly cared for will furnish a Ipt of fruit for family use that ydu would not have if men will return to their homes with pictures of the tragedy February Time to Get Seed and ^°The°couitf agent’s ffi brought dbout by fire impressed upon their minds, while '; Begin Planting; Good idea To , special^'ass'iLnL O'ther thousands will have basic knowledge of how to combat Grow Some Fruit i neighborhood that would ! like to cooperate in getting each W'e snouid make fire prevention our motto in our daily 3vill be wise in growing a garden chard. life. All communities Can pull together toward the control of '*5®cause the food — th. common enamy, tire-.Which is never licked. Let us all S"he Hpply common sense in avoiding unnecessary hazards., war. Feib^uary is the month for starting gardens, and now is a CIGARETTES COST MORE THAN ELECTRIC SERVICE ; wTbeTn. hand'^as'^^eyd. SLADESVILLE NEWS My problem began as soon as 1 arrived. What was I going to do with my telescope while I went to look for a job? There must have been a checkroom, but I did not know what it was lor. I solved this problem which had suddenly jumped up before me, by looking around for a grocery store, tor a grocery store was a sort of club for farmers; where they met and visited and left their packages and parcels and chil dren. I found one and asked *a man, who seemed to be the owner, if I could leave my telescope. He stud ied me a moment, then said I could if I wanted to. I marched to the rear, as we always did In our own grocery store, and left It among the onlf shiiiie I wasn't Ccked. Not that, but I would scoop his A man was sorting letters shoving them into boxes. glimpse of want-ad answers. “Where will I find the city ® tor?” I asked professionally- j “ ‘The city editor?’ ’’ he reP®® “The city editor,’’ I said flr® “His office is upstairs.” 1 stared in astonishment, got there, for there were only persons in the office. No green ® shade. But I didn’t know wh® I wanted to work on such a paper, or not, for the other offi®® been humming with activity. ^ T want to speak to the chy * tor.” A man stopped running hiS typ®" writer and looked at me curioP “Do you want a job?” “Yes, sir.” “Come back at one-thirty. vidual; each had traits and charac- boxes and barrels. TTien 1 started teristics a good deal like my Knabb up the street to get my job. neighbors. ’The discovery just abont floored me. I began to feel a bit more at home and made a few shy advances, so I had never read a Horatio Alger Jr. story and, so far as I know, I had never heard the name, so I had no false ideas of what a young man stimulatmg were people to me. Lit-1 must face. All I knew was that tie by little I accumulated a few i I was going to get a job and nothing 1,1 . 1... , T . going to keep me from it I asked the direction of the news paper offices, and started north up the street. I saw a streetcar, but I 1 crept down the stairs, beglP®*®j to get the hang of the thing- had known there were evening P pers and morning papers, but o Miss Ann Green of Norfolk is spending a short while with her narents, Mr. and Mrs. R. W The American public spends almost 50 per cent more on May peas, "spring salad croip-s, (jj.g0p cigarettes than on electric service. According to figures nub- carrots, beets, radishes, onions, „ ", „ , , lished recently by the Securities and Exchange Commission, rn^Ca^aje^ vlsi^nr ^ " txie gross revenues of the six largest cigaretite manufadurers pianl^ should be put out. I Hu^h ^'ortescue formerly of in th United States in 1943 totaled $1,553,032,000. During the H you have been having trou-' this place, who now is a Washing- same period the revenues received by all American electric af-|ton re^dent, is quite ill at his ,utilities privately owned and publicly-owned—^for residen- put out sets to use for green! ^'I'^ery. tial and farm service totaled $1,100,000,000, or nearly half a onions and plant seed of River- Whitfield is visiting Mr, billion dollars less than the receipts of the cigarette manu- Spanish to use as dry Onions. Those grown from seed ■ * I will keep better than the onions O j grown from sets. You are urged to use V-mail when writing friends and rCla-- have a good sup- +;-..Qo XT-~ -1 A . , Piy of home grown fruits, make fives overseas. V-mail saves cargo space. A single reel con-1 a start on that this season :byput- Itaining 1,800 letters fits into a three and one-quarter inch space shipping carton weighing seven ounces. That many letters weigh 45 pounds. ting out strawberries, boysentoer- ries, grapes, pears, plums, apples, and peaches. For the home orch ard the following is suggested: 100 plants each of Blakemore North Carolina women were urged today by Governor R.! Massey strawiberries. Gregg Cherry to give fullest support to the current campaign! f B^ncr^rTpesr Concord and to enlist 105 women for training in the Women’s Arrhy Corps! Niagara. to serve as medical and surgical technicians in Army General! ^ Scuppemong and 1 James or Hospitals which are nmv receiving over 30,000 war casualties, ^^2“ plunS^TDamson, 1 Methley monthly from the battlefronts. FARMER SENCOURAGED TO GROW SOME STRAWBERRIES or Abundance. 3 or 4 apple trees. 6 peach trees. Hundreds of communities in North Carolina -will specialize in the growing o.f small fruits this year and the strawiberry is the favorite of such fruits in most of the communities. ' "^^6 above assortment will not ha-i o tVi • 1 aro ina a rea y g great amount of space j W. Green have their plans under way, ac-; ' and Mrs. J. M. Credle at their home in Sladesville. P. C. Simmons of Fairfield was a visitor here Friday. F. V. Harris and Miss Eva Mc Millan of the FSA office of Swan Quarter were business visitors here Friday. Miss Lantha Sawyer is sipend ing a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Sawyer. R. W. Green, Lee A. Sawyer and Statz Cullifer were Belhaven visitors Sautrday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter M-cHar- ney of Norfolk visited relatives here this weekend. Mrs. Julia Williams returned to her home Friday after spending some time fwith her daughter, Mrs. R. W. Green. Miss Lois Ange spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. R. friends, like a tree making rings I pulled up out of the areaway and began taking my lunch to the school- yard and eating it on a bench. Some times some of the very boys I had slid down the areaway to avoid would rush through their lunch at home to come and sit on tlie bench ' with me. | A change had taken place. But I | did not know why. I became acquainted with a farm ! girl from another part of the county. It seemed to me she was wonderful and I began to “go" with her. I knew her father owned more land than mine, but I didn’t realize how important this was going to be. One day, when I happened to mention that my father owned a quarter section, she said, “I know that.” I was surprised, as I knew I hadn’t mentioned it before. So I asked her how she knew it. “I looked it up In the plat book.” ' My ardor fell off, and a young man whose father owned far more land than mine succeeded, later, in > winning her. Another example of I the aristocracy of land. j As I plowed and harrowed and j hayed, I thought how wonderful it would be to go to St. Joseph and get! a job as a reporter. The same feeling of doubt and lack of self- confidence laid hold of me that I had had when 1 had first decided to go to high school. What if I should fail! Yet I did want desperately to work on a "city” paper. I wandered around the teeUng lonely but confident N® spoke to anyone else. Hardly horses on the street. At one-thirty I climbed the » again. The place seemed alive people. The man who had been ning the typewriter silently P® jgsl a finger at a man sitting at a j and I marched over and wanted to go to wo^k for hint. T® God he could hear! Finally, when I was through’ ^ said, “How much money do ' want?” I said, “I’ll leave that to you- Maryvllle that would have be® challenge for the man to be ous. But I was to find city were different. j “I can pay you $9 a w®®^^en told him I would take it. ‘ ^ can you go to work?” “As soon as I can get a pi®®® Uve.” I found a rooming house and on a streetcar and started for to grocery store. The telescope was there. I hadn’t been in the city long enough to realize Pa knew he was talking about. wba‘ I took my telescope to my rooib- I was shocked, after I had tnad® was all arrangements, to find there _ ^ a toilet inside the house instead being in the place 1 was accustoin ^ to. What a terrible roaring h h®® , It seemed vulgar and I felt ashan® every time I slunk into it. Well, I’d have to make uP toy mind to get used to city way®- I was given a “run” of the takers and the YMCA which ^ the first I knew about that org®''g*j tion. A place for young men. "What is it you want?” he asked I had graduated from high school, ! * ®”ished. but the world I knew was the Croy | wasn’t surprised. Hadn’t I seen one farm and our town. But how thor- | in Omaha? oughly I knew then, our neighbors and the people I came in contact I found the office of the paper. T u J u A , ' w’hich is now the St. Joseph News- w.thl I had been out of the county : and walked H. R. Niswon'ger, in charge of Horticultural Extension at State College, is s'ponsoring this activ ity. In the counties the farm and -home agents are giving direct supervision, and vocational agri cultural teachers, rural neig-hlbor- hood leaders, and representatives of all agriicultural agencies are c oiperating. Each neighborhood ccnducts its awn project. The neighborhood leaders, both V lite and Negro, select some It rchant or other centrally lo cated person through whom all 8 orders are pooled. Every fam- i in the community is encour- j ; ed to set from 100 to 200 straw- I f. "ry plants, where this is the j c. )sen fruit, and the county and ] ; L .ne agents supply the neces-1 f -y \ information for fertilizing, | tuitivating, and consenvinig the' crop. Several meetings are held during the first year so that lo cal proiblems connected with the production and handling of the crop may ibe worked out. ■With the rationing of fruits, Niswonger says that the growing of some such small fruits as strawiberries for a specialty, with all the families in a given area cooperating, offers the very best of mpot;in« the situation and ij:.-u.in.g uu n ndeqi’Tc diet. cording to Niswonger. Some in dividuals have expanded their 1 growing of strawberries from a | few' rows in the garden to as, much as half an acre. Some go j so far as to predict that North I Carolina may one day be known as the ‘‘Strawberry State.” FULL SPEi-D ANEADi , , J Ai. , , A ■ 1 ' ‘wain.cu boldly in, for I rV n K ^ had that all studied out, and asked fThn, f I?" ' businesslike where I could find L! T ‘he city editor. Pretty soor, I found NORTH CAROLINA MAY BE THE "FIFTH STATE” IN MANY WAYS but it’s a poor T *5^ m In Number of Hospital Bed* Per 1,000 People Why not ask your Legislator to Support the proposed State-Wide plan few MORE DOCTORS-MORE HOSPITALS MORE INSURANCE mi r the other boys or girls had been any farther. One day one of the boys told me he was going to Oregon on a visit. I thought of it all the way back on Dave. When I told Ma about it in an awed tone, she laughed and said, “He means Oregon, Missouri.” And that was what he had meant, a distance of about thirty miles. It hurt my father when I told him I wanted to go to St. Joseph and myself standing by the desk of a man wearing a green eyeshade. It seemed to me that every man in tlie office was staring at me and burning with curiosity. Not very far from the truth, as I can now believe, for I was tali and lanky and thin as a rail—six feet two inches—with an overbit upper jaw and a large nose, and I was painfully ill at ease. I edged closer, for I didn’t want all the staring people to hear, and told try to get a job. Why did I want to 1 lb® baan with the green eyeshade go off and leave our good farm? It pained me to Insist, but there was that inner urge to do the kind of work I wanted to do. And Pa was pained, too. Never had a Croy, or a Sewell for that matter, wanted to leave the land. But finally he said he would not “hold out.” When we went to get the family telescope, ^there was a hole in the that I wanted a job. “What is it you want?” he asked when 1 finished. corner. A telescope, I must explain. I again imparted the confidential Information. Then he cupped his hand behind his ear, and I realized he was hard of hearing. So I had to shout at the top of my voice. He took his hand down. “Don’t need anybody. Got too was made of two pieces. The top of one fitted over the other, like a pillbox lid. Around the middle was a single leather strap, and there was a handle. Some way or other a mouse had been trapped and had gnawed its way to freedom. “I many now. I could hardly believe my ears. But I had come for that job and 1 was going to have it. So I started all over again telling’him how good I was. He took his hand down again and calmly started to read copy. Pretty soon 1 was out on the wish you didn t have to go off to the j street, shocked and unbelieving that city with a hole in your telescope,” Ma said. But I was not thinking of the hole. I would make good. I would get that job! Pa and Ma and I got in the hack and started to town along the road I had traveled four years on old Dave. As we drove .along. Pa told me how I must g Joe wa? it could have happened to me. There was another paper there, the St. Joseph Gazette. The paper Eugene Field had worked on, and Henry M. Stanley and Walter Hines Page. It was not as good a paper, and 1 knew little about it. But it W'as a newspaper. .. t'Avcv.v 4.V* — .g, they were playing pool. I was ginning to see Pa was right. i* As exciting and thrilling was. it seemed to me that w night’s work would never end. t-' hours. All my life I had got ^ early and gone to bed early- must not only stay up, but work- The first chance I had I went t see the house where Jesse was shot and stared, strangely fected, at the hole in the wall- a :nd looked at the spot on the floor wn his lifeblood had drained away- Then to the red stables where the Express had started. I thought myself, “Now I am really s®' -eing things.” But also I had seen th'®®! at Omaha when I had seen Genet ^ Nelson A. Miles with his gold sWOt Once you have your foot finnly on the spil, a little of ‘ soil sticks. I missed the old ^ I missed the people I knew. I hk Pa and Ma more now than I ®'' j had; I thought of many had done that I wished I I made resolves I’d do better w I saw tliem again. Show them more appreciation. Tell them I liked tb®^^ which had never been easy for h®® j do. No one in our neighborhood e said he “loved” anybody. That W®^ mushy. You “liked” people and J had “regard” for them. If yo® you had “high regard” for • that was just about the same as engagement. Ma! wrote twice a week. sleeping well?^ Was I getting P‘® j ty of good wholesome food? " kind of bed did I have? Was I a good boy? Then she would the family news. The price of ®®® j who was sick. Uncle Will Sewell o come up in the cart j«5 roads were muddy. The had hog cholera. Ma hoped ^ wouldn’t get down our way. Ma’s letters—always ended the sa way: “Your fathers sends regards- One day, after I had been ing about a month, I came to desk and there, on my Oliver tyP writer, was an envelope with name written in heavy pencil side was a sheet of copy paper tyP,^ written with this sentence on will „ I 1 inquired where its office was and [ nrv se in the city. St. started determinedly down the wno uould steal j^j-eet I W'" Id ww Old Green Fve- “As of Thursday, the Gazette have to dispense with your s ices (Teasn *■’”-7’ ?.n Paffp 4)