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MeCORMH K W;SSK^^ J ”■ > i ' '-‘h- - < V • • • .. v'. Ni.*-ai* * .fc'i V7 '•••fr , r ;‘*••. 'il XsP^*;^ v 9m ? ^^ 9 ^ Colored Registrants Called For Pre-la-1 duction Examination In addition to the colored reg- istrants previously listed who iite roing for pre-induction physical examination froin Local Bo^rd ’ T o. 57, Selective Service, McCor mick County, Mr. R. W. Dunlap, Chairman, announces that ; the ’-egistrants listed below will also go in the near future: Thomas Thompkins, Woodrow Martin, „ James: Archie Talbert, Fate Lane, Jr.. • )PA district director at Columbia, mnounced. This is also true' if toints are assigned to foods that, lave been at zero pbint values, he) >aid. “Sulspension orders,” Talbert ex-1 dainCd, “are necessary to protect ssefitial commodities in short sup-[ ily from diversion into- the black market. They are issued, after | searings before hearing commis- ioners • specially designated for j ;hat purposed Suspension orders which expired I .vhile the foods they covered were unrationed or had a zero point] value were not revived when ra tioning was resumed, -the director] said. '■'il V Vi r. *■ . Ration Calendar For Week of Jan. 15,1945 PROCESSED FOODS: Blue X-5, ^ T -5. Z-5, A-2, B-2. C-2, 0-2, E-2. T’-2 and G-2 (Book 4) now valid rt 10 points each. 1 The directive of tVe Economic Stabilization Director to place ceil ing prices on live - cattle should make it easier for housewives and] dealers alike to get their fair j share of all grades of beef'at fair I prices,’ E. H. Talbert, OPA district) I director at Columbia, declared.. ’ “Live cattle were the only im-j >Vrr% T-,«r™, « ^ ^ i portant basic food commodity that '-r^^ T-Tu 5 V-5, W-6 and WaS n0t under Cellin8 prlCeS -" Tal - A —— — X-5 (Book 4) now valid at 11 points each for use with tokens. SUGAR: Sugar stamps No. 34 valid now for five pounds. SHOES: Airplane stamps. No. 1, No*. 2 and No. 3 now valid. FUEL OIL: Period 4 and 5 cou pons from last Reason and Period 1. 2 and 3 coupons for current reason now valid at 10 gallons ^ach in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. GASOLINE: A-14 coupons valid through March 21. Rationing rules now require that each car * wner write his license number and state on each coupon in his possession as soon as it is issued ■him by his local rationing board. Sugar retailers v/ere cautioned that acceptance of counterfeit or expired ration coupons may re- fu^t-in’their inability to sell sugar X:r /the t duration. / E. H. Talbert, OPA district di- -rector^at Cilumbia, pointed out that under the agency’s nsw jharge-back program, sugar deal- £i*s’ inventories will be reduced in the amount of the number of in valid coupons they accept. “Deal-* ^rs who continue to accept il legal coupons will force themselves cut of business,” Talbert said. 'aS&e director pointed out that it is not necessary for a merchant to be expert in detecting counterfeit coupons. “All the storekeeper has to do is to refuse to accept loose coupons,” he declared. “Coupons properly attached in ration books issued by local boards are gen uine.** bert pointed out. “As prices of better grade animals rose and beef ceiling prices held liable, a large] percentage of choice and good grade cattle went to a minority of I slaughterers selling meat Jxt ' a- bove ceiling prices. Legitimate J slaughterers and ordinary butch- sr shops got less than their usual) share of quality beef,” he said. “Our entire program of meat] price control was in danger of breaking down. By placing ceil-j ings on live cattle it will be pos sible to hold meat prices rigidly to present ceilings,” he said. In addition to protecting the public against any increase in the retail price of meat, the program is designed to prevent any sub stantial reduction in live cattle] prices which might cut down feed ing or production. The directive becomes effective u^nuary 29. — X ILITARY orders are higher now than ever before. War Production Board estimates for the First Quarter of 1945 show pulpwood is being used faster t -' 3 than it is cut In spite of all efforts to increase pulpwood production, the-situation has never been more critical than now. o m en IN THE HURCH i iHl arti Fourier Ceiling prices for fresh straw berries, f. o. b. shipping points in -Florida, have increased for the *est of January, E. H. Talbert, dis trict OPA dii^ctor at Columbia, -announced. The new prices may result in an increase of a cent a pint in retail sales, OPA said. The higher prices were manda tory under the “disaster” clause of the Stabilization Act, which pro vides for increases when * pro ducers' yields are reduced by ad verse growing- conditions. Freez ing temperatures in Florida were -taid to have “substantially” re duced the size of the January txop. The new shipping pointy ceiling prices are: Pint, 26 3-4 cents, an increase cf 3-4 cent. Quart, 51 1-2 cents, an increase cf I 1-2 cents. Pound, 34 cents, an increase of cne cent. Rations of fuel oil in the east coast area will be held at 10 gal lons per unit for Period three, be ginning January 15, E. H. Tal- iS district director, said. The ten-^gallon unit is being maintained on the recommenda tion of the Petroleum Administra tion for War. Although the unit value will continue to be the same rs it was for the two preceeding periods, PAW and OPA empha sized that users must ration their own daily use of oil very closely, since supplies at this period of the heating season are at the lowest point since rationing began. Mr. Talbert pointed out that in view of the excessively cold weather of the past weeks, main tenance of the 10 gallon value ac tually represent a cut to ration holders In relation to their in creased requirements. “Don’t forget that your sons know enough to put on their own rubbers now,” says Dr. Philip Jones, of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York City, speaking to church women of the pre-discharge education need ed in the church before the ser vicemen return. “They have be come adults in the hard, quick way. We need them in our churches, not as returning army and navy men, segregated from the ongoing chuch program, but to fill positions in our church.” He urges the formation of church wide councils which will plan not to be of obvious service to the returning veterans, but to act as “big brothers”. jf| To manufacture and ship the munitions needed in Europe and the Pacific, somebody must cut more pulpwood right now. How much more can you cut ?_ 'yfmmm k /HUGSNTL Y NEEDED NOW To make the war goods most needed j by our armed forces, mills in this area MUST HAVE MORE A UNPEELED iPINE y * i Under the auspices of “Bundles for America”, church women from all parts of the United States will join during the first three months of 1945 in sewing some 450,000 gar ments for the relief of Filipinos liberated from three years of Japanese oppression on Luzon and adjacent islands. Philippine War belief of the U. S. A. will furnish che material; members of Local 10, Cutters Union of the C. I. O. will cut the garments; and church women organized under the U- nited Council of Church Women, uhe missionary auxiliaries of the Potestant Episcopal Church, and a number of Jewish and Roman Catholic women’s groups will do the sewing. Unexpired suspension orders forbidding businesses to deal in rationed foods apply immediately The ordination of a woman min ister “for ecumenical work and the ministry of the written word” was recently conducted at the Broad way Tabernacle, New York City, with the approval of the New York City Congregational Church Association, the licensing body. The woman upon whom this u- nique distinction was conferred is Mrs. Elsie Thomas Culver, a Bach elor of Divinity from the Pacific School of Religion, and a publicist , on the staff of the Church Com mittee on Overseas Relief and Re construction. WEST VIRGINIA PULP AND PAPER CO. i CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA ^ C#f in touch with tho doalor in your territory from whom wo buy woed: R. M. WINN, PL UM BRANCH, S. C. /> ★ilk VICTORY PULPWOOD Call u' when you need mill supplies such as: pipe, fit tings, valves, bolts, nuts, chain, pulleys, hose, belt. Large stock flat and endlesr; belts. . I : RICHMOND SUPPLY COMPANY- Phone 2-7797 630 Seventh Street, Augusta, Georgia. ion Bag and Paper Company and were allotted to all counties of the state. Because of weather conditions last spring at the nursery, pro duction of pine seedlings was be low normal, Mr. Hall said. It was necessary to limit the number of free seedlings to a maximum of 2,500 per farmer. This reduced the total number for distribution j to slightly less than 900,000 for the year. Four hundred thirty-one farm ers received their trees between December 15 and January 5. Each the Parsons Reading Room at order was wrapped separately and Bethlehem House, Methodist so-; was transported by pulp company cial settlement In Memphis, Tenn., i trucks t0 the count 5' a S ent s of - according to Miss Mary Ora Dun- flce at the county seat. larmers ham, the supervisor.' In this par-, were notified In advance and were tlcular nook the blind men have usua ^ on hand when the true r built shelves for their Braille read ing materials. Among them are the Bible, the Reader’s Digest, and other magazines in Braille. The nook is named for Miss Celia Par sons, once a kindergarten worker under the Methodist Church, who lost her sight after years of serv ice. She is now employed by the state as home visitor and teacher for the blind—Negro and whi of Memphis and Shelby County. -X- Many Pine Seedlings Furnished to Farmers Columbia, Jan. 13. — D**"'ng December 1944 South Ca' ina farmers made requests th” ’gh Extension Service county a^:nts for 1,350,000 pine seedlings * > be used in reforestation work, C. W. Hall, assistant extension forester, said here today. These trees were purchased from the State Commission of Forestry by the Southern Kraft Division of the International Pa- A group of blind Negro men and v/hen” the foods they cover are re- women have been meeting every j per Company, the Champion Pulp ^stored to rationing, E. H. Talbert, Thursday for more than a year inland Fiber Company, and the Un arrived. Planting instructions and trees were given out together. This is the third year that pulp companies have cooperated in making free trees available to South Carolina landowners. Near ly 3,900,000 trees have been plant ed in this program by 1,356 appli cants. X — Brood Chicks On Clean Soil For Best Results Clemson, Jan. 13. — The best means of preventing diseases a- mong chicks is to brood on new ground each year, says P. H. Gooding, extension poultry spe- 60,000 NEW PIECES AND NOVELTY POTTERY JUST RECEIVED Make your selection from pieces worth up to $1.50 M AND A DIME With The Purchase Of Other Merchandise /• • 845 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, GA. brooder house. Others apparent ly do a good job of brooding but in the fall soon after the pullets start laying, some of the birds go blind, others become paralyzed, and mortality is unusually high. Such troubles as these result cialist, suggesting that portable from infestation by intestinal par- brooder houses are most desirable i asites, infections of coccidiosis, for the average farm where 100 and various other diseases while to 1000 chicks are brooded each year. Many people use the same range for two or three years with good results, and then without warning run into trouble which costs many times more than it would have cost to move the the pullets were young. Pullits brooded and ranged on cl a*.i ground may be moved into the permanent laying house when fi/e months old with little danger of trouble because at this time they have strength enough to resist disease germs and intestinal par- '■.i' asites. Clean the brooder house several days in advance. Operate the stove for two or three days be fore the chicks arrive to make sure it gives enough heat and is regulated properly. Cover the floor one inch deep with clean litter of finely cut hay, pinestraw, shavings, * cottonseed hulls, or coarse sand. If shavings, hulls, or sand are used, chicks may eat it and have digestive troubles. To prevent this, cover the litter with news papers, change these each day, remove them entirely after sever al days.