pubuc ,,,, th^ morehead'ii'ndependent

5
■'T' pUBUC ,,,, ^ f Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent ONE OF KENTUCKY^ GREATER WEEKLIESMOREHEAD, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1943 NUMBER TWENTY-NINE My visit with my home folks is ended. It ha* been so wonderful to see and chat with you all. I would liked to have stayed all suwifner. but I need a rest. After wringing hand*, fixing washers, mowing lawn.s. trir^ming shade tree* moving flower pots, hunt ing blackberries and June apples, a thirty-six Stillson will feel good. And I feel guilty sitting here when there is so much more important work to be done. At least I can ^eel when 1 am at work that the little my help amounts to may help one of those guys over there. The plant that I will be helping to a l)ttl e' airplai f need so badly. So Harrison » lire to one of ll s that Tackett and I must stay on the job. You all can surely do without Euiis and washing machines unt;i we get this dern war settled. I have enjoyed many thirtgs while here: 1 appreciate the ehig- gers I found or the one# that found me while making a lour of Bill Carter's farm and seeing all the young heifers that he ho* on pas ture; and seeing that young bull that stays across the creek and about four mile# up the hollow. I don't see why Bill could not have found a bull that would have stayed closer to the fence. I ap preciate the riioata. the geldings, the sows and all the rat of the boo that he U raising. How many be has I would be afraid to lay. BiU does not know or has any idea how many he has. They are only Funeral Services Held Sunday For Haldeman Resident SL Clajr Bowen. 72. retired em ployee of the Kentucky Fire Brt^ Company, Haldeman, died July 16 at his home there of a paralytic stroke. Mr. Bowen was a native of Car ter County, but had lived at Haldeman for the |Mst 21 year*. He Is survived by seven daugh- ters, Mrs. Nathan Reeder. Halde man; Mrs. John Reeder. Upper Tygart; Mrs. Louis Hunter. Halde man: Mrs. Willard McDtmell, Knightstown. Indiana; Mrs. Lil lie Stinson, Knightstown. Indiana; Mrs. Russell Fugate. Ashland. Kentucky: and Mrs. M. C. Vance. Meeting CaOed To Discuss CommuBity Cannery Mrs. W. H. Rice, supervisor of the Community Cannery, to be operated this season by the Coun ty Board of Education, has called a meeting of all women in More- head and Rowan County to dis cuss plans for canning at the new project The meeting will be held at the Courthouse. Monday. July 26, at two o'clock p. m. Mr*. Rice explained that the Cannery is not intended to lake the place of home canning but in- ste:id It's purpose is to help those families who do not have cunning equipment or those families thaf wish to can a larger quantity than usual. George Bowen. U. S. Army. He is al.so survived by grand children. His wife preceded him in death three years ago. Funeral services were held Sun day, July 18. at the Haldeman High School Auditorium, with the Rev. L. E. Leeper in charge of the services. Burial was in the Lee Cemetery, in Morehead. l(evival Meeting Now In Progress. A1 Farmers Vacation Bible®-*'®® School EnroUment Draft Wont Take Fathers Until Oct War Manpower Commission Says Over 9.000.000 Men Now In Uniform etrely do appreciate the shetUnd nay that has a young colt, and in Ikiration for the young colt I vb carry a bruise on my east tide' Ubc west in the shape of a moth- ¥ pony's teeth. Bill said all ¥otl^ ponies were affectionate Oie that. If pony love runs to the e^Mnt that the marks of lower set tt pony teeth show below ones tlMng suit. I'll check. I am aure Hid be does not raise rattle nakm. I auppoee BiU got the Idea that I did not vote for him or-was not supporting him some way. Or maybe that I am registered re- -..publican. You know politics can go thru generations and be from time to come. I was told the other day that "Happy Chandler was going on this trip under the pretense that he was visiting the war fronts to And a man In North Rflssia that voted against his great-grund^ father once for constable. Ill ^arantee if it costs the taxpayers of this country a million. Happy will And him and spit on his shoe 'toes. It is hard to fbrget a dirty trick like that. We Republicans wont have to worry about any thing like that for before we ever get another one elected our chil drens children will have forgotten that there were ever anything but Democrats. 1 have great hopes for my son. Tommy^,^If I can keep him out of bad rampaipr 1 will* make a Republican out of him, aure. I cant make up my mind -inA might get Jn jail if he even voted for one. Frankfort is getting to the point that whenever 1 go through there on the train I go to the end of the coach and lock myselP In the wardrobe. You juat do not know what minute Howard Hen derson ia going to pin something on you. I don't see what in the world Saddle Watters married him for. He is just a regular old gossip. And Allen Trout can live a week on cancelled checks. Rode# K. Myers would talk about his Grandmother. It's a shame the way he talks about Lyter Donald son manicuring the highways and byways. He is shouting it from one comer 6f the state to the other. Well, I am going to vote for the biggest liar. I have always done that and 1 have'never lost a vote yet. Seri^ly, l am very much in favor of one of our own boys (OoMlnacd ra Page Tbrae) Ruth Breu'cr and Ralph Waldo Emeriiun. well known evangelists of Kansas City. Mo., arc in'a \ival now in progress at the Christian Church in FnrmeV. H. G. Bailey who will be priivipal of the school this year is Mil' I speal n "Hollywood s Ruth speaks Mintstar. rhurS' Hell.' day night Friday night Miss "The Soldier and his Uniform." J, Warren Blair To Get Wings Aug. 31 James W. BIa*r of Morehead, Ky., was impatient to fly. If be hadnt been, he might have re-' eeived hi* pilot'* wing* before now. But as it is. he'* acheduled to receive them at this Army Air Forces advanced flying school August 31. Back in October. IMI. Blair, then 16 years old, went to Wind sor. Ontario, and Joined the Royal Canadian Air Force tot air tralniiv- was in Nova Scotia when 'Pearl Harbor was raided, and the remoteness of his Aeld may be judged by the time it took for the news of Pearl Harbor to ream therethree days. After Pearl Harbor. Blair asked T 0 discharge so that he could join the United States Army, didnt come through until May, 28. 1942, and by then he lacked only three mom InstnicUen arr ved home on June called by his selective service board lor induction the next day. There « Ave months before for aviation cadet training, to be gin again where he had started more than a year before. With primary training at Pine luff, Aril,, and basic at Coffey-, lie. Kan., behind him now. Cadet Blair is flying sleek AT6's (Tex- made by North American Aviatiog^nd looking forward to the not-to?)-dietanl future, when wings. : 2, and V (Continaed on Page Three) Sheriff Carter Gets Two Stolen Cars Rowan County Sheriff BiU Car ter recovered two stolen automo biles during the past week, both of which had been abandonee' the thiefs In this county. Ownership of both v^icles etestablished; one car from t.ouis- ville was the property of Fredrick Bittner and the other was property of R. H. Wllkerson, Huntington, W. Va. Mortie Raymond Transferr^ To Ftorida Hitly appointed a Cadet and was head, was recent Navel AviaUon transferred to the Naval Air Training Center. Pensacola, Ha., ir intermediate flight training. Late in January, he was sent to the Naval Air Station in Bunker Hill. Ind., where he successfully completed the elimination /train ing course June 8. Upon completion of the inten sive course at the Anna|mUs of the Air'.' Cadet Raymond wll re ceive his Navy "Wings of Goldwith the designation of Naval Aviator, and wlU be commissioned 1 Ensign In the Naval Reserve or Second Lieutenant in the Marine Corps Reserve. September 15 this week got their Arsl ofAcial and positive assurance that there will be no need to issue a general drafl call tor them be fore October at the very earliest. Classes l-A and I-AO (men who can be used for non-combat ant military service) already con tain enough men who will actual ly get into uniform to All draft calls for July. August and Sep tember. Maj. Emmett Solomon of the Selective Service manpower division told reporters. That will be true, he said, al though some of the 1,566.000 men in these classes will be reclassiAed on appeal and many more will be rejected by physicians and psy chiatrist*. who currently are turn ing back 40 per cent of those ex amined. Solomon defined to coumiait directly on-the induction of fath er* of chJMrcn conceived before Pearl Hartwr or predict, when H would begin, but data be preaen- ndicated that the drafting 6t Reaches 142 Tues. School WilTciose On Friday, Auirusf 30th Secretary of State their class might be delayed well past October 1. Approximately 50.000 of M.OOO youths newly turned eadi nwnth can be county upon for induction, he said, adding 150.000 to the pool of men who can be taken through September. Fu^ermore, this number will (CMlteMd an Page Thrae) Batlaa Ontor 5C require* the Batioo bolder to make Men- Ufylng' Dotattm Immediately tipiiTi receipt of ecopan^^Nota- Uom shall be made on the face of the ooapan. Instead of an the The Vacation Bible School at the Mor^eed Baptist Church opened Monday of this week with unexpected success. Those In charge have been surprised al the unusual interest over last year. On Monday morning 118 boys and girls were enrolled. " morning the 142, which is corresponding day attendance is likeP. . records of the Ihfee years past. The program begins with wc ship, followed by chorus singing and an evangelistic talk by Rev. L..E. Leeper. Then follows class periods in all departments. The brief closing exercise brings the whole school together for singing and announcements. Then children are directed in thirty minutes of play and recreation. Soft ball, horse shoes, and other games are played. Pastor B. H. Kazce leads the In termediates, L. E. Leeper. Dorothy Turner and Clyde Smith have charg by M and t Newport, Ky,. leads A surprise treat will be given at the end of this week. The school will continue through Friday *of next week, and will close Friday night with Commencement. A Milk Shortage By Next Fan Is Predicted... ^Ih milk produces and (3ov- emmeot authorities were agreed that civUians face a milk- shortage next falL but they disagreed in placing the blame for the situation. An OJ*A. milk expert and H. Ritchner, economist in the Federal Milk Administrators of- Ace, admitted '*the market loidcs tight for fair but, they asserted, large requisitions of milk for Lend-Lease, dried mlik products needed for the armed forces and the natural output drop in July and August arc the causes. The Nat i o n a 1 Co-operative MAk Produce/# Federation, how ever. in an unanimous resolutian. charged that federal milk price policies do not allow dairymei as much proAt as the raising of cattle. It further . slry pla« ing out of business because of of labor and the refusal of the W. P. B. to allot replacement* for n out and obsolete machinery. ' £tof* K. LBE STEWART R. Lee Stewart, of this city, is candidate for the- Republican nomination for Secretary of Stati He is as well-known in state wide political circles as he is tc neighbors and friends here, hs held many public posjilioa* made two other races for stale ofAce, Mr. Stewart ination for Clerk of the Court of Appeals ii} 1936 and 1939. both hard fought races, in which he formidable opposition, knows personally perhaps people over the state than any other Republican Agure in Eastern Kentucky. This wide acqualnunce acquired in the following po sitions: enrolling clerk of the Ken tucky Legislature, deputy Collec tor of Internal Revenue, Secretary to John W. Langley when he to Congrao, Deputy UB. Mar^. Federal Revenue Agent, UB.Com- liseioner end Police Judge of this ty. He is a familiar Agure at Republican state conventions, having attended practically every le for over 50 years. Mr. Stewart again has strong opposition in hU race this year. the consensus of political observers is that he whl state ticket this year. II be on the Lock] Men Attend Stale Legion Convention Mahlon Hall and Jack Cecil, representing Corbie Ellington Post of the American Legion in More- to the state in Louisville, this convention, this weA. Russell , head. was( appo'tmed but V - ' ------- m.Reld it J I ^iarkbr. also of Morto >s( appo'tmed a delegatdr unable to make the trip Tips From the County Agent RWnn County 4-H Club mem bers are helping to win the'War by producing and canning food. Last week the Extension Seivice conducted 11 4-H Club Tours and found that Club members are set ting an example by producing more feed and food crops, and livestock. The county agent found that chickens, hogs and cattle r doing good under the 4-H Club members' care. The and tobacco projects were good and the gardens were better than the neighboring gardens. .Mrs. Henry Haggan, Haldeman teacher and 4-H Oub Leader, went with the Agent and Club members to visit the Halde Agricultural Projects. They vis ited 13 homes end contacted Club members. Jr. Steven* and Billy Fultz had two of the best gardens that the leaders saw that afternoon. They both had ripe to matoes and bushels of beans ready to be harvested. Daniel Halt isy in the berry patch when the ub members reached his qdnee. He came to the house and ha and Genevie showed us 160 half gal lon cans of blackberries. The boys had picked the berries and Gene- .-uid her mother Rad canned them. Mrs. Haggan counted the and estimated that they had canned over 100 gallons of black berries. SO. but this year is was half again much. The reason was that some seed'went to our Allies for their gardens. So, even though seed could be procurtd. often .was not of the wanted variety, and often it was inferior. Next year .will be no different; so. gardners who will want to make sure of their gardens' be havior. will save as much of their seed as they an. Also, in saving gar^n seed, money is saved, too. Th#work is not difAcuH; in fact, ,il U outweighed I interesting. Here of the vegetable seed t)iat may be uved at heme, and directions to do its b«st. TOMATOES. Here is of "having one's cake and eating it, too", in that _ . . 1 for the table, the seed from the best may be removed and put in o glass, put ting with it the juice of some other tomato. Set somewhere in the kitchen, out of the way. fermen ting starts, to cut the "phlegm" and let the plump seed fall to the bottom of the glass. The top is poured off and the heavy seed is spread on paper to dry, each separate. Tomatoes may "mix" 1 much as 5%. but only .if the ines cross each other. - BEANS. There is no difAculty in saving bean seed pure, as the only "mixing" that can take place is through bumble-bees, and even this happens rarely. Seed may bo saved from the time that the pods show the Arst sign of wilting. To keep out the weevils, the seed always' easy be warmed to 130 degrees for y be k] in a glass jar with a tight top. a half-gallon, for example, and on it pour '? teaspoon of the chemi cal. keep clbsed light for 24 hours, then open for the odor to leave, and close tightagain or put into insect-tight cloth sacks or whole paper sacks. To treat larger lots, a 50-lb. lard can full, for example, place the seed in cloth sacks, or t>e sacks open, 'f the chemical. glass jars, with enough ^und limestone to All all the spaces, or It may be fumigated with Carbon Disulfide, as follows: Put the seed D the cover fits air- ceed as above. Car- bop disulfide is INFLAMMABLE and EXPLOSIVE; do not do the treating Ridoors where there is Are of any kind. The back porch does well. PEPPERS, As they are being prep able which dry and break apart, fan-. ning out the light seed. Peppers! "mix", afrd it is unsafe to save >m s I rows of "hot' TURNIPS. SEVEN TOP, MUS- TARD, KALE. Seed plants should be gathered when mature, wrapped in tobacco canvas to dry, threshed at convenience, and. the seed passed through flyscreen. Although some mixing can take place , it seldom does. LETTUCE. G.ither seed plants : for tumip.s, above. Especially desirable is to save of thenew comer Bibb, seed for which is not gel from seedmen. OKRA. On plants that have made okra to one's liking, let the pods hang until large and hard. Roger Caudili Receives Lieutenant Commission Roger Caudill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius P. Caudill of this city, has recently been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant (Junior grade) in the United States Navy, and has been assigned to the ad miral's staff al hi# base in the Alaskan territory, near Adak Is land. Roger entered the Naval service as a commissioned ensign in July of last year. At the tine of his en listment, he was serving as assis tant cahier of the Peeples Bank of Morehead. County Advisory Committee Is Organized Here To Cooperate In Operation or Community Cannery - The Rowan County Advisory Com^ttee. organized last Monday afterooon at the office of the County Superintendent of SchooU. Franlt Miller, Jr.' Gets Commission Frank Miller, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. Miller, was grad- ualed from The Midshipman's School for Naval Officers. North western University. Chicago, on July 1st, and received his commis sion as Ensign. He was appointed Instructor qf Navigation (Trigon ometry and Astronomy) and will train Naval Officers at Abbott Hall. Northwestern University, Chicago, where he was graduated, s nddre. U. S. N. R. Mid shipmen's School. Northwestern University, Chicago. Illinois. Frank. Jr.was No. 1 man on the University of Kenti(cky varsity tcnni.s squad last year §nd was Captain-elect. At the lime of his enlistment, he was working on his Master's Degree. Raving eceived Fellowship at the University of Kentucky. He is twenty-one years old. will cooperate i 1 advisory ca pacity with the Rowan County of Education in operating cannery, to be uiv loiiimuimji cannery, lo oe sponsored by the' Board this can ning season. Superintendent of Schools Roy E. Cornette acted as'tamporary chairman of the meetihg until Mrs. W. H. Rice was elMted to Funeral Service Held July 21 For Alice Holbrook W«8 UMjomg EDIott County Mrs. Alice Holbrook. 77. life long resident of EUllott County and mother of Charles Holbrook, of this city, died at her home on Sun day. July 18. of a heart ailment. She is suruTv^ by two sons and ur daughters. Charles Holbrook. Morehead: John Holbrook, Ard more, Oklahoma; i Mrs. Leitha Simmons, of ElIioH County; Mrs. Mary. Mauk, Portsmouth. Ohio; Mrs. Susa Lecdy, Irondale, Ohio: Mrs. Addie Williams. Middletown, Ohio. Her husband and two chil dren, James W. Holbrook, of this city, and Mrs. Paulina Green, of Elliott County, preceded her In deathher husbaltd and son. James, both died abutoxlmately year ago, and. Mrs. Green died three years ago. She is also sur vived by 48 grandchildren; 12 grandchildren are dead. Funeral services were held ednesday morning al 10 o'clock, the home of Charles Holbrook, here, with the ReV. B. H. Kazee. istor of the Morehead Baptist lurch,, In charge of the services. B^al was mode in the family head. Secretary of the Committee. The following sub-committees were named at the first meeting: Surplus farm, products Dan Brame. Robert Bishop. H. C. Hag- gan, Charles Hughes, and Curt Finance Curt Bruce. Charles % Hughes and Roy Cornette. Policy Robert Bishop, chair man. H. C. Haggan. Chas. Hughes, and Roy Cornette. Regulations C. B. McCul lough. chairman. Dr. T. A. E. Evans, health department; Claude Turner. A.AA. Publiity Dan Brame, County Agent, chairman; Mrs. Grace Ford and W. J. Sample, newspapers; W. R. Shaffer and L. H. Mills, thea tres; Mrs. C. U: Waltz, Mrs Roy Cornette and Miss Inez F. Humph- rey, women's clubs; the principals of the consolidated schools repre- tg the schools of the county; Patti Bolin. MS.T.C. nutri tion' expert; R. L. Barker, Ameri can Uglon; Mrs. J. W. Hpibrook, P.T.A.; Miss LilUan Ratcliff. Farm aecurily Adtntotatrotion; W. H. Vaughan and C. B. Lane. Boy Scout orgahlzaticm; and the fol lowing ladies representing their respective section of Rowan Coun ty: Mrs. K, H. Fannin. West More head; Mrs. B. C. Hall, Clearfield; Mrs. Cooper Black. Little Brushy; Mrs. Leland Hogge, Crane ton; Mrs. «. W. Jones. Elliottsville; Mr#. John Caudill, Seas Branch; H. Johnson, Farmers; Mrs. A. L. Wallen, Tolliver Addition; Mrs. Hiram Eldrldge. Sharkey; and Mrs. A. W. Patton, Thomas Ad dition. V I Lee Cemetery in Mure- Rationing At A Glance Warning Issued For Refrigeration Of All Foods large seed from the small. Warning that housewives be careful to keep ail peris foods under refrigeration during pres Sarah .Vance Dugan, director of the Bureau of Foods. Drugs and Hotels, Stale Board of Health, said last week ihoi "failure to do this might be the cause of sick stomach prevalent among Kentuckians lit Kentucky town, near a railroad stop, reported five coses of food poisoning-yesterday, Mrs. Dugan said, caused by the eating of ham sandwiches not on refrig- itern Kentuck eraI persons ' iled -ector urged also that people keep their systems well- supplied with salt and avoid get ting overheated. Two Local Boys Are Transferred To Florida Two former residents po George O. Jackson and Buell Hogge, have been enrolled m a special course of instruction in the Southern Signal Corps School ~Bmp Murphy. Florida. Young Jackson is the son Stonewall Proceaaed foods Blue stamps N, P. and Q good through August 7ih. Meat* and Fata Red Stamps P. Q. and R good )w; Stamp S will be good July ' •)8th; all wilt expire July 31st. i - Coffee ■offee Stamp 21 good for one (ip pound through July 2lst; Stamp 22 good for the following three weeks. ' * Sugar Stamp 13 good for five (5) pounds ;through August ISth Stamps IS and 16 good for five (5) pounds of canning sugar each through October 31. * Shoe# Sho# Stamp 18 good through October 31st. I Tires , Next inspection dueA book vehicles by September 3Wh; B Book holders by Ot*jber 31st; C Book holders. August 31st: Com mercial vehicles every six months svery 5,000 miles, whichever occurs flrsl. Federal law viiriies heavy penalties for misuse bf rulioii damps, certificates and for various other misdeeds in connection with rotloning programs. War ration stamp* and books remain the properly of the go\frnmenl ever, though they are distributed for by the general public. In that way the government retains coo- trol over iheir use. The /Second War Power.* Act. covering such subjects, carries a prison sentence nr fine up to 410,000, or both, upoa conviction. ' A great sqany malpractices in (Continued on Page 3)

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Page 1: pUBUC ,,,, Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent

■'T'

pUBUC ,,,,

^ f ■ • ■

Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent“ONE OF KENTUCKY^ GREATER WEEKLIES’

MOREHEAD, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 22. 1943 NUMBER TWENTY-NINE

My visit with my home folks is ended. It ha* been so wonderful to see and chat with you all. I would liked to have stayed all suwifner. but I need a rest. After wringing hand*, fixing washers, mowing lawn.s. trir^ming shade tree* moving flower pots, hunt­ing blackberries and June apples, a thirty-six Stillson will feel good. And I feel guilty sitting here when there is so much more important work to be done. At least I can

^eel when 1 am at work that the little my help amounts to may help one of those guys over there. The plant that I will be helping to

a l)ttl e' airplai

f need so badly. So Harrison» lire to one of ll s that

Tackett and I must stay on the job.You all can surely do without

Euiis and washing machines unt;i we get this dern war settled.

I have enjoyed many thirtgs while here: 1 appreciate the ehig- gers I found or the one# that found me while making a lour of Bill Carter's farm and seeing all the young heifers that he ho* on pas­ture; and seeing that young bull that stays across the creek and about four mile# up the hollow. I don't see why Bill could not have found a bull that would have stayed closer to the fence. I ap­preciate the riioata. the geldings, the sows and all the rat of the boo that he U raising. How many be has I would be afraid to lay. BiU does not know or has any idea how many he has. They are only

Funeral Services Held Sunday For Haldeman Resident

SL Clajr Bowen. 72. retired em­ployee of the Kentucky Fire Brt^ Company, Haldeman, died July 16 at his home there of a paralytic stroke.

Mr. Bowen was a native of Car­ter County, but had lived at Haldeman for the |Mst 21 year*.

He Is survived by seven daugh- ters, Mrs. Nathan Reeder. Halde­man; Mrs. John Reeder. Upper Tygart; Mrs. Louis Hunter. Halde­man: Mrs. Willard McDtmell,Knightstown. Indiana; Mrs. Lil­lie Stinson, Knightstown. Indiana; Mrs. Russell Fugate. Ashland. Kentucky: and Mrs. M. C. Vance.

Meeting CaOed To Discuss CommuBity Cannery

Mrs. W. H. Rice, supervisor of the Community Cannery, to be operated this season by the Coun­ty Board of Education, has called a meeting of all women in More- head and Rowan County to dis­cuss plans for canning at the new project

The meeting will be held at the Courthouse. Monday. July 26, at two o'clock p. m.

Mr*. Rice explained that the Cannery is not intended to lake the place of home canning but in- ste:id It's purpose is to help those families who do not have cunning equipment or those families thaf wish to can a larger quantity than usual.

George Bowen. U. S. Army.He is al.so survived by 5« grand­

children. His wife preceded him in death three years ago.

Funeral services were held Sun­day, July 18. at the Haldeman High School Auditorium, with the Rev. L. E. Leeper in charge of the services. Burial was in the Lee Cemetery, in Morehead.

l(evival Meeting Now In Progress. A1 Farmers •

Vacation Bible®-*'®® School EnroUment

Draft Won’t Take Fathers Until OctWar Manpower Commission

Says Over 9.000.000 Men Now In Uniform

etrely do appreciate the shetUnd nay that has a young colt, and in Ikiration for the young colt I vb carry a bruise on my east tide' Ubc west in the shape of a moth- ¥ pony's teeth. Bill said all ¥otl^ ponies were affectionate Oie that. If pony love runs to the e^Mnt that the marks of lower set tt pony teeth show below ones tlMng suit. I'll check. I am aure Hid be does not raise rattle nakm. I auppoee BiU got the Idea that I did not vote for him or-was not supporting him some way. Or maybe that I am registered re-

-..publican.You know politics can go thru

generations and be from time to come. I was told the other day that "Happy Chandler was going on this trip under the pretense that he was visiting the war fronts to And a man In North Rflssia that voted against his great-grund^ father once for constable. I’ll ^arantee if it costs the taxpayers of this country a million. Happy will And him and spit on his shoe

'toes. It is hard to fbrget a dirty trick like that. We Republicans wont have to worry about any­thing like that for before we ever get another one elected our chil­drens children will have forgotten that there were ever anything but Democrats. 1 have great hopes for my son. Tommy^,^If I can keep him out of bad rampaipr 1 will* make a Republican out of him, aure.

I cant make up my mind -inA

might get Jn jail if he even voted for one. Frankfort is getting to the point that whenever 1 go through there on the train I go to the end of the coach and lock myselP In the wardrobe. You juat do not know what minute Howard Hen­derson ia going to pin something on you. I don't see what in the world Saddle Watters married him for. He is just a regular old gossip.

And Allen Trout can live a week on cancelled checks. Rode# K. Myers would talk about his Grandmother. It's a shame the way he talks about Lyter Donald­son manicuring the highways and byways. He is shouting it from one comer 6f the state to the other. Well, I am going to vote for the biggest liar. I have always done that and 1 have'never lost a vote yet. Seri^ly, l am very much in favor of one of our own boys

(OoMlnacd ra Page Tbrae)

Ruth Breu'cr and Ralph Waldo Emeriiun. well known evangelists of Kansas City. Mo., arc in'a \ival now in progress at the Christian Church in FnrmeV. H. G. Bailey who will be priivipal of the school this year is Mil'

I speal n "Hollywood

s Ruth speaks

Mint star. rhurS' Hell.'day night

Friday night Miss "The Soldier and his Uniform."

J, Warren Blair To Get Wings Aug. 31

James W. BIa*r of Morehead, Ky., was impatient to fly. If be hadn’t been, he might have re-' eeived hi* pilot'* wing* before now. But as it is. he'* acheduled to receive them at this Army Air Forces advanced flying school August 31.

Back in October. IMI. Blair, then 16 years old, went to Wind­sor. Ontario, and Joined the Royal Canadian Air Force tot air tralniiv- R« was in Nova Scotia when 'Pearl Harbor was raided, and the remoteness of his Aeld may be judged by the time it took for the news of Pearl Harbor to ream there—three days.

After Pearl Harbor. Blair asked T 0 discharge so that he could

join the United States Army, didn’t come through until May, 28. 1942, and by then he lacked only three mom InstnicUen

arr ved home on June called by his selective

service board lor induction the next day. There «Ave months before for aviation cadet training, to be­gin again where he had started more than a year before.

With primary training at Pine luff, Aril,, and basic at Coffey-, lie. Kan., behind him now. Cadet

Blair is flying sleek AT6's (Tex- made by North American

Aviatiog^nd looking forward to the not-to?)-dietanl future, when

wings. : 2, and V

(Continaed on Page Three)

Sheriff Carter Gets Two Stolen Cars

Rowan County Sheriff BiU Car­ter recovered two stolen automo­biles during the past week, both of which had been abandonee' the thiefs In this county.

Ownership of both v^icles etestablished; one car from t.ouis- ville was the property of Fredrick Bittner and the other was property of R. H. Wllkerson, Huntington, W. Va.

Mortie Raymond Transferr^ To Ftorida

Hitly appointed a Cadet and was

head, was recent Navel AviaUon transferred to the Naval Air Training Center. Pensacola, Ha.,

ir intermediate flight training. Late in January, he was sent to

the Naval Air Station in Bunker Hill. Ind., where he successfully completed the elimination /train­ing course June 8.

Upon completion of the inten­sive course at the “Anna|mUs of the Air'.' Cadet Raymond wll re­ceive his Navy "Wings of Gold” with the designation of Naval Aviator, and wlU be commissioned

1 Ensign In the Naval Reserve or Second Lieutenant in the Marine

Corps Reserve.

September 15 this week got their Arsl ofAcial and positive assurance that there will be no need to issue a general drafl call tor them be­fore October at the very earliest.

Classes l-A and I-AO (men who can be used for non-combat­ant military service) already con­tain enough men who will actual­ly get into uniform to All draft calls for July. August and Sep­tember. Maj. Emmett Solomon of the Selective Service manpower division told reporters.

That will be true, he said, al­though some of the 1,566.000 men in these classes will be reclassiAed on appeal and many more will be rejected by physicians and psy­chiatrist*. who currently are turn­ing back 40 per cent of those ex­amined.

Solomon defined to coumiait directly on-the induction of fath­er* of chJMrcn conceived before Pearl Hartwr or predict, when H would begin, but data be preaen-

ndicated that the drafting 6t

Reaches 142 Tues.School WilTciose On Friday,

Auirusf 30th

Secretary of State

their class might be delayed well past October 1.

Approximately 50.000 of M.OOO youths newly turned eadi nwnth can be county upon for induction, he said, adding 150.000 to the pool of men who can be taken through September.

Fu^ermore, this number will

(CMlteMd an Page Thrae)

Batlaa Ontor 5C require* the Batioo bolder to make Men- Ufylng' Dotattm Immediately tipiiTi receipt of ecopan^^—Nota- Uom shall be made on the face of the ooapan. Instead of an the

The Vacation Bible School at the Mor^eed Baptist Church opened Monday of this week with unexpected success. Those In charge have been surprised al the unusual interest over last year. On Monday morning 118 boys and girls were enrolled. " “morning the 142, which is corresponding day attendance is likeP. . records of the Ihfee years past.

The program begins with wc ship, followed by chorus singing and an evangelistic talk by Rev. L..E. Leeper. Then follows class periods in all departments. The brief closing exercise brings the whole school together for singing and announcements. Then children are directed in thirty minutes of play and recreation. Soft ball, horse shoes, and other games are played.

Pastor B. H. Kazce leads the In­termediates, L. E. Leeper. Dorothy Turner and Clyde Smith have charg by M and tNewport, Ky,. leads

A surprise treat will be given at the end of this week. The school will continue through Friday *of next week, and will close Friday night with Commencement. A

Milk Shortage By Next Fan Is Predicted...

^Ih milk produces and (3ov- emmeot authorities were agreed that civUians face a milk- shortage next falL but they disagreed in placing the blame for the situation.

An OJ*A. milk expert and H.Ritchner, economist in the

Federal Milk Administrator’s of- Ace, admitted '*the market loidcs tight for fair but, they asserted, large requisitions of milk for Lend-Lease, dried mlik products needed for the armed forces and the natural output drop in July and August arc the causes.

The Nat i o n a 1 Co-operative MAk Produce/# Federation, how­ever. in an unanimous resolutian. charged that federal milk price policies do not allow dairymei as much proAt as the raising of

cattle. It further . slry pla«

ing out of business because of of labor and the refusal of the W. P. B. to allot replacement* for

n out and obsolete machinery.

' £tof*

K. LBE STEWART

R. Lee Stewart, of this city, is candidate for the- Republican nomination for Secretary of Stati He is as well-known in state wide political circles as he is tc neighbors and friends here, hs held many public posjilioa* made two other races for stale ofAce, Mr. Stewart ination for Clerk of the Court of Appeals ii} 1936 and 1939. both hard fought races, in which he

formidable opposition, knows personally perhaps people over the state than any other Republican Agure in Eastern Kentucky. This wide acqualnunce

acquired in the following po­sitions: enrolling clerk of the Ken­tucky Legislature, deputy Collec­tor of Internal Revenue, Secretary to John W. Langley when he to Congrao, Deputy UB. Mar^. Federal Revenue Agent, UB.Com-

liseioner end Police Judge of this ty. He is a familiar Agure at

Republican state conventions, having attended practically every

le for over 50 years.Mr. Stewart again has strong

opposition in hU race this year.the consensus of political

observers is that he whl state ticket this year.

II be on the

Lock] Men Attend Stale Legion Convention

Mahlon Hall and Jack Cecil, representing Corbie Ellington Post of the American Legion in More-

to the state in Louisville, thisconvention,

this weA.Russell ,

head. was( appo'tmed but V - ' -------

m.Reld itJI ^iarkbr. also of Morto

>s( appo'tmed a delegatdr unable to make the trip

Tips From the County AgentRWnn County 4-H Club mem­

bers are helping to win the'War by producing and canning food. Last week the Extension Seivice conducted 11 4-H Club Tours and found that Club members are set­ting an example by producing more feed and food crops, and livestock. The county agent found that chickens, hogs and cattle

r doing good under the 4-H Club members' care. The and tobacco projects were good and the gardens were better than the neighboring gardens.

.Mrs. Henry Haggan, Haldeman teacher and 4-H Oub Leader, went with the Agent and Club members to visit the Halde Agricultural Projects. They vis­ited 13 homes end contacted Club members. Jr. Steven* and Billy Fultz had two of the best gardens that the leaders saw that afternoon. They both had ripe to­matoes and bushels of beans ready to be harvested. Daniel Halt

isy in the berry patch when the ub members reached his qdnee.

He came to the house and ha and Genevie showed us 160 half gal­lon cans of blackberries. The boys had picked the berries and Gene-

.-uid her mother Rad canned them. Mrs. Haggan counted the

and estimated that they had canned over 100 gallons of black­berries.

SO. but this year is was half again much. The reason was that

some seed'went to our Allies for their gardens. So, even though

seed could be procurtd. often .was not of the wanted variety, and often it was inferior.

Next year .will be no different; so. gardners who will want to make sure of their gardens' be­havior. will save as much of their seed as they an. Also, in saving gar^n seed, money is saved, too. Th#work is not difAcuH; in fact, ,il U outweighed I interesting. Here of the vegetable seed t)iat may be uved at heme, and directions to do its b«st.

TOMATOES. Here is of "having one's cake and eating it, too", in that

_ . . 1 for the table,the seed from the best may be removed and put in o glass, put­ting with it the juice of some other tomato. Set somewhere in the kitchen, out of the way. fermen­ting starts, to cut the "phlegm" and let the plump seed fall to the bottom of the glass. The top is poured off and the heavy seed is spread on paper to dry, each separate. Tomatoes may "mix"

1 much as 5%. but only .if the ines cross each other. - BEANS. There is no difAculty

in saving bean seed pure, as the only "mixing" that can take place is through bumble-bees, and even this happens rarely. Seed may bo saved from the time that the pods show the Arst sign of wilting. To keep out “the weevils, the seed always' easy

be warmed to 130 degrees for y be k]

in a glass jar with a tight top. a half-gallon, for example, and on it pour '? teaspoon of the chemi­cal. keep clbsed light for 24 hours, then open for the odor to leave, and close tightagain or put into insect-tight cloth sacks or whole paper sacks. To treat larger lots, a 50-lb. lard can full, for example, place the seed in cloth sacks, or

t>e sacks open, 'f the chemical.

glass jars, with enough ^und limestone to All all the spaces, or It may be fumigated with Carbon Disulfide, as follows: Put the seed

D the cover fits air- ceed as above. Car-

bop disulfide is INFLAMMABLE and EXPLOSIVE; do not do the treating Ridoors where there is Are of any kind. The back porch does well.

PEPPERS, As they are being prep ablewhich dry and break apart, fan-. ning out the light seed. Peppers! "mix", afrd it is unsafe to save

>m “sI rows of "hot'TURNIPS. SEVEN TOP, MUS-

TARD, KALE. Seed plants should be gathered when mature, wrapped in tobacco canvas to dry, threshed at convenience, and. the seed passed through flyscreen. Although some mixing can take place , it seldom does. ’

LETTUCE. G.ither seed plants : for tumip.s, above. Especially

desirable is to save of the’new­comer Bibb, seed for which is not

gel from seedmen. OKRA. On plants that have

made okra to one's liking, let the pods hang until large and hard.

Roger Caudili Receives Lieutenant Commission

Roger Caudill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius P. Caudill of this city, has recently been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant (Junior grade) in the United States Navy, and has been assigned to the ad­miral's staff al hi# base in the Alaskan territory, near Adak Is­land.

Roger entered the Naval service as a commissioned ensign in July of last year. At the tine of his en­listment, he was serving as assis­tant cahier of the Peeples Bank of Morehead.

County Advisory Committee Is Organized HereTo Cooperate In Operation

or Community Cannery -

The Rowan County Advisory Com^ttee. organized last Monday afterooon at the office of the County Superintendent of SchooU.

Franlt Miller, Jr.' Gets Commission

Frank Miller, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. Miller, was grad- ualed from The Midshipman's School for Naval Officers. North­western University. Chicago, on July 1st, and received his commis­sion as Ensign. He was appointed Instructor qf Navigation (Trigon­ometry and Astronomy) and will train Naval Officers at Abbott Hall. Northwestern University, Chicago, where he was graduated,

s nddre. U. S. N. R. Mid­shipmen's School. Northwestern University, Chicago. Illinois.

Frank. Jr.was No. 1 man on the University of Kenti(cky varsity tcnni.s squad last year §nd was Captain-elect. At the lime of his enlistment, he was working on his Master's Degree. Raving eceived

Fellowship at the University of Kentucky.

He is twenty-one years old.

will cooperate i 1 advisory ca­pacity with the Rowan County

of Education in operating cannery, to beuiv loiiimuimji cannery, lo oe

sponsored by the' Board this can­ning season.

Superintendent of Schools Roy E. Cornette acted as'tamporary chairman of the meetihg until Mrs. W. H. Rice was elMted to

Funeral Service Held July 21 For Alice HolbrookW«8 UMjomg

EDIott CountyMrs. Alice Holbrook. 77. life­

long resident of EUllott County and mother of Charles Holbrook, of this city, died at her home on Sun­day. July 18. of a heart ailment.

She is suruTv^ by two sons and ur daughters. Charles Holbrook.

Morehead: John Holbrook, Ard­more, Oklahoma; i Mrs. Leitha Simmons, of ElIioH County; Mrs. Mary. Mauk, Portsmouth. Ohio; Mrs. Susa Lecdy, Irondale, Ohio: Mrs. Addie Williams. Middletown, Ohio. Her husband and two chil­dren, James W. Holbrook, of this city, and Mrs. Paulina Green, of Elliott County, preceded her In death—her husbaltd and son. James, both died abutoxlmately

year ago, and. Mrs. Green died three years ago. She is also sur­vived by 48 grandchildren; 12 grandchildren are dead.

Funeral services were held ednesday morning al 10 o'clock, the home of Charles Holbrook,

here, with the ReV. B. H. Kazee. istor of the Morehead Baptist lurch,, In charge of the services.

B^al was mode in the family

head.

Secretary of the Committee.The following sub-committees

were named at the first meeting:Surplus farm, products —Dan

Brame. Robert Bishop. H. C. Hag- gan, Charles Hughes, and Curt

Finance —Curt Bruce. Charles % Hughes and Roy Cornette.

Policy — Robert Bishop, chair­man. H. C. Haggan. Chas. Hughes, and Roy Cornette.

Regulations — C. B. McCul­lough. chairman. Dr. T. A. E. Evans, health department; Claude Turner. A.AA.

Publiity — Dan Brame, County Agent, chairman; Mrs. Grace Ford and W. J. Sample, newspapers; W.R. Shaffer and L. H. Mills, thea­tres; Mrs. C. U: Waltz, Mrs Roy Cornette and Miss Inez F. Humph- rey, women's clubs; the principals of the consolidated schools repre-

tg the schools of the county; Patti Bolin. MS.T.C. nutri­

tion' expert; R. L. Barker, Ameri­can Uglon; Mrs. J. W. Hpibrook, P.T.A.; Miss LilUan Ratcliff. Farm aecurily Adtntotatrotion; W. H. Vaughan and C. B. Lane. Boy Scout orgahlzaticm; and the fol­lowing ladies representing their respective section of Rowan Coun­ty: Mrs. K, H. Fannin. West More­head; Mrs. B. C. Hall, Clearfield; Mrs. Cooper Black. Little Brushy; Mrs. Leland Hogge, Crane ton; Mrs. «. W. Jones. Elliottsville; Mr#. John Caudill, Seas Branch;

H. Johnson, Farmers; Mrs. A. L. Wallen, Tolliver Addition; Mrs. Hiram Eldrldge. Sharkey; and Mrs. A. W. Patton, Thomas Ad­dition. V

I Lee Cemetery in Mure-

Rationing At A Glance

Warning Issued For Refrigeration Of All Foods

large seed from the small.

Warning that housewives be careful to keep ail peris foods under refrigeration during

presSarah .Vance Dugan, director of the Bureau of Foods. Drugs and Hotels, Stale Board of Health, said last week ihoi "failure to do this might be the cause of sick stomach prevalent among Kentuckians

lit Kentucky town, near a railroad stop, reported five coses of food poisoning-yesterday, Mrs. Dugan said, caused by the eating of ham sandwiches not on refrig-

itern Kentuckera I persons '

iled-ector urged also that

people keep their systems well- supplied with salt and avoid get­ting overheated.

Two Local Boys Are Transferred To Florida

Two former residentspo

George O. Jackson and Buell Hogge, have been enrolled m a special course of instruction in the Southern Signal Corps School ~Bmp Murphy. Florida.

Young Jackson is the son Stonewall

Proceaaed foodsBlue stamps N, P. and Q good

through August 7ih.★Meat* and Fata

Red Stamps P. Q. and R good)w; Stamp S will be good July '

•)8th; all wilt expire July 31st. i - ★

Coffee■offee Stamp 21 good for one

(ip pound through July 2lst; Stamp 22 good for the following three weeks. ' *

SugarStamp 13 good for five (5)

pounds ;through August ISth Stamps IS and 16 good for five (5) pounds of canning sugar each through October 31.*

Shoe#Sho# Stamp 18 good through

October 31st.

I Tires ,Next inspection due—A book

vehicles by September 3Wh; B Book holders by Ot*jber 31st; C Book holders. August 31st: Com­mercial vehicles every six months

svery 5,000 miles, whichever occurs flrsl.

Federal law viiriies heavy penalties for misuse bf rulioii damps, certificates and for various

other misdeeds in connection with rotloning programs. War ration stamp* and books remain the properly of the go\frnmenl ever, though they are distributed for

by the general public. In that way the government retains coo- trol over iheir use. The /Second War Power.* Act. covering such subjects, carries a prison sentence nr fine up to 410,000, or both, upoa conviction. '

A great sqany malpractices in

(Continued on Page 3)

Page 2: pUBUC ,,,, Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent

THE MOKEHEAD (KV.) INDEEENDENT^

ADVERTISING RATES MADE KNOWN UPON APPUCATION

.....................................................................;•■•■..............................

(AU SubMTTptiMU Mtut Be Pkid ia Advance)

PoliticalAnnouncements

1 to AanouBce:

WALTER J. BAILET«s a candidate for Repreoeota* live of the Ninety-Sixth Dis- triet composed of Rowan and Bath ConnUes,' subject to the action or the Democratic Pri­mary on Saturday. Anc- 7. 1M3.

We are Antborized, hLESLIE E. RICHARDSON

as a candidate lor RepresenU- Uve ad the Ninety-Sixth Ms- trict composed of Rowan sad

mary oo Satnrday. An|. 7. IML

We are Anlhoriaed to vAanonnee

tor ComiDOD-

mary. Anyost 3. IMS.

We Are Anl 1 To Announce

J. A. RICHARDS Of Owinesrille. Ky.

as a candidate for the office of SUte Senator for the 27lb Sen-, atorial District, subject , to the action of the Democratic Pri­mary, Auyust 7. IMS.

We are Authorized to Announce REID PBEWnr

as a candidate f

the 21st Judicial District, sub­ject to the action of the Demo­cratic primary. An«ttst 7. IMS.

SheriffsSale

aU of said land lying south of County Road.

Being same land conveyed to W. L. Hargis by D. C..CaudiU and wife by-Deed dated August 16. 1940. and Recorded in Deed Book

directed to me, which issued from the office of the Rowan County Circuit court in favor of Mrs. M.

Courthouse door in Morehead, Kentucky, expose to public* sale, to the highest bidder, the follow­ing described property, to-wit:

Lou Nos. 101 and 102 in the ToUtver Addition of Morehead. Ky., fn»Ung on the Did County Road, said lou being same proper­ty conveyed to Mrs. Dick Preston by C. B. Kegley and L. P. Kegley. by deed dated April I. 1031, Re- corded in Deed Book 44 at Page 258 Rowan County Records, levied on as the property of Mrs. Dick Preston.

will be made

SI. at Page 568 Rowan County Records, levied on as the property of Lem Hargis.

Terms—Sale wiU be made on a credit of 8 months with aj^roved security required, bearing interest Bj the rate of six per cent per an-

1, from date of sale and having the force and effect of a replevin bond.Amount to be made.Debt r9.4»CosU $11.00

W. H. CARTER. Sheriff of Rowan County.

credit of 6 months with aw»roved security required, bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per ah- num. from date of sale and having the force and effect of a replevin bond.Amount to be made Debt $39.19 CosU $9.00

W', H. CARTER. Shcr;ff of Rowan County.

WHEREAS, on the 6th o..y of July. 1943. there was duly fllcd in the ofHce of the SUte SoU Conser­vation Committee • at Prankfort, Kentucky, a petition signed by at

SheriffsSale

Bath. Fleming. Mason. Menifee. Rowan and Wolfe Coonties. subject to the aeUim M the Democratic primary. August 7.

INDEPRNDENT — SniX $LM PER TEAR

lent Want Ads Get Results!COURTBSY - - EFFICIENCY - - SAFETY Tbaoe three features, eeupled with the prampt- oHi which baa beoMM syuouymeus with “fU*" •errioei is the reaaoo Curt's Tmasfer is first

dwioe far hauUng aad deUvery servtoe.

SUt^ Morins Permit S31

CURrS TRANSFERJ. R. WENDEL, Owner

c: A O. Pick-up Phones:And Delivery 99 and 25$

“U Need Us Every Move U Make”

By virtue of execution No. 1088 directed to me. which i.-tsued from the office of the Rowan County Circuit court in favor of M. M. Bradley against Lem Hargis I. or one of my deputies, will on Mon­day, Aug. 2. at about the hour of 1 O’clotdt P. M. at the Courthouse door in Morehead. Kentucky, ex­pose to public sale, to the highest bidder, the foUowing described property, te^wit:

A cerUin tract or parcel of land lying in Rowdn County. Kentucky, on Licking Ri'ver. described as fol­lows: Beginning at two blackoak bushes marked as, corner to Ona Prather, thence N.' 69 E. 139 poles to a white oak maple and black oak comer to Henry Razor 20V- acre survey; thence same coucse 35 poles to red oak. with stone set against it and white oak; thence S. 26 W. 30 poles to a double hickory; thence same course 64 poles to the old gum comer on back of branch near the forks; thence S. 19 W. 22 4-10 poles to white oak oo south side of County Road; thence S. 43%

vation Districts Law, (Chapter 8. 1940 Ses.sions AcLs. page 37) re- ques Row-District. and

WHEREAS, the lands sought to be included in the .said district by said petition comprise lands in Rowan County, described substan­tially as follows:

Alt lands lying frithin the boon- dary of Rowan Coonty. Ken­tucky. with (he exceptiott of those lands lying nilhln the bonndary of lacorporaled towns and villages within the county.

NOUC.THEREFORE. notice i s. hereby given that a public hearing will be held pursuant to the said

■tition. on the puestion of the de-ibility and necessity, in the in­

terest of the public health, safety and welfare, of the creation of such district: on the question of the appropriate boundaries to be

propriety of the petition, and all other proceedings Uken under the said Act; and upon all questions relevant to such inquiries. The said ■ ■■ ■

E 9 poles to a small pine; thence 19 E: 9 poles to a sweet gum;

thence S. 55 E. 9 poles on south side of river bank; thence S. 1$ W. 11 poles to four maples; thence 18 poles to two sycamores; thence S. 68 W. 19 poles to a bunch of small sycamores; thence S. 68 W.

........... the north bank of LickingRiver and corner to Oo^Prather;

poles to a stake: thence 139 poles to a set stone on top ofridge: thence N. U E. 39 poles to the beginning. Excepting Is made of land previously sold to T. Harryby D. C. Caudill and wife, being

TDIESCHEDVIECentral War Time

J. C. WELLS BUS LINESHAYSYILLE TO CAHPTON

VIA • . ‘wed. Sandy Beak, Weet Uberty. Caanel City bad Haari Gnen, Zr.

EFFECTIVE: JDIT 1. IMS

READ DOWN LEAVE

P.H. AJA am.

READ VP ARRIVB rM TM

IS ; s11 4:19 t0:.55

N.V. BCATSVrtLE. KT. AR.. ______ LEWISBURG

WEDONIAflemI1(gsbubg

GODDARDplvmmers mills

HILDA

9:399:159:658:59B:40t:S0S:15

2:$5 2:15 2:99 1:59 1:35

. 1:25 1:15

5:15

I If ELLIOTT VILLE DEW DROP

NEWFOUNDLAND SANDY HOOK ‘

WRIGLEV

7:297:096:596:496:15

12:15 6:55 11:59 6:40 11:35 6:30 11:25 6:20 19:40 6:90

s 7:15 . 7:45 8;IS

CANNEL CITY HAZEL GREEN

AB. CAMPTON LI

9:45 5:00* 9:20 4:30 9:00 4:00

'LP.M. A.M. i

ARRIVERound Trip Fare Of One Way Fare

Increased when necessary to make sneb fare end in •'9" or “S”

AJ»L PJH. ^VE

NOTICE!Notice Of Hearing Upon OrgMl-

satton Of Proposed Rowxu Conaty SoU C<

■s pursi e Soil (

id public hearing will be held by e SUte Soil Conservation Corn-

County of Rowan.All the persons, Anns and cor­

porations who shaU hoM tiUe to, 'shall be in paesession oL any

e-described territory, whether as owners, lessees, rent­ers. tenants, or otherwise, and all other interested parties are invi­ted to attend and will ge given opportunity to be heard at the time and pbcified.

COMMlBy WilUam C. Harris

Acting Vice Chairman

comer to lands of said John Fos­ter. John Moore and Henry C. Caiidill. and at end of fence; thence a south east course with said fence and John Moore line to a set stone in line of Jerry Lewis land; thence a oorth west course with said Jerry Lewis and with a fence to a set stone to said Jerry Lewis line; thence

being the same land conveyed from John Foster to John-Moore

01 Marcn, iinu, ano oi record ut Deed Book No. 35. page 49. RowanCounty'records.

Or sufficient thereof to produce the sum of money so ordered to bemade. For the purchase price, the purchaser must execute bond, with

bearing legal^ the day of sale, until

(Ci9M99*d M Page TWee)

Commissioner’sSale

Rewaa CIremH Cewt

P. S. Howard. Adm. Plaintiff

VERSUSRuth CarUr. et al.

Defendant .

By virtue of a judgment and or­der of sale of the Rowan Circuit Court rendered at the May Term thereof, 1943. in the above styled cause. I shall proceed to offer for sale at the,-e«jrt House door in the Morohead. Kentucky,to the highest best bidder, at pqblic auctlon/on the 2nd day of AugbWrOPWrfit One O clock P .M.. o» thereabouts, upon a credit of .six (6) months, the following dOK cribed property, lo-wit:

A tract of land in Rowan Coun­ty. Kentucky, botinded as follow.-i Beginning at a set stone in line of lands sold by the party of the first part to Henry Caudill on the weet side of the Phelps road; thence with the Phelps road and with the meanders of said Phelps road and ^n the west side thereof to a whit© oak stump corner to lands owned by Jerry Lewis; thence about a south west cruise with said Jerry, Lewis lands to a set stone in said Jerry Lewis and John Foster line; thence a north course with said Foster line to a set stone in said Henry Caudill's line; thence with said Henry Caudill line to the be­ginning. containing 25 acres more or less, excepting therefrom a txxid or passway 16 feet wide extend­ing from the said Phelps road along the line of said Jerry Lewis land to Chimney comer or where the old chimney formerly stood; being the same land conveyed to party of the first part by John Foster and wife by deed of

Some Facts Worth Remembering

A CmU WiU Be Hicher ★ Tracks WiU Be Few9r A DeUveries WiU Be Slower A Ecoaomy Cool Is Better

il aa« btv wUle you eaa get delivery.

BcMMv Coal Pratoced By

WILLARD COAL COMPANY*’ J. L. BOr.UESS. Owner

> WILLARD. (Carter County) KENTUCKY

• by deed January 23rd. 1929, recorded inDeed Book 31. page 501. Rowan County records.

Also another tract or parcel ol butd lying in Rowan County. Kentucky, on west side of Trip-

Jbr Economical Transportation

^CJiEVROLET/f

SALES SERVICE

Genuine Chevrolet' Partsand Accessories

Eizperienced Mechanics 24-Hour Wrecker Service

-HIDLANDTRAIL-GARAGE

No Shoe Stamp Needed AtGOLDE’S Til July 31

OPA Odd Lot Release - Allows Us To Sell Approximate!^ PairsMen's, Women's & Chilt^en's Shoes - No Stamp!!

Of Course We May Sell Our Entire AUotment The First Day - This Sale WiU Last Only Until Our Allotment Is So[d - So You Had Be^ ter Be Here On The First Day.

ioff'OPA Also Requires Us To SeU You These Shoes at 25% Off Their

Regular Price

JARMAN SHOES FOR MEN8.85 SHOES - NOW 6.64 NO COUPON

7.85 SHOES - NOW 5.89 NO COUPON

6.85 SHOES - NOW 5.14 NO COUPON,,

5.85 SHOES • NOW 4.39 NO COUPON

5i0 SHOES - NOW 4.13 NO COUPON

4i5 SHOES - NOW 3.74 NO COUPON^

3S SHOES - NOW 2.99 NO COUPON -

2.98 SHOES - NOW 2.24 NO COUPON

WOMENS & CHILDRENS SHOES4J5 SHOES - NOW 3.74 NO COUPON 355 SHOES - NOW 2.99 NO COUPok 2.98 SHOES - now' 2.24 NO COUPON 2.49 SHOES - NOW 1.87 NO COUPONTHIS will allow us to soil about 100 palm without Coupons, but we will have about 500 pairs to Miect from. However, as soon as we sell our 100 pairs, the balance will have to be withdfawn from Sale. HERE IS WHAT WE CAN SELL WITHOUT

COUPONS:VA Of Our Entire Stock Of Men's Shoes

4% Of Our Entire Stock Of Women s Shoes 2V'< Of Our Entire Slock Of Children's Shoes

GOLDE’S DEPT. STORE

Page 3: pUBUC ,,,, Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent

T"

1 _THE MOREHEAD (KY.) INDEPENDENT

HOT AIN’T IT!!!■■• BUY ICE!

TAUTT GOWA BE • HOT FOREVER

ORDER YOUR COAL NOW FROM

Horehead Ice & Coal Company

paid, and having th« force and effect of a judgment. Bidders will be prepaid to comply promptly with these terms.

ARTHUR HOGCE

O.P. A ODD LOT RELEASE ON

SHOESNO STAMP No. 18 K REQUIRED

- JULY 19 TO JULY 31 -

SEE OUR SPECIALS ON

LADIES’-DRESSES(Three R«cks)

$298 - $398 - $498

Men’s Slack Suits & Wash Pante

ONE-FOURTH OFF

THE BARGAIN STOREARTHUR BLAIR. Mgr.

SaleCommissioner’s

Master CorRowan Circuit Court

nearest ration board any ration- bocks or stamps you may find.

(e) Withulding of ration stamps - certiltcates belonging to another

person, such as a former doarder, household helper, or maid.

Transferring, by selling or giving, gas coupons or any other rationed Items to another person.

(g) Pur^asiiig sires with cer- tifleate by refusing to surrender old tires.

Crackerharrel---(Ce*tlMM« Frea Page 1)

in town for Secretary of State. Uncle Lee Stewart. I

f to bat for him 1007«.

his family, kninv his record, and know him to be on the level. And 1 think the least that we. his friends and neighbors here in thisand other counties of the state, could do for him is to talk for him and vote for him on election day.

My most heartfelt sympathy to the Tomlinson family. Evai

r friend, ^nlf a good and kindil to all. ■

Rationing - ■ -

the light of

tng . le viewed

thoughtlessness In any

event the public is harmed. Mis­use of ration stamps makes a di­rect contribution to black markets with all their resultant evil.s. fact, their misuse is responsible in a large degree for the operation of black markets which, by arfd large, throw the whole plan of <iqual division of at-ailable foods and goods out of line, cause short­ages and bring avoidable discom­fort to the people.'

The most serious violations "are:(a) Theft and iUegal possession

of ration books, stamps, certifi­cates. etc.

(b) Using stolen stamps inpur- foodchasing food, gasoline i other

(c) ' "Shop-lifting" goods without giving stamps-

(d) Making false sUtemente in applying for ration stamps or cer­tificates.

Selling or purchasing of

Other common misuses(a) Trading or exchanging or

giving away unused stamps.(b) - • •Purahasing commodities

sold by a store only on condiUdnthat certain other goods chased.'

Using your gasoline foroUier purposes than that tor which

THANKSFOR

YOURHELP!

As XmniHriMM. w. nunUy fed about cbe Brown Hottl in eoedy tbe' ■ame way that erery tpie KetKoddan feela about his Aomw—diat it should be always ready ta«.offer tbe noK geoeroui hospitali^ to eeecy fiikiKl who comes our way. ....Thafi why it has been particalatly

tng ro ua, on so many days sod

come for a fow bouts or a few ' to see cfaetr boys in uniform. . . .

nights during the past year or so. to have to tell many of our best friends that die Brown is filled up, And that we just can’t cake care of them. . . .

You probably know our situation. Thousands and thousands of soldiers ace scarioned within a few miles of LouisWUe,'and almost every night the Brown is "sold out”, widi every room oco^ied'either by officers, tnspeccots or men from distant does,St bjr whres and parents sdio have

When that happens we have uj .alternative but to tdl you the condl- tioos, and to adc diac you bear with us until better-days come back again. We dislike dte present situatipn even more than you do >-> excepting only.

we do few that despite rationing, ahoitages o( labor, etc., we are coa- cributing somwhing to the War efibtt. In the meantime, when you plan to come' to Louisville, write us as fer in advance as possible^ and we’!!"^

retythiog in our power to show yourfiar we apprtdaU your paden^e and your feiendship.

Tbe Staff of tbt

BROWN HOTELLOUISVIlXE

actually have been drafted after they refused to leave a nonde- ferable Job for euential-'work. Waived on their age were ob­tained from the Army.

Word earlier in the year that general draft of fathers prob-

fect on local draft board.s, causing them to speed the indtitejm of sinele men deferred orenousiy

Draft Fathers---be swelled by "recoveries’ the 2.S7S.000 men who m class 4-F on July 1 because of disqualification tor physical, lal. educational or moral reasons.

picited out that of

aged18 through 37. more than halt al-

On the darker side of the poini

the toUl of 22.184.000re. Solomon p

placed in 4-F.War Manpower

officials said there a

- rejected and

9,300-000 men and women in uniform and this number will grow to 10.-800.000 by January 1 and to II.-300.000 by next July I as the Navy expands by some SOT,000 in the first half of 1944 yfineMhe Army holds to a strtng.h of/B.- 200.000. !

Salomons diWassiori_Qf' draft situation wi^" hlBhlighled by statements Aat:

This month's draft call larger than any of the four

"slightly larger than August and Just under July.'

Local boards are rejecting and rccluss-fying to 4-F 6.5 per cent of the men they examine, while induction sUtimu are rejecting about 33.5 per cent.

"Psydiiatric rejections" cover­ing cases of men believed unable to stand the menial strain of the shift from ciWlian to military life, are '*at the hiidtest point ever

proportion" ofall rejections. This situation being studied carefully in an tempt to work out “more uniformstandards” for psychiatric exami- nations.

The average age of

composed almost exclusively fathers, is 30J. (Rejections rise steeply as age advances.)

The Navy is taking for special service men with some ordinary disqiiallflcatlons, IwVit is not fol­lowing the Army practice of tak­ing ariNind 9 per emt for-limited ser\-ice. Much of the Army’s lim­ited service quoU may be filled by general servle soldiers who are disabled slightly in battle

n over'38

Profe&sionalCards

DR. M. F. HERBST Dentist

OFFICE HOURS: PHONE N^g TO 5

Seoood FImt CeosoUdated ' Hardware BaUdlng

MOREHEAD. KENTUCKY

Lane FunerarHome Fmenl Dinetora

AnbalRRCd Serried Phone: 91 (Dt7).174 (Nisht)

V. H. WOLFFORD‘General Insurance

“Athlete’s Foot"I Made This Test

I learned the germ imbeds it­self deeply. Requires a strong penetrating fungicide. TE-OL iuUon made with 90% alcohol in­creases penetration. Reaches more germs (aster. You feel it Uke hold. Get the test size TC-OL at any drug store. Try it (or sweaty, smelly or itchy feet. Today at C. E. Bishop Drug Company.

“HELM’S GOVERNMENT AP- PROVED CHICKS—Blood test, ed for 20 years—Wonderful Uv.ability-Egg Contest winm World's records-Extra eggs and extra chicks raised make you extra profils.-HELM'S HATCH. ERY, Paducah, Ky.

the deferment ecupation to dependancy.

(There is en official ban against induction of fathers living with

children bom be­fore September IS, provided they

• • rableare .not engaged in nondeferable wor^. ’ Draft officials contend there have been few cases where

s disregarded, and say that local boards have been “ior-

retried after gening out of line." There is a strong probability

■at many of the 70S,000.single lildless married men now defer-

.id as necessary workers on farms will be reclassified (or military service after the harvest season.

J. Warren Blair---(Continned mm Page One)

:an. the P-51Mustang, in c mbat.

Blair is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lus-.cr E. Blair. 336 Wilson ax’*-

Morehead. He was gradu­ated al .iBreckinridgie Training School in 1938,

paredby Preston S. Sinton, acting chief engineer, and H. A. Zanone, plumbing-heating

Independent Want Ads Get Results! /

Dry Cleaning and Pressing4^

One - Day Service — We Deliver

DELUXE CLEANERS628 West Main Street

Phtme 28 • - Rex Walters, Owner

Morehead State Teachers College years. He has a brother.

Harold F, Blair. In the Den- department staUo.ied at Camp

Wallace. Texas.

Capt. \ tul dep

State Has Spent Almost 4 Million On Institutions

Kentucky spent $3,989,142.70 between December. 1939, and last June 1 on the State institutional rehabilitation and construction program.

addition. $431,890.77 was spent to build eight armories. $109,509.48 by the State-formed Armory Corporation and $232- 381.29 by the Work Projects Ad­ministration. while the corporat­ion bought the Campbellsville Armory building for $14,802.50.

These expenditures (or the were listed in a reeport ofpen

the State Engineering and Con­struction Division made public

The document, pre-

HENRY WARDDoMcraefe CoMlkbte Fer

LlfinTENANT GOVERNOR ★

rOl/R POTE FOR WARD IS A VOTE FOR KF.NTVCKVS FROCRMS^

* EXPERIENCEDWard to the only Cendidele ■

served ss Representntjve eontinuo elecM Democratic Uejorlty Uedei

e put 10 yeen end wm

Waid hu authormt

putod of the Stole’s umplete trowloai fre of Itom to praraot It «S^ Into dMt osUn.

* PROGRESSIVE

« good of hto Plate end Its people than Henry Ward " Howard a lalthtui puMto aarvant. Vole tor Ward, to)

CTTIZENS CAMFAIGPI COMKITTig Wtnr WARD FOR UEVTU1AHT GOt'SRmMt

WIN WITH WARD

TO THOSE DURABLE PATRIOTS

nE of tf>e Graytwund family hoM « firm edmireKon for our panen^ers. For whM

i) comet fo beerinq up, trhen war fravet amarqaneiat and prdblemt are baaHnq down, they’re 100 proof ... 100 pgr centl In fact, at a group they ere the mott cooperative, mott cheerfully indulgent felb it’t been .our good fortune to Aow.Fewer copvanieneet have made no rift in our long and pleaThey accept ^wartime eonditiont at they ere . . . relinqu'ith their good Americanprarogativa to travel how, when and where they pleate, aU in the causa of Victory. Greyhound penangers are flying their true colors every day that roOt around . .. andthey can depend upon Greyhound to do Ih level best by them, to prove worthy of their continued good will and loyalty.

SOUTHEASTERN

greyhoumdHMes •

..

Page 4: pUBUC ,,,, Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent

v;': ■

THE MOREHEAD (KY.) INDEPENDENl

-Mii^ Amelia Duley «pent Mon­day in Lexin^or.

MisF Juanita Minish Lexinglon Saturday.

Hook \Tonday and Tuesday business.

Miss Mary Frank Wiley, of Ash- land, was a visitor in town,4asl week-er^. ■

Mr. William DeForest. of Mann. West Virginia, visited his fr.mily here last week.

I ' Missk Katharine Blair returned i^undny to Washington. D. C. from aNk'eek's visit with her fai here.

Mrs. Cecil fTaley visited Buntington. W. Va.. last \veek*end

Mr. D. B. CaudiU \NOTICE

Ouroffice U now open and will be atnrlng the months of July and Aagust. Come in early-and give la your list and avoid the pcn-

<>-alty that goes on for late flUng. PEYTON ESTEP.

County Tax Commisioner.1 ^

PLASSIFIEnb ADS U

Capt. O. M. Lyons, of Fort Ben- jamin Harrison, is the guest of his family this week.

Miss'Elorothy Highly is spend­ing the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Lyons at Olympia Springs. Kentucky

Mi.ss Carline Evans, of Louisa. Kentucky, is the guest this week of Mrs. Oli ~Boyd.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Craig and

Missighters were Sunday guests of ■■s Lela Mae Craig.

.Missfew days

lives in Owingsville.★Billy Vaughan spent last week­

end at Camp Offut. a boy scout >r Versailles.

Miss Katharine Powers, of Olive Hill, was the guest of her parents, Mr- and Mrs. J. H. Powers, last wteek.

CAUDILL BEUNION

The Caudill family held an all-

Greyhound Lines Produce Motion Picture In 1940‘This Amazing .America'*

A’iewed By Seven Million Persons

tiome of Mr. and Mrs. 1. C.: -This Amazing America. ' IBlatr on Fifth street.. Dr, E. D.; technicolor motion picture pi Blair s maid served the dinner duced by the Greyhound Lines and picnic supper. The food was. 1940 >0 pi

Saturday from sever.nl days' visit with his mother. Mr>. F. P. Blair.

Mrs. Dorsey Gevedon. of Pan- na. Ky.. returned home Friday

after completing five wetks' study at MS.T.C.

Misses Ernestine Powers and Elizabeth Sluss. of Wright Field. Dayton. Ohio, were guests of their families here Sunday.

Mrs. Gladys Robenson. mother fo Mrs. A. B. Bowne. underwent

minor operation in a Louisville hospital recently.

promote bus travel, eiising and the "kuests •'serving a new and important pur- entertaining and inter-1 p,.se in advancing the country’s

•sting day.Members of the family present

reportinternational relations.

. . . I The Office of War Information,were; Mr. and Mrs. S. M, Caudill. | at the request of the State De- Mr, and Mrs. D. B. Caudill. Mr. parlmcnt. has obtained prints of and Mrs- D. C. Caudill. Mr, and the film for distribution i Ru> Mrs. C. P. Caudill, George Caudill,Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Caudill and son. Dale.P Caudill Dr. and Mrs.

parthe film for distribution i Ru.ssia Initial showings are planned for the AmericanEmbassy in Moscow,

Mrs. Boone'but unlike the films once presen- nd daughter. Susie, f ted bv German counselor officials. E. D. Blair

county farm labor committee re- poru throughout the burley belt. As many as 506 men may be need- edin some counties; he said, while from SO to 200 will be sought in others.

The extension service of the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, which is k chan the farm labor pru'gr^ in 1 lucky, will handle the task of find­ing workerji who will be available about the middle of August, when the burley harvesl usually begins

Poundslone urged growers to tile their applications for workers "at once."

led by F.’ P. Fish. Food

Kentucky Births Up Ten Per Cent In Five Months

Kentucky’s birth rate for I first five months of 1943 shows increase of 10.per cent over t. some period last year, according to f>relimin.-iry figures released by

Mrs. John Barker and children, countries. Hendrix Barker, Billy. Virgimii. ],s title revised

Lytti.^nne and LouellaMri^

•aggs and daughtex.„-f<:arl. Kankakee. Illinois.

'h; been more than

Statistics, staleBoard of Health.

Births totaling 28.150 up to June umpored with 20.140-during

fir.st live months of lust year.

camp r

Mrs. C. 2. Bruce .md son. Rob-i p._ ‘f z|,_t. left Tuesday for a visit with i V.-ierK OI title

her parenLs. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. CoUft of Appeals

Mrs. Milton Evans, who i^.annoui ig the summer in Baltimore, [ pound

s here lasv week-end.

Gose, of Jackson.

Private and Mrs. .Astor Collins announce the arrival of an eight

July 19. at the Good

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Of. ipent last week-end with their

Leo. at Fort Thomas.

Miss Beryl Shanklin. of West Virginia, is the guest this week of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Black.

Mrs- Robert Anglin and ejau ler spent the week-end Wit\. husband at Aden. Kentucky. \

FOR SALE »-ACRE FARM, with 7-room

dw^ling (4 rooms downstairs. 3 iipl- Good well, bam and out- iHiUdittgs. Good orchard. Elec- 'tricity in house. Gas well — taziD pays S35.00 per year roy­alty, and aU gas necessai? for use tne. Located one mUe north of MoreheadBoad. Known as the Isaac Quis-enbetry farm. For further infor­mation call 306, or see Bill AJ- <>cnnaa. •-•s m-

FOR SALE HOUSE AT 323 SECOND ST.,

divided into two S-room apart- tncsite, with separate entrances. Coal Furnace or Gas Heat, Completely modern. Terms can be arranged. See owner on premises or call 235 between 8 a_jn. and 9 |i.»n.

Chann-Kurl Kil. Complete, in*

tay McKenzie, glar star. Money refui

imorous movie inded

Batson's Drug Store.

Harlan EHlngton, of Bangor.

Miss Jean Elliott, of Frankfort, was the guest of Lieut, and Mrs. George C. HallI last week-end.

Misses Mary Hlen and Betty Moras were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Helwig last week-end.

Edward Crawford, of Ports­mouth. Va., is spending this week

the home of Mrs. Z. E. Johnson.

Astor Collins returned Sunday to Camp Forest, Tenn„ from sev­eral days' >isit with Mrs. Collins here. • - —•• •★

Mr. and Mrs. Karl M. StoUar and son. Jimmie, left Wednesday

days' visit with his pa­rents. Mr. and Mrs James H. Stol-

rk Cilar, of New York City.

Mrs. D. B. Caudill. Mrs. D. C. Caudill. Mrs. Boone Caudill and daughter, Susie, and Miss Pearl Skaggs are visiting today at the }iome of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Little, of Lexington.. ★

Mrs. J. T. Daugherty returned Sundi^ from Laguma Beach, Cal­ifornia, to make her home with

NOnCB

Under the new law, you ate rcqalred to come In and file yoBr lax list at aur office, at tbe ConrUmwe in Morehead. Oaroffice la BOW open and will be darittt the months of Jaly and August. Come In early and give in your list and avoid the pen-, alty that goes on for late filing.

PEYTON ESTEP.Connty Tax Conwnltsioner.

ilmer, while Lieut. Daugh- griy is overseas.

T. and Mrs.^W. H. Vaughan and son. Bobby, and Miss Marie Jenkins.. were guests last week­end of Dr. Vaughan's father. W. J. Vdughan, and Mrs. Vaughan's mother, Mrs., James H. Woofis, of Louisa.

WRITE IT14ND MAIL ITYou have a bill to pay. Yoii write a check and mail it. It’s all as simple as that. When a postagestamp will save * ----- ’ ’ " ' ‘

it itown, it is one ofyou time and a special trip to the world's best investments.

And there are more benefits. Later, the check will return to provide a legal and lasting receipt. You will haVe full information for your protection. Now, when so many figures are required by your povemment, you need financial fact-s at your fin-

Otherw'iscgerlip.«. OtI vise, you may be the loser.

A Checking Account hqye will be doubly helpful in thwe busy war-time days. Your business is invited.

PEOPLES BANK OF MOREHEADMOREHEAD, KENTUCKY

Member Federal DcpoMI lusorancc CarporatipB

Samaritan Huspital. Lexingtun.

Mrs. M. S. Bowne and daughter, Analen. cf Lexington, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Bowne on College sircvi this week.

Rev. and Mrs. A. E. Uaiidolt were in Lexington Sund.ny. Mrs. Rosa Rac, grandmother >>f Mrs. Landolt. resumed home with them to spend several days.

Mr, and Mrs. J. R. Wendell and daughter. Mary Scott, visited Captain and Mr.'^. Earl May in Lexington last week-end and at­tended the Horse Show.

Mrs. Fred Cassity returned from

Charleston. W. Va.. Saturday and left Tuesday for an extended visit with her family In SalyersviUe.

Mrs. Alma Bdlamy and Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Elam, of West Lib­erty, visited Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Bellamy Sun street.

Miss Leola Caudill, army hos­tess at Fort Knox, returned Mon­day to the army post at Fort Knox from a week's vacation with her mother. Mrs. W. T., Caudill. She

accompanied 10 Louisville by her rhother.

.' tified.ocpies of birth record have

. unaiT Ih. of Ihe Of- I .o,..-. 12 IM fron, J.n-ifk,. of .»« Cwdlnolor o,I Ame.-icHn Affairs- These show. ’„ inss are sl.ll con:inuinB before Department als..aud.ences Itt several S»h.msand requests for cer-daily ■polio.'

"This Amazing .America" i>. »r. ,, . ...™d,m.ro,al nir. 0,.,, t.olo. o, . j ™ »l«reh o, ,h„ ,ear. i .200

...o, U., Unl,« SUI» ■•■“••'* ■‘“"J’.id .L, plol Th, pif,™, vi.l,rt ______________the screen include Hollywood and ^

San Fran­cisco and,(he bay bridges. Cali-

'thousand

’ the average number of 1942. Dur-

Soutlivrn California. 1 . d-the bay brii

i forma's ftedw«H>d:;;iSurvey Discloses

Many Failed ToIsiis.' vl“s;::Re0ster For Meat;Bost<i:i and hisloru. New England., __________I the Natural Hndgv of i the Grtiil Smoky .Mountains.|Flori.-.a beaclie... New Orlean.- and';the Miss ssippi. Texas and the, i Alamo, and the Grimd t'unyon. i Smtee it produelioti three ye.ir. j ago. •|ic film has be«n viewed by audiences mtaling seven million persons in this couniiy.

■ Such I'orsi)n.s Subject To A Fine and Imprisonment

Rationing ReprcMntative in Charge of the Meats-Fata Pro­gram. all persons dealing in meata, fats., canned fish, butter and ra­tioned cheeses are required to reg­ister and account for their trans­actions in these commodities.. Any who have not registered with their Local War Price and Rationing Board are in violation of Ration­ing Order 16 of the OPA regula­tions. Any person dealing com­mercially in theseby sale, gift or exchange, are re^ quiced to collect raiioninjf'-pointa

. commer­cial slaughterer, restaurant, dairy selling butter or rationed cheeses, farmer aellig fresh or cured meata, butter or rationed cheeses, can ob- Uln information from their local War Price and Rationing Board. '

MILLSTHEATRE

PHONE 146 MOREHEAD, KT.

SATURDAY. JULY 24 Doable Featare

“Keep ’Em Slugging”Dead Ead Kids

“Truck Busters”RMiard Travis - Rutb Fard

SUN. A MON.. JULY 25-26“Next Of Kin”

Basil Sydney -Natty Ptne Cabin Cartoon

BROOKS L. HARGROVE

Brooks L. Hargrove, Louisville, has announced his candidacy the office of Clerk of the Coui_____irt ofAppeaU. subject to the action of the Democratic primary. Satur­day. August 7th. •

Mr. Hargrove, an-ordained Bap­tist minister, has had fifteen years of legislative and clerical ex- perience.

His. candidacy deserves the se­rious consideration of the Demo­cratic voters of this section of the stale.

Gassified Ads Get Results!

' Th’c U x.m;iiii, Di.-lnrt rtfii,-,. „f: ,Or’A ha., found many pcryo.is

, i-hangc of meals, fnfii and ihcoscs

TUES. A W ED.. JULY 27 - 28“Follow The Band”

L-.P Errol - Belii llaOm

THURS. A FRI.. JULY Ef ■ 3R

Leaf Harvest In State Will Require 3,000 Extra Workers

An extra 3,000 workers will be needed to cut and house Ken­tucky's burley tobacco crop this

Bruce Poundstone, Slate

The mountain country tif ^st em Kentucky, which has been the source of a steady flow of helpers to the stale's farming regions dur- ing the current growing season, will be combed for the needed recruii-v.

Poundstone sa-d he based his ertimatc of workers needed on

ffices of county agenu iuitl c

AN OPEN LET|TER, Colnlj t eac^ ho

To The Democratic Voters of Rowan (

It is not possible for me to visit eac^ home in m.v cam­paign for the Democratic nomination for Representative.for this reason 1 am writing to you, that you may know more of what ti expect of me if I am nominated and elected.

Mrs. Louis Higgins and daugh- r. Betty Bruce. 0l Erlanger, Mr.

and Mrs. D. B. Redmond and chil­dren, Una Pearl and Anne, of Murfreesboro, ' Tenn., and Mrs- George Punke, of Cincinnati. Ohio,

Mrs. H. C. Lewis and Miss Nan- nette Robinson left Friday ior-xi. visit with Mrs Lewis’ son. Ser- n geantJack Lewis who is recupera­ting from an operation at the Wal­ter Reed HospiUl, and with Nan- netle's father. Lieutdnant Com­mander Greene Robinson, of Washington, D. C.

Mr. A. J. Sexton celebrated his 85Ui birthday tvith a dinner at his home on the Flemingsburg Road

ily 18lh.- Twenty-five members his family were present. Out of

wn guests were: Fon Sexton, r. and Mrs. Cal Sexton and

grandson. Ronnie Wade, of-Asl land, and Mr. Sexton's sister. Alii Duncan, of Portsmouth, Ohio.^

Notice!Under the new law. yon are

required to eooie la and file yoar tox list at oar office, at the CoarUioose in Morehead Oar office la now open and will be during the months of July and AngusL Come in.early and give In yoor list and avoid the pen­alty that goes on for late filing.

PEYTON ESTEP.Coanty T^ Cwnniimloner.

without proper registration. Those Good LUck, Mt. YrICS ' persons are not properly register- Claire Trevor - Edgar Wro-k.—fr , cd and accounting fur rationing Shortpoint, are in violation of the law | Malice In Siunberfaiid and are subject to penally and 1

for violation. I

In 1918 and in 1928, I served as your Represenlative from this district. It was during the.se time.s that good roads, state finances and school and college maintenance was before

]the legislature. It was my belief that good road.s were es.sen- tial to the people in their various requiremens. I feel that way about it now. Economy in state maintenance Involved much study and thought, but I was convinced that it was to the interest of the taxpayers that the money of the people should be used only to the best interest of the state. That shall again be my policy if elected. The maintenance of com- mbi^schools and teachers colleges, and adequate pay for tea­chers had to be provided for, and I favored using the tax money in liberal proportion to this need.

APPUCATION FOR HOME CANNING SUGAR

After clipping and filling but form in detail, enclose War Ration Book One of each member bffamily and mail to Local War Price and Rationiaig' Board. ^

1. Amount of sugar purchased with Stamp 15 and 16 of .War Ration Book One of each family

2. Number of quafts of fniit canned from su­gar purchased on War Ration Books or by certifi­cates iasued by Local Boards since January 1st, 1943.

S. Nurobe>^of pounds of sugar used for preser­ving from su^wk purchased with stamps from Book One.

4. Total number of quarts of fruit for which application is being made.

larts of fruit to be canned

6. Number of War Ration Books One enclosed with this application.

of our late friend and worker, Judge Allie W. Young, the Morehead. State Teachers College was esUblished. This col­lege has meant much to eastern Kentucky. Since the passing of Judge Young, the legislative appropriations for this col­lege have steadily declined. It is a question of whether this college can continue to operate efficientl;lege can continue to operate efficiently on present appro­priations. Our fight is to restore it to its former power as an educational center. If elected, I will use all the power at my command to keep our college active and-growing.

Many of our teachers are attracted to other states and places of lucrative employment. Our common school is suffer­ing because of this, and the further fact that so mapy of ouryoung and available women teachers are going into the de- fehs ' . . - . . —ise of our country, that our schools are endangered. We must do everything possible to win the war, but our leaders do not want the educational interests of our slate and nation to perish. If elected. 1 trill use all the power I possess to re­lieve this situation.

It is my judgement that your representative .should k wisely and act accordingly when exercising his right

to vote qpon all measures, and at no time lo.se interest inthink t

the welfare of the state and nation. If elected, I will use my best talent in this respect. I will appreciate your support and influence.

Sincerely yours,WALTER J, BAILEY

ALWAYS A GOOD'FRIEND .... ...your ,bank account

Money in the Bank doesn’t blow hot and cold, Kke some friends do. It’s always there. . . ready for your use when you need it.

I

There isn’t any deep, dark secret about building a bank account. It’s easy. First, open an account. Second, make regular deposits. You’ll be' sarprised how soon this builds a comfortable balance.If you need a loan, we will be glad to consider your case. Come in today!

BUY WAR BONDS HERE

THE CITIZENS BANK

Page 5: pUBUC ,,,, Th^ Morehead'ii'ndependent

f -mm

THE MOREHEAD (KY.) INDEPENDENT

1^15^ Amelia Duley Fpenl Mon­day in Lexington.

Miss Juanitfc^Minish wa. Lexington SaluKiBy.

Mr- and Mr*. M. C. Crosley- Were in Cincinnati Monday.

Mrs. C. B. Lane and daughter. Betty, were in Lexington Monday.

Miss Olive Seagra' relatives in Olive Hill last week-

Caudill V

NOTICEUnder the new law. you are

paired to come in and file your tax list at our office, at (he Coortlioase In Morehead Onr «ffice is now open and will be daring the months of July and Aagust. Come in early and give In your lly. and avoid the pen- sKy that goes on for late filing.

PEYTON ESTEP. County Tax Commissioner.

Hook Monday and Tuesday 'on business.

Miss Mary Frank Wiley, of Ash­land. was a visitor in town last week-end.

Mr. William DeForest. of Mann. West Virginia, visited his family here last week.

Capt- O. M. Lyons, of Fort Ben- jamin Harrison, is the guest of his family this week.

' Mitts’ Katharine Blair returned Sunday to Washington. D. C. from a week's vis;t with her familyhore •

Miss Katharine Powers, of Olive Hill, was the guest of her p.irent! Mr. and Mrs., J. H. Powers Wfek.

rents, . iiist

Mrs. Virgil Lyons at Olympia Springs. Kentucky

.Miss Carline Evans, of Louisa. Kentucky, is the guest this week of Mrs. Olive Boyd.

Miss Lela Mae Craig.

Miss Grace Crosthwaile spent few days last week with rela­

tives in Owingsville.

Billy Vau^an spent last week- nd at Camp Offut, a boy scout amp near Versailles.

I t

PLASSIFIEfl b ADS U

Mrs. Milton Evans, who

e last week-end.

’S'son, Leo. at Fort Thomas.

Miss Beryl Sh^anklin. of West Virginia, is the guest this week of Mr. and Mrs. J, G. Black.

WANTEDA WOMAN TO IRON, one day Alls week only. Good Pav. • Call ^one 266.

Mrs. Robert Anglin and daugh­ter spent the week-end with her husband at Aden, Kentucky.

FOB SALE SO-ACRE FARJH, with 7-room

dwelling (4 rooms downstairs, 3 upl- Good well, bam and out- Ixilldlngs. Good orchard. Elec­tricity in house. Gas well on farm pays S3S.00 per-year roy­alty. and all gas necessany for use fiw. Located one mile north of Morehead on Plemingsburg RfUdi-Known as the Isaac Quis- faiberry farm. For further infor- jnatkm call 906, or see BUI Al- densan.

FOR SALEHOUSE AT 323 SECOND ST.,

divided into two 5-room apart­ments, with separate entrances. Coal Furnace or Gas Heat. Completely modern. Terms can be arranged. See owner on premises or call 235 between

aju, ,4Bikrsd*'• st.-7-lO 43

lANENT WAVE, »c! — Do your own permanent with Charmi-Kurl Kit. Cohiplele, Inv eluding 40 burters and shampoo, Easy to do. absolutely hartnless. Raised by thousands including

McKenzie, glamorous movieFay I star.satisfied. Batson's

if notDrug Store.

Harlan Ellington, of Bangor. Miss Jean Elliott.

T^.

. Wood Hinton returned to Louis­ville Saturday from several days' visit with his mother, Mrs. F, P. Blair.

Mrs. Dorsey Gevedon. of Pan­ama, Ky.. returned homr Friday after completing five weeks' study at MB.T.C.

Misses Ernestine Powers and Elizabeth Sluss. of Wright Field. Dayton. Ohio, were guests of their families here Sunday.

Mrs. Gladys Robertson, mother fo Mrs.'A. B. Bowne, underwent

minor operation in a Louisville hospital recently.

CAUDILL REUNION

Greyhound Lines Produce Motion Picture In 1940

The Caudill family held an ly reunion Sitftday, July 18, alllulv

the home of Mr. and Mrs. Blair, on Fifth street.

'This Amazing America'^ Viewed By Seven

Million Perrons

• • "This Amazing America,'- E. D,{technicolor motion picture pro-

Blair's maid served the dinner, duced by the G^yhound Lines inand picnic supper. The food was. 1940 to promote bus travel. Is most appetising and the guests • serving a new and important pur- report an eniertaining .md inter- pc.se In advancing the country’s esting day. international relations.

Members of the family present] The Office of War Informoiion, were; Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Caudill, at the request of the State De- Mr. and Mrs, D, B. Caudill. Mr. partment. has obtainedpartment, has obtained prints of

the film for distribution i Russia. Initial showings are planned for

and Mrs. D. C. Caudill. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Caudill, George Caudill.Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Caudill and

. Dale, Ml. and Mrs. Boone but unlike the films once presen- Caudill and daughter. Susie. I ted by German ct.unselor officials.

Dr. and Mrs. E. D, Blair and son. | the picture will show the scenic Donald. Mr. and Mrs. James Clay. Sconders of America r.nther than Mr. and Mrs. O, B. Elam. Mr. and: the ruthless invasion of neutral .Mrs. John Barker and children, eounlriesHendrix Barker. Billy. Virgimu, Its title revised to "North Amer- ^ne and Louella Lytlon. Mrs., ica^%7-Bus," the film has already Lyda Cooper and Mrs. Saiulsi<en shWn to more than a mil- Skaggs and daughter, Pearl, <.f, ijon pAsons in South America Kankakee. Illinois. l underAhe sponsorship of the Of-

Coordinator of Inter-

portsinty farm labor committee re­ts throughout the hurley belt.

of the oUege ol rhurge of

Af many as 500 men may be r*ed- edm some counties, he said, while from 50 to 200 will be sought others.

The extension servjce _. , University of Kentucky College Agriculture, which is in charge the farm labor program in Ken­tucky; will handle thejask of find­ing workers who will be available about thejniddle of August, when the burl^ harvest usually begins.

Poundstone urged growers to fill- their applications for workers "at once."

Kentucky Births Up Ten Per Cent fn Five Months

Kentucky's birth rote for the first five months of 1943 shows increase of 10 per cent

. prelperiod last year, according liminary figures released b.v

Hargrove Candidate American Aftans.

Court of Appeals

Blackerby. director of the Bureau of Vital Statistics.Board of Health.

'Births totaling 28.150 up to June 1 as ompared.with 20.140 during the first five m»>nihs of last year, Binckerby reported. Deaths in Kentucky .'otaled 12.180 from Jan­uary to Jui

in., ... .1,11 .on-.ISs "r'''” D-P-™™ "!«■

June of 1943. and 11.180show-''

Private and Mrs. Aslor Collins announce the arrival of an eight pound son on July 19. at the Good

Mrs. M. S. Bowne and daughter. Analcn. cf Lexington, are visiting

the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Bowne on College street this week.

Rev. and Mrs. .A. E. Landoll ••ere in Lexington Sunday. Mrs. losk Rae. grandmother of Mrs. .antlblt. returned hum J sp^d .severaj days.

t. of Frankfo0. the guest of Lieut, and Mrs.

George C, Hall tasi week-end. "Misses Mary ^Jlen and §etty

Moran were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Helwig last week-end.

Edward Crawford, mouth. Va.. is spending t

I the home of Mrs. 2.

Ports- this week Johnson.

Astor Collins return^ Sunday

with Mrs. Collins

Mr. and Mrs. Karl M. Stollar and BM). Jimmie, left

ten days' visit with his pa­rents, Mr. and Mm James H. Stol­lar, of New York City.

NOnCB

Under t^ new Uw, yon arc required to eoBte in and Ale yonr Ux list at eur office, ml the Coorthoase In Morehead. Oar btfice li now open and will be during the months of Jaly and- Attgust Come In early and give In your list and avoid the pen­alty that goes on for late filing,

PEYTON ESTEP.Connly Tax Commissioner.

Mrs. D. B. Caudill. -Mrs. D. C. Caudill. Mrs. Boone Caudill and daughter, Susie, and Miss Pearl Skaggs are visiting today at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Little, of Ilexington. . ^

Mrs. J. T. D^^erty returned Sunday from Laguma Beach, Cal­ifornia, to make her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Palmer, while Lieut. Daugh- grty is overseas.

Dr. and Mrs.^W. H. Vaughan id son, Bobby, and Miss Marie

Jenkins, were guests last week­end of Dr. Vaughan's father. W. J. Viug^an, and Mrs. Vaughan's mother, Mrs. James H. Woods, of Louisa.

Miss Leola Caudill, army hos­tess at Fort Knox, returned Mon­day to the army post at Fort Knox from a week's vacation with her mother. Mrs. W. T.. Caudill. She

accompanied to Louisville by her mother. -................

WRITE IT AND MAIL ITYou have a Wll pay. You write a check and

s alk as am ■mail it. It’s alk as simple as that.-When a postage stamp will save you time and a special trip to

,f the V...................................town, it is one of the world’s best investments.

are morp benefits. Later, the check lastir

And th( ........., _______ ___ _____________will return to provide a legal and lasting receipt. You will have full information for your protection. Now, when so many figures are required by your government, you need financial facts at your fin­gertips. Otherwise, you may be the loser.

A Checking Account here will be* doubly helpful in these busy war-time days. Your business is invited.

PEOPLES BANK OF MOREHEAD,, m6rEHEAD, KENTUCKY

Member Federal Depotlt fauwaiiec CarporxtloD

Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wendell and daughter. Mary Scott, visited Captain and Mrs. Earl May Lexington.last week-end and at­tended the Horse Show.

• Mrs. Fred Cassity returned from a visit with her husband in Charleston, W. Va. Saturday and left Tuesday for an extended visit with her family in Salyersville.

Mrs. Alma Bdlamy and Mr. and Mrs. Alofuo Elaffl. of West Lib­erty. visited Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Bellamy Sun street.

, Bobby, and Miss

Mrs. Louis Higgins and daugh-

George Punke, of Cincini

Mrs. H. C. Lewis and Miss Nan- nette Robinson left Friday for a visit with Mrs Lewis' son. Ser­geant Jack Lewis who is recupera-

ter Reed Hospital, and with nette's father. Lieutenant Com­mander Greene Robinson, of Washington, D. C.

Mr. A. J. Sexton celebrated his 85th birthday 4vlth a dinner at his home on the Plemingsburg Rodd July 18th. Twenty-five members of his family were present. Out of town guesU were: Fon Sexton. Mr. and Mrs. Cal Sexton and grandson. Ronnie Wade, of A^- land, and Mr. Sexton's sister, Alice Duncan, of Portsniouth. Ohio.

Notice!Under the new law. yon are

required 'to come la and file yotfr Ux list at onr office, at the Courthouse in Morehead Onr office 1s now open and will be

the months of July sadAugust. Come In early and give In your list and avoid the pen­alty that fees on lor late filing.

- PEYTON ESTEP, Couniy Tax Oommisslonei

or ...erol ihoorand """“"'“I i""! torda.I. I,. r.»lor Iho ■G.«d Nrlehbor i '■"'■‘•■'rp.m o, b.rlh record lt»v, , . I 25 per cent from

• Thii. Amazing America ' is « March of this year, 1.200 cer-

I director said.scenicThe. places visited

lywtj Southern California., San Fran- ! cisco and the bay bridges. Cali- ' forma's Redw<K«l highway, Vet- lowstone Na ionul Park, the Min nosota Lake ciiuntry. the Dutch colony at Holland, Michigan.Niagara Falls. New Yurk City.Birslon and historic New England, the Nalural Bridge of Virgini.i. e,,.t, « ■!' *the Great Smokv Mountains. ‘"AFUiriia Ixache--.. N.-.v Orleans and Imprisonmenlthe Miss-iMppi. Texas anil the, ,Alamo, *md the Grand Canv.m. ...T

Siiiece .1 pr.xluclion three ye.ns''”'' has found many persons he him h.is U-.n viewed by:''• change

Survey Discloses Many Failed To Register For Meat

' As explained by F. P. Fish, Food Rationing Representotive In Charge of the MeaU-FaU Prt>- grom. all persons dealing in meats, fats, canned Ash, butter and ra­tioned cheeses are required to reg­ister and account for their trans­actions in these commodities. Anywho have not registLocal War Price and Rationing Board are in violation of Ration­ing Order 16 of the OPA regula­tion*. Any person dealing com­mercially in these commodities

!. gift 01by sale, gift or exchange, are re^ quired to collcet rationlnj’‘'pointsand account for ther firocef, Icial slaughterer, resUurant. dairy selling butler or rationed cheeses, farmer sellig fresh or cured meats, butter or rationed cheeses, can ob­tain information from their local War Price and Rationing Board.

MILLSTHEATRE

MOREHEAD, ET.

SATUKOAY. JULY U Doable Feature

“Keep ’Em Slugffing»»Dead End Kids

“Truck Busters’*Richard Travts - Rutb Ford

SUN. A MON.. JULY £5 - 2C“Next Of Kin”

Bull Sydney - 5Nutty Pine Cabin Cartoon

T'UES. A WED.. JULY 27 - *8..“Follow The Band”

Leon Errol - Beth llufhea

ag>'.audiences totalliig seven million

; pci'sims in tins etjuntiy.

BROOKS L. HABGROVE

Brooks L. Hargrove. Louisville, has announced his candidacy for the office of Clerk of the Court of Appealo. subject to the acUon of the DemocraUc primary. Satur­day. August 7th. •

Mrl Hargrove, an ordained Bap­tist minister, hu had fifteen years of legislative and clerical ex­perience. ,

His candidacy deserves the se­rious consideration of the Demo- craiie voters of this section of the state.

Classified Ads Get Results!

Leaf Harvest In State Will Require 3,000 Extra Workers

An extra 3.000 workers will be needed to cut and house Ken­tucky's burjey tobacco crop this year. Bruce Poundstone. 'SUte farm labor supervisor, estimated this week.

The mountain country of ^st­em Kentucky, which has been the source of a steady flow «if helpers to the state's farming regions dur­ing the current growing season, will be combed for the needed recniib.

Poundstone sa-d he ba.*ed his estimate cf workers needed on applications already on file in the offices of county agent* luitl on

AN OPEN LETTERTo The Democratic Voters of Rowan County:

It is not possible for me to visit each home in my cam­paign for the Demot^ratic nomination for Representative, for this reason 1 am writing to you. that you may know more of what to expect of me if I am nominated and elected.

ting to you, that you me if I am nominated

In 1918 and in 1928. I ser\-ed as your Representative from this district. It was during these times that good road.s, state finances and school and college maintenance was before the legislature. IL was my belief that good roads were essen- tial to the people in their vuriou.s requiremens’. I «feel that way about it now. Economy in state maintenance involved much study and thought, but J wa.s convinced that it was to the interest of the taxpayers that .the money cf the people should be used only to the best interest of the .state. Thatshall again b^my policy if elected. The maintenance of corn-

schools and teachers colleges, and adequate pay for tea- ired nsino-chers had to be provided for, and I 1 the tax

money in liberal proportion to this need.It was in this period that the teachers colleges were be­

ing established over the state. Through the untiring effortsof our late friend and worker. Judge Allie W. Young, the M—u-.j 04.X- Teachers College was established. This col­lege has meant much to eastern Kentucky. Since the passing of Judge Young, the legislative appropriations for this col-

Bdil;.....................lege have steadily declined. It is a question of whether this college can continue to operate efficiently on present appro­priations. Our fight is to restore it to its former power as anedi - “ ■ ^ .......................... ................................x^Jucational center. If elected, I will use all the power at my command to keep our college active and growing.

placesMany of our teachers are attracted to other states and

of lucrative employment. Our common school is suffer-fact that so many of our

.......... ihers are going into thiof our country, that our scnools are endangered.

of this, and the furthi and available women

must do everything possible to win the war, but our leaders ■do not want the educational interests of our state and nationlucational interests of our state and nationto perish. If elected. I will use all the power I possess ,lo re­lieve this situation.

It is my j'udgement that your representative .should think wisely and act accordingly when exercising his right to vote upon all measures, and at no time lose interest inthe wejfaFe of the slate and nation. If elected, I will use my.best talent in thik respect. I will aigireciate your support influence.

Sincerely yours, >WALTER J, BAILEY

f meat*. laUv and cheeses' THURS. A FRI., JULY 29 - 39wilhuul pii.pcr regiflration Those Good LUCk, Mr. Y&tCS persons are not properly reRisierr ^ CUlre Trevor - Edfured and accounling for rationinj; point.s are in violation of the law and are subject to penalty and punishment for such violation.

APPUCATION FOR HOME CANNING SUGXr

After clipping and filling but form in detail, enclose War Ration Book One of each member bf famDy and mail t^-V>cal War Price and Rationing

1. Amount of sugar purchased with Stamp Ration Book One of each family15 and 16 of War Rafli

Ration Books or by certifi- issued by Local Boards since January 1st,

2. Number of quarts of fruit canned from m War

issued by

Number o1 ving from Bolk One.

gar purchased on \ at es is»

dsYitiaugar u: from sugar purchased with stamps from

tl. Number of poundsd^’U6i«ugi ’ used for preser-

4. Total number,of quarts of fruit to be canned r which application is being made.

S. Number of War Ration Books One enclosed with this application.

-tasr

FRIEND ....ALWAYS A GOOD....your ,bank account

Money in the Bank doesn’t blow hot and cold, like some friends do. It’s always there. . . ready for your use when you need it.

There isn't any deep, dark secret about building a bank account. It’s easy .-First, open an account. Second, make regular deposits. You’ll be' surprised how soon this builds a comfortable balance.If you need a loan, we will be glad to ronsider your case. Come in today!

BUY WAR BONDS HERE

THE CITIZENS BANKMOREHEAD, KY,

Meaber Pefiend Depeoit 1