1 I >! J CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES All Classified Advertising Is Cash Except On Established Accounts. 4c A Word This Size Type (10 Point) 2c A Word This Size Type (7 Point) Minimum Charge For Classified Ad.—30c CARO OF THANKS--50c The Dally Star will not be responsible for more than one Incorrect Insertion of any ad. Errors should be reported at once. All keyed ads are strictly con fidential and can be reached by sealed letters only. Ads must be In by 10 AA1 PHONE 1100 I. FOR SALE FOR SALE: TOMATO PLANTS. T. W. Fisher, 220 Earl Road, Shelby, N. C. 6t 4p JUST RECEIVED TODAY: BIG shipment of 'white slips. J. C. McNeely Company. ltc FOR SALE: 1934 FORD COACH, radio and heater. Price right for quick sale. Howard' Turner, 326 E. Graham St., Shelby. 2t 5p ATTTF-.NS FOUR DISC TILLER plow, on rubber. Wade Harris, Mooresboro. N. C. 2t 5p FOR SALE: LINOLEUM RUGS. Shelby Credit Co., 210 South Washington St., or Young Bro thers. , 2t 5c RECEIVED THIS MORNING: Shipment of beautiful blouses. J. C. McNeely Company. ltc FOR SALE: ONE ALLIS CHAL mers Tractor, WC Combine 60, one Oliver Superior drill, one 4 disc tiller, one new disc harrow, one woodsaw, one tractor mow- , er. Byron Daves, near Union church. It Ip ; FOR SALE: OUTDOOR, KERO 6ene chick brooder—100 capacity. The very thing for raising chicks in town. Morrison Farms, near Zoar church. 2t5p GREEN BEANS 15c POUND, j squash, 2 lbs. 25c, Tomatoes 18c. The City Curb Market, on the square. 3t-7c 6 EMPLOYMENT WANTED — COOK, NO CHIL dren, salary satisfactory. Tele phone 565. tf le WANTED—EXPERIENCED WAIT ress. Good salary. Apply new Shelby Cafe. tf 2-c WANTED—MAID WITH HEALTH certificate for full or part time work. Mrs. John Anthony, 519 East Marion street. 2t 5p 10. MISCELLANEOUS VISIT OUR STORE WHEN you are shopping for Moth er’s Day gifts. We will wrap them in nice gift pa per for you. Lee’s Home & Office Supply. 3t-5p SEE THE NEW SHIPMENT of high pressure Orchard Sprayers, 3’> gallon capac ity. Campbell’s Basement. Jt-4c WANTED: ALL PEOPLE RUF , fering from kidney trouble or backache, trj Kiddo, 97c. Money j back guarantee. Paul Webb & Son. 30t MWF April 2p FINEST WATCH REPAIRING PEARLS RESTRUNG Reasonable Prices — Quick Service T. W. HAMRICK CO. Jewelers tf M-W-F 10c 9. AUTO REPAIRS 11. LOST LOST: N. C. LICENSE TAG NO. 519-784. tinder please return or notify Margaret Head, Route 2. Ellenboro, N. C. 3t 7p FOUND—PAIR OF GLASSES IN brown case. Please call at Star Office and pay for this ad and get them. It 7p LOST—A AND B GASOLINE RA tion book, in Shelby. Finder please return to Bost Bakery. Charlie Williams. 2t 7c 12—WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT ONE OR two unfurnished rooms. Call 9&-%L 3t 7p t Backgrounds and Hedges You Can Grow from Seed Great interest in ornamental plants is being shown by Victory gardeners this year. Many are planting borders and backgrounds of flowers to set off their attrac tive rows of garden vegetables. Where screen and background planting is desired quickly and at small expense, there are annual plants which can produce both. Largest of all is the castor bean. From one small bean can be grown a beautiful plant eight feet tall and as much in diameter. The leaves are large, and of a bronze or ma roon tone. The Zanzibar strain will produce plants twelve feet tall, in suitable locations with plenty of water and rich soil. Great bushes four to six feet tall are grown by the Tithonia, some times called the Golden Flower of the Incas, and this is a flowering plant, bearing 2-inch orange flowers resembling a single zinnia. The fine leaved fire plant Kochia tricophylla, makes a miniature tree of bright yellow green leaves which in late summer turn to crimson. It is even handsomer in its green than in its red form and can be pruned to make a low hedge. The coleus, the old-fashioned plant our grandmothers delighted to grow in the house, can be raised from seed easily outdoors in a variety of bril liant coloring. In hot, sunny locations, Amaran thus tricolor, often called Joseph’s coat after the biblical story of the cOat of many colors, will attain its finest coloring. The inner foliage is of blackest bronze, tipped with green, the outer bright scarlet and gold. Heavy-leaved plants should be relieved by those of finer character in the border. Some of the orna mental grasses easily raised from seed are useful for this purpose and are often seen associated with can nas, castor beans, or the elephant ear caladium. The ornamental grasses, both an nual and perennial, give excellent decorative effects. The pennise tums, pampas grass (erianthus) and eulalia with green and white leaves are all attractive. LOCAL NEWS OF COLORED PEOPLE PARENT-TEACHER MEETING A meeting of the P.-T.A. will be heir at Cleveland High school Tuesday night, May 8, at 8:30 p.m.1 All parents are urged to be pres-j ent. j Until the opening of the new Ledo road, no truck fleet had roll ed into China since' the Japanese closed the Burma road two and a, half years before. 8 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE: 4 ROOM HOUSE with bath, near Cloth Mill, Fredrick Street. Price $2,550.1 J. B. Nolan Co. ltc | FOR SALE:4 ROOM HOME, LIN-j coin Street, bath, 3 closets, pan-; try, front and back porches. This home is in good condition.' Price $2,800. J. B. Nolan Co. ltc ___ - ___i FOR SALE: 4 ROOM HOME,! near Esther and Cloth Mill, Do ver Street, has deep lot. Price $2,350. J. B. Nolan Co. ltc FOR SALE; STOREROOM WITH living quarters, near Bethware, No. 74 Highway. Price $2,500. J. B. Nolan Co. ltc FOR SALE: GOOD 4 ROOM home with bath, just off old Kings Mountain road, garage. A gstod buy at $2,600. J. B. No lan Co. ltc FOR SALE: DUPLEX, OLD Kings Mountain road, has hard vood floors, built-in baths, wired for electric stoves, double gar age. Price $4,250 for quick sale. J. B, Nolan Co. Itc 1 FOR SALE: NICE 5 ROOM HOME with hardwood floors: practical ly new, has, good lot, located on old Kings' Mountain road. Price $4,850. J. B .Nolan Co. Itc HOME FOR SALE: 6 ROOM home, 410 West Graham Street, new vacant. Make us an offer. J. B. Nolan Co. itc' FOR SALE: 6 ROOM HOME,' East Graham Street, large lot. Can give quick possession. See us. J. B. Nolan Co. Itc THIS FIVE ROOM HOUSE IS ready for you. Buy today and move at your convenience. An! attractive home, good plumbing, new roof, new paint, closets, nice section. Owner wants $4, 000. We want your offer. It's now vacant, 616 Hilcrest. An thony & Anthony. ltp THE BEST 6 ROOM HOME THAI we have for sale now has 3 big bedrooms, large living room, dining, kitchen With extra large pantry, Hardwood floors, inlaid linoleum on kitchen floor, front; and back porch, large lot, plc-nty shrubbery, grass. North Shelby, j terms at $6,000, Anthony & | Anthony. ltp ATTRACTIVE 5 ROOM HOME for sale, near all schools in West. Shelby, hardwood floors, mod- ! ern bath, good closets, it’s prac tically new, located at 306 Martin Street. Price $5,000. An thony & Anthony. ltp PC NO 6 TRUCK DRIVER haul coal. Nat Company. We Buy Burned & VV recked Cars SHEUY USED AUTO PARTS <FORM*RI.Y CLIN*'*) WANTED TO Bowman Coal tf eod 7c Lone Survivor Dies In Wreck WALNUT COVE, May 7—(/Pi— On Christmas day 1939 Charles B. Lawson and seven members of his family were found dead at the Lawson home near here. Lawson had died of a gunshot wound, his wife and six children ranging from five months to 17 years in age, had been shot or beaten to death. There was one survivor, James Arthur Lawson, a son who was visiting away from home at the time. 'Saturday night, this lone sur i vivor also met a tragic death. He was killed in a truck wreck near Walnut Cove. $74.25 For Steaks SIOUX CITY, IA. — (!?)— Mrs. Mary Mook, alleging that Patrolman Harold Greene had eaten some 73 T-bone steaks, worth about 95 cents each, at her cafe without paying for them, has filed suit against the patrolman for $74.25. SPECIAL NOTICES COMPLETE LANDSCAPE service. L awns mowed weekly. Alec McRae, 712 E. Warren St. Phone 946. tf7c HAVE YOU SEEN !THOSE lovely Mother’s day gifts at The Gift Shop? Give Mother a vase, picture, nov elty, set of crystal, station ery or other gift from our selection. If it’s from The Gift Shop, she’ll be proud of it. 3t-7c R E M EMBER MOTHER with a nice gift from the Remnant Store. Dress lengths, bed spreads, pil lows, blouse lengths, and others. 3t-7c CAR CLEANING SPECIALS WASHING ... 75c GREASING... 75c POLISHING & WAXING ...$7,00 2.000-Mile Kendall Motor Oil, 5-Qt. Change __ $1.50 WE FIX FLATS, TOO. CAMPBELL’S CITIES SERVICE EAST MARION ST. PHONE 9131 Average GI Dreads Move To Pacific By HAL BOYLE WITH AMERICAN TROOPS IN GERMANY, May 3— (Delayed)— (JP) —The victory over Germany finds the average American soldier cu riously unexcited. There is little exuberance, little I enthusiasm and almost none of I the whoop-it-up spirit with which j hundreds of thousands of men | looked forward to this event a | year ago. It has been a long and bloody trail—this 800-mile march from the beaches of Normandy in less than 11 months. It has drained much from the men who made it—much from their bodies and much from their spirit. They are physically and emotionally tired. The destruction of the German armies came more slowly in this war than in 1918 when the armis tice burst with climatic sudden ness, stunning the world with joy. This time there has been a series of capitulations and surrenders. GRADUAL CRACK-UP For most units there was a gradual cessation of combat as German lines melted into nothing before them or dissolved in chaos. That has prevented any mass feeling of exhiliration such as swept through the American army and the American nation at the close of the last war. It also has given many soldiers days or weeks in which to think —to ponder over problems that victory in the west brings. And preeminently they are talking over one thing: “Will I be sent to the Pacific?” They have written the European war off the books in the army ranks and the chief topic is what outfits will be sent around the world to finish cleaning up the Japs. You can drop into any front line mess for chow now and you'll hear comparatively little talk of Germany, the Russians, or the de cline and fall of Adolf Hitler. The interest centers almost completely on which outfits will pack up and leave for the Far East, which will stay put and occupy Germany, and which lucky ones will hit the hap py road that leads to home. HOMESICK. It is only truthful to report that 1 a very small percentage of these ! veteran troops have any desire to i go and fight Japanese. There is | a great and spreading nostalgia j for home and peace among the j battle-weary soldiers who have I walked and fought painful miles | from Cherbourg to the Elbe. Particularly this is true among older men. Newcomers already are pretty well resigned to another year of fighting in another clime. They feel it's in the cards and there isn't much they can do but pick up their tommy guns and move on to meet the next enemy, waiting for them hidden behind the next hill or dug in deep in the next jungle. But some older men—those above 30 with wives and children to come back to — have developed homesickness in the hour of vic tory here, a homesickness that is almost an illness. Many of them have been in the army more than four years and have served two to three or more years overseas. Some fought in Tunisia and Siciiy or Italy before coming to western Europe. They feel they’ve sacrificed enough for their country—consider ing that the biggest peril i# over— j and they’d like a chance to go j home, pack away their medals and go back to punching the old time clock for their families. FEAR DISEASES All aren't combat troops, but you can get almost as tired haul ing gasoline or patching up the wounded as you do lying in lox lloles. At least if you are doing it, you feel you can. But they’ll go if they are called. They are afraid chiefly of new diseases — elephantitis and bone break fever and Pacific malaria— rather than meeting a new ene Children Ask For It Grown-Ups Demand It. WALDENSIAN Simbaam, BREAD Doily at Your Grocers Auto Loans $50 AND UP ANY MAKE OR MODEL LOWEST RATES — EASY REPAYMENT PLAN SERVICE FINANCE CO. OF SHELBY LOUIS M. HAMRICK, Jr., Mgr. Gardner Bldg. Hours: 9 A. M. - 5 P. M. Room 21 Phone 116fi my, because they feel sure the Japs are no tougher fighters than the trained German SS troops they have already beaten. < As one veteran of North Afri ca, Sicily, Prance, Belgium, Lux embourg and Germany said with a wry grin: “Sure I’ll go to the Pacific. I’ll go anywhere my old Uncle needs me, if he needs me that bad. But they’ll have to cut out all that saluting. You can’t salute when you're in a strait-jacket.” A babe in a house is a well-spring j of pleasure, a messenger of peace and love, a resting-place for inno [ cence on earth, a link between angels and men.—Tupper. Joe Ramsey Dies At Home Near Gaffney GAFFNEY, S. C.—Joe Ramsey, 61, retired farmer, died late Fri day at the home of a son, Robert Ramsey, near Cowpens after a day’s illness. He was a native and had lived practically all his life in Cherokee county. Funeral services were conducted Sunday at Graham chapel at Mayo by Rev. Carl Wright, Rev. James Miller, and Rev. C. L. Farris. Burial took place in the church cemetery. Surviving are two sons, two sisters and a brother. Before the war, the average per son in the United States ate 17 1 pounds of butter a year. BREEDING — TYPE — PRODUCTION WILL BE COMBINED IN * 35 HEAD OF REGISTERED JERSEYS TO BE SOLD AT THE * FAIR GROUNDS AT HICKORY TUESDAY, MAY 15,1945 For Catalog Write EARLE BRINTNALL, Sec., NEWTON, N. C. TRY SHELBY DAILY STAR WANT ADS fHIMBLE THEATRE HURRY UP AMO PACK v YER SEA-BAG,SUUEE'PEA SECRET AGENT X-9 Baffled G-Men. rl'M NOT TRYING TO GOOF OFF THI5 CAGE, CHIEF, BUT MAYBE YOU OUGHT TO WANP IT TO ^ SOMEONE ELSE, mm •nr<^ ha -* PONY uOOK 7 AT ME, CHIEF, I'M AG > W/&L GAFFlEP AG rr®.'r^f Meanwhile Wl'M CLEANING UP ON TUB 0400-0400 (SAMI, 60LDPLATB. TUB SUCKBM'PMD OFF »lfl ON TUB^^ ■r^l pelav, roooo! pump ■ IT ON TUB TA*LB GOOD NKSHT! / rRCMEMMR THE GIRL WHO PUU.SP THt EMERGENCY COOP ON TWI WASHINGTON TRAIN t I'VE COMB TO COLLECT MORE OP THE POUGH I WELPEP VOU By CARL ANDERSON HENRY B LO N DIE By CHIC YOUNQ I'LL TAKE ■ SOME < HONEY ) !>•'*. Fwirn Int , Uotli ughtt rttrrttd 5'7 TOOTS AND CASPER A Costly Cat! 0y JIMMY MURPHY 1 NO TRACE has Vet BEEN FOUND OF HERMAN THE/ tomcat SINCE IT STRAHijEtf DISAP- ■ PEARED ELEVEN DATS A6rO. CASPER,THERE'S A CLAUSE IN MV LATE COUSIN OPHELIAS WILL 1 DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT UNT NEITHER Dl TITTERS 19-Q. Kmjt Feature* bynJu-aH, Im I WAS *TO GET $500. *2 WEEKLY FOR TAKIN6r CARE OF THE CAT AS LONG/ AS IT LIVED— THEN THE ESTATE WAS TO GO TO ELMER NOW I WON'T <jET MY MONEY/ BECAUSE 1 HAVEN'T THE CAT—AND ELMER WON'T CrET THE ESTATE, BECAUSE HE CAN'T PROVE THE CAT IS DEAD • IF THE CAT ISNT PRODUCE! DEAD OR AUVE WITHIN 14 DAYS AFTER IT DISAPPEARS/ BOTH AND ELMER ARE "THEN DISINHERITED— AND THE ESTATE THEN £rOES TO I MUGGS AND SKEETER By WALLY BISHOP vi r~r I

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view