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Girl Accused In Kovacs’ Murder Case Collapses BRIDGEPORT, Conn., June 2< —OP)—Mrs. Imogens Stevens, at tractive twice married, 24-year-oli mother coDapeed as she was beinj led before a coroner's inquest toda; to investigate her admitted killinj of a Pacific naval veteran at i neighbor's home late Saturday night. The shooting occurred in Nev mann. Appearing distraught as she wat jscorted into the Superior court juilding, where Coroner Theodore E. Steiber was waiting to open his hearing into the shooting of Albert Kovacs, a 19-year-old Norwalk sub marine sailor, Mrs. Stevens gave an inarticulate cry, as she reached the corridor leading to Steiber’s court room, and slumped to the floor. Her black, shoulder length tresses flowed over her chalk striped gray suit and white blouse. Terrs stream ed down her cheeks. Sheriff Edward Platt and a wo man attendant quickly picked her up and bore her into the court room where she was revived. UNEASY NIGHT Meanwhile a crowd had gathered and her attorney, David Goldstein, cried out for them to stand back and give her air. Mrs. Stevens, wife of an army major on overseas duty, had spent an uneasy night in her cell where she had been held in default of )50,000 bail on a charge of man slaughter and a physician was call ed in to quiet her. Mrs. Stevens has been quoted by New Canaan police Chief Otto Schmidt as saying she killed Ko vacs In self defense. James Kovacs, 26, who was with bis brother when he was killed in New Canaan late Saturday night, told newspapermen "Albert never made any attempt to attack Mrs. Stevens.” No action is expected to be taken in regard to the manslaughter cargo against Mrs. Stevens, wife of Major G. Ralsey Stevens III, and daughter of a Pampa, Tex., police man, until after the coroner’s find ing. Kovacs, a submarine sailor on leave from Portsmouth, N. H„ was shot in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Milton where he and his brother had gone to call on Miss Faith Coombs, a maid. WOMAN’S STORY Mrs. Stevens, a neighbor of the Miltons, told police she found the Kovacs brothers aparently alone in the Milton residence late at night, demanded an explanation of their presence and ordered them to leave. Chief Schmidt quoted her as say ing the sailor refused and that when they became involved in a tussle she shot him three times with a pistol she previously had testified by firing two bullets into the fire place at her home. James Kovacs asserted, however, that his brother was shot "while looking up the stairs to see if Paith was home.” Police said Mrs. Stevens told them uie ywi/ui was given ner Dy ner husband, a former University of New Hampshire athlete whom she met and married two years ago at the Alliance, Neb., air base, before he went overseas with a paratroop outfit. He Is now In Germany. Charles Wheihee Dies In Norfolk NORFOLK, Va., June 26.—OP)— Charles Whedbee, 69, of Hertford, N. C., died this morning in a Nor folk hospital after a long illness. A son of the late James Monroe Whedbee and Mrs. Fannie Skinner Whedee, he is survived by his wid ow, Mrs. Evelyn Copeland Whed bee; a daughter, Mrs. John Apple white; and a son, Silas Whedbee, all of Hertford; two sisters, Mrs. Samuel Watkins, of Henderson, and Mrs. Sidney McMullen, of Edenton. The body was sent to Hertford for funeral services and burial. Boswood Quits N. C. Agriculture Setup RALEIGH, June 26—(JP)—Agri culture Commissioner W. Kerr Scott said today that the services of Gideon C. Boswood, feed and seed inspector for northeastern North Carolina, will be terminat ed August t. Boswood has been inspector for the agriculture department since 1937. A native of Currituck I county, he has served as repre sentative from Currituck in the general assembly for four consec utive sessions. ENEMY Starts On Page One the enemy fleet, he continued: "There's no such thing as a safe harbor for the Japanese any more. Carrier and land-based planes are now capable of carrying the war into protected areas where the ene my formerly could retire for repairs and servicing.” He predicted the enemy will use no new weapons in the war. He explained that if the enemy had any other new weapons they would have used them before now. 'They may have some in the draw ing board,” he added, “but our iHJmber* will never let them get past that stage.” He said the objective of Pacific fighting forces now is to kill the Japanese "scientifically and as luickly as we can.” “We have the equipment and the srganlsatlon to do it,” he added, 'and i don't anticipate that our losses during the remainder of the will be exclusive.” v... ------- X a N. C SENATORS HEAR TAYLOR Judge Porker Speaker At Opening Banquet Ses | sion Last Night • HENDERSONVILLE, June 36. - ! (IP) — North Carolina’s senators. I gathered at this resort city for a ’ week’s "get-together”,, were to hear George W. Taylor, Jr., chairman of the War Labor Board, at their first meeting this morning. Taylor was scheduled to make the opening address in the Henderson county court house. Maj. Gen. Ed ward H. Brooks, newly appointed commander of the Fourth Service command, also was to speak. At their conferences throughout the week the senators will discuss state-federal relations during the Immediate post-war months. Sever al prominent federal and congres sional speakers are scheduled. Re creation and sight-seeing tours trips have been arranged for sever al afternoons, Including a tour of the Flat Rock estates today. BANQUET LAST NIGHT At a banquet last night the sen ators heard Judge John J. Parker of Charlotte, senior Judge of the U. S. Fourth circuit court, discuss the San Francisco United Nations charter. He hailed the charter as “one of the greatest achievements of the race”. He said it was a framework of organisation under which the world could be ruled by law and order and future world wars avoid ed. Judge Parker said It should not be regarded as a “powei: alliance”, since the small nations were given a voice In the council. VETO POWER He also said there was no basis for criticising the veto power for the five great powers. "We shall certainly not have peace," he said, "unless the great powers are willing to reconcile among themselves differences that may arise and cooperate with each other for the maintenance of peace. If it becomes necessary to use force, the organization has already failed and we are in the midst of another world war.” Troops To Retrain At Bragg, Bntner WASHINGTON, June 26 —OP)— Two North Carolina camps have been designated as retraining areas for divisions back or sched uled to come back to the United States in the redeployment pro gram. The 97th will train at Ft. Bragg, while the fourth will go to Camp Butner. W /AVTVXFI iLUUua Starts On Page One tabled a proposal to call a strike for some 38,000 organized maintenance men. Aout 1,500 of the 30,000 idle auto workers in Detroit were CIO maintenance men. Rival AFL-CIO unionists plan ned today to resume efforts to set tle the jurisdictional dispute which has kept idle the auto workers, in cluding 22,000 at the Packard Mot or Co., and 7,500 at Budd Wheel. A second conference of the rival unionists in Washington with the department of labor was projected in an attempt to settle the dispute over reconversion Jobs in the auto industry. Harry Bennett, Ford Motor com pany official, termed strikes by 5, 500 Ford workers as "vicious and planned work stoppages that show complete disregard of the UAW CIO-Ford contract.” Other stop pages in Detroit affected 650 at Hudson Motor Car Co.; 975 at the Aronautical Products Corp.; 500 at the Stinson Aircraft pant, and 700 in 12 yards of five retail lumber companies. Officials of the independent Chi cago truck drivers’ union directed 6,000 members to go back to their jobs today, to Join the estimated 98 per cent of the 8,000 members of the AFI international brotherhood of teamsters who had returned. Trucking operations, said office of defense transportation officials in charge, were more near to normal than any day since the start of the strike which followed a war labor board wage-hour decision. In Columbus, O., Joseph Foresch, president of the federation of glass, ceramics and silica sand workers (CIO) said he had issued no direct back-to-work order to the 15,000 glass workers, but said he had “forwarded to them a war labor request that they resume work.” AIRMEN Starts On Page One with our igorots, you give them a tommy gun and they think they’re invulnerable. They charge right into enemy machlnegun fire giving the Igorot warwhoop.” FORMOSAN PRISONERS The first cavalry division report ed that more than 300 Formosan troops had been conducted into ' American lines in a single week by , one Formosan prisoner of war. MacArthur announced today that elements of the 25th division had made an unopposed 40-mile amphi bious hop June 10 to land at Baler Bay. Slaughter of the enemy continu- ' ed elsewhere in the Pacific. Austra- ! lian ground forces reported killing an additional 1,128 on New Guinea, 1 Bougainville and New Britain, ( bringing enemy casualties there 1 since Jan. 1 to a total of 9,725 dead ’ and 226 captured. 1 To rtresc up pea soup, add chop- t oed leftover meat or thin slices of 11 Irankfurter. It TWO EISENHOWERS—This picture of General of Army Dwight D. Eisenhower and his son, Lt. John Eisenhower, was made following their return to this country from the ETO for the nation’s welcome to "General Ike.” DELEGATES Starfts On Page One Prance at the head of the order of signers. The one exception was that the United States as host country and in order to simplify witnessing of the ceremony by President Truman, preferred to appear in 50th place. Thus the order is China, Rus sia, Britain, France, Argentina and so on in alphabetical ar rangement. A published list of j names indicated that Dean Virginia Gliderslecve of the United States group would be the last person here to put her name on the historic papers. These ceremonies complete two months and a day of intense, de bate-studded conference work. They make this symbolically one of the great days for which the Allied world has fought and planned since the second World War started—the day on which the victorious govern ments subscribe to a plan for pre venting a third World War. How well the plan will work, dele gates generally agreed, as a ques tion for the future alone, and de pends on how much peoples and governments determine to make it work. ratification Unless all the Big Five and 23 other nations take this action, the projected world organization will not come into existence. In the United States this is a problem for the senate, primarily, and signs are mounting daily that the senate will approve. Senator Vandenberg of Michigan, a Repub lican leaders and member of the j American delegation here, announc | ed yesterday he would sign the char ter and "make every effort to se cure its ratification with reason able speed." In Washington an As sociated Press poll showed 53 sen ate votes already announced for rotifinoHftn Dafifi/tnli/VM w/tniMMoa » two-thirds majority of those vot ing. It provides five principal pieces of machinery: General assembly—Composed of all member nations with powers to debate and make recommenda tions on virtually any issue involv ing peaceful relations among na tions. In this every state, great or small, would have one voice and one vote. ALL MUST AGREE Security council—composed of II nations, always including the big powers—the United States, Russia, Britain, China and France—and six smaller powers elected by the assembly. There is vested the au thority to act to prevent war or restore order by peaceful means or force. But no action could be taken except when all the Big-! Five agree. Social and economic council — composed of 18 nations elected by i the assembly, this agency would be responsible for promoting such diverse causes as economic im provement and respect for human rights among all nations. OTHER BRANCHES Trusteeship council—composed of an equal number of mandate holding powers and other states : not controlling dependent terri tories. The council would supervise the rule of people under interna- j tlonal trusteeships and protect their social, economic and political , rights. Military staff committee — com- j posed of the chiefs of staff of the , Big-Five powers, this is the high rommand that would take and 5xecutc orders from the security rouncil just as general of the army George C. Marshall, U. S. irmy chief of staff, for instance, ■ :arries out the directives of Presi- ■ lent Truman. ; JUTTING ; Starts On Page One if North Carolina were isolated , ast night when communications ' ailed. Such was the case with \ Carolina Beach, 12 miles south of \ Vilmlngton, and Elizabeth City as irell as some other towns. t 1ANTEO UNDAMAGED 1 For a time it appeared that the t low would head directly for the t ttle town of Manteo on Roanoke i iland, which was isolated and bote t Conference Held Surprises About World Line-Ups SAN FRANCISCO. June 26—iTP) —The pulling and tugging that split delegates to the United Na tions conference and welded them back into agreement revealed a few surprises about the world’s new political line-up and dashed some old beliefs. Perhaps the most unexpected political development was the tight solidarity of the Arab league, formed in Cairo only a few weeks ago. France's close cooperation with the four inviting powers—Britain, Russia, China and the United States—made a real Big Five. France occasionally broke away from the “penthouse line’’ in de bates, but almost invariably voted with the sponsoring powers. (Near ly all the Big Three, Big Four, and Big Five meetings here were held in Secretary of State Stettinius’ penthouse apartment—and major power policies were decided there.) BIG VS. LITTLE With a few exceptions, it would be hard to draw a clear-cut pat tern of the opposing sides during conference debates. Some argu ments were primarily the big ver sus the little countries, especially where the veto power was con cerned. Others took on regional aspects or were related to quarrels out side the conference. This was especially true of the Arab league’s antagonism to France. There were several occas ions where one of the five states in the league—Egypt, Syria, Leb anon, Iraq and Saudi Arabia — stabbed at French policy. British commonwealth solidari ty—which many orators called “six votes for England” when the new j-ieague ui natiuiu was uciub formed—scarcely even put In a guest appaerance. Australia and New Zealand were on the opposite side from the United Kingdom on many questions. And Canada was with the Anzic most of the time. South Africa and India sat on both sides of the fence. PAN-AMERICAN On the other hand, the true extent of Pan-Americanism be came evident. At times the Latins seemed to be voting in bloc, at times they were split wide open—it always depended on the issue If a mat ter directly and primarily con -emed the western hemisphere, Latin America can be expected to stand together and to resent out side interference. This showed in developments on admitting Argentina and fitting ;he Pan-American system into the world peace agency. On matters )f general world concern, each lation followed its own policy. Never store in the refrigerator oods that do not require refrigera ;ion, and thus avoid overcrowding. ;he brunt of last October’s tropic mrricane. Early this morning, aowever, the sheriff stated that vhile Manteo experienced winds as ugh as 40 miles an hour, and leavy rains, no material damage lad been done in that section, and it the time of his report the winds had subsided and the wea ther generally appeared to be im jroving. Thousands of vacationiscts at Vrightsville Beach and Carolina leach were evacuated yesterday is the storm approached the bath ng resorts, but later in the after - loon when the storm apparently lad bypassed these areas, vaca ionists began returning to Vrightsville. Red Cross and state highway mtrolmen spread the alarm to per ons at these resorts and along he coast generally where it was eared the storm might strike. In preparation for any emer ency, the American Red Cross iad field workers standing by hroughout the day in readiness o lend assistance in any areas I long the coast that might feel 1 he force of the storm. __ ji Furnished by J. Robert Lindasy and Company Webb Building Shelby, N. C. N. Y. COTTON AT 3:00 Today Prev.Day March .22.70 May .22.68 July .......22.85 October . - 22.85 December . .22.77 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT July . -1.6614 September _ -1.63Ts December - -1.6314 CORN July. September . December . .1.1814 .11814 .1.1614 22.66 22.61 22.91 22.80 22.71 1.65* 1.621! 1.62% 1.1814 1.18% 1.1614 * RYE July . _1.54% 1.5314 September _ -1.4414 1.43% December . -1.3814 1.40% STOCKS AT 3:00 Imn Rolling Mill . - 22 1-8 American Loco _ .. 36 3-4 \merican Tobacco B . - 79 \merican Tel and Tel . — 175 \naconda Copper . - 36 1-4 \ssoc Dry Goods . - 29 1 3eth Steel _ . 82 3 Boeing Air . 28 1 Chrysler _ .-. 114 1 Jurtiss-Wright . .. 6 3-4 Slec Boat . _ 16 1-4 Deneral Motors . - 69 7-8 Pepsi Cola . 23 Drey hound Corp . - 26 1-2 International Paper _ . 29 Hash Kelv . . 21 1-8 Dlenn L Martin _ . 28 1-4 Newport Ind . . 26 1-2 V Y Central .— 32 Penn R R. 40 1-8 Radio Corp . ... 13 1-2 Reynolds Tob B.. 35 3-8 Southern Railroa d.52 1-4 Stand Oil N J. 65 7-8 Sperry Corp . _ 32 3-8 U S Rubber . __61 1-4 Q S Steel . 72 Western Union _ . 50 3-8 Youngstown S and T --51 3-4 STOCKS AGAIN RISE NEW YORK, June 26—(IP)—'The stock market today cut another notch on its 8-year record in one of the liveliest sessions of 1945. On the rising side most of the day were Southern Pacific, Can adian Pacific, Baltimore Ohio, Boeing, Grumman, Glenn Martin, Distillers Corp., National Distillers, Homestake, American Water Works, Columbia Gas, Eastern Air Lines, ranscontinental and Western Air ways, United Air Lines, White Motors, Willys-Overland, U. S. Steel, Crucible, Bethlehem and Youngstown Sheet. Occasional los ers were Santa Fe, Goodrich, U. S. Rubber, Sperry, Douglas Air craft, American Can and Texas Co. Bonds were narrow. Grain fu tures rallied. N. C. HOGS RALEIGH, June 26.—UP)—NCDA —Hog markets active and steady with tops of 14.55 at Clinton and Rocky Mount and 14.85 at Rich mond. N. C. EGGS, POULTRY RALEIGH, June 26.—UP)—NCD A —Egg and poultry markets steady to very firm. Raleigh—U. S. Grade AA large 44; hens, all weights, 27 1-2. Washington—U. S. Grade A large 44; broilers and fryers 32.5. BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, June 26—(^—But ter, firm; receipts 829,162. Eggs, receipts 10,964. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, June 26—(IP)— (WFD A)—Salable hogs 8,000, total 14, 000; active, fully steady; good and choice barrows and gilts at 140-lb. at 14.75 ceiling; good and choice sows at 14.00; complete clearance. Salable cattle 8,000, total 8,000, salable calves 1,000, total 1,000; fed steers and yearlings steady to 15 cents lower, yearlings showed most decline; weighty steers com paratively scarce; choice kinds topped at 17.90; best yearlings 17.40; bulk steers and yearlings 15.25-17.25; heifers steady to weak, best 17.25; cows, uneven, steady to weak; cutters 8.75 down to ship pers, light kind 8.25 down to big packers; bulls steady; weighty bulls to 13.00, and heavy calve bulls to 15.50; vealers 50 cents lower, mainly 14.50-15.50, outside 16.00. SUZUKI Starts On Page One in other parts of the empire, once swollen by the conquests of 1942. BOMBARD BALIKPAPAN Radio Tokyo said that “some 30 Bdd enemy surface units, Including cruisers and destroyers, now are Bombarding Balikpapan,” big re fining center for' eastern Borneo’s ail fields. A Dome! broadcast said that un identified Allied units had landed Bn the small island of Temate, ibout 350 miles southeast of the southern tip of the Philippines. If true, this would clamp a pin cers on the nearby enemy-held island of Halmahera, since Amer ican forces already, have occupied Morotai Island to the northeast in :he drive north to the Philipuines. The Japanese, who previously had claimed that landing attempts in ;he Balikpapan area had been re Bulsed, began all over again and ■aid that it appeared now an in vasion was impending. A big battleship sucks in and Breathes out enough air each 24 lours to equal half her own weight n the water—48^000 tons. w SETS RECORD IN BOND SALES 7th War Loan Salts Ex pected To Beat Record Of 6th War Loan WASHINGTON, June 36 —Off)— An official of the Maritime com mission has sold personally nearly a million dollars worth of war bonds in one month as a memorial to his son, killed on Iwo Jlma. The treasury’s war finance di vision told the story today as the nation’s total sales in the 7th War loan reached 20,250,000,000 and ap peared Headed for a new record. The bond-selling official Is How ard L. Grimm, from Kansas City and St. Joseph, Mo. A marine in the first World War, he fought in 26 engagements against the Ger mans. His son, Howard George Grimm, enlisted in the marines at 17, af ter telling his father in a letter he wanted to enlist more than anything he had ever wanted in his life. Two years later, on February 24 of this year, young Grimm, a pri vate first class, fell in battle. Secretary of the Treasury Mor genthau said yesterday it appears that 7th War loan sales will beat the record of $21,621,000,000 in the 6th war loan. He also announced that individual sales have reached $6,595,000,000, thus topping the previous record for individual sales of $6,351,000,000 in the 5th war loan. Sales to corporations have risen to $13,655,000,000, almost double the $7,000,000,000 corporate quota. 500 Starts On Page One Alchl aircraft works’ Eitoku plant, assembling ’ Judy’’ divebom bers; 20 percent destroyed in ear lier raids. Kagamigahara: Kawasaki aircraft assembly plant, damaged 35 percent in June 22 raid; Mitsubishi aircraft plant, lightly damaged June 22. OSAKA, AKASHI Sumitomo propeller and duralu min factory of 2,200,000 square feet, escaped heavy damage in previous raids; Armv arsenal. Japan’s largest producer of medium and small arms, 300,000 feet of roof damage in fire raids March 13-14. Akashi: Kawasaki aircraft plant, pro duction stopped by demolition raid June 29 but since repaired and bombed again June 22. Other American planes mean while struck the enemy through out the Pacific. A dm. Chester W. Nimite announ ced that fleet air wing one had sunk 122,845 tons' of Japanese shipping and damaged 128,890 tons since beginning operations ‘‘over enemy waters" about ten weeks ago. They also destroyed 36 Japanese planes and damaged 24. EAST INDIES MANILA, June 26—IIP)—In the southwest Pacific and East Indies, American raiders rolled up this score: Wrecked three freighters and two sailing vessels southwest of Hongkong: bombed oil storage fa cilities at Nanking: set fire to an alcohol plant and barracks on For mosa; again bomber Ballkpapan on eastern Borneo, destroyed four coastal vessels west of Borneo, and raided Malang airdrome, eastern Javaa. One and one-half million more non-white persons were employed in non-agriculture industries in 1945 than in 1940, according to the census bureau. WANT ADS STAR-KIST TUNA, TIDEWATER Herring Roe, Canned Oysters, Borden’s Dry Milk, Carnation Malted Milk, Silver Cloud M Mallow Creme, Duke's Mayon naise, Sbefford's Sandwich Spreads. Nestor G. Hamrick. It 26c WANTED TO RENT: 2 OR 3 rooms unfurnished for light housekeeping. Mrs. Keith Moss. Call 38 day or 1141-M night. 3t 26c DISHWASHER WANTED AT Shelby Cafe. tf 26c Farmers Dissatisfied With * Government Price Policies (Ovid A Martin has Just return ed from a cross-country tour with the Anderson food shortage in vestigating committee. This is the | first of four stories in which he I summarises the American farmer’s worries and analyses why these worries are hampering food pro duction.) By OVID A. MARTIN Associated Press Farm Editor WASHINGTON, June 26 —(JP)— Farmers are dissatisfied with gov ernment price policies. They fear a post-war collapse in demand for farm products. This is hindering maximum pro duction of food — particularly meats. These facts stood out to me as among the most important found by the house food shortage inves tigating committee at hearings held in the midwest and far west. The committee spent eight days in efforts to find ways of stepping up the output of food. Chairman of the committee is Rep. Ander son (D-NM), who will become secretary of agriculture and war food administrator next week. CONFIDENCE SHAKEN At Omaha, center of a major cattle feeding area, testimony showed that the morale of cattle feeders was low, that their confi dence in government programs was greatly shaken and that their con cern over another post-war farm depression dominated their think ing and planning. It is to the feeder—who decu ples a peculiar position in pro duction of meat—that the govern ment has been appealing for greater output of beef. His is an operation that requires not only great skill but a very large financial investment. Like wise, his is a process which adds tonnage to cattle which otherwise would go to market with a high percentage of bone and a low per centage of meat. At best, the feeder's business is one of great risk. SMALL MARGIN Under conditions prevailing now, the average feeder feels that he has very little chance of mak ing a gain but many chances of going bankrupt. He’s adjusting his operations accordingly. Briefly and simply, his situa tion is this: The margin between what he must pay for lean cattla and the price which he can expect for his finished product is insuf ficient, he feels, to cover his feed, labor and other costs and a profit. The margin is governed by gov ernment ceiling prices. While the government limits the margin on his operations, it offers him no protection whatso ever against a possible collapse in prices if the war should end sud denly. Adding to the feeders’ lack of confidence have been frequent changes in government price sta bilization programs. Those pro grams involve a complicated sys tem of ceilings and subsidies to packers and feeders. HQG FARMERS Farmer confidence has been shaken by experiences of hog far mers with government price sup port programs. During the heavy marketing season of 1943-44, hog feeders dropped below levels at which the government had promised to sup port markets. Producers appealed * to the government to live up to W its promise. Government action was largeiy ineffective—a fact de plored by the committee in a re cent report. Committee Chairman Anderson asked A. S. Wendell, a Bronson, la., farmer, if he thought fanners were entitled to the same protec tion as that offered makers of tanks and guns. "Yes,’’ Wendell replied. The far mer audience applauded their ap proval. Foundation To Name Officers Officers will be elected at the annual meeting of the Cleveland county chapter of the Infantile Paralysis foundation to be held Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock at the health department. Dr. Ben H. Kendall will preside as the current president. ^ The study of medicioe is a selective process j # //I in itself. Seven years of intensive study in col- i r, , If ' lege, plus one year of practice in a hospital, 1 l are the minimum requirements. It is wise to | I trust your precious health only to a conscien tious physician of recognized standing. Avoid the quack, the charlatan, the "cure all” type of doctor. Almost invariably they do more harm than good. Select your physician as you should your pharmacist—with care and confidence. When your physician writes a prescription, bring it to us to be filled. We are specialists at this work. REMEMBER SUTTLE’S FILLS ANY DOCTOR’S PRESCRIPTION t WHEN YOU NEED ANYTHING IN USED FURNITURE SEE SHELBY FURNITURE CO. WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE. INVESTIGATE OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN. NEXT DOOR TO ROGERS THEATRE Shelby Furniture Co %
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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June 26, 1945, edition 1
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