RUSSIANS PREPARE FOR ‘BIG THREE’ MEETING—Russians in Berlin have erected this ornate stanc which carries paintings of the "Big Three” in preparation for their meeting in the German capital thi; month. President Truman's picture is at left, Premier Stalin’s in center, and Prime Minister Winston Church' ill’s at right. The stand is part of the decorative scheme for the meeting. AP Photographer Henry L. Griffin made the picture— News Of Soil Conservation Wood has been listed with alum inum, copper and steel as an es sential war material. The war needs for forest products of all kinds arc listed as critical materials In fur thering the war effort. Labor, to get out wood products. Is the real bottleneck. Farmers will help most if, somehow, they and their neigh bors can manage to get out some wood after laying by time with the labor available on the farm. The demand is great and the price is good. For further information, con tact the County Farm Agent or rep resentative of the Soil Conserva tion Service. Both agencies ha\e offices in the county agriculture building. The sericea meadow strip which William Wright of the Oak Grove community seeded this spring looks mighty good. Mr. Wright says, "I wanted sericea and I wanted a good stand, so I put down plenty seed, in ^act, I sowed about twice the rec ommended amount per acre.” The Soil Conservation Service re cently staked terrace lines for Paul Allen and D. T. Horn. Mr. Horn plans to use his farm 'tractor arid disc plow to construct his terraces. Mr. Allen will have his built with heavy terracing equipment. Several farmers have placed orders through the local AAA for their winter cover crop seed. Get ting seed in the ground early in the fall will assure a much better cover during the winter months and a larger growth to turn under next spring. "Vegatative cover is the most important single factor in pre venting erosion; therefore, the pro duction and maintenance of a com plete vegetative cover for the soil is a practice needed on every farm", says Tom Cornwell of Route 5, Shelby, National Farm Safetv Week, July 22-28. 1945. Furman Plans For Football In 1946 GREENVILLE, S. C., July 10— iA5!—Furman university will return to intercollegiate football compe tition in 1946 after a four-year layoff with H. R. iRedi Dobson. Furman star of the, early 1926, as athletic director. Dr. John. L- PJyler, jiijit^erslfy, president. mk'dJ the ahhouneement yesterday. Dobson will come here from Spartanburg high school where he has been athletic direc tor for about 20 years. I AJWUgguTOF PURINaTgROWE N A CANfOlToW^ '> » ^ ' W "V • . , *», SWGfPUUiTS ' Thaf* all it takaa whan • you feed GROWENA on tha Purina Plan. Built iar ia«t growth and vigor ... Get* 'am on tha n#*t aarlyl FALL, EGG ’~lart'wi GOOD . and it feed to grow pullet*. Try Chow—it'* built to sup ply what grain lack*. E->‘i GROWING RIDiPULLETSiOF L ARGE * ROUNDWORMS Chek-R-Ton knocks large roundworms out of your birds— quickly, safely, without shock. WxfCHEK-R-TON - ■,'**£. * [ m a Sll./f, WAKE UP SLEEPY LAYERS dLl cHjtm-T» JJ OA4 ’URINAfCHEK-R-TON Kelps get sluggish birds to eat the ,:eed needed to*get ^em back in rondition^When^birds^re *I'off >ed"Jf remember |[Chek-R-Ton. WASHINGTON—It's doubtful 1 five cabinet members ever wer< named with greater favor fron Congress than the five Presiden Truman has just appointed to hi; wartime roundtable. In the first place, Secretary o Agriculture Clinton P. Andersoi was a popular member of thi House from New Mexico when hi was appointed. Secretary of Stati James F. Byrnes and Sectary o Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach botl were popular alumni of Congress They all talk congressional lan guage and presumably think aloni congressional lines. Attorney General Tom C. Clarl never served in Congress but Ser Tom Connally and especial! Speaker Sam Rayburn, as well a several other members of the Tex as delegation have been his pollti cal godfathers since the day h left Dallas to work for the gov ernment. fis a member of th -'little1 Chbinet” when he was as sistant attorney genera! tall, gen ial, drawling Tom Clark wldenei his following on Capitol Hill con siderably. Postmaster General Robert Han negan has a popularity niche al his own—but more of that later. On the other hand, this ver favor has put the new Cabine members squarely on the spot. The; take office under the weight o great expectations and if they trij it will be a great disappointmen to their loudest rooters in Congress Here are some of the things ex pected of them: tl) Anderson has to pull somi meat other than rabbit out of thi hat; straighten out our muddlet food problems; keep consume; prices down, farm prices and pro duction up; and do it all quick! enough to take the public, pro ducers, and distributors, wholesali and retail, off congressional necks Even with the sweeping power Congress has given him, Andersoi knows what he’s up against. <2> Byrnes has to do the mos thorough house-cleaning the stat,i department has ever had (Under secretary Joseph C. Grew and si; other top members of Edward R Stattinius’ team already are re ported to have offered their resig nations). If Byrnes wants to keej Congress happy, he'll have to taki the department out of pink tei diplomacy and put the administra tion of our foreign policy on i two-fisted, hard-headed, forthrigh basis. Also he will have to confe: ASSASSIN Shares , vicious lies with the audience about pri vate lives of public men. Spreads false rumors about minority groups and people he calls, "foreign-* ers." Tries to destroy our faith in our.countryand its people. ' "s~ PoM'T LISTEN To HIM! 4 i Windsor Couple Lost Third Son In Plane Crash WINDSOR, July 10 — the Hill are looking to him to re t store patronage along the clear . Democratic lines that existed when James A. Farley was postmaster i general. The post office depart ; ment? Oh, that runs itself—and • very well. BRIDE SLAIN, HUSBAND HELP— Charles R. Ross (left at top) of Knoxville, Tenn., is shown in cus tody of Detective Lieut. Leo Hem ler (right) at Seattle, Wash., after police quoted him as confessing he killed his bride, Wilma Margaret Ross (bottom), 19, a civilian em ploye in a Navy yard. They had been married four months.—(AP Wirephotos). DOMINATION TO BE REFUTED BY NEW BOOK By LYNN NISBET RALEIGH, July 10—Prom time to time, especially in campaign years, there are charges and countercharges of ,‘machine’, do mination of North Carolina gov ernment, of too great influence of the "interests” and similar libels (?) upon the real democracy of the state. Governors, senators and other political leaders have vigorously denied these charges but in many instances have failed (as did the old negro preacher) to "show wherein.” Jule B. Warren of the staff of North Carolina Citizens Association, Inc., is preparing a book titled ‘‘The People Govern North Carolina’’ designed to show just how state government func tions. The book will be illustrated by charts and graphs as well as by photos of the last general assem bly showing that body in action. It will contain 24 chapters dealing with almost every phase of rela tionship between the citizen and his state government, between the state and local government units, and with the federal government. With a background of many years experience as a newspaper reporter, followed by several years as secretary of the state education association, and two years research with the Citizens, associaton, the author should be well qualified to handle the subject. Jews To Haifa MARSEILLE, PRANCE, July 10 —(£>)— Gathered from German concentration camps, 818 Euro pean Jews embarked today for Haifa in Palestine on voyages ar ranged by supreme headquarters and UNRRA. It was the first trip of its kind and many more may follow. Independent U. S. retailers re ported a four per cent decrease in the value of inventories accompan ied by an eight per cent rise in sales during 1944. We Will CLOSE for VACATION From Friday, July 13 Through Saturday, July 21. Open Monday, July 23, for business as usual. MAUNEY RADIO SERVICE ll Street Repair Work At Kings Mountain KINGS MOUNTAIN — Work Is low being done on King Street ind the new Gastonia-Kings Mtn. ilghway by state workers. Asphalt and gravel is being poured on the street to a thick ness of about one inch, the pre viously laid asphalt is being re moved from man-hole covers, ana street gutters are being cleaned. Workers are* laying the pavement with considerate speed and hope I to finish the Job within the next few days. Traffic has been detoured from Gastonia to Kings Mountain via the old Gastonia-Bessemer City Kings Mountain highway, also known as the truck lane. In Kings Mountain the traffic is detoured into the business section via Ridge Street which connects with the truck lane or Cleveland Avenue. il-Cemtat run wit tc Norths** irbese, Chicopee Fells, Miss. Any City Can Take Pride in Its Airport Runways of Soil-Cement Auxiliary and secondary runways need this new, tested type of surface—low in first cost, strong, highly weather resistant Airport runways of secondary or auxiliary class present a serious construction problem. How can they be built strong and durable —at low first cost? *»«—■» .*». The solution that is real news in the engineering world is Soil Cement :;; simply field or road way soil plus portland cement plus moisture••• mixed and com pacted under scientific control. Proved Under Traffic Service on many hundreds of miles of light-traffic roads and streets and at numerous airports, proves that Soil-Cement is strong, dense and highly resistant to sun, rain and frost. It is placed rapidly with simple equipment and ordinary labor. Precise but simple methods of laboratory^ control enable the engineer to be sure of a good job. Soil-Ceident Is noHnfended for the main runways of ale* ports or heavy-duty roads and streets, which need the strength and low ultimate cost of potfc land cement concrete; But Soil-Cement CAN save you time and money on second dary or auxiliary airport surfaces ana light-traffic roadways. The complete story will be furnished on request to engineers, offi cials and citizens concerned with airport development. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION State Planters Bank Bldg., Richmond 19, Va. A notional organization to Improve end extend the usee of concrete • % t through scientific research and engineering field work GALORE! It was a lucky day for us when we purchased a dealer's entire remain* ing stocks of used piec es of furniture, which we are passing on to our customers. We con sider every one a real value. Come early and get first selections. OAK DINING ROOM CHAIRS ... set of 6_$7.95 OAK DINING CHAIRS ... set of 4_$8.95 COMFORTABLE LOUNGE CHAIR__ $3.95 COXWELL, LOUNGE CHAIRS and ROCKERS _ $4.95 to $10.95 Tapestry and leather covers. BREAKFAST CHAIRS ... set of 4_$3.95 Odd Lot OAK DINING CHAIRS ... each __$1.29 GOOD USED SOFAS . .. bargains at_$10.95 WICKER SUITS ... 6 large pieces, set_$34.95 DRESSER BASE ... a real bargain-$2.00 ODD BUFFET ... a great big value_$2.50 KITCHEN TABLES . . . what you've been wanting-$1.00 PORCELAIN TOP KITCHEN CABINET_$39.00 DINING ROOM SUITE ... 7 pieces . . . only_$34.95 DINING ROOM SUITE ... 9 pieces . . . only_$37.95 DINING ROOM SUITE ... 4 pieces ... only_$44.95 MARBLE TOP WASHSTAND . . . first come_$8.95 CHINA CLOSET ... get here early_$21.95 ODD MAHOGANY CHEST OF DRAWERS_$24.95 OAK CHEST . . . what a value!_$14.95 CHIFFEROBE ... in good condition_$19.95 OAK BOOKCASE ... 3 tier, glass front__ $5.95 One RECONDITIONED PIANO for only_$69.95 GAINSBROUGH CHAIR . . . like new_$42.95 BARREL BACK CHAIR . . . perfect condition_$21.00 SOLID MAHOGANY BEDROOM SUITE ... 3 pieces_$54.95 CASH or EASY TERMS SHELBY FURNITURE CO. NEXT TO ROGERS THEATRE EAST MARION STREET TELEPHONE 1140 t