Price Rollbacks On Clothing Pul Off Indefinitely WASHINGTON. July 35 — Oie government* plane for rolUni Aack clothing prices appeared to day to be sidetracked indefinitely Changes for a six to seven pe cent cut in retail fa-ices—toe goa set early this year—received an other jolt as the OP A granted fur ther Price concessions to fabric manufacturers. The agency announced last night (Hat for the rest of this year pro ducers of woolen and worsted fab* riot can turn out about the same price lines of merchandise they did before the rollback was or dered. Beginning in l#46 they will be required to trim their average prices, but not as much as origi nally hiennad. The revised order will be baaed on prices slightly less than those which prevailed in 1944, rather than on 1943 prices. VNBBPBeSENTATIVE This is being done, OPA said, because military requirement* and restrictions on the use of virgin wool to 1543 made that period “un representative of normal civilian operations.” While only fabrics are affected at present, It was learned that OPA soon will make similar ad justments for garment manufac turers. This means that at least part of toe projected retail output will be wiped out for such apparel as men’s suits and overcoats, chil dren's snowsults, girls’ skirts, wo men’s coats and a wide variety of other items. OPA acknowledged that adjust ments granted to fabric producers had just about eliminated any hope ot price cute for such gar ments this year. PBOiTT MARGINS Tire adjustments for woolens and worsteds came close on the heels of retail increases for cotton garments. These also canceled part of planned reductions. They were allowed, OPA explained last week, because expansion of the Inexpen sive clothing program left mer chants with too-narrow profit margin* for moat of their gar ments. Upward adjustments for manu facturers of rayon fabrics also have been allowed, and probably will be passed on to the retell cost of rayon clothing. Clothing prices have climbed 12 percent in the last 33 months. OPA officials have described the rise ai the most serious inflation threat at present. ANNUAL Starts On Pago One account receivable Iron the cits school board for sscsm pay men i on bonds and interest of $3,MS. The bonded indebtedness shown by the audit is the lowest in 14 yean and now stands at $*48,000. Water and light profits for the year just closed amounted to $140, 838 as compared with profits of 8182,866 during the previous year, a net reduction of about 840,000. The city had ddbt service obli gations during the year of $77,609 as compared with obligations of 876325 which it will have this year. CONTRIBUTIONS The city approved contributions during the year of $6,983 which included an item of 81,700 donated in water and lights to the school system. Of the total capital assets of the city represented by the figure of $2,245,038.18, shown in the audit and which includes the values of all city owned streets, real estate water lines and other assets, a to tal of $1,602,028 is set up as sur plus. The auditor also commented on the excellent tax collections, 92 percent of the currertt levy having been collected dining the year, the same percentage that was collected in the prior year. DEATH RULED SUICIDE RALEIGH, July 25.—(if)—Coro ner Roy M. Banks today ruled as suicide the death yesterday of Wal ter Williams, 80-year-old farmer. Banks said Williams shot himself with a shotgun in a com field near | his home — PIANOS — Your Child Has TALENT Why not give her a chance to cultivate and develop as others ire doing7 “We don’t sell all the pianos but we do sell some of the best.” YOUNG BROS, or Shelby Credit Co. 216 S. Washington Street Army Units Due To Reach U. S. Today By the Associated Frees The following army units are due to arrive in the United States to day (Wednesday) from Europe: ■, At Boston— 153rd finance disburs , ing section, 66th replacement bat ’ tali on, 443rd and 440th military prisoner of war procurement com panies, JS6th and 397th quarter master truck companies and the [ I 3137th quartermaster service com • | pany. These unite originally were scheduled to arrive yesterday. Mount Holly Firm Receives Charter RALEIGH, July 26.—(/P)—Three certificates of incorporation, filed today in the office of the secre tary of state, included one for Wil son Sales Corporation of Mount Holly, to deal in all kinds of cot ton, wool and all syr*i*etic or fib rous materials. Authorized capital stock 6100,000, subscribed $300 by Brown W. Wilson, Gastonia, *. H. Venning and Prank H. McKinney. Mount Holly. OKINAWA Starts On Page One airdrome, just north of the city, after flights of Liberators passed over. Invader attack-bombers roared in low over Tachang and Tinghai air ports to drop fragmentation bombs on buildings and dispersal areas. An estimated 45 Japanese planes on the ground were either destroyed or damaged at the three fields. Tokyo claimed seven of the at ' (ackers were shot down by anti aircraft fire. There was no aerial interceDtion. (Meanwhile, it was reported from Guam that nearly 100 Mustangs based on Iwo Jima yesterday shot up airfields and railways in the Nagoya area on Japan and encoun tered only light enemy opposition.) PEAP patrol bombers Sunday re turned Sunday through bad weath er to southern Honshu to hit Mlho and Yonago airdromes. Search planes bombed the air drome near the Mg ferry port of Pusan in Korea, hit an Amoy muni tions dump on the south China coast, and sank a river boat sear Saigon in French Indo-China. Bombers and fighters attacked Tanega and Amami island in the northern Ryukyus. Seventh fleet scout bombers shot down a Japanese plane and de stroyed another on the ground near Kota Bahru in Malaya, while a navy patrol bomber sank a freighter ana lugger wi wwt kmkv&j coast. Australian Liberators in a J,000 mile roundtrip, bombed Samarang shipyards 160 miles west of Soera baja on Java, while other Aussie heavy bombers and fighters struck air bases on that island and In the Celebes group. LIST Starts On Page One Ridge factory Friday and spread to the other two plants resulted, said a union spokesman, over dis charge of a steward. John Mc Grail, president of UAW Local 666, however, termed the walkout unauthorized and said union mem bers were urged to return to work. Two other large walkouts were added to the list during the last 24 hours. In Savannah, Ga., a walkout of 400 machinists in a wage dispute at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corp., idled more than 7,500 workers in the building of AV-1 ships. Another 7,600 was idle at the Chevrolet division of Gen eral Motors In Cincinnati in a dis pute of a plant manager. Union officials said his return would end the walkout. Meat supplies in the St. Louis metropolitan area hit a new low as the strike of AFL butchers spread to a fifth plant, putting the total on strike at 1,900. The butch ers, ignoring a WLB back to work order, struck in a dispute over wage negotiations. The biggest return of workers to their jobs was in Detroit. Most of the more than 10,000 idled by the closing of 300 lumber yards in the Detroit area were back on the Job after dealers reopened their yards yesterday after a stoppage since last week. Another 5,000 Detroit workers, employed at the U. S. Rubber company plant, were be ing sent back to their jobs today by CIO-United Rubber Workers of ficials. Major film studios in Hollywood obtained a court order restraining Screen Office Employes Guild from calling a proposed strike pending a hearing tomorrow. A strike vote notice at the North American’s aviation plant at Grand Prairie, Tex., was filed by the UAW, which represents 8, 000 workers. THE RECORD SHOP c,WEST "Raining on the Mountain” (Wesley Tuttle and Coon Hunters) ECTIONS JUST .ECEIVED “We Live in 2 Different Worlds” (Tex Ritter) “You Two-Timed Me One Time Too Often” (Tex Ritter) "Each Minute Seems A Million Years” (Tennessee Ramblers) PHONE 7*8 SHELBY, N. C. I I 3 i < ] l ( SHORT, WOOD OK TRIAL TODAY Two Are Charged With Having Robbed Roy Crowder Of $70 Trial of Burcn Short and W. L. Wood, who axe charged with hav ing robbed Roy Crowder of $70 af ter he had been hit over the head with a beer bottle was underway in Cleveland Superior court this morning with Judge Allen Gwyn presiding. The prosecuting witness claims that he bad been drinking beer with the defendants at several places. At the Rivervdew service station, he says he saw Bhort come out of the station with a bottle of beer and get in the back seat. He declared that he was hit over the head and that he remembers noth ing more until he woke up in the hospital Police testified that they found $70 on Wood’s person after he had been arrested. Defense counsel by their questioning indicated they would contend that Crowder be came drunk and gave the money to Wood for safekeeping. OTHER CASES Other cases disposed of this morning and yesterday afternoon were: Paul Bridges and Rex Collins, indicted for breaking and enter ing, were given prison terms. Bridges was ordered to serve 12 months of a three year term, the balance of the sentence to be sus pended, Rollins is to serve three months of a 16-months term, the balance to be suspended. Prayer for Judgment was con tinued in the case of Joe Wig gins, charged with assault with deadly weapon. James Smith, negro, for robbery was ordered to serve two years in the state prison and a term of two years was suspended. Pink Page was given a 30-day suspended sentence for being drunk. Fred Ramey was ordered to serve a 16-months prison term for breaking and entering and was given a suspended term of the same length. Albert Sadler was given a six months suspended term for pos sessing home brew. Robert Mayes was given a 12 months suspended sentence for breaking and entering. Prayer for judgment was con tinued in the esse of William Def ter charged with assault with deadly weapon and using profani ty. THREE-POINT Starts On Pm On* prepared today to drive home fch contention that the contemplate military agreement with the coun cil should be submitted to botl houses for simple majority agree ment. RATIFICATION Senator Hatch (D-NM) plunge< the senate into an uproar yesterdaj when he challenged an earlier as sertion by John Foster Dulles, chie: adviser to the American delegatioi in San Francisco, that this agree' ment would come bach to th< chamber for a two-thirds ratifica tion vote. Senator Wheeler (D-Mont), dr on ing through a 15,000-word speed in which he said he would vote foi the charter largely because of Dulles statement on this point, read Dulles testimony before the senate for elgn relations committee. He add' ed that the record also showee Chairman Connally (D-Tex) agree ing “thoroughly” with Dulles tha a treaty was in order. Previously the issue had not beet raised. It was a looeely-guardet secret, however, that several stati department officials were worrie< at the possibility of facing anothei treaty debate on this score. Wheel er said it would be a “real fight’ and that he would help wage it. MILITARY AGREEMENTS Lucas told reporters he plans t< point out that congress is giver constitutional authority to raise armies and as a result both house? should pass on the military agree ments. Senator Pepper (D-Fla) said he planned to contend that the main step is being taken in ratification of the treaty and that the agree ments under it shouldn’t also have to be put in treaty form where one third of the senate, plus one, could defeat them. 8enator Vandenberg (R-Mich) said it had not occurred to him be fore that anything but a treaty would be offered, but that he had no objection to approval in statute form. DOOLITTLE 8 tarts On Pare One record 185,000-ton monthly total igalnst the Reich. rONNAGES INCREASE While bomb tonnages against the enemy will increase, Eaker >ald production of B-17 Flying fortresses has been ordered halted lust as B-24 Liberator production vas ended six weeks ago. In all, >rders for 44,300 warplanes that vould have cost an estimated $7, 100,000,000 have been canceled ilnce V-E day, Eaker reported. In addition to the LeMay-Twin ng command shift, Eaker also announced that MaJ. Gen. John 3. Brooks will assume command >f the 11th air force, which re :ently has been active over Para nushiro and the Kuriles. The 1th is attached to naval forces inder fleet Admiral Chester W. 4units. The South African republic be came a part of the British empire n 1877. | Veterans Commission Executive Director To Be Namei Today RALEIGH, July 25 —(JP)_ Ap pointment of an executive director of the State Veterans commission was expected to head the list of matters for disposal today at a conference of the commission in session here. ( Announcement that the com mission also intends to appoint an j assistant director of World War i II service was made yesterday by June H. Rose, of Greenville, acting executive secretary. A proposed budget was being prepared for the advisory budget commission and plans were laid to increase the number of service of ficers from six to 10 or 12, to be stationed at key points over the state. Aussies Move Two Miles Down East Borneo Coast MANILA, July 25.—(jP)—Pushing a general Japanese withdrawal in the Mt. Batochampar area, Aus tralian troops have moved two j miles down the east Borneo coast, Gen. MacArthur reported today. This placed them within 50 miles of their next big objective, the oil I field at Samarinda. Aussie Spit 1 fires supporting the advance, which ■ was made on Monday, spotted a i Japanese truck convoy and probably ! got 18 trucks loaded with enemy troops. RAAF Liberators meanwhile at tacked Celebes Islands to the east and Kittyhawks teamed up with American P-T oats to shoot up Jap anese water craft and buildings in Mandar gulf in the Celebes. PETAIN Starts On Page One pending the constitution and mak ing Petain a dictator. WON’T ANSWER Petain stolidly refused to answer questions, adhering to his vow on the first day of the trial. Judge Paul Mongibeaux then read into the record what he said was a telegram from Petain to Hitler ask ing permission for Vichy troops to help the Germans in defense. The issue arose during the cross examination of former premier Edouard Daladier, whose angry testimony was punctuated by chair slamming and shouts. Daladier was followed to the stand by the last elected president of the third republic, Albert Le brun-dressed in a formal morning ■ tuai (U1U oui^tu unjuotso Iitiu 5 wearing a rosette of the legion of ! honor In his lapel. Lebrun recited a succession of i military defeats which preceded ■ the French armistice. The telegram was read in re sponse to a juror’s questioning of l former Premier Edouard Daladier, ’ who had testified that "all the traitors of Prance” flocked to Vichy ' after the armistice and that Prance , was not unarmed when the Ger ■ mans struck in 1940. The same juror asked Daladier whether he knew of a telegram from Petain to Hitler congratulat ing the Germans on the bloody re i pulse of the Canadians at Dieppe. There was no immediate reply. ’ CONCESSIONS TALKED ’ Daladier agreed during cross ex amination with testimony yester day of former Premier Paul Rey l naud that “certain concessions in Africa” to Mussolini were consid , ered in 1940 in an effort to keep Italy at peace. i “The true cause of our defeat.” I Daladier said, “resulted from de ! moralization of the army and the [ old conception of the inviolability ■ of the Ardennes”—the mountain ous gap of Belgium and northeast Prance through which the Ger mans burst French lines in 1940 and pushed back the Americans i last December. He said the defeat also was due j to military “incapacity” and ac tivities of the Fifth column. “On June 25, 1940, we were told i a new order was being constitut ed,” Daladier told the court try ing the aged soldier for intelli gence with the enemy and plotting against the security of Prance. “It consisted of destroying Re jublican institutions of Prance. The Republic was destroyed con trary to the wishes of the national assembly which met at Vichy. As delegates to the national assembly left Vichy, we saw arriving all the traitors of Prance, x x x The peo ple of Prance, stupefied, witnessed the Vichy coup d’etat.” SECOND WITNESS Daladier was the second witness and continued the statement he started yesterday. Petain had en tered the courtroom at 1:22 p.m. He was the first French chief of state to face a court since Louis XVI. The swarthy Daladier at one point picked up a chair and slam med itr to the floor as his face flushed with anger. He was re counting the story of the Riom trials in which the Vichy regime tried unsuccessfully to pin the blame for the French collapse on him, former Premiers Paul Rey naud and Leon Blum, and Gen. Maurice Gamelin. He said he had learned at Bour rasol that without having been tried or condemned, he had been sentenced to life imprisonment. He recalled that the former at torney general, Gaston Cassagnau, had refused to porsecute the case at Riom and at this point he slam med the chair to the floor. As Daladier spoke, he shook his fist. His voice frequently rose to a shout- Reynaud listened intent ly to the man he succeeded as premier. Furnished by J. Robert Lindsay Webb Building Shelby. N. C. and Company STOCKS BETTER NEW YORK, July 36—(IP)—Stock market skies brightened a bit to day as leaders generally edged to ward recovery although scattered clouds still dimmed the investment firmament. In front most of the time were U. S. Steel, Chrysler, Southern Railway, Baltimore and Ohio, U. S. Rubber, American Telephone, Johns - Manvllle, Allied Chemical. Douglas Aircraft and Sears Roe buck. Bonds were selectively improved. Rye futures strengthened but other commodities were narrow. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, July 25(IP)—Salable hogs 5,500. total 11,600; active and fully steady; good and choice bar rows and gilts at 140-lb. up at 14.75 ceiling; good and choice sows at 14.00; complete clearance. Salable cattle 9.000, total 9300; salable calves 600, total 600; choice fed steers firm, active; top 18.00; best yearlings 17.70; all other grades slow, weak; bulk slaughter steers 14.75-17.50; heifer steady, best 17.10; cows weak, shade low er; canners and cutters steady at 7.00-8.60; most beef cows B.25 13.00: bulls steady to easy; most grass bulls 9.50-12.50; heavy dairy sausage bulls to 13.25 and heavy beef bulls to 15.25; vealers weak at 16.00 down; stock cattle slow, most ly 13.00-14.76. BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO. July 25—(^P)—Butter, firm; receipts 597,161; eggs, re ceipts 9,351; firm. N. C. HOGS RALEIGH, July 25—(/P)—(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, July 25—(/P)—(NCDA) —Egg and poultry market steady to firm. Raleigh—U. S grade AA, large, 48; hens, all weights 26.8. Washington—U. S grade A large 48; broilers and fryers 32.30 to 32.30. N. Y. COTTON AT Today March . .22.82 May - .32.79 July . ..22.59 October....22.79 December . .22.83 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT 1.63% 1.64 1.63% 2:00 Prev. Day 22.81 22.79 22.57 22.80 22.83 July. September . .December . 1.63% 1.64 1.64 CORN July .1.18% U8% September - .1.18% 1.18% December . 1.18H 1.18B July.1.44* 1.43% September . -.1.39% 1.38% December - -...1.35% 134% 31 77 178 32 26 STOCKS AT 2:00 Amn Rolling Mill . 30 American Loco - —. American Tobacco B _ American Tel and Tel ... Anaconda Copper . . Assoc Dry Goods. Beth Steel . Boeing Air _ .. 24 Chrysler . - Curtiss-Wright . - 6 Elec Boat .*- 16 General Motors.66 Pepsi Cola . 21 Greyhound Corp . —--24 International Paper . - 25 Nash Kelv . -- Glenn L Martin - . 26 Newport Ind . —* N Y Central . 26 Penn R R - . 36 Radio Corp. 12 Reynolds Tob B . - 33 Southern Railroad _ ---- Standard Oil N J-61 Sperry Corp . U S Rubber . 54 U S Steel . 67 Western Unio n. . 46 Youngstown S ana T.46 7-8 1-2 1-2 3-4 3-4 3-4 79 3-4 108 3-4 3-4 1-8 7-8 3-8 1-2 18 1-2 24 5-8 3-4 3-8 3-4 46 1-4 30 5-8 5-8 3-4 5-8 DIGGERS Starts On Page One way of the Solomons. They poured huge stockpiles of war supplies in to the Buin area before Allied planes, submarines and warships could sever communication lines. Allied landings on New Britain trapped 50,000 men on the Gazelle Peninsula at the island’s northern tip. The mighty enemy base at Rabaul was neutralized. Japanese on Bougainville island to the east were hopelessly by-passed. The job of rooting out the foe on Bougainville was turned over to Lt. Gen. S. G. Savige’s Second Australian corps last fall and the first attack was mounted Novem ber 23. The diggers now have knifed into the garden areas of Kahili, vital to enemy subsistence, and have punched through Jungle and swamp to within 18 miles of nearby Buin at Bougainville’s southern tip. An estimated 17,000 Japanese remain under wily Lt. Gen. Kanda, commanding the remnants of the 17th Japanese army. They still have heavy 155 artillery, four-inch defense guns and an abundance of 75 millimeter anti-aircraft dual purpose guns that can be turned against tanks with devastating ef fect. 35 Liberated Yanks Coming Home Today NEW YORK, July 25.—(#•)—'Two small vessels with 35 liberated Amer ican prisoners of war arrived today at the New York port of embarka tion. They are the Albangares. with 18 men, and the Bulk Lube, with 17. HOME Starfts On Page One kaido Island, north of Honshu, was monitored by the American Broadcasting company). Planes and warships went into action again as tabulation showed this toll of Japanese fighting ships collected yesterday: Two battleships, two carriers and three cruisers damaged. (British carrier planes accounted for one of the carriers at a Shikoku port). The incomplete score also show ed 64 enemy planes destroyed or damaged. These results, plus other damage inflicted by British car rier planes and land-based navy bombers, increased to 563 the num ber of ships, and to 635 the num ber of planes, destroyed or heavily damaged by forces under Admiral Nimitz command in the 15 days beginning July 10. NIGHT FIGHTERS Between the hours of yesterday’s carrier-plane attack and today's night fighters slashed at the ene my to make this the first around the-clock carrier strike against Nippon. In a broadcast from the scene, Admiral Halsey termed it "a new phase of naval warfare . . • The final plunge into the heart of Japan. "If the Nips do not know they’re a doomed nation, they’re even stu pider than I think,’’ he added. “My only regret is that the ships do not have wheels — so we could chase them inland after we drive the from the coast.” Combined with a 625-plane B-29 strike on Osaka and Na goya—heaviest of the war—and other army air raids, the blows of the past two days were the hardest ever struck against Ja pan. Some 2,000 planes, in all, participated. Tokyo's jitters were obvious in its radio broadcasts. The enemy radio made no effort to minimize seriousness of the threat as Halsey's ships steamed defiantly near the coast — close enough for cruisers and destroyers to shell Honshu's southern shore! this morning, hammering at the Kushimoto seaplane base, Shion omisakt airfield and other targets. Tokyo radio acknowledged the shelling. SUPERFORTS Starts On Page One the ms i reported today. The 20th atr force, acknowledg ing loss of a single plane' in the record-making sweep, said "heavy damage" was inflicted on these important targets of the Osaka Nagoya industrial district: Osaka; the Osaka arsenal: the Sumitomo light metals plant, which i produces aircraft propellers, and I the Kawanishi aircraft plant at suburban Takarazuka. Nagoya; the Aichi-Eutoku air craft plant; a bearings plant; and; the Industrial hearts of Tsu, pop-! illation 68,000, and Kuwana, pop-1 ulation 42,000. EMERGENCY LANDINGS Flak damage and dwindling fuel forced 180 of the big planes down for emergency landings at I wo, enroute to their Marianas bases. Cpl. Angelo Vassala. Rochester, N. Y„ said he watched the bombs go down on the Kawanishi aircraft plant, "and when I looked again, ■ the buildings weren't there.” WANT ADS i-! TOO late for behind the Front Page—Three girls wish ride to Jacksonville August 1-2. Will the lady offering ride to Jack sonville this week please phone. Wanted to buy for service men i overseas two cameras, one 35mm. Phone Holt McPherson. WANTED TO RENT: FURNISH ed or unfurnished apartment by responsible couple. Call 222. 3t 25c LOST TUESDAY NIGHT, HUB cap for 1942 Buick. $5 reward for return to Lee B. Weathers and no questions asked. 2t 25p WANTED TO BUY: BAND SAW and other woodworking machin ery. C. C. Newton, RFD 4, Mor ganton, N. C. 2t 25p WANTED TO RENT: 2 OR 3 rooms, unfurnished. Write “ABC" Box 200, Shelby. 2t 25p MEET YOUR FRIENDS~AT the new cue room of the Wig-Wam. All new equip ment. 6t-25c WANTED: OFFICE GIRL FOR permanent work. Apply Carna tion Co., Shelby, between 3 and 6 p.m. tf 25c PORCELAIN TOP KITCHEN tables, large size. Shelby Credit Co., 210 S. Washington St. ltc HUNDREDS OF VICTROLA REC ords only 20c each, at Shelby Credit Co., 210 S. Washington St. ltc THE WIG-WAM’S NEW CUE room is the place to relax and enjoy several games of pool. Meet your friends at the Wig-Wam. 6t-25c i NEW SELECTION OF CHINA lamps, Just in. Shelby Credit Co., 210 S. Washington St. ltc FOR SALE: MARTIN GUITAR. Linder Andrews, 303 East War ren St. Must sell by Friday. 2t 25p If you are interested in buying a good re-conditioned Sewing Ma chine we have them at: $49.95 YOUNG BROS, or SHELBY CREDIT CO. 210 S. Washington 8t. Truman To Review Troops At Frankfurt POTSDAM,' July 25—(^—Presi dent Truman 'Will fly to U. S army headquarters at Frankfurl tomorrow and review Americar troops, taking advantage of th( off-day in the Big Three schedule officials announced today. Gen. Eisenhower, commander oi the United States forces in the European theatre, will meet the President in Frankfurt, where thej will inspect the 84th- infantry anc Third Armored divisions. The twc will have luncheon together. Mr. Truman will return to Pots dam early Thursday evening foi resumption of the Big Three con ference, interrupted by the depar ture for London of the highesl British leaders to await electior returns. WEATHER CHARLOTTE, July 25—(/P)—Of ficial weather bureau records ol the temperature and rainfall foi the 24 hours ending at 8:30 a m. Rain Station Max. Min. fal Asheville .90 64 Atlanta . 96 73 Augusta - 91 71 ,9( Birmingham - 95 70 Boston . 70 62 Charleston.— 88 79 Charlotte _..91 69 Columbia _ 93 72 Greensboro .... — .90 68 Los Angeles _ 83 64 Memphis ..98 77 Miami _ 87 76 .0: Mt. Mitchell .75 56 New Orleans - ...88 78 New York ..81 69 Raleigh .90 69 San Antonio . 94 76 .0) Spartanburg _ 91 72 Washington ..84 70 .T Wilmington ... 74 BRITISH Starts On Pftfe One eign Secretary Anthony Eden — who I* accompanying him to Lon don—may return to Potsdam Fri day. In the event of a Labor party victory, however, the task of con tinuing the Big Three talks will devolve upon Clement Attlee, who has been sitting in on the confer ence at Churchill’s invitation. FOREIGN POLICY A change in British leadership is not expected here to result in any marked setback to the Pots dam negotiations. No sharp differ ences on foreign policy were raised between Churchill and Attlee dur ing the election campaign. President Truman. Premier Sta lin and the British leaders held their eighth meeting yesterday. There was no indication, however, of the direction the talks were tak ing. (A Paris dispatch last night said U. s. Ambassador Jefferson Caff ery and Soviet Ambassador Alex ander E. Bogomolov had been sum moned to Potsdam, suggesting that the conference had reached a point where expert assistance on proo lems Involving France was need ed.) If yon want to fix your dining room np before your husband, son or daughter returns from the service you should see our beau iful dining room suites before you buy. They are excellent buys and big savings to you. YOUNG BROS, or Sholby Credit Co. 210 8. Washington Street NOTICE NOW OPEN FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT, NEW CUE ROOM AT THE WIGWAM CAFE. ALL NEW EQUIPMENT, 6 TABLES UPSTAIRS, 6 TABLES DOWN STAIRS. MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE WIGWAM. NEW FURS For all those women interested in owning a fur coat next winter (and what woman isn’t) this is the news you’ve been waiting for! This is the opportunity you can't afford to miss! With “just so much” to spend you can have a fur coat of quality, beauty and warmth—a coat masterfully designed of the finest pelts—a coat that will provide you with that feeling of luxury at a price and a plan that you won’t feel. Use our Layaway Plan. Select your fur coat now, while the sun shines and let us store it for you until the snow flies. These ore some of the new furs now on display for the first time. Silver Blue Muskrat Natural Silver Muskrat Sable Dyed Muskrat Mink Dyed Muskrat Russian Weasel Hudson Seal Kidskin China Mink Minkolette SEE OUR WINDOWS J. C. McNeely Co. “The Style Center of Shelby and Cleveland County"