The-Shelbg Bale Stett I (FOUNDED 1894) PuDUabed Every Afternoon Except Sunday Entered aa Second OIj Matter at the U S Post Office Shelby N C. By STAB PUBLISHING COMPAN* 217-219 East Warren Street Sbelby. N. C LEE B. WEATHERS. President and PubUshee BOLT McPHERSON. Mng Editor - U L WEATHERS Secy. Treae. SUBSCRIPTION RATES •Payable On Order) • * CARRIE* MAIL I One Year _*10.40 *7.00 Six Months _ 6.20 3.76 Three Months_ 3.60 3.00 Pour Weeks _ £0 .76 ►One Week _ -20 .20 . all TELEPHONES — 1100 WARD-GRIFFITH CO. INC.—National Advertising ttepmenttUiei MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TMS ASSOCIATED PRESS IS ETCLUSIVEL* ENTITLED TO THE PURPOSE POR PUBLICATION OP A LI. THE NEWS DISPATCHES CREDITED TO IT PUBLISHED HEREIN. ALL RIGHTO OP PUBLICATION OP SPECIAL OR NOT SthERWISE IN THIS PAPER AND ALSO TH* LOCAL NEW* OISPATCHE9 HEREiH ALS6 ARE RESERVED. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 5,1945 BIBLE THOUGH!* MORTAL MEN AND WOMEN OFTEN DISAPPOINT US AND PROVE UNW'ORTHY, BUT GOD IS WORTHY OF OUR LOVE BECAUSE -v THE GOVERNOR AND UNEMPLOYMENT PAY Governor Cherry in his recent appearance before a Con gressional committee in opposition to the administration proposed liberalization of unemployment benefits was moved by something more than abstract state's right \yhich has been a bone of contention for years and which spmetimes means something a-nd sometimes doesn’t. We believe that Governor Cherry had in view the welfare of the \worker himself. Of course, it sounds a little peculiar to say that bppos- i ing a raise in unemployment compensation would be in the interest of the worker who might receive this pay. \ However, it is our opinion, a.nd we gather it is the gov ernor’s opinion, that the chief interest of the Tar Hbel worker is in getting pay for the job he does as opposed to getting pay for idle time. The North Carolina general as\! sembly has provided that he shall be given assistance in a layoff period but as the Governor points out that any in crease above 50 per cent of the worker's average weekly earnings would serve to encourage and increase idleness. This same position was taken by Rep. Robert L. Doughton before the governor had anything to say on the subject. Everybody knows, or should know, that unemployment benefits are not drawn out of thin air. The business of paying them falls back on a combination of taxpayers and industries, which means of course that in the final analysis the worker who works must pay the worker who doesn’t work. This is a fair deal only if the payments to the unem ployed are kept within reasonable limits and below the point at which workers would be encouraged to stay off the job. We believe that the governor of North Carolina is in terested in the worker in this state and we believe too, he is interested in the work that is done. For it is upon work done that all of us must live. You can’t make a state pros perous with unemployment benefits no matter how high you make them. HOME BUILDERS VS. A FUSS About the only thine: on which the War Production Board, the Office of Price Administration and the National Housing Administration—WPB, OPA and NHA, if you like alphabetical designation better—the three government agencies which have to do with housing control, are in agree ment is that there is a tremendous demand for new housing. As a matter of fact, one does not have to go to any branch of the government to discover that truth. We have but to look around us at makeshift arrangements, at the want-ad columns of the newspapers where persons are cry ing daily for places to live, to realize the country needs more and better living quarters. Many persons put up with crowd- j ed conditions in a good spirit during war time, but now* that peace has come with its more abundant materials and what we are told is a surplus of workmen, these home-hungry folks think they are entitled to something better. What is more, they are right, and they should not be frustrated by some argument in Washington. As we under stand it, the War Production Board wants to take the lid completely off home building. It has already revoked con trols over industrial construction. The Office of Price Ad ministration urges the modification of controls but doesn’t want them all torn down. The national housing administra tion agrees that modification is all right but wants it ac complished differently. If we were called on to take sides in the argument, we . believe that we would come nearer agreeing with WPB and take off all the controls. This not only seems the sensible thing to do but it is also the course advocated by the major national business organizations They should have some idea , about what is the best stimulation for the nation’s commerce. For the moment, however, we are only interested in ! .stopping this bickering ar.d allowing the would-be home- 1 builders the satisfaction of knowing where they stand. The 1 most unsound foundation for a home, building, or anything ; else, is a fuss. ! Twenty-four war criminals seem to make up a mighty . small crop from such a big war as we had. • -V- , Many congressmen won’t have time to unpack their bags from their European junkets in time to get them packed ]\ again for Washington. i Not only coal, but its outlook is also dark. Stabilizer: Something that is used by airplanes and ' economic systems. I! SHARING THE WARMTH «* EUROPE Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. A PRAYER FOR TODAY FOR THE FLTIRE All 'time is an eternal present to Thee, O Eternal Creator and Ruler of the universe; and Thy plans for mankind, include two worlds. We pray that Thou wilt make us ready for what \Thou art making ready for us. In the splendors of a new order of life, ruled by love and jus tice, may we bear a worthy part. Whatever the new day may hold of deprivation and change and sac rifice, may we meet it in the spirit of those who seek to follow Christ, even to a cross. Deliver us from fear and panic and pettiness; and teach us the eternal soul\ value. We would not shrink from temporal changes; for Thou, O Father, changest not; and Thy love is constant in all the mutations of life. Lift' up our hearts, and our imaginations, and our pur poses, that we may fee good sol diers of the new day, wherein Thy will may be done, and through which Thy Kingdom may come. Amen. \ LETTERS CHANCELLOR HARRELSON PRAISES SHELBY TEAM Editor of The Star: y Please add my name to the\ list of those who are extending Con gratulations to the coaches, play ers, and others who aided \in bringing victory to the American Legion baseball team on last Sat\ urday night, ' The Shelby team deserves praise from the whole state for its great playing. Pleased be assured of my best wishes. Sincerely yours. J. W. HARRELSON, Chancellor. Wachovia Increases Stock Four Millions WINSTON-SALEM, Sept. 5 — Plans for a $4,000,000 increase in the capital funds of the Wachovia Bank and Trust company were approved by the directors of the bank in a special meeting here today and will be submitted to the stockholders at a called meet ing on September 20, according to information released here by offi cials of the bank. When approved, the capital in crease will be made through the sale of 80,000 shares of new stock of $25 par value. The sale price to stockholders will be $50 a share, and from the proceeds of this sale $2,000,000 will be added to capital, increasing it from $3,000,000 to $5, 000,000 and $2,000,000 will be ad ded to surplus. It was stated that when the transaction is completed, capital, surplus and reserve funds of the bank would be approximately $14,000,000. In commenting on the proposed issue of new stock, President^Rob ert M. Hanes stated that for some time the officers and directors had felt the desirability of in creasing the bank’s capital funds in order that they might more nearly keep pace with the rapid increase in deposits. "Our depos its are now around $270,000,000 and have increased over Jiuu.uuu. 000 in the past two years,” he said. | The Everyday j I COUNSELOR* What did you do following the announcement of the Japanese sur render and the coming of peace? August 14, 1945 is a new day in the history of the world. Some day you will want to look back and recall how you spent those hours immediately after seven p.m. when the wonderful news was releas ed by President Truman. Some played w hile others prayed. REV. SPAUGH 11 has always been a source of regret to me that I am unable to recall, and did not write down, my thoughts and actions on Novem ber 11, 1918. All that I remember is that I was in the Army and that we soldiers were very happy. I don't think I will forget the events of August 14, 1945, I was just ready to sit down to the din ner table when the great news came. The doors of The Little Church On The Lane were immed iately thrown open, although one door is open all the time. The can dles on the altar were lighted. The church bell was rung vigorously for upwards of a half an hour. A number of visitors came into the church for prayer. vine same toox place in oiner churches to which hundreds went I quietly for their own prayers of ; thanksgiving. Even in the wild ; downtown celebration, there was a thoughtful and solemn undercur | rent. \ A friend who was in the midst of it reported that he fre quently\ heard a remark that this 1 ! was a solemn moment and that men should be praying instead of playing. He said that he saw one or two actually kneel on the sidewalk. Later in the evening I opened my Bible at random to find these words in the ninth\ chapter of the Book I of Ezra: \ "And after al| that is come upon us for our evil \deeds, and for our great trespass, seeing that thou our ! God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve,',and hast given such deliverance as this; Should i we again break thy commandments As I thought upon these words. I i was struck with the application to 1 us in America. History is filled with j the destruction of nations which i have forgotten God. Germany is an I awful example. We have suffered : less than any of the other nations . involved in this war. We have re | ceived a great deliverance. There is a new day of opportunity before ‘ ; us. I We have much moral and spiri tual house-cleaning to do. Drunk enness among men has increased; among women much more. Immor ality, vulgarity, brutality, lack of politeness mark these days. Sab bath desecration is so common that the majority think nothing of! it. The world is looking to us for moral and spiritual leadership as! well as material leadership. We are facing our big opportunity.. Our, future depends on what we do with ! it. j <JLiterar Guidep6st .h\, '!{'(; By W. G. ROGERS SELECTED SPEECHES AND STATEMENTS OF GENERAL OF THE ARMY GEORGE C. MARSHALL, edited by Maj. H. A. DeWeerd (Infantry' Journal; $2.75). Forty-eight selections, from 1938 to this year, from speeches and tes timony by the Army Chief of Staff are included in this important vol ume, rightly heralded as an inval uable source book in American mili tary history. If a general must be tested by what he does. Marshall passes tri umphantly now that the last ene my has surrendered. But a general is judged also by what he says, and Marshall's -^ords are an Impressive consistent ucord of his clear fore sight into the danger threatening us and of his single-minded purpose in preparing for it. Being Chief of Staff seems to have been only a fraction of the Chief of Staff's duties. Marshall had to take time out to address the Legions, Rifle and Ordnance associations, colleges, historical so cities. Chambers of Commerce and the National Association of Manu facturers, and furthermore to argue for his kind of an army before sen ators and representatives who, to quote a couple of them, thought a fellow who had to wear the uni form very long in defense of his country was "unfortunate” or ex pected the general to stop every thing while he cleaned out the Pentagon. Marshall's virtue appears to be that he is an unromantic warrior in time of unromantic warfare. He led no charges, brandished no sword, uttered no memorable rally ing cri“s. He kept his head. His business was conscription, train ing, production, finances, over-all strategy. Like his book, he is meth odical; he's not glamorous but he's effective; a marshal in fact. Perhaps his most interesting comments have to do with educa tion. School books stress our vic tories but do not, he complains, admit the price we paid for them. In 1898, he recalls, our troops sailed for the Philippines with enough small arms ammunition to last just one day. We enrolled nearly 400, 000 men to beat British armies of 45,000 in the Revolution, and even more in 1812 to beat a foe never numbering over 16,000 in one place. Luther A. Abernethy Claimed By Death LINCOLNTON—Luther A. . Ab ernethy, 87, prominent farmer, died Monday morning in his home near Macpelah church, after a long illness. The funeral will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Macpelah church. Formerly Mr. Abernethy taught schools in different parts of Lin coln county. He leaves two sons, W. B. Abernethy, former sheriff of this county, and L. F. Aberne thy, and four daughters, Mrs. Pansy A. Boyd of Washington, D. C„ Mrs. L. S. Womack of Char lotte, Mrs. Ralph Lohr of Lenoir, and Mrs. J. C. Caddell of Orlando, Fla. The first national election re turns to be broadcast bv radio were those announcing the elec tion of President Harding in 1920. A Merry-Go-Round Resignation Of Marshall Likely By DREW PEARSON (Lt. Col. Robert S. Allen Now On Active Service With the Army) WASHINGTON — If Congress really looks into the Pearl Harbor I disaster carefully it will uncover! one of the most amazing detective. stories in international diplomatic j and military history. Top officers who worked on the Pearl Harbor investigation state privately that despite all the po lite eyewash about responsibility in Washington, there is uncontro- j vertable testimony that Adm. j Husband Kimmel had concrete evidence seven days before Pearl Harbor that four Jap carriers were unaccounted for. These turned out to be four of the Jap ships which attacked Pearl Harbor. The fact that they couldn't be located was so serious that Kim mel indicated to his intelligence officer, Capt. Edwin D. Layton, that he was aware of the possi bility that the Jap carriers might be in sight of Pearl Harbor. Yet Kimmel did onthing to check up and ordered shore leave on Sat urday, December 6. just as in nor mal times. The facts are these: Captain Layton had done an outstanding job of intelligence a gainst great obstacles. More re cently he has directed intelligence for the entire Pacific fleet with equal efficiency. Layton called on Kimmel on the morning of Dec. 1, 1941, and told him the Japs had taken an unusual step. He j told Kimmel the Japs had chang ed all their naval radio calls. Kimmel then ordered Layton to analyze immediately the wherea i bouts of the Jap fleet. Layton put together all his se } cret information, and reported back to Kimmel on December 2 that he didn't know where two Jap carrier divisions were. ROUNDING DIAMOND HEAD ••What! You dont know where carrier division I and carrier di vision II are?" Kimmel asked. "No, sir. I do not," Captain Lay ton replied, "I think they are in home waters, but I do not know where they are. The rest of the ( units—I feel pretty confident of their location. Testifying before the secret na val board of inquiry, Captain Lay i ton continued: j "Then Admiral Kimmel looked at me. as sometimes he would with a somewhat stern countenance , and yet partially with a twinkle: in his eye and said, 'Do you mean j that they could be rounding Dia ; mond Head and you wouldn t know it?’ or words to that effect. My j reply was that, T hope they would be sighted before now . . . Diamond Head is the major landmark right on the island 61 Oahu near the entrance to Pearl Harbor. i The officers who questioned Layton didn’t understand what he meant by referring to the twinkle in Kimmels eye. and they asked him if he felt the discussion had been serious. Layton replied that the question was absolutely seri ous and that failure to locate the four carriers was most important. Later on, every day up to the Pearl Harbor attack, Layton sent reports to Kimmel pointing out there was no knowledge of where the missing Jap carriers were. Layton also told Kimmel that 200 Jap naval calls had been partially identified and that not a single one was from a carrier. When ships are on a combat mission they maintain radio silence. Thus it was known that the carriers were up to something. But Kimmel did nothing about the warnings. He never sent out a single plane from any fleet headquarters to look for the miss ing Japs. This was despite the fact that Washington had warned of a sneak attack from "Orange" (the secret code name for Japan», which ftad never declared war in her entire history of ruthless, un expected aggression. UNDER THE DOME Admiral e-rme rung. iraninau der </ the fleet, who put up such a fuss for the gray summer uni form for naval officers, now has another secret sartorial ambition. He is designing a gray-green win ter uniorm for officers which would replace time-honored navy blues. A lot of other admirals don’t enthuse over King's new ambition . . It was King, who during the height of the war, went over Secretary Knox’s head ; to FDR and ok'd the new gray summer uniform. Knox had ve toed it on the ground that textiles were scarce and civilian clothes were already difficult to buy The 13th Nazi criminal on the al lied list of Germans to be prose cuted is a cousin of the State de | partment official who translated ; for Byrnes and Truman at Pots dam. He is Gustav Krupp Von Bohlen, head of the Krupp mu nitions wnrks. His cousin, ‘'Chuck” I Bohlen, is an able U. S. career diplomat who speaks Russian flu ently and has translated for both ! Roosevelt and Truman in talks with Stalin. The Russians, who know all about his family back ground, consider Bohlen very an ti-Soviet. Most newspapermen who know Gen. George Marshall have the I highest regard for him. How ever, when they read the army board’s charge that he was partly ! responsible for Pearl Harbor they j couldn’t help but remember two cases where Marshall was also woefully wrong with them . . . One : was the day after Germany in-* j vaded Russia, when the chief of staff held a press conference and predicted the fall of Moscow in l a few weeks . . . Again, just a few | days before Japan surrendered ^ Marshall held another prefc con , ference in which he told how he needed a tremendous army to tn | vade Japan. This waa even after Behind The [ FRONT PAGE By HOLT McPHERSON Managing Editor H. L. MENCKEN IN HIS SUPPLEMENT TO “THE AMERICAN Language’’, in which he considers accretions of the past decade, belabors the fad of recklessly using first names which he views as having reached alarming proportions. He says he knows of little tom-tits not five years old who speak to and of their parents and elders as “Bill,” “Jack”, “Margaret”, "Florence”, etc. Radio announcers are, as he views it, doing their pumpkin-headed best to help the movement along. Now most of us see nothing so disturbing in knowing folks well enough to call them respectfully by their first names, but the youngsters have picked up the habit to the point of excess; witness the story told by Senator Hoey of a recent outing here when a 10-year-old walked up, slapped him a bit low on the because he couldn't reach to a full back-slapping height, and said "Hello, Clyde!” There was cause for proceedings by some one in that case, through Senator Hoey, naturally enough, took none himself. A LITTLE BIRD—WELL, IT WAS A BIG BIRD, COME TO think of it—tells me that one of the ardent followers of Shelby's baseball team is trying to arrange to give those wrist watches to the boys as his gift, and if successful then the Legion will take the money intended for wat-'-'s and equip each of the boys with a new suit of clothes as icy depart for the world series. The Legion truly honors itself in the way it is honoring the boys, more especially in the provision of scholarships which is to be a continuing purpose, according to Commander Willis McMurry who pledges all profits from baseball to a community better ment program. * fl EDITORIAL PAGES ARE BEING SLANTED MORE IN DIREC i.on of the sports pages of recent days as one editor after another has taken occasion to congratulate their Shelby friends on winning ths American Legion's national junior baseball championship. "This should put a stop to the unfounded rumor that all they raise up in Shelby is cotton and politicians,” says Bob Thompson in The High Point Enterprise. “They raise baseball players, too. (All of which reminds us of the time when Shelby's Clyde Hoey was governor and there was a ball game between state officials and Catholic priests down in Raleigh. The first batter was Bishop Haffey. Governor Hoey opened the gams by pitching to him. With his long hair and longer coattails flying in the breeze, the governor would up and cut one loose that nearly beaned the bishop. Whereupon both the governor and the bishop were removed from the game and church vs. state strife was avoided as the two settled down in the bleachers to refresh themselves with a couple of cokes.)” GOVERNOR ELLIS ARNALL GIVES PROPER EMPHASIS to the part played by the Battle of King<i Mountain in turning the Revolution and pointing the course of a nation ai he writ— of “Dixie On the March" to say: There is a feeling through the South that momentous things will happen in the postwar re conversion period. Dixie definitely is on the march to a wider recognition of Its status as an integral part of our common coun try, to a new era of genuine prosperity, based on the realisation of our dream of a stable industrial-agrarian economy. “The heritage of the South is a rich one. with which the peopW of the South sould become better acquainted. Here is the rea cradle of American freedom. Here is where the revolution wag won. on the battlefield of Kings Mountain. Here is where the continental empire that is our nation had its Inception In the grants to the: Federal government of the western empires of the southern states. “Here is where opportunity lies tomorrow, and the last remain nlng frontier, the neglected and too long exploited South. We are freeing ourselves of prejudices and foibles, and srikare Impressing upon all the nation the inexorable proof of the interdependence of all sections of our common country.” A MEMORIAL IS BEING PROJECTED TO HONOR THE MEMORY of the late Ernie Pyle, the G. Boswell in this war, in the form of Journalism scholarships at Inclana University. It is something in which Ernie himself had shown real I'rere.st before he died, making its realiza tion a worthy memorial in complete good taste and worthy of success. It is far more worthy of Ernie's memory than that vast park and ceme tery which high-powered promoters projected in his name and had to be called off by his widow who was offended by the garish purpose to raise some S10 million dollars, to do something pretentious for as un pretentious a guy as ever trod this earth. This p.urpose to raise the standard of newspapertng through better training is a rightful concern of everyone who values the usefulness of an honest, courageous and sound press. It is something of which many o: us have thought seriously in the hope that in this state and in the South such stimulation to study and equipment might be encouraged. The press could honor itself and its leaders in no finer fashion than by thus helping assure that the business will be carried on by well-trained hand. 1. L. PATTERSON IS RAISING STRAWBERRIES THESE days out at his place, his vines yielding a couple of quarts daily. It just goes to show what enterprise and initiative will do with Cleveland land—I don't know what price fresh strawberries com mand, but they couldn't be cheap at this season. the atomic bomb had been drop ped . . . General Marshall's resig nation-undated—has been on Trumans desk for some time. He has long been wanting to retire' to a colonial home he purchased in Leesburg, Va., and if it did not look as if he were retiring under Pearl Harbor investigation fire, he would leave right now . . Both Marshall’s and Admiral King’s resignations will be accept ed before January 1 . . . Mac Arthur’s resignation also may ; come at about the same time, depending on how things go in Japan. All three are over-age. When storing cotton wash cloth es, wash and put them away without starching. Two Injured When Train Is Sideswipei CLARKSBURG. W. VA.. Sept. 5—(/P>—One soldier and a locomo tive engineer were injurea early today when the Baltimore and Ohio railroad’s National Limited sldeswiped a troop train a mile west of here. Three cars of the westbound limited and all five cars of the eastbound troop train were de railed. About one-third of the fires put out by municipal fire departments ;n the United States are put out w.th hand extinguishers. MADAME NORTH AMERICAN PALMIST. LIFE READER. ADVISOR SPECIAL READING DAILY AND SUNDAY LOCATED IN PULLMAN TRAILERS. Without any question thl» remarkably fitted woman reveals vour entire life, from Infancy to old age. fir ing names, dates, facts and figures and guides you to success, health and happiness: settles lovers' quarrels, enables you to win the esteem and affection of anyone y you love, causes speedy and happy marriages: tells you if the one you love Is true: restores lost affection; peace end confidence to lovers and discordant families; gives you the full secret of how to control the thoughts and actions of anyone you desire First appearance near the citp. If vour business is unsuccessful, If your health Is not good. If you are In TROUBLE of any kind you should sec this TRULY GIFTED READER She has helped. THOUSANDS Why not you? Whits and Col ored are Welcome. WATCH FOR SIGN.-DAILY AND SUNDAY PROM 10:00 A. M. TO 10:00 P M. I Located in Pullman House Trailers at Cleveland Springs, 3 Blocks from Shelby City Limits. Highway 74, Charlotte Road.

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