Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Sept. 10, 1945, edition 1 / Page 2
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Shipyards, Aircraft, Ordnance To Be Hardest-Hit Industries (Editor’s Note: This is the second of a series of three ar ticles on the reconversion picture in the southeast, based on War Manpower commission figures and surveys.) By HENRY LESESNE Atlanta, Sept. 10—(JP)—Because the industries in the southeast which do not plan to carry on any peacetime work are chiefly ord nance, shipyards and aircraft,; the disemployment picture in the region will be spotty, the War Manpower commission says. There may be considerable num bers of workers out of work as the disemployed are shifting from one; area where there are no job op- j portunities to other areas where! there are jobs from new or recon verted industries. Hardest hit areas are the ship yard and powder bag loading areas where big plants have been built but which have little use in peace-1 time industry. But in many of these areas most of the war work-, ers are farmers and their fami lies. LITTLE RECONVERSION The brightest part of the pic ture is that much of the south east’s manufacturing is very simi lar in peacetime or war. Recon version is no serious problem here. This is particularly true of textiles, steel and some other j products. Most of the jobs now available in these industries—textiles, lum ber, mining, the service trades. A recent survey by WMC indicated that these industries plan to in crease employment. In the survey 410 industrial plants in the region of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Mis sissippi and South Carolina were questioned. Only 23 replied that they expected to discontinue pro duction entirely and these were in direct war manufacturing. Dillard B. Lasseter, regional di-1 rector of WMC, says, however, that; reconversion plans are changing! rapidly, and some employers are now obtaining orders which will enable them to keep at least part of their plants in operation. RE-SURVEY A re-survey is planned at an early date. The survey showed a wide va riation in the tirne required for reconversion — textile, apparel,: chemical, non-ferrous metals, lea-, ther, and lumber plants by mid- i September; automobile and auto mobile equipment, paper and small aircraft plants, by October; i small ordnance and small ship- i yards by November, and machin-1 ery manufacturing, except elec trical. by January, The 23 plants expecting to close will lay off 60,334 workers, accord ing to the survey; but those which expect to go on operating phn to increase their labor forces by 34,149, which means a net de crease in employment of 26,185. Main net increases in employ ment, the survey showed, will be In textiles, tobacco manufacture, rubber products, iron and steel, paper and allied products, food and kindred products and apparel. HUSS Starts On Page One vestlgation of the accident imme diately after it happened seemed to indicate that the beer truck was being driven with part of the truck on the left of the center of the highway. Funeral for Russ was being held this afternoon at 5 o'clock at Zoar church with Rev. Jesse Blalock in charge of the service. The body will lie in state 30 minutes before the service. t DISCHARGED Russ was discharged from the army on July 31 after serving two months. He is survived by his moth er, Mrs. Georgia Russ, by five brothers, Claude Russ, Jack Russ. M. G. Russ, Everett Russ and Plato Russ, two sisters Mrs Phocian Bo helor and Mrs. J. D. Turner, all of Shelby. Riding with Blackmon at the time the collision occurred were his assistant, Wellmgs King, of Charlotte, and two negro helpers j The negroes also had to be given first aid treatment at the Shelby hospital but sustained only minor injuries. Russ and the two girls who were riding with him had been to the Colfax fair and were on their way back to Shelby when the acci dent occurred. Meredith College Opens Fall Term RALEIGH, Sept. 10. —OP}— The fall term at Meredith College will begin on Monday, Sept. 17. Presi dent Carlyle Campbell said the college has an enrollment exceed ing that of last year. Classes will begin Friday morning, Sept. 21, at 8:30. i BOYS CAUGHT IN ROBBERY William Plato Bennett and a boy whose only identification found so far is that his first name is "James" were caught by the Kings Moun tain police last night as they were said to have been attempting to rob the Midway lunch. According to police the two had already rifled the cash drawer and had also col lected up some other merchandise. They will be given a hearing at an early date in the Kings Mountain Recorder's court. * Canada Resumes Meat Rationing OTTAWA, Sept. 10—(/P>—Cana da resumed meat rationing today amid widespread controversy. The Halifax Chronicle reported some meat dealers may halt sales m protest. After going through six years of war with only nine months of meat rationing, the government! announced its resumption for the] purpose of providing meat for Great Britain and the liberated countries of Europe. The govern- i ment's decision was made public; last July 6, but the actual date of resumption had remained a secret until yesterday. WAINWRIGHT Starts On Par* Ona a toothache. (He stopped off in Omaha for a treatment.) But there was no immediate indica tion that it would interfere with his reception and round of speech- j malting. Wainwright and his party, in cluding his son, Cmdr. Jonathan M. Wainwright V of the mercnant marine, left Hamilton Field, Calif., at 8:55 pm. (EWTi shortly alter a three-hour San Francisco pa rade beneath a flight of P-38’s and Superfortresses. Mrs. Wainwright arrived by plane last night after a motor trip from her home at Skaneateles, N. Y. “I keep thinking I’m going to wake up and find it all a dream,” she said. WHIRLWIND PACE Wainwright's plane scheduled one stop, to refuel at Omoha, Neb. His reception here called for a whirlwind pace until late in the aftemcon to be climaxed by a meeting with President TYuman at the White House at 3 pm. Early on his schedule was a promised report to the War de partment on his treatment by the Japanese during 40 months of im prisonment. Gaunt and plainly showing the effects of abuse, the general previously has declined to comment on reports that he had been slapped by his guards. A parade along flag-bedecked avenues and welcomes from both houses of Congress also were scheduled before “Skinny” and "Kitty” were to have an oppor tunity to fill in the years that have separated them since Mrs. Wainwright was compelled to leave the Philippines in May, 1941. During most of that period scat tered letters, most of which took a year for delivery, have been their only means of communica tion. Their first telephone call short ly after the general arrived at Hamilton field from the Pacific Saturday, was marred by the fact that he couldn’t hear his wife. The reason: Deafness caused by artillery fire about him in his last-ditch defense of Bataan and Corregidor. PEARL Starts On Page On* a letter dated August 38, the day before President Truman released the findings of Army and Navy boards set up to investigate the military disaster. Kimmel, who long had demand-1 ed a court martial, did not reply immediately, and a second letter was sent last week. There ha* been no announcement of any response. Nor has it been disclosed whether the War Department made a sim ilar offer to Maj. Gen. Walter C. Short, the army commander at Pearl Harbor at the time. Short said after the Army-Navy findings were released, “My conscience is clear.” MRS. PUTNAM ILL Mrs. Annie Putnam of Waco is seriously ill at the Shelby hospi tal. THr RECORD SHOP NEWEST SELECTIONS JUST RECEIVED j Lily Belle—Pied Pipers | Tampico—Stan Kenton j I’m A Shy Guy—King Cole Trio } Oklahoma Hills—Jack Gutheree SHELBY v ( Aussies Dislike Mac Arthur’s Kid Glove Peace Policy SYDNEY, Sept. 10. —(/P)— Au stralian press and public today showed mounting dissatisfaction over what many decried as Gener al MacArthur’s “kid glove” peace policy for Japan. The reaction included bitter cri ticism of MacArthur and praise for Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney, com mander in chief of the Australian army. Newspaper used editorials and huge headliners to describe Japan ese atrocities and to express dis pleasure with any easy peace for Nippon. Blunt language was heard on all sides on streets and in public ve hicles. The reaction also was re vealed in interviews and letters published in newspapers. Men Injured By Blocks Of Ice GOLDSBORO, Sept. 10 —<jF)— Two Mt. Olive men today receiv ed hospital treatment here for in juries they suffered late yesterday at the plant of the Geddie Ice company, Mt. Olive, where they are employed. Robert Miller and Jim Teachev, both about 45, were the victims. Officers said they were hurt when a heavy weight of ice fell upon them after a part of the ice mak ing machinery in the plant gave way. Teachey was weighted down for an hour under a big block of ice before he was rescued. Miller suffered a broken leg and other injuries. REFUSES Start* Ob Par* One plied: "You are the victors and you are able to name him now. But historians 500 or 1.000 years from now may judge differently.” Tojo’s home is new. in the Yoga district about an hour’s drive from the imperial palace and a half hour from the Meiji shrine where the U. S. First Cavalry division is bivouacked. When we first saw him. Tojo was lying back in a garden chair, supervising a solitary laborer who was filling in a cellar-like air raid shelter of concrete. Tojo subsequently said that he and his family had saved them selves in that shelter in the fire raid which burned a small out building within five feet of his home and wrecked the surround ing district. •LIBERAL*’ INTERPRETER "You burned my three best pine trees.” said the man whose armies destroyed most of Asia. "Now I have to replace them with bam boo." pointing to a Japanese-style garden covering the charred foun dation* of the burned outbuild ing. We were taken to the place by Jiuiji G. Kasai, a liberal parlia mentarian who was graduated from the University of Chicago in 1913 and who acted as interpreter for us. Kasai lost his seat in the diet in 1942 through pressure brought by Tojo’s totalitarian party, the imperial rule assistance associa tion. Kasai said he had visited Tojo only ten days ago to pay his respects for the snicide of the general's son-in-law, Major Koga, who committed hara klri upon failure of a conspiracy to prevent the emperor’s peace announcement from reaching the public. Tojo’s neat one-story residence is possibly the most discussed house in Asia. It has been built since he fell from power, and the Jap anese say it is far more elaborate than any he would permit to be built under his regime. STRANGE MIXTURE The house is a strange mixture of western and Japanese architec ture. A tan stucco front porch makes it look like any ordinary suburban American home, but the main part is entirely Japanese, with big spacious rooms and glass slid ing windows and panels, some of which still are covered with adhe sive tape strips, relics of air raid days. The house, some sources say, was some sort of bribe. The politician who earlier in formed us of Tojo's plan to accuse Roosevelt of war responsibility, in sisted that the former premier was roundly hated by the Japanese public because he had thus far failed to commit suicide. The informant begged that he re main anonymous, saying, “If the people knew I visited him they would kill me.” Quoting a friend in the foreign office, this informant said Tojo in tended to commit suicide as soon as he had made his expected court defense. AMASSED FORTUNE Other sources reported that Tojo had amassed a fortune of millions of yen during his tenure of office, most of it coming from the illicit opium trade in China, where high generals acted as couriers to take the drug from north China to Shanghai markets. Despite his power, Tojo’s down fall was a foregone conclusion to the Japanese after the loss of Sai pan. These sources said that for days after the island was lost, Tojo’s telephone rang and anony mous voices asked his wife, “Hasn’t Tojo committed hara kiri yet?” 8CHMELING ACQUITTED HAMBURG, Sept. 10—UP)—Max Schmeling, former world heavy weight boxing champion, today was acquitted by an Allied military government court of a charge that he made a false statement to a member of the Allied forces contrary to military government regulation*. HE LED LAST MILE OF MARCH TO TOKYO — Maj. Gen. William C. Chase (above) led the U. S. First Cavalry division on the last leg of the long Allied march into Tokyo Sept. 7. He left his Jeep and strode across the city line of Chofu on the southwestern outskirts. — (AP Wirephcto). KOREA Starts On Page One Gen. Yoshio Sozuke, he clarified the administrative policy at a press con ference. UNDER ORDERS He made It clear that Japanese administrative officials would act only on his orders; that they would be permitted no independent action Japanese rule came to an end formally in the throne room of the palace in Keijo. The surrender document was signed by Hodge and Admiral Thomas C. Kincaid, com mander of the U S. seventh fleet, and Sozuke. Korean politicians wanted to know what the Americans and Rus sians "planned for this unhappy land. They want to know if the same laws and regulation w-ill be enforced in both sections of the country.” One Korean warned that dis charged Japanese soldiers had permitted to take hand gren ades when they left the army. Koreans feared they might use them against concentrations of Americans. FIRED ON Two Koreans were killed and 10 wounded by Japanese as they pa raded, unarmed and carrying small American flogs, to greet American occupation forces at Jinsen. Koreans charged the Japanese fired with out provocation. Hodge told the islanders that their desire for immediate inde pendence cannot be granted be cause of political chaos among theiT own factions. He said Japanese governor general No boyuki Abe and his staff would continue in office, but only to carry out his (Hodge’s) direc tives. Hodge promised that he would consult with native leaders regard ing his future course, but stressed that decisions were subject to ip proval by United Nations leaders. The general pointed out that the situation was difficult because at least three important political fac tions claim high places in the for mation of a government. JAP Starts On Page One ference with their Individual lib erty and property righto," he ex plained OCCUPATION A light censorship was placed ever Japanese newspapers Suday, but there has been no attempt to control their editorials or propa ganda. Occupation troops will be sent home, MacArthur said, "aa speedily and as effectively aa consolidation and securing of peace can be accomplished through orderly occupation of - Japan and the demobilization of Japanese armed forces.” The date will depend to a great extent upon how the troops carry ! out their occupation duties, he ad i ded, reminding them that “we fought and won a war to protect the rights of the individual . . , for all peoples of the world.” , In addition to Ominato, 400 miles, north of Tokyo, two other Japanese naval bases were taken over by American forces Sunday: Katsuura southeast of Tokyo; and Katsuama, south of Tokyo. Lt. Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger said part of his Eighth army would continue to spread northward from Tokyo, and that two divis ions would occupy Hokkaido northernmost island, about Oct. 5 Mrs. Hoskins' Condition Shows Improvement Mrs. A. H Hoskins, who has been seriously 111 at her horn* here for several days, Is reported to be somewhat better today. Furnished by J. Robert Lindsay Webb Building Shelby. N. C. and Company N. Y. COTTON AT 2:00 Today Prev. Day March . -_22.78 22.76 May - _22.72 22.71 July _ _22.44 22.44 October . _22.81 22.78 December . _22.86 22.84 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT September.1.65’s December.1.644* May . . 1624* CORN December . May . _ RYE September . -1.52 December.1-44 May . _1.3644 1.654 1.6444 1.6244 1.1414 1.13 1.52 1.44 1.364 STOCKS AT 2:00 Amn Rolling Mill-... 23 5-8 American Loco . 37 1-2 American Tobacco B-87 1-4 American Tel & Tel. 184 1-2 Anaconda Copper -34 5-8 Assoc Dry Goods _ 28 1-2 Beth Steel . 84 1-2 Boeing Air . 24 1-8 Chrysler __ 125 3-8 Curtiss-Wright . 6 7-8 General Motors .. 74 3-4 Pepsi Cola . 28 3-4 Greyhound Corp .— 25 7-8 International Paper. 30 3-4 Nash Kelv _ 20 3-4 Glenn L Martin . 27 3-8 Newport Ind_20 1-2 N Y Central . 26 1-4 Penn R R . 38 1-4 Radio Corp ..-. 16 1-8 Reynolds Tob B_37 1-4 Southern Railroad .. 45 7-8 Standard Oil of NJ_62 1-4 Sperry Corp ...- 30 5-8 U S Rubber .. 67 1-2 U S Steel . 73 Western Union . 48 3-4 Youngstown S & T.. 55 1-4 STOCKS STEADY NEW YORK. Sept. 10 — UP\ — Strength of scattered specialties steadied the stock market today and even the lately downtrodden rails displayed rallying tenden cies. At peaks for 1945 or longer were | Pepsi-Cola. Bridgeport Brass. Budd Mfg, American Radiator, Bethle hem, General Motors and Amer ican Telephone. Ahead were U. „,S. Steel, Chrysler. Santa Pe. Southern Pacific. Chesapeake and Ohio, Douglas Aircraft, Western Union 'A," Texas Co. and Anaconda. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. Sept. 10.—OP)—USDA —Salable hogs 4.000. total 7,500; active and fully steady: good and choice barrows and gilts at 140 lhs at 14.75 ceiling: good and choice sows at 14.00; complete clearance. Salable cattle .21.000. total 21.600: salable calves 1.500, total 1.500; fed steers and yearlings, including yearling heifers, steady to weak, i mainly steady; good and choice ■ offerings fairly active, top 18.00 on steers paid for 10 loads; best yearlings 17.90; bulk fed steers; 15.00-17.50: best heifers early 1700: common and medium slaughter steers and stockers and feeders weak to 25 cents lower; approxi mately 100 loads northwestern grass cattle, mainly stockers; cows and bulls weak to 25 cents lower; ! bulls showing full decline; Veal ers steady at 15.00, mostly 14.50 down. N. C. HOGS RALEIGH, Sept. 10—'#’>—NCDA —Hog markets active and steady with tops of 14.55 at Clinton and j Rocky Mount and 14,85 at Rich mond. N. C. EGGS, POULTRY RALEIGH, Sept. 10—(/Pi—NCDA —Poultry and egg markets steaay Raleigh—U. S. grade AA, extra large, 57; fryers, broilers and roast ers 308. Washington—U. S grade A, large 56; broilers and fryers 38.20. BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, Sept. 10. — i/P,— But ter, steady; receipts 612,672. Eggs, receipts 10,258. COTTON LETTER Cotton prices strengthened this week in moderately active spot markets. The sharpest advance came on Thursday following Presi dent Truman's message to con gress. Picking and ginning are getting well under way but farmers are not selling freely at present prices. Crop conditions were more favorable, Boll weevil infestations are heavy and Insect damage is reported from widespread sections 1 of the belt. Prices for middling 15-16 inch 1 ! in the ten designated markets av - eraged 22.53 cents per pound on , Friday, September 7, against 22.31 a week earlier and 21.27 a year ago. This compares with the Sep tember government purchase price of 22.31 at the ten markets, j President Truman’s message *o congress stated that there Is need for additional measures to streng then the machinery for carrying out price-support commitments, and for laying the basis for broad er peacetime mdlkets for agrienl j tural products. He recommended ! that $500,000,000 of lend-lease funds be made available to C.C.C. 1 on a continuing basis for use in price support activities. Reported sales in the ten spot markets totaled 68,600 bales as compared with 77,000 in the pre ceding week and 84,600 in the same week a year ago. In the southeast, inquiries for spot cot ton were numerous but the volume of sales moderate. Domestic mill buying increased for both prompt and deferred shipment. In the central belt, markets were quiet with the volume of offerings at present prices small. Much the same situation prevailed in Texas markets, Registered sales under the 1944 cotton export program j totaled about 623,000 bales through TOKYO ROSE’ HELD—U S 8th j Army headquarters in Yokohama , aas announced that Iva Toouri . labovet, Los Angeles-born radio announcer who won fame among , American troops in the Pacific as \ ‘Tokyo Rose", is under detention. , — (AP Wirephotot. Secrecy On Atomic Bomb May Bring On ; Armament Race CHICAGO, Sept. 10. Sec- i recy regarding the atomic bomb will 1 ae only "a temporary safeguard" ' and may initiate "a secret arma ment race,” 63 University of Chi :ago professors and scientists de rided today, and sought to have President Truman obtain a "mu- . :ual sharing of information" among the United Nations to avert such a conclusion. j Mrs. C. W. Sepaugh i Dies In Gaffney GAFFNEY. — Mrs Minnie Wylie Sepaugh. 68, died at her home in Gaffney Monday morning at 8 25 o’clock after an illness which had lasted for four years ... Funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock from the Shuforri - Hatcher funeral home with services to be conducted by Rev, Paul Dobbins. Rev. C A. Kirby and Rev. .John W Buttle. Inter ment will take place in New Hope cemetery. She is survived by her husband. W Sepaugh, and son, O V Se paugh. both of Gaffnev; three brothers, Frank Wylie, of Gaffney, S C ; Dave Wylie, of Newport News, Va . and Elbert Wylie, of Zebulon; a sister. Mrs C. S. Dick son, of Kings Mountain. N. C. College For Negroes Opens Sept. 20 DURHAM. Sept. 10. —O’)— North Carolina College for Negroes will hold its formal opening of the 1945 46 session Thursday, Sept. 20. A freshman orientation program is scheduled for Tuesday and Wednes dav of next week. President James Shephard an nounced that the current enroll ment is the largest in the history of the school. A total of $46,000 has been spent for physical equipment for the coming session in addition to repatring and maintenance, She phard said. September 1, 1945. This was only a slight increase for the week. ! Trade reports indicated, however, that Spain came into the market this week for a substantial vol ume of cotton. WANT ADS FOR SALE, GOOD PRODUCTIVE farm, two good houses, lights and water, right at church, mail and school bus by house. T. F Bridges, 1244 S. LaFayette St.. Shelby, N. C. 2t 10 p -,--— ' FOR SALE HOME ON 833 WEST Marion Street, 6 large rooms, 8-foot hall, large front porch and screened back porch. Hard wood floors, newly painted, lot 100 x 200. Beautiful shrubbery. Dr. B. M. Jarrett. Res 671-M Office 576-W. tf M W F 10c PLENTY OF GOOD AP ples, cabbage, sweet pota toes, green beans, turnip greens, fresh yard eggs, watermelons, $tc. The City Curb Market, on the Square. 2t-10c WANTED COLORED BELL BOY ! Shelby Hotel. tf 10c FOR SALE: CHEVROLET BUS, 21 passenger. $695. See O. S. Hunt, new Gulf Statio, across from Webb Theatre. Phone 192. It p FOR SALE: JOHN DEERE TRAC tor Model A, planting and cul tivating tools. Five disc tiller, 14 double disc harrow in A-l condition. New front tires. Dr. B. M. Jarrett. Res. 671-M. Of fice 576-W. tf M W F 10 c vVANTED FAMILY TO PICK cotton, house furnished. Jim Porter, R-l, Shelby, near Wil son Gin. 2t 10 p FOR SALE: SINGLE BED, FOUR poster, wood construction with springs. Also one all-metal wardrobe trunk. House 34, Do ver Mill. 2t lOp NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS — Shelby Welding and Pipe Co Welding of any kind, anytime, anywhere Phone 1065 Located at 300 W. Warren St. ltc QUISLING Starts On Page One Irand Admiral Erich Raeder and | tther high German officials in j December, 1939. and urging them1 0 invade Norway. He was charged with turningi >ver Norwegian defense data to he Germans, and on the day of he invasion, April 9, 1940, it was harged he went to the, govern nent offices and personally tele ihoned certain garrisons and gave nstructions not to resist the Na ils. It was through his agency hat German troops were intro luced into Norway's haroors in he holds of coal and freight, hips, the prosecution asserted. JNDERMINED Thus undermined. Norway's de ense quickly collapsed. After Germany had taken pos ession of the country, Quisling ■ooperated with the Germans in 1 policy of deportation and op iression that resulted in the leaths of hundreds of Jews and latriots, it was charged. Throughout. Quisling contended le cooperated with the Germans o avoid a worse fate for his coun ry. In his final plea, he declared he tood before the court as "Quisling he Patriot.” During the trial experts who I ■xamined Quisling declared him iane. though they said there were inusual elements in his mental liakeup. Neither public Prosecutor An-1 Ireas Schjoedt nor Quislings' •ounselor, Henrik Berg, was pres-1 >nt when the verdict was an nounced. the Oslo broadcast said, i 3oth were represented by depu tes. Quisling did not move a muscle is the verdict was read depriv ng him of his life and all his I vealth. estimated at more than j 1,000.000 kroner ($227,000 at 1940 ■ates) His beetled brows were drawn ogether and his Jaws were clamp- i »d hard as the panel of three ludges and four laymen read his loom He stood calmly and only a slight red hue appeared on his pallid face, paled bv several months' confinement since Ger man occupants of Norway surren lered. It may take as many as 13 bot tles of dried blood serum to keep a fighting man alive when he has Been gravely wounded. George A. Cantrell Dies At Cliffside RUTHERFORDTON The neral of George A. Cantrell, 65, was held at Green’s Creek Baptist :hurch Saturday at 4 p.m. Mr. Cantrell died early Thurs day morning in the home of his daughter, Mrs. Tom Dedmond, at Cliffside, after long illness. Ha is survived by two daughters, seven sisters, and a brother, J. V. Cantrell of Charlotte. *■ Have A WARM Room DAY and NIGHT Holds Fire 24 to 36 Hours THE MOST BEAITIFIL COAL HEATER IH TOWH Here is a healer that you will be proud to have in your living room, a heater so tastefully de signed, so attractive to look at that it will enhance the appear ance of your home. The top-feed feature prevents spilling coal or coal-dust on the floor. And a Cole heats so well that it eliminates cold floor drafts, and at the same tune uses lets fuel than any ocher stove with the tame sue fire-pot TOLE’S CO/'! - BURNING ROYAL HEATERS CAMPBELL’S Department Store V. ) Mmmmmmmatt Oue&n 'ueen shoes Superbly Styled Smoothly Fit "-oudly Worn i I A gay tribute to autumn are the new,-) ever-so-lovely Queen Qualitys. A dream to wear... with style to spare. You’ll love their luxurious quality... their superior craftsmanship. « _ A. V. Wray & 6 Sons 0 (
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Sept. 10, 1945, edition 1
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