Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Dec. 14, 1945, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
107 RECEIVE DISCHARGES 18 Fathers Among Grou| Register Separation Witl Shelby Draft Board The Shelby draft board regiS' tered Its largest number of diS' charged veterans this week, rec' ording 107 separation papers. O: this number 18 were fathers. Then were 19 negroes in the group. The list of those registering dis charges follows: Tommy Lucas, John T. Martin Woodrow W. Grayson, John C, Diion, John H. Cherry, (col.) James C. Debrew, Franklin E. Put nam, James Moon, (col.), Lloyd N. C *2rson, James B. McKee. Wes ley D. Moore. James N. Hammett, Matthew N. Greene, Buren WTiis nant. Shelton McSwain, Burgin R. Dellinger, jr., James Durham (col.>, Clyde 71. Gantt, Lee R. Hudson .(col.), Paul L. Morrow, John W. Norwood, Charles C. Roberts, Charlie L. Adair, Alton Bridges, Nathaniel Moncrief (col.), Walter R. Palmer, Roy B. Greene, Clifford A. McIntyre, Robert H. Philbeck, Dewey R. Foster. David H. Cline, Jr., Lloyd L. Fraser, Co lon M. Melton, George F. Lee, Thomas F. Elliott, Tony Guest, jr., (col.), Cletus Wilson, (col)., Archie B. Williams, William G. Arey, jr., Carl Lollls, Herbert H. Ellis, Daniel W. Moore, jr., Arthur W. Patterson, Hardy Ellis, (col), Sam Hoey (col), James F. Blanton, Calvin J. Con drey, Homer H. Brackett, Harrill W. Moore, Hugh E. King, Press Tate, (col). Lloyd J. Cooke, Fletcher W. H. Phillips, (col), Robt. L. Love lace, Lawrence C. Holland. Wil liam JP, . Anderson, Lester H. Scruggs,' James E. Smith, Willie D. Davito (ool), Monroe Degree ,<col.), Alonzo W. Duncan, James C. Seism, Mack R. Fredell, William M. Linebergcr, Joe W. Greene, Jo seph F. Runyans, William A. Ram eeur, Jr., (col), Leroy D. Williams, (col.), Herman M. Eaker, Alfred W. Greene, J. M. Hamrick, John L. Mostellpr, A. C. Oates, (col.), J. Y. Jones, John P. McSwain, J. Y. Harshaw (col.), Cecil B. McCracken, Charles H. Beam, James T. Pheagto, C. G. Po6ton, Ellis E. Lowe, Foye W. McCur ry, Olan R. Speagle, Vance Lon don, Jr., (col.), John H. White, Guy E. Shytle, Hershel O. Gibson, Kenneth E. Heffner, Adolphus L. Dover, Postell M. Clark, Walter H. Whisnant, Iverson Bramlett, Clyde A. Randall, Wayne F. Boyles, Wil liam S. Lucas, John F. Lankford, Buren H. Bridges, Tom Farmer, Joseph A. O’Leary, jr., Jack P. Riviere, Ben G. Sisk, R. J. DaftHSport, (col.>r Burman P. Keller, ’William F. CSBb, Geo. W. Sisk Carlo F. Elmore, Joe H Hunt. ADMINISTRATION Start* On Pare One spreading labor troubles from thwarting the speedy return to peacetime standards of living and working. 2. Opened a vigorous drive for prompt extension of the price control act beyond its present expiration date of next June SO. 3. Put a brake on OPA’s schedule for removing indivi dual price ceilings. This hap pened after OPA lifted ceilings from some such supposedly “safe” items as citrus fruit and coroanuts only to see prices zoom. 4. Reversed its position on real estate ceilings by asking congress for price control on both new and old houses to go along with the priority on residential building materials. 5INTI-INFLATIONARY Even the restored priority con trol is anti-inflationary in na ture. It will reserve materials only for the builders of houses costing less than $10,000, thereby discour aging the flow of scarce bricks, tile, lumber and hardware into the •o-called luxury homes which builders prefer to erect. Officials of the Civilian Produc tion Administration, often at odds : with OPA in the past, have joined i Price Administrator Chester Bowles i In the campaign for immediate extension of price control. The reason: They fear that fnanufacturers will withhold goods from the market and wait for price control to die off so they can Write their own price tags. BEAST Starts On Page One In paira. The women walked to their death singly. German civilians said former concentration inmates were al lowed to witness the hangings by Special passes. Armed British tommies stood *u rd at the 15-foot high wall •round the prison. Great Way to relieve stuffiness, invite PAYMENTS TO UNEMPLOYED SHOW INCREASE RALEIGH. Dec. 14. —</P>— North ► Carolina benefit payments to unem I ployed civilian workers and veter ans totalled $713,924.50 in Novem ber, compared with $641,782.50 in , October, the Unemployment Com pensation Commission announced today. Of that amount $421,242.50 was paid to civilians, compared with $427,737.50 in October. Readjust ment allowance checks to unem ployed veterans totalled $292,682 last month, compared with $213,845 I in October. The commission handles the latter claims as agent for the | U. S. Veteran Administration. | “Most of the unemployment since i V-J Day has lasted only a few ! weeks,” the commission said, “with many claimants returning to work . or finding new jobs before drawing ' even one benefit check. “Initial claims as early as the week ending September 8 began to reflect the shortlived nature of the unemployment nightmare that was expected to follow the termination of the war. During that week they declined from 4,035 for the previous week to 2,552. Each succeeding week has seen a further decline up to the week ending November 17, when initial claims dropped to 606.” 6,000,000 Starts On Page One I on his conscience.” Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himm ler thought Eichman’s total was too low, Hoettl's affidavit reveal ed. But Hoettl added that Eich-: man was the best informed offi cial on Jewish executions. Thousands were killed when SS troops wiped out the Warsaw Ghetto in a 29-day massacre in 1943, according to records sub mitted by Major Frank Walsh of New York city, assistant U. S. porsecutor. Details of the mass murder in Warsaw were read from the reports of the SS police chief of the city, who wrote that he ordered troops "to destroy the entire Jewish residential area by setting every block on fire.” The reports showed that the S. S. chief, a Maj. Gen. Stroop, di ; rected the annihilation campaign from April 17 to May 16, 1943, and that he boasted he had killed 7,000 Jews in battle, 5,000 to 6,000 by explosions and fires and collected 49,000 others ‘‘whose extermina tion in camps can be proved.” The cost to the Germans was 15 dead. SHOCKING CLARITY No attempt by alleged officials1 to write an account of the mass murder in the Ghetto has yet1 equaled the shocking clarity of the S. S. repor s themselves. Established . . German insist ence and over the protests of Po- j lish city officials, the Ghetto housed 400.000 Jews behind guard ed walls until “resettlement” — transfer to Madjane or elsewhere —reduced the population to less than one-fourth by the spring of 1943. Stroop was entrusted by Gesta- ■ po Chief Heinrich Himmler with1 the force devacuation of the re-, mainder, described as a ‘‘cleansing operation” to “preserve £he health | of the German forces.” He started by attacking with tanks and armored cars what the Nazis called “Polish bandits” re inforcing the Jews. Sweatshop arms plants, which had been pro ducing inside the Ghetto for the Wehrmacht, provided the victims with the means of resistance. HIDEOUTS BLASTED Flame throwers and artillery were called into action by the Germans and Wehrmacht engi neers were detailed to blow up hideouts with TNT. Chemical smoke was used to flush fugitives from sewers. Systematically block after block of buildings was set | ablaze. “The former Ghetto is com pletely destroyed,” Stroop finally advised his superiors proudly, "but! the ruins still contain a vast! amount of stone and scrap mater- I ial which could be used.” PROBE Starts On Pace One from Mrs. Krebs estate. Brown asserted that there is a pattern in the deaths of all four women. All died shortly after being registered in hotels. The arrangements for their cremations were made by a man who identi fied himself as Cline or Klein, either as their husband or their business agent. OUTLINED Brown outlined the case as fol lows: Nov. 8, 1943, a woman died in Jacksonville, Fla., and was cremat ed as "Elizabeth Hannah Klein.” Brown is convinced she actually was Mrs. Elizabeth Hunt Lewis, of Oakland, a widow and has dis appeared. A woman died in Macon, and was cremated Feb. 21, 1944. as “Mrs. Alma Willa Carter” of 385 Geary street, San Francisco. Brown believes she actually was Mrs. Alice W. Carpenter, of Bloom ington, Ind. Oct. 17, 1944, a woman died in a Dallas hotel and was cremated as Mrs. Alice W. Carpenter. Brown believes she actually was Mrs. Krebs. Nov. 29, 1944, a woman died In a Portland hotel and was cremat ed as Mrs. Krebs. Brown is con vinced she actually was Mrs. Isa bel Van Natta, a missing widow from San Francisco. In all four cases, death follow ed brief illness. The easiest and best way to '"an aluminum cooking utensils with a mild soap and steel wool ' ' ■: )'Y\ MEET IN GERMANY—Cpl. Jesse King (top) and Pfc. Bill L. Walker (above) recently met in Germany. After they had tried six months 1 to get in touch with each other, Pfc. Walker flew to Sweinford where he spent some time with Cpl. King. They also saw Irod Hartman, Flay Gantt and a num ber of other servicemen from Cleveland county. Pfc. Walker is with an M. P. division of the 4th armored division. Cpl. King ex pects to come home in a few weeks. $120,614.68In Highway Revenue RALEIGH. N. C.. Dec. 14. $120,641.68 was collected in high way revenues, fines and costs dur I ing November. Commissioner of , Motor Vehicles T. Boddie Ward said ' today in releasing a report of the state highway patrol. Highway patrolmen investigated 460- accidents in which 63 persons were killed and 370 injured, accord ing to the report. A total of 1,216 i light tickets were given, and 1,424 equipment tickets issued. As patrolmen continued their . campaign to rid highways of the menace of faulty lighting, 22,943 automobile lights w’ere corrected. Ward said 2,837 arrests were made j during the month. 250 of which were j for driving drunk. Of the total, 2,773 were found guilty and 67 not ■ guilty. i --- ACTS Starts On Page One position vote would injure British interest in the United States. An swering Churchill's abstention in structions to conservatives, Bevin remarked: “The egoism of it, the actual boastfulness of my right honor able friend, the horrible assump tion that the American govern ment would go on its knees to him because there was a labor govern ment in being. NO COWARDS “I say to members of my own party, don't let us have any cow ards on this side. The fact is we have to borrow and are not in a position to dictate terms. There fore, we had to negotiate.” Bevin declared no one could “come away from a money-lend er’s office and calculate the re payments” without feeling discom fort. “This discomfort.” he said, "is added to when the catastrophe falls upon you after you have been a money-lender for so long.” Churchill said he “was aston ished that the United States thinks it worth while to extract the equivalent of 1.62 percent in terest in the special circumstances in which we find ourselves. It is a pity we should have allowed a commercial loan agreement to be linked up and mixed up with other transactions. I don’t like a mix ture.” See PASSED Page * ELECTRICAL Starts On Page One ton failed to settle the 44-day old strike of some 4,000 AFL Grey hound bus drivers in 18 northeas tern states. UNION ACCEPTS The conciliators, in announcing the collapse of the wage negotia tions, between bus operators and officials of the AFL Association of Street, Electric Railways and Motor Coach Workers, said the union had accepted a “strongly urged” federal fact-finding pro posal but that the two companies, Pennsylvania Greyhound and Cen tral Greyhound, had refused. The NLRB announced at Den ver that white collar employes of the Denver Rocky Mountain News, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, vot ed 61-37 to authorize the CIO American Newspaper Guild to call a strike if necessary to support their demands for a wage “i •rease. I Germany May | Become Good | Cotton Buyer j WASHINGTON, Dec. 14— UP) — I Germany may become an outlet for j a part of this country's surplus of ! low-grade cotton. | The government Is considering ways of placing at the disposal of German textile mills a part of the 2,500,000 bales of such cotton the government acquired before the war under its grower price support program. The objective is two-fold: To help defeated Germany get back j on its economic feet and to pro ! vide more cotton clothing for needy Europe. i Before the 30’s. Germany was one of this country's biggest cot ton customers. Then the Reich turned to other cotton and to synthetic fiber. The big problem in the program now under study is one of financ ing. One suggestion is that the cotton be made available to Ger many by means of a loan pro vided either by the U. S. Export , Import Bank or the Commodity Credit Corporation. The latter agency holds title to the govern ment-owned cotton. ITNRRA PURCHASES Another proposal would involve purchase of the cotton by the United Nations Relief and Reha bilitation Administration. UNRRA then would take payment for the cotton from the Germans in the form of textile for relief of other European countries. The matter is being studied by Secretary of Agriculture Anderson and a cotton export advisory com mittee, composed of representa tives of the American cotton in dustry, and by the state depart ment. The state department has announced that it favors a policy of providing funds to help Ger many import her necessities over the next two years. Anderson is eager to dispose of the government’s cotton holdings during the next year or so. The foreign field is large, but the effective demand is limited by a lack of foreign exchange and by the fact that American cotton is priced considerably above that of cotton grown in other countries. This country now is paying a subsidy of four cents a pound on commercial exports. Mountain Musician And His Father Burned To Death WEAVERSVILLE, Dec. 14. —UPy— Roy (Cotton) Lankford, 44, well known mountain musician, and his father, Charles C., 65, were burned to death early Thursday when a fire destroyed their small "hiune at Georgetown, four miles north of here. Dr. P. R. Terry. Buncombe coun ty coroner, said that the blaze ap parently started when Lankford’s father poured kerosene on live coals in a small stove while at tempting to start a fire. Roy Lankford had played with many mountain string bands in western North Carolina, and had made radio performances as a mu sician. * Didn’t Like His Seat So He Walked Right Off The Train WASHINGTON, Dec. 14. —</P>— Robert Lee Gray of St. Pauls, N. C., didn’t like his seat on an At- j lantic Coast line leaving here early i this morning so he walked back i through the train seeking another. He walked and he walked and the next thing he knew there was no train under him. The train had; entered a tunnel and, as Gray ex plained to police later, he didn’t realize in the smoky dark that he looked too far. Gray picked himself up and kept' on walking back to Union Station j where he was given first aid and taken to emergency hospital. Auth orities said his condition was not serious. PEARL HARBOR Starts On Page One this month, but Barkley said It would difficult for the committee ; to find other counsel. Mitchell asserted in his statement j that all of his staff accepted ap pointed on his expectations and as surances that they would not be held up for any considerable time after January first. “My own obligations and respon sibilities put me in the same posi tion," he said. Mitchell explained that when he accepted the council’s post weeks ago he wanted to be relieved of duty by the first of the year. Barkley noted that Mitchell and some of his assistants had said they desired to serve without compensa tion. GO ON FOR MONTHS Both the counsel staff and Bark ley protested that the hearings were ranging over such a wide field and witnesses were being ques tioned at such length that the in vestigation would go on for months. The chairman said that he had not wanted to serve on the com mittee in the first place because as majority leader he had “all any one human ought to be asked to do." Since the hearings started, Bark ley added, he had been forced in effect to give up his work as maj ority leader “and almost as sena tor." It now had become apparent, Barkley said, that the Investiga tion could not be concluded by Jan. 3, as congress had stipulated in its enabling resolution. lOnodu&Wmk&X Furnished by J. Robert Lindsay and Company Webb Building Shelby, N. O. Spot Cotton, Middling 1”_24lie N. Y. COTTON AT t:00 Today Prey. Day March.24.68 24.65 May .24.60 24.55 July .24.21 24.21 October _ . 23.33 23.25 December . _23.21 24.66 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT December . _1.80 >4 May _ .1.80 >4 July ...1.77% CORN December _ ...1.18% May .1.18% July .1.18% RYE December _ _.1.79 May .1.65% July .1.44% 1.80% 1.80% 1.77% 1.18% 1.18% 1.18% 1.77% 1.65% 1.44% STOCKS AT 8:08 Amn Rolling Mill _ 28 3-4 American Loco _. 38 5-8 American Tobacco B _ 89 3-4 American Tel & Tel_ 191 1-4 Anaconda Copper _ 44 1-4 Assoc Dry Goods _ 42 3-4 Beth Steel . 94 1-2 Baldwin Loco . _ 33 7-8 Chrysler _ 134 1-4 Curtiss-Wright _ 8 1-2 Elec Boat _ 21 1-4 General Motors _ 75 Pepsi Cola __ 36 1-2 Greyhound Corp . 33 1-4 International Paper _ 42 1-2 Nash Kelv . 24 1-2 Glenn L Martin . 41 5-8 Newport Ind _ 35 1-2 N Y Central . 32 3-8 Penn R R .. 44 1-4 Radio Corp _ 18 5-8 Reynolds Tob B _ 37 1-4 Southern Railroad _ 60 Standard Oil of N J. 65 3-8 Sperry Corp . 36 5-8 U S Rubber . 67 3-4 U S Steel . 81 3-4 Western Union .. 53 Youngstown Sheet & Tube .. 68 RAILS RALLY STOCKS NEW YORK, Dec. 14—(JP)— Rails rallied the stock market selec tively today although there was a notable lack of steam on the come back and many leaders refused to participate. Better performers included St. Paul i when issued) Common, at a new high; Santa Ft, N. Y. Cen tral, Southern Pacific, Great Northern, Northern Pacific, Para mount Pictures, Glenn Martin, Eastern Air Lines (up about 8 on a few sales), Boeing, Consolidated Vultee, Chrysler, U. 8. 8teel and Youngstown Sheet. Backward most of the time were General Mo tors, Woolworth, American Tele phone, American Water Works, Westlnghouse, Goodrich and Tex as Co. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Dec. 14—(A*)—(USDA) —Salable hogs 7,000, total 14,000; active, fully steady; virtually all barrows and gilts at the 14.85 cell ing; weights under 180 lbs., very scarce; sows at 14.10 ceiling; com plete clearance early. Salable cattle 2,000. total 2,300; salable calves 500, total 500; few loads choice steers and yearlings steady at 18.00, very few medium and good grade steers offered, mar ket on such kind very dull at re cent 50 cent decline; other kill ing classes mostly steady; beef cows fairly active at 10.00-13.50, choice cows to 14.00; canners and cutters dull at 7.25-8.50; bulls and vealers acutely scarce, steady; veal ers 15.50 down; most sausage bulls 13.00 down to 10.00; load common 1400-lb. western bulls 10.50; no choice heifers offered, beat 16.50; general heifers market holding steady. N. C. HOGS RALEIGH, Dec. 14—(JPi—(NCDA) —Hog market* steady with top# of 14.55 at Clinton and Rocky Mount and 14 90 at Richmond. N. C. EGGS, POULTRY RALEIGH, Dec. 14—OP)—(NCDA) —Egg and poultry market* steady to firm. Raleigh—U. S. grade AA extra large 59; fryers and broilers 29.3; turkey market dull on heavy stock; young toms and hens 34 to 36. Washington—U. 8. grade A extra large 60; broilers and fryers 27 to 28; turkey hens 44; light toms 44. BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, Dec. 14—(JP)—Butter, firm; receipts 216,498; market un changed. Eggs, receipts 7,401; firm; mar ket unchanged Feed Manufacturers Conclude Meeting RALEIGH, Dec. 14. —(JP>— Con cluding Its two-day meeting here Thursday, the North Carolina Feed Manufacturers Association elected Tom Cameron of Raeford president of the organization. Other officers elected were Oscar Chandler of Burlington, vice-pres ident; Roy McLaurin of Laurlnburg, reelected secretary and treasurer. Cameron, Tllson, McLaurin, Chan dler, J. W. Maxwell of Charlotte, John Earle of Asheville, and W. G. Crawford of Goldsboro were elect ed directors of the association. COMMANDER RESIGNS SEYMOUR JOHNSON FIELD— UP)—The retirement of Col. Dud ley B. Howard, base commander, has been announced. He la suc ceeded by Col. Ivan W. McElroy, former commanding officer of the Suffolk Army Air base. New York. Col. Howard has completed 28 years’ service as a regular army officer and seven years in the National Guard. Jap Cyclotrons Destroyed On ‘Specific Instructions’ TOKYO, Dec. 14. —(/P)— General MacArthur’s headquarters said to day that he had ordered Japan’s five cyclotrons destroyed upon “spe cific instructions” from the office of Secretary of War Patterson. Nevertheless, the headquarters spokesman added, four days after that directive had be6n received and after the destruction of the atomic research equipment was practically completed, "an inquiry was received from the chief of staff’s office in Washington as to the feasibility of shipping intact a cyclotron from Japan for re-erec tion in the United States.” HIGHER AUTHORITY A special press release was is sued to identify the “higher author ity” which headquarters here prev iously reported was responsible for the destruction. Prefacing the press release, head quarters quoted a Dec. 11 Associat ed Press dispatch from Washington which said the War Department apparently had asked MacArthur for a report on the smashing of the cyclotrons. “Answering a ques tion," the story added, “a depart ment spokesman said that demoli- I tion of the cyclotrons ’is a matter of discussion’ between the depart ment and MacArthur’s headquart ers.” Critics in America have compared the destruction with Nazi book burning and similar curbs upon the quest for knowledge in Europe. 2,000 New Cases Of Syphilis, 400 Of TB In Savannah SAVANAH. Ga. Dec 14. —</P>— Two thousand new cases of syphilis and from 350 to 400 cases of tu berculosis were brought to light in Savannahs mass testing of 71,149 citiaens in a 45-day health cam paign, a report showed today. Dr. Clair A. Henderson, city and county health officer, said that in addition to the 3,000 new cases of syphilis many thousands of others who had had previous treatment, were found. Several hundred cases of gonorr I hea were found and treated with penicillin during the survey. White Man Sentenced For Attempt To Ravish Negress RALEIGH, Dec. 14—(/P)—Bruce Combs, Wake county farmer, was sentenced to 10 to 15 in pri son yesterday for assaulting a ne-, gro woman with Intent to rape. The 37-year-old white man had been charged by the negress with rape, but Solicitor William Y. Blckett accepted the plea to the lesser charge at the request of the girl’s father. Combs pleaded guilty to the last charge. Sam Byrd Ready To Write New Novel GOLDSBORO. Dec. 14. —IIP)— Sam Byrd, actor, author and pro ducer recently discharged from the Navy, today made plans for a new novel as he settled down for a ‘ re conversion” visit at his home town, nearby Mt. Olive. Byrd, who won stage fame as Dude Lester in ’Tobacco Road," re ceived his discharge several days ago at Sixth Naval District head quarters in Charleston. A naval lieutenant, he saw action in the Normandy Invasion and lat-t er, in the Pacific, as beachmaster of a landing operation, he accept ed the surrender of Japanese forces at Sasebo. His latest book, "Hurry Home To My Heart”, grew out of his exper iences in the Normandy invasion. Moving on to writing success aft er his stage fame, Byrd several years ago wrote “Small Town South”, drawing on Goldsboro for much of his story material. BODY RECOVERED MOREHEAD CITY— (JP) --The body of Audrle V. Jarvis, 41, was ; found Thursday four miles north of Morehead City on the Newport river shore. He drowned Oct. 37 near Atlantic Beach bridge while attempting to rescue a member of a fishing party who had fallen overboard. HEAR GOOD SINGING At DAVIDSON MEMORIAL Baptist Church SUNDAY, DEC. 16 Beginning at 2 P. M. Victory Quartet, Smith Quartet, Spindale Quartet, Spindle City Quartet, Davis Trio DISCLOSES TRAGEDY — Mrs. Vera Blackson, 19-year-old mother, sobs as she telephones relatives from St. Mary's hospital in Phila delphia, to tell them that her two children, Vera, 2, and George jr., 3, died in a fire which destroyed their home while she was shop ping. <AP Wirephoto). ACUTE SHORTAGE IN LIVESTOCK, POULTRY FEEDS RALEIGH. Dec. 14. —Un less a serious shortage of livestock and poultry feeds improves soon, the government may impose new restrictions on manufacturers, Wal ter Berger of Washington, chief of the feed division of the U. S. De partment of agriculture said here today. In a speech before the annual meeting of the North Carolina Feed Manufacturers Association, Berger said that such an order probably would limit manufacturers to the amounts of proteins used last year. Asserting that there has been a large Increase in the production of poultry, Berger recommended that all chicks hatched since June be •'liquidated’ 'toward relieving the feed shortage. Such liquidation, he said, would not affect the current egg situation. ACUTE SHORTAGE He attributed what he termed an acute shortage of all kinds of feed for poultry and livestock to a decline in the production of soy beans and the scarcity of cotton seed and fish. He added that "a problem' fas ' developed * In connec tion with the distribution of pro teins, productive areas being in clined to hold their outputs for other uses. Berger was the principal speaker at the opening of a two-day meet ing of the association. Another speaker was D. S. Coltrane, assis tant state ‘agriculture commission er. New officers were to be elected later in the day. About 150 feed manufacturers from all -ections of the state Were registered for the meeting. Eleven Battle Stars For Rutherford Boy RUTHERFORDTON — Broadus Calvin Womack arrived last week direct from Japan with a discharge from the navy after serving over seas two years. He won 9 major battle stars from the Asiatic-Pa cific area and two from the Phil ippine liberation campaign. He left Japan Nov. 1 bringing home a Jap rifle and bayonet. He was for merly with the Elmore Corp. of Splndale and was on the U. S. S. Santa Fe. He saw Nagasala, Ja pan where an atomic bomb wrought much destruction. — THE PLACE — to buy good pre-war dining room sites at substantial savings is YOUNG BROS, or SHELBY CREDIT CO. 210 8. Washington 8t Keeter’s Specials PHONES 312-412 WEST WARREN STREET — SHELBY — BIRDSEYE FROZEN FOODS — RASPBERRIES — PINEAPPLE — FRESH ITALIAN PRUNES — BLACKBERRIES — APRICOTS — FRESH GRATED COCOA NUT — CHOW MEIN CHOP SUEY VEGETABLES.__ - FRESH PRODUCE - LARGE LIMAS — SMALL LIMAS — ENG LISH PEAS — CAUL I FLOWER — CORN — CUT GREEN BEANS —FRESH BLACKEYED PEAS. CANNED SHRIMP — CRAB MEAT — CRANBERRY SAUCE F«w Gallon Jars Left! SALAD DRESSING Charlotte, Bessemer City Firms Chartered RALEIGH, Dec. 14—Seven certificates of incorporation, filed today in the office of the secre tary of state, included: Terminal Transfer and Storage company of Charlotte, to operate a general transfer and hauling business. Authorized capital *stoclc $100,000, subscribed stock $300 by Prank L. Brooks, Charles S. Holmes, W. K. Girer, Jr., all of Charlotte. Carolina Chenille company of Bessemer City, to deal in house furnishings authorized capital stock $200,000, subscribed stock $300 by W. K. Gladden, Artie C. Gladden both of Bessemer City, Ernest R. Warren, Gastonia. Gladden Furniture company of Bessemer City, to deal in modern and antique furniture. Authorized capital stock $100,000, subscribed stock $300 by W. K. Gladden, Ar tie C. Gladden, Mary Cook, all of Bessemer City. WANT ADS FOR OVER FIVE YEARS the management of this in stitution has followed a single course. It was estab lished strictly as a com- ^ mission live stock yard, and % all through the years it has stayed on this main line, regardless of the seemingly promising side tracks along the way. Probably that’s the reason Dedmon’s is re garded as the Crescent Limited among the Live Stock Yards in North Caro lina. Watch them sell on Monday. Dedmon’s Live stock Yards. 2t-14c POULTRY WANTED: HEAVY hens 23<, roosters 15r. fryers 25r. On account of snow will b« at Dixon's Store at Pallston Mon day. from 8 a m. till 11 a.m. C. M. Crowe. 2t 14c SPECIAL NOTICE: WE PAY cash for turkeys, rabbits, country hams, sides, shoulders, fryers and hens. D. A. Beam Grocery Co. Phone 46. W’e Deliver. Itl4c WANTED TO-BUy7~ONE junked 17x22 McCormick Deering hay baler. Luts Yelton Co. 3t-14e » ’41 FORD AND~ CHEVRO let floor mats, radio aerials, batteries. Sherer Motors. 3t-14c WANTED TO BUY: THREE small tricycles, two med ium, one large and two bi cycles. See Hause or Cham pion at Hause & Champion Auto Service. 300 E. Mar ion. 2t-14c Just opened. nevTship ment of evening dresses at J. C. McNeely Co. lt-Uc GET YOUR EVEREADY BAT teries at Young Bros, or 6helby Credit Co., 210 S. Washington Street. 2t 14c CANARY BIRDS FOR SAL* — Beautiful singers. Hugh Wray Mauney, 418 W. Warren Street. 4t 140 JUST RECEIVED — A LARGE shipment of radio batteries at only $5.28. The Stamey Co., Pallston. 2t 14c STRAYED — WHITE BOB TAIL feist male puppy, with brown ears. Reward. 202 Palmer St. _ H ({
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 14, 1945, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75