CLASSIFIED AOS FOR SALS FREE I If Excess acid causes you pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indiges tion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloat ing, Nausea, Gas pains, get fas* sample, Udga, at ALLEN DRUG FOR SALE—House and several acres of land near Bess Chapel. See M. A. Stroup. 2t-pd FOR SALE —Marglobe tomato plants. See A. V. KENDRICK, Cherryville, N. C. 2t-pd FOR SALE—One walking horse 6 years old, See L. C. Haire.son, Cherryville, N. C. Rt. 1. lt-pd LAND FOR SALE—Twelve Acres Good Land, suitable for sub-divisions into lots, edge of Crouse, on Highway. Well watered. Will be sold at public auction on Satur day, July 7th, at 2 o’clock on the property at the spring corner. S. O. Murphy, Crouse, N. C. 3t-pd. LOST LOST—War Ration Book* No. 8 and 4, belonging to Hulo Hart man, Finder please return to the owner or to local Board._ LOST—Ration Books No. 3 and 4 Finder please return to owners, James L. and Margaret Getty* or local Ration Board. ltpil WANTED MAN OR WOMAN WANTEL. Good nearby Rawleigh Route now open. If willing to conduct Home Service business while earning a good living, write immediately. Rawleigh's, Dept. NCE-43-45, Richmond, Va. MISCELLANEOUS We now have electric power to our Hamer Mill and can do your Hamer. Your business will be ap preciated. DALTON FLOUR AND FEED MILLS “SKI HI stops running fits in dogs or we refund your money. We know of no other guaranteed running fits remedy.'* Houser DRUG COMPANY. FINE PEACHEDS (In season soon,) Bells, Elbertas, Hales, Slappys and Indians. NOAH HOUSER, BESSEMER GITA, N. C. 4t-pd ' MAKE SLIP COVERS - Make slip covers for any and all kinds of chairs. MRS. FLORENCE CRAFT, Cherryville, N. C. ltpd FOUND—Two keys with N. C. license plates No. 481-334. Own er may get same by calling at the Eagle Office and paying for this ad. 11 ATHLETES FOOT GERM Kill It For 35c “Biggest seller in years” say drug gists everywhere. Why? Te-ol is more than a surface application. Contains 90% alcohol. MAKES IT PENETRATE. Reaches more germs faster. APPLY FULL STRENGTH for itchy, sweaty or amelly feet. If not pleased your 36c back. Today at Allen Drug Co WE BUY CHICKENS AND EGGS—Pay highest market. We sell feeds of all kinds. DALION S FLOUR AND 1EED MILLS, North of High School. tl PATCMTC mX! Prompt, expert service, send sketch or model for free opinion. Expert Washington associates — DAVID P. Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you suffer from rheumatic, arthri tis or neuritis pain, try this simple inexpensive home recipe that thousands are using. Get 3 package 01 Ru-Ex Compound, a 2 weeks' supply today. Mix it with a quart of water, add the juice of 4 lemons. It's easy, pleasant and no trouble at all. You need only J tablespoonfuls two times a day. Often within 48 hours — sometimes over* night — splendid results are obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave and if you do not feel better, Ru-Ex will cost you nothing to try as it is sold by your druggist under an aba© lute money-back guarantee. Ru-Ex Compound is for «aie and recommended ky ALLEN DRUG CO. North Carolina farmers have signed contracts for 1,500 Baha mian workers, scheduled to arrive between June 20 and July 9. An improved cotton tire cord has been developed in research laboratories. There is also a new development in ratproofing cotton goods. When death comes suddenly to cattle after they have been put on pasture, the trouble may be blackleg. The animals should be eramined by a veterinarian. The growing of grapes was first introduced in the sandhill terri tory of Norland South Carolina by thij% Seaboard Railway agricul tural ageata. LEGAL NOTICES GASTON COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT BEFORE THE CLERK NOTICE J. A. Wilkins, Administrator of the Estate of Aaron Q. Webb, Deceased, Petitioner, -vs Nettie M. Edwards, widow, Fran ces E. Johnson, widow, Helen E. Kahn and her husband, Allie Kahn, Alice Kane, widow, Ger trude G. Love and her husband, Sam Love, Rebecca P. Neely and her husband, Robert Neely, Tril by W. Patterson and her husband Phoenix Patterson, Aaron <$. Webb, Jr. single, George S. Webb and his wife, Beatrice Webb and Duella Webb, single, Defendants. Th defendants named and all other parties interested will take notice that a special proceeding has been commenced in the su perior Court of Gaston County, North Carolina, entitled as above to sell the lands of Aaron Q. Webb, deceased, to make assets to pay debts of the deceased. And said defendants will furth er take notice that they are re required to appear at the office ot the Clerk of the Superior Court of Gaston County, North Caroli na, in the Courthouse in Gastonia North Carolina, and *ns*,e5 ?r demur to the petition filed in said proceedings within ten days after the final publication of this notice, or petitioner will apply to the court for the relief demanded said petition. This 7th day of June, 1946. EMMA CORNWELL Asst Clerk Superior Court. NOTICE Or SALt Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained w • DEED OF TRUST given by L. W Muskelly and wife, El.zabetft Muskelly to the undersigned as trustee for the Home Building and Loan Association on the 3rd day of April. 1943 and registered in the Register of Deeds Office for Gaston County m book 417 at page 229 to secure the indebted ness therein mentioned and de fault having been made it ™ ayment vb gk QJ Mfiflff jqtlll nt lAe and at the request of the -lame BuiH.nR «'> map of Bessemer City, N c.l ich map if recorded m ria. Book No. 1 a* page 75 m Regis ter of Deeds Office of Castor. County, and ba'iig the sanoc* lot conveyed by .1. L. Stewnr. pud -.ife to J. B. Th.masson, Trustee, by deed, dated the 10th day oi (.•••tober, 19 as will appear of i, (ord in t.hs Register of Deeds Ottice for (Wton Cou’.tj in B.« k 264 at p»ge 306; Being the i.kntical tract of land conveyed ro L. L. Boyd and his wife, S. Louise Boyd, by A. H. Patterson and wife, as will ap pear by deed of record in the Of fice of the Register of Deeds of Gaston County. This the 6th day of J»rne, 1945 B. S. NEILL, Trustee J. R. DAVIS, Attorney._ ORTH CAROLINA ASTON COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT BEFORE THE CLERK atherine B. Gladden, Plaintiff, -vs scar E. Gladden, Defendant* NOTICE OF SUMMONS The defandant above named ill take notice 'that an action ititled as above has been com enced in the Superior Court el aston County, North Carolina , obtain a divorce; and the de indant will further take notice iat he is required to appear al ie office of the Clerk of the bu »rior Court of Gaston County, at s office in the city of Gastonia, C. within twenty days after ;h July, 1945 and answer or de ur to the complaint of the plain er or the plaintiff will apply to e court for the relief demanded. This 8th day of June, 1945. Clerk of Superior Court. '. H. Sanders, ttorney for Plaintiff. 4t-Jy 5 NORTH CAROLINA, GASTON COUNTY. Ethel L. Peck, Plaintiff vs William C. Peak, NOTICE The above named defendant will take notice that an action has been started in the Superior Court for Gaston County, for di vorce and the defendant will be required within twenty days of the final publication of this notice to appear before the Clerk of said Court, and answer or demur to the complaint or the plaintiff will apply to the Court, for the relief, demanded in this complaint. This the 13 day of June, 1946. EMMA CORNWELL AmH. Clerk «f Superior Court. 0. A. WARREN, Att’y- for Plaintiff. 4t-Jy6 Having qualified as execlutor of the last will and testament of Nancy Carpenter, deceased, late of Gaston County, North Carolina this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at R F D No. 1, Cherryville, N. C., on or before the 24th day of May, 1946, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This May 23, 1945. ELLIS CARPENTER Executor of the last will and testament of Nancy Carpen ter, deceased. 6t-Jl28 NORTH CAROLINA GASTON COUNTY. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain mortgage deed executed by A. L. Allen and wife, dated Feb ruary 23rd, 1942, and recorded K) Book No. 409, page 59, in the office of the Register of Deeds for Gaston County, North Caro lina, default having been made in the payment of the indebted ness thereby secured, and said mortgage being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, the undersigned mortgagee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest ''bidder for cash at the court house door in Gastonia, N. C. at 11:00 o’clock in the fore noon on the sixth day of July, 1945 the property conveyed in the said mortgage, the same being defined and described as follows: Lots Nos. 4-7 inclusive Block F as shown in Plat Book No. 1, page 124, in the said Register of Deeds Office. But the said sale will be made subject to all outstanding and unpaid taxes. This the 6th day of June, 1945. W. H. SANDERS 4t-Je 28 Mortgagee NORTH CAROLINA GASTON COUNTY. The undersigned, having quali fied as administrator of the estate of Aaron Q. Webb, deceased, late of Gaston County, this is to noti fy all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 4th day of June, 1946, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This 4th day of June, 1945. J. A. WILKINS, Admr. 6t-.Jy 12 (Gastonia, N. C.) NORTH CAROLINA, GASTON COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT George F. Roof, Jr., 1 laintic Carol Roof, Defendant. NOTICE OF S, ..i.vlONS The defendant, Carol Roof will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the iSuperior Coui\ of Gaston County for an absolute divorce on the grounds of two years’ sep aration, and the said defendant will further take notice that she is hereby required to appear be fore the Clerk of the Superior Court of Gaston County at the Court House in Gastonia, N. C., on the 25th day of July 1945, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This the 25h day of June, 1945 PAUL E. MONROE, Clerk of Superior Court 4t-Jy 19 ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Having quailed as administra tor of the estate of John T. Sel lers, deceased, late of Gaston county, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersign ed at Cherryville, N. C., on or be fore June 28th, 1946, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. This June 26, 1945. RAYMOND BROWN, Administrator of John T. Sellers, deceased. 6t-A2 I NORTH CAROLINA GASTON COUNTY. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT BEFORE THE CLERK A. M. Whitener, Plaintiff, -vs Viola Whitener, Defendant. NOTICE OF SUMMONS The defendant ablove named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been com menced in the superior cocrt of Gaston county, North Carolina, to obtain a divorce; and the de fendant will further take notice that she is required to appear at the office of the clerk of the su perior court of Gaston county, at his office in the city of Gastonia, N. C. within twenty days after Ju ly 27th„ 1945 and answer or de mur to the complaint of the plaintic, or the plaintig will apply to the court for the relief deman ded in the said complaint. This 2nd day of July, 1945. PAUL E. MONROE, Clerk of Superior Cocrt. W. H. Sanders, Atty for Plaintiff. 4Uy26 Seaboard Railway agricultural agents introduced the culture of Irish Potatoes in western North Carolina for use as high grade planting stock in (South Florida. A Lebanon cedar tree, nearly 100 years old in Burbage, England has iwt IfltojMt for the tint time. STRIVE FOR COMMON WELL, BEING Most of us agree that a spiritl of co-operation is what is moat • needed to make family life more | harmonious, as well as to make the family an effective training unit for citizenship. But just what do we mean by cooperation? One of the dictionary definitions reads "Collective action in Che pursuit of common well being.” But in ac tual practice in the home most of us act on the.defipition once giv- 1 en by an employer to a new assis tant. The young man at the end of a trying day had made so bold as to explain that he was doing j las best to cooperate. To which the older man bellowed in reply, I “Young man, my definition of co-! operation is for you to do exactly what 1 tell you to do, and do it quick!” Of course, as parents we must prepare our boys and girls for just such situations as this young employee was up against in the person of a domineering executive i for that matter, there are plenty of situations in life where the j safety of great numbers depends upon rigid discipline and exact i obedience. But strangely enough, | potent as habit is in every other j orbit of character formation, the habit of instant obedience to par- j ents does not, as a rule, breed obedience to authority in later i life, even if that end were in it self always desirable. For some has been tyrannized over at home time, some where the child who has been tyrannized over at home is going to take out his resent ment on some other person or in stitution, or just on life in general So let's go back to the dic tionary meaning for the kind of copoeration we seek as parents. And let’s begin when when our children are babie to set them an example of “striving for the "common well being” of the family. To be sure all this is complicated by the fact that the instinct of self preservation makes thinking of the rights of oth ers a decidedly acquired trait Fortunately this is offset by the baby's equally instinctive desire to win the approval of those about him. But from his extremely limited vantage point in the cradle, the infant has only one way of learning how to please us, and that is to imitate our attitudes. i wonuer « mis isn i wny you rarely find a girl being a “lone wolf” in the family, while the role is fairly common to boys. Girls, from babyhood, see their mothers exerting most of their energies in caring for the family so it is nat ural for them to grow up with a group. But boys, until they are old enough to appreciate impor tance of money in the scheme of things, are apt to see their fathers as a little outside the family circle Today, of course, this is only too true in an actual sense. But even fathers who have stayed with their families are too often lack ing in understanding of the childs point of view, which mothers usu ally supply. The child has heard his mother, divided in her loyal ties, explain, "But son, your fath er doesn't quite understand hiow things are—you see, he’s so busy. Wouldn’t it be more logical for fathers to have to explain mothers to small boys? Why wait until manhood to share the camarad erie expressed in the phrase, “Af ter all, son, your mother is a woman—she wouldn’t quite un derstand !” Seriously, though, if fathers would fit themselves into the warp and woof of the child’s everyday existence with the same casual ness that mothers do, the tapes try of family life would have a pattern of mutual helpfulness which would be repeated in the child's character. GERMAN PRISONERS TO WEAR WORN CLOTHING ATLANTA, Ga. — German prisoners of war in the southeast will, in the future, wear repaired clothing formerly worn by Amer ican fighting men in training, says an order issued today by Major General Frederick E. Uhl, commanding general, Fourth Ser vice Command. The move is part of the cloth ing reclamation program. The or der specifies that German prison ers will be issued “Class X” cloth ing, garments previously used by U. S. troops as work clothes or for actual combat training. Amer ican soldiers do not wear “Class X” clothing off a military reser vation. G. B., “Joe” Cloninger, Route 2, Bessemer City, near Pasour Mountain, believes in having- a va riety of pasture available for his cows to produce milk economical ly. As a result of a farm" plan worked out with the Soil Conser vation Service program, he plans to develop permanent pasture and temporary grazing corps for as near year round grazing as possi ble. From a mixture of smallgrarn and rye grass sown last fall hi« cows are still getting excellent grazing and will continue to do so when turned on permanent pas ture sod. “Joe” believes in the liberal use of lime and basic slag in feeding his grazing crops for best results. He plans to sow six acres of permanent pasture this fall for a recommended grass mix ture. The growing of lima beans in North Florida ‘ was originated by Seaboard Railway agricultural tural agents. Terrace lines were staked re cently, to be built by the county terracing units and by farm equip ment, on the following farms: R. U. and A. C. Pasour, Route 1, Dallas; Woodrow Carpenter, O. V. MdSwain, Carl Carpenter, R. F. Davis, W. C. Davis and L. T. Wyant, all RFD Bessemer City. L.E. Southards, North Belmont is following his sawmilling opera tion with pulpwood cutting of tops and other smaller trees, suit able for this material. This prac tice completely utilizes wood that would otherwise rot on the ground and be wasted. He plans to ship a car per week. Alfalfa is becoming increasing ly popular throughout the country as a parmanent hay crop on bet ter land. Excellent yields and , stands have been realized where proper fertilization and liming and seed bed preparation have been followed. Farmers planning on seeding alfalfa this fall should take soil samples for fertilizing and liming requirements and plan to turn under a legume crop in advance to seed bed preparation and early seeding. Preparation of a good seed bed is most impor tant. Due to heavy demand on seed, orders should be placed now with your local seed dealer. Soil samples for analysis have been received for the following forms, in preparation for seeding this fall: Guy Harrelson, Route 1, of Crouse; H. C. and W. M. Carpen ter, Route 1, Bessemer City; E.R. 'Sell, Route 2, Bessemer City; Sonny Man McCory, Route 3, of Gastonia; C. O. Carpenter, Route 4, Lineolnton, and Carl Carpenter Route 2, Bessemer City. I Rehabilitation of the pineapple industry, which died out in Flor ida’s lower East Coast during the j great boom, was first undertaken j by Seaboard Railway agricultural agents. Read Eagle ads for bargains— Say “I saw it in the Eagle ’. AT L /tunic Comfinr-Brntaitl in Atbnlc. CkarMIr, C*aga~o|«, Ntr/alk.Chbn4n_ r**********************’************************' S WALLPAPER I have all kinds of Wall Paper for any home. Samples can be seen at mv home in the western part of town or see me \ and I will be glad to show them to you. FLOOR SANDING I am prepared to do all kinds of Floor Sanding at reasonable prices. B. T. SELLERS Cherryville, N. C. P* O. Box A New "House of Magic" for Postwar America "...one of the strongest guarantees of progress and world peace is continuous scientific preparedness through industrial research." # “General Electric has approved plans for a new $8,000,000 Research Laboratory. This ex penditure has tremendous significance. Scientific research has contributed much to our progress as a nation. “Many things have been discovered during this war, and we can and must develop them into better things for peacetime. “Today we have 650 research people on our staff. These new facilities will not only give increased outlet for their abilities, but will provide opportunities for new research minds with new talents. “From this new laboratory we think new achievements will come. In the past, G-E research has contributed much to better living in America—not only through new developments in x-ray, electricity, metallurgy, electronics and chemistry, but also through reduced cost and increased efficiency, as in the modern incandescent lamp. “Even more than in the past the la boratory will emphasize research in pure science- continuing and expanding the work begun by Dr. Whitney and the late Dr. Steinmetz forty-five years ago. “To find new facts of the physical world, to extend the limits of knowledge, is a forward step in creating More Goods for More People at Less Cost.” GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY Ns w ••mlMlon-dsllsr 0*1 Research laboratory will be built .five miles east of Schenectady, New York, on the Mohawk River. The geographic location offers special advantages for television, high voltage x-ray, and radar research. Buildings with 300,000 square feet of floor space will accommodate an expanded post war research staff of about 800. Research rooms will be a scientist’s paradise of equipment for experi ments in chemistry, physics, mechanics, electronics. It is hoped that construction can start in six months. Hear the U-E radio programs: me AU-gin urcnesira, ounuay xu p. m. x, 77ie World Toddy news, Monday through Friday 6:45 p. m. EWT, CBS The G-E House Party, Monday through Friday 4:00 p. m. EWT, CBS. FOR VICTORY-BUY AND HOLD WAR BONDS GENERAL ELECTRIC