Newspapers / The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.) / July 19, 1945, edition 1 / Page 1
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FARM LOAN ACT AMENDED BY CONGRESS CHERRYVILLE JRS. PLAY CHARLOTTE HERE SATURDAY Last Home Games Of Season At 4:30 P. M. Game To Be Played At High School Park; Large Crowd Expected To See Good Game. The strong’ Cherryville Ameri ean Legion Junior base bail team will play their last home game here Saturday afternoon at 4 ;30 at the high school park, when they Ble®t i_^,e ^^a,,l°tte junior team. Although eliminated from fur ther play the Cherryville team have given fans throughout this section some good base ball, and their standing should be second, but losing some good games, by the scores of 1 to 0, 2 to 3, 6 to b, etc., is evidence enough to prove as the old saying is; "the breaks- was against them." Cherryville is proud of this fine bunch of boys, their conduct on the field as well as on the streets have been of the highest standard, and the community will miss them. The coach, Maury Greason has proven himself to be one of the best coaches in the league and the fans are hoping that he will return again next year and give Cherryville and community some more fine brand of base bail. Shelby, has the best team in the league and Cherryville should have been ranking second. John Stanley, Chen, vilie’s c pitcher is rated one ot the best in the league and will in all prob 'ity pitch against the MeckTen boys Saturday. a Anson Family T Entertain Legionairc \\. Blaine Beam has made ar rangement with the Johnson Fam ily, from VVBT, Charlotte to en tertain the American Legion ol Tryon Post No. 100 at the annual Wutermelon feast which will be given by him at his home on Fri day night, July 27th. Commander Beam is extending an invitation not only to the Try on Post 100 and their wives, but he also invites the mothers and fathers and wives of the men in service and the ex-service men. This does not mean the service nibn must be at home, but the parents and wives are invited even if the boy is in camp and cannot be present himself. The Johnson family is heard ovei Radio Station WBl, Char lotte and everybody enjoys their Radio program. This will be a real treat to hear them in person. Also on the program will be a guest speaker for the occasion. Mr. Beam especially urges the mothers and wives to be present and enjoy the evening with he and his family. William B. Payseur S. F. C. On Battleship ON A BATTLESHIP IN I HE PACIFIC — William B. Payseur, Jr., 21, of Lincolnton, N. C., is a “plank-owner” member of the crew of this 35,000-ton battleship having been aboard when the ship was commissioned. A seaman, first class in the Na val Reserve, he stands watches at the ship’s wheel and works at navigation tasks, keeping logs shooting” stars and tending ship's clocks. During battle, tie is a helmsman at an auxiTiary steering station. Payseur has been through many Pacific battle actions, in cluding major shore bombard ments, invasion operations, the Philippines actions, carrier task force raids against the Japa nese mainland, and the first ot the raids against Formosa and and the Ryuku Islands. Payseur’s wife lives at Cher ry ville, N. C. His father, W. B. T>ayseur, lives at Lincolnton. ►)- V. C. O. SWICEGOOD MING THIS WEEK-END Rev. C. O. Swicegood of Le noir City, Tenn., will preach here Saturday night and Sunday at ,Free Saint’s Tabernacle. Satur-! day services will begin at 8:00 o’- j clock and Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and again Sunday night at 8 o’clock. The public ia cordially invited to attend these services. FINAL REPORT E-BOND SALES Chairman Are Well Pleased With Final Results. D. R. Mauney, chairman cl rt< 7th. War Loan Drive and Mrs. Edwin Rudisill and Mrs. George B. Falls, co-chairman of the Wo man s Division have announced the following final reports in the Carlton Nuway Rhyne-Houser Howell '. Post Office Building & Loan Bank Production Credit Ass’n Carolina Freight $ 25,47)0.00 0.(550.00 1 l,000.2o 7,200.00 5,90(5.25 (5,475.00 45,056.00 225.00 8,943.75 TOTAL $110,512.50 The textile plants and business concerns not reported separately are counted in with the Cherry ville National Bank. The Chairmen wish to express their sincere appreciation to each and every one for the fine spirit of cooperation in helping to make this drive a complete success. Mrs. Rudisill, chairman of the , Woman’s Division wishes to thank I the Cherryville Merchants Asso . ciation, the Senior AVoman’s ! Club, The Lion’s Club and The Junior AVoman’s Club for the priz es given in the Baby Contest which was sponsored by the AVo man’s Division during the drive. T he Baby Contest which proved a great success closed on Monday, June the 11th, with the sales amounting to $60,555.00. Lach selling agent, together with each organization, the schools, and each individual did a wonderful job and each and every one is to be highly praised for the splendid spirit of cooperation j manifested in the Mighty 7th War I Loan Drive, and again Mr. Mau i ney wishes to thank each and ev ; ery one, both workers and buyers. Revival Meeting Be gins Cherryville Cir. i - A revivil meeting will begin at the Bethlehem Methodist Church on Sunday, July 22 and continue through the week. On (Sunday, August 5tli, a revi val meeting will begin at St. Paul Methodist church and at Bess Chapel Methodist church, August 12th, and Mt. Beulah Methodist church September 2nd. Rev. N. S. Osborn is pastor on this circuit and will have charge of all the meetings. REVIVAL MEETING BEGINS AT MOUNT ZION CHURCH A revival meeting will begin Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at Mount Zion Baptist Church. The Rev. Bruce Whitaker of Cleveland County will be the visiting minis ter. Rev. Whitaker, a young- man, is at the present time a student at the Southern Baptist Theological Seniitiary at Louisville, Ky. We are happy to have this consecra ted man of God with us in this series of meetings. Let us make plans now tq.t at tend as many of these services as is possible. The hour for the morning sesvices during the week will be announced Suuuay. Servi ces each evening at :; . o'clock. The public is coniiauy inviled to worship with us. SPECIAL SINGING There will be a special singing service ut the Church of God on East Main Street, Sunday night, July 22nd, at 8:15. Singing ana music from different churches will be here and a special healing service. We invite all of you to comej and enjoy old time singing. ISAAC I. PUTNAM, Pastor I Big .Three Meet in Berlin The war-weary Jittery world Is awaiting eagerly the meetli-g these three men. President Barry S. Truman, Premier Winston C'i.r,. ill, and Marshal Joe Stalin, hoping that N will clear away many <«' 1 tensions, misunderstandings and suspicions that have av.sen since o. many was vanquished. * ■ ■ - . :.. ■■ " ;■ , AT MISSIONARY METHODIST REV. ROY R. NANNY (Special to the Eagle) 1 The Annual Conference Revi val of the Missionary Methodist Churches will begin in the local church of that faith, here, Sunday July 22, and continue through Sunday night, July 29. Services will be held each evening at 8 o' clock. The public is cordially in vited. Rev. Geo. W. Rideout, interna tionally known evangelist of Au dubon, New Jersey is the engaged evangelist. Dr. Rideout has served as pastor in various Methodise Churches for 21 years; he was a teacher of Theology for 12 years, and has preached on every major mission field m the world. In addi tion to his evangelistic duties he is corresponding Editor of the Pentecostal Herald, published in Louisville, Ky. He was a candi date for United states Senator on the Prohibition ticket, in the State of New Jersey, during the last National election. Rev. H. Reid Sisk, promising! young pastor of the Caroleen Church, is to direct the singing during the revival and Confer ence. He is a former pastor of the church, and at present is as sistant secretary of the Confer ence. Rev. Dan S. Hardin, of Forest City, is president of the Confer ence, which will convene in an nual session, Friday morning, Ju ly 27, at nine o’clock. The even ing services will be evangelistic. Rev. Roy R. Nanjey, pastor for the last two years has been re-elected as full-time pastor of the church. Rev. Mr. Nanhey, his wife and baby daughter reside at present in east Cherryville. TO LEAVE FOR FT. I DRAGG MONDAY, Thi.- following young: men will leave from Draft Hoard No. three Monday, July 23rd for induction in the United States army: Warren Ralph Smith, Cherry ville, R-l. Stonewall Jackson Schronce Newton., R-2. , Cecil Coy Buff, Lincolntn, R-l. | MRS. C. P. BEAM ILL The many friends of Mrs. Charles P. Beam will be .-'orry to! learn she has been ill this week but is improved, 1 REV. H. REID SISK REV. GEORGE W. RIDOUT SISgt. Ralph Beam Receives Promotion S. Sgt. Ralph H. Beam, son of Mrs. Mattie F. Beam, R. 1, Cher ryville, N. C., has been promoted to the grade of T-SUt. He is a member of the European Division USAAF Air Transport Command commanded by Brigadier General Earl S. Hoag. Sgt. Beam’s organization is the trans-Atlantic aerial supply hue between the United States and Europe, operating hundreds of passenger and cargo plants monthly. These planes carry im portant passengers, vital supplies, the all-important soldieis' mail and fly American soldiers to the Ui.il (1 States and to other thea '•ii of i perations >• the army s redeployment program. Sgt. Beam entered the army on August 4, 1942 and has been ov erseas in the European Theatre of operations for the past twenty six montha. Tornadoes have been reported from every state in the United States except Nevada. BIG THREE IS NOW HOLDING 2ND. MEET Little News Leaks Out From Conference. POTDAM, July 18.—Three vet erans of old battlefields—Presi-. dent Truman, Premier Stalin, and Prime Minisfer Churchill—con-' ferred again late today, with Al lied vicotry in the Pacific a press ing goal. This second formal meeting of the Big Three was as heavily blan I keted by security as yesterday s, I but the trend of thought among the American and British delega tions seemed to make it certain that the ways and means for Ja pan’s defeat would Be fully aired before the Soviet leader. Earlier in the day, Truman conferred separately with Churc hill and Stalin. The day’s events indicated the leaders were agreed upon reach ing as promptly as possible full agreement on the issues facing them—issues upon which a speed ier end of the war with Japan and the future peace of Europe may depend. TRUMAN’S GOALS Truman, the presiding officer of the tri-power sessions, seeks as his chief goals a quicker tri umph over Japan and the bul warking of peace through solu tion of long-standing dispuites. He lunched today at 1 p. m., with ‘Churchill, and then later with Stalin. He was accompanied at the second luncheon by Sec retary of State James F. Byrnes, his close friend and an exper ienced negotiator. Under cloudy skies, the President walked from kit residence to the local equiv alent of No. 10 Downing street, and was greeted, at the gate by Churchill and his soldier-daugh(‘r, Mary, an announcement from the British delegation said. Fifty troops of the Second bat talion of Scots guards forme.* an honor guard on the tree-shad ed lawm, and a Royal Marine band struck up the Star Span gled Banner. Truman and Churchill talked cordially on the terrace while photographs were taken, and then lunched inside at a table set for two. When Truman was leav ing, Byrnfes emerged from Bri tish Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden’s house next door, w here he had lunched, and met the Presi dent at the entrance. The Brit ish delegation did not say how long Churchill and Truman con ferred, nor was there any hint of their topics. STALIN IS HOST. Stalin was host to the Presi ; dent at 3 p. m. at a comparative ! ly brief luncheon, but there were evidence that it was cordial. ' Caviar, fish, and meat apparent i ly were on the menu. | Byrnes, Foreign Commissar Vyacheslav Molotov, the Presi dent’s military and naval aides, Brig. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan and Capt. Janies K. Varlaman, Jr., and Charles E. Bolden, State ) department Russian experts, al SO WPI’P iriipctv ftf Utulin Byrnes—like Truman-^is an experienced veteran of compromises smoothly worked out on Washington's Capitol Hill, and now as Secretary of State brings that experience and diplomatic ability to dis cussions of vital international problems being worked out here. He was an advisor to President Roosevelt at the Yalta conference and other meetings. Truman’s calls today returned the visits paid him by Churchill on Monday and by Stalin on Tuesday. The President is un derstood to be planning a din ner soon which Stalin and Churc hill will be honored guests. British and Russian officers seemed agreed that the Stalin Churchill choice of Truman to preside, even though he is the ' freshman” member of the three pow’er conference was a cordial diplomatic handshake to the Mis sourian. FIRST CHAIRMAN. This is the first Big Three con ferenee which has had a formal chairman. It was reported unof ficially from Tehran in 1943 that the late President Roose velt then was informal chairman most of the time. At the Yalta meeting, Stalin was understood (Continued on page ft) Lending Powers OF Land Banks And Farm Increased John F. Gaylord, Sec’y.-Treas., of Charlotte Nat’l. Farm Loan \Makes Announcement. Hitler Is Reported Hiding In Argentina WASHINGTON, July 17— The State Department is go ing to check up on a report that Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun ar« hiding out in Argentina. It directed the U. S. Embassy in Buenos Aires to follow up a Chicago Times story from Mon tevideo which said Hitler and his alleged wife have found a haven in Patagonia. Argentina ha*s assured other Allied governments that it would not harbor Ayis war criminals. The Chicago 'fifties story was from Correspondent Vincent DePascal. He said he was virtu ally certain that Hitler and the woman he is supposed to have married in Berlin’s last days "are on an immense, G^erman owned estate in Patagonia.” The pair reportedly landed on a lonely shore front a German submarine which supposedly re turned to surrender to the Allies Other stories have had Hitlei put to death on his own orders, some Germans claimed to have seen his and Eva Braun's burn ing bodies in Berlim. The Allied sources have not agreed defin itely on what happened to them. Cpl. J. W. Knight In Hospital Now MIAMI BEACH, Fla. 16 July. —Cpl. J. W. Knight, husband of Mrs. Jewel Knight, Cherryville, N. C., has been admitted to the AAF Regional and Convalescent Hospital, Miami District, for rest [ and treatment. In addition to receiving regu lar treatment from a staff of Ar my physicians, nurses and speci alists, the patient would partici pate in physical training, recrea tion and classroom activities which are a part of the hospital's program to help the soldier attain I complete recovery. Patients at the hospital also take part in the convalescent ser vices program which gives them an opportunity to plan post war homes, sketch, paint, work in the machine and woodworking shops, and study music and languages. AUSTRALIAN PAPERS HINT “BIG NEWS” IN OFFING ABOUT JAPS Newspapers in Sydney today published speculative yports that “big- news” relating to Ja pan would be forthcoming soon. One conjecture wias that Ja pan may be suing for peace, an other that Russia may have de cided to enter the Pacific war. (Acting Secretary of State Joseph < . drew in Washington denied last week that any gen uine pea<e overtuies had beerj received from Japan.) ‘‘T'he end of the war may come with dramatic suddenness commented the Sydney Sun. N “Hirohito is still the god-em >eror, the editorial said. ‘‘By >ne stroke of a pen he could re lieve Japans terrors and make peace. There is every reason to believe that United States poli cy is preserving him for that pait in tic drama. The Morning Herald sa e I bat nothing short of the Allies teims would be acceptable, hut added that Japan is without mil itary hope and might seek to escape '-ermanys late. REVIVAL MEETING BEGINS ON CHERRYVILLE CIRCUIT A Revival meeting will begin at the Bethlehem Methodist Church on Sunday, July 22 and continue through the week. On Sunday, August 5th, a Re vival meeting will begin at St. Paul’s Methodist church and at Bess’ Chapel Methodist church, August 12th, and Mt. Beulah Methodist church September 2nd. Rev. N. C. Osborn is pastor on this circuit and will have charge of all the meetings. Mr. John F. Gaylord, Secre tary of the Charlotte National Farm Loan Association, said to day that under the new legisla tion recently enacted by Con gress, it will be imposisble for the association to handle loans more expeditiously and that with more of the lending proeesa turned over to the associations, the prospective borrowers Will be told more quickly of what ac tion will be taken on their ap plications for long-term loans from the Federal Land Bank of Columbia. Under the new law, the land bank may lend up to 65 percent of the normal agricultural value of the faun, whereas since 191 < it has been limited to 50 per cent of the appraised value ot the land plus 20 per cent of the permanent improvements. Land Bank Commissioner loans will be continued for one year from July 1, 1945. They may be made up to 75 per oent of the normal value of the farm However the contract interest rate on these loans will bi except to veterans who may borrow at 4 per cent in the event the loan is guaranteed under the G. I. Bill of Rights. The ooRtract rate for land hank loans through the association will remain at ite present all time low of 4 per cent. Secretary Gaylord said that many of the Commissioner loans have been reduced to a point where they can be easily refin anced with 4 percent land bank loans -which will give these bor rowers savings of 1 per cent. The office of the Charlotte Association is located opposite the Court House in Charlotte and handles land bank and com sioner loans in Gaston, Linooln, Cabarrus and Mecklenburg counties. ARGENTINES SAY TWO NAZI SUBS SEEN OFF COAST BUENOS AIRES, July 17— Argentine naval authorities are and possibly two submarines were sighted off San Clemente del Tuyu today only a few days after the German U-630 sur rendered at Mar 3el Plata. (The British Admiralty said yesterday four German subma rines had not been accounted for.) The editor of the newspaper El Tribuno of Dolores, near the Atlantic Coast told the Associa ted Press there was no doubt that two submarines were sight ed by more than 100 people shortly before 11 A. M. today. The editor said the vessels sur faced three mites elf San Cle mente. , The Argentine government has decided to deliver to the United States and Britain the ■German submarine U-530 which surrendered July 10th at the Argentine port of Mar del Pla ta, it was learned today. Official announcement of the government’s decision was set for 3 P. M. eastern war time. The cabinet agreed on this ac tion after studying a report submitted by the committee et four foreign ministry officials. Pvt. Thomas Howell Back In The States Pvt. Thomas Dean Howell of Cherryville, who recently return ed to the states after serving in the European Theatre for eleven months is spending a 30 day fur lough at home, with his wife and two children. Private Howell is the eon of Mr. and Mrs. 1'om Howell who lives on Route Two, Cherryville. Private Howell sailed for over seas August 29, 1944 and served in Patton’s Third Army until No vember 6, 1944, when he was wounded by shrapnel and carried back to a hospital ia England. He remained in the hospital for four months before being trans ferred to the Eighth Air Fore*. At ter a 30 day furlough he wifi re port to Fort Bragg far realign ment.
The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.)
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July 19, 1945, edition 1
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