• * TODAY i»4 * TOMORROW Bj DON ROBINSON —'—-"V BROKERS prophet* The brokers and bankers who buy and sell large quantities of stocks and be able to foresee the future more accurately than any fortune teller. They may not be able to tell you that you arcv go ing to meet a dark-haired man who will alter your whole life— but in the field of business and economics they are uncanny in their ability to Ret the correct answer. Therefore, when the stock mar ket prices start rising by leaps and bounds, as they have recently, it means that the financiers have seen some handwriting on the wall and are convinced that investmen1 in industrial concerns are worth more monev. (Before I Bo any futher, I want to make it cjear to read er* that I am not recommend in* buvinsr stock*. I don’t know anythine about them. Tomor row somthinr may hanpen that will send them diving to new lows.1 But I am very much interested in why they have been going up and up and up, in spite of the fact that labor difficulties and shortages of material make the profit-picture for industry look worse every day. There seems to be onlv one an swer. It must be that the brok ers have good reason to believe that inflation is on its wav. and that no matter what may be done I Sjt* Charles Liekert, patient at the U. S. Army’s Holloran General Hospital, Staten Island, N. Y., is happy that the war is over and he can look forward to a job. The 24-year-old Pittsburgh parachute trooper | dropped from the sky lu France only to be put out of combat by a shell from a nearby German tank. The shrapnel sliced into his right arm. IIn wounds have healed but he urges everybody to buy Victory Bonds to help furnish medical attention to the boys who must receive treat ment for months. i. _' Seaman Eddie Flower*, 23, Penaacola, Fla., lay* buy Victory Bonds to speed the recovery of Navy wounded all over the world. Hi* leg was injured by a land mine in France many month* ago but it wa* slow in healing. He la thankful for the added care and comfort that War Bonds affordod him at the Navy’* St. Avon's Hospital, N. Y. Pvt. Carl L. Smith, 22, of Green Back, loin., is get lin£ about again afier receiving treatment at llie Army’* Holloran General Hospital, Staten Island, !N. Y. He was wounded in the right leg bv a sniper in Germany and urges people to buy Victory Bonds to help provide care for thousands of other men still ha hospital*. V. S. Treasury Department to try to prevent it, prices are go I big to go up and the value of the dollar is going to go down. : INFLATION . reason* I Chester (Hold - the - price - line) Bowles, head of the Officii of Price Administration, is still tUfting inflation for all he is worth, but the bankers have ev idently decided to place their bets on his attackers. Here are some of the more obvious reasons: (1) They have evidently in terpreted President Truman’s recent speech on wages and prices as indicating that he will not be nearly as adamant as Mr. Bowles has been in refusing to permit price in (2) They think that la bor’s insistence on higher with a good book... Atlantic Company—Brtttrui in Atlanta, Ckmlgttt, Ckatfonoag*. Worfolk. Orlando 23 THROUGH THE EYES OF A FRIEND r^9* vr.rca are o- pL. Anri the Telephone Company has l-1'. Lor.s.JertJ customers in that light—..s i;Ji ' ' -r. like the men and women who make up our own CC . r .is .riendly feeling, we are happy to say, is reflected in t.-.e progress that North Carolina and the Telephone C J-. t-.'.ny made together through the years. It is this same kind oi partnership that makes the future sparkle with premise. Like North Carolina, the Telephone Company is buck ling down to its postwar tasks. For the 3,712 men and women of the Telephone Company in this state, it means the greatest expansion program in our history in North Carolina. It's a full and complete program, de signed to meet the state’s industrial and agricultural needs of the future. It means the expenditure of millions of dollars in North Carolina. * Specifically, the program will provide telephones for all who have been waiting for them. This is one of our first jobs I A greatly expanded telephone program for our farmet friends is also in process. Expansion of long distance service is being scheduled too. It will include the installation of coaxial cables to handle more calls with speed and convenience for you, and provide more facilities for that exciting visual art—television. A mass of construction is to be done end a new service to motor vehicles is also in the offing. Here’s a program of achievement, to be worked out together by North Carolina and the Telephone Company as they have worked out their attainments of the past. By mutual understanding and cooperation, North Carolina and the Telephone Company will grow greater than ever. It’s a big program that shall become a reality as fast as materials become available—a reality to be translated into prosperity and payrolls for the people of North Carolina. For a business is like an individual. If he fares wsll, his community fsres well with him. And that is ths way it should be, among friends. B. H. WASSON, Carolinaa Manager SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY i I wages will, force price in creates as a necessary require ment for meeting those hig er wages. (3) They realize that the pentup buying power in our country is so terrific that it through the price line—that it will gadually force its way no matter what OPA does a bout prices, when the mer chandise everybody wants begins to become available, people will go dollarwild in their bids to get hold of that mer chandise. The financiers may have a lot of other food reasons for antic ipating inflation. Those are simply ones that a greenhorn can see. Rut in spite of the sharp trend toward inflation, and in spite of the “bets” of the brokers, I am still optimistic enough to think that, inflation could still be staved off if the people would recognize the danger and act to prevent it. SPREE . . . temptation To prevent inflation the public will have to go on a buying strike instead of a buying spree. We will have to look at a shiny new automobile in a deal er’s wndow and decide not to buy one. We will have to let our wat ering mouths continue to water over those washing machines, ra tios, vacuum clearens, refrigera tors and “gadgets” which are be E-inning to appear in the stores. We will have to hold tight to our pocketbooks and run from tem ptation when we feel the urge to clutch at some product which we have been longing for during the entire war. “But,” you may ask, “if the product is there in the store, some body is going to buy it, why shouldn’t I?” The only answer to that rea sonable question is: Yes, some body is going to buy it. But the less people who fight for it, the more its price is apt to keep from rising. The best way to prevent inflation is to let the few units of a scarce product which are available go to those who are un able to say “No.” If a large enough number of us could keep our patience under control for another year, could keep buying bonds and putting money in the bank until the scar cities are ended, the pressure on prices might be reduced enough to keep inflaion in check and to prevent peacetime black mrakets. BUY BONDS EAGLE PUB. CO. BUY BONDS Soil Conservation Fred C. Ferguson, R-l, Clo ver, in the Crowders Creek •Church community is realizing the benefits of following a sys tematic rotation. In one thirteen acre field Fred has been follow ing a two-year rotation of cotton followed by small grain and les pedeza for the past five years. The lespedeza seed is combined and the litter turned under be fore cotton. He planted Coker 100 Wilt Resistant variety, fer tilized with 500 lbs. of 4-10-6 per acre, side dressed with 100 lbs. nitrate of soda in the-spring. Fred said “I harvested 18 bales from that 18 acres and its the best cotton I’ve ever made in| that field”. Conservation prac-1 tices" paying off. J. Lee Ferguson located in the Crowders Creek community and a cooperation in the hover Ca tawba Soil Conservation District program sowed three acres of Austrian Winter Peas as part of tho soil improvement program started on his farm. He has a good stand and plans to turn trem under next spring to build up the soil. Winter legume crops [are also excellent protectors a I gainst erosion as well as supply i ing nitrogen and humus to the j land. .T. W. Morris, R-l, Stanley,! : recently ordered 2000 Loblolly j npine seedlings from the State j Nursery for planting on idle and 1 eroding land t his winter. An excellent way to put loat'ng land1 to work producing an income and 1 being an asset to the farm. | Terace lines we:e staked re cently to be built by the bounty terracing units bn the following fauns: J. W. Whitest.'..?, .J. u. Whitesides and Ilinkle Houser, RED, Crouse; and, Betty C. Ra gan farm, K-M, Gastonia, N. C. O. D. Cloninger, Stewart Dell inger and Edward Gollner all Stanley, |ave excellent stands of alfalfa seeded this past fall. These farmers plan to maintain Wieir alfalfa by following the srecommended practice of feeding this crop with a top dresisng of phosphate and potasr every spring. Tit is treatment is paying dividends in quantity and quali y of hay and keeping the plant# in vigorous growing condition. Edgar Abemethy, R-l, Stan ley, has a fine young stand of Loblolly pines to show for his efforts over the past few year*. Ed has been setting about 2000 ‘1000 pint's each year for the last four years and now has about 12 acres of idle land planted on the farm. These pines are be ginning to show up, some of which are 10-12 feet high, and each year adding to the value of the faj'm. ■ SUPREME ■ COLD WAVE Each kit contain] 3 fall ounces of Salon-type solution with Kmrltum, 60 Curlers, 60 end tissues, cotton appli cator, neutraliser and complete instructions. Tairas only 2 to 3 Hours at Homo ALLEN DRUG CO. USE EAGLE ADS SMlHsax nPHINK of it! Your min imum daily requirement* of A and D Vitamin* op of B Complex Vitamins, in one pleasant tablet Remember the name CNE-A-D1Y (brand) Vitamin Tablets. »» NERVINE Tk O TENSE Berras auko " yon Wkkeful, Onuikr, Restless? Dr. Miles Narrtee help* to lessen Nerroas Tendon. Get it at your druf ■tore. Read directions aflM only as directed. Alka-Seltzer HEN -. Htedlcht, Hue enUr Paln« or Simple Neuralgia, Dirt root oftor Mooh, Gu oa Stomach, or Momliur Attn" Interfere wltt »our work or epoll T°tu fan, try Alka-Seltoer. ATHLETES FOOT ITCH Slop It In 5 Minute* Successful treatment! must be more than larfau applications. Most remediei do not penetrate •ufficientlr. Require* a STRONG PENETRATING MOBILE liquid. Alcohol ii VERY MOBILE. W* suggest Te-ol. It contain# 90%. REACHES MORE GERMS FASTER. Feel it PENETRATE. Moat druggist! have the teat site. Small auppl? juat arrived at (dealer*! name). • allEn DRUG CO. IT’S HERE ■ NOW ON DISPLAY IT’S BIG - IT’S BEAUTIFUL FIRST IN FOUR YEARS YOU’RE INVITED TO SEE THE NEW NEW MODEL-NEW DESIGNS LOW COST IN OPERATING WESTING HOUSE HOME APPLIANCES Electric Refrigerators, Upright Home Freezers, Elec tric Ranges, Radios and Radio-Phonographs, Automat ic Home Laundries, Electric Sweepers and Vacuums, Electric Irons, Toasters and Mixers, Waffle Irons. MAKE YOUR PLANS NOW TO HAVE AMERICA’S MOST MODERN COMPLETE KITCHEN KESTER - GROOME FURN. CO. Cherry-ville - Shell* y