A The Star Want Adv. Rates On# Cent a word (thta type) each tneertlon Ac Minimum Charge 2c a word this size. 3c a word this size. Caah mint accompany all ord er* unlete you have an open ac count with ua All keyed adva are confldent laL No Information about earn# will he given. The only way to > reach thaaa !• by letter. As antes charge of 10c win be made far an ^fayed* adva. Wt fnarve the right to revtaa ,cr reject fmr «W. i Cleveland Star PBONK NO. 11 REMEMBER LAST Winter! Don’t wait. Order your coal npWfc iMt* & Yelton Coal Mid Oil 60. ffeonel*! - 832. tf-F-Wc Uachb new reftnlah and upholstei Shelby Upholsters, 30( wr ktpd. Shelby Upholsters, iM tod street, phone 004. tf aug 26< RK paired, painted, upholstered. Alst woodwork repaired In cars Leigh* Body Stop, South Shelby LOy Ulll Road. tf 18< FOR ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES and wiring materials and for re pairs on ranges and appliances phone 438. Gardner Electric Co. opposite Western Union. Promp service aft hours. tf 3< . MONUMENTS We have certain design* In mon ument* at ’special price*. B. R Dellinger. Shop near Hospital tf 1» IF YOU HAVE A LEAKING ROOT " 6r chimney which needs cleanlnj out see me. I can atop the leaki and fix the chimneys. Can alw paint and cover your roof. First class work guaranteed. J. W. Dei ton. telephone No. 11 tfj LOST7 SATURDAY AFTERNOON black leather punt, contalnlnj about $36.00. Only ldentlficatloi “A. D. Polger, National Commit tee for North Carolina.” Reward Dr. W. T. Origg, Lawndale, N. C It CAROLINA MARBLE AND ORAN tte Works, Charlotte, N. C. offer you mow to monuments. See uc Write or oaQ T. S. Beam, Gas terria, R-t, N. O. Phone 3331. tf 15 POR PROMPT SER tim call Lutz-Yel ton Coal Co. Phones 881-832. tf-F-W< SWiOrSVILLE POTATO HOUS1 wfll open Monday, October 35, fo storage. See Broad* McSwaln o Tor B. Webb. 3t 81 509 RATTAN bottom chairs He each, a * & Purnlture Co. tt 23 BIRD'S ROOFINGS EN dare. Call Z. J. Thompson Lum bee Co, phone 107, N. Washington •treat tf 34 THOUSANDS L O S E THEU Eves, militant are severely injur ed and maimed every year Iron eeatdante. You may be the ner victim. Buy accident insurant* nose—tomorrow may be too late J. ft. Willard, Finance Bldg Shelby, N. C. tf mon 9< YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY IN surlng your car with the Fara Bureau Mutual. Selected risks lower rates. Norman Harris, Hote Sendee Station, agent. St 21c FOR 8ALE OR RENT: TURNER barber shop, next to bus station Three chairs and other equip ment. Reason for change on ac count of health. See R. B. Turner 3t 23r FREE BEAtnTFOir BRONZF Roosevelt emblem with ten gal lons, gasoline. Hotel Service Sta tion. 3t 26c MR. PARMER BE BURE ANE see O. E. Ford Co. when in the market for tractors and tractoi equipment New and used trac ton. There la none equal to Mr CScemtcfc-Deering. Ask anybodv 3t 3* LOST: SATURDAY ON COUR7 square, pocketbook containing check far $69.21, about $18 catJi drivwa license ana other identi ficaUou. Reward. See T. B. Ware Shelby route 2. „ 2t 26| LAWNDALE POTATO HOUSE will open Oct. 37th. Storage price stockholder* 7c, other* 10c. Crate* may be gotten at, house. 3t-21p FOR RENT STORE ROOM, filling station and living rooms, located on Highway 20 and Lattimore - Boiling Springs cross roads, one of best locations we have. Roy ster Oil Co. 2t-23c LUTZ - Y EL TO N Coal and O i 1 Co. has a complete line of coals for every purpose. Phones 831 -832. tf-F-Wc THE SHELBY POTATO HOUSE will be ready to receive potatoes from the 36th October through the >0th. 3t 31p BUILDING LOTS ON PAVED street* with water, electric lights, sewerage, in desirable neighbor hood. Cut to suit your require ment and at prices extremely reaeonsble. O. B. Young. tf 18c BOW YOUR OATS WITH ONE OF the famous Coles 8 plow drills. Prevents freezing out. O. E. Ford Oo. has a good supply of them. 3t 36c MAIL SUBSCRIBERS T 0 The Cleveland Star may renew for a limited time and secure Shelby Daily Star. Renew now at old rate and save, but you must renew at the office or by mail direct. 3t-23j» WILL PAY CASH POE HOGS, any size. F. & Dedmon. fit 18c WILL PAY CASH FOR CATTLE, any kind. T. 8. Dedmon. Magness and Co. Market. fit 19c MR. FARMER IF YOU ARE looking for the best grain drill In the larger sizes see O. E. Ford Co. for tye McCormlck-Deering. at 36c LUTZ .YELTON Coal and Oil Co. in ; vites you to visit their Coal Yard, lo cated on S. Morgan St. tf-F-Wc FALLSTON POTATO HOUSE will be open October 36 through October 31st. Cletua Owens, Mgr. , 7t 31c 1 SPECIAL WHILE THEY LAST: 1 Unfinished breakfast room chairs 69c each. C. & S. Furniture Co. 3t 33c : FOR LIME, CEMENT, BRICK, piaster, mortar mix and other ' building material call O. E. Ford Co. at 26c • 12c A WEEK DELIVERS . Shelby Daily Star at your door each afternoon if you , live in Shelby or suburbs, Kings Mountain, Grover & Lawndale. Carrier service i will be established else ; where if there is a suffic ient number wanting it. ; _ 3t-23p ■ OLD GOLD I PAYING CASH FOR • scrap gold. Bring us what you have lor estimate. T. W. Ham > rick Co, Jewelers. 6t 6c > WANTED: A GOOD STORE~SAFE, average stee. Phone 410. 2t, 23p ! WE PAY CASH FOR COW HIDES , Magness Market. 6t 3lc 1 FOR ASPHALT 8HINOLES,~ROLL rooting and galvanized roofing O. E. FORD CO will be glad to supply your wants. 2t 26c M & C. BEAUTY SHOPPE. ROOM 14. old Bank building, phone 9146 Permanent $1.75 to $7.50. Work guaranteed. 5t 23p BATTERIES RECHARGED, RE bullt, bought, sold, exchanged Bargains In used batteries. Hotel Service Station. 4t 21c ITS HERE NOW—THE GATES silent safety airflow tire. The ut most in tire achievement. Just slightly higher than regular first line tires. Hotel Service Station, i 5t 21c| FIREBRICK. FIRECLAY,! j flue lining. Z. J. Thompson Lum-1 j ber Co, phone 107. tf 17c! WANTED FRESH MILK COW,! good condition. Write Post Office j Box 351. 2t 26c WANTED; TWO ROOMS To! rent, unfurnished. Phone b. F.j King at City Hal! ?t 3«p : PLENTY OF SEED OATO AND I :] the best, fertiliser can be had by j calling O. E. Ford Co. 2t 26r ;1 FOR SALE: GOOD MOLASSES i at the inll! all next week. 50c gal-1 Ion, you furnish vessel, near Mi Sinai church. D. Reuben McSwain. it 26)) 1 CROONER’S MARRIAGE BACKFIRES Claiming ha ntvar remembered hla wadding which followed a night of drinking laat Juno, Prank Tannflla, orehaatra oroonar from Mont* flomary, Ala., patltlonod tho Now York auprema court to annul hla marriage to Alleo Poy. hatehcck girl In a night club. They ora ahown together at a happier moment. A publiahed report that Tennllle wanted to marry Dixie Dunbar, tho movie daneer from Atlanta, Oa., wae denied by hla attorney. (Aaaoclated Preee Photo) May Feed Quail, Check Erosion On Carolina Farms Every farmer knows a bobwhit* quail when he aeee one, but few are thoroughly familiar with its food and breeding habits, its ene mies and the diseases that thin out its numbers. Oeorge B. Becker, biologist oMhe Soil Conservation Service, says that 86 percent of the food of the quail consists of waste grains and plant food. In providing quail and other de sirable forms of wildlife with food and cover by the planting of shrubs, legumes and grasses In gullied areas, galled spots and odd comers, the farmer in cooperation with the SoU Conservation Service and State College Extension Serv ice not only helps to replenish the supply of wildlife but controls ero sion on his farm. Cowpeas, soybeans, waste grains left after harvest, sorghums, millet, wild plum, mulberry, dewberry, ragweed lespedesa, beggarweed, blueberries, huckleberries, dog wood, wild cherry and weeds are among the food producing plants attractive to the bobwhite quail. Fourteen percent of the food of the bobwhite quail consists of ani mal life, including grasshoppers, weevils, locusts, chinchbugs. cater pillars, squash bugs, cucumber bee tles and wlreworms, said Becker. The bobwhite mates usually in May and lays from 6 to 20 eggs, which are hatched in 23 to 24 days. Soon after hatching the young are able to take care of themselves in their new environ ment, and if everything goes well with the first brood the female uually docs not lay another set of eggs. Among the agencies tending to decrease the bobwhite, Becker pointed out, are its predatory ene mies, disease, and weather condi tions. Some of the prominent enemies of the quail are stray cats and dogs. Cooper’s hawk, sharp-shinned hawk, skunk, o’possum, cotton rats, snakes, ticks, redbugs and red ants. Quail are very susceptible to poultry diseases and cannot be propagated successfully near chi ckens. Quail disease coccidiosis. and blackhead are among the dis eases of the bobwhite. Build Final Link In Highway No. 18 MORG ANTON, Oct. 36. — Con tracts totalling $90,000 have been let by the State highway and pub lic works commission for the con struction of the final link of High way No. 18 to Morganton's town limits, avoiding the difficulty that arose over right-of-way In the cor porate area, it was learned yester day. Instead of coining into the town as originally planned, the new route will be brought into intersec tion with the present highway at the corporate limits. Blythe Brothers, Charlotte con tractors, received the contract for grading and surfacing oa a low bid of $30,500. Chief item of cost, how ever, will be construction of a bridge over the Catawba river, and contract for this structure was swarded Cobh and Homewood, Chapel Hill firm on a bid of $80, 500. Jid tu Adams and Thgxnaa Jef ferson both died July «. ime. the fiftieth anniversary of the Decla ration of Independence. .X 8-Pound Potato Found By Hayes Pot*to pudding* an In store for Rive* Haye* and all hi* family. Mr. Haye* thl* week-end wa* exhibiting an eight pound potato which wa* taken from hi* “patch” of about a quarter acre. He will harvest the re*t of the potatoe* next week. "One of the children found It by ac cident. We wen Ju*t grabbling a few of the little one* for dinner.” The Haye* live at Beam* Mill. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By BOBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD —Touring the Aim factories: Sitting down between scenes, often a problem for actresses who must be careful not to wrinkle their gowns, becomes a luxury for the actors too on the “Lloyds of Lon don" set. The costume of a gentleman of the Napoleonic era in England, for instance, puts Tyrone Power jr. in a very tight place Indeed. Made to specifications for him and for the style, the outfit has had both Power and the tailor perplexed as to how the well-dressed blade of that day ever got dressed at all. Once in side those trousers, however, the wearer does not dare sit down. For tunately for the costume, Power's character in the film is an ener getic lad who rarely sits. Offstage, when the actor has to rest, they t rundle in one of the reclining I racks the actresses use for that purpose. Shirley’s False Tooth Shirley and Mrs. Temple have just returned from lunch and when Director William Seiter, having lin ed up his shot for Shirley’s new picture, “Stowaway." calls for her presence Mrs. Temple has work to do. Disillusioning though It, may be, Shirley is like other little girls in losing a tooth occasionally. Mrs. Temple’s job at hand is to delve into her purse, extract a white tooth arranged on wire* and attach the fixture to the chasm in Shir ley's pearly front row. As she proceeds with practiced dental calm, suddenly two dogs yip and bark and leap, and Mrs. Tem ple, startled, drops Shirley's "bridge work." Mrs. Temple utters a stifled scream, hastily retrieves the tooth, and the operation is completed amid merriment. "1 thought for a minute,” she1 says, "the dog had eaten it.” What, Na Sun? "San Quentin” prison—or enough of its walls to create a forbidding scene under a gloomy California sky —has been reared on the Warner back lot. Scenes here will be match ed with those, taken in the actual prison, which aroused Governor Merriam's indignation. Here are gathered a grim assort ment of movie "prisoners." batter ed ears and broken ncwes and gen erally tough appearance lending credence to the whispers that among them are at least a few al umni of the real institution. All concerned ke*p looking a* the gTay sky to see if the sun is peeping through at last. Concern about sun in California, and with all those sun-area about? Director Lloyd Bacon explains "The lights are all right for the close-ups. but lor long shots, we've got to have sun—to match the lights." And the -on doesn't shine that I Cay, or the next. Dr. David Lyle Diet At Rock Hill Home Dr. David Lyle, prominent physi cian of Rock Hill, 8. C„ and bro ther-in-law of Joe E. Nash of this place, died in a Rock Hill hospital last night after a brief illness fol lowing a heart attack yesterday. He was 57 years of age. Mr. Nash is spending today in Rock Hill and he and Mrs. Nash will attend the funeral to be con ducted at Edgemoor, former home of the deceased, tomorrow morning. Dr. Lyle was a former member of the South Carolina legislature and in the recent State primary was elected by an overwhelming vote to serve his county in the Senate. He had also served as mayor of Rock Hill. He had practiced medicine in Rock Hill for 2S years and was ac tive in the civic afTalrs of the city. Survivors include his widow, two sons, David and Nash, two daugh ters, Jean and Henrietta, all of Rock HilL Grows A Pumpkin That Weighs 71 Lbs. A 71 pound pumpkin «u brought to the Star office Saturday by J. Peter Hoyle who lives out on R5 Shelby. It measures 51 inches In | circumference and is one of a, hundred huge pumpkins he grew this year in his choicest pumpkin : patch. : PROMINENT MINISTER TO COME TO COUNTY; KINGS MOUNTAIN, Oct. 36. — Rev. R. O. McLeea, D.D., of Chat* ham, Va, one of the outstanding evangelists of the Southern Presby terian church will be the visiting preacher, for a week of special ser vices at the First Presbyterian church, beginning November 1st. j Dr. McLees is deeply spiritual. His preaching is couched in splen did and simple English. People flock to hear him and all fcre sorry [when a meeting closes, A vice-president has succeeded a president six times: st the death of Harrison in 1841; Taylor, 1850; Lincoln, 1865; Garfield. 1881; Mc Kinley 1901; and Harding. 1931. The first time on record sion was charged to v. , ^ game was* on July 20. 145, game was between Brooki-n New York, and over i.y*) P»ld 50 cents to watch the con It’s Financed Sr Our Monthly Payments Will Be Less Than The Rent We Are Now Paying SAVINGS and Loan permit* you hom« owner ship without expenses arrester than you now shoulder! Investigate our convenient plan. Series Now Open CLEVELAND BUILDING A LOAN ASSOCIATION J. L. SUTTLE, Secretary OFFICES IN UNION TRUST COMPANY | beautiful WALLPAPER The better wallpaper you buy. the more you *ava! Smart new pattern* all kind* lor every room. Don't delay! Buy one room lot of wallpaper at the regular price. You get the second room —eame Quality and same Quantity For Only 98c .st Valuer up to $10.00 Don't Delay—Act Now! Visit Kterrhi* templru p4tat . Wallpaper Department ‘ h«fln to roftstdrr p.lntln, ^ J •ratio* Wo ran «ho» v* *»** an the rt«ht paint for g,, * Shingle Stain Pro tec tj end preeri~.-«« glee All colon 2 I ftnetritsi I 1 CA deeply Into «** **v3 wood. Gtl Gloss Paint Lovely colors * m ee Washable. No He J Q X brush mark*. “ 9 “ Lest* year* gah a* STERCHI TIRES Bonded 18 Months Buy these depend able tires. Know that you are pro tected by a bond Use our easy pay ment Plan. OhIt $1.00 Ftr Wf»k MEN’S WORK SHIRTS Covert Work Shirt*. Full eut well made. These come in blue, grey and tan. Sixes 14$ to 17. A bargain. 48c “RED CAMEL” WORK SHIRTS Full cut chambray and Covert work shirts. Guaranteed to give Real service. Sizes up to 20 MEN’S SANFORIZED OVERALL PANTS Full cut pants, made of heavy blue denims. Riveted pockets, sanforiz ed shrunk. Will not shrink. In all sizes. i 97c BOYS’ BLOODHOUND OVERALLS Extra Heavy Quality. All size*._ 49c MEN’S WORK SHOES They’re solid leather throughout with good tough Panco or Leather soles. The biggest work shoe in town. $1-94 MEN’S BLOODHOUND OVERALLS Made of heavy 2.20 denims. 2- bib pickets. Large and roomy. Milt shrunk. In all sizes. “RED CAMEL” 8-OUNCE OVERALLS Sanforised, shrunk, fan emt. Well itMi Extra sites. Same price 98c “RED CAMEL” JACKETS StirftriKd, shrunk. To mstrh Overs Us. AU sices. 98c BLANKET LINED JACKETS Went lined. FuU cut. Made i« stand hard wear. AU sices. $1.39 MEN’S WORK SOCKS Oood quality. Reinforced at toes —In browns and greys. 9c MEN’S WHIPCORD JACKETS Well made by Sweet-Orr. Neat fit* ting. Guaranteed to Rive aple™'* service. $4.95 Whipcord Riding Pant* To match jacket*. Reinforced it seat and knees. $3.95 WHIPCORD SLACKS To match jackets. Make s eoofl looking uniform. $3.95 High Top Leather Boot* One of our top notch va'u . Strongly made. Heavy uppers »no soles. BELK-STEVENS CO. -SHELBY’S HOME OF BETTER VALUES -—