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Shelby Daily Star
PHONE NO. 11
OLD FURNITURE MADE NEW.
We repair, refinish and upholster
any kind. Shelby Upholsters, 205
Week Ford street, phone 694.
tf aug 26c
Carolina marble and oran
lte Works, Charlotte, N. C. offers
you more In monuments. Bee us.
Write or call F. B. Beam, Gas
tonia, R-l, N. C. Phone 3321.
tf 15c
MONUMENTS
We have certain designs In mon
uments, at special prices. B. R.
Dellinger, Shop near Hospital.
tf 19c
IF YOU HAVE A LEAKING ROOF
or chimney which needs cleaning
out see me. I can stop the leaks
and fix the chimneys. Can also
paint and cover your roof. First
class work guaranteed. J. W. Den
ton, telephone Mo. 11. tfp
WRECKED AUTOMOBILES Re
paired, painted, upholstered. Also
woodwork repaired In cars.
Leigh's Body Shop, South Shelby.
Lily Mill Road. tf 18c
LARGE ASSORTMENT ALL FALL
styles In ladles dress materials on
sale Wednesday. Cleveland Cloth
MiU. tf 2c
REMEMBER L AST
winter! Don’t wait.
Order your coal
now. Lutz & Yelton
Coal and Oil Co.
Phone 831 - 832.
tf-F-Wc
FOR SALE — PINE SLABS FROM
tl to $5 per load. R. F. Ellis &
Sons Transfer. Phone 671W.
4t 18p
WE PAY CASH FOR
peas. Morgan and
Co. tfN2c
MATTRESSES RENOVATED. ALSO
make new ones. Work guaran
teed. Cleveland Mattress Shop,
413 South Morgan street. Phone
W2-W. 4t 18c
w rv nvAjiuAJDijr., oivnci nuum
formerly occupied by Quinn Drug
Btore, next to Masonic Temple.
Steam heat, attractive show win
dows. Lee B. Weathers. 2t 20p
your last chance to buy~a
real bargain in a brand new five
room residence on Lineberger.
Price will be advanced if not sold
In few days. Substantially built
with full plumbing and electric
lights. Oarage. Paving tax paid.
Bargain for quick sole. Lee B.
Weathers. 2t 20p
Get YOUR WINTER
supply of oils, greas
es and Anti-Freeze
for your car at any
Amoco Service Sta
tion or Arey Motor
Co. 5t-23c
FOR SALE: WARDROBE, ABOUT
six feet high, four feet wide. Price,
$10.00. See Corbett Hamrick. An
tique Shop. 4t 19p
FIRE-BRICK. FIRE CLAY. |
iiue lining. Z. J. Thompson Lum
ber Co, phone 107. tf 17c
LACIES, UP TO $10 PAID WEEkT
ly making wood fiber flowers.
Steady work. Send 15c for sam
ple flower, instructions and suf
ficient material to start. L. Jones,
Dept. Olney, 111. It 23pd
BE SAFE — NOT
sorry. Trade where
you see the Large
Amoco Signs. 5t23c
TWO OR THREE ROOMS FOR
rent. Furnished or unfurnished
Mrs Bridges, 205 South DeKalb
otreei. lip
Morgan & Co. 20t 6c
FOR RENT NICE FOUR-ROOM
apartment in duplex home. D.
Huss Cline. 5t 16c
FOR SALE: 5 ROOM HOUSE ON
Hillcrest. Special bargain at $1,
300. Easy terms. J. B. Nolan Co.
ltc
WE ARE SHIPPING
another car of peas
this week, and pay
in gthe highest mar
ket price. We also
buy black walnuts
and hickory nuts. D.
A. Beam Co. 3t-19c
CASH PAID FOR ~TURKEYS,
ducks and geese by Magness
Meat Market, Shelby. 3t 23c
FOR RENT: DEC. 1ST, FIVE
room dwelling In good condition,
with one car garage. Coal and
wood house. Location: West Mar
lon street, convenient to both
Graham and high school. See C.
R. Webb, office next to Western
Union, or telephone 610.
3t f-m-w-20c
THE BEST DRAIN TILE
and Terra Cotta Pipe, see Z. J.
Thompson Lumper Co., phone
107. tf 19c
JUST RECEIVED —
Car load of Anti
Freeze for your car.
Prices right. Arey
Motor Co. 5t-23c
FARMS FOR SALE By J. B.
Nolan Co.: 60 acres, 4 miles west
of Shelby on No. 20 highway.
Price $60 per acre; 88 acres near
Patterson, seven room home, other
Improvements, price $3,750; 30
acres, Otis Frady farm, 6 miles
from Shelby, price $1,750; 75 acres,
Lincoln county, on South Fork
river, 10 room home, plenty other
buildings; 87 acres in No. 1 town
ship, 3 houses and good barn.
The above farms are all special
values. We have other good farms
for sale. J. B. Nolan Co., Room 22,
| Royster Building. 2t m-w 23c
GOOD GREY! SINGLE ~BLAN
kets. All yon want at 49c each. No
more to pay. The Stamey Com
pany, Fallston-Polkville. m-w 16c.
1 FOR SALE 125 ACRE FARM NEAR
j Kings Mountain batleground, six
room house, fair condition, would
consider Shelby property In ex
change. Address Box 611, Shel
by. 2t 23p
56 ACRES, 1 HORSE FARM OPEN
$300. 270 acres level land, good
top soil road, price $2700. 60
acres good house $700. 86 acres
• $400. J. C. Welborn, York, s. C.
It 23pd
FOR RENT: THREE ROOM FUR-'
nlshed apartment. Conveniently
arranged. 212 McBrayer Street.
2t. 23c j
FOR SALE: POLAND CHINA1
pigs and shoots. T. P. Humphries.
4 miles west of Shelby, highway
3t 23p
WANTED—BOARDERS, REASON
able rate.' home cooked meals.
330 E. Warren St. 2t 23p
WANTED: SEVERAL,-BOARDERS"
Close in. nice location. Private
home. Phone 285-J. itp
FIREWORKS! GET FIREWORKS:
lor Thanksgiving, Salutes $2.50
per case. Chinese firecrackers, all
kinds, lc and 5c pkg. Roman can
dles, sky rockets, spit devils, tor
pedoes, bombs, etc. The be t cap
pistol ever shown in Cleveland
county. At Hamrick's Candy Co.,
3 1-2 miles west of Shelby. U. 3.
highway No. 74. 3t 23c
FOR RENT: TWO~ ROOM Un"
fumished apartment. Desirable
location. Prefer couple without
children. Phone 285-J. Itp
IF IT’S ANTI-Freeze
you want for your
car, we have it. Pric
es lowest. Try it and
you will see a differ
ence. Amoco Ser
vice Stations. Arey
Motor Co. 5t-23c
FOR RENT—TWO ROOMS FOR
light housekeeping. Private front
and back entrance. J. Carver
Wood. 311 North Washington St.
ltc
WILL PAY HIGH
est cash prices for
furs, mink, raccoon,
o’possum, muskrat,
skunk, brown weas
; el, house cat, fursiof
| all kind. D. A. Beam
i Co. 5t-23c
Pass In Review
Notes And News From Here And There About
• Cleveland County People You Know
IKK JOHN MASON 01 BeSfte
mer City may land a Job In the
movies because he happens to look
so much like Abraham Lincoln.
Plans are being made to take the
squire to New York tor final testa
for a role as the great commoner”
In the picture “Shipwreck." Rep
resentatives of a movie company
have interviewed him and gave
preliminary tests.
ANY MENTION of Lincoln in up
per Cleveland and Rutherford coun
ties always brings up the story that
Lincoln was bom in the eastern part
of Rutherford, that he was not the
son of Joseph Lincoln at all, but of
a mountaineer named Martin. They
will add that several families of the
Martins in that community have
the same rugged appearance for
which Mr. Lincoln is so noted.
DR. C. C., “Skinny” Pearson, a
Wake Forest professor and for 20
years or more head of the history
department there, tells his stud
ents how “Uncle Sam" got his looks.
Uncle Sam originally was drawn
long-legged, he said, because Amer
ican people grew long-legged going
west on foot; he was drawn slen
der because “the average American
is constantly worried and nervous.”
“The whiskers,” he added, “are
typical of the person who is in such
a hurry that he does not have time
to shave."
DR. J. W. EZELL, negro resident
of the city is an expert at wood
carving and artcraft. He has Just
sent a sorority design to his daugh
ter who is a student at Shaw uni
versity in Raleigh. The design Is
made from wood, silk ribbon and
fine leather. It is shaped like a
rosebud and have the Greek-letter
emblem of the sorority on it. He has
studied artcraft abroad and can
do oriental as well as European
and American styles.
Loyalists Say
Craft Appear
(Continued from page one.)
the capital, which began at 6 a. m„
was chiefly of a propaganda na
ture, the fascist pilots dropping
bundles of leaflets in addition to a
few bombs.
The planes circled for more than
half an hour over the eastern "neu
tral'’ zone and passed over the
United States embassy so closely
many refugees inside fled to the
cellars.
Besides the bomb which fell In
the war ministry courtyard, anoth
er landed so near the Urquijo bank,
causing some damage.
A third small bomb was reported
to have fallen in the “neutral" zone
causing a flurry among refugees
there.
The bombardment Interrupted
the wholesale evacuation of wom
en, children and old men to eastern
sections of Spain. Between 300 and
450,000 persons, under defense
plans, are to be evacuated.
News of the naval attack coincid
ed with a government declaration
at Barcelona that the loyal war
fleet was being reorganized and
that new officers were being trained
to fight an "illegal blockade.”
Barcelona sources said fascist
warships were patrolling the coast
from Cape Creus. easternmost main
land point, to Barcelona, and near
Alicante, Cartagena and Ceuta,
Morocco.
GERMANY REPORTED TO
PLAN RUSSIAN BREAK
v»«vumu uiuu xrpvtus circulated m
London diplomatic circles today
that Germany might be consider
ing breaking eft relations with Mos
cow so the Nazis could assume a
free hand in Spain.
The reports followed Hard on the
heels of a 45-minute conference be
tween Joachln von Ribbentrop. Ger
man ambassador to Great Britain,
and Prime Minister Stanley Bald
win on an undisclosed subject.
Adding indirectly to the Russo
German tension over intervention
in the Spanish civil war was sen
tencing to death of a German en
gineer by a Russian tribunal for
anti-communist sabotage.
Authoritative Berlin newspapers
warned that Germanys stands be
hind every German abroad. The :
Nazi ambassador to Russia appeal- :
ed for postponement of the execu
tion until he could lodge a formal :
protest.
While the British cabinet await
ed with concern a report from a
British destroyer off Cartagena that
the Spanish cruiser Cervantes was
damaged by mysterious explosions
yesterday. 1
A communique of the Madrid
government asserted submarines of 1
a "foreign fleet" attacked govern- 1
ment warships at the entrance to
Cartagena harbor.
NEGRO COMMUNIST
GETS NEW TRIAL
WASHINGTON, Nov 3J.—yp* t
Angelo Herndon, Cincinnati negro
communist organizer, was granted i
a supreme court review today in his i
effort to escape an 18 to 30 year i
chain gang sentence Imposed by i
Georgia ourU under a statute #n- i
acted in Reconstruction daya to pro- i
hiWt insurrection against the state.! i
ALTON KIRKPATRICK and P.
P. Grigg can Hike a joke. Recently,
Alton was In a local barbership
waiting lor some work. He was sit
ting in an empty chair when Mr.
Grigg walked in for a chave. Kirk
hopped up, got behind the chair
and rather professionally asked
Mr. Grigg to have a seat. Thinking
to carry the Joke as far as Kirk
patrick, Mr. Grigg seated himself
and before he knew what was hap
pening his face lathered with a
towel on it and his friend strop
ping the razor. With fear and trem
bling he found himself being shav
ed. Only a few touches by a real
barber were needed to complete j
the job. When it was over they botn |
laughed.
THE TREASURER of a local
PTA organization probably felt on
tJie spot a few days ago. During
the meeting a speech on rigid hon
esty was made and later the money
department was petitioned for funds
to buy library books, an electric
stove, and a number of other ac
cessories. Then came the treasur
er’s report, the first of the current
year. There was the sum of four
cents.
IN A RATHER SERIOUS auto
accident near Lattlmore recently
Everett Blanton, well known farm
er, and Bird Wray, colored man,
were thrown from an embankment
into a small stream below. They
were on their way to a fox hunt. A
dog in the back seat was so fright
ened by the unusual occurrence he
scrambled out of the overturned
car and failed to return home for
several days. The men escaped ser
ious injury, but the negro with Mr.
Blanton pled with neighbors who
were taking him home, "To hurry-,
I’se bleeding to death." It wasn't
blood at all, but he had been duck
ed in the hole of water, and in the
dark he only felt the trickling in his
clothes.
Britain Demands
Apology Of Japs
• continued from paste one.)
in the face by Japanese police and
pi ai nclothesmen.)
The British government, Eden
told the House of Commons, has
demanded punishment or the of
fenders and payment of compensa
tion to the victims.
If Japan does not comply, Eden
said, the British commander in
chief in far eastern waters will
snub Japanese officialdom by can
celling a courtesy call scheduled
for Yokohama Nov. 30.
Informed by the British Ambas
sador at Tokyo of England's in
tentions, Eden said, the Japanese
government “sent an interim re
ply expressing regret such an un
pleasant Incident should have oc
curred." and asked time or further
Investigation.
Pending receipts of “a satisfac
tory reply,” the foreign secretary
said, “Britain would not consider
the incident closed."
Eastern Methodists
Still In Session
NEW BERN, Nov. 23.-(7P)-A mass
of unfinished business today was
txpected to push the final session
)f the 100th annual North Caro
lina conference of the Methodist
Episcopal church, South, over into
the afternoon.
Among matters still to be acted
upon was a proposed system of bene
fits for superannuates, discussion
of which occupied much of the Sat
urday afternoon session. Numerous
other matters also remained on the
program for disposal.
Reading of conference appoint
nents was not expected to begin
mtil afternoon.
Sunday was devoted to worship,
ordination of deacons and elders and
the annual conference sermon of
Bishop Paul V. Kem.
LOST ON DEER HUNT.
SPENDS NIGHT IN OPEN |
HENDERSONVILLE. Nov. 23.—(/P)
-R. W. Shaw, of Greenvile, Tenn.,1
o=t in Pisgah National forest while
railing a wounded deed, made his 1
say to a ranger’s cabin after a
light in the open and reported him
self suffering from “slight” hunger 1
iains after a 30-mile walk without
ood.
i
i
At Tbe Theatres
“The President’s Mystery,” a story
oncelved by Franklin D. Roosevelt ,
ind written by half a dozen famous ]
luthors, is the feature attraction ,
it the Carolina today. Paramount’s ]
tew reel featuring Duke-Carolina
ootball game and a Mickey Mouse
■artoon are added attractions on ]
he same program. ,
"The All-American Chump,” ]
itamng Stuart Erwin. Robert i
Armstrong. Betty Furness and Ed- i
nund Gwenn, ls the main show at t
he Webb today. Comedy and news
eels are supplementary to the pro
rrani. “Tlie All-American Chump’ i
s a light laughable comedy and is .
cu>mmeiidea tor tauUly entertain- j ■
Forest City Woman
Gets 150-lb. Deer
FOREST CITY, Nov. 23.—(/F)
—A big. government-supervised
deer hunt is underway in the
PLsgah National forest, but Mrs.
Lucy Upton says she is doing
right well at home, thank you,
and without spending any pow
der and lead.
Out picking peas near her
home, Mrs. Upton said she saw
a deer, walked over and caught
it barc-handed. It weighed 150
pounds.
Boar Hunters Are
Again Wandering
In Tennessee Hills
TELLICO PLAINS, Tenn., Nov. 23
—W—Enthusiasm flared high thif
morning as 30 fresh hunters took
the frost-silvered trails of the Un
aka mountains in search of wild
Prussian boars.
Today was the first time out for
these sportsmen, since the firs!
gToup participating in this event
sponsored by the Federal Forest
service in Cherokee National For
est completed its three-day period
Saturday.
Ben Ellis, a veteran of the trail,
voiced the feeling of the guides
and the hopes of the hunters when
he said:
“We'll get 'em this time. So far
we’ve Just been unlucky.”
The fame of 20 year old Edith
Haas. sharp-shooting mountain
girl, aparently had traveled far,
She is in great demand as a guide,
but declined to go out unless re
quested by a woman hunter. There
are no feminine nimrods in the
group today.
Tennessee Party
Are Hunting Deer
KNOXVir.T.F Tdtin Nov 23—fk»l
- Gordon Browning:, who will be
come Governor of Tennessee in
January, today began a three day
hunt with a party of friends in the
Pisgah National Forest in North
Carolina.
He Is accompanied by J. Gordon
Powers, Knoxville newspaper col
umnist; Judge Thurman Ailor, Col.
Claude Reeder, Houston Brown,
Ross Williams, and Jimmy Plum
mer, of Knoxville; Lewis Pope, of
Nashville, and A. C. AcuiT, Nash
ville newspaper man. The party
will return to Knoxville in time to
attend the Kentucky-Tennessee
football game here Thursday.
Robersonville Men
Confess Slaying
GREENVILLE, Nov. 23.—(/P)— Po
lice Captain Bowen Dorsey said to
iay twv> Robersonville white men
ivere arrested here last night for
he hammer-slaying of Thomas Hol
day and that one had confessed
snd implicated the other.
Dorsey said the men, Willis Bui
ock and A. W. Watson, wore blood
splotched shoes and clothes when
hey were arrested less than 12
hours after Holiday, 24-year-old
'tiling station operator, was found
lying In his station at Roberson
rtlle.
Dorsey said Watson confessed and
implicated Bullock. Bullock denied
connection with the killing. Watson
vent to Robersonville as a truck
iriver with a crew recently, the po
ice captain said.
southerners Study
Tenant’s Problems
HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Nov. 23.—
/Ph-'The Arkansas Farm Tenancy
'ommtssion—composed of state of
'lclals. newspapermen, bankers, busi
ness men, educators and farmers—
■enewed today Its efforts to find a
solution of the south’s tenancy
nroblem.
The state’s retiring governor, J.
if. Futrell. and incoming execu
tive, Carl E. Bailey, came to the
session to express their views. Chair
nan C. E. Palmer presided.
Same Room Is Open
In Legion Building
A game room for the use of
>oys and girls organizations of the
Salvation Army has been estab
tshed in the basement room of the
>*ion building.
Apparatus and games have been
lonated by M. E. Olsby, R. U. Wood*
ind Zeno Wall, Jr.
BEAD-ON COLLISION
KILLS. HURTS ONE
WILSON, Nov. 23.—(A*)—A head
>n collision of two cars yesterday
tilled Luclen Gilbert, 35. of Mac
ilesfleld. and sent Eddie Tyndall of
ifacclesfleld to a hospital with ln
uries expected to prove fatal.
H. B. Stevens of Benson and
drs. Pauline Hardy of Wilson, oc
:upants of the other car, were serl
tusly hurt state Patrolman F B.
leagle said Tyndall would be
harged with manslaughter if he
■ftcovers Tyndall suffered a frac
ured larynx
In two years after completion of
he Santa Clara valley water con
ervation project in California, the
tater level was raised to a:i aver-1
ige of 21 feet over 120.000 acres. 1
T oday’s
Markets
New York cotton at 2:30 today:
Jan. 11.65, Mar. 11.65, May 11.61,
July 11.54, Oct. 11.22, Dec. 11.71. Ii
- i
STOCKS DOWN
NEW YORK, Nov. 23.—</P)-St0Ck
market prloes pointed downward in
today’s early dealings.
At an active opening losers of
fractions to 2 or more points In
eluded Chrysler, General Motors, U. '
S. Steel, Bethlehem. Western Un- i
ion, International Nickel, Anaconda,
American Water Works, Loews and
Consolidated Edison. '
COTTON STEADY »
NEW YORK. Nov. 23.—</P)—Cot- 1
ton futures opened steady. 3 lower *
to l higher with liquidation for '
the first December notice day to
morrow taken by the trade.
WHEAT UT
CHICAGO, Nov. 23.—(A5)—Wheat !
prices averaged a little higher early j
today, Influenced by a sharp reduc- ,
tion In stocks of stocks of wheat '
afloat for European countries.
CHICAGO HOGS ]
CHICAGO, Nov. 23.—C/P)—(U. S. ]
Dept. Agr.)—Hogs 36,000. including 1
10,000 direct; fairly active, fully s
steady with Friday’s average; top <
9.80. .
Summary Of \
The Market ;
Famished by E. A. Pierce A Co.
i
t
London stock market irregular, l
| trans-Atlanties easier. i
Magazine steel says operations
advanced 1-2 point to 74 1-2 dur- f
ing the past week, the 18th con
secutive week that rate has held
between 70 and 75, not since 1029
| has such a steady rate of opera
tions been maintained for so long. -
i Heavy fighting northeast of Hsing v
Ho in Suiyuan-Chahar border war
fare reported in Chinese quarters 1
today.
International Pete year ended
June 30 $1.65 on combined prefer
red and common stocks vs. $1.49
preceding year.
Reed Roller Bit Co. declares extra
divulend 55c and regular quarter
20c.
h
f
s
r
l
fi
Warner Bros. Pictures and sub
sidiaries fiscal year ended Aug. 29.
75c a common share vs. 7c year
ended Aug. 31, 1935, quarter ended
I Nov. 28 will show a substantial im
provement over $1,031,316 for the
like quarter last year.
American Power and Light 12 e
months ended Oct. 31 net income
$10,444,961 equal to 26c a common
share vs. net income $7,339,778 pre
ceding 12 months, 3 months ended ~
Oct. 31, 13c a common share. Sl
Procter & Gamble advance pric
es, continuing strength of raw ma
terials indicates further advances
by all soap makers on all volume
soap brands.
a
o
a
it
t
ri
United Air Lines increases its
original order for 26 Pratt <Sc Whit
ney 14 cylinder Wasp engines to 68,
new engines will be installed in
United's new $3,000,000 fleet of 28
Douglas planes for its New York
Chicago 3 Pacific coast routes.
Great Britain has decided to pro
vide warship protection for its mer
chantmen in the Mediterranean,
interference with British ships will
be met with forcible resistance, it
was said in reliable quarters.
Brown Shoe year ended Oct. 31,
$2.44 a common share vs. net pro
fit in preceding year including
$400,000 net credit of $3.59 a com
mon share.
Inland Steel awarded Koppers
Co. contract for erection of 59 coke
ovens and for other construction
and replacements at its Indiana
Harbor plant.
Assocsiated Gas and Electric and j
subsidiaries preliminary report 12;
months ended Oct. 31 profit $36,-1
430,077 before interest preferred di- j
vidend of underlying companies,!
etc., vs. $33,154,437 preceding 12
months.
COTTON LETTER
NEW YORK, Nov. 23. — There
was a better outside demand for
cotton at the close of last week.
Favorable domestic textile condi
tions and prospects for a continu
ance of the same appear to have
Induced more confidence in the
long side bringing about a broad
ening In the speculative or invest
ment demand. Selling from the
south is naturally diminishing.
Judging by the present comments
foreign production of cotton Is like
ly to be smaller than recent esti
mates Indicated. The situation In
our opinion favors the constructive
side for the pull
France lias a president, but it.
does not have a vice-president.
Fine Stream Of
Sand Carves
(Continued from page one.)
performed it Is ready for a finish
ing process under the "Sandblast,”
in apparatus which blows fine,
• try fine sand, or grit, against the
.urface to cut it away, similar to
i stream of water on dirt. The
land hits the granite under 100
pounds or more pressure, and comes
'rom a tiny nozzle of cast iron or
ipecial steel.
Bud Lybrand, son of the late well
cnown Heavy Lybrand, mans the
>last and has to wear a mask,
jloves and other protection from
he sand.
The surface of the stone is cov
ered with a coating of hot rubber
m which, after it cools, is laid the
lesign or pattern wished to be cut.
t may be: Rest in peace, John Doe.
:cnt but not forgotten, or a suitable
•pltaph.
With the little stream of sand
3ud cuts exactly the mark he wish
■s, carves out the design, just as
f the stone were as soft as wood,
emove.s the entire rubber coating,
ind presto, the monument is ready
o be sold. It would take several
nen to do the work the little ma
ihine does.
There has been quite a little
hange in design for monuments.
I’ormerly styles ran to rather or
late, tall, many-pieced affairs,
low most people want something
imple, in either two or three piec
s, cut mostly square, to give the
m press ion of massiveness.
Granite is a basic or plutonic
ock composed of a combination of
eldspar, quartz and mica or hom
lende. The first gives it body,
he second makes it hard, and the
itter two make it polish and
learn.
Marble, which is more expensive,
fill polish almost like a mirror. It
! a limestone which through the
ges has been metamorphosed by
eat into a crystalline form. It is
sed mostly for fine buildings and
tatues.
^ite Of Man Gets
Ready For 9 Duels
(Continued from page one.)
ongratulated the Herr Doctor
armly.
The ambitious challenger wolfed
is last meal before the nine duels
i company with the Associated
ress correspondent.
He ate a bismarck herring and a
ard roll, and drank light wine.
Dr. Sarga said he probably would
ght the duels in his horn-rimmed
jectacles, which probably are the
ioat repaired pair of glasses in
iupgary. They have been shattered
equently in 17 previous duels.
The jugular veins of the con
stants will be covered only with
light cloth about their necks,
arga is the smallest of the duel
ts. but his hairy shoulders are
ie broadest of the ten.
Tonight's first duel will be the
>ughest, Dr. Sarga opined, and
le two following it should be
isy "because I’ll be warmed up."
Right Of Way Fight
ROANOKE RAPIDS, Nov. 23. UP,
H. E. Bobbins, police chief here,
lid investigation indicated James
obinson, negro, beat Nat Barlowe
ith a shotgun in an altercation
rer automobile right-of-way here,
id that Robinson as shot and ser
usly wounded later when he
ireatened Policeman Sam Jones in
■sisting arrest.
Heavy Toll Result
In Juneau Mud Sli,
(Continued from pag(> ^
fled.
The heavy rains of the i
days caused two slides rlf'
did slight damage The f*
few hours later was loo <L?
j and from 10 to 40 feet deep ’
Rush From l|oniN
The rumble was heard tv.
j living at the foot of the
j Some rushed from their hom“nt,
! °ne faml'y was caught
three story Nickinovich frame ,,
nient house and were the 7.
moved. " Ilrst
A terrified woman and two ,
j dren, none badly hurt. , J '
from mud up to their necks
! In concrete structure'wl
the slide carried arrow . *
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Peterson ,
bqheved to have been caught r
daughter, Lillian Peterson
cued. Mrs. Fred Mattson a rZ
of the same apartment house
missing.
Before power was restored
ights turned on, fire depart,,
trucks and automobiles nm
their headlights on the ruin. w
men hacked at the slide A
shovel was moved up and bit
the mass.
Mulvihill said efforts were f
tered on rescuing persons
voices could be heard. Four wm
heved to be In one place. in ant
er, a woman apparently as Und.
piano.
Several slides have occurred
Juneau this winter.
Group No. 6 B. T. U
To Meet Tuesdi
Group No. 8 of the Kings Mm
tain associatlonal B T U will t
its quarterly meeting on Taes
night at the Double Shoals chttt
beginning at 7:30
Rev. R. P. Hamby will address
meeting. Miss Annie Davis is pr<
dent and has arranged an inter,
ing program. Churches included
the group are Double Shoals. C
penters Grove. Casar, Norm
Grove, New Bethel and Lawnda
LET
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Your front wheels a
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They often succeed w
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Paint ft Body Work
N. Morgan Street
PHONE 155
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