Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Nov. 23, 1936, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THIMBLE THEATRE T Hooky Line and Sinker By E. C. SEGAR PPsPPV, COME HERE 106 VOfcNT TO TfcUK TO VOO > ^ VJE'LL SOON BE HOME ftN’ l GOT ME A* POPPA* - \ WH'T . • AREN'T VOU EVER COMING BACK TO <THE ISCANOV" why o\o you 7 leave, pappy? (,/AREN'T YOU { EVER COMING l back, pappy ■ VJHKT YE VJANT 7 VJE'U-X MtSb YOU, i POOPDECR e PAPPY / " ! SECRET AGENT X-9 The (a-Men Have A Shore Date'. _ *By CHARLES FLANDERS NEXT doy X-9, ALIOS •SEAMAN GREENE,’ REPORTS TO HIS SUPERIOR OFFICER ON THE GREENE REPORTING, SIP BROKEN FLPNSE IN THE BOILER-ROOM COME ALONG PND SHOW / MEET ME AT JOCK MILLER'S WATER-FRONT TONIGHT AT PLACE ON THE NINE SHARP/ AND Cflggy our routine oboer ] ikncwwwt ■\td do ! nr BLONDIE All The Comforts Of Home. By CHIC YOUNG DO VDU MIND WF MOT AT ALL, DEAR !> IP! READ IN BED?]'! JUST FIX THE LAMP SO ir WONT r SWINE IN MV J V _J ? •: —— . * r ■ — r WANT-TO FINISH THIS BOOK T TONIGHT P MOWS TWAr? SEEMS AWPUU.V BQIGWr 1 WELL, HOW'S TUlS? fr- i .^X'Xw.v.'.vAy/.v.y.'.v.v.w mmmmm ,1936. King Feature* Syndicate, Inc., World right* rtKrw^s, HENRY -r-'y-yyj ji By CARL ANDERSON Ulllll .. . ■ .. JUST KIDS Her Weakness For Automobiles! By AD CARTER MOM! GENEVIEVE m is gone!! r I’M A LITTLE MAN DOING A BIG JOB -hi-db • ni^vf^r HI -MO * <al>\vV1/ DE - WO")/%?//■1 aGENEVIEVE / GENEVIEVE!! Fittmn Sfadiutc, Inc , World nghtt r«*«rvtd MEHffgMXBX TILLIE THE TOILER Strictly Profeuional By WESTOVER fe? ■ T \ GOT TO TVUMK'NQ Tll-UE_ IFOME ' HTTLE KISS OM My head made , "THIS L-OCK haii^ l WHV OF <3RCMJ, JL 20 I SEE—MANV losses would MAKE IT ALL etSOUJ, BUT, MAC, THERE'S MOROMAWCE IN IKISSIN6 l A &ALC Head O o f t y Goofy Is His Name, Says He RACINE, Wts„ Nov. 20.—(JF}~ Oofty Goofty Bowman said to day that’s his real name, has been for 56 years and will be until he dies—no matter if his telephone never stops ringing. He added that neither will he back down before the raised eyebrows of hotel clerks when he registers, nor the disbelief of bank tellers when he tries to cash a check. “By gosh, it's my name and I’m going to stick by it,” he said. "I pay for the telephone, I need It, and it stays. The ‘smart’ boys, the inquisitive and all the others who want to find out about my name when they see it In a telephone book call me up. I tell ’em all the same thing.” His parents named him Oofty Goofty, said he, after an actor they knew In Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Mary Christmas, also of Racine, was less patient. Per sons wearied her so, calling to Inquire about Santa Claus, that she gave up her telephone. Nine Prisoners Are Turned Out By Ehringhaus RALEIGH, Nov. 20.—(^—Gover nor Ehringhaus paroled nine pris oners Wednesday and refused cle mency requests of 35 others. Paroled were: Hoke McMillan, given five years in Alleghany coun ty in May 1935 for robbery with firearms; Tom Canipe, sentenced in Alamance in January to two years conspiracy; Everett L. Moon, con victed in Davidson in March of abandonment and non support and given 18 months; James Russell Turner, sent up from Forsyth in March for a year for storebreaking. Fred Cagle, sentenced in May to 12 months in Jackson for breaking, entering and larceny;; Adison Quesinberry, convicted of house breaking and larceny in Surry in February and given 12 months; James Fletcher, Jr., given eight months in August in Union or as sault with a deadly weapon; Pres ton Lindsey, sent up from Bun combe in August for six months for larceny; and George Hughes, given 90 days in Mitchell in March for failure to pay costs in an aban donment case in which sentence had been suspended. ENDORSE GRADY FOR HIGH COURT BENCH KENANSVILLE, Nov. 20.—(A")— The Duplin county bar association endorsed today a resolution re commending Judge Henry A. Grady of Clinton for one of the two ad ditional places on the State Sup reme court authorized in the amendment approved in the No vember 3 election. The resolution, addressed to Governor-elect Clyde R. Hoey, cit ed the record of Judge Grady as resident judge of the sixth judicial district for almost 15 years as de monstrating his fitness for an as sociate justiceship. The Duplin bar adopted the re solution at a meeting here last night. Lancaster Man Is Killed In Houston LANCASTER. S. C.. Nov. 20—(AV News was received here today of the death of Cullen Porter. 22, of Lancaster, who was killed accident ally while installing a boiler in Houston, Texas. Porter was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Porter of Lancaster and a nephew of U. S. District Attorney Claude N. Sapp of Colsmbia. He was employed by the Grinnell company of Charlotte, N. C. Coughlin's Church Did Not Stop Him CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—(A5)—The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin says in next Monday’s edition of "Social Justice” that he suspended activi ties of his National Union for Social Justice because of "a barricade builded by no superior, but rather by the laity and the clergy In America.” "I shall not continue to wage the battle which I have fought," he says, “as long as the generals are indifferent and as long as my fel low officers are in such a flagrant disagreement.” Woman Is Suicide PILOT MOUNTAIN, Nov. 20.—(A”) —Mrs. Lester Swift, 45, was found shot to death in her home near here and a coroner’s jury returned a verdict of suicide. Health-Wrecking Functional PAINS Severe functional pains of men struation, cramping spells and Jan gled nerves soon rob a woman of her natural, youthful freshness. PAIN lines in a woman’s face too often grow into AGE lines 1 Thousands of women have found It helpful to take CarduL They say it seemed to ease their pains, and they noticed an increase in their appetites and finally a strengthened resistance to the discomfort of monthly periods. Try Cardui. Of course if it doesn’t help you, see your doctor. TO PARENTS The Enlarging Horunn There was a time when evi household was more or ie« , unit and to some extent self-c« tained. A woman could or at ™ rate often did live inside the l walls of home, or at most , neighborly with those who li, nearby. Of course there was tin church work to be done, and m city her duty might lead into „ lie charities. But as a general th life for the woman, at lea1 tfn ed to be narrow and self-renw But such times are past modern mother can afford , longer to neglect the world outst, The family has become an mi gral parti of the community ^ children spend half their wakj hours away from home. They i at school, scout meetings, the at letic field, the movie hoir-e i community house. They are rid. on buses or trolleys or tr»t meeting people and making ct tacts with new ideas and influem everywhere. For the sake of t entire family, mothers, no mat how home loving or shy, ra, broaden the scope of their act, ties and their interests to incli the group, the community, | town, the state, the nation. Ev if they themselves stay at hot their children do not and cacnc Every household is a pan of t whole community, and is afTpci by or has an effect on every oth If the Smiths have a contagii disease, the Joneses are in dani of catching it unless the health regulations are fhoro 1c o pantpr from the Browns’ house, it m still be a danger to the Brer children. Traffic regulations aft everyone. And the health boa the police force, the traffic squi the school board, all the put service agencies are the burim not of the local politicians, but every citizen, and especially of pi ents—fathers and mothers both. OFFICERS ARE NAMED BY LUTHERAN BROTHERHOt GASTONIA, Nov. 20.-W-1 United Brotherhood of the Luth an synod of North Carolina, cli ing its one-day meeting here, elei ed W. W. Scholtz of Charlotte, v terday to head it for the next ye Paul Monroe of Gastonia a elected vice-president; M, L. Rhot cf Lincolnton, secretary; Tut! Boelick, of Hickory, assistant a retary; Evan L. Houser of Dali statistical secretary; E. W. Wag! ner of Salisbury, extension sec tary and A. C. Cline, of Conco treasurer. Grant Franehis* RALEIGH, Nov. 20.-UTWI state utilities commission author ed the Blue Eagle bus line of Wi ston-Salem to operate from I court house square. Winston-Sak to Ogburn, a distance of three mi and a half. Spinning Down WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 - (41 The cotton spinning Industry a reported today by the census t reau to have operated during Oct ber at 123.3 per cent of eapaci compared with 125.8 per cent d> ing September this year, and Id per cent during October last year due to colds relieved with one swaj k Best thing ever, or money back. 35f| THDXINE ^ CLEVELAND DRUG CO. p__ orrison Optometrist Eyes Examined. Glasses Titled Mid Repaired. Office Days: Mon. and Sat a. m. to 6 p. m. Tues. and FA 8 a. m. to 12 Noon. ORDER BEAM’S Coal High—Heat—low—Art Stovewood PHONE 130 LEGION dance At The Community Building TUESDAY. NOV. -» 9 I*. M. Excellent Music Hound and Dancing 75c corpus
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1936, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75