Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Dec. 4, 1936, edition 1 / Page 9
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[Shop This Page For Your Saturday’s Market Basket Specials menu p0r Sunday MBS. ALEXANDER GEORGE Breakfast Grapefruit Waffle* Syrup Broiled Link Sausage* Coffee Dinner Chilled Fruit Diced Roast Veal, Stuffed Browned Potatoes F'calloped Cauliflower noil* Currant Jam Chilli Sauce Steamed Chocolate Pudding Sauce Supreme Coffee Supper Fruit Bread Cream Cheese Sandwiches Apple Sauce Tea Steamed Chocolate Pudding (Using Soda and Sweet Milk) ,.2 cups flour 1-8 teaspoon salt teaspoon soda tablespoons 1 egg cocoa 3 tablespoons 1 cup sugar fat, melted 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup milk Mix ingredients and beat well, galf fill buttered mold. Cover tight ly and steam 2 hour*. Unmold care fully and serve warm. Sauce Supreme 1 cup sugar 3 tablespoons ^ tablespoons flour butter 2 cups water 1-j teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon 1 egg vanilla Cream sugar and butter, add salt Wd egg. Add flour and water. Cook Hourly and stir constantly until sure thickens. Add vanilla and srve immediately. Fruit Bread (Serve Plain or in Sandwiches) J1-2 clip'- flour (teaspoon bak ing powder 1 teaspoon :-alt 1-3 cup sugar 1 cup chopped dates 1-1 cup candied orange peel 1-4 cup chopped candied pine apple 1-2 cup shredded pecans 1 egg 1 2-3 cups milk 2 tablespoons butter, melted Mix ingredients and pour into tater^floaf pan (large sized). Let pie 15 minutes. Bake 50 minutes In moderately slow oven. ; II sandwiches are to be made, I Biggest that the bread be at least hours old. Bethlehem Section New» Of The Week BETHLEHEM, Dec. 4.—The Sun day School surprised Dr. C. J. Black last Tuesday night with a pound ing. Mis* Annie Robert* of King* Mountain was the week end guest of Miss Piccola Blalock. Misses Goldie, Ruby Dixon, Vir ginia, Ruth Randel and Flora Herndon spent Sunday with their grandmother, Mrs. W. A. Herndon and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Herndon. Miss Elizabeth Randle of this community is attending the na tional 4-H club congress In Chi cago. Mr.and Mrs. R. D. Hambrlght visited in Charlotte recently on business. Mrs. Willie Sellers had as her Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. Roy Vess and Mrs. Turner of Caroleen. I Mr. and Mrs. Basil Francis of I Blacksubrg spent last week end • with Mrs. Francis’ mother. Mrs. A. |L. Wells. Lester Welch and family have! moved from the Margrace village to | their new home in the Dixon com munity. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Welch and little daughter, Faye of Kings Mountain spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Hope and family. Lutheran Church Sunday Service# A Week of Services will be con cluded at the Lutheran church with two sermons cm Sunday, at 11 and 7 o’clock respectively. At the close of the 11 o'clock service a brief congregational meeting will be held and announcement will be made of peftaratlon for the Annual Every Member Visitation. At the 7 o'clock Service, the sermon will be the third In the series of “Three Things which, If a man will do, will insure Eternal Life.” The public is cordially Invited. Colored Gospel Preachers To Meet The last quarterly meeting of the gospel preachers union for 1936 wih convene Sunday, Dec. 6th at 3:30 p. m. at the A. M. E. Zion church In Shelby. Rev. A. D. Padgett, chaplain says choirs and quartets will furnish music. R. J. Dixon will deliver an address on the Supreme Hour. A group of 35 colored minis ter* make up unfem. #n& sly sermons will be delivered at the final meeting. 6 KEETER'S SPECIALS MEAL 10 pounds 25c VANILLA WAFER lb. 15c BEETS No. 2 10c MACARONI 7 oz. 5c ONIONS 2 lbs. 5c SQUASH lb. 15c GRAPEFRUIT 3 for 10c CARROTS Bunch 10c Maxwell House Coffee 1 lb. 25c PRUNES lb. 5c MIXED CANDY lb. 10c STICK CANDY 2 lbs. 25c PEANUT BUTTER lb. 15c S ^GAR — io Pounds toOSE RICE —Pound—. J0MATO JUICE — Can __ ^ Cl MBERS — Pound_ BANANAS — Pound. JEW IRISH POTATOES - GREEN BEANS — Pound ORANGES - Dozen_ S£RY - _ ^TTUCE - Head. 4 Pounds 50c . 5c . 5c 15c . 5c 25c 10c 15c 10c 10c — SPECIALS IN MEAT MARKET — PnoJ — Eat Back — Pound_14c — Lean — Pound_20c rpE BOAST — Chuck — Pound...15c KLF0R STEW — Pound_.10c ^_ENERS — Armour’s — Pound_--- 19c DRESSED HENS AND FRIERS — FRESH FISH OYSTERS. PRICES EFFECTIVE AT THE CLEVELAND CLOTH MILL STORE. Boiling Springs Woman ' Given Birthday Dinner (Special to The Star.) BOILING SPRINGS, Dec. 4. — Mr*. Pamelia Hopper was honored by children on her 78th birthday with a dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Jolley Sunday. The table was covered with an Irish linen spread and the central decoration was the larfe white birthday cake holdtnf pink candles. A bountiful four course dinner was enjoyed by Mrs. Hopper, Mr. and Mrs. Unle Hamrick, Mr. and Mrs. Graham Hamrick. Miss Rosins Hamrick, Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Led* ford, Mr. and Mrs. Felton Walker, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Jolley and Langford Jolley. Mrs. Hopper was the recipient of many lovely gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Cade Greene, Mrs. Henry Burnette and two daughters, Cora Lee and Catherine attended the Furman-Clemson football game at Clemson College. They visited Mr.| Burnett at Liberty. 8. C,' who accompanied them to Clemson Col* lege for the game. Mrs. Eddie Lawhom has been 111 suffering from an attack of Influen za. Dr. and Mrs. Allen Cash of Win ston-Salem spent Thanksgiving day with Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Bigger* staff. Misses Rosalya Pruette of Colum bia, S. C. and Elolse Pruette of Charlotte spent the week end with their other, Mrs. J. L. Pruette, Dr. and Mrs. B. M. Jarrett and chil dren and Mr. and Mrs. Butler Pruette and son of Shelby, spent Sunday here, also Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bridges are making their home with Mrs. Pruette. All of her children and grandchildren were with her over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lancaster and daughter and Mrs. Bennie Hamrick spent Sunday In Kings Mountai nwlth Mr. and Mrs. Elam Hamrick. Mr. and Mrs. Travis White and daughter and Mrs. Hicks of near Spartanburg, S. C., spent several days of the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Dean White. Miss Vemta Goode of Chapel Hill spent last week with Miss Vel- j ms Ooode. Mr. and Mrs. James Bridges of Lawndale spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Bridges. Miss Elisabeth Hamrick of Thom asvtlle came home last week and spent several days with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Carl Ham rick. Roll Call Sunday At Dover Church Next Sunday, Dec. 6, there will be special sendees with the Dover Baptist church during the morning worship hours. The roll of member ship will be called and the annual enrollment will be observed. All whole families will be given special mention. All the membership Is urged to be present and answer to their names. The public In general Is given an Invitation to come and worship together. The pastor's sub ject far Sunday morning will be, "Worshiping and Serving the Lord." PLAN BOX SUPPER AT FALLSTON SCHOOL There will be a box supper at the Pallston high school Saturday even ing, December 5, beginning at 7:30. Special features are being arranged. Benefits go for the benefit of the school. Martin's Subjects For Sunday Named Sunday subjects of Rev. C. V. Martin at the South Shelby Bap tist church will be. morning, "Jesus Christ, the same Yesterday, Today and Forever"; evening, “Be Ready Always to Give Reason For Your Hope." -Other services will be held at the regular hours. The strangling flg plant wraps its stems about trees so tightly that eventually it stranges them to death. Jr O* Proprt 4 Son Maxwell House Coffee lb. 28c CHEROKEE f Af in Plain or Self-Riaing Qfi r L U U K 24-POUND BAG oDC Fresh Ground Corn Meal 23c FRESH STRING BEANS lb. 10c Fresh Curley Mustard 2 lb. 15c IRISH POTATOES 10 lb. 29c Campbell Tomatoes Soup 3 for 25c Heinz Vegetables Soup 2 for 25c {TOMATOES Can Each 5c < Full Line Fruit Cake Ingredients FRESH TOMATOES lb. 10c CELERY Large Bunch 10c LETTUCE Large Head 10c COCOANUTS Large 10c BEEF ROAST pound 14c PORK ROAST pound 23c SLICED BACON pound 23c PORK LIVER pound 12i/2c SPARE RIBS pound 20c ALL KINDS FRUITS and NUTS - -- J. O. Propst & Son .—.. ) Ethel And F. R. Jr. Both Bom With “Silver Spoon In Mouth ” By SIGR1D ARNE Copyright, 1939, By The Associated j Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-(A*>~ln 1914 Oyster Bay, Long Island, w li the gathering point for many of the public leaders of the day. They went to talk with **T.R." who had j been defeated for a third term on his newly-formed Progressive tick- ■ et. Three hours south by train the; du Fonts plants in Wilmington, Del., were tightening up to meet the strain put on them by the bursting war in Europe. That year a Roosevelt boy-baby put in his appearftnee at his grand mother's home, Hyde Park, on the Hudson river above New York. ■T.R.” was “dee-lighted" because the new Infant's mother was An na Eleanor Roosevelt, a niece of his, who had been one of his favorites among the Roosevelt children. He had given her away when she mar ried another Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, in 1906. A year after the new Roosevelt arrived, the du Pont clan was en larged by the birth of a dainty girl-baby at “Owl's Nest," the home of the Eugene du Ponts, Just out side Wilmington in the hills along Kenneth Pike. To The Manor Born Now, two decades later, the ba bies have grown to adulthood and are planning to marry in June: Ethel du Pont, the beauty of her clan, and Franklin Roosevelt, Jr., the son and namesake of the Pres ident. The two were typical “born with a silver spoon” babies. They had sunny nurseries, attentive nurses and brothers and slsfofs to frolic with. They went to exclusive pri vate schools where good manners were as much a part of the curri culum as arithmetic. They whiwed around the countryside In early au tomobilees driven by family chauf feurs. They grubbed in garden plots set aside "for the children.” They grew up to own smart road sters of their own. Both families are lovers of the out-of-doors. Both had their own riding horses. The boy. Franklin, was lifted to the back of a horse at the door of Hyde Park Just about the same year the du Pont groom first led a harse up the circular drive at Owl'» Nest for little Miss i Ethel. Both l.lke Riding Hie two still prefer cantering o\er the hills to any other recrea tion. and they have done much of it around the du Pont home In Wilmington and at the du Pont summer cottage at North East Har bor, Maine. Miss Ethel has taken the sport more seriously. She has a stable of mounts which she rides at eastern horse shows and on which she has won a good array of silver cups and ribbons. Young Roosevelt has a second sport In boating, in which his whole family Is expert. And Miss' Ethel’s summers on the coast of j Maine have made her a good sailor! as well. Both families have large, com fortable homes surrounded by roll ing lawns, gardens, and huge trees. Around Hyde Park is an experi mental forest In which the Presi dent has Indulged his love for ama teur forestry. One of the rites when he visits Hyde Park now Is to drive through the forest to see how the experiments progress. Miss Ethel's father also looks proudly from the long windows of his home down a gentle slope cov ered with a magnificent stand of pine. 'There wasn't a tree here when we built," he says, shyly proud. "I planted all those when we built our home.” Cosmopolitan Pair On the dlstalT side of the two immediate families, the prospec tive mothers-in-law both have fa vorite sports. Mrs. Roosevelt takes a dally horseback ride at 7 a.m. whenever her crowding engage ments permit. Mrs. du Pont la her husband's favorite companion In trap-shooting and on hunting trips. "She shoots very well,1* her hus band saya. Traditionally, the young people of both families visit Europe when they turn 20. Both Franklin and Miss Ethel have had such trips. Miss du Pont’s return from Europe last summer was the oecasion for i romantic gesture from her suitor, sho, impatient of waiting on the dock, cajoled the captain of a tender into taking him down river j to board the Incoming ship carry ing the du Font family. 1 Canned Vegetables In A Sale! SOUTHERN MANOR LIMA BEANS 2 && 29c PHILLIP S DELICIOUS STRING BEANS 4 &£ 29c SOUTHERN MANOR ALL GREEN ASPARAGUS 2 ££ 45c SOUTHERN MANOR GOLDEN BANTAM or WHITE CORN &£ 10c COLONIAL BRAND GREEN PEAS 2 cans 23c Phillip’s Solid Pack TOMATOES — Large Can_10c Colonial Brand TOMATO JUICE — 6 cans25c — DON’T OVERLOOK THESE! — PRIDE TURNIP GREENS — No. 2 Can_ 10c GIBB’S PURE HOMINY — 3 Cans_ 25c ' SOUTHERN MANOR CATSUP — 2 Bottles ’ 25c ? COLONIAL SUCCOTASH — No. 2 Can_ 10c PHILLIP’S MIXED VEGETABLES — Can_ 9c SOUTHERN MANOR TINY PEAS —Can. 2lc SELECT PINK SALMON — Can..10c COMPOUND LARD — 2 Pounds__ 25c PENDER’S BEST FLOUR — 12 lb. Bag_I 49c SUGAR — 10 Pound Bay __;_49c — FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES — FRESH TOMATOES — 2 Pounds. 25c BANANAS — 5 Pounds. 25c CRANBERRIES — Pound. 23c LETTUCE — 3 Heads For.25c CELERY — Bunch. 10c NEW IRISH POTATOES — 4 Pounds.25c FRESH PEAS — Pound .. 15c GREEN BEANS — Pound.10c SPINACH — 2 Pounds______15c Concert Drive Is To Be Held Here Organisation of tha Shelby Co operative Concert Association was announced today, following a meet-' lug of more than SO music lovers in . the city. Plans are being made forj a membersthp campaign to begin on January 11. The purpose of this association It to hold three or more concerts each year In Shelby under the auspices of the Columbia Concerts Corpora tion. a division of the Columbia Broadcasting company of New York. Upon completion of the member-. ship drive in January, a commit-; tee will be selected to choose the artists desired. Officers of the Shelby Coopera- ( tive Concert association are com posed m follow*; president, ROOer* H. Cook; vice president, Mrs. Ben Buttle, Mrs. Oeorfe Hoyle, Mr*. J. w. Hsrblaon, Horace Eaaom, W. K. Abernethy and Chas. A. Burrus; secretary. Mias Mettle Rayle; treas urer, Jesse K. Bridges, chairman of the membership committee; Mrs. R. T. LeOrand; secretary, Mrs. Jaea Sheppard; dinner chairman, Mrs. George Hoyle; chairman of the ap pearance and transportation, com mittee, J. D. Llneberger; members of publicity committee, chairman: James Sheppard, associate chair man. Henry Lee Weathers. 15—If Car Stalls BAN FRANCISCO.—IS*) —Motor ists who start across San Francis co's 8 i-« mile bay bridge without enough gas to finish will find their oversight expensive. Towcars are available at all times to haul off stalled autos but the charge la 88 ■B* each 2ic i® 5® 1 lb FRUIT CAKE 45c 2 X. FRUIT CAKE 85c FRUIT CAKE 51.« L'umpbfH* Tom«J" SOUP 3 «"* wc PEACHES 2 “S 29* BUTTER ■ * " 15£ MILK" 3 a 10c BEANS Z«^15e MACARONI?‘“"“IS. % «r *p»rbN«l CHEESE »■ »« 10c salmon COFFEE it. 18c OATS - - ,?£ fcjurnA it. 13c thtl bf»»« i*9 •i»W. (ku« HWI Fetl Trf Large 20-0*. Pullman ORANGES 15c to 25c TOMATOES lb. 10c CARROTS bunch 8c COCOANUTS 2 for 15c WINESAP APPLES lb. 5c ONIONS 2 lbs. 5c | VEAL CHOPS * SP ARE RIBS NECK BONES STEW BEEF CHUCK ROAST FAT BACK lb. a lb. 15c lb. 18c lb. 10c lb. 10c Kafifil :a ood V
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1936, edition 1
9
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