THIMBLE THEATRE The Mystery Melody. By E. C. SEGAR VE HEfcRS Y VEfcH, pOPPft, IT NOW, / STRANGE ew,5on?L i^\usic K( WICH GOES , f 'r%£r~ ME •v6#lSfB0KES :-v VEftH, VT MOST BE COHlU’ ^ NEftRER- IT’5M ^ 6ET*m' 7m \ louoery m W$&:ys#<£ mm Kitltf U4U>H $Y SECRET AGENT X-9 The G-Man Offers A Bargain. By CHARLES FLANDERS I 7HOT flBE'OU OtNG UP AT m Hie Houg^Ji BLONDIE Beggars Are Choosers! .s ——Minium i By CHIC YOUNG CAM I WAVE > SOME COOKIES J ;. daddy? Zy VOU CAKjT WAVE AWV MODE TODAV f.jassBT HENRY By CARL ANDERSON BARasi* SHOP IX • I Mi JUST KIDS Learning By Leaps And Bounds. By AD CARTER rM SONINA. TAKE TME TWINS') OUT-AN' TEACH 'EM V ’■lP WALK! PER THE LUV\A MIKE ■*y-7 stand up V VjRELAWNEY! TILUE THE TOILER W!W A Smoke On The House! By WESTOVER you | SAJO * it, nine Sundown Stories For The Kiddies! Christmas Eve By MARY GRAHAM BO.YN/R Listen very carefully, ' will you please? Do you hear sounds, almost like music, almost like sleigh-bells, al most like the wind, almost like some one skipping over the crisp snow, almost like the runners of a sleigh lightly skimming the snowy i earth? Santa Claus , is passing over the world tonight! Do you hear little chuckles of glee, bounding hoofs, something that sounds like tlfe laughter of! reindeer even though you’ve never! actually heard reindeer laugh? Santa Claus Is passing over the 1 world tonight! Do you feel there is something glowing all around you. making you so happy, so that little shivers of joy go running up and down your spine and you feel as though you couldn’t wait for the morning? Santa Claus is passing over the world tonight! You are tring |o he*ig up your stockings now, and don’t you love that absolutely certain feeling that in a few more hours, you’ll find them filled to overflowing? Now you aye in bed and it al-, most seems as thouah vou could-1 n't go to sleep. But soon a delicious sleepiness comes over you and eyen' as you sleep it seems that you can hear creaking sounds through the house you don’t hear on other nights of the year. ■Santa Claus has reached the place where you live! The early morning light is com-1 tag through the windows. You are going to get up now. 1 And you know — you absolutely know—that SANTA HAS COME! Just Ten Years Ago __ wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm (Taken From The Cleveland Star Of Friday, December 24, 1926). A county-wide campaign among the farmers to diversify farming in Cleveland county, will be launched Tuesday, January 4, according to announcements made by Alvin Har din, farm demonstrator, and J. C. Newton, secretary of the chamber of commerce. Every farmer in Cleveland county 1s invited to at tend. Attorney D. Z. Newton, former state senator, is the new president of the Cleveland County University • club, named at a banquet of Caro lina alumni and students held at Cleveland Springs Wednesday even ing. Reports are that Zeb V. Turling ton of Mooresville is being groomed i for the next governor’s race. Tur lington fathered the prohibition bill that bears his name in this state. Raleigh.—North Carolina during the past year produced more tobac co and peanuts than any other state in the union, ranked second in the production of soy beans and sor- j ghum and third in the production of sweet potatoes. Holland Eskridge, better known to his Shelby friends as "Bush” will on the first of the year resign his posi tion with the American Express com pany to go with Liggett-Myers To bacco company as salesman with headquarters here. coraiai interest here is the wedding of Howard P. Hamrick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lon Hamrick, to Miss Louise Hammer of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, which was solemnized at the home of the bride’s parents on Wednesday evening at 7:30 in Tus caloosa. Oooose Judges A* Political Reward WINSTON-SALEM, Dec. 24.—{8) 1 —Judge Roy L. Deal, president of the Forsyth county bar association, said today that every bar associa tion in the state would be asked to opopse appointments to the bench “by reason of party or political service.” , The Forsyth bar Saturday adopt ed a resolution embodying that sen timent. The resolution said that controll ing consideration should be given to th% judicial qualiilactions of ap pointees in appointments to the Supreme court or Superior courts. Snttle’s Drug Store offers FREE Sample of new High Blood Pressure treament Every High Blood Pressure Suf ferer in Shelby' 1: urged to go to Buttle s Drug Store and receive a free sample of ALLIMIN Essence of Garlic Parsley tablets for High Blood Pressure as well as a valu able booklet. These tablets are made by a prominent Chicago con cern and according to most reliable reports ar being used with good re sults by thousands <ft suflerm. A special new process by which AL-' T.TMTM tablets are produced makes them both t" tales and odorless. A two weeks’ treatment costs only JWSA Hollywood Sight* And Sound* By ROBIN COONs HOLLYWOOD'. - Along ^ cai grapevine one hear, tha, „ * Stewart, the pride of Inm ^ is not so greatly appreciated on his home studio lot as h. mi ” be, considering the e.^5 n T pression he has made in the v ous roles assigned to him This may be because that 1™ the studio domicile of che ve outstanding comet, Rober twu,* in whose glittering wake less 'Z "*****'- -5 Whatever the cause, now is in a fair way to remJJ this. He Is on loan to plav the ret of Chico in "Seventh !icaVw. oposite Simone Simon And movie history has only to repeat itself J well-behaved history should to m* Stewart to the tcp-lf Bon, to Dance’’ does not turn that trick re him in advance. Skyrocketed Janet Gaynor Ten years ago this picture in gj. lent form took two pracnraiiy ^ known young people, Janet Gavno: and Charlie Farrell, and made them the screen’s foremost romantic team for the next six years a1 least. TiYanlr YtarVQCPA . The other day Henry King put the talkie version in work in cramped quarters: a mouldy, damp crawl? set representing an underground sewer in Paris. Here the Sewer Rat 'John Qua len) and Chico, son of the street*, are Introduced to the camera,. Be tween takes, they sun themselves outside the enclosed set. and com pare notes on costumes and make up. And a fine pair they are ragged and begrimed, Qualen especially with his red nose and pink-grained eyelids. “It isn’t how long it takes to put it on,” says Stewr#t “hut how long to get clean again. 1 fee! scrimy—apologetic when I go to the dining room. My dirt rubs off on the tablecloths.” “I don’t go to the dtmng room ' says Qualen. “I live close enough to go home for lunch—and I eat in the backyard.” Their clothes, sanitarily new, have been run through the studio dirt mill. Wrinkled and tattered, the garments are sprayed with Puller'; earth, grease paint, and discoloring acids. Stewart and Qualen will fee! "scrimy” for several weeks. Tops In Squalid Sets Squalor more dismal is rampant on another outdoor set, at the mo ment, where Mark Twain’s "Thf Prince and the Pauper” is to work Water stands in the eobble-stonet streets of London’s 16th century slums, and the ill-shod poor, gaum and lean, pursue their separatt miseries in garments that are n< more than shredded rags. The ex tras are masterly types of malnu trition and starvation, although it reality probably -well fed But that may be another story. . . . Two Truckloads Of Presents For Duke ENZESFELD, Austria, Dec. 24. - (sp)—Two truckloads of Christina mail have arrived for Edward, Dukf of Windsor, although he was rep resented as wishing only that th< world forget him. So great was the interest of En zesfelders in the mail and so deviou their efforts to get the stamps, the. it was announced the envelopes woul! be destroyed immediately after the: were opened in the castle of thf Baron and Baroness de Rothschilf where Edward was a guest. Enzesfeld is doing the best it rar to give Edward a bit of Christo® cneer. a Dig tree wa-s piateu town hall and school children madj little gifts to give to Edward should he attend the community Yul* party. The duke’s skiis were waxed toda'j Snow was visible on the hillside* few miles off. Up In the Morning Feeling Fine! The refreshing relief so many MB I say they get by taking Black* I Draught for constipation make*I them enthusiastic about this fsmorn. pW I ljr vegetable laxative. __, I Black-Draught puts the <U?estive I la better condition/to set regularly. I without your contlnuaU.v having »l :• medicine to move the bowl*. Meat time, he sure to try BLACK- . DRAUGHT A GOOD LAXATIVE ££ FIRE [Crackers) AT THE SNACK SHOP

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