What Your Daughter’s Chum Must See VACATION time... home coming .. the sharpeyed little stranger ... how many a daughter finds her social standing strengthened or im paired by her guest's impression of the home she lives in. Your daughter who loves her home so well can see nothing but beauty in it, but you can’t expect her guests to overlook the unlovely truth of dingy, dull or shabby floors. If you have a single floor that lacks character or beauty, do not let it go another day without Dovco Marble Floor Finish Varnish. Pale, clear, translucent, it dries quickly with a brilliant, durable gloss that adds materially to the beauty of the floor. This Coupon is Worth 40 Cent9 Kill out this coupon and present it to us within 30 days. We Will give you Free a 40 Cent can of any Devoe Paint and Voinish Product you want.cr a reduction of 40 Cent son a la: i;et can. Your Name Address Tama ---... ........ State .......__..._— Devoe ^igext’* Nosvt.__-. 5*2.1 Ore eou.'.'cn to h % Iw utfc-£ l/y PAUL W EBB - AUTHORIZED AQENT FOR: DEVOE PAINT AND VARNISH PRODUCTS You can select a good oil two ways. By mak ing elaborate tests lor yourself or by asking Ry naipe for a brand that has been tested and accepted by a whole generation of motorists and engineers. Think of the time, expense and uncertainty that you save by asking for "Standard” Polariue. A name is a convenient handle by which the public reaches for and gets the product it wants. * All good motor oils have names. The handle is there for your con venience and protection—use it, please. ♦ You never say “Give me a package of cigarettes11 or “a tube of tooth paste.” You know what you like and you ask for it— by name. It is to your advantage to buy oil only by name. It prevents substitu tion. It guarantees uniform quality. « There are several good oils, but none any better than “Standard” Polarine. It is the standard among lubricating oils and has been so for many years. It is -*till growing in favor. It is an honest oil STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey} L Buy the best oil but buy it by name— ond the name is "Standard” Polarine Dairy Specialist Tells How To Avoid Some Of Them. Sommer Trouble Causes. Rv .1. A REV. Each soring there are certain con ditions which are likely to cause the cream producer considerable1 trouble if proper measures are not taken to avoid them. Sometimes this results in a misunderstanding between the cream seller and tbe cream buyer. With the arrival of spring a de crease in the cream test usually oc curs. The responsibility for tins is often placed on the creamery man agement. although upon investigation it will be found that the -conditions which bring it about are fo be found on the farm and not In the creamery. A large number of cows freshen during the spring months and this, together with the turning of cows on fresh pasture, causes n marked in crease in the milk flow and a cor responding decrease In the fat con tent. Under such conditions the dairy man can expect a decrease in his cream test although no changes have been made in the methods of operat ing his separator. i up tning that tne cream producer should bo primarily interested in is not the individual test, but the total number of pounds of butter-fat that the creamery gives him credit for per month. During periods when low cream tests prevail, caused by a large volume of lower testing milk, tiie low test will be offset by a cor responding increase in the number of pounds of cream obtained. A rising temperature with the com ing of spring is another condition that the dairyman must be prepared to meet or his crenm will become too sour and begin Wheying off before it reaches the creamery. Good hotter cannot be made from cream in this condition. How To Avoid Trouble. The following are suggestions that will aid the dairymen in avoiding cream troubles that are common at this season of the year. 1. Keep the milk r.s clean as pos sible and free frdm undesirable odors. 2. Take the cows out of the pas ture at noon it it is infested with wiki onions or any other weed that will give an undesirable flavor to the cream. 3. Set the credrp screw so that a cream testing from 30-40 per cent butterfnt will be delivered. A cream containing a low percentage of but terfat sours more quickly than ope rich in butterfat. 4. Cool cream immediately after separating by placing container in cold water .where it should be held until delivered to tho Creamery. Warm cream should bo emoted before mixing it with cream frifm a previous skim ming, Cream should be stirred at leant twice a day. in order to prevent it from becoming lumpy. ■r>. Wash and soak! all milk voted:: and the separator after each use. 0. Cream should be delivered three timos a week during the summer months. J. A. Aroy, Office of Dairy Extension. If you want a quish and satisfac tory adjustment themji-ve your Had Insurance to C. J. Woodson, who has Imd a longer experience in handling losses of every sort than any ugeiu in Western North Carolina. (NOTE: Dr. Pitre* U president of the Invalids’ Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y., to wUcb for SO years put chronic suf ferer* have been coming for special ised treatment from all over the U. S. A., Canada and foreign lands.) Will Undo Much Evil By Dr. V. M. Pierce Knowing the vast amount of liarni wrought by diseases of the kidneys, and having had opportunity to observe the analyses and the successful methods of treatment in tliousands of cases of kid ney trouble at the Invalids’ Hotel, I have recently given to the public the latest and perhaps most important of the Dr. Pierce home remedies, ''An uric" (anti-uric-acid) Tablets, which I now recommend to thole who suffer with kidney backache, irregularity of urination and the pains and disturbances that come from excess of uric acid in the blood. "An-uric" can be had now at all the drug stores. The mere drinking of a cup of hot water each morning and a little “An-uric” before every meal should bring remarkably quick improve ment You may have kidney trouble and not know it. Ttie danger signals to be watched for and quickly heeded are backache, depression, aches, pains, heaviness, drowsiness, dieziness, irrita bility, hsadaches, chilliness, rheumatic twinges, swollen joints, gout. Former Shelby Pastor Dies In Greensboro Rev. Hush M. Blair, Long Editor Of Christian Advocate, I’assts Away. Funeral Tuesday. Greensboro, May 20—Rev. Hugh McLeod Blair. <■' well known throuirho.it the Southern Methodist church because of his !') years as edi tor of Toe North Caroi n i ( hristian Advocate, died at his h >rne here >ior‘- v mom'nsf, fol’.jv'in ? an Ftnesr. (t four months. }Te was boro in Caldwell county and educated at Rutherford col lege, finishing there in 187.*.. For 41 years he was hi tti“ ministry serving as pasto ; t C'ri ■<■;•■!near hen*, i ei:i r..' in 10?I frem the active ta n i.. r,. For four years, 1S04-!>S, lie was •ufs'cTip cider of the Moimt Any -: S G. . >• m 1901 to Id':' h- was editor f 1 ■ n Advo.’i "j anot1 er yi;,i ’Cl he acted as editor. Dunns his editor ship he saw t.be paper grow from a small circulation until, when it was ! consolidated with The Riihitrli Clnis tian Advo-ate in 1919, it had a circu lation of 20,000. ITe leaves his wife, who was Miss Laura Ramscur.of Lincoln county; a brother,H. ,f. Rlnir, of Phoenix, Ariz.: two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Allred and Mrs. Sarah Oxford, of Taylorsville; ami a daughter, Mrs. Eva Howell, of Terrell. Funeral services were held at West j Market Street Methodist churcn Tues- j day afternoon at 3 o'clock cud :nter mont was there. Boll Weevil Blues. 1924 Version. j Gawd makes the bees ! An’ de bees male’ de honey, ! Niggah an' mule mak’ cotton— White folks writ’s de money. Boll weeviPS a hidin’ ~ Hisself in de wood, Takin’ things easy ’til. De cotton’s growin’ good. If dis summer’s gwine To ho mighty dry Ole Boll Weevil will Hab to draw up and die. Af it rains a heap, And jest stays wet. De ole Boll Weevil. ! Will get do crap yet. j How it’s "wine to lie i Dere’s no way to tell, | We mought get rich An’ we mought ketch hell. I’m got de blues— Dem Boll Weevil blues. On the first of the month we are always reminded of that noem “The A California woman had her hair bobbed on iter hundredth birthdsv, all of which goes to show that it isn’t 1 the first hundred years that counts. LYNCHBURG COUPLE RELY ON TANLAC FOR HEALTH Mr. and Mrs. llnrue Turn To World's Greatest Tonic When ever They Feel Need Of A Tonic. Among (ho thousand of people ev erywhere who have come to rely upon Tanlac to keep up their health and strength are Mr. and Mrs. P. I). Un ruo, 901 Eighth St., Lynchburg, Va. Speaking for himself and wife, re cently, Mr. Unrue said: “Whenever my wife and myself be gin to feel the need of a tonic We get Tanlac and are soon back to normal health again. Stomach trouble had made life miserable for me for a long time. Gas pains after eating, constipa tion, bad nerves and loss of sleep made me feel so bad I could hardly pull through my day’s work. “A few bottles of Tanlac did away with my troubles and had me feeling well and fit again. Tanlac has proved ofgreat benefit to my wife, too, and I believe it will help anyone who gives it a fair trial.” Tanlac is for sale by all good drug gists. Accept no substitute. Over 04 Million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills For Constipation. Made and Recommended by the Manufacturers of TANLAC. A. B. C. overalls. A. B. C and Mc Kinney special overalls white back indigo dye and just one of the best made. Special $1.69. Wray-Hudson Company. Adv Save 25 cents to 75 cents by buy ing n pair of men’s Big Ace, A. B. C., and McKinney special overalls from Wray-Hudson Co. Adv SAVED FROM AN OPERATION Mr3. Shaw Calls Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound a God-Send to Sick Women Cambridge, Maine.—“ I suffered ter ribly with pains and soreness in my i..1skies. Each month 1 had to go to bed, and the doctor told me I simply had to go under an opera tion before I could get help. I saw your advertisement in the paper, and 1 told my husband one day to Eet me a bottle of ydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Com i~.. ..... pounu. oezore z took the third dose I felt better. I took it four times a day for two years, getting better all the time, and now for four years I don’t have any pains. After taking the medicine for two years I had another child—a lovely baby girl now four years old—the life of cur home. 1 do praise this medicine. It is a Godsend to women who suffer with female troubles and especially for pains at the periods. I surely was very bad once, 1 and I know that Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound saved me from an 'operation.” -r- Mrs. Josie M. SHAW, Route No. 1, Cambridge, Maine. A country-wide canvass of purchasers i of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com j pound reports 98 out of every 100 were benefited by it. For sale by druggists everywhere. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Having this day qualified as execu tor of the will of G. L. Moore, deceas ed, late of Cleveland county, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against said estate to present them properly proven, to the under signed at Grover, N. C. or B. T. Falls attorney, Shelby, N. C., on or before the 19th day of April, 1924. or this notice will ijc pleaded in bar of any recovery on same. All persons indebt ed to said estate will make immediate payment to the undersigned. this the 18th day of April, 1924. J. H. MOORE, Executor G. L. j Moore’s Will. The Coach is Exclusive to Hudson and Essex Gives Closed Car Comforts at Open Car Price The Coach is a Hudson-Essex invention. No other type and no other car gives closed car comforts at so near open car r ost. 1 he extra cost of closed models on ether cars is from ■•300 up, even on the lowest priced cars. More than 135,000 Coaches arc in service. Sales exceed 3,000 every week.’ Everyone prefers a closed car. The Coach alone is the quao.y car within reach of all. No wonder the Coach on Hudson and Essex is the world1* largest selling six-cylmder c os«-d