Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Sept. 26, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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CHARLOTTE PIANO M ' N HERE. Prof. J. F. Gallery, piano turner from the Parker-Gardner company, Charlotte, is in town to tune pianos add by Parker-Gardner company and others. Professor Gallery has been with the Parker-Gardner rirni for 18 years and is also an expert player piu ito nut(i, havinjr worked in piura fac tories and i!' ( work for nio.-t of the! musical people on his route. He is | also a violinist of ■.■me rot -, and those wishing od work on their pianos should add re. . Prof. J. P. (lallery, ,onera! deli'. re, Shelhy. Ad If we could -ee •ur-ielves n: others see us, w. (I ne er speak !■ them Toledo Blade. MONDAY O Q SEPTEMBER PERFORMANCES DAILy «.T 2 and 8 F.M. Nr 350 ARTISTS 40 MENAGERIE 2 HERDS OF PERFORMING ELEPHANTS IN THE PRESEN) ERR OF THE AUTOMOBILE. LOVERS OF HORSES the world over have raised the cr> "PERPETUATE THE HORSE". BN REPEAL WITH WHICH THE SPARKS C/RCUS IS IN PERFECT ACCORD. 1 HIS ORGANISATION RAISED ««?i/*lillR5ll UADCfi* Hundreds of ggg¥H.F-gg s ~—Tn thc Sensational fox hunt. High School Exhibitions and high jumping contests DOORS OPEN ONE HOUR Earlier to allow Public ample time io visit the CQMPRfliLHSIVE MENAS?' .: PRICES CHILDREN UNDER 12 35c Adults -!-i 75c SEATS ON SALE CIRCUS DAY AT CLEVELAND DRUG STORE SAME PRICE AS AT SHOW GROUNDS. sr Milt Tolbert Ha* Exceptional Show Entire Troupe, Especially Orchestra And 1 ends, Far Superior to the I stial Tent Shows. It is seldom that a County or small ’ city paper deals in dramatic criticism, hut the! e are exceptions. 1'oiice offi cers may shoot W or 15 dogs a day and still not produce a decent news story hut let the hide of one high priced canine be punctured and a good story in forthcoming. The same ap plies t , tent -how - hey eome and go -only one in a hundred is worthy of notice. and this one evidently s'ruck Shelby thh week. Milt Tol hei tent show it is .called although Tolbert will hourri no more applause and for him the Curtain has fallen forever, 'I he owner nowadays is a Youngster known as lined Holloway, the self same youngster that may again mak<- the tent show a favorite because h" believes in giving the pub lic their money’s worth clean, high dr.' and far better than the usual run on mall, and evi n some large, vaudeville circuits. r<> Ix'i :’i with Holloway, an excep tional “take” with this audience and a medal bedecked veteran of the \\ drill War, has an orchestra the gal lery mil call :• ‘ pippin” or “peach” Made up of college 1 h ys, a select hunch from T’enn State, Atiburn, Geor gia Ti ell .'.nr! other institutions, it con tains; anu* of the best jay.?, artists in ■the country. Holloway features his -pr-liyra 11,1 —llfl.. Iidocitn ennenrf j before sh^v s and skits between with :ot"! heitWiA Kv >»it a law calibre tent trottpe Would ‘pot over" w'P.h that orrhe'ra. The orchestra, however, is not by fa:- fhe only unusual talent ••he yoimpt owner believes-in carry ing -the cast from-the leads to the extras, : of the kiiid that acts in stead of moving anil talking lnavion < tte fashion. In their first play Mon j day night, “Saintly Hypoerits and i Jlonest Sinners”, several well timed i morals were carried, and carried with out disturbing the entertaining fea ; tuns. Leonard Morse, as Abe, the j ianitor, has Jin exceptional talent and • is well worth his berth in speaking tint! character parts in any clas of ATARRH of nose or throat i9 made more endurable, some times greatly benefited by applying Vicks up nos Also melt some ana inhale the vapors. VapcRub Oner 17 Million Jar * (J*md Yrarip Tommy f^ooper, Harry Hartz, Bennie Hill, Antoine Mourre, Prw • Harlan Fcngier, Wacfe Morton, Ernie An-, sierburg, Phil Shafer, and Red Cairens. 50-Mile Race Over One anil One Quarter Mile Board Oval Track Probable Speed 115 Miles An Hour " ' . 1 $25,000 IN PRIZES I ndo* til® rules with the* sanction of the contort board of tho American Automobile association. Sanction No. 1525 Saturday, Oct. 25=2. P. M. Accommodations For 75,000 Being more pcu|i!o ilum live In any one of •0 i'uuiiiIi'h In Ninth Carolina. 30.000 (iramlsiaiul Seals 45.000 In tikttcld k.ooo automobiles inside 10.000 automobile* outside HOW TO GET THERE Speedway located on North Carolina hard surface highway No. 26. Southern railway will operate local shuttle trains to speedway every thirty minutes on day of races. lief your tickets XOVV. Won't wait. Aiituncc Nile beyond nil ctpectatiniis. Tickets mnv on Nile at all laird's stoics null Charlotte S|»cod H»y hcmU)uurlcrs. as West I rude street, Charlotte, C’. Admission to infield.(2.00 Grandstand seats.$5.00 Sot'iIon in (irntuihttuiil ••U" uvullublo for col ore<l iieoplc. CHARLOTTE SPEEDWAY, Incorporated CHARLOTTE. NO.iTh CAROLINA performance. Near him in the realis tic performance is Miss Malone, while Holloway himself in the cue of the wild younit brother was the favorite his part demanded of the audience. Selecting: stars iti' the troupe is an other matter. Every individual in the outfit would be a star in the ordinary run of tent shows. One of the Auburn boys, who won the crowd with his caroling of “blues” in the main show, exhibited an exceptional knowledge <.f the original stage “buck-and-wing dancing during the concert skits. The company plays here the entire week through Friday and Saturday and no tent show in history has been a bigger drawing card. People like clean and high class entertainment even tinder canvas—Tolbert’s “hous es” are the proof. If Halloway brings hi« troupe around this section next yeqr, our advice is a wider canvas and more seats. Shelby wondered at first how a tent show could afford such an orchestra—the first perfor mance was the answer. NEARLY ALL SWEDISH FARMS ENJOY ELECTRIC LIGHTS While the utilization of water pow er for every purpose has been devel oping rapidly in Sweden during the last two decades, there is a strong tendency at preesnt to convert the turbine power into electric energy for further industrial use. Thus factor ies are being built hundreds of miles away from the source of their power, and electric current is not only dis tributed to all part.' of Sweden .hut is exported tt» neighboring countries as well There are now 2.100 large power plants in Sweden, of which about 50 per cent furnish light, ‘ heat and power for the country districts. Be sides there are several hundred small-’ er plants using less than 10,000 horse power each. Forty per cent . of the Swedish farms now run thefr house hold. dairy, and agricultural machin ery by electricityKand 50 per cent of the Houses in the country districts are lighted by electricity. This is believ ed to be a record for the world. NEW MODEL CHEVROLET COACH NOW ON MARKET The Chevrolet Motor company an nounces a new model to its line, the Chevrolet coach, which will be the lowest priced coach on the market, say Arey Bros., dealers of Shelby. This Chevrolet coach, however, dif fers from most Of the coaches on the market in that the rear panels are steel clear to the top, like the other Chevrolet closed models, and is fin ished in black with gold stripe—the same us Chevrolet sedan. The door on each side is' exception ally large allowing for easy entrance and exit, while the wide windows, two on each side, affopfl an*oxtreme range of vision during all seasons and re freshing xeritilation in warm weather. The rear quarter windows are the same width as the door windows. -1 GOLF BALL BARRAGE BAD ON RATTLESNAKE Augusta, Gu., Sept. 23.—Local golfers have killed wild birds and pigeons with their mighty drives, and it is even said that' innocent bystand ers have been knocked silly by ill guided balls, but it remained for Mor ton Jones, automobile dealer, to set a new record in this line. Playing golf with Judge J. C. C. Black, Hugh P. Saxon and Milledge Lockhart, Mr. Jones sliced his ball on the twelfth tee and when the elusive pill was found behind a shallow declevity it was lying close beside a diamond back rattlesnake which was in the throes of death. The snake measured three feet and bad two rattles. McADOO IS SILENT ON RB Tl RN TO UNITED STATES New Yopk, 22.—William G. McAdoo, returning on the Leviathan today aftof several eekit In fcuropa. declined to comment on politics at this time, although he asserted he would "have something to say later.” “1 have been out of touch with the political situation for more than twe | months,” Mr. McAdoo said, "and am i therefore unable to discuss it intelli gently at the moment.” Mrs. A. R. Weaver A Mother's Story I Young Mk>th«n^Should Hood Charlotte, N. Gar.—“I am glad to recommend Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription to the young mother who has need of a tonic and nervine, for I am very sure it was of benefit to me in my own young motherhood. It quiets the nerves and strengthens every part of the body.”r-Mrs. A. R. Weaver, 80) N. Davidson St. You better go now to your nearest druggist and obtain this wonderful woman’s tonic, the Prescription of Dr. Pierce to be had in tablets or liquid; or write Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice, Send 10c M9 trial pkg, tablets. ::ijls"■ -— - Arab Women Seek Removal Of Veils Jerusalem—The stubborn conserva tism of the Mohammedan cu. tom with regard to the social isolation of the women in Palestine may soon give way before the movement launched by Arab feminists for the removal of the veil. The Holy Land backward in many respects, is behind such Moslem conn-, tries as Turkey and Egypt in breaking the shacldes holding women in seclu sion. The movement for the enfranchise ment of Moslem women in Palestine is of recent origin and is traceable to the influx of people from the west, es pecially Jewish immigrants coming to settle i ritheir national home. As the first step towards their 1 emancipation the women demand ec. j clesiastical sanction for tiie removal of the dark veil from their fees. If; such flyinjj^in the face of age-long custom do<»in<rt**vin official approval some of the leitifirig Arab women of j Palestine are determined to do what ; their Moslem sisters did in Turkey, where the veil hus been entirely cast; off, or at least in Egypt where only a ! light transparent veil is still worn; extending from below the nose. The ban on the public appearance of women has retarded the development of the Arab drama, and it is the hope of the feminists that the admittance of Moslem women to the theatrical stage will follow the removal of the veil. Arab women of Palestine are keen not only on social emancipation'BUT on participation in politics. “Take us out of our insulting seclu sion and remove from our faces the offensive black cloth, give us opr op- ; portunity as free members of a free1 people, granting us the right to fight with you for our national ideals," says in part an appeal appearing fp cently in an Arab language newspaper in Haifa. “Then we shall in gratitudb | sacrifice our jewels, delivering up our | gold and precious stones for the es ■ tablishment of the Arab National .bank.” -- RELATIONS CONFUSED BY FATHER-SON WEDDINGS ..... .. . Munich, Sept. 24.—The recent wed ding's of Karl Braun, 25 years old, and his father have started an endless chain of relationships which has got beyond the reach of genealogists and culminated in Braun becoming his father’s father-in-law. Young Braun married a widow of 45 with grown-up children. Shortly after his father, 50 years of age, mar ried the 24-year-old daughter of his son’s wife. Genealogists figure that as a result of the two 'weddings young | Braun becamfe his father's father-in | law and that his wife’s daughter be came her mother’s motherin-law and the st^p mother of her own step-fath er. iDRY AGENTS SEIZE LIqVoR CASES BY THE THOUSANDS 'New Orleans, Sept. 22.—Dry agents today seized thousands of eases of liquor at Mandeville and Bayou La combe, across Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans, and unearthed, they said a gigantic conspiracy to ship liquor by carloads to the large cities of the south and middle west. J. H. Hemmingway, said by the of ficers to he “the brains” of the alleg ed conspiracy, was arrested as he at tempted to leave Prieto’s yard in his automobile. He gave his address as Mandeville. I In “detour” the accent is on the j last syllable. So many people place it on the d-.—Associated Editors. The swell-head gerni is nobody’s fool. He always manages to pick out ! an empty one.—Everett Herald. I —-.—___ ORDINANCE AUTHORIZATION TTHE ISSUANCE OF ELECTRIC LIGHT BONDS OF THE TOWN 4*\ MpOIlpSBORIJ. J It is ©irtjered bv tgA-goverping body of the town of Mooresbm-ft that bonds of said town of Mooresboro, a munici pality in the^co^tjB of Cleveland and state of North Carolina, be authoriz ed and issued: fa) For the purpose of erecting in stalling and building an electric light plant for the town of Mooresboro. (b) The maximum aggregate prin I cipal amont of the bonds to be issued hereunder is $12,000. (c) That a tax sufficient to pay the principal and interest of the bonds j shall be annually levied and collected. : (d) That a statement of the debts j of the municipality has been filed with \ he clerk and is open to public inspec , ion. (e) The assessed valuation of the property subject to tuxation by the I municipality for the year of $200,137. (f) The amount of the net debt of j^he municipality outstanding author I ized or to be authorized by this bond ordinance is $12,000. (g) The probable period of useful ness of the electric light system to be constructed with the funds derived from aid' bonds is found and hereby declared to be thirty days. (h) This ordinance shall take effect thirty days after its first publication t>r posting, unless ip the meantime a petition for its submission to the vot ers is filed under the Municipal Fi nance Act, and in such event it shall take effect when approved by the vot ers of the municipality at an election as provided by law. The foregoing ordinance was pass ted September 17, 1024, and was first ‘published on September 2C. Any ac toin or proceeding questioning the Validity of said ordinance must be commenced within 30 days after its first publication. U. C. MOORE, Mayor of Moores boro. ] H. H. GREEN, Clerk Town of Moor j esboro. I)ESIG \ ERS, rA BR!( ATORS, Erectors, Structural Steel and Concrete Reinforcing liars. For Office and Store Buildings, Oarages, Store Fronts, Mil: and Factory Buildings, Machine Shops and Foundries, Churches and Sellouts. Immediate shipments from ^Charlotte stock. SOl'THERN F.NOINEEKINT, COMPANY Office and Plant * Charlotte, N. C. SPECIFY HOME PRODUCTS Ask your groreryman for Rost's Bread and Cakes. They are sold on a money-?<:u:k guarantee if not satis factory. Our products are delivered to the grocers twice daily. Demand them'fresh. Rolls .Made Morning and Evening. Get them at the Bakery. BOST BAKERY Phone 158. Shelby, N. C. mmBnBinan 1—1 n.i 11 ■ n i u» r~r BaHBMKdTSiSr HOTEL ST, .TAMES TIMES CQi'AUK, NEW VOliiv <'ITY —-Just uff-Hroutlwny—a4- itiD-i 1 t West t.~il li St. .Much (^viireH by women traveling without curort. “Sunshine in every room.” An hotel of quiet dignity having the atmosphere and appointment.-! of a well eoJglitioned h/mue. 40 Theatres, all itrincipal' shop: j and churches, 3 to 5 minutes walk < ! 2 minutes of all subways “V j roads, surface ears, bus lines Within 3 minutes Grand On-" tral, 5 minutes Pennsylvania Ter minals. amr.a£,'}BZZt£'m. i»U FIST Postal for Rates and Rocklet W. Jo.v’.son Quinn, President Any Car is a Better Car if nothing but TEXACO GASOLINE TIIE VOIATILE GAS is ever fed to the tank: Better in mileage, up keep, flexibility, pick-up and power. Fill uj) at RANDALL BROS., Grover, N. C, one of the new l&uick models s embodies all of the features and qualities that have made Buick famous. Jit the new prices you can afford to own tkBmckyoumnt. J. LAWRENCE LACKEY, Dealer - ~ - - - Shelby, N. C. When^etter^utomobiles ^Thuilt, Buick win~b^M~them
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1924, edition 1
2
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