Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Nov. 14, 1924, edition 1 / Page 10
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Be Young! AGE isn’t always a matter or years; sometimes it's lack ofvigar—a weakening of the vital organs of digestion, circulation and nervous force. Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic is Nature's remedy for the “run down.” It gives the whole system renewed strength to ward off old age. For Constipation Use Munyon’s Paw Paw Pills MU N YON’S PAW PAW TONIC 'T/wre it Hupe‘* \ with IRON and NUX AT ALL DRUGGISTS Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded MUNYON'S, Scranton, Pa. SOLI) BY PAUL WEBB. SHELBY, N. (’. (■ 1 Feeding Ful-O-Pep Egg Mash to your hens will produce those extra eggs and extra profit. Don’t make the mistake of thinking some other feed will do. There is only one FuK)-Pep Egg Mash. Ful-O-Pep Egg Mash makes eggs. Keep it before your hens and you will get eggs in abundance. Ful-O-Pep Egg Mash is a health producing feed as well as an egg producing feed. For Sale by N-2H Your Grocer McKNIGHT & CO., Inc. Wholesale Distributors What Northerners Think of South The.' following; clipping: from the New York World will prove vastly j interesting to Southerners. Apparent ly certain people ‘‘up north" have no 1 love for the ‘‘Solid South:" Newark, N. .1. 1 To the Kdit.or of The World: This is a day of rejoicing for all " od Amerhuns, for not only is our noble President Coolidgc returned to 'office by a smashing vote but the ■ : I y - gobble tv (Walsh of Montana, Hmokhart Wheeler and LaFollette jhave all fared badly. That should put an end to the besmirching of public men and be a source of great at -.faction to the martyred Daugh jerte. Hut there are two features of the election that fail to give satisfaction. One is th r: election of Smoth over ■ lerling and steadfast Roosevelt. Why should this upstart from the I east ide he permitted to triumph i over a scion of an ancient, aristo crat c, American family, the son of i one of the most illustrious men? | When that fan happen it is not a i healthy sign. The other ore spot is the old solid ■ i-1 nut It. .^pp-nTPHtty ttilTt part 3f our : country, where dense ignorance pre vails, is still trying to keep up the Civil War. On no other theory can v.v :.cci int for it. vote against such a splendid I’ve -blent in many ways the rival- t. of ihe line as Calvin i olid;- A move at Washington to : disfranchise tlve South and hold that 1 ior. under the same sort of ar rangement that now exists in the case of the Philippines would be welcom ed by all H/0 per cent Americans. IOHN T. McCORD. Newark, N. J. MSI.!.ION VIRES* SON’S BEGIN WORK IN STOKE Albany, N. V. Two sons of mil lionaires Kenan their business ca reers in an Albany department store recently Raymond Mellen, son of Chas. S. M- lieu, former president of the New Vork, New Haven and Hartford rail road, punched the time clock at 8:30 I a. m., atul began his duties of sweep inn floors and unpacking toys for the Christinas trade. Charles H. Sabin, -lr., son of Charles H. Sabin, New Yt rk banker, checked the Christmas stock in a maze of crutes, boxes and barrel:. The boys have rented a small room in alodging house street and ; have declared their intention of ntak i ing their small salaries meet their i weekly expenses. Mr. Sabin, Sr., be | gan business life as a clerk in a local j hank and Mr. Mellen learned the rail | mad business by starting at the bot tom. World’s Greatest Value ENHANCED BY Wonderful New Prices The Coach is now priced below all com parison. The greatest year in Hudson-Essex history with the largest pro duction of 6-cylinder closed cars in the world makes possible i these price reductions. It gives Hudson-Essex exclusive advantage to create these cars and these prices. HUDSON SUPER-SIX COACH *1395 WAS *1500 ESSEX SIX COACH *945 WAS *1004 Freight and Tan Extra Largest Selling 6-Cylinder Closed Car In the World HOEY MOTOR COMPANY Right Man in Right Place By MARTHA WILLIAMS < (.'up! right.) fta ((Ol’l'I’OSK you lutd three wishes. ^ what would you ask for first?" David Allen asked, not quite steadily, with a quickly averted glume at Kliuor Mure. “O! 1 don’t know—let me see< Yes —I do kjuw—wings—and freedom—” j Elinor begun, David laughed softly: “That's two in-one, right out the hex.” he interrupt ed : “Win just one more, you’d never be uble to choose what it was." "Hni! I do hate wet blankets!" Elinor ejaculated with a mutinous grlmnee. David took Iter hand. "Wish you’d let me choose for you," he said thickly: "No need to tell you what my choice would lie—" "Kenlly! I’m no clairvoyant, Elinor said, snatching away her hand, "Het ter tell me straight out what you’d pick for me—that'will show If you un derstand me the least hit.” 'Here goes. husband six feet tall—and named D-Davhl," the sHitor cried desperately. In reward he got Elinor’s best baby-stare, and: "Hut where’d 1 find htm? You’re the only Uavid I know—and unless you marry Nancy Tilly, your mother and tlie aunts will have cut-fits." "111 take care they den’t—-if that’s all there is to hinder." Ihtvhl said stoutly, again possessing himself of her hand. , "You won’t—not by several tong I chalks!" Elinor thing at him. ‘‘They set tip an Allen as too good for a i. Ware. Tell ’em from me straight oat, it's the other way round." "Honey—no matter what the name Is. nobody in the world isn't quite good enough for you,” David answered hum bly. ‘Hilt there may lie—yes, there are—fellows wjto deserve you less | than I do. If ever one such took you I i»way from me—well, I’d have to kill | him—that's flat.” A prophetic speech, maybe—for In : Side a month the unexpected happened —In the concrete form of Joe I.uchlitt. j nephew and next heir to the richest citizen of Hroonie county. A personable young fellow, good to look at, nppn handed, open hearted, hut not quite at his ease. He came, saw, was con quered by Elinor—which was quite the usual-thing. The unusual thing was she fell for liitn, nearly as hard. They had a whirlwind courtship— inside sis weeks tlie wedding was Imminent, frocks all made, cakes baked ready for the Icing—and Madame Alien and her sisters the Miss Grlmballs, easy in their minds as to David—for the first time since lie began shaving. In spite of joy in his deliverance they were a little sorry for him. He surely did take It hard—this losing of Elinor. Yet that did not make him unjust to his victorious rival—he went so far as to say to Elinor: ‘It's mighty poor comfort—but all I’ve got—that it took ! a better man to heat me.” Which Hurt ! iter much worse than any scorn or railing could have done—Indeed when David was out of tearing, she sobbed as though her heart would break. Time ambling withal brought the day before the wedding. In tlie dawn of It tlie bridegroom expectant hurst In upon David, lifeless and sullen of aspect, saying dully: "David—unless you’ll help me, I’m hound to kill my self. Here's tlie whole story. I came here, the craziest fool ever—all be cause of a girl. The only girl—you understand. Never can he another— not slurring Elinor. Hut—we had quar reled—she sent hack m.v ring—next thing I knew she was Hashing another fellow's—and he giving me the laugh i '.p and down the eountrv. doin' to marry Lucy—that was her mime— right out of ha nil—anil take her to Europe, maybe all round the world. She had money, you .sort—as much as I'll ever have—and he made nut hb didn't nive a thought to anything but her. Of I'omnc lie lied—he was shnrp | er, and a thief. He not round her I mother, and wheedled nway all her ; Liberty bonds, with a tale of making 'em pay her double Interest—and then he persuaded the poor lady to let him have Lucy's share too—so he could double It for his weddln’ pres ent to his bride. If only I'd stood by, that wouldn't ever happened, no mut ter what else did-—hut I acted the cow ard, and gave him his chance, lteckon you can guess how he used It—ran nway with all the money—to nobody knows where. And Lucy Wrote—the letter came last night—I can't talk about It—only this—she hasn't got hardly a dollar left—and she don't want anything in the world—hut sight of u big lummox—named me.” David sat spellbound, staring hard through the recital. He whistled his keenest at the end, stopping suddenly to say: * *'I see." Joe w ent on miser ably: "All I see is—luingln's too gmjd for me—messln’ tip things this ■ way for two of the finest girls livin’. Now—you tell me what to do. Shall I keep on with Miss Elinor?—” “Sot by a Jugful," David broke kp stormlly. “Don't you see what an insult you’d offer her inurryia' her, when you love another girl?" "You'll do no such thing.” David said sternly. "We’ll go together to see Elinor—and tell her everything.” When Elinor knew everything, she laughed heartily, saying us she held out a hand to each. “This Is surely providential—there’ll be a wedding Just the same—only David will be nty bridegroom—and the right man In the right place.” Carried unanimously by a vote of the three tx'ppivst young people aiivg. Big Profits Made By Sugar Smugglers ; Dublin—The Free State Govern - i meat is losing- thousands of dollars I monthly in revenue through the ac tivities of a band of sugar smugglers operating on the Ulster Free State border. Scores ot young Irishmen with a lust for adventure are engaged in the illegal traffic, it is alleged, trans porting sugar from Ulster—where the cost is approximately three doll ars per hundred-weight cheaper than in the Free State—-across the border and avoiding the payment of the heavy Free State tax. The smugglers are able to sell their sugar to Free State dealers at a handsome profit, wh.le the dealers are still able to undersell their competitors who are forced to pay the Free State duty. The Custom* Department has been bombarded with complaints from j respectable dealers throughout Coun ty Monaghan, on the border, where | almost the entire population is able to buy tax-free sugar. The smugglers usually proceed in the same way. A merchant in a town across the border books the orders. A store shop or house, just inside the Northern frontier, is secured to be used as a clearing house. The sugar is deposited here, and j from time to time the smugglers j cross the border, driving motor trucks I load up and sr.eak buck into the Free State by little-used roads, thus avoiding Customs authorities. Arriv ing at his destination, the smuggler dumps his load of contraband into another clearing house, from which it is distributed to F'ree State deal ers. There is no interference by the Northern officials. The driver se lects the ‘‘unscheduled roads," which means he takes the risk of having his motor truck confiscated. Only the “scheduled roads,” on which Cus toms depots have been established, are officially open to automobile traffic. But there hus been no confiscation up to the present, and the smugglers’ trade goes merrily on. CANADIAN GOLD OUTPUT REACHES MILLION OUNCES Ottawa, Ont., Nov. 7.—Gold pro duction in Canada passed the 1,000, 000-ounce mark for the second time since 1900 last year, according to a report released by the Dominion Bu reau of Statistics. The output totaled 1,243,341 ounces, valued ut $25,702, 139. Ontario accounted for 90 per cent of the Dominion’s gold production. Its output amounted to 981,794 ounc es, with a value of $20,298,622. Brit ish Columbia was next, with a pro duction of 200,140 ounces, wi|Oi £4, 137,261. The Yukon, which ForHierly produced the bulk of Canada’s gold, was third, with an output of 60,144 ounces, valued at $1,243,287, followed by Quebec, with a production of 667 ounces, worth $13,788. ANCIENT COINS ARE FOUND IN BRITAIN London,—A collection of Savon coins issued during the reigns of five Wessex kings has been discovered in a cave near Peakland, Derbyshire, by the Rev. C. II. Wilson. Human and animal remains found in the outer chambers of the cave indicate, ac cording to antiquarians, that the cave was formerly the dwelling place of a personage, possibly a Mercian rul er more than a thousand years ago. The coins so far identified date back to the time of Cenwulf, a Mer cian king, who ruled about the year 800. Articles of personal adornment also were found. Correct this sentence: “That’s all J right dear, you can go on to work and 1 will build a fire in the fur- 1 nace.” The poor are not always with us j as of old. They are riding around in automobiles and get out of town j frequently. Loafing is a poor pastime without j plenty* of tobaeco, a warm place to sit and somebody who is willing to listen to you. The questions a wife asks her husband when he gets in late are not hypothetical ones, though they ; may seem so. The French are proposing to put a' tax of $1,000 on American divorces, i Looks like Americans could -ave! money by trading at home. -- . Over 19.000 persons died from I snake bite in India last year. Let’s see, and India has no Volstead law or eighteenth amendment either. The federal prohibition commis j sioner says 90 per cent of the boot leg liquor is poison. The mortality rate indicates' 'his figures are low. If he’s one of the common people, he’s “busted” when he goes broke, and if he’s in the capitalist class, he [is just “financially embarrassed.’ A water heater that also serves as a fireplace is now on the market. B ABY'S COLDS can often be “nipped in the bud” without dosing by rubbing Vicks over the throat and chest and also applying a little up the little one’s nontrils. VapoRub °v*r 17 Million Jar, U**d Yearly Soun/m Enomm comur r designers, fabricators, Erectors, Structural Steel i nd Concrete Reinforcing Bars. For Office and Store Buildings, Oarages, Store Fronts, Alii! and Factory Buildings .Machine Shops and Foundries, Churches and Schools. Immediate shipments hi.rlotle stock. SOUTHERN ENGINEERING COMPANY Office and Plant * Charlotte, N. C. from NEW FLORIDA TRAIN “Land of the Sky” Special VIA Southern Railway System Through sleeping car from Charlotte to Jacksonville, via Colum bia and Safannnh, thence A. C. I,. K. H., with connections at Jacksonville for all Florida i>t>i • t ■ : S< II KIM I.K Southbound Northbound 5:20 p. nr. f.v. . . Charlotte -.. Ar. 9:30 a. m. 10155' a. TnTT.v. " Columbia TTvT F.D1 a. in*— 3:55 a. ni. Ar. . .. * Hav; much Lv. 13:45 a. ni. 8:15 a. m. Ar. Jackniiville Lv. 8:15 p. m. Dining car service and .>!>. creation car between Charlotte and Columbia. •Excellent, service to and from Florida. For further :>iA>rnnt inn, and Plet-ping car reservations call on any SoiiUr r» Railway Agent: R. H. Graham, Division Pas?■.eager Agent, Charlotte, X. C. TRY A STAR PENNY COLUMN AD. SEIBERLING ALL-TREADS <^> 40,000,000 T1RES Were built by Mr. Frank A. Seiberling before he designed and built the Seiberling All-Tread. Science and Skill is the result of a tire that has no equal, for Endurance. You demand a good tire—Then buy the best at— MISENHEIMER TIRE CO. AND IDEAL SERVICE STATION VULCANIZING UNEXCELLED. SHELBY, N. C. STAR WANT ADVERTISEMENTS PAY TAX NOTICE I will be at the following places on the dates speci fied for the collection of County taxes for 1924. Let all tax payers who possibly can see me on this round. Pay on this round and take advantage of the one-half per cent discount allowed by the State Law. Monday, November 10th, No. 1 Township, Humphries Gin, 9 to 12 A. M. Monday, November 10th No. 1 Township, McBee’s Store, 1 to 4 P. M. Tuesday, November 1.1th, No. 2 Township, Jolley’s Store, 9 to 12 A. M. Tuesday, November 11th, No. 2 Township, Boiling Springs, 1 to 4 P. M. Wednesday, November 12th, No. 7 Township, Moores horo, 9 to 12 A. M. Wednesday, November 12th, No. 7 Township, Latti more, 1 to 4 P. M. Thursday, November 112th, No. 8 Township, Delight, 9 to 12 A. M. Thursday, November 18th, No. 8 Township, Delight, 1 to 4 P. M. Friday, November 14th, No. 11 Township, Casar, 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Monday, November 17th, No. 10 Township, Carpen ter’s Store, 9 to 12 A. M. Monday, November 17th, No. 9 Township, Dixon Bro thers Store, 1 to 4 P. M. luesday, November 18th, No. 9 Township, Lawndale, 9 to 12 A. M. Tuesday, November 18th, No. 9 Township, Fallston, 1 to 4 P. M. j Wednesday, November 19th, No. 5 Township, Waco, Thursday, November 20th, No. 3 Township, Earl, 9 to 12 A. M. 1 hursdav, November 20th, No. 4 Township, Grover, 1 to 4 P. M. Friday, November 21st, No. 4 Township, East Kings Mountain, 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. Saturday, November 22nd No. 4 Township, Kings Mountain, 9 A. M. to 4 P. M. HUGH A. LOGAN, Sheriff of Cleveland County.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1924, edition 1
10
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