Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / March 13, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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1 P. Cleveland Gardner attorney-at law Royster Building Shelby, North Carolina DR. T. O. GRIGG, DENTIST 407 S. LaFayette St. NOTICE OF ENTRY. A piece of land lying* in No. 9 township, Cleveland county, North Carolina, has been filed for entry. Bounded on the north by Knob Creek on the east by lands of Lem Elmore and others and on the west by lands of P. C. Mauney. Containing 3 acres more or less. Thi 4th day of February A. D. 1925. P. C. MAUNEY. R. L. Weathers, Entry Taker. | T. W. Ebeltoft Grocer and Book Seller Phone—82 tings’Free f Flower/ Seeds/ Hastings’ la giving away Absolutely Tree, 5 Seed Packets of Beautiful Flowers to each 1325 customer. Hast ings’ beautiful, new 112-page, 1326 Catalog shows these ilowers in full natural colors. The front cover pic vires the great Stone Mountain Confed erate Memorial This Big Seed Book is the Standard Planting Guide, with valuable culture directions and accurate descriptions of- all kinds of seeds, plants and bulbs. It has over 250 pictures from actual photographs and is bigger ani> better than ever. Brim full of informa tion, it’s the most useful Seed Book ever published. You need it for ready reference al most daily. I!e sure to write for it today; a post-card will do. It comes to you entirely free by return maii H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. NOTICE OF TAKING DEPOSI TIONS. North Carolina—Cleveland Coun ty. In the Superior Court, lien H. Harrill, Plaintiff, , vs. Gertrude Harrill, Defendant. To Gertrude Harrill, defendant in the above entitled action now pending above entitled action: You are hereby notified thut in the above entitled action now pending against you in the Superior court of C levelarid county. North Carolina, in which complaint has been filed and in which an absolute divorce is sought upon the grounds of adultery, the de positions of Mrs. Sadie Langston and Mrs. S. R. Winslow and others will be t 'ken on behalf of the plaintiff, at Hamlet, N. C., before J. C. Leigh, a Notary Public, at his office in the town of Hamlet, N. C., on Thursday. March 19th. 1925 at 10 a. m. and thg hearing will be continued until said deposition j are taken and completed. I be - aid J. C. Leigh has been appoint ed Commissioner by said Court to take said depositions. This February 23rd..1925. GEO. P. WEBB, Clerk Superior Court, Cleveland County. Ryburn and Hoey, Attys for plaintiff. SICK WOMEN . ATTENTION! Read this Remarkable Testi mony Regarding Results from t aking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Norfolk, Virginia. — “If you only anew how many women and girls havo taken your medicine by bearing my testi mony, it would seem wonderful to you. Every day and every chance I have I ad vise some one to try it It was in June, 1904, when I had given up to never get well, that I wrote to you. My husband went to the drug store and brought ine Vegetable Compound home to me. in a few days I began to improve and l! nave often taken it since. I am now filing through the Change of Life and still stick by it and am enjoying won derful health. When I first started with ynur medicines I was a mere shadow. My health Beeroed to be gone. The last doctor I had said he would give me no more local treatments unless I went to the Hospital and was operated on, that was when I gave the doctors up. Mow I am a healthy robust woman. I wish I could tell the world what a won derful medicine Lydia E. Fink ham’s Vegetable Compound is. I will be only teo glad to answer letters from any where. I wish all sick women would Like it.”—Mrs. J. A. JonE-s,317 Colley Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia. Flu Rages in Holly Springs Neighborhood J. B. Swain Speaks in Interest of Co. Operative Marketing. Personal Mention of Interest. (Special to The Star.) Holly Springs, Mnr. 9.—Mr. J. B. Swain a Co-op man from Raleigh vis ited our school recently and made an interesting talk to the pupils. He offer ed a silver pencil to the pupil thnt brought the most people to his lecture the following night. Otis Scruggs won the pencil. Flu is raging in our community. Fol lowing is the list of pupils who have been out of school sick: Dewey, Lon nie and Beatrice Summers. Garthe Humphries, Bernice Whelchel and Clara Mae Runpe. Miss Verna Byars a student at Boil ing Springs and Messrs. Broadus F.arls and Toy Summers, students at Cliffside high school have been ill, but we are glad to note are now rap idly recovering. We regret that Mr. M. B. Earls, one of the school committeemen had the misfortune to fall through a bridge and break his ribs. We hope for him a speedy recovery. Mr. Nicus Hicks our former teacher, now at Palmer school spent Thursday night at the home of Mr. M. B. Earls. Mildred Whisonant of the 7th grade spent Thursday afternoon in Boiling Springs. Sarah Lovelace has left school and gone to work at Henrietta. We regret very much to lose her. The Wednesday night singing at Camps creek have been discontinued owing to the lack of attendance. We have only seven more weeks of cchool. Let us push forward and make these the best weeks of the term. Dairying Business Worth Staying By Since the close of the war, nearly all farm products have experienced a a period of low or unprofitable prices. Cotton was one of the first to suffer, and last year wheat was the outstand ing victim. Dairy products, while suffering some reduction in prices, have held up well until recently. It is probable that they will take their turn in the de pression, Put being among the last to suffer, possibly the decline in prices will not be so great.. In ali lines of farming and especially in livestock farming in the South, the tendency has always been to change to some other line of production when there is a slump in prices. Dairying has made a splendid in crease in the South i nrecent years. Many have added the sale of milk oi cream to the farm revenues with sat. isfaction. We are not yet milkingjone fifth the cows we should, but possibly the progress or increase in dairying has been fast enough in many sections during recent years. But if now, when prices decline, we follow the usual course and quit the business, it will be a great mistake. When prices are low, one may not increase the number of cows, but the aim should be to pro duce the heifers necessary to increase the herd when better prices come. Certainly it is am istake to quit the dairy business after a few years in that line, or it was a mistake to go into it at all. When prices are low, only the good cows should be kept, and these should be more wisely and economically fed, but to quit the business means selling at a low price stuff bought or pro duced at a high cost. It takes years to learn the dairy business and build up a high-produc ing herd, and no one should think ol sacrificing his herd and changig to some other line when the recurring slumps in prices come. We hope our Southern farmers who have recently started selling milk or cream will not make the mistake ol closing out this line of work when prices decline. The thing to do is to keep the good cows, improve the pro duction of the herd, cure for it better, aud feed it better and more economi cally, and have a good crop of heif era coming on two or three years hence when the better prices come. Anyone who goes through Denmark or Holland or Wisconsin and sees what the dairy cow has done for these sec tions will be slow to quit dairy pro duction because of temporary depres sion in prices. DETECTIVES H \ STOLEN T LS IN COURTROOM Charlotte News. Wanted: The person or persons who Monday morning m police court in front of Judge William.;, and a hall down lawyers, aid other court of ficials stole Detective Alex Wests * While “Daddy” West, as the veter an city detective is known all over Charlotte was busily engaged in tes tifying in cases against defendants lie and his biother officers had round ed up Saturday night and Sunday, someone took the officers big olack chapeau light out from ruder hm ■lose and made a successful getaway. Mr. West, when court adjourned, wus wearing a hat that sat well jeon his crown and failed to get in speak ing distance with either ear. lie ad mitted that somebody ’.ad swapped hats with him and promised that if the “thief" would at once >e(.urn the missing chapeau he would refrain from starting a scouring party in search of the offending wearer of his missing headpiece. The J. I. Nissen wagon, as pood as the best. See O. E. Ford t o. TSir FINEST ESSEX EVER BUILT J. THIS '"v. greatest ESSEX VALUE traijht and Tan Extra ' . y You Cannot Get Equal Style Performance and Reliability Within Hundreds of Dollars of Its Price ✓ X' Essex is a totally different type.^ Its advantages arc - exclusive because patented. It gives results never be fore attained in any car: ' Low price, without disappointment'in looks or ' reliability. - , Economy without sacrifice of performance. / Stability and highest roadability without unnece»i X sary weight. J a The riding ease of large, costly cars. The handling A ease of a bicycle. Utter simplicity in design. The lowest maintenance cost, we believe, of any car in the world. A Car You Will Be Proud to Own These qualities make it the most wanted and largest selling car of its class in the world It is the finest Esst I ever built. It is the smoothest, most reliable Essex ever built. It is the best looking, most comfortably riding Essex ever buff* And .the price, because of volume, is - the lowest at which Essex ever sold. * i Surely you cannot be satisfied with less • than Essex offers when its cost is but little more than cars of thelowest price. Hudson-Essex, Largest Selling 6-Cylinder Closed Cars in the World HOEY MOTOR CO. — The Standby of the Home RENEW your furniture . quickly and economically. Restore overnight the wood work, wickerware, picture frames, lighting fixtures, bric a-brac—in fact anything that is at all dingy or worn. Pee Gee Re-Nu-Lac stains and varnishes in one operation. It is water-proof, and withstands the hardest usage. Glance around and note what has been marred or scratched. Apply Pee Gee Re-Nu-Lac and note the dif ference. Anyone candoagood job with Pee Gee Re-Nu-Lac. It is indispensable to the home. * PAUL WEBB & SON Shelby, N. C. H STAIN & I ••»(»«»#•««*. •t«Vltl.Et KENTtf (Special to The Star.) Grover, Mur. 10.—Miss Mabel For- 1 lone spent the week end with her mother ai i’orest City. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. White have re* | upiled from a pleasure trip into Flor ida and Cuba. They .eport a pleasant time ami many interesting observa tions und experiences. M iss Mury Sue Hunt .spent the lat ter part of last week in Grover, Messrs Frank Sheppard and Loitus r.llr. visited friends in Upper Cleve land Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kills, Rev. and Mn. lloyli 1 e, ami Miss Mary Sue .iunt at urued the Missionary rally at Shelby la3( Friday. Miss Rubv Ellis of Limestone col. I kf0v'/tS tonv‘*lcscinK with a errid at nor home for several days last week. Our community hits experienced its Or t scares with mad cloys for the year 1025. It is reported that one start od from down in some part of Chcro kee c.junty and came all the way out m ‘ .:uth Carolina over into the old 1 -'forth State” following the course of Kings Creek for some distance and then headed for Buffalo creek, but the pursuers with shotguns stopped him down near Mr. K. B. Herndon’s Sun day afternoon. It is reported that I many dogs-.were bitten and the head j of the dead dug was sent to Raleigh so the people will know whut disposi tion to make of iho other dog*. A mass meeting was held at Grovei school house Monday night in the in terest of cooperative marketing of cot ton. Mr. J. B. Swain of'Ualeigh gave some interesting facts about cotton ex changes, their interference with the price of cotton when supply and de mand should regulate the pfice, as ■well ns other things. One feature of the meeting was a contest between six high school boys and girls to set who would get the most people to be present. Miss Louise Pinkioton wa:> ! presented with a good fountain pen for [the highest score while Miss Mary t'risp came second and won an Ever sharp pencil. Mr. Lawrtme? the farm agent fot I Cleveland county followed Mr. Swain j und told ubnut the things that were being done with storage houses for sweet potatoes und the advantage ot selling them on the co-operative plan. Many farmers of the community have manifested an interest in the potato business and it is thought that a stor age house will ho built at Grover. We are glad to note the fine inter est that many of the pupils are tuking in their work'. Those that make above; 90 on four' major subjects and do not i come below 80 on uny item are plae-1 ed on the honor roll. Our February list is as follows. First grade: Gertrude Beam, Mar jorie Bird and Ada Mae Moss. . Second grade: A. It. Bookout, Ethel Elliott, VV. V. Elliott, Margaret Hern den, Lucy Crisp, O. D. Moore, Hazel Moore, Louis Hamrick and Boyd Stacy, Third grade: Pinkney Cook, J. B. Cook, Myeres Hambright, Elizabeth Gold, Nancy Jay Dillingham, E. B. Herndon jr., and Nelson Beheler. Fourth grade: Mary Anna Beheler, Dick Rollins, Aden Crisp, Clyde Wal | lace, Everett Hambright, Dclinar j Mpss and Buren Randall. Fifth grade: Annie Randall, B. M.1 Gold, Feleeia Bell, Blanchard Horne. Sixth grade: Mary Hambright, Mar ie Herndon, Virginia Beheler, Alvah Bridges, Minnie Harry, A. G. Dilling ham, Ervin Hambright’, Elena Ran dall, Clyde Randall. Seventh grade: Marjorie Crisp, Franklin Harry, Malcolm George and Tyree Keeter. Eighth grade: Eddie Byers, Leatha Beheler, Bessie Wells. Ninth grade: Lottie Beheler. Tenth grade: Mary Hester Ellis, Inez Davis, SaDelle Harry, Lois Moore and Evelyn Mullinax. Belwood Electric Line Near Finish (Special to The Star.) Belwood, March 11.—The farmers of upper Cleveland are busy getting ready for the spring: planting. Our school is flourishing ynder the able management of Prof. C. G. Hodges assisted by Mrs. Hcmer Beam, Misses Willie Witherspoon, Susan White and Macie Lattimorc. The work on the Belwood Light Co., line ig about completed. Mr. Ed Dixon deserves great credit for his c< rse verance in putting this modern im provement into our community. Quite a number of our people at tended the Training School for Sun day School teachers at the Methodist church in Shelby, last Sunday after noon. Mr. C. K. McMurry is very ill at his home. His many friends v/isli him a speedy recovery. Miss Ola Canipe visited Mrs, Mag gie Neason of Rockdale, Sunday night. Miss Veva C. Spangler of Double Shoals visited Misses Ine* and Ottie Maia Lut* Saturday night; A man to whom a pledge means nothing is not one to tie to in any kind of a deal. Automob'les are constantly being improved, but there is no perceptible improvement in the drivers. The air service is trying to blow up the army and navy, but indications are its wings will bs clipped. See O. E. Ford Co., for iron wheel farm trucks. rivis Wood’s Pedigree Bonne County, Woodburn White Dent nnd Wood’s Dixie Corn, the be?t varieties of white corn. Pedigree Reid’s Yollmv Dent nnil Improved C.Uien Dent Com—best yellow varieties. Wood’s Virginia Ensilage Corn best available ensilage torn. All of our see 1 corns are of High Germination. Write for prices ami samples of va l ie Lie.- best suited to your soil and climatic conditions. FREE—Crop Special It gives full information cr.d current price* on aoi» Wot*!'* lVdigrec Kunsati irrowu Alfalfa »nU other nvutsontUk- goods* WOOD & SONS Seedsmen Since 1$79 14th St., Richmond, Va. If you must tell a falsehood tr/* end do it on the right side. The trains ore safe enough—iP* the crossings that are dangerous The difficulty about the large frr rent of dumb bells is that they aren't dumb. STEEL y CtfNrOQONO ft A CHANM fet.fi’ " Ahoiea * PLATffl ■ BtAM5 . PLATA CiVPfl OPOCf VRMfr cnwiorrr Dr. C. M. Peeler Dentist Office in Whi nant RuHding Over Battery Store. Office Phone 99-W. Residence Phone 460-W. a BILIOUS^ATTACKS From Which Kentucky Man Suf fered Two or Three Timet a Mouth, Relieved by Black-Draught. Lawrenccburg, Ky.—Mr, J. P, NevinB, a locnl coni denier end far mer, about two years ago learned of the value of Thedford's Black Draught liver medicine, and now ho says: “Until then I suffered with sa ver* bilious attacks that came on two or three times each month. 1 would got nauseafttt. I would havo dizziness and couldn’t work. “I would take ptllf until I waa worn-out with them. I didn't seem to get relief. After taking the pills my bowels would act a couple or three times, then I would bo very constipated. “A neighbor told me of Black Draught and I began Its use. I never have found so much relief ns it gave me. * I would net bo without It for anything. "It seemed to cleanse my whole system and make me feel like new. I v ould take a few doses—get Pf the bile and have my usual clear iiea.l, feel full of ‘pop’ and could do twice the work." One cent a dose. NC-lfil [ Beauty and Health l x MRS. BEULAH WALL Gaitonm, N. C.—“Dr. Pierce’s Fav orite Prescription is the best tonic and nervine that I have ever taken and I would never hesitate to rec ommend it to any woman who is ail ing or nervous. I was weak and ner vous after my first baby came, would have dizzy spells and backaches. I also had functional disturbances but after I started taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription my system be came regulated and then my pains and ache6 disappeared* 1 took sev eral bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and was just as well and strong as a woman could wish to be.” —Mrs. Beulah Wall, 103 S. Ran som St. Regain your health and improve your looks by obtaining this famous “Prescription” now, in tablets or li quid, from your druggist, or write Dr. Pierce, President Invalids’ Ho tel in Bqtfalo, N. Y., for free advice.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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March 13, 1925, edition 1
5
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