Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / May 22, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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TO GET AHEAD AND KEEP AHEAD YOU MUST PLAN AHEAD If 10 per cent of what you make is set aside in a Special Account you will keep well in the front. HAVE YOUR SPECIAL ACCOUNT WITH US. UNION TRUST CO. SHELBY, N. C. BANKING - INSURANCE — TRUSTS SHELBY - LATTIMORE - LAWNDALE - FALLSTON - “IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH.” OiirTcwn —SHELBY SIDELIGHTS— — R. D. — I Hecorder John P. Mull is the author ity for tiie host actual pun we’ve heard in many a day: Lost week during the tax listing at ; the court house there am hied in a man who upon getting down his entire be longings on paper found them to he six dogs. With the proper entry made the tax-lister asked him to hold up his right hand. ( ‘‘Lookahere, do you have to swear to this thing?’’, inquired the man. “Sure,” replied the tax li>ter. “Well, then make that read seven dogs.” Two may not. live as cheaply as one, but heres a tip to the younger read ers that will save two dollars for the extra expenses—Marriage license ad vance -in' price on June 1 to $5 instead of $3—Just nine more days. Since we’ve always been addicted to reading these “From Peanut Stand to President” type of stories it's a pleas ure to hear the following pulled by the Bell Telephone News: A wealthy motorist, while touring through Georgia, drove up to a gaso line station and found the tender a lazy country boy. “Hey, boy,” said the motorist, "I want some gasoline. Get a move on you. You'll never get any where in this world unless you push. Push is essential. When 1 was young, I pushed and that got me where I am.’ “Well, boss," said the boy, “I reckon as haw you’ll have to push again ’cause we ain’t got a drop cf gas in the place.” The Star offers a good chance to be gin cooperation in the family. It would not take two people long to do th< work required by The Star for a fret trip to the Nation’s capital. And, Jim my, what a honeymoon, if you didn’t have to pay for it. Now that Tom Bost i coming to Shelby to make a speech we advise po] iticians hereabouts to mind their speech while the redheaded newspaper man is in town. He may look for a story or two while here. A headline in the last issue of The Star read: “Cleveland Farmers Found It Cheaper to Use 100 per cent Paint''. It would have been equally as true had the line been “pied” and the word “flappers” appeared instead of “farm ers.” Shelby is metropolitan notv. The rooms and apartments advertised for flRE/VT Itap) ■■ Co. WiikkkEconoM? HUI.KS 6ic 20c SUGAR, pound __— — LARD, pound_— FLOUR, Pillsbury Brand, 12 lb. bag __ Flour, l’illsburv d* •% /| Q Brand, 24 lb. bag 1 .40 Butter, Fancy Cream 73c cry, lb. Corn Flakes, Sunnyfield, package ______ Farina, Grandmother’s 1 C Wheat, package X DC Milk, A & P Evaporat ed, tall can ___ 10c 5c Milk, A & P Evaporated, small can__ THE' GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC JUST ARQUND’THE CORNER FROM EVERTBOD\ TEA co. I “at a price” If you like the idea of getting your money’s worth and more — better take a peep at our Griffon Suits. They are “to the manner born” when comes to style and tailoring. Yet six “five-dollar bills” is all you need for a good Griffon Suit. That’s what we call getting good clothes “at a price.” Dependable Shoes, Oxfords, Shirts, Hats, Hosiery, Un derwear, Neckwear, at prices that will cause you to buy. If Man or Young Man wears it and its good and reliable McBrayer has it. rent frequently read “to parties with out children.”—Still Shelby Grows. A faithful reader of the paper says j we were all wrong in “Around Our 1 Town” last week in saying that no one had an’idea “Casey” Morris and nfs j team would win a championship. Ac cording to him he prophesied such. I And without the least investigation | of his claim we. with Professor Grigg’s 1 permit, will award the prophet the Charlotte Observer loving cup—which ■ now seems to he a relic and as much j in existence as such a prophesy. | No, the unu ual crime news does not always take place in some state. ! Speaking of bobbed hair bandits, don't we have a young woman automobile, thief, according to her - admission to officers. Hereafter we wonder if Shelby taxi drivers will'furnish all accommoda tions to their passenger,- ? They do say that when I). Z. New. : ton was campaigning for the state I senate and was on route to an adjoin i ing county to make an address that a friends acoo-te 1 him with the question j “What do you think of the political situation now?” “Don’t bother me!” responded Mr. Newton. “I’ve got to talk; there’s no ; time to think.” And at that he must have sounded like a prospective con gressman instead of a state senator , (with apologies to Major Bulwinkle). Headers should be more careful. A short time back a report circulated about town that a fine barroom was to open up. Almost as much ex citement was created as when the Ar mistice was signed-—all over a mis reading. The Star sometime back car ried in the “29 Years Ago" column an item that a new barroom wa - to be op ened. Uhtjuh, we had several then, so they say over with the court lawn boys. Hero’s n riddle for you; What has i happened to 'tyie cross .word puzzles? ! Only a few months back they were the I .rape; now they’re almost forgotten, | hut a Ford,’ rolled hose and bobbed i hair go bn forever. They tell if down about the South ! ern depot that during the last exodus of negrofc's. to Northern labor centers that a trainman noticed one negro looking on nonchalantly and inquired of him: “John, are you going North?’ “No sah,” said John. “I’se a class B nigger.’ “What do you mean by a class B. nigger?’ asked the trainman. “Well,” said John, “I B's hcah when dey leave and I B’s hcah when dey comes back.” Claude Webb cant see why a spring bubbles when a river runs always but stays in its bed. The person who .works out the lit tle things of life never has any trou ble grasping the big ones. The lives of some financially suc cessful men teach us that it is not al ways, silence that is golden. WHO WILL WIN, LOVE, CHARITY? O'11 in Poftla.ru>; Ore., social w«?|. far«> soeivti's and the mother of little Jessie iVarl Rank, 5, arc- fight* In? over the child. Welfare people say the mother is too ,■ ■ r to give the child the proper trihgng. The mother answers that poverty has nothing to <lo with mother love. So the fate of Jessie IT arl Hank is up to tin Or-gon Supreme Coiiit which has 1 ■* • ri ' ill <1 ai“in to de cide who shall haw the child. The add test is when you keep on smiling after your best girl gives you a lemon. TRl L'STEE'S SALE. By virtue of the power of sale con tained in the Doer) of Trust executed on October 17th. 1923, by I’. A. Ham rick and wife; Ola Hamrick, to me as trustee, securing an indebtedness to the Security Life and Trust company and default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness and hav ing been called upon to execute the trust, I. as Trustee, will sell: for cash to the highest bidder at public auction at the Court House door in Shelbv, X. C-. on Monday, May 25th, 1925. within legal hours the following de scribed rial estate: Situate in Xo. 2 township, Cleveland county, X. (’., lying on the waters of Sandy Run Creek, adjoining the lands ot .J. L. McSwaih, G. G. Me-Swain and others and containing 115 9-10 acres of land. The foregoing tracts are made up of the 50-acre tract deeded !’. A. Ham rick by .1. J. Rollins by deed dated Anril 19th, 1920, and recorded in Book “III” page 59. ami the 02 3-4 acre tract deeded F. A. Hamrick by Q. M. Mull, Trustee, by deed dated October 7th, 1922, and recorded in Book “LLL” page 182. A description of both of said tracts by metes end bounds is fully set forth in the Deed of Trust which is recorded in Book 104 page 575 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Cleveland county. This April 20th, 1925 GEORGE A. CRIMSLEY, Trustee. Ryburn and Hoey, Attys. SUCCESSFUL Operates Travel Service In Own Name Ramona cibeons haves ■ K rhi ’ €,ma0NS n-'.YCS, J-lCh: igo. pretty, .patits. rnU-a L. .^wU, Un‘vei*ty of Chicago ha* l<WiExtinction of be *x>" tlit cu.^-cst. BteamehJi) * ■, , agent er«,.:,...i . ' . ‘l -,eu‘- «fc* has g®?**"* t Jeoesafui in her own name. Rv feS" SrC^t5i2ias 13 thi.d! S-‘-« Ps»‘blc fori c.. sf’3«r.ta asd.aih** («• |^t3 cc limited means to Bee Europe ®*‘e organized group., of American . of th<> Europeans who. beioro ^tillZutyt UrTork^Te'1 iK* *»■<»»■ c^uA&J; iiiiv Vr?- ~ WffWE d—• ' ' ' "I Popular System j for Sanitation Plan Originated Few Years Ago Is Saving Hog Raisers Much Money. (Prepared by the United State* Department of Agriculture.) That the system of swine sanitation i originated in the United States De i partment of Agriculture a few years ago is saving hog raisers large num bers of pigs and much money Is shown tiy reports coming In continuously from various parts of the Middle West. Illinois, where the system was first tried out In McLean county, has been } faking up this new method of han dling sows and young pigs with a great deal of energy, and the results obtained no doubt will stimulate In creasing numbers of farmers to raise pigs under sanitary precautions which will keep them free of worms. Pigs Given Good Start. This spring 500 farmers In 57 Illi nois counties gave all the pigs far rowed a good start by having them •come to clean farrowing houses after the sows had been thoroughly j scrubbed. The live stock extension specialist of the University of Illinois considers that with this start half the battle in the economical production of pork lias been won. lie says the other half consists merely In keeping the pigs away from worm eggs until they are at least four months of age, and to do that does not require skill, but merely determination and persistence. Reports Indicate that farmers who have raised pigs the sanitation way i will not go gack to the old careless method. They saved more pigs, the pigs grew faster, and gain costs less, the pigs were ready for market soon . er, and the profit was greater. At the experiment station farm at Urbana, Hi., a lot of sanitation pigs gained 35 pounds each while others allowed to run in old liog lots where they picked up worm eggs gained only 18 pounds. j »r. 11. is. itanensperger. or litoom ington, III., representative of the bu reau of animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, reports a lot of sanitation hogs that reached a weight of 218 pounds, while others frequenting an old hog lot grew to only 1G2 pounds. In this case the san itation method increased the size of the pigs 35 per cent. Hundreds of farmers in various parts of the state have reported similar and even great er gains. One man raised sanitation lings to a weight of 300 pounds in the same time that his hogs formerly grew to only 200 pounds; another re ported a ton litter of sanitation pigs ' averaging 272 pounds when others in the old hog pastures weighed only 150 : pounds, a gain of 80 per cent. A 1 farmer who adopted the sanitation system last year had two sows which | raised 13 pigs on a half-acre of old i pasture land which had been plowed and sowed to oats and rape. As this man expressed it, he had the best "luck” with these pigs that be bad ; had in ten years. Easiest Way to Raise Pigs, It itli such enthusiasts as these nfen scattered throughout the state, it Is highly probable that the sanitation method of hog raising will be the com hi on method in a few years. The method is hot comiflicatett and, as one Illinois farmer expressed It, once you are fixed for handling hogs In this way, it is the easiest way to raise pigs. Briefly, all that Is necessary Is to h a ye the pigs farrowed In a pen that lias been thoroughly cleaned with lyo and hot water, from sows that have been thoroughly scrubbed be fore the pigs are born. From this point on the pigs must be handled so as not to be brought in contact with old hog-lot soil polluted with worm eggs. 3 hey Should be moved to clean pastures and kept away from contact with other hogs until they are four months of age, and have a gocd enough start to resist any worm in fection that may come later. --- fc Find Rape Superior as Pasture Crop for Pigs " flt“n compared with other pasture crojis for pips, rape demonstrates It self the equal of any and the superior of most of them. Feeding trials at the Iowa and Ohio stations with fat tening pigs on corn and tankage on pasture have shown the gains pro duced, feed requirements and carry ing capacities of rape and alfalfa to he practically Identical. Alfalfa, of course, enriches the soil as a legume and also has the ability to produce hay, neither of which Is true of rape. When neither alfalfa or clover Is avail able for the pigs, however, rape should not be omitted. It Is of course, much superior to hluegrass pasture, pat* tlcularly after July 1. Orchards Need Repairs In every fruit region there are or chards that need to be rejuvenated, made over, or repaired. These are not i always old orchards. Some have not reached their prime, and some have' never borne a barrel of fruit Many such orchards have not had a chance through neglect, and others have suf fered at tlie hands of ignorant owners. Sweet Clover Helps Sweet clover prepares land for al falfa. This is especially true on any of the poorer types of soil where It Is desired to grow alfalfa. The large roots of the sweet clover plants open up the subsoil and the plants inocu late sell with the proper bacteria for alfalfa. Follow the sweet clave* » cultivated crop. TRY Si’.ix ", ANi p
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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May 22, 1925, edition 1
6
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