Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Oct. 9, 1925, edition 1 / Page 4
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ARE YOU GOING TO BUY A FARM THIS YEAR We hear that money is tight fund it is, but that’s the very time to buy if you can make the financial arrangements. It is our business to not only sell Real Estate but to help you in making the arrange* mcnts to pay for that which you buy. i _ fi < - Jt On most of the farms we have listed with us we can arrange very liberal terms. By paying a small cash payment at this time of year, the land you buy will be deeded to you and the deed held by us until January 1st, at which time another payment will become due, Deed of Trust for deferred payments will date from January 1st. The listings we have can be bought on terms as a rule in pay ments running from three to five years time. 33,000 bales of cotton will probably be made in the county and this means that somebody is going to have some money. If it is you the safest and best place to put it is in a GOOD FARM. We are not mind readers—if you happen to be one that is in terested in buying this year, either write us a card stating that you want to see a farm of so many acres or else come in and see us 'anytime. We will arrange to carry you out and let you see just what we have. , .. 1 The farms we name below are just a few of those taken from our list of options. We try to keep a varied list, made up of farms both large and small, with the price ranging from a few dollars per acre to a reasonable price for the better located and best grades of farm land. If these do not appeal to you we have others. 20 acres, with 7 room dwelling, barn and other outbuildings, one mile of Kings Mountain on the Patterson Grove road. This is a suburban farm right in town. Property of L. G. Beattie. $200.00 per acre. 53 acres, in No. 7 Township, with good 7 room dwelling, large 12 stall barn, with 35 acres in cultivation, balance in pasture and timber, near Cabaniss School, 7 miles from Shelby, mostly level and is the land of'N. O. White. $150.00 per acre. ' 30 acres with 5 room house, small barn, garage and other out buildings, practically all level and fronts on both sides of sand clay roa,d from Lattimore to Union church and school in No. 7 Township. N. O. White place. $105.00 per acre. 30 3-4 acres with 4 room dwelling, barn, crib, 20 acres in cul tivation, balance in wood and pasture, in No. 5 Township, near Oak Grove church and school, being the S. O. Bell place. $65.00 per acre. , 161 1-2 acres with 5 room dwelling, 3 stall barn, crib and other outbuildings. 50 acres cleared, balance in some fine timber that will cut 250,000 feet. This land is 5 miles north of Shelby and is the property of B. S. Mauney. Price is $100.00 per acre. 150 acres with two three room dwellings, 400,000 feet of saw timber, all land lies level and free of rocks. This farm is 6 miles of Shelby in No. 5 Township and is the best buy in the County. Price is $72.50 per acre. - 65 3-4 acres in No. 3 Township, joining T. P. Camp and others, good 6 room dwelling, barn and other outbuildings, 30 acres in cultivation, balance in timber and pasture. This is the A. L. Neal place and price is $80.00 per acre. SHELBY PROPERTY IS A GOOD BUY THE YEAR ROUND An especially good buy is the R. E. Lawrence two story house fronting the Shelby Hospital property. This home has hardwood floors, two bath rooms, one only being completely equipped, nice fixtures, large double garage, extra large lot, 80x200 feet. Price of property is $5,750.00. tv On North Washington street also fronting the Shelby Hospital property we have the Elisha McBrayer home. This house has six rooms, plastered with bathroom built but not equipped, back porch, large front porch. The lot is 90x200 feet and is on the corner. On the rear of this lot there is a 4 room dwelling sealed &nd in good condition. Both houses on this large lot can be bought at the low price of only $4,150.00. Vacant lot 55x175 feet, three blocks of Square on road to Cleveland Springs, joining the residence of Rev. C. F. Sherrill. Price is 1,850.00. 4 The Matt Hordtwo-.tory 7 room dwelling on North Washing i.°onlFeW,500.W)15 ee*' H ’ “ 8°°d properly and ‘he Price - When you want to buy or sell either town or county nr< let us talk it over with you. ANTHONY & ANTHONY Lineberger Building. Consistency. (Morgantnn News-Herald.) Regardless of explanations or ex cuses there’s not getting around the fact that it looks mighty bad that the Made-in-Carolinas exposition is being advertised by made-in-Michigan .aignr and the critical comment made in newspapers throughout the sta?:-, to the effect that it is not consistent to get printing away from home to ad vertise a “trade-at-home” idea is bound to have a detrimental influence on the exposition. Replying to the criticisms the ex position officials say that their policy is to advocate buying Carolina pro ducts when price and quality are equal or less than elsewhere, and the infer ence is—in fact the statement is matte —that the Michigan-made yellow cards were cheaper and better than could be produced by North Carolina printers. Wonder if this point was fully investigated! But even that argument in defense of the out-of- state printing is better than to say that “anyway” Charlotte and North Carolina printers were not supporting the exposition. An Idea as big as the Made-tn (NOTE: Dr. Pierce is president of , the Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., to which for 50 years past chronic suf ferers have been coming for special ized 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 harm wrought by diseases of the kidneys, and having had opportunity to ob serve the analyses and the successful methods of treatment in thousands of rases of kidney trouble at the Inval- ■ ids’ 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, whic'fo now recom mend to those who s.™er with kidney backache, irregularity of urination and the pains and disturbances that come from excess of uric acid in the bloCRl. “An-uric” can be obtained 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 improvement. You may have kidney trouble and not know it. The danger signals to be quickly heeded are back ache, depression, aches, pains, heavi ness, drowsiness, dizziness, irrita bility, headaches, chilliness, rheuma tic twinges, swollen joints, gout. If yon desire a trial package," send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic in Buffalo, N. Y., and write for free advice. r— 111 .^ AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT POLICY Sold to Every Member of Lhe family, male or female, ages 16 to 66. No Medical Examina tion, (White Risks Only.) -pays $1,500.00 for loss of life, limbs or eyes. $750.00 for loss of one limb. $500.00 for loss of one eye. $40.00 weekly for hospital confinement. $50.00 Weekly for Nurse’s Fees. for and $25.00 weekly for Total j disability for 6 months. $12.50 weekly for Partial, Disability for 2 weeks. $5.00. Surgeon’s Fees Non-Disabling Injury. $100.00 Identification Emergency Relief. 50 per cent Accumulation Clause on weekly Indemnity. All Premiums Returned In Case Of Accidental Death In Addition To The Death Indemnity. COSTS ONLY $5.00 PER YEAR. (Established 1887.) a _ Assets over $1,800,000.00 Over $5,000,000.00 Paid To Satisfied Policyholders. —SEE OR WRITE— marvin blanton < arolinas proposition should not cheapened by trying tfa “get even with any ciftss of producers who do not collectively or individually contri bute directly to! the movement. The whole thing is so similar to local trade-at-home propaganda. Tt too often happens tlmt the folks who have the most to say to the newspa per about preaching trading at home are the very ones who buy the'r printing out of town. Trading at home and buying Carolina goods are all right for advice to the other felloe i.ut the majority of peoole will go right along doing what happens to please them ami buying where and what they want. Re’s Mistaken. (Charlotte New- ) One of the well-known syndicate writers had “a piece in the papers, the other day in which ho,claimed that the immigrant contributed nine-tenths of the labor in the cotton mills of this country, which, of course, we would nail instantly as a gross libel upon the labor in the Southern cotton mills, ever, from only a superficial survev. The charge did not escape ttv> al ways alert eye of the editor of the Manufacturers Record who drew the tatistics on the writer and the Pres byterian survey which printed the tatement, declaring that the last C. v census shows that the avers#*1 nuin er of wage-earners in the 1. r.ited states emi /ycnlin the manufacture o‘ WE CAN SAVE j YOU MONEY— i $15 to $35 | ON THE TIME I PURCHASE OF A j NEW CHEVROLET The new low rates of j the GMAC Time Pay-] ment Plan make a new Chevrolet easier and less expensive to to buy than ever be fore. Come in and let us show you how you can save money in the time purchase of ope <*f these fine new quality cars. AREY BROTHERS,! Dealers cotton goods was 495 197, and of thi number 289,469 were employed in th< cotton mills of the Southern States As the South has about one-half o the wage earners in the cotton ni’lii ct the country, and, as anyone at/sil familiar with the cotton industry o' ; the United States knows, the cott.n ; mill workers of the South are praeti rally without exception native whit' American of Anglo-Saxon stock, how lean the1 immigrant furnish nine-tenth; I of the cotton mill labor? We ar" al aware of the fact that the cotton mil labor in the east is composed almas! entirely of foreign stock, but we nlsr know that Southern cotton mill labo v/hich is half the country’s total thus employed, is native white American Th Talkless Barber. Asheville Citizen. They shut the shop and put a h or Rent” sign in the window, th.s bar ber shop in New York whose failure is a monument to those who do not want what they think they warn. There are several such scattered throughout the United States. The shoo was the fad of a rich man. He abominated talkative Ixir bers and he concluded that all bar bers were talkative. From his boy hood days he had read jokes in funny papers about the chatty barber, illus ! trated with cuts showing him absent 1 mindedly snipping off a patron’s ear i while intent on talking into ho other j ear. He decided that people would eajrerly patronize a shop vv|, bers acted the part of the ri»., dumb. d a So he started this shop imj . tised it and people cam,. —. 1 that the barbers did and not talk—K no traditional conversation ^ II from them. These patrons Wver back—and new ones were sc* ** — - "«'re scare,, ti asc—if not the shop-wax analyzed with surprising resuln , was found that people do'want u h. the cheery barber chat—they * no silent dummy tonsorialixt pf may say they do.but they don’t Mothers Treat Cold The New “Direct” W» No J^mger Necettary to “Do*" f, .^assets**"* v-nuaren s (W *°.ns. are easily up ffi l)> tuo rnu* do",np." Vict V^Rub bc-ing! ternaliy annl.^ ■ Deme ei ttrnaiiy appji^ $** not »p8tt® stomach-. I-tfu' nrst or any other cold trouble! appVfe VICKS PORul OvtB Z/MmuohJaik Useo Ycaht -DRAPERIES Let us give you an estimate on your cur tains and draperies. All grades of mater ials. We make and hang them. Phone and let us call with samples. J. M. RHEA and COMPANY Kings Mountain, N. C. Phone 296. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY COMPANY Arrival and Departure of Passenger Tinins at Shelby, N. C. Lv. No. Between _No. Ar. 4:50 16 Monroe Rutherfordton 16 4:5C 12:27 15 Rutlierfordton_Monroe 15 12:2'< Schedules published as ^formation and are not guaranteed. E. W. LONG, D. P. Am Charlotte, N. C. or H. A. HARRIS, I.ocal Ticket Agent Tickets Now On Sale Admission Grandstand A.$5.00 10,00# Reserved Seats Grandstand B .... ,$3.00 0,000 Reserved Seats. Prant Raw Bans $00.00 Sneend Row Boxes $$$.00 Third Raw Baxes $00.00 0 Seats ta each Box General Admission $2.00 lnfidid Parking $1.00 Armistice Day Race Wednesday) Nov* tl 2 P. M. FLASHING speed of the world’s fastest cars. Daring, pace settihg, record break ing driving by the world’s greatest stars A thrill every dizzy lap of the 250-mile South ern speed classic that may declare the winner of the world’s championship this year. t 1 he world’s greatest drivers are entered. Ks. a world holiday. Get the spirit of the occasion —pile the family and friends igto the car ana see this greatest exhibition of speed ever seen in the South. The pick of grandstands ana boxes may be had byi%oixlering your tickets how. Mail Order* to Oiniood Barriocor, Caearai Mas. N W. Trade St, GWett*. fl. C
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 9, 1925, edition 1
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