Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Nov. 25, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ittleqtars ******** n ******** . • • • • * . fotton, per lb---19 1-2 * • Cotton seed, bu.- 49 1-2 * _At Limestone—According to a dis patvh from Gaffney, S. C., Miss Ver cie Sarratt, of Earl, this county, at the recent elections at Limestone eol l w was named by fellow students as [.pcretary-treasurer of the college ath it.c association, and also president of Jhe Cooper Literary society. —Auction Sale—An auction sale which promises to attract a large crovv'd wdl be that of the John M. Black property near the Seaboard depot r . iday aft / noon of this week. The Shelby Leal Estate Co. will sell nine residential and business lots for jir. Black, on easy terms. Prizes and band music will feature the sale. —Officers Added—Six officers were added to the organization of the Presbyterian church Sunday. By a v0*e of the congregation G. W. Neely and J. B. Jones were made eiders and r. M. McGregor, C, B. McBraycr, B. A. Lefler and James Tiddy were add ed to the board of deacons. Pastor Me Diarm id preached a fine sermon, showing the Bible qualification for office-bearers of the church. —With Snowflake —Andrew Col lins and Ernest Putman, laundrymen of long exper.cr.ee, have accepted positions with the Snowflake Laundry, .dr. Collins becomes superintendent and Mr. Putman solicitor. —Masonic Notice—Regular com municEti.in at Cleveland Lodge No. 202 Friday night of this week begin ing at 7 o'clock. Members urged to be present. —Into New Home—Mr. and Mrs. George Magness moved Wednesday from West Marion street to their new home on the Magness farm on the northern edge of Shelby beyond the Hopper place. —Infant Dies—Friends of Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell will sympathize with them in the death of their infant daughter. The little one lived only a few hours. —Banks Close Tomorrow—A11 the banks of Shelby will be closed Thurs oay for Thanksgiving day. i—East-side—The report of the school made late today shows that: there were visitors in the school! during education week and that 87! homes were visited by teachers. —No Game Here—The Shelby Highs, will not play a football game here Thank giving day, it was definitely announced this morning by Coach "Casev" Morris, who left at noon for ! the Carolina-Virginia game. —Masonic Notice—Cleveland lodge J Mo. 202 A. F. and A. M., will meet in regular communication on Friday ev- j fning at 77 o’clock in the Masonic tern-1 fie. i —At Greenville—Tom Tucker jr.. is! Icing held at Greenville, S. C., for lb-1 cal officers, according to a message! received today by Sheriff Logan, j T nung Tucker is wanted in connection with an alleged forgery, it is said. —No kiwanis—No Kiwanis meet ing will be held tomorrow evening, the i regular weekly dinner at Cleveland( Springs being called off on account of the Thanksgiving holidays, accord-! Fg to a notice mailed out by Chas. A. j Burrus, secretary of the club. Go In New Dover Church Sunday The congregation cf the new Do\cr Baptist church will hold their first services in the new structure Sunday morning, it is announced. •Sunday school and two preaching services will be held. The Sunday school will give a special program in the morning and the first sermon will he preached by Rev. M. Green, of Boiling Srpings, it is understood. There will also be a preaching service “t night. Quite number of friends of, the church and vasitors arc expected to join with the Dover congregation in the first services. School Children Of Shelby Give Much To Poor of City 1 he school children of the Shelby schools this morning responded bet t' i' than ever before , to the annual Thanksgiving appeal for the needy of the city. It was reported from the superin tendent’s office that the contributions totalled $83.07 in money and from l 'l* to $.‘100 in fruits and useful gifts, the schools responding well. As a '•‘suit of the big hearted w7ork of the school children from 25 to 30 unfor unate Shelby homds will be made f'ghter for Thanksgiying. NOTICE to the public. We wish to notify our friends and Patrons that Ernest Putnam who re presented us as driver is no longer ill 0Ur employ. Elmer Price has accepted the P'»sition formerly held by Mr. Put nam. ^ °ur continued patronage will be appreciated. „ SHELBY STEAM LAUNDRY, “■‘•lad. F. R. Sanders, Sec.-Treas. TO MY LAUNDRY PATRONS 1 AM NOW SOLICITING LAUN 'O for the new Snowflake Laundry *"'• will appreciate it if my friends 1 caB me at 591, at anv lime. n ERNEST PUTMAN. Mrs. E. Miller Eskridge left Wed nesday morn;ng for .Saint Louis, Mo., to spend sometime with her daughter, Mrs. h. C. Berger. Miss hrankie Borders who teacres att.U"lonvIillt’ N. C. spent week end with Miss I' ranees Rohertswho teaches at Jonesboro, N. C.—Sanford Express. Mr Lslie Pendleton, Mr. Stephen Woodson, Mr. Ralph Hoey and Mr. Ed. McCurry were Spartanburg visi tors Sunday. Mr. Clyde Wilson and Mr. Altor hopper were Gaffney visitors Sunday evening. Nir. Julian Thompson and Pt?arh»y Hugh Hoyle spent Sunday evening in Gaffney. Mr. Charles Lever and Mr. Roy Colquett were Gastonia visitors Sun day. Miss Delia Beam; spent thy week end with Miss Margaret Beam, on N. Lafayette St. Mr. D. C. Newton returns Friday to his home in Little Rock, Ark., aft ci spending a week with his-mother, Mrs. jf. A. Newton at Casar and brother, County Superintenent J. C. Newton at Shelby. Messrs Mai Spangler and Rule l Justice have returned from a business trip to Birmingham, Ala. -Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roberts, Misses Pattie and Elizabeth Roberts will be the guests on Thanksgiving of Dr. and Mrs. Allen in Greenville, S. C., to witness the k Urfnan-Clemson game. They will be week end guests of their relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hudson, Miss Jordan and Mr. John Hudson spent Sunday in Greenville, S. C. Miss Ruth Howie will spend the Thanksgiving holiday in Abbeville, S C., with her parents. Miss Sarah Carroll will be at her home for the Thanksgiving holidays in York, S, C. Misses Page Godfrey and Gene Knight, will spend their holidays in Honea Path and Cheraw, S. C. Miss V. innifred Wygal of New York spent Wednesday here the guest of Miss Elizabeth Webb. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Williams and Mr.and Mrs. C. B. McBraycr spent! Sunday in Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Nolan left Wed nesday for Pittsboro, Raleigh ar.d Chapel Hill. They will visit their chil dren in college. Miss Lilia Hull is visiting relatives in Lincelnton. Miss Ollie Sherrill of Winston Salem, is visiting her parents here. Mr .Henry Vanstory leaves this week for a visit to his brother in Golds be ro. Mrs. Meyers of Charlotte is spend ing some time at Cleveland Springs. Mr. and Mrs. George Stevens of Asheville were visitors at Cleveland Springs this week. Judges J. L. and E. Y. Webb will spend the Thanksgiving holidays here j with their families. Miss Vera Moore of Limestone c.d- i lege will be the guest of Mis-. Louise j Honeycutt during the Thanksgiving ! holidays. Big Andy Cloninger Killed In Runaway Well Known Farmer of Dallas Sect ion. of Gallon County, Killed When He Falls From Wagon. Gastonia, Nov. 25.—Mr. Andy ( i«n irger. of the Dallas section, was ac- j eidentally killed this afternoon about | 2 o'clock near his home two or three j miles north of Dallas when he was run over by a wagon after his mules had run away and thrown him out of the wagon. His neck was broken when the wagon passed over nis body. He was hauling a load of wood to the house at the time of the accident. Mr. Cloninger familiarly known as “Big Andy” was one of the best known characters in Gaston county. One Pint Costs Four Over $200 For a (rob of little eras the YuloHdc i ry has been “Shop Early; Do Tour Christmas Shopping Now,” And from the price a pint of kick tost Charlie Rudasill, colored, and three others the try applies also to booze. Florida may talk of how land en hances in value there and Henderson ville mny chime in for a second honor, hut neither has a look in with Shelby when it comes to mountain liquor. hi< r ida lots double in price in one month, but Shelby liquor, doubles in price several times in one week. One pine, $200! That’s the price Charlie Rudasill and Frank Poston, colored, and Leroy Thacker and 1 IT. Harkins paid. That's not all. but just ihe tax imposed by Recorder Mull, the original purchase price not being in tituled in the $200. Only recently Charlie bought and imbibed a goodly portion of a pint and as the result saw an open road where there was an automobile. Another re sult was that Charlie had a collision an dcame to Shelby from Boiling Springs with Deputy Jolly. On reach ing Shelby Charlie, volunteered to tell (he source of his supply. An investiga tion brought Poston and the two white boys in the toils of the law. The pint cost Charlie $3 to begin with and a $50 fine and the costs. Poston, who pioved a good witness for the state, was let off with a suspended sentence, yvhile Harkins fine was $100 and Thackers was set at $;>0. Makes a case of Scotch : ound cheap. THEATRES Tonight and tomorrow (Thursday) V ebb’s present that marvelous screen drama, that stupenduous and wierd picture ‘’The Phantom of the Opera" The scenes were filmed in Paris, at a tremendous cost; and that inimitable pantominist, Lon Chaney appears as the Phantom. Without a doubt this ’.s one of the most fascinating pictures Lon Chaney has ever appeared in. The mad, crowds chnsThg the phantom is worth coming miles to see. There will bt a special orchestra for this great picture. And owing to the high cost of this picture the admission to it will be 23 and 50 cents. Beam Brothers present at the Prin cess Wednesday "Havoc”—a woman without a soul who dangles men’s hearts at her finger tips; who turns lifelong friends into bitter enemies, who laughingly leaves a trail of "Havoc” in her wake. Thursday at the Princess will be Kamon Novarro in “The Midshipman” It’s real, it’s different! Made at the tl. S. Naval academy at Anapolis, with co-operation of the navy and 2,400 cadets. You'll never see anything like it again. No extra charges. Friday.at the Princess, a procession of terrific situations, the fist fight in the blazing cabin, see Bob Custer in ‘ No Man's Law” It's a Western drama 1 A hick is a man who can get a can- f taJoupe before it rides two thousand miles. 4 ... .- .* VOICE BUILDING AND ART OF SINGING Voices tested without charge on Tuesday between 2 and p. m. Studio, 314 West Marion St.. Shelby, N. C. Class Lessons. Private Lessons. C. A. McILVAIN Of Charlotte, Instructor. i !_J_ —1■■ • .—*! SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DINNER Roast Turkey With Dressing and Cranberry Sauce Steamed Rice With Brown Gravy Turnips, County Style Turnip Greens Creamed Mashed Potatoes Mixed Pickles Pumpkin Pie Coffee Tea Milk Make Reservations as Soon as Possible. HEAVY’S CAFE If you have greying or fall- j ing hair, dandruff or scalp : disease of any kind; sagging muscles of the face and neck, enlarged pores, blackheads or blemishes, give our scientific treatments a trial. Everything in the line of Beauty Culture. Marcelling a specialty. BEAUTY SHOPPE Union Bank Building. MBS. M. FLAY HAMRICK, Moler Graduate. —PHONE 560— A MINISTERIAL PLACES MAY BE OPENED TO WOMEN IN ENGLAND London,—"Her grace, the archbis hop of Canterbury,” may be known by the present generation of children in England. So evident is the lack of candidate * for the ministry in the Church of England that authorities are being forced to consider the problem of ad mitting women to tlv holy orders. Several leading churchmen have warned that the day of women preach ers is in sight! This restraint of feminine equality will be removed in the next generation they said lin ks sthere is a revival of religious in I terest in the country. The church has been restricted by the scarcity of ministers during the last 30 years and the situation now is acute, the bishop of Canterbury told the church congress. I /'. 1 « M, M. Watkins curate of the fashionable church of St. Mnr tins-inlho-Fields, Trafalgar sijuarc, has written in a parish magazine that it now is a necessity that the church move in progress with nation al life and nllow the women to min ister in the church of England. hi the congregations and law church offices,' women already out number men and at a church confer ences the bulk of delegates are wo men. I PRINCESS 33W. sn> i in s nomiiM Mo\ n '<■ EL BilAM, MORS.A OWNERS. Z E BEAM MATINEE DAILY. 2 TO 515. PM MIGHT, 7 TP ' I PM. —SI ECIAL TODAY — William Fox presents hi-, super special en'.i In] “HA VOC.” featuring George O'Bri. M, Madge li. I laamy, Ham y Clark, Margaret Livingston t'i David Butler. It' a > jj cia I picture that is guaranteed to pleas-. Thi ' is n ■; altogether a war picture, A society picture of vva - dazed worm a. Tits pi til. .• is play ng all ties week in Philadelphia atr. tiires times the edini: siiui tve are charging and still they can’t handle the < iowti. I time out and see it. No ad vance in price. Extra- -A good comedy and Felix th" Cat. Matinee 2 p. m. 15 & 25c. N'igh.t 7 p. m. THANKSGIVING SPECIAL TOMORROW Metr -Co’tJ.vyn Pictures presents the Well known actor, Earuon Navarro in “THE MIDSHIPMAN,” in his greatest role as , the hard fighting, fun loving midshipman who takes the count only when cupid lands the knock out: This picture is made with the cooperation oi tne navy und 2,400 cadets are in the picture, it s a real one that you will like. Wesley Harry is a Keren rj in th s wonderful picture. Extra-—“The Fox News. Coming 1- today “A Map’s Law” with Ciu ten Laturduy TOM MIX. Tonight and Thursday | -SEE- ; LON CHANEY and 50 great screen artists in “THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA” j BIG THANKSGIVING SPECIAL j BIG SEVEN PIECE ORCHESTRA i BOTH DAYS. j —25 AND 50c— \ -WEBB THEATRE- | ^ “Of Course.” —COMING SOON— « Colleen Moore in her brand new Picture “WE MODERNS.” AN INVITATION November 25th to January 1st The term “player piano" has been discarded as ap plied to roll-played, foot-power instruments of the Gul bransen manufacture. They are “Registering Pianos”— “Gulbransen Registering Pianos”—far superior to and capable of musicaf expression never even thought of in connection with “player pianos”. While the transition of the Gulbransen has been gradual—spread ovev a period of years—it may today be classed as a new invention, on account of its fidelity to hand playing and the ability of anyone to play it with personal “touch” and expression. We are making a special showing of the Gulbransen Registering Piano. We do not ask you merely to hear it, we ask you to play it. Instead of being the innocent by stander you are the performer. Remember the dates, November 25th to January 1st. No obligations whatever. W. A. PENDLETON The Music Shop Shelby, N. C. “THE WORLD IS AGAINST ME” “ The world is against nie,’ he said with a sigh. ‘Somebody stops every scheme that I try. The world has me down, and is keeping me there; I don’t get a chance. Oh, the world is unfair! When a fellow is poor then he can’t get a show; The world is determined to keep him down low.’ ” —Grant land Rice. “ I he world is against me”—that is the cry of the weakling. And some men haven’t the courage to say it in as many words—but they think it! '1 he world was against Abraham Lincoln, as he split rails, and as he studied by the flickering flame of a candle in his cabin home. Not only the world, but Nature, too—all were against George Washington as he crossed the ice-choked Delaware. It is said that Benjamin Franklin went hungry to bed many times. Certainly'the world was against him. The world was against Henry Ford in his younger days. The world i against every man who thinks of it that way. But the real man thinks of it this way: “The world is an aggregation of individuals, such as I am. They have no thought of combining against me; they can only attack single-handed and, one man at a time, I am a match for any of them.” The world is noi against a man—the man is against the world. As he goes forward with squared shoulders, he "'ill not find a better friend than is to be found in a good strong bank. First National Bank OF SHELBY RESOURCES FOUR AND A HALF MILLION DOLLARS. IT IS SAID THAT THERE ARE ONLY THREE GENERATIONS *N THE SPAN FROM SHIRT-SLEEVES TO SHIRT-SLEEVES INDICATING THAT WEALTH DOES NOT LONG REMAIN IN ONE FAMILY ISN’T IT POSSIBLE THAT, IN THIS DAY AND TIME, WE DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH SHIRT-SLEEVE BEGINNINGS? THINK IT OVER. To the Man Who Is Prepared To Deny Himself the Luxuries Until He Has Earned Them The Savings Departments Of Our Banks Will Be Found Extremely Useful And That Man Is Welcome To Everything The Savings Department Has To Offer. UNION ¥UST CO. SHELBY LAWNDALE LATTiMORE FALLSTON
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 25, 1925, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75