Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Sept. 24, 1926, 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
ISJSIDE SECT! HIS OF IMS! •iohi-r- of Jefferson School Are j j nttriained. Buchanan Birth, jay. Personal Items. (Special to The Star.) IVir!i. M. A. Cline is visiting rela in Lincolnton. Mr- and Mrs. Lon Wortman and [', daughter visited relatives all A, •;;.!«• last Sunday. Jethro Lattimore and chii ln „f Lawndale spent last'Sun* v with Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Lat \I, and Mrs. C. P. Queen and Itiren visited Mr. Queen's par -i near Beams Mill during the ck end. Jr, Charlie Krause of Union 11s visited his nieces Mrs. E. CL U1J, • and Miss Josephine Mor v u, t Sunday. Jc. and Mrs. Boyce West cf pxatnlcr spent last Sunday with and Mrs. C. D. Walls. Jr. and Mrs. Oren Huskey have v,d into the house vacated by Pruitt, who moved to Char t,. last Saturday. Jr. and Mrs. Art Johnson and mly and Miss Edna Lamb at*, ided a ringing convention at ffnev last Sunday. Hr. and Mrs. Wor:Ti .Newton, s. Minnie Lamb and Miss Mag , Gladden spent last Sunday afl mon in Spindale. Hisses Violet and Virginia Weav of South Shelby spent the week 1 with Mr. and Mrs. Vetus Wear His? Minnie Gladden spent the ek end with her cousins Misses a and Fidelia Willis in upper 'vetand. Hr. and Mrs. J. P. Tcms and ehil n spent Sunday afternoon with . Toms’ father at Lattimore. Hr. and Mrs. Charley Lattimore 1 children of Lawndale spent nday afternoon with Mr and Mrs I). Lattimore. * Hr. and Mrs. Claude Phillips, of nrieita, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. Walls Sunday. Hessfs. Ralph Morrow and Mar-. Dixon visited at Gaffney, S. C. iday. Jr. and Mrs. G. C. Eskridge and Idren spent the week end in able Shoals. Ir. and Mrs. Clay Hicks of ifney visited Mr. and Mrs. T. South Sunday. ir. and Mrs. J. E. Waldrop had their guests Sunday Mr. and c L. R. Beeman of Cramerton. Hr. Tom Fowler and family at ded the funeral of Mr. Fowler’s ;er Mrs. Monroe Morgan at Buf ) church Sunday. Mrs. Morgan died at the Shelby hospital Satur day morning of typhoid fever and complications. Born to Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Wall, a daughter on August 18. Mr. Ham Guinn moved his family from this village to Gaffney, S. C., Wednesday. We regret to lose them. Mr. R. G. Holland Is sick at this time. We hope that, he may soon he, well. The relatives of Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Buchanan surprised Mr. Buehar on Sunday with a birthday dinner. They gathered in after church with well filled baskets and all enjoyed the day. On last Friday afternoon frori three o’clock until four the ladies of Eastside community wer" hostesses at the new Jefferson schorl building to the school teach, ers in a get-together meettyg. Rev. H. E. Waldrop opened the meeting with a prayer followed by an ad dress of welcome. Each one of the teachers was railed upon for a short talk in which they commend ed the mothers for their coopera tive spirit, believing it to be a great help to the pupil, parent* and teacher. Following this several interest ing games were enjoyed. During the hour khe hostesses served fruit punch and cakes. The thirty-six present enjoyed the afternoon to the fullest and the mothers express td themselves well pleased with the new building and with the teach ers who have their children hi charge. The. teachers at this school arc Mr. Forrest Hamrick. Mrs. G. P. Hamrick, Mrs. New, Mrs. Connor, Mrs. Gerald Morgan and Misso’ Evelyn Dover and Elisabeth Suttle.' Rev. Frank Putnam of the Dover mill church exchanged pulpits with our pastor Rev. H. E. Waldrop, last Sundav night. He brought us n very timely sewnen on'“Steward ship.” The church -enjoyed having Mr. Putnam very much. Rev. A. S. Raper of LaFayette street M. E. church paid several calls in the village Wednesday. Shc’.by Boys (io Good Chartiy & Children. Shelby hoys have the habit of getting there. Lee Weathers is running the truweekly Star, which is one of the brightest papers that corae to this offioe, while O. L. Moore, another Cleveland man, follows close behind with his Laur ir.burg Exchange. Each of these papers is a real credit to the towns in which they are published. Fool-proof airplanes are pre dicted. Impossible as long as peo ple continue to be made as they are now. i i . i F.D, GRIST SUED ' Bl E. L BART! Forty Thuusiincl Dollars Damage Asked ufgFulior Commission er by Charlotte Man ! Charlotte, Sept. 22.—A suit for 820,000 actual and $2 ,000 puni tk-e damages was filed in super ior court yesterday by Walter Clark attorney for Ernest L. Barton, manager of the Queen City em ployment bureau here, against vrank I). Grist, state commission er of labor and printing. The suit was the outgrowth of recent litigation between Barton and the state official. Mr. Barton asked damages on the ground of false arrest and an alleged desire on the part of the defendant to injure the business conducted by the plaintiff. The plaintiff contends that th< state officer gave out interviews to the press, announcing he was going to have the defendant ar rested for violation of the state law which forbade charging ar initial fee for services of a labor bureau. Recently Judge A. M. Stack dis solved the temporary injunction which -Judge Michael Schenck had granted Barton, who sought thi> means of restraining the commis sioner of labor and printing from interfering with him. The first actual step in tlje liti gation took place in July it when •Grist had Barton arrested for the alleged illegal practice of charg ing an initial registration fee for the services of his employment bu reau. A voluntary non-suit, however, was taken when it came up for a preliminary hearing before Re corder F. M. Currie, of Charlotte. After this Judge Schenck signed the temporary restraining order barring the commissioner from further interference with the labor bureau until argument should be heard before Judge Stack as to whether the order should be made permanent and also barring the bureau from charging a fee until the hearing. Assistant Attorney General Al ien of the state appeared as coun sel for Grist at the hearing, which resulted in Judge Stack’s dis solving the injunction against the commissioner. The civil suit filed yesterday afternoon will find its way to trial on the regular civil court calendar. Green quiets the nerves, ac cording to an eye specialist. Es pecially greenbacks. Toluca News Notes Of Present Week (Special to The Star.) Ii. Y. P. U. at Carpenter Grove is progressing nicely. We are sorry to lose some of our members. Miss Helen Falls and Messrs Floyd Hallman and Glenard Warlick have go"nc away to college. The B. Y. P. | U. meets at 7 o’clock instead of at 7:30. At the next meeting new officers will be elected. Mr. nad Mrs. Clarence Mode of Fallston spent last Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Austin Hicks; also spent Sunday with Mrs. Mode’s parents Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Sain. Mrs. Lester Smith and children of Shelby have been visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hicks the past week and attending revi val services at St. Peters. Miss Ora Sain a nurse from Morganton spent some time at home with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Sain last week. Mr. Spurgeon Randall of Cher ry ville, spent last week with his uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hicks. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Smith of Shelby spent last Tuesday night at the home Mr. Austfn Hicks. TALENTED MUSICIAN AT THE WEBB THEATRE The Webb theatre has engaged the services of Mr. Herman Avery Wade, a New York musician of note, who wijl henceforth furnish music for the movie patrons. Mi. Wade is a graduate of Yale univer sity, who has made an intensive study of music, and who is giving the city in general, along with the theatre patrons, the benefit of his talent. He appeared Wednesday at the High school, and Thursday at the Marion street school, where he de lighted two big audiences of chil dren. At the theatre Mr. Wade is show ing what can be done in the way of adapting music to the screen ac tion, and the demonstrations are highly effective, the music serving to emphasize the drama, blending with the emotional flow of the , story. It is said Mr. Wade will remain in Shelby indefinitely. Thieves stole a tmek load of as pirin tablets in New York. They arc preparing for several mornings after. Radios make it next to impossi ble to tell whether the neighbors are playing the phonograph, fighting, crying or washing the dishes. STYLEPLUS CLOTHES Men9s New Suits For i Fall, and Winter Now is the time to get posted on the styles that well dressed men will wear this season. The new assort ments are here ready and we’ll be mighty glad to show you if you will stop in soon. It’s a really comprehensive showing of the new modes—the new weaves and colorings favored in men’s wear for Fall and Winter—a display that dem onstrates our ability to select with care and to give the best values. $29.50 TO $45.00 OTHER EXCELLENT VALUES $19.50 TO $24.50 W. L. Fanning & Co. 1 !=n ran nwi I7=>n CTn fi=>n Ir^n [F,nir3HraU5IU5 l!b tlEiliBHBtiB ilEs Ute IS IMS' tiPr t-'-Sifi — SWEATERS — We tire showing new Sweaters for men, wom en and children. A com plete st.H k to select from. The tuanc maim Right QUALITY—Right STYLE-Right PRICE BIG BUYING POWER {?«(«ths low l>iut for »*.*—h h<lp* hi fiw thr lou>prut Ij yvu Store* in North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia * MEN’S HATS #4.»8 These hats are the new est fail styles. A color and block for every type. Select yours today. OLD FASHION RUMMAGE SATURDAY AND MONDAY SALE SATURDAY AND MONDAY >*#•**♦ V#• # « «•«t *4 , :.: :: li h Ladies Belts, values to 98c Ladies’ Carters, 50c values Ladies’ Chain Belts, 59c values Curtain Goods, 48c values Drapery, Joe value_ Men’s and Boy’s Belts, 50c value Children’s Drawers _ Underwear Children’s, 18 value _ Talcum Powders, 25c value_ . White Goods .".5c value . ____ Men’s Porosknit Drawers _ Sett Collars in Solids and S'ripes 50c values_ _ _ ««• • ♦ * • ♦ • *>t*«>*• W% • * ««• v« v*# 8 | Roy’s Corduroy Pants. $1.25 value 1| Men’s Dress Shirts, $1.48 value_ Ladies’ Muslin Underwear _ Children’s School Dresses Table Covers, $1.48 value ___ Dress Goods, values to $1.00_ Ladies’ Glove;; $1.19 value __ Boy’s Wash Suits, $1.00 value Dress Ruffling, $1.19 value_ “Perfect” Double Disc Records. Choice 2 for___ Ladies’ Pocketbooks, $1.00 value __ Table Cloth, 98c value___ i ) ■; J HEAD EVERY ITEM IN | I THESE BOXES. BAR $ {GAINS IN EVERY HE. S £ PAHTMENT. — FIRST li , COME — FIRST SERVED > A EE WEST GO. ACT NOW! • *W. *'•%'**' An Event Of ) Every Home Interest To In Shelby 21 t And Surrounding Territory. { ? A Feast Of Kare Values j (j J Are Offered At Such I tonishnig Prices. As i n r Bi 1 BRING THE FAMILY! The Goods Offered In This Event Are For Every Member From Baby To Grandpa. SATURDAY — MONDAY __Ladies Gloves, 98c value _ Middy Ties, $1.48 value _ EnameJware, values to 69c __Ladies Hose, $1.00 value _____.Children’s Drawers Children’s Rompers, 79c value Women’s Ginghams Dresses and "a few Cotton Crepe Kimonas. ______i__ $1.48 value _Women’s Waists, $1.00 value ____ Slipover Sweaters, $1.00 value __Infant’s Dresses 79c value Boys’ Hats, $1.25 values __ Ladies’ Pocket-books $3.98 value Ladies’ Gloves, White, Silk and Kid ___ Ladies’ Underwear, $1.98 value |____ Women’s Blouses, $2.19 value __Corsets, $1.98 values __Corselet tea, $1.50 values __Princess Slips, $1.48 values _Infant’s Dresses, $1.69 values _Infant’s Sweaters, $1.69 values _Men’s Fall Hats, $3.9® value _Glass Serving Trays Choice Men's Coat,Sweaters, All sizes, $1.25 __ values am imwiw ■ Specials ■ -BOY’S SHORT PANTS SUITS VALUES TO $10.50 YOUR CHOICE, AT Sizes 8 to 18. 2 l'ants Suits $4.95 BOY’S SHORT PANTS SUITS • VALUES TO $14.50 YOUR CHOICE, AT Sizes 8 to 18. 2 Pants Suits. MEN’S SUITS — VALUES TO $39.50 Men’s high grade suits of of Flannelette, cassimeres, worsteds, etc. Pin stripes and select colors. Assort ed sizes to select from. CHOICE_ YOUTH’S SUITS — SIZES 30 TO 34 These suits are made of the same high grade ma terial as our higher priced suits. Young men’s college clothes in values to $20.00. CHOICE_ I - Specials - i LADIES COATS AND DRESSES This group contains the | choicest materials in Coats and Dresses. Values to i §19.95. Assorted sizes. YOUR CHOICE AT LADIES DRESSES Of Silks, Crepes and Satins. | Values up to $24.95. Assorted Sizes. YOUR CHOICE_ * \ —LADIES DRESSES AND SUITS— Crepe Satin and Silk Dresses, Twill Suits of High Quality. Values to $24.95. Sizes 16 to 50 $7.95 CORDUROY ROBES, colors, rose copen and red. $4.98 values. CHOICE, WHILE THEY LAST NOVELTY SKIRTS, $7.95 to $11.95 values SKIRTS— 55.95 VALUES___ $2.98 $2.98 $1.98 LOOK HERE MEN ! 25 Dozen Stiff Linen Collars. All sizes. Each .. Four-In-Hand and Bow Ties of Silk and Pongee. CHOICE. — EVERY ARTICLE A — — BARGAIN — »'*«• *w» *vvi | TRADE HERE AND SAVE | IAES9VABA AC MiiiwimimiManillimmiiiijuiuu —.- Elastic*, Per Yard --— Middy Laces ----Barettes .Dress Trimming? -Small Aluminum Ware --Novelty Combs Ironing Pads Middy Emblems --- Oarpet Snaj>s
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 24, 1926, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75