Apparently Mister Groundhog
could have seen his shadow on Feb
ruary 3, and 4, as well as February
0
000
I town at Raleigh the lawmakers
are discussing the intention of not
paying officers who capture a still
unless the operator is also caught.
* * *
Gas-electric cars may be operat
ed over the Seaboard through Shel
by soon, according to news dis
patches appearing in The Star to
dav.
• • •
The burial of the colored fellow
which was delayed has been carried
out, his mother being satisfied that.
he died from natural causes.
* * *
\ big training program for
churches in the Kings Mountain
association is announced in The
Star by A. V. Washburn.
* * *
The Shelby district Epworth
league meeting is to be held ir,
Gastonia.
* * *
Good crowds are expected at the
high school here tonight. The first
attraction is a basketball game in
the new gym followed by the annua!
Webb contest in the Central audi
torium,
* * *
Why not have a basketball tour
nament in the “tin can” here to de
cide the county championship?
The query is a pc.rt of the sport
news in today’s Star.
• * •
January marriages very near
equalled those of December, the
holiday hitching month, a survey of
the marriage book reveals.
* # V
Read the INS. story from Wash
ington about old age as related by
Major Stedman, of North Carolina,
the oldest member of the house.
* * *
Another store for Shelby seems
likely, according to the news in
this issue.
Mayors? Yes, several candidates
are being talked, hut nothing def
inite has taken place as yet in the
political world.
* * *
When Shelbly colored folks have
a dance they believe in realty
dancing. An “all night ramble” is
on the boards for such an event
next week.
* * *
The news in today's Star from
the smallest advertisement to the
most sensational news story should
be of vital interest to every reader.
Exclusive Shoe
Store To Open
“Haines. One, Two. Three" to Open
a Chain Store in Judge Webb
Building Shortly.
Mr. Haines, a dynamo of energy,
a shoe wizard and defeated candi
date for Congress in the State of
Pennsylvania, has leased a half of
the store room in the Judge Webb
building nowr occupied by Dr. David
M. Morrison where he will open
an exclusive shoe store about the
middle of this month. Shoes for
men, women and children will be
handled and sold for just three
prices, “One, two, three,” meaning
any shoe in the store will be priced
either fl, $2, or $3. Mr. Haines
maintains the main office of the
company at York, Pa., but has
stores of this nature in Virginia,
Tennessee, Georgia and the Caro
linas. A dozen or more stores in
the chain will be open this year in
North Carolina.
Mr. Haines is a man of consid
erable wealth and his rise in a com
parative few years from a merchant
with ?200 capital has been phenom
inal. He now owns a five story
hotel building at York, Pa., oper
ates a big shoe jobbing house in
Boston and is the controlling power
in a chain of popular priced shoe
stores like the one he will open
shortly in Shelby.
“Yes, We Have No
Candidates Today”
Since the recent anouneement
that Shelby may have around a halt
dozen candidates for mayor in the
spring' several other names have
been mentioned and if pre-election
talking means anything the affair
may ,turn into a political “Battle
Rr v„i ”
At least two other me about town
have been mentioned as candidates
for the berth now held by Mayor A.
P- Weathers. One is a retired busi -
ness man of some prominence, and
the other still in business is well
known over the town and has been
for years. Some of the candidates
already mentioned disclaim any
lesire to head the growing town and
several of the others are non-com
mittal, One group, and they aren t
youngsters either, has the idea that
,f m about time young blood was
moving into the city hall and there
begins to be talk of a candidate
f'oni the younger business and pro
fessional men.
The merry month of May may be
a'l the title would have it be.
we/nfoer*
rrr
North CareUnai
PRESS ASSOCIATION^
i
Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Afternoon*.
By mail, pi r ye. :
By carmr, p<-r v a
r (.<
Reported That Gas-Electric Car'
For Daily Run To t'hnrl >tte !
Has Been Ordered.
Rutherford ton.-—The Seaboard
Air Line radwav will likely ener
•ite a gas-electric car from Char-!
lotto to Ruthc rfordton a’ an early
date, according to information
gathered by The Rutherford Conn- I
ty News o*’ this p)ae n
The report stated that the ear!
had been ordered and Will be put I
5n use soon. This arratagement
would mean much to the people of
Rutherford. Cleveland end Lin
coln counties especially, the car
leaving early in the monrng for
Charlotte and returning late in the 1
afternoon.
It is reported that this ear can J
be operated for one-half the cost j
of a steam car. or less. It will have
a gasoline motor to generate cur
rent. The car will be operated
from a storage battery, similar to
an automobile.
Begin Trestle.
It is also understood that work
began this week o,v rebuilding the
trestle over Second Broad river
between Bostic and Forest City
this week. All new steel with con
crete piers will be put in for the
trestle. It will be from 300 to 500
feet long and will cost around
3100,000. Contract'calls for the
trestle to be completed bv .fun" 1.
It is also understood that Pull
man service from Wilmington to
Rutherfordton will be inaugurated
lune 1. The De Luxe busses will
make direct connection to Chim
ney Rock, thus enabling a passen
ger to leave the seacoast in the
morning and be on top of Chimney
Rock before night.
ATTEND FUNERAL
OF DR. T. M. LOWERY
Brother in Law of Mrs. R. L. Ry
burn of Shelby Buried at Yofk.
Former Shelby Pastor.
About fifteen Shelby people at
tended the funeral yesterday oi
Rev. Dr. T. M. Lowry at York, S.
C. ,the services being conducted by
Rev. W. W. Harrison, from the
First Presbyterian church of that
city. Dr. Lowery was a former pas
tor of the Shelby Presbyterian
church, a brother-in-law of Mrs.
R. L. Ryburn. Last summer he sup
plied the local pulpit during the va
cation of the pastor, Rev. H. N. Mc
Diarmid.
Dr. Lowery was born and rear
ed in York and after retiring from
regular ministerial work about two
years ago. he returned there to
make his home. At intervals during
this time he filled the pulpits of
various churches at nearby points
that were without a pastor, among
these being the Presbyterian church
at Davidson.
He received his academic educa
tion at Erskine college and his
theological training at Columbia
seminary and Princeton seminary,
He served pastorates at Aberdeen,
Miss., Eufola, Ala., Augusta, Shel
by, Knoxville and Memphis. His
longest pastorates were at Knox
ville 10 years and Memphis 1G
years. At one time he was traveling
representative of Columbia semin
ary.
Dr. Lowery was a man of brilli
ant intellect and scholarly attain
ments. Surviving are his wife, who
before marriage was Miss Cather
ine Middleton Faison, of T'ayete
ville; a son, Thomas M. Lowery,
jr., graduate student of Princeton;
a daughter, Miss Frances Lowry,
of York; three brothers, Dr. M. I.
Lowry, Eugene Lowry and R. K.
Lowry,' of Meridian, Miss., and a
sister, Mrs. J. M. Starr, of York
McGlothin Preaches
Here This Sunday
Dr. W. J. McGlothin, president
of Furman university, Greenville,
S. C., will occupy the pulpit at the
First Baptist church nerp Sunday
morning, it is announced.
Dr. Zeno Wall, pastor of .the
church is sick at the present time,
but his hundreds of friends will be
glad to know that his condiiton is
not serious and he is only under
going treatment for a run-down
condition, due to strenuous exertien
in the past weeks.
Gets Free Trip.
New York—Because she was born
at sea Lydia Bellach, nine (lays old,
was presented with a certificate b>
the officials of the Wallach line,
entitling her to a round trip to
Italy in the first class at any time
that she chooses.
McDiarmid Heads Newly Organized
Ministerial Association Of Town
At a meeting: held early thin
week the Shelby Ministerial
association was organized by min
isters of the town.
The purpose of the new organi
zation will be to unify religious
forces of the city and to take con
certed action on any matter pre
sented to the body.
I
Future meetings will be held onj
Mondays following the second Sui-j
day in April. July, October, ardj
January, it is announced.
Officers of the association are:.
Rev. H. N. McDiarmid, president:!
Rev. 11. K. Boyer, vice-president: j
Rev. Rush Padgett, secretary and)
treasurer.
Oldest Member Congress Scoffs
At Recipes To Attain Old Age
By International News Service j
Raleigh,—Rep. Charles M. Sled- '
man, (D) of North Carolina the I
oldest member of Congress, scoffs
at the time-honored recipes for at
taining a ripe old age.
Major Stedman, at the age of 80
eats what he please, smokes when ,
he desires and works hard.
"The whole secret of my long
and active life 53 the Providence;
of God,” he said. “He fixes the ;
time for the death of all persons, j
I know my time is already fixed (
by Providence, and it doesn’t wor-,
ry me.”
Graduating from college at tl
age of twenty. Major Stedman
tered the Confederate Army as
private in 1861, was wounded threJ
times and emerged as a major. .4
lawyer, he held many public of
fices in North Carolina before
co*->ing to Gongress sixteen years
ago.
“1 smoke more cigars than the
ordinary man, and have smoked a
1
great deal most of my life,” he j
said. “I rat anything, that I like!
that is re; on the table before me.
I do much walking at home but in
Washington 1 take no particular
form of exercise. I usually retire i
at 10:30 and rise at 7:30.”
Major Stedman prides himself
on his ability to keep his work as
a congressman up to date. He
never refuses to answer a letter,
however trivial. They come to him
in great, hatches from all parts of
North Carolina.
“I haven’t given the matter of
retirement a moment’s considera
tion,” he said.
He has great confidence in his
state.
“North Carolina at the present
dime is enjoying prosperity and
the prospects for the future are
bright.” he said. “The state has a
magnificent climate, great re
sources, a conservative people and
is in the midst of an era of great
industrial activity.”
Officers Must Get Man With Still
;; To Get Pay For Work Is Late Talk;
-*-! - !
Dr. Boyer Outlines
Club’s Objectives
Presents High Purposes for Which
Kiwanis Club Stands. Two
Enjoyable Quartets.
Rev. Hugh K. Boyer, D. D., chaii
man of the committee on Kiwanis
education, delivered a most inspir
j ing talk Thursday night at the Ki
wanis club meeting at Cleveland
Springs when he bid his fellow mem
bers understand the Kiwanis inter
national and the noble objectives set
for this year. Too many people,
even members have an idea that
Kiwanis is a social and eating
club only, when as a matter of fact
it has set out on a greater mir-sion
to do something for others as well
as themselves. This year the Inter
national has announced three impor
tant objectives: Encourage a more
general exercise of the use of the
ballot; teach the principles of gov
ernment in public schools com
bat the influences at work to under
mine our government and our citi
zenship. Dr. Boyer bid the local
club bestir itself in the interest of
these three important objects. He
urged all members to read carefully
all Kiwanis literature in order that
they might more thoroughly under
stand the noble purposes of Ki
wanis.
Two very enjoyable popular
numbers were sung by a quartet
composed of H. M. Pippin, C. A
Burrus, M. A. Spangler and Rush
Hamrick.
The club accepted a challenge
issued by the Lincolnton club in
an attendance contest, the club hav
ing the lowest percentage of aver
age attendance in a period of two
months, to entertain the winning
club at a banquet.
No Dance Curfew
For Negroes Here
They're Going to Ramble, No Skip
ping, All Night For the Tax
Is The Same.
The municipal authorities of
Shelby charge the colored folks $10
tax for every public dance held and
there is no restriction as to hours
so the next big colored dance for
Shelby is billed as an “All Night
Ramble.’. It will be held next Wed
nesday night and a special gallery
section will be reserved for white
spectators. Prizes will be given for
the best Charleston hoofers and
other eccentric and specialty dances.
The dance will be held at the Union
club and one warning is “Don’t
Skip’’, meaning not to skip the
dance for there will be plenty cl
skipping there.
Seeing that High Point recently
placed a curfew toll on night danc
' ing at 12 o’clock it is interesting
to note that the Charleston step
pers are to carry through all night.
The promoters are looking for such
a crowd that by alternating on the
floor it will take all night for all
the prize entrants to shake their
hoofs.
Subscribers to this journal of
the people are urged to remember
that it depends upon them finan
cial support as well as upon good
wishes.
(Greensboro Daily News)
Raleigh.—Thirty per cent of
North Carolina's counties went
houseward in favor of requiring
prohibition officers to bring heme
the bacon when they take a still,
and probably all of North C aro
lina would have dittoed these do
ings, had not Representative Turl
ir.g.on with his eagle prohibition
eye not seen a possible let-down
in the enforcement morale.
The bill was purely local when
representative iTobe Connor
brought it to the house. Mr. Con
nor had wearied of paying sher
iffs and others $20 for every cof
fee not and tin can which officials
brought into town with nothing
but an evil smell as evidence that
once this was a still. So for Wil
sor he resolved that hereafter an
officer taking a. still must get him
a man. Nat Town-end. late oppon
ent of Mr. G nrpr, asked first
get in the select class. Then the
house tumbled. It was suggested j
that this measure become state- '
wide. It is a money-saver. But
Mr. Turlington did not wish it for
Iredell.
Officer Must Make Good
So it was stopped at thirty or so j
counties. The bill merely provides
that when an officer gets a still !
he must catch his man and convict :
him. The high court must sustain 1
the conviction. Mr. Connor ex-1
plained how wide open is the pre- j
sent law'. The catcher of the still
gets any old makeshift and is re-j
warded. He must make good now.
Dr. Wall Preaches
Spindale Sermon
1
Spindale, Feb. 2.—At seven
o'clock last night at the Spindale '
Baptist church the Rev. Watson
Abrams, of Boiling Springs, was |
ordained a minister of the Baptist
church, after very impressive j
ceremonies before a congregation!
which filled the sacred edifice, j
Six noted preachers, the Rev. Dr.,
7,eno Wall, of Shelby, Rev. Dr, W. j
A. Ayers, of Forest' City; Rev. Dr. j
M. A. Adams, of Rutherfordton,
Rev. J. R. Greene, of Boilingj
Springs, and Rev. R. C. Smith of j
Cliffside, constituted the presby
tery.
Two Fine Sermons
The sermon delivered by the
Rev. Dr. Wall was an excellent one
and that given by Rev. Dr. Adams
was likewise extremely good. A
Holy Bible was presented to the
Rev. Mr. Abra by Professor J.
D. Huggins, of Boiling Springs.
The hymns which were sung ,wcre
very fine and altogether the ser
vice was dignified and very sol
emn. Afterward the congregation
present extended their heartfelt
congratulations to the Rev. Wat
son Abrams.
Dancing Curfew
On At High Point
High Point—(INS)—-A terp
siehorean curfew will ring at 12
o’clock here in the future.
Mayor II. A. Moffit has order
ed that all public dances in High
Point stop at midnight.
begislntion Concerning Proposed
Changes in Forms of County
(Government Coming.
Itah igh, (IN'S.)—County reform j
legislation is expected to make it
appearance in the general assembly
within the next few days.
Several bills effecting county
povtinimental reform are being
sponsored by the North Carolina
Association of county commission
ers arid by the administration.
The proposed bills, which are
now being drawn up, are the result
of a lengthy investigation by the
county government commission ap
pointed by Governor McLean to
make a study of North Carolina
Bounty government.
One of the hills, it is expected,
will set. out several forms of coun
ty government, which counties may
adopt by holding an election. Still
another bill would limit the amount
of indebtedness that each county
might incur through the issuance
of bonds.
One of the hills also will provide
for a budgetary system of ac
counting in order that a record of
all fiscal transactions will be kept
at all times, it was learned.
It was expected here that the
county reform bills would be intro
duced either late this week, or
early next week. Finrming touch< s
are now being placed on the propos
ed legislation, it was said.
EIGHT ENTilTS
II WEBB CONTEST
GBIGC ANNOUNCES
/
Unless another g'.rl enters today
there will be just eight contestants
for the Selma C. Webb Recitation
medal tonight at 8 o’clock in the
Central school auditorium, it is an
nounced by J. H. Grigg, county
superintendent.
Girls from the following schools
will enter it is definitely announc
ed: Casar, Shelby, Belwrood, Pied
mont, Lattimore, Waco, Boiling
Springs and Grover. There is sonic
likelihood, it is said that Faliston
will enter a contestant.
Three out of town judges have
been secured and they will conie
from Gastonia this evening. Follow
ing the recitation contest the win
ner of the Webb essay contest will
also be announced. The program for
the evening includes several musi
< al selections by the various schools
having contestants.
COTTON MARKETS
(By Jnu. F. Clan and Co )
Cotton was quoted at noon today
on the New York exchange as fol-j
lows: March 13.51; May 13.72; July ]
13.04; October 14.14; December !
14.31.
New York, Feb. 4.—Liverpool
12:15 p. m. March, May, October 4,!
July 2 American points better than I
due, spot sales 7,000.
Southern weather dear.
Little better business in Worth i
street yesterday prices firm. South- j
ern spot sales 30,000 bales. While a j
further upturn this morning may j
attract increased offerings the i
market seems unlikely to decline
much owing to the big mill de
mand under it. Should congress
pass the bill to take a census of
the grades in the carry-over it
might help new crop months on the
theory that there is very little
tenderable cotton that isn’t ear
marked for consumers.
Marriage Decline
In January Not So
Far Below Dec.
i
Generally speaking busi
ness takes a slump in January
following the holiday buying,
but no serious decline was not
ed on the local marriage mart
according to Register of Deeds
Andy Newton.
Licenses were issued for 22
couples during December, the
holiday rush month. and 18
couples. The January total
ranks high among the average
months of the year and higher
than the average January, it
is said.
Added information is that
February business promises to
to hold up just as well or bet
ter. During the first three
days of the groundhog month
license was issued to three
couples, or one license .per
day average.
Qklahoma Indians Visit CooUdge
of ‘^nlu’iu^Ja vUllit’g *♦( It'e Wl'.'n H
f# iii*<Or-j ;-rruu-i mult-i * through tvoritau&bh i*e
t**»h*' foi ^ vovi.ci^t 10 i>:-t i*i ia« can
-rocen H:
b: ju^Ui •
Shelby District
Leaguers Gather
In Gaston Soon j
Will Make Study of Efficiency.
League Met In Shelby For
Tw o Last Meets
The Shelby district Ep worth
League efficiency institute will be
held at Main Street Methodist
church in Gastonia for five days,
from February 7-11. Fifty-seven
leagues in this district, which
constitutes the largest number in
any North Carolina district, will
have representatives at these
meetings.
A splendid course of study has
been arranged. The theme of the
study will he wider and more thor
ough efficiency in all the depart
ments of Epworth League work.
Experts In Epworth League work
will have charge of all the ela <ses.
Special text books will be on hand
and those who do not purchase
them can take notes which will
serve almost ns well.
The meetings will he held at
night and the delegates will come
through the country in most in
stances, and go hack to thc-i*
homes after the programs. About
125 people are expected t« take
advantage of the several meetings.
A big social will be given Friday
night by the Leagues of the local
church in the young people’s
building.
.1. W. Atkina president of the
Shelby district league, will pre
side over the meetings. Rev. C. II.
Moser, of the Smyre Methodist
church, Rev. Arthur Barber, field
secretary of the Western NV C.
conference. Rev. C. S. Kirkpatrick,
presiding elder of the Shelby dis
trict. and Mrs. G. G. Adams, of
Stanley, will serve as the corps of
teachers.
There will be four different de
partments. The book of the first
department will be, “Training the
Devotional Life;” of the second.
“The Good Neighbor;” or the
third, “The Church al Play;” and
of the fourth “The Why and How
of Foreign Missions.”
“Training the Devotional Life”
will also be brought before the
junior and intermediate superin
tendents by Mrs. Adams, who is
the wife of Rev. G. G. Adams,
secretary of the Shelby district
league. '
Mother Satisfied
Death Of Her Son
Berry Boyd, the 24 year old
negro who died in South Carolina
a few clays ago and whose body
was about to be buried at Shoal
Creek church down in No. -2 town- i
ship, when his mother held up the
buriel service because a spectator
thought Chat his neck had been
broken and that he was the vic
tim of foul play, was buried Wed
nesday. His mother was eonvir.c- i
ed by the physician who attended •
her son that he died suddenly of!
“mitral regurgitation” and that he
was not a victim of foul play. She i
got another local physician to
make an examination and this
physician confirmed the diagnosis
of th eS. C. doctor, who exam-;
ined the body just after it died.
Mr. Bridges, at whose lumber'
plant Boyd worked when he died
secured the proper papers for the ,
transfer of the body and for its
burial and these were turned over j
to the family in this county when
the body was brought to Shoal
Creek but'the mother did not real
ize that she had all of the creden
tials at the time she held up the
burial.
Shelby Highs To
Meet Belmonters
In Game Tonight
Local Basketball Team Piny* Ab
bey Squad in New Gym Here.
One Victory to Good
Athletic officials of the local
high school are expecting a good
crowd to pack the new gymnasium
here tonight for a game between
Casey Morris’ Shelby High quint
and the fast team from Belmont
Abbey.
Shelby met the Abbey five sev
eral days ago on the floor of that,
■school and won a close victory’
over the hard-playing preppers
i due to the goal shooting of Gold
| and Beam and the stellar’ guard
i ing of the entire team. Whether or
! not the trick can be turned again
at home remains to be seen. The
Abbey boys have one guard whose
I play offers a treat it is said and
j Morris’ shortly trained youths are
; no slouches on the floor arid in
I making shots.
The game will start promptly at
7 o’clock so as to be ended prior
to the Webb contests in the school
auditorium.
The Shelby girls are this after
noon playing Forest City.
Judge Morrow Is
Author New Book
V rites Interesting Reminences Of
Stirring Civil War Days—
Star Sells llis Book
Judge D. F. Morrow, native of
Rutherford county who has many
friends and acquaintances in'
Cleveland, is author of a hock en
titled “Then and Now,” which hnJ
just come from the presses of the
publisher-. It contains interest ins:
stories of before and during the
war with some comparisons of the
habits and modes of living then
and now. Fvery chapter is inter
esting reading and historically
correct because Judge Morrow has
a vivid recollection of those ntir
ring days. It tells of the dinn r j
horn, the old cow bell, happenings
at the old muster ground, of sun
einstitutions and ghosts, com
shucking and other community
past times ns well as vivid pie- j
tures of white and colored charac
ters who lived in those stirring
days. Judge Morrow sees the hum
orous side and tells in true
Southern style of the funny things
that happened in his life+time. It
is in no way a personal sketch of
his life, hut rather his recollec
tions of the days before, after I
and just following the conflict 1
between the North and South.
Judge Morrow has left a con
signment of these books of The
Star office. Those who care for a
copy will find the investment more
than worth while. It sells for $1.50
in paper binding and $2.00 in
cloth.
Hearings At Kings
Mountain Net $150
Judge John P. Mull spent a part
©f Thursday morning holding
county court in Kings Mountain
with the result that $150 cash was
added to the county school fund.
Three cases were “aired”, all
over charges of driving while in
toxicated, and the fine in each case
was the same $50 and the costs.
All three defendants were caught
at night, it is said, one being an
out-of-town man and the others
residents of the section.
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pel- hi-ru'di
■ . iiapUs.Sv--|
i.. ' he' i
AVilS I . ; a ■
t;.ii,jv. •#:«'. I
’ill iH* t kc.t ;
■lie intermiijm
ffratic4 und||
'UiiiJinjf
t" enn- t< s* jj
fev I echo?
f leant tKtetP|
r. Jhy. ,
i one or two x
:n '.«vvti, i-j ;■!
tf:
ilAHlii
that will hi -
will he the eh3r
; workers <lww;\g
'Urtfe s U ill Li
test hook, yx 4
i\ clnssfiK
■ j eii- church lias not..
ten*, it i ; aaketi tlr 1
ich wi-li tee *m«g|
y. V. Vv, xhhurn. ar
HR . • that w«
i might make e. i1,-; x. r emit.
i arrange for.
■trait!
Beloved School
Mere Year,'
Interred
r of Forty or ' !
s i* nee fH ) 'M
'.attisnore.
The rema
ridge, wife
was buried
o’clock at L;
the funeral
ed by Rev,
(great crowd
!, tiffi. ,» fr
r.«. Ellen f% f
ohrj Eokridge.fi;
■f'Uoon at 2
E’aptlst dmrdi. ■
■■ iog conduct
(IRC? ill
public
forty
C level
Air.*, h
uallv
Shav;
grew
hhuin, >v.
\ the furm*a* *\
: >!lff , •
■• rah
ad R'setit ov« "i
1 teacher
ford courttigi ",
■r husband ul ,
or unci whe rt
About ■ thf J|
re teaching h
■ .. COlirt'
i her eoiulifi
i d runic \U '-H
Ei
W
0' mniTrt-K v.
imson, ■ She|
t i age and - sur- i
■ ’ ■ • yd husburM and
a. Mrs. Eskridgi’
• fid woman, pa
■ola of life,..a con--;,,,
and teacher ahJ^
■ and mother. Tv. .
■, Seth Eskridge efc
Maliiei Guntm-a
at Helena, near
1’c h children tw.r >
d, Sulh EsUridj.-.; ar
riving from Chicago at noon today.
One broth: ■, \V. -.sic • Wiilianiiu-.!, ii
the last of her fain:’v
... _ .. _ '*> ?
who is
Rocky M<
home for fu
Laitiiitore
Tc Shelby Gkk
The Shelby girl* basketball - -
tet added anotli. >' victory in i-Yoia-js
increasing string by <’■ (vatltuf^
Lattimore this, week 22 to 5 Ti. j
local lassie.; ar • rn:».-y
provement through (heir pi;:ili..-o,6t£|
the new indoor i'3iVor aiid a.f« : i.' -
injt into ono of, the be'ft sv\t< ts -a
the section. y’e ■ ?
The line-up: ^
Shelby (32) Poo
Sparks (10) F
M. Waldrop. (13) F
R. Waldrop
A, Janies
Richburg
H. James
•Shelby sui
Beattie and Ah
Bridges.
l.:;nh,'ore{^t'v
W eathers
II Of (1l
McKrtyfr-i
1, i, .i t;vC V
Wa'ker'-I
nethy. LuviiirictfH.t
■S(
<.
G
1’r,
(1. B. Shav
prepare d, for ' h„* World W6
well, Gee a.v.-a; .• k*. - ..i
about everything.