Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / March 28, 1927, edition 1 / Page 2
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Arungton hotel IDEAL DOWNTOWN LOCATION Ont of the 4M Hotels i CAIRO HOTELS | MARTINIQUE jmOCNHAU \SLv* oJhvJays IJ A ROOM WITH Running WATER ?2 A ROOM WITH PRIVATE RATH •3 OWRATEO 6Y MADDUX. MARSHALL, MOSS ts MALLORY inc WRI11 fOR hfUf COPY Of OUR'1.00 PICTORIAL GUIDE MAP OP WASHINGTON ADVERTISE IN THE STAR — IT PAYS. Send toftal For Rates and Booklet W. JOHNSON QUINN, THE STIR in, ..li IWPU i Bmwjiuu-uxja^s'j" -.SCHEDULES-— $ Inter-Carolina Motor Bus Company -7. B, U. 6, 7 :30—Charlotte t». Shelby to Chsrlotte Sfcelby—8, 10, 12, 2, 4, C King* Mountain to Charlotte—7:30 9:30, 11:30, 1:30, 3:?0, 6:30. 8:30. Direct connection mode in Klnga Mountain fpr Spartanburg and Greenville in the morning—One hour lay over ip the afternoons. Bessemer City to Charlotte—7:45. 11:45, 1:45, 3:15, 5:45. 8:45. Gastonia to Charlotte, leaves every hour on the hour, from 7 a. ns. to 8 p. m. Connection made there for Rock Hill, S. C.S Spartanburg, Greenville, Cramerton, I.incohiton and CheivyviUe, York and Clever S C. Gastonia to Shelby—On the odd ho'ars, making connections for Butherfordton, Hendersonville, Asheville and Statesville. Gastonia to Cherryville—8:30, 12:10, 4:10. 3:10, ChetryviU* to Gastonia—7:15, 10, 2, 6 p. m. Charlotte to Rock Hill—8. 10:30, 4:15. Bus loaves Spartanburg 6:15 p. m. Connection at Kings Mountain, Charlotte. Telephones: Charlotte 2671; Gastonia 1051; Shelby 450; Shelby to Butherfordton—8 a. to. and 1 p. m. Rutherfordton to hnelby—8:0 e, *n. and 2115 p. m. Shelby to Asheville—10n. rs.. 12 4. 6. j>. m Ashe ville to Shelby— 8, 9 and 11 o. to. and 2, 4 p m. Shelby---7:20 a. m.; 10:00 a. m.; 1 p. in.; 4:30 p. m. Li neointon—8:80 a. m.; 11 n. m.; 3:00 p. nv.; 6:30 p. to. 8eh*4ulee Subject te Change. LIST OF THOSE Til SMI The fourth pnnur' standard training school for Methodist and Presbyterian Sunday school work ers of Cleveland county, held dur ing the past week at Central Me lodist church, Shelby, was not only the most largely attended but was %t he most effective school yet lit Id. according to Director O. V. Woosley, The school came to a fitting close last Friday evening | with a social meeting at which the ladies of the church served light refreshments. Over 225 attended the various sessions of the school, of which number 173 attended six <m mot class periods anti were officially enrolled. Of this number 158 at tended all twelve class d all assignment work and earned certificates of credit. These ci students are listed with the fol lowing churches in number given: Polkville 46, Central. Shelby 30, First Presbyterian, Shelby 16; Casar 12. Palmtree 0, St. Peters 0. Main Street, Gastonia 8; Ln Fnyette Street, Shelby 7: T'V’ ton 4, Kttdesh 5, Bassemer 3; Re habeth 3, St. Paul 2, Do"bte Whowls 2. Harmony 1, Beulah 1, Shelby circuit 1. The courses, instructors and credit students follow: The Christian Religion, Rev. C. S. Kirkpatrick, instructor. J. A. Anthony. Miss Zula Allen. Mrs. W. T Alexander, C. G. Boyles, Rev. H. K. Boyer, W. J. Bridges, C. A. Bridges. Mary Sue Bridges, Miss Georgia Bridges, Mrs. HupTi Bettes, R. P. Crowder, W. W. Covington, Mrs. W. II. Covington. II. B. Covington, R. L. Carpenter, ! Clyde Carpenter. John Crawley. Miss Lucy Dixon, Junior Dnggen hnrt, Mrs. W. C. Davis, A. B. C. DePriest. Plato Elliott. Joe El liott, Miss Lottie Elliott. Miss Sarah Bell Elliott, Mrs. Foster 1 Elliott, G. E. Green, Mrs. G. E. Green, Zeb Green, J. H. Grigg, Fred Grigg. Miss Ruth Origg. Talmadge Gardner, A. A. Horton, Mni, A. A. Horton, Mrs. C. R. Hoey, Reid Harrelson, Rev. T. R. Johnson. Miss Jewell Parker. Mrs. T. B. Johnson. Miss Mae Johnson. L. R. Jenkins, J. R. Lee, James Lee, Miss Eveline Lee, C. S. Lee, Mrs. 0. R. Lee, Miss Mary Nllei. Lee, Miss Gladys Leo. F. II. Lee, Mrs. F. II. Lc<k E. M. Low ! man, Win. I.inebei'ger, Rev. S. M. Needham, Mrs. S. M. Needham, J. W. Powell, Mrs. J. W. Powell, R. P. Philbeek, Edgar 0. Peeler, Mrs. Edgar O. Peeler, Miss Mnrv Palmer, John Ramsey, Mrs. Hat tie Ramsey, Mrs, A. P. Hainsey, Miss Edith Sain, Mrs. T. A. Span pier, D. S. Turner, Mrs. I). S. Turner, R. Q. Whisnant, Mrs. R. Q. Whisnant, C. S. Whisnant, Boyd Whisnant, Ivey Whisnant, Rev. D. P. Waters. J«s R. Wiekle, Mrs. W. E. Lee, Mrs, II. K. Boyer, Mrs. M. P. Coley, Miss Addie Dellinger, Miss Frankie New, Mrs. E. M. Auten. The Puivil, Prof. C. T. Carr, in structor. Mrs. H. E. Elliott, Rev. t'. R. Ross, Mrs. I.. E. Stacy. Rev. J. W. Fitzgerald, Mrs. T. T. Kend It is signifi&mf Athat me users of " Standard' Gasoline f $ outnumber the users of any«b other brand 2 more than two to one -^5% rick, Hewitt Palmer, Miss Mary D. Palmer, Lee Yates, Miss Katherine Whtsnnnt, Miss Eugenia ETiiott, Mrs. Mattie S. Anderson, Mrs. Louis A. States, Mrs. H. R. Chest-' nut, Mrs. Mary E. Yarborough, | Mrs. Jessie E. Ramson, Mrs. T. E. Summcrow, Mrs. V. E. Long, Mrs. C. S. Kirkpatrick, Miss Beulah I. Johnson, Mrs. Bessie Dellinger, W. H. Mitchem, Miss Bessie Willis, Mrs. Edny Willis, Miss Bessie j Clark, Miss Lula Vay Elmore, Miss Mant^, Hoy toil, Miss Mozelle Carpenter, Mrs. Renn Drum. Mrs.! B. A. Lefler, Miss Myrtle Hovis. Junior Pupil, Mrs. E. R. Michaux, instructor. Mrs. G. C. Beam, Miss Grace Harmon, Mrs. E. M. Lowman, Miss Oia Whis- j nant, Miss Adda Willis, Miss Thelma Young, H. W. Goolsby, I Mrs. B. B. Higgins, J. L. Blanton, i Mrs. C. S. Beum, B. A. Lefler, Miss Ellen B. Switzer, Mrs. Draper Wood. Primary Pupil, Miss Corinne Little, instructor. Mis-- In a Car- j nenter. Mrs. F. D. Edwards. Mrs. O. E. Ford. Mrs. J. H. Hull. Miss | Mary Hardy, Mrs. Charles Hoey, . Old Dog Is Able To Do New Tricks Hickory Record. When a man get* well cn in the years he concluded, and often says, that he is too old to learn new tricks. That fs usually because 1 he is too lazy to apply tvmsp.lf to j the task. The following from the North Carolina Christian Advo cate will cite the eases of several; well known men who made con siderable accomplishment of a new sort alter they had passed the middle age: ‘•For some of the boys along in the fifties and sixties who have I not yet gone to repeating over andj over the same old iokes and have i not formed the habit of musing | upon the days of their childhood, j but may he thinking that it is about time to ‘knock off’ we pre scribe the following tonic which i: a brief record of great spirits who were learners until the sun went down. It is an old medicine compounded by some unknown pharmacist. Cato, at eighty, took it into his venerable head to learn Greek and Plutarch, almost as . late in life, learned Latin. Theo-1 prustus began his work on the characters of men at ninety. His; literary labors were ended only! by death. Socrates learned to j play on musical instruments when j | well advanced in life. Colbert, the j ' famous French statesman return- j ed at sixty to his Latin lind law studies, and the great Doctor Johnson applied • himself to Dutch but a few years before his death. Then there is the now forgotten Marquis de St. Aulaire, who was once regarded as a remarkable prodigy. At the age of seventy he began to write poetry and con temporaries declared that his. verses were full of fire, delicacy and sweetness.” v -Jb_ The slogan, “Five Cracking Good Cows and One Hundred Clicking Good Hens,” for every farm in Madisor- county is bearing fruit , and there is a change appearing in i the agriculture of that county. CARD OF THANKS. There comes times in each ones life, when hours are very dark, and clouds hang heavy. It is such relief, in such an hour to have comforting j and cheering words from friends. I ! take this method of expressing mv most sincere thanks to the many, many friends, for their words of consolation and cheer in the hours of sadness, of the passing of our devoted husband and father. Wil liam Ellis. The thought of your kindness will ever remain in our memory. t, Mrs. VC. M. Ellis and Family. WILL START AN ACCOUNT HERE Weekly deposits of on? dollar or more will in crease it regularly, and compound interest will add to the principal. —If you have never opened a Savings Account we urge you to open one now. A new period starts April the j f’tst here. If you already i have a savings account keep i it crowing by making de posits. Interest added to your ac count every three months. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. Cleveland Bank & Trust Co. t SHELBY, N. C, W._ .. ■ »p.eft Miss Dora Ledbetter, Miss Moselle Lee. Miss Ellen Louise New, Mrs. C. R. New, Miss Ruth Roberts, Mrs. Ft. W. Nilson, Mrs. C. B. Alexander, Mrs. Henry A. Mills, Beginner Pupil, Miss Aiha Bow man, instructor. Mrs. B. F. Cai’is, Miss Fay Dellinger, Mrs. W. C. Dixon, Mrs. VT. O. Elmore, Mrs. Thad C. Ford, Mrs. J. Talmtidge Gardner, Mrs. Hugh Hoyle, Mir.s Lizzie Mae Lee, Miss Carobel [.over, Mrs. John McClurd, Mrs. VV. H. Mitehem, Miss Josephine Ramsey, Miss Ruth Arrowood, | Mrs. James B. Jones. Farmers of North Carolina will increase their acreage to irish po tatoes, sweet potatoes, tobacco, and peanuts this year. Notice Of Sale On April 1st, 1027, 1 will sell at I public auction, beginn'ngat 10 a. m.: one horse, one inula, wagon, ! harness, fanning tools, corn ruff i:cs3 feed, blacksmith tools and peas. In fact many other valuable articles for the high dollar as 1 have decided not to farm. South of County Home 1-2 mile. E. A. Eades. ' 2t 28c , >——"————' THE DOLLAR YOU SPENT YESTERDAY Now Belongs To Someone Else. The Dollar you deposit in your bank account will be yours tomorrow, read y when you need it, and earn ing compound interest all the while. Decide now that you will open a Savings Account here for systematic sav *• i ing. It is your move—A new interest period starts April first. Act today. Savings Department . Cleveland Bank & j Trust Co. SHELBY. IS. C. j' i AVERY TERRACE KING Y PLANTER i Double Jointed—Axle Driven! An AVERY PLUS Feature B. F. Avery built into this business the ideal that “A thing wortli doing at all is worth doing well.” The result is a big department of designers and inventors whose chief busi ness is thinking. Avery Plus Features are the result. For example: Any short coupled planter cart do a pass able job of planting in hilly places where rows are short and irregular. But passable does not satisfy Avery. Therefore you find in the Avery line the Terrace King Planter—a double jointed, flexible planter especially de signed by Avery experts to do a pei fect job of plantL'-a fc» the crcokedest row.. To do this, many new feet ores were developed —amen;* them a special pivoted frame, with the pivot at a point $irect!y in front cf the epetier. This permits very sharp turns. In addition, the planting 'mechanism is driven direct from the cxie. All chains, gears end other friction producing parts are eliminated. These are Avery Plus Features—improvements which insure faster, more accurate and nv e profit able planting for you mat who form under these conditions. I Avery Plus Features Save You Time and Money Any Avery implement costs v/nut gooa queue/ is worm. x.ic^o Avery Plus Features—crefited by Avery designers, inventors and craftsmen—are extra dividends which your money earns when you invest in the name Avery. They save both time andYnoney. That is why an Avery Pius Implement is the cheapest implement any iron can own. See us for any information. GET ONE FOE 7©c A $3,50 Webster’s Home, School And Office Dictionary Our second shipment has just been received and Star readers can obtain one of these 1,200 page, 12,000 word Webster’s by paying for a year’s sub scription and Seventy Cents addit ional. This is a book, second only to the Bible for being handy and useful. Grown-ups use it, school boys and girls need it every day and it wortt grow out of-date. Ask anyone who got a Webster out of the first shipment and he will tell you what a fine offer The Star is mak ing, or come to the Star office and look one over. SUBSCRIBE TODAY. $2.50 BY MAIL OR $3.00 BY CARRIER EVERY OTHER DAY FOR A YEAR. ADD 70c AND WE DELIV ER THE WEBSTER TO YOU. The Cleveland Star „. ' SHELBY, N. C. — CAROLINA’S BEST NEWSPAPER OUTSIDE THE DAILY FIELD.-S
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 28, 1927, edition 1
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