, Wedding Kept a Secret For Seven (Months Is Announced— Per sonal Items. (S|»ecinl to The St nr.) Miss Donnie Sain, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hartsell Sain who has been making her home with Mrs. W. A. Pendleton, of Shelby, for the past four years and at tending high school surprised her friends lost Sunday, when she paid a visit to her parents as Mrs. Morehead. Miss Sain was married to Mr. Bill Morehead, a young man of Shelby, seven months ago and has kept it a secret, or at least tried to. A lot of her friends had suspected her marriage for a good while. Mr. and Mrs. Wytle Costner, of Double "Shoals, spent last Satur day night with their parents Mr. , and Mrs. J. L. Sain. Mrs. Minnie Hoyle and son, ' Woodrow and Mr*. S. A. Sain spent ■test Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Brackett, of Lawndale. Mr. Tom Propst and family spent )a*t Sunday at the home of their parents Mr. und Mrs. J. M. **-Ledford. „ Misses May Sain, Bertha Brackett and Lucy Dixon, Boone ' Students spent the week-end at home. T Master Thaxter Sain spent last ^Bunday with Master Charlie Wade Carpenter. *’ Mrs. M. J. Carpenter was a din ner guest at the home of her son, Mr. and Mrs. S T. Carpenter Sun . day. . Mr. Lytle Quinn and family anti “‘ Mr. Fred Mullinax, of Kannapolis, * swere guests of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Carpen ter last Sunday. Mrs. Quinn and children are spending some time * with relatives. Misses Selma Prost and Char lotte Peeler were guests of Misses * jSdlth and Helen Sain last Satur day night. ■?“ Mr. Burt Yarhro was in Mpr ,„gnnton hospital last week to see his brother, Charlie Yarbro, who was operated on for appendicitis, ‘He is doing nicely. : Mr. Flay Carpenter of Morgan ton spent ,ihe week-end With his parents,* Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Car *' penter. Mr. and Mrs.' *Guss Carpenter, of Lendlr, (pent last Saturday evening and were dinoBMUests of Mr. and Mrs. is. T.flK*l>eptai ; they alto 'spent Satuadbv might '‘with Mr. and Mrs.* JoE£ni\(fck Mr. Sttd Mrs. Dan Irain vMted at the home of their son. Mr. S. A. Sain Sunday. v ? Mr, and Mr*. A. B. Willis viait * «ed at the home of their brother, Mr. D. M. Mull Sunday. Rev. «C A. Henderson, of Char * lotte, spent last Saturday night with Mr and Mrs. A. T. Mull. Miss Gertrude Seism. of Cherrv ville, visited Mrs. A. G. Boyles lust Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs, Atlas Tillman, of Belwood, visited Mr. and Mrs. Burt Sain last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Burt Sain while * out joy-riding Sunday afternoon happened up with good luck when .they were called in to a wedding dinner while passing through Bed wood at Mr. P. L. Peeler’s in honor of his son, Mr. Lamar, who was mjfwod Sunday. B. Y. P. U. at Carpenter’s Grove every Sunday night at eight o’clock. All visitors are welcomed. White Man’s Food Tried On Eskimos (By International News Service.) New York.—Dr. I.eumun M. Waugh, professor of Orthodontia nt Colunrtpa school for dental and oral surgery, is sailing soon for the region of Northern Labra dor and Ungava Bay on a mis sion to determine just what white ' man’s food has done to the teeth of the Eskimo tribes. f Dr. Waugh is confideut he will he able to disprove the theory ad -”vanced by 1880 by Howard Mum mery, of Birmingham, England, that the teeth of Eskimos arc stronger than those of nny other primitive peoples. For the purpose * ‘ of collectng data Dr. Daugh will penetrate Into the almost unknown territory above Makevin. He is sailing on the Nau, a 34 foot sea skiff, with a Crew of two * sailors and his young son Donuld. . now a student in a preparatory school. Dr. Waugh has made other ^trips to the Arctic. W .’These people once had the 4 largest jaws and strongest teeth in the world,” he said. “But their ‘teeth have gone to pieces since they have eaten white man’s food. The meats and fats which were it. the exclusive diet of the primitive Eskimos have been replaced in ’many cases by the carbohydrate . foods of civilixatiop.” Naming A President (News & Observer.) v The trouble with the Democrats thev have a plethora of men of presidential siae. The New York Tribune prints the pictures of 19 men and one woman who are be lieved to be in the face. Those .listed are Smith, McAdoo, Glass, Walsh, Ritchie, Robinson, Barkley, *"Hped Hitchcock, Donahy, Woollen, gr » Year-Old Son To Kill. I ■ -- ! Lenoir, June 22.—Refusing to stand idly by while his stepfather berated and beat hi* mother, J Leonard Carver, 1.(5, shot and kill ed T. A. Marshall, 50, at their i home near* here, today, according to other members of the family. Officers arrested the boy this afternoon, holding him in jail on a murder charge. j The trouble arose between fath ! er and stepson at the noon meal hour. It appears thai there were ; four of the Carver children pres | ent. The stepfather corrected one of the Carver girls for some pur i pose, and this was resented by the child’s mother. Words followed, and according [to the story told by the children, Marshull was heating Mrs. Mar shall their mother. Leonard Car ver ran to get a rifle but an older brother took it away from him I and broke the rifle in two. Think ing he hud put it out of eommis | sion, he threw it down and was J trying to sepurate his mother and .father. Again Leonard picked up the rifle and noticed that when his brother broke the stock from the barrel it did not affect the lock or firing mechanism, and he fired one .22 caliber bullet which struck his stepfather under the right arm. Upon being shot, it is claimed that Marshal started to get a shot gun, but the older stepson suc ceeded ip getting it first and fired *'eth barrels into the air before bis stepfather could reach it. In his last efforts to reuch the gun 'the man fell from the wounds in flicted by the rifle bullet. (Mr. Marshall, deceased, bought the farm on which he lived at the time of the shooting from Mr. J. H, Hull, of Shelby. The farm con tained over .100 acres and involv ed about $1(5,000.) -t-r (By Evelyn McDonald, INS Stafl Correspondent.) i Paris.—Elaborate bathing suits | will be seen at Deauville and other 'fashionable resorts this summer, j Even in the water women can 1 plan to be elegant and keep in the 'mode, for the simple one-pieco Jersey outfit has been discarded by the important couturiers. A stunning white bathing suit trimmed with whito shells em broidered in silver, is one of the moat popular models from Jean Patou. A white bathing bonnet jgoes with it, and boasts the same : embroidery. Stockinette is the newest mat erial for the abbreviated beach outfit. Silk jersey and light weight taffetas are also used. Black stockinette suits are extremely chic. A grew, deal of green, orange, yellow, sun-burn color and flesh was displayed at a resent showing The two-piece bathing suit is in I I l I the lead this season. Necks ore v shaped, sleeves are eliminated, waists close-fitting and skirts fol low the circular movement. Trou sers are attached to the waist underneath, and only a t;nv b;t of them can be seen peeking from the skirt. Trimming is used in {profusion All sorts of fancy braids bind the necks and hems. Long streamers fall from the collar. Rubber fringe, water-proof flowers and wooden bead decorations go towards mak ing 1927 models successful. Peignors, as the French call beach wraps. accompany each bathing suit. They are gray, non chalantly worn and under no cir cumstances should she fit. Bright cretonnes with novel designs, shantungs in odd colors and tow elling ahe exceedingly smart. The nicest bathing caps tie un der the chin and come in the same color as the suit. Bathing hand kerchiefs, rubberized, can be safe ly tied around the head and are most chic. Turbans are worn, made in waterproof taffeta, with the more dressy bathing suit. and Meredith and Mrs. Nellie Ross Governor of Wyoming. In addition to the pictures printed it lists Phelan, Sweet, Thompson, Ayers, McLean, Harrison, Baker, Owen, and Hall. There are still others, not counting Byrd who might make a successful flight, and a half a dozen other Governors and Senators suggested, including a possible dark horse. It would bo easier to make a selection if the number of availables was not so jlarge. The Republican find selec tion less difficult because they have fewer from which to choose. a* mm 'TALK TO MARS ! Bf BEAM SIGHS (By Robert S. Thornburgh, IXS Staff Correspondent.) Washington.—proceeding on the theory that geometrical truths un known to any one intelligent enough to receive u jadio or light message, and that inter-planetary communication is not beyond the range of possibility, Dr. Alfred X. Goldsmith, chief broadcast engi neer of the Radio Corporation of America, is planning a series of attempted communications with Mars. Once the appartus is set up— either a huge bank of searchlights for a light message, or a beam transmitter of thousands of kilo watts power for a radio signal, Dr. Goldsmith’s program will bo this: First will he transmitted a se quence of telegraphic dots—fol lowed by another sequence of dots. This is calculated to attract the attention of the ii.habitants of Mars. The signals sent from the terrestial station should be Such that if received on another planet the idea of regular control would be conveyed. “This should he carried on for a long time," Dr. Goldsmith said, “ever waiting with receiving ap paratus for the answering signal. My first message would be based on the assumption that geometri cal truths are universal and known to anyone intelligent enough to get u light or radio message. The right angle is the most simple of the geometrical truths. “There I would seek to indi cate the right nngle triangle in my message—possibly by using three dots, a space, four dots, space, five dots, then nine, six teen and twenty-five dots follow ed by two sequences of twenty-five clots each, indicating twenty-five as the sum of nine and sixteen. “If anything similar came back to my ear-phones, or if anything at all came hack, the fact that life exists on the planet, that those be ings had communication equip ment and intelligence would be established. Monroe Paper For Seaboard Bus Plan 1 Monroe Journal, The Seaboard Air Line proposes to run a bus connection from its trains at Rutherfordion to Chim ney Rock. But private bus owners, and perhaps others, are making . objection, and the matter is to be heard by the Corporation Com I mission on Friday of this week. Chimney Rock is the Seaboard’s | legitimate territory and it has all I there years done what it could to I advertise it. It was not able to build a track to it but always that ;has been the ultimate idea. Now ! roads and motor vehicles often ! make it unnecessary for a railroad to make heavy investments at ter minals or for short extensions which are desirable but not suffi cient to offer large returns. Ail . over the country this is being done. Also with the street car lines in the cities. We are unable to think of any good reason why the Sen board should not be given permis sion at once to go ahead, nay even encourged to do so. STOPPED HIS ‘DON’T CARE” FEELING Charley Fisher Says Munyon’a Paw Paw Tonic Whetted His Appe tite and Gave Him Strength. i “I was having much difficulty with my stomach and whenever I i would get up I would feel drowsy and really did not care for any ; thing.” So write Charley Fisher, ; of Bunker Hill, 111. “I began taking Munyon’a Paw Paw Tonic, and after the first dose ; I felt much better, and after nbout half the bottle was taken it seem ed as if I could not get enough to tat, my appetite had improved to | such an extent. I felt much strong er. I have altogether taken three bottles and my condition has been wonderfully improved. “Our local druggist carries the tonic in stock, and 1 am able i procure it from him. I have been , telling my friend* about it and , some of them arf Also taking the | Tonic and find it ’a» I told them, i There is no better ^opie for the | blood, and the iron in it makes one strong.” If YOU are run-down or suffer from indigestion, heartburn, sleep lessness. stomach, liver, kidney or blood trouble, you owe it to your selt to try Munyon’s Paw Paw I Tonic. It has put thousands back I on their feet and has given then' : the happiness of health a n % I strength again. There’s danger In further delay! Buy a $1 bottle of Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic TODAY at any first-class drug store. Fo’ Sale By PAUL WEBB & SON And Druggists Everywhere. Netvs and Obsever. A survey of women in industry in North Carolina made under the direction of E. F. Carter, executive officer of the State child welfare commission during *the biennium just closing, shows that employers of 79,9,11 women workers general ly are abiding by State laws cov ering working hours ar.d that in dustrial environment surrounding women workers generally as good. Under way even before the tur moil of last summer blasted a breach between three Stute wo men’s organizations and the ad ministration at Raleigh had load ed the subject with so much T. N. T. that it was not even whispered on the floors of the last general assembly, the survey was made quietly by the child welfare com mission. Outstanding in the findings of the investigators was that tho major ity of women workers are employ ed between 55 and 60 hours a week; that night work is not fre quent but workers are employed less than 60 hours a week, and that not a single violation Of State labor laws was found in a tobacco manufacturing plant. It was shown that hour viola- ‘ tions were much more frequent in i small establishments than in large j ones, and that in many cases viola tions weie caused by piece-work ers own jealousies in working dur ing luncli periods to increase their production. Unknown to the public, tho pile of statistics on the subject has ac cumulated during the last year un til now they are complete for the closing biennium. Mr. (. arter, who Was the storm center of the row last summer over who should conduct the sur vey, declined to comment on the statistics, which now constitute a public record. He said, however, that the sur vey was made in the course of reg ular inspectional duties of the com mission as outlined by statutes governing the child labor commis-i slon. tenilnoRTH Inifl 1 V A fHBVI I 1 P ^ Ajheville, n.c. «fpeciql Weekly cfigCts Spend your jpnnd' Pdc dfion lMb the it'ild flowery ot the Smoky Mountain) The famous VmilMxih Ion offers you i special weekly rate tor your family-which include) d mar uriour prolan of entwainmenTT jutin in on WWNC anu tvenina , AMtWCAN PLAN J gSt*!":*#Z ? •ou*o»jncu* • . ufc* DtUfktfKl. rfifni/M sumundinqi —I>l*. IWM.M4IW urn, uaqfj t - • WXTCOE- A MARVEL M A N A O l BROADCASTS i GOOD NEWS Columbia, S. C.—“Last spring I got' SO bad I was almost beyond going.1 Knowing of L)r. i Pierce's medicine* and their reputa- , tion I decided to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pro scrip- j tion and before I had taken all of one bottle I was gaining in health ajufby the time 1 had taken throe bottles l*was in fine condition. ! my nerves became quiet , I could sleep, I my appetite returned, I started to gam j in weight and felt well and strong. I 1 have never taken a medicine that did me so much good ”—Mrs. J. B. Carter,' 12123 Bull St. | If your druggist is out of the Pro*1 scription, send 05c to Dr, Pierce, I Buffalo, N. Y., for a package of tablets.' FOR i . AMBULANCE SERVICE . — CALL 61 — PALMERS FUNERAL HOME 109 Sumter Street SHELBY, N. C. WOMEN PROFS. NAMED ON X. C. university FACULTY ( Hy International News Service.) Halt-iyh.—Women have passed : another milepost in North Caro-j linu or. the road to recognition. j For the first time since the Uni- j vers it y of North Carolina was! founded i:'»0 years ago. women are jitoihlf to be members of the facul ty. Shattering of the _ precedent come; in the wake of the action of the board of trustees of the insti tution in approving the recom mnula.ion of the executive com-j niittee that women be admitted to the faculty of the school of edu-1 cation in order tin 'facilitate the service of the school of education in advanced and graduate instrur- ■ Vion for elementary school teach ers supervisors.” Miss Sallie B. Marks, now r-u-; pervisor of grades in the publir chools of I.a Crosse, Wis., and Ce celia II. Bason, at present head j of the denartment of primary me-! ihods in th> East Tennessee State J teachers college, are the fir'd two women instructors. Each will have Urn rank of assistant professor. Cirls Is This True? Greensboro Patriot. i Beauty isn’t even skin deep' these days: just, paint and powder ( deep. And the shallower the brain the deeper the paint“find powder. i >.W« *'» •'» oo « * *'#*'# !•! | DO YOU WANT | | A HOME? | l I I - Well, Listen To jj " ".|.“” ■*" 1® B 8 Us! Ii is our business to help you own your home, we will meet you more than half way. but you must make some effort. You must either own your lot or have some B. & L. Shares. So if you want to own your home and you do not own your lot already—Come in now and take out as many shares as you can pos sibly carry, then in a lit tle while, you can own vour home with our help, $2.50 a week will carry 10 shares, this will ma ture $1,000.00, and 20 shares will mature $2, 000.00 at $5.09 a week, and lo on. JVvike The Start To Own Your Home - It’s Easy. CLEVELAND BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION Office With Cleveland Bank & || Trust Co. 1 Saturday, July 2, A New Series Starts. BEAUTIFUL! Just arrived, a fine selection of beautiful Georgette a.id Flat Crepe Dresses—the new pastel shades and navy blue - wonderfully tailored. Made tj sell at much higher prices. You can only appreciate the quality and smartness of these frocks by seeing them. Extraordinary Values— $18.75 $12.50 NEW VOILE DRESSES $5.85 Is there anything more sum mery and delightful to have than a charming Voile dress? You’ll find no better values anywhere, at any time, than we now offer. The popular white and a va riety of color*, i*: all sizes. SMART HATS Our Millinery department has always had the reputa tion of being the first to show the new and smart styles. -SPECIALS — $5.00 - SATURDAY Only Imported French Felts — New Pastel shades - $6.95 values. $1.95 - Straws and Silks, Variety colors and shapes. $5.00 Dress Hats—Azure Strawy new colors and shapes. $1.00 to $5.00 Children’s Hats — straws, milanr, and leghorns. MADAME GRACE Corsets, Corseiettes and Girdles. We have a complete assort ment of this celebrated line, $1.50 to $5.00. W B BRASSIERES If you have ever worn W. B. Brassieres you’ll never wear any other kind-65c to $1.00. -SIS HOPKINS Means Knickers and Shirts For Women and Girls. KNICKERS — tan and t-rey sizes 16 - 22-$2.95 to $3.50. Shirts — tan and white - siz es 16 to 22 - $1.95. DOVE UNDERWEAR Those who appreciate daia ty underwear prefer the Dove B. and — silk and voile, a ported colors — $1.00 t:> $8.50. RICHELIEU UNDERWEAR You, who like knit under wear best will find Riche lieu most satisfactory, white and flesh, all sizes - includ ing stouts - 65c to $1.50. W. L FANNING & COMPANY frigidaire IS THE NAME OF THE REFRIGERATING UNITS MANUFACTURED B Y GENERAL MOTORS. THIS IS THE PRODUCT WE ARE OFFERING YOU. our Fr' 0,jr **era*or Pro#Pect* were as familiar with values and conveniences as our r rigidaire owner, we could not get Frigidaire. fast enough to supply demand. 400,000 WILL BE SOLD THIS YEAR. AREY BROTHERS . -PHON 2 280 i