Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Jan. 7, 1929, edition 1 / Page 7
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Let A Star Want Ad (on At Wi] WHat You wfent In th e Rates tor Want Advertisements fn This Column Minimum Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. This size type 1 cent per word each insertion Thi.; size type 2c pet word each insertion. This size type 3e per word each insertion. , Ads that amount to less than 25c, win be charged 25c to? first insertion. 1* YOO ARK PLANNING IO build let us maKc an csttthaie Plans and sketches cheerfully sud ■> mitted First class workmanship guaranteed Lowimn Brother- con tractors Phone 727 -J tl i& FOR RENT: GOOD 2 HORSE farm, 3 miles from Rutherford.on on Highway 20, good land and houses. L. W Gardner. Shelby. S.t 28c MEAT SCRAP FOR SALE analtzes 55 per cent protein Excel t lent-for hog and chicken Red $70 per ton- City Abattoir Apply d City Hall tl 7 c HOWELL TRANSFER, WE haul anything anywhere, any time All grades of sand for sole Pronin! service. Shelby, N. C. Day phone 718 Night 124-R. tl 23c WEDDING IN TIT A LIONS AND announcements, printed, cngrav .o or reileigm! Three different kinds of printing, many styles of lettering ^ Bndes-to-De. your secret will oe k pi Place your order wild us and money The Star Puone. No 11 FOR SALE- Beauti ful ten room residence ; cn North LaFayette street. Large lot. Two thousand cash, seven thousand Building & Loan in six years, bal ance in three years. Prompt possession. Formerly occupied by "the late Mrs. Patt’e Ware. A. C. Miller, tf FOR RENT TWO ROOMS AND large hall, steam heated. At \ Weathers apartment. tf 24c FRESH COWS FOR SALE: ij have several fresh cows for sale at j bargain prices. Most all of these cows have young calves with them You will find some extra good cows ( in this lot. B. O. Hamnck. tf 28c FOR RENT: TWO HORSE farm, known as R. W. Elliott home place. Mrs. Julius Elliott. tf 28c FOR SALE' STOVE WOOD 4 ready for use. Phone 406 Morrison Transfer Co. tf 8. FOR SALE CHEAP TO QUICK buyer, nice desirable lot just off Highway No. 20 west of Shelby. Zeb C. Mauney. . tf 28c AT AUCTION FRIDAY JAN uary Ilth at 10 o’clock at J. M Moore’s ncme in the Mount Pleas ant section, two mules, one horse wagon, buggy end farming tools Terms, cash. High dollar buys. J. M. Moore, owner. 4t-2p ‘ FOR RENT: ONE FURNISHED room. Prefer ladies. Mrs. J. W Canipe, 208 McBrayer Sc. 2t 4p ROOMS WITH MEALS. MRS. Frank Rippy, 417 South LaFayeth Street; tf 4e FOR SALE: THREE RANGE stoves, one electric range and a lot of new furniture. C. B. Cabaniss. 3t 4c ONE SHOAT AT T^Y HOUSE; weighs 75 pounds, red. Owner can * get same by paying for feed rrd this adv. C. C. Putnam. 2t 4c LOST: 1929 AUTO TAG NO. 399428. Finder please return to k Star office and receive reward. 2t4n TWO FURNISHED CONNECT lug rooms for housekeeping, one block of business section. Telephone 611. 3t 4c WANTED: TO BUY SECOND hand Fordson tractor and Athens plow. D. w. Carpenter, Shelby, N. C. " 4t 2p NOTICE: ALL PERSON'S ARE 1 forbidden to hunt- or trespass on my land in any way. D. W Car penter. 4t 2p WANTED. GOOD . SECOND hand two horse, wagon and stalk cutter. J. T. Webb. Shelby, N. C. j ; ' - : • 3t 4p FOR SALE: 140-EGG INCUEA tor and 32 inch canopy top brooder. * Deans Hoyle, Fallston, N. C. 3t 4p FOR RENT: TWO OR THREE unfurnished conn acting rooms for light housek'-er'rig. K2 >1. Morgan st&ev, 4ac. t. BUILDING LOTS- '.:OOr> Lo cation. 0. S. Ypriny tf -12c FOR REN T ONE HALt STORE room. Apply at Star office. 8t L’r FOR. SALE—1TERMS -TO hn't the buyer. Ten room, two jtery house, suitable for nurd'r.g or rooming house, ! ‘an h • mad? into apartment, ’■ouse. large barn, on the Cleveland Spring- road—No 10 highway. Two minutes ’rive- from center of town, a.and M-l acres of land al! uitable for builcMng lots.' A chance to buv like this does ot come often. See your . "I estate, i an and let him make, terms to suit you. Ten ears time if you want it. Titles guaranteed, when all ayments are male. The pwn ■j- wiT guarantee 5 per cent crease in value pe • year for j 'he next five years. See -bonds ! '. W't 'ort, owner. "2t‘-7c I C OMMISSIONERS mm; oi 1 AND. i Under and by virtue of a judg ment made by the clerk of .he sn | pcrlor court in . special proceeding : entitled: R. H. Hamrick ana wife. : Rellic Hamrick and others’ hr;-’ ,,t 1 lew of S. Yeung Hamrick, deceased. ) ex parte, now o! record in the of fice oi the clerk of superior court for Cleveland county, N. C . the undersigned commissioner will of fer for sale to the highest bidder at public auction, at the couit house door in Shelby, N. C. on the 5th day of January. 1929. at 13 o’cloc! M, the following described trac oi land: . AS Lying in No. ‘ -township. Cleve land county, N. C. and being the home place of the late s Young Hamrick, deceased. Beginning at a stake, to.rnerly a pest oak, corner of the" Sarah W. Blanton and Nelson Turner lands, thence south 70 east 82 poies to stone; thence north 72 , cast 112 .poles to a stone: thence north 76 west 58 poles to a stone; thence 721-.. west 70’-;. poles to a stake; thence south 17!2 east 481 u poles to the beginning, containing 83 acres, more or less. Terms of sale: One half cash on day of sale, and the,re mainder within twelve months from date of sale. Plat of the above described prop erty may be seen by making ap plication to the undersigned com missioner. Said property will first be sold in lots and then as a.' whole. The land has been rented for the year 1919, and the purchaser will receive the rent. This the 1st day of December. 1928, T. GROVER » AMRICK, Com missioner. Newton & Newton Attys. Try Star Job Printing Yiiua CHICK3 EIGHT! Give them exactly the things their tenderlittle bodies need and they’!! grow swiftly into strong, profitable birds. No trouble at all to use Quaker FU&-0-PEP CHICK STARTER The complete oatmeal feed that contains cod liver oil, cod liver meal, molasses in dry form and other valuable materials, and blended into a scientific ration. We have it for you. For Sa’e By McKNIGHT & CO., Shelby, N. C. y7 V •GUS AND GUJSIl i let* Unci., <: ■ ‘ ... * • w. —... viOES' AT i. AST , VT.S DO OR* DIB DO AH,. . HAVEN'T \ t ^6t You ! 50MSWH6r«.H f f COUCB BE roTMiptB I've BEEN fiOMSWHKIte . Y /t~~ytoo-~vSj we --- That \ WHAT do i \ sav AJO W s ‘V. ^4. /arent ybJ'V (SuAlNT—— i \ HA_— W A — V S‘. we %e ALL • SI ON TVA*T StAV-(tlO« Kmf F*#rurt» Syndicai# Inc, Gitm Smam rigbte Cue Feels Him self Sinking <3US WAS *edNH up* OSi HIS LINES. STASE -f? c > C5 H "T WAS W'A/ - susre VALIANTLY' "TfelES TO TOSS HIM HIS LINES WHILE <3USS1E ATTEMPTS TO PROMPT HIM FROM THE WH6S - you TMAV to me / assent Vou \ lotht ~ V.-** > • <!' ■ K'ti * I' r art * • %.rw!$. t AM. By DOROTHY HER TOC, {Copyright 1928 Premier Syndicate) Hollywood.—now-a-days the flick er ferns refer to new- wrinkles in their respective faces as charac ter lines.” “Twas the witching hour of mid night. A fire crackled sn the grate. We were discussing this and that with dreamy languor. Suddenly Eess Meredyth—who writes M. G. M. scenarios for $1,500 a week—pul verized, us with fear,. Our teeth chattered and our feet froze. Bess recounted how at the age of three a terrifying woman spectre came into her life. (I'm penning this at night and believe you me I’m getting more scared'by the minute) This spectre was a tall sparse brunette who suddenly ma terialized on the stairs and -crouch ed toward Bess, a knife gripped in upraised hand. Bess screamed and fled into the yard. The spectre dis appeared, only to return again and against. , Bess hesitated to tell her moth er about the terrifying experience'. Finally, at the age of sever., she did. She ha>i to tel! somebody Her mother said she vas dreaming an,: dismissed it from her m»nd. It •• as no dream to Eess. however Year later she had herself psycho-anal yzed in a desperate effort to pene trate and overcome these fearsome scenes with the murderous woman spectre. The doctor. however, found no clew to the menace. He did tel! her. though, that rf ‘ the woman ever reached her it would result in death. Lawd, I tel! you, when Bess fin ished that story we were all nearly too frightened tc go home. The John Barrymore: were show ing some friends through their Bev erly Hills home Each room was mere beautiful than the other. Fin ally they entered a bedroom that looked like nothing at alt. The friend rased unbelievingly, then: “Why the awful wreck?" Barrymore smiled shyly: "That's our guest room—the one she un welcome guest will occupy. This has been known, to be call ed subtle. Vikna Hanky Has gone m for dic tion seriously, under tutelage of Nance O’Neill Miss OTSfeiil homes in Los Angeles these da'-s, spend ing a large share of her time with the Repertoire Flayers, with which organization John Cromwell is also associated. Vtlma deemed it wise to defeat her accent in order to cope with talky pictures, so Miss O'Neill has been teaching the Hungarian blonde how to overcome the blhrred finish to words and how to enuci ate her syllables slowly. Emil Jannings. on the other hand, evinces little interest in cap turing an English vocabulary, even though the U. S. A , and more spec ifically, jr-w’-iyi.,, fs his »irtv'plaee YILMA BANKY the set, and it is still very difficult to understand hit guttural Ger manized English. .. When Grata Garbo first came to Hollywood she spoke little or no English for six' months. What she spate, however, started brimstone fires in many instances. Greta just listened to everybody else. And learned. And finally knew she had confidence in her language psrew ,ess and sc commenced to -speak 'lengthily. She can be plenty fluent today when she chooses. Record FaJurc? In 1923. New • York.—Although 1928 was a favorable year for business, the number of failures reported to E C Dun and- company, exceeded those j of any . yesf in the past seven decades. The ..liabilities, however, were under 'those of 192? and the record year of 1921. Mercantile 'failures last year to talled 23,842 compared . with 23, 146 in 1922 and 23,676, the previous ■ record established in 1922, liabili ties amounted to '439 659.624, against $520,104,263 in 1927 and $627,401,833 in 1921. In 1522 the liabilities passed 5620,000,000. The average of liabilities per failure last year was about $20,-. *51 The smallest: excepting $18, 795, in 1926,. in nearly a, decade. Kafesrh.--In consiiicrtpa; the prob 'l&tt of taxation. North-Carolinians should' remembt;* that' the federal ^ government took $ "r i «oo taxes from this state -last. rear, while the state collected for all pur poses" only c:c ,000.000,. exciu-'ve of highway ford: .according.-fo John ■G Dawson, termer--ch.airin.an of the state Deni: ratio .executive commit tee The state ■ should real -:e that federal taxes are a.vital factor In the Mate's. tax problem and should give some- a item fob jo the question' of federal taxation, instead 0! giv ing all Its attention to state taxes, Mr Dawson belle c^. This was pointed c-T:f by Mr. Daw son in a speech before the .Burling ton Merchants .Association, in which he- further pointed out that only $2 300,000 of this $223,000,000 col lected by the government m North Carolina', was returned to the state while all of the $16,000,000 in state taxes Is expended within'the state. The greater pa: - c! this sum collected by the federal roverla ment was from the tobacco tax and was not paid by the - people of the state directly," Mr. Dawson pointed out. Neverthef*:.: it effect then! adversely, because North Carolina not only loads, in the man ufacture of tobr.'co, but also leads in the growing of tobacco. For what affects the manufactured product necessarily, affects the grower of the raw nrodiict.” As a remedy for this situation and as a solution for the Itortfc Carolina tax problem, Mr. Daw :.on suggested that an effort be made to' secure the return at least o! , a small percentage of federal taxes collected to the state from which they cents, ar.d stated as,bis belief that other states, would rlad !? loin no such an effort. Lr.ck of interest ■ erv -.the part of the majority ci'people at to what . congress docs was suggested by Mr. Dawson as tiiejprobabjfc cause of the growing bnrdsSBomeifcis of federal taxation saying "it is a sad fact that'.many of nc know little more of the .doings of congress than we know about the doing of the Brit ish parliament, while burden after burden is placed upon, the energy and 'industry of the people' by the government at Washington, as •'**. struggle with smaller matters in the state. Flu Spreads In Go-dOn Gaston —Dr. R. E. Rhine, Gas ton county health’ cffirer today estimated that the.’numbsr of peo ple here* confin'd to the:r homes, by Influenza and cold", "‘cild prob ably reach the .5,000 msrlc Of these, life. said, there was a total of probably not more than" 2.560 with real cases di mfluenri There .a a meat deal ot flu among the negroes of the city and also among- the in habitants of the numerous 'cotton mill villager where the people hav not been i*n+\v 3. in the r.f ? ,kh Buys Giants’ Stock WilHa.tr: F. Kenny, friend of former Governor Alfred E. Smith and multi-millionaire contractor of New York, has purchased a 20 per cent, inter est in the National Exhibition Company, more popularly known as the New York Giants. •• A Dream Vision." ;'By Lloyd MauneyO Standing before a picture fair Of old and wondrous fame, I looked upon the scents laid there A • Dream Vision" called by name; I It painted the future a rofy hue And save the past a shade, ! I frankly agreed with artists there ! It was the, loveliest ever made. I The past it lay m shadows dark i With f’orebiddmg and gruesome hue, | It made a picture of selfish life That ruined the future view; i It painted the days of the past as scenes of pam and woe. And made a shadow1 all around That stemmed the happier glow, she future gleamed from out it’s place .And beaconed with its s arms. I filled the hearts with rapture Thai; heeded and answered it’s charms. It called aloud to those that seek V _th promises wrought in gold. It told of life and living That filled the seeking soul. And then the path that lay between And divided these, ancient ways, Came to view and to,.picture there Emerging in m out of the maie, c i d. along the narrow way Witlj. thorns on every side, T. am the ' path leading upward" It gladly and loudly cried. The picture, seemed to come alive As I gazed at the scenes laid there, It painted the picture of ever day life The scenes of the bad and the fair; It called to mind the lesson old That u, known around the earth. The realms of the past end the fu .' tvre “ JV,™wu ~J .—w U. WuwUh ! STOCKHOLDERS MEETING. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Cleveland Bank & Trust Co. wtll be held on Tuesday, January 8, 1029. at 11 o’clock a. m. In the banking room of said bank At which time directors for the ensu ing year will be Alerted. J. J LATT1MORE, Sec. ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE. Having this .day qualified as ad ministratrix of the estate of J. C. Thomas, deceased, this Is to notify all parties having claims against the said deceased to present them to me properly proven on or be fore the 3rd day of December 1920 or this notice will be pleaded In bar of recovery thereof All per sons owing the said estate wtjl please make Immediate payment to the undersigned- This Dec. Srd 1938. ONIB THOMAS, Administratrix of J. O. Thomas, deceased. A. R. Bennett, attorney. REAL ESTATE Farms And Town Propartv. W. A. Broadway Royster BHg., ShaJhy, N.C Office Phone 775. Residence Phone 471. . 1l QUEEN CITY COACH LINES FOR ASHEVILLE, CHARLOTTE, WILMINGTON, FAYETTEVILLE j 5 FOR ASHEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS LEAVE SHELBY:—9:40 a. is,; 11:40 a. as,; 1:40 $ m3:40 p. m.; 5:40 p. m.; 7:40 p, m. FOR CHARLOTTE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS LEAVE SHELBY:—10:50 a. m.; 12:50 p. n.; 2:50 -*■ p. in.; 4:50 p. m-; 6:50 p. m.; 8:50 p. m. FOR WILMINGTON AND INTERMEDIATE '** ‘ POINTS / 1 LEAVE SHELBY:—10:50 a is.; 2:50 p. ss. FOR FAYETTEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS LEAVE SHELBY:—7:50 a. 10:50 a. as,* 2:50 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION — PHONE 450 QUEEN CITY COACH COMPANY who can judge this woman? —married to a brute, in love witk a matt Sometimes, Lima thought herself gapped by some' terrible cight nure. But the scene trig, fever-laden jungle with its brooding loneliness and that tattered, whiskey-soaked beast, who was her husband, were only too real How could she have ewer dreamed that she loved him?—the scientist she had thought a man. True, she had been very young when she had married him, and hid come to Brazil. But fever, that white man's curse, had got into his blood—and she had seen him slowly like eyes-—eye* clouded with eilest austty. Aoujement. taps, pity woe but the prelude to lore. And whet one day an answering light Slimmed her soft, dark eyes flashing hiss a woe* derful message— Thus it Vein rhit streets drama of the jnnglA-a drama odaaddedn* love on Townley's part —a tragedyof renunciation, of desperaw battHahwidS con science oo the part of Laura- Don’t miss this startling true-life — ««** acgcnerate into s, booze-sodden beast TEea Townley, -young, clean, whole some,earns adventuring up the river, to find 2 girl of twenty, with the body of 2 youthful Venm—glistenin e hair, creamy skin 2nd star February Partial Contents^'** for February Tie M jrriije Wrecker I Pawned My Very Soot The Wife Who Had My Mysterious inheritance first la ft Toman's life —amoi tight other r stories rioweratnejea** in February Tn* Starr
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1929, edition 1
7
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