Let A Star Want Ad Sell It For You At Small Cost What Ybur Waxit * In the W&NTAPS" Rates For Want Advertisements In This Column. Minunu.u Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. This size type 1 cent per word each insertion This size type ‘2c pei word each insertion. This size type 3c per word each insertion. Ads that amount to less than 25c, win be charged 25c to? first insertion. it you ARE PLANNING f O Build let us matte an estimate P'ans and sketches cheerfully suo mitted First class workmanship guaranteed. Lowmir Brothers con tractors Phone 727-J tf ItJc MEAT SCRAP FOR BALE, analizes 55 per ceht protein Excel lent tor hog and chicken feed $70 per ten City Abattoir Apply at City Hall tf 7c HOWELL TRANSFER: WE haul anything anywhere, any time All grades of sand for sale Prompt service Shelby, N. 0 Day phone 718 Night 124-R. tf 23c For Sale-at Shelby Poultry Fa.m, Kockj and Red Baby Chicks, and week-old Chic's. I H. McConnell. lt-25 WEDDING IN m A LIONS AND announcements, orinted. engraven or reliefgraf Tnree different kinds of printing, many styles of lettering Brides-to-be, your secret will oe kept Place your order with us and save money The Star Phone No U FOR RENT THREE ROOM A- i PARTMENT furnished for light ‘ housekeeping. 416 N. Morgan St. Phone 239. 3t-21p FOR SALE' STOVE WOOD ready for use Phone 406 Morrison Transfer Co. tf 8; FOR SALE CHEAP TO QUICK i buyer, nice desirable lot just off Highway No. 20 west of Shelby. Zeb C. Mauney. tf 28c ( FOR RENT: FIRST -LOOR six room flat, separate entrance, separate bath, range, covered drive way. Belvedere Park, $35. Phone 655-J. tf 9c FOR RENT: ONE HALF STORE room. Apply at Star office. 8t 12p FOR RENT — TWO - HORSE faim, known as R. W. Elliott home place. Mrs. Julius Elliott. tf-14e BUILDING LOTS—GOOD Lo cation. C. S. Young. tf-12c FOR RENT ONE FURNISHED room 416 N. Morgan St. Phone 239 3t-21p CORD WOOD. DRY PINE— good quality. C. S. Young, tl lie WANTED TO BUY: FINE LUM ber and pine timber on stump. Be tween Rutherfordton and LincoHi ton. Ooodsonville Lumber Co . Lin colnton, N. C. 4t 21c DRY PINE WOOD FOR SALE. Phone E. B. or J. J. Lattimore 12t 16c FORMER CUSTOMERS WILL please notice ihat I have rc-open cd my blacksmith shop at Arro v.ood Lumber Plant. Horse shoeing $1.00. R. J Ledford. 6t 18;: WE THRESH CANE SEED fverv Saturday. Morruan Trans fer. V 21c FOR SALE. FORD TRUCK. 25 tnodd cheap, good condition, new tires. E. G. Clark, R-E, Shelby. N- C. 2t 21p FOR RENT' 6 ROOM HOUSE Close to. W. A. Pendleton. 2t 23c STOLEN A CHILDS SIDE walk bicycle from my front porch or yard. Reward for it* recovery. T. W. Hamrick. 3t 230 BABY CHICKS — Rocks and Reds. Each Wednesday beginning Feb. 6. These are a fine let of chicks. Beck your orders and be as sured of getting them just when you want them. A. B. Suttle Hatchery. tf-23c FOR SALS: JERSEY COW, fresh. L. A. Huffstetler. R-7, Shelby, N. C. 3t 21p FCR RENT: FOUR ROOMS. OR an 8 room house. Close in. Rush Btroup 3t 21c EXPERT SAW FILING. SET TING, Jointing, Sizing ' eeth. fast amocth u ttlng, 30 to 40c cart ^ r Elias C. Leigh, Ella and Lt y Mf Road. South Shelby. St 2>p, FOR RENT TWO UNFURNISH- ' ED.'rooms. Close in. Price reason* able. See J, R. Elmore. N Washing ton St. No.. 205-. 3t-25p HARMON & MOSS Elec': lea' Contracting end Rena ming. Locat ed under Chcco’ate Shop. Phones: Office 230.Res.2C3. tf-25 HEMSTITCHING - Mrs. H. YV. Harmon, nexi c?cor to ’’ara^on, T hide C’~ ccbt? Shop Phone 230. 12t-25 Capital Tar ITec.s Elect. Washington.—The North Caro lina Society elected these officers for the ensuing year:. J. Gilmer Korner. formerly of Forsyth coun ty, and now in the treasury depart ment. president; Mrs. Leo S. Ov erman, vice president and Miss. Newton, secretary. Rep Charles L Abcrnethy was elected chaplain. This was done oii motion of Representative Lvon. Mr, Abernethy. in the absence ol the chaplain, was asked to open the meeting with prayer, which he did so well that although he is not a preacher he was elected chaplain T!tf si t E S SALE By virtue of the power ol sale contained in a certain deed of trust 'executed, by R. H. Ponder and wife to the Commercial National Bank of High Point, N. C.. local trustee, as security tor an indebtedness for Twenty-Two Hundred ($2,200,00) Dollars, said deed of trust fceiiiif of record in the office of the Register of Deeds for Cleveland County, N. C\ in Book 150. at page 282; and J default having been made in the payment oi said indebtedness, and having been called upon by t lie holder of s. ;d indebtedness to fore close said deed of trust, the under signed trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bid der for cash at the Court House Door in Shelby. N. C., on the 23rd day of February. 1020. it 12 M. tin fdllowing-cl c :ibed property, situ ate, lying and being in tire Town of Shelby, Cleveland County. N. Ch in No. ti Tow -hip...and bounded and more particularly-described as fol lows: Being joined on the North by an alley, on the Lust by J. A. Roberts, cn the South by East Warrcnt ■ Street, and' .on the West by J. A. Weaver, and lying: cn the North ride of East Warren Street in the .Tov.n ot Shelby, N.. C,: BEGIN NING at a stake or rock cn the North edge of the ex,.rn.hc.n of Fast .Warren Street. J. A. Weaver’s Southeast corner, the said corner being 63 W3 feet South 63 degrees and 30 minutes East from the in tersection oi North edge oi East Warren street, with the East edge of Maple.'Street, and runs from said Weavers' corner South 85-degrees ;and 20.minute, East with the North edge of East Warren Street 60 feet to a stake, corner of J. A. Roberts; Uisnce with RehOiu s'; line : North 2 degrees and 20 minute.- Fast 175 feet to t. BttiKe in ;ino. wrnn :0f a 10-1'go' -alley; thence with.said edge ol said 10-foot alley North 85 degrees r,n<J 30' minutes West 80 feet to a stake, J , A. Weaver s Northeast corner; thence with Weaver’s line South 5 decrees and CO minutes West 175 ieet to the ^beginning, same being a part ol the property conveyed to ft, H Fon der by J i Thcmasson by dees, recorded in Book £-S,” page 478. and part of the property conveyed 1 to R H. Pender by Dr. J. ft. Os borne and rife by deed recorded in 3cck "3-W.” r.t page 487. Cleveland oOttniy Records. This January 21st, 1929. COM MERC I AL N ATI ON AL BANK OF HIGH POINT, NORTH CAROLINA. Local Trustee, i Netvlon & Newton, Attys. I * ' ’ For colds, grip and flu take and ha&l.ns lcco.Ldy. GUS AND GUSS1E” Bar Work. /NOW THAT FLOSSIE. AMD 5>OS»E HAVE CETlCED FROM -THE STACSE.* SUS AMD GC5SIE MOST P t x OF5 A TWO -ACT AMD TRY IT OUT /ACJAI AJ <s « ; King r»-»furf5 Syndirtf with yoo^ 'pAMCt/M VJHICH f Ife A SMASH, AM' -SOME FLY GAGS, WE SHOOLD OUGHT To CPASM THE. ©i<~r “TIME - ft*^ ( WrtEBE ARE >OU 6O1M6 |( TO CET 1UE MATERIAL SS\for. OOC. comedv ~ / DCWT Bfc CMD\C. W(2.'TlAj<ar icCMEDV IS OMt OFTrtE 1 HIGHEST PAID SPECIALIZED k PROFESSIONS, IT i?EQUiei:S TALEMT, TQAlNlNC, NATURAL <£\PTS, MOW COME YOU THIAJVC YOU C AM ) VJE4TE. CiAUf) ’ / easy i'll co Tt> the PlFP'CEMT VAUD'VILLE Houses AM' HEAe THE DIFF'PEMT acts, am' EVE^YTIME THEY PULL A GOOD GA6, I'LL WRITE. IT; And So Will Gus. rHp'O'J^.srto/sj ARISES, IS > T Rr<5WT that CtUSVSHOUL-D 'UFT'TTaOCHS FROM OTHER. ACTS FOR. THE AiETW ‘DOUBLE-TEAM HE VJILLTC2.V OUT SMITH 6I3SS1E ? BUT- SUPPOSE j WE HAVE TO > PL.AV OAJ THE same BILL WITH OaJE of the OTHER ACTS V WHOSE LAUSHS vyou'eE soiMG TdCOP? V7 CAM WE HELP IT IF OOP M l AID POMS IM THE SAME DlBECTlOAi A6THEIK&? > CAM WE HELP.tT \F WE \ <SOTS THE 6AME SEMSE O' MOMO»- WHAT THEY <SOTS? BESIDES VWWEBE t>»DTHEy<SC>TS MOST / O'THEM WHEEZES - THEY <SOT6 (M THE J imsi. FIRST PLACE? /\Jg| ' -- ^ r" A (5E.AU LAD6H HAS AJO HOME-, IT 8EL.OMGS To THE WORLD IT MAKES PEOPLE HAPpy, AM' IT'S THE DOTY OP v OS ALU ~T© SPREADJ YOU <50PE ABE TWfcKJE NaIiTM THU I AMCV XT' comvi Aiuerae,-y happiness I ( l <SHO0LDAl’T WOMDEtt/AT ) (MAT. IP SOME OP' TWE \ GTAMDAt3O ACTS DtD <£t=-1 VJlSE.CKlAC.Kfi> ayV^.. .tme ^ame \maYjs* A /'Vfc>U iSAtD\ VVS*. ( IT, felSTEfe. \ _—v, > / / ) VAOO-VILLE I «T W vL. , l L J A. v i unD^ #" V* 7 Foil JJZZY MUSIC Noted British Musician l rges Return To Old Masters. Chapel Hill.—"You have great work to do in music in this coun try," an Englishman told an Amer ican audience in a lecture at the university -on musical history. "You've got to raise your stand ards of musical taste all the way through. It is not enough to have musical power. You must have taste. "Y'ou are crazed for modern mu sic. Get back to the classics'. Know your Each, your Handel, your Beethoven, your Mobart, your Hay dn, and all the other masters. Get a foundation to understand music, and then it will be a great message to you," The Englishman who made these pertinent ob nations had been in this country three weeks. He was no less personage than Sir Ernest Fowtes, fellow of the Royal Academy of Musicians and one of Britain’s most, outstanding musicians. He bpoice unaer me auspices oi the student entertainment com mittee on "A Bird's-Eye View of Musical History'’ and at once de-; lighted and charmed .a large au dience of students, faculty members and townspeople. Playing selections from time to time to, illustrate his lecture, Mr. Fowler took up musical history with the Stone Age and traced it, down to present times. Mai . Chester P. Mills propmtly ved the $25,000 check for his \ re^v,inning solution. At a late our' las; night, however, bootle i nr had received no check what ever.—llic New Yorker, i LET ME QUOTE YOU PRICES ON BURGLARY HOLD-UP AND ROBBERY INSURANCE. J CHAS. A. HOEY N. LaFayette St. > PHone $58. a *a w >—*> w •» do ■-* « >=— NO MORE REGRET Because of Sinclair • and Opaline super iority. Superior gas and oil. Gas that will keep your car humming merrily a long-powerful, pep ful and economical | to use; oil of just the , right grade of maxi mum lubrication— that’s what you are assured when you drive into this de pendable filling sta tion. You’ll find our attendants always prompt and courte ou*. Sinclair gas and Opaline oil are orr-’-’cts of proven quality. Cleveland Oil Distributors v 4 MODERN SKIRTS li| STYLE OF JUNGLE; Designer. Back Front Tour, Says! Styles Will Be Exotic. New York.—Jungles and harems will furnish the chief inspiration tor spring fashions, and the key note of new frocks will be exoticism and brevity. Miss Ethel Traphagen, designer, said, adding the remark "The briefer they are the better I like them!" according to the Brook- j lyn Eagle. Miss Traphagen. who conducted a, school In cooperation with the clothing trades tinder the auspice;, of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in addition to her evening classes at the People's Institute at Cooper Union, has just returned from a seven months tour that took her from Jungle huts to the sultans' harems in South Africa in search of inspiration for chic cos tumes this coming season. She found it. and predicts that everything from the necklace of Nairohian women that furnish charm but no warmth, to the veils of Arab women that furnish warmth but no charm, will be seen in adapted versions on Fifth and Park avenues this season. More than that, they may even be seen on Forty-second street and on Broad way. Miss Traphagen predicted, for, she insists, it's the shop girls who are really abreast of the mode these days. ‘‘The new mode will mingle the primitive and the Oriental," Miss Traphagen said. "Evening gowns will be modeled on the alluring robes of the Kikuyn women of British East Africa, though the designers will not use the cowhide treated with castor oil and red mud that the native women use for frocks." Jewelry, particularly tor sports wear, will be a combination of primitive baling wire colls and the heavily carved Jewelry of the South African Arabs. Heavy brass colls worn by the native women around their shins may be adapted to our inode Belts will be popular, wide and heavily beaded after the fash ion of best-belted warriors of Zan zibar and earrings may assume the proportions of cold cream Jars Skirts will be modeled after those of the jungle warriors, some of whom wear a ruffle attached to their ornate belts, while others fasten two long and sweeping "fish tails'’ of leather over either hip, bringing them to the overlapping IK)hit hi front and back. Captain W. H. Richards, arrived at New York with his famous robot, admits that his mechanical man locks a sense of balance. Human, all too human!—Sprinfield Repub lican, A TONIC GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC restores Energy and Vi tality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When yon feel its strengtheniag, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its truo tonic value. 60c. liver Pills A package of Grow s Javer PiU* t a en closed with every bottle o GKOyt!. S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC for those who w i*h to fake a Laxative in connection with the Tonic. MONEY AT 51/4% FOR 5 TO 35 YEARS You Owe It To Your Wife And Child ren To Protect Them With A Co-Op erative Long-Term Farm Loan. They have enough troubles when you leave your estate for settlement. If you have been forehanded and have a 35-Year Loan from us you are sure they will not be embarrassed by having to seek a loan at what may be a most inopportune time. They merely continue to pay the installments the same as you have dona. It’s the most comfortable, cheapest, safest, sensible and longest loan. SHELBY NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSOCIATION. HENRY B. EDWARDS, SECRETARY-TREASURER 21 Royster Building — Shelby, N. C. Call or Phone 673, We’re Glad To Explain. » NOTICE OF KALE OF LAND. By virtue of the power of sale made tn an order of the superior court of Cleveland county. N. C. in special proceeding entitled, •'Aman da Warlick, widow, et ftl. vs. Lula Elmore, et al." the undersigned commissioner will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bid der at the court house door In Shel by. N. C. at 12 M. on the 4th day of February, 1929, the following de scribed lot of land: Known as lot No. 1 of the lands of J. F. Warlick. deceased, lying in No. 10 township, Cleveland coun ty, N. C. Beginning on a pine stump, corner of dower lot in line of J. T. Warlick, and runs with said line S 69 45 E. 1424 feet to n cedar at edge of branch; thence 8. 69.30 E. 495 feet to a hickory; thence S. 43.35 W. 726 feet to a stone; thence 8. 67 40 W. 404 reel tts a dogwood, corner of Decatur War lick; thence N. 45.15 W. 38 feet tc a post oak; thence N. 68.30 W. 300 feet, to a stake; thence N. 38.05 W. 782 feet to a pine; thence'8. 70.10 W. 79 feet to a post oak; thence N. 37.30 W. 415 feet to a stake; cor ner of J. T. War lick; thence the Warlick's line N. 22.50 E. 600 feet to the place of beginning, contain ing 33.4 acres. Terms of sale; One-half cash on day of sale. the remainder 12 months thereafter. The bid will start at $1025.00. Tltls the 17th day of Jam^y. " AMANDA WARLICR, Com missioner. Newton & Newton, Attys. Extra Bales— • EXTRA DOLLARS ■\rv'.£ Start now to make them TT is the extra yield per acre that makes real cotton profit. Say you made one* t hird bale per acre last year. Feed your next crop plenty of Chilean Nitrate of Soda and you ought to at least double your yield, for Chilean Nitrate sets a larger crop, then help* it through to early maturity. Stronger plants. Better cotton too. More strength to fight bad weather and early bolls to beat the weevil. L. D. Moseiy of Edgewood Farm*. Simp son, N. C., has had good results year after year with Chilean Nitrate of Soda- On one crop he made 86 bales on 75 acres. On an other crop he made 100 bales on 100 acres. On both of these profitable crops he used Chilean Nitrate of Soda liberally. Chilean Nitrate is the old, original “Soda2*, to* natural product—not synthetic. Used profitably for over 50 years. Last year every cotton cham pion used it to make his winning crop. Place your order now for all the Chilean Nitrate you need and be sure of extra bales from your new crop. A New Fertilizer Book™FREE Our <raloab!a book “Low Cost Cotton* wffl b»!p yoe •neks a better crop. It is free Aik for Book No. 2 or tear out this ad and mail with you* name address an the margin. Chilean m Nitrate of Soda •rrt SODA MOT IUCK EDUCATIONAL BUREAU 220 Professional Bldg., Raleigh, N» C. In writing ploaae refer to Ad 1So. B6®

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