Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Feb. 8, 1929, edition 1 / Page 7
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Let A Star Want Ad Sell It For You At Small Cost Rates For Want Advertisements In Thus Column. Minimum Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. This slse type 1 cent per word each Insertion This size type 2c per word each insertion. This size type 3c per word each insertion. Ads that amount to less than 25c, wul be charged 25c fot first insertion. IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO build let us mase an estimate P'ans and sketch-s cheerfully sub mitted First class workmanship guaranteed. Low man Brothers con tractors Phone 727-J tf lHe MEAI SCRAP FOR SALE enallzes 55 per cent protein Excel lent for hog and chicken Iced $70 per ton City Abattoir. Apply at City Hall. tf 7c WEDDING INVITATIONS AND announcements, printed, engraved or reliefgraf. Three 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 ll FOR SALE- STOVE WOOD ready for use Phone 406 Morrison Transfer Co. tf b. FOR SALE CHEAP TO QUICK buyer, nice desirable lot just off Highway No. 20 west of Shelby. Zeb C. Mauney. tf 28c OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR sale at The Star office. Twen ty cents per hundred. Call at the press room. tf-26x FOR RENT: ONE HALF STORE loom. Apply at Star office. . 8t 12p BUILDING. LOTS—GOOD Lo cation. C. S. Young. tf-12e DRY PINE WOOD FOR SALE. Phone X. B. or J. J. Lattimore. 12t lCc WE THRESH CANE SEED every Saturday. Morrison Trai ler. tf Qlc I HAVE SEVERAL thousand dollars to lend on improved farms in Cleveland county. See or write Marvin Blanton, Led better building, Shel by. W-F-tf FOR RENT: — TWO HORSE farm, known as R. W. Elliott. Phone 16-W or call 808 N. La Fayette. tf-30c OOOD LOAD FRESH KEN tucky mules for sale or trade. All well broke. Blanton and Elliott. 3t 4p HEM8TITCHING, MRS. H. W. Harmon, next door to Paragon, under Chocolate Shop, Phone 230. 9t 4c WANTED: TABLE BOARDERS, also two furnished or unfurnished rooms for rent. Mrs. M. M. O'Shields. ■ tf lc WANTED SALESMAN TO SELL the Luther Burbank flowers and bulbs and garden seeds sold only by the Starks Bros. Nurseries Co., Louisiana, Mo. See or write me for terms. M. P. Ramsey, sales manager, Box <54, Forest City, N, C. 4t 6c FOR SALE CHEAP: TWO fancy mares, one good mule. Ad dress J. L. Morgan, Clarrissa. N. C. 4t 4c JERSEY BULL FOR SALE—16 months old. J. M. Sparks, R-3, Lawndale. 3t-6p WANTED TO DO YOUR FLOOR ■urfacing. Old floors made new and new floors neatly surfaced. I have most up-to-date machine in town. Frank M. Newton, Phone 456. 3t 4p BABY CHICKS — POULTRY bringing best price in years. We batch or sell you chicks cheaper than hen can hatch them. Rocks and Reds each Wednesday. Suttle Hatchery. tf 6c For Sale — 25-horse power crude oil en gine, in first class run ning condition, been used for pulling cot ton gin, now pulling raw mill. If interested ccme to see it work. T. A. Champion, R - 4 Kings Mtn., below Cak Grove church* 2t-6p J*.* Jfci.ar, HARMON & MOSS Electrical Contracting and Repairing. Locat ed under Chocolate Shop. Phones: Office 230. Res. 203. tf-25 FOR RENT: ONE BRICK building in godd location at a rea sonable price. See J. F. Harris or J. M. Black It 8c LOST LARGE POINTER DOG. white with brown head end ears. Answers to name of ‘'Case." $10 re ward. Notify Dr. A. P. Beam, Shel by. tf lc | TOR RENT: NICELY fURNISH ed apartment. Close m. Phone 282-J. 3t 4c ! IF NEEDING HAY, SEE US before buying. Have twenty cars choice hay, bought right and can save you money. Prices advancing weekly. Webb Brothers Grocery. 0t 8c FOR SALE — THREE PIECE living room suite practically new; also brand new bed and mattresses. Telephone 404. 3t-4c TENANT WANTS TO SECURE good two horse farm. E. C. Lemons, R-3, Shelby. _ . ■ _ ^ „ 3t 8p SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT OF Trees. Pruning, cementing and falting. Also sell and set water oaks unde: guarantee. F B. Put nam, R-2, Shelby. tf4c FOR RENT: THREE ROOM apartment, furnished or unfurnish ed for light housekeeping. 416 N. Morgan Sheet. 3t oC WE ARE RECEIVING HAY every day. Prices advancing. See us quick. Best grades at best prices. Webb Bros. Grocery. fit 8c MR. FARMER, FOR COTTON seed cleaners, turning plows, smoothing harrows, stalk cutters, wagons, etc., be sure and see O. E. Ford Co. 2t 6c GENERATOR, STARTER and magnetons repaired. We do general repairing. Phone 737. Turner and Williams Garage. tf FOR LIME, CEMENT, PLAS ter, plaster paris, Keenes cement, face and common brick call at O. E. Ford Co.’s. 2t 6c SEE US FOR HAY IN * CAR load lots or less. Best prices. Webb Brothers Grocery. . ' 6t 8c McCORMICK-DEERING FARM machinery and repairs will be found at O. E. Ford Co. 2t 6c FOR HOGS AND CHICKENS digester tankage can’t be beat. 60'« protein, see O. E. Ford Co. 2t Cc WE HAVE IN STOCK ALL kinds of seed and feed oats. Prices right. See us. Webb Bros. Grocery. 6t 8c LOST: MALE GERMAN Po lice dog. Answers to name “Jack.” Finder please return to Dr. B. M. Jorrett, Royster Bldg. Reward. tf6c CUT YOUR STALK WITH THE McCormlck-Deering stalk cutter. O E. Ford Co. has plenty of them and anything else you need in the way of farm machinery. 3t 6c ALL FARMERS NATURALLY think of O. E. Ford Co. in the spring because they save them money on fertilisers, nitrate of soda and farm machinery. 2t 0c FOR SALE: 28 TENNESSEE mules. Will arrive Sunday night. J. A. McBrajer, Lattimore. It 8p LOST BLACK, WHITE AND TAN Walker hound about three weeka ago. One ear cropped. Lost about one mile east of steel bridge on : Broad River, South of Boiling Springs. Reward. Notifly Herbert Blanton at Shelby Creamery. 3t-8c LOST: BETWEEN MAUNEY Cos. store and Casar, truck cover. Reward. A. Blanton Grocery Com pany. 2t 8c For Sale-One Cash register; first condi tion. Bargain. Crane’s Vulcanizing Plant, S. Washington street. 3t*8c j» y alfr. Xk ii “GUS AND GUSS1E” A New Comedy Part I tread sof-tuv and snba*. op on ©os and QuSSi* REHEAR. SiN© me i a. mew -two-act • NO NOlSK, NOW. * THIS CHEK9ICAK.1 HAS TO OPIN MONDAV NOW, YOOUU COM'S IN FttOM TVlAT WAY, RBOiSTeRIN' V'nO- MO* NJONCCmALANCE R^MOV THE DUCHESS TAKES Sjp a4 strut dowm the E DE LA POO r YOU KNOW WHAT 40N1E CMALANCE ?. SURE s I KNOW, MISTER. is THIS what you SAY WHO IS THE COMB CM AN iN S ACT? AN' fcON' FOR.QET IT. Crickets and Critics "tM6 ROUTES FOR. THi MCW *TWO-ACT IS ALL BUT S6T. Just a frw final wiQ^uaHTS AMO <30 S AND GUSSie ARfc RS AOy TO DO OR D>£ OR. BOTH ' x «>o«* ALU the BiG CfttCK.«T*XU BE AT THE TiMKCANMfc THEAVTER aAONOAV To KETCH OO*. i STOPP i MBAN TMBM * ALECS WHAT ' NOTHIN' AN’ SAV 1MB QiRl WAS VBRV CHARMING, BUT THB COMBDtAN •/ou CAN DtnND ON »t« *rw«y'Lu BE THBRB , SCARBD OUR ACT MIGHT BK A H\T. OH,CHei«.UP« tVEN A CRITIC MAY HAVE Z SOUU, A CONSCIENCE , A SENSE OP HUMOR, A OB Si RE POR •JUSTICE - T Suae «. ' A WCTTUSNAKE V\AV HAVfc PRATHERS, BUT, LIKE THE SWtS BATTL.BSHIPS —^ MOBOOY EVER , SBBN 'EM. . y -P* fry*? Copeland’s Health Talk Doctors Live Longer BY ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. (United States Senator And Former Health Commissioner of New Fork.) With young people the thought of death is rarely permitted to enter the mind. As we grow older there U Increasing interest in the obituary column. I confess I never fail to run over such lists of casualties in the med UK. LWfcUAND. ical profession. In each of the weekly issues of the ‘J'oumal of the American Medical association'' Is a pace headed “Deaths.” During one week re cently there were so many that It required four columns of type to list the names of departed doctors. I had a curiosity to see exactly how these medical men died. Even though it Is a gruesome subject, I believe you will be Interested. Perhaps, too, this analysts may be made the basis of some comments that will help'you to stave off the evil day of death. In this list I found seventy-seven names. The average age at death was #8 years. There were thirty names of men 70 years or more, the oldest being M. The average age of those under sixty was 59 years. I feel encouraged. It was only a generation ago that the average doctor in active practice died at about 40. If this week's record la typi cal, I am convinced doctors are living longer than in the old days. Now let us see what were the chief causes of death. Only a limited number of the obituaries included this information. But, as recorded, the chief disease was of the heart and blood vessels. Half as many died of pneumonia and from the affects of accidents. The same num ber were swept away by cancer. Neat came brain troubles, including I hemorrhage. Small numbers died from liver complaint, diabetes and typhoid. At least half these deaths were due to preventable ailments. Doc tors are the last men in the world who.should neglect the precautions which are known to be effective in warding off certain diseases. You know the old saying about shoemaker's children—that they arc always without good shoes. The same principle applies to the doc tors. In their enthusiasm for the cure of their patients, they do not give thought to their own precious bodies. It is probable that attention to bad teeth or tonsils, diseases of the gaU bladder, or neglected constipa tion, might have kept from the heart the poisons which caused it to fail. Who knows, too, what can be done to escape cancer by living well regulated lives? Is it probable that lowered resistance is an es sential faetor in developing this dreadful disease? “Physician heal thyself,” said one of old. I wish it might be possible to make the doctors think of them selves. They are so important to large numbers of their respective communities that we hate to see them neglect to take to themselves the wise advice they give others. It is positively wicked for you to overlook the simple precautions which add years to your life. You can't cheat nature. You'll get caught sure as fate. Begin now to live right, to eat right, to get the rapt and sleep you n»ed. You cpb avoid hemorrhage, Uvy trouble and lots of other ailments. The way to do so Is to regulate your habits and practices. This is the time to start. You will excuse me for speaking about this uncomfortable thing, death. But I want to encourage you all I can to escape medical atten tion for years at a stretch. That should be your aim. Answer* To Health Queries. L. 8. Q.—I am sixteen years old and rather short: how can I in crease my height? A.—Get plenty of outdoor exercise Eat plenty of good nourishing food including milk, eggs, fresh vegeta bles and fruit. Avoid constipation and sleep as many hours as possible in a well-ventilated room. -M. B. Q.—What diet would you advise for a patient who cannot take sugar on account of acidity? Is honey harmful? What about raisins and prunes? A.—Eliminate sweets and acid forming foods. Eat plenty of green vegetables and fresh fruit. Honey is rich in sugar but is more readily digested than the latter. Raisins and prunes should be suitable. Woman Life Saver. New York.—Miss Blanche Tucker, restaurant cashier on the trans atlantic liner Majestic, is the ouly woman to hold the British board of trade’s lifeboat certificate. She passed a test by loweruig a life boat from a ship 70 feet into the water, unshipping the falls and helping with the oars. In early years r.t Devon she rowed a boat daily. Amort other things she has £cpe down to a wieek in a diver's suit. Beans Gat Him. Carlo, Mich.—The theft of 30 bags of beans U the Immediate cause of a life sentence for Frank Bower, His four convictions on a felony made him a habitual criminal. A left-over ham-bone will great ly improve the flavor of pea or bean soup. Whip Women, Too. Indianapolis,—lit criminals must be whipped the state senate Insists that women as well as men recehe lashes In front of the courthouse from sheriffs. It has amended a whlppfng post bill, expecting that now it will die. TRY STAR WANT ADS. PUBLICATIONS OF SUMMONS j North Carolina, 01cvelftnds4*ounty. In the Superior court, Marjorie j Heavncr Towcry. vs. Arthur Tow ery. to Arthur Towery, Defendant: Take notice that an action as above entitled has been commenced In the Superior Court against you for divorce absolute, on grounds of separating for more than five years, that the said summons is re turnable before the Clerk; on the 7th day of March. 1929, when and where you are required to appear and answer or demur to the com plaint, or the relief prayed for will be granted. This the 2nd day of February, 1929. v A. M HAMRICK. Clerk Superior Court. What 59 years have taught us about making gasoline I There Is no truly "anti knock" motor fuel being told, except at a premium price. The beat known‘'anti knock" hid i« ESSO, the Giant Power Fuel. It is ac Unowledged by engineers to be in a dase by itself—a gen I uine “anti-knock” fuel, spe cially made for use in high compression motors, and in motors that are carbonized from long usage. ESSO coats more to make and haa to he sold at a small premium a*or “Standard" Gasoline, but ESSO gives sn extra engine performance never before experienced. On tale only at the Silver ESSO Pumps with the ESSO Globes. The Standard Oil Company of New Jersey was a pioneer in refining gasoline. Since the first automobile was built “Standard** has been—both in quantity and quality— the leader in the refining and supplying of this necessary motor fuel. This company has spent millions of dollars in research work and in the development of new and better proc esses of making gasoline. What has been the result Just this—that you can depend on finding in every gallon of “Standard” Gasoline these qualities; Easy Starting—erm in coldest weather. Quick Acceleration—a necessary thing in traffic. Power, Steady and Reliable—ioim climbing and tong hard runs. Mileage Efficiency—proved over and over by road tests in every type of car. Safety to Motor—I fuel that cannot possibly injure your engine. Complete Combustion—3 fuel that burns cleanly, leaving practically no carbon, and burns completely, leaving no “loose ends'* to seep down and dilute the motor oil in the crank case. C niformity—you can set your carburetor on "Standard’’ and forget it, for every gallon is like every other galba wherever you buy it. Availability—"Standard ’ (iasolinc has the further ad vantage of being easily obtained, as our red "Standard" pumps are conveniently located throughout the length and breadth of this state This rare combination of qualities makes “Standard” the best all-’round gasoline on the market The fact that it outsells any other brand of gasoline in this state by more than 2 to 1, is evidence of its superior qualities. Use “Standard” Gasoline and you will get unvarying fuel satisfaction. ** STANDARD GASOLINE §9 ■U' STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSB
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 8, 1929, edition 1
7
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