Let A Star Want Ad Sell It For You At Small Cos M Rates For Want Advertisements In This Column. Minimunr Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. This size 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, will be charged 25c fox | first insertion. IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO bi^ld let us maKe an estimate Plans and sketches cheerlully sub mitted. First class workmanship guaranteed. Lowman Brothers, con tractors Phone 727-J. tl 18c MEAT SCRAP FOR SALE, anallzes 55 per cent protein Excel lent for hog and chicken feed. $70 per ton. City Abattoir. Apply at City HalL tf 7c FQR SALE' STOVE WOOD ready for use. Phone 406 Morrison Transfer Co. tf 8c FOR SALE CHEAP TO QUICK buyer, nice desirable lot just off Highway No. 20 west of Shelby. Zeb C. Mauney. * tf 28c BUILDING LOTS—GOOD Lo cation. C. S. Young. tf-12c 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 HEMSnTCHxNO, MRS. H. W. Harmon, next door to Paragon, under Chocolate Shop, Phone 230. 9t 4c BABY CHICKS — POULTRY bringing best price in years. We hatch or sell you chicks cheaper than hen can hatch them. Rocks and Reds each Wednesday. Suttle Hatchery. tf 6c WANTED: GOOD 2 HORSE renter, for splendid farm. Must have stock. Apply quick. D. A. Beam, Shelby, N. C., phone 95. 6t 11c SEE US FOR HAY IF YOU want a bale or a car. Shelby Feed Co., located with Suttles Hatch ery. tf 11c WE HAVE CHICKS EVERY day in the week. Finish out your hen with out chicks. Suttles Hatch ery, tf 11c HJORTGAGE LOANS ON HIGH class business and residential property in Shelby. Unlimited funds immediately available. See Bert Price, Royster, Building, Rooms 4 and 5. 12t 15c ANOTHER CAR LOAD ST. Johns River Oranges will arrive Monday, February 18th. Will be sold from our same location on the square. George J. McReynolds. 4tl5p SHELBY AUTO AND WAGON Company, specialising in rebuild feig wrecked cars, building commer cial bodies, duco painting, top up holstering and glass work. Black gmithing. Phone 753-J. South Mor gan Street. tf 15c i NICE FAVORITE RANGE, L cheap for quick buyer. See party at Mrs. J. J. Pruett's, 2 miles be low LUy Mill. 2t-20p FOR SALE: FULL TANCRED itrain White Leghorns, C. C. Mc Swaln, Kings Mountain, Route 2, Phpe 2905. 4t 20c FOR SALE: OLD-TIME FOUR poster bed, equipped with springs. Phone 203-J. 2t 20c FOR SALE: GOOD SECOND bailtd Chevrolet truck or would trade for cow or mule. C. A. Mor rison. 5t 13c FARM FOR RENT: I HAVE A farm to rent, will furnish stock. See W. H. Putnam, Lattimore, N. C. 3t 18p FOR SALE—PURE FULGHUM seed oats *1.00 per bushel. T. F. Bailers, Kings Mountain, Route 1. 6t-18p FOR SALE: FRESH MILK COW. D. F. Beam, R-4, Lawndale. 3t 18p SEVEN ROOM HOUSE FOR rent. Close up. W. Graham. Phone 701. 2t 20p STRAYED FEBRUARY 15, ONE mare mule. Notify C. A. Cab inesl, Photts 605-R, Shelby. 3t 20p GENERATOR, STARTER and magnetora-repained-.-Wc. do general repairing. Jyiane f7. Turner and Williams xage. „-- if HARMON & MOSS Electrical Contracting and Repairing. Locat ed under Chocolate Shop. Phones: Office 230. Res. 203. tf-25 WE THRESH CANE SEED every Saturday. Morrison Trans fer. tf 21c THERE WILL BE A CARLOAD of broke Kentucky mules at W. H. Elanton’s stable Saturday, Febru ary 23 for sale. W. W. Bowman, ltc FOR RENT OR SALE: NEW five room housa with water and lights. C. D. Mintz, phone 324 M, West Marion street. 3t 22c FOR RENT GOOD TWO HORSE farm, five miles east of Shelby, near Kings Mountain highway. Renter must furnish stock. Mrs. W. H. Jennings, Shelby. 3t Furnished rooms for rent. 305 De Kalb street. Mrs. Val Thomason. 2t-22p Breakfast Bacon 22c lb., Fat back meat I2hc lb., 98 lb. flour pla:n o r self-rising 3.35. C. H. Reinhardt, South Shelby. 3t-22c (Special to The Star.) Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Greene and daughter, Janie, spent a lew days last week In Statesville visiting Mr. and Mrs. Yates Blanton. Miss Ray Greene, who worts in Shelby, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Greene. j Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Bridges and children of Shelby visited Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Philbeck Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Toms and son visited Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Washburn Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Harlie Wright and daughters of Shelby were visitors in the community Sunday. Mr. Ess Cabaniss who has been in ill health for some time is not! quite as well as usual. Mrs. Clyde Short has been in disposed for a few days. Hope she will soon be well. Many of our folks will attend the Hoey contest Friday night as Mr. Wyan Washburn is one” of the speakers. EXECUTOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as executor of the will of Owen C. London, de ceased, this is to hereby request all persons indebted to his estate to make immediate payment of such indebtedness to me; and this is to further notify all persons having claims against said estate to pre sent them to me on or before the 20th day of February, 1929, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of anv recovery thereon. This February 20th, 1929. MORGAN N. LONDON, Executor. Newton & Newton, Attys. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS. State of North Carolina, County of Cleveland. In the Superior Court, before the clerk. 'A. I. Jolley and wife, Daisy E. Jolley, Yvon Jordan and hus band, J. C. Jordan, and Rossie A. Jolley, widow, vs. Mary Griffith and husband, L. O. Griffith. The defendants Mary Griffith and husband, L. O. Griffith, will take notice that a special proceed ings entitled as above has been commenced in the superior court of Cleveland county, North Carolina, to partition certain real estate situ ate in said county and state be tween certain of the petitioners and defendants as tenants in common; and the said defendant will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the clerk of the superior court of said coun ty in the court house in Shelby, N C., on the 21st day of March, 1929 and answer or demur to the peti tion in said proceedings, or the petitioners will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said petition. _Xhifi. the. 21st. -riay -nf-Eehruari^. 1929. A. M. HAMRICK, Clerk Su perior Court, Cleveland Coua ty, N C. _ _ “GUS AND GUSSIE” Head To Feet Over fare is Over WHEN we HIT the last tap O’ "THE OPENIN' NUMBER, VOU SAY TO ME ,“HOW FAR. IS A LONS WAY FROM HeR6?* DONT WORRV ABOUT MV links-just GET VOURS STRAJ®* Amo vour steps, KEEP ON "THE v SPLVT . BKATS / DOW' BE .Xs / AFRAID- \ i'll BE THERE WITH AAV DOGS AN AAV DIALOGUES l'A\ A REG’LAR. HOOF-AN - MOUTH V Actor, now—. T “Looking” Towards Success ONLY" A MATTER. op MOMENTS MOW_ A FEW MORE CARS OF THE OVERTURE TO <30, AND THEM %/ ll#29, Kin* Feature* Syndic*! Great Britain rights rwn» LIGHTER. ON N THE TEE DEE AND HEAVy ON The DUMB.... / "THIS IS \ NO TIME FOR. SOUfeCASM_ TEAMWORK. IS The spirit, Kroner.— ' THINK I'LL LOOK AT Vbu AT ALL, WITH THAT HANDSOME i WRU3HT ROOX Oft \ OUT IMBUB - IN "THE ACT i Vt5U‘ B-E S'POSC D TO 8E -MV SWEETIE, SO DON' <3lMME . NONE O' THEM LEFT-HANDED LOOKS WHEN WE RE ON — If f |i!f *IDONT AND H'M The ^ SOM OF THE BlQTltyE VAUDViLLB KiMQ, BESIDES- j V VoM LOOK* J AT MB AN' j, LIKE IT— ' HE MAV MAKE' A HEADLINES* OUT O’ YOU_, BUT i WILL-,.. :.u \r— sill \ Copeland’s Health Talk Ear Pains Serious BY ROYAL S. COPELAND. M. D. (United States Senator And Former Health Commissioner of Now Fork.) It is not at all uncommon to have an Infection'or .contagious dis ease cause more or less inflammation of the lining m^ihbrane of the nose. It is very easy for the trouble to creep up the tube from the nose to the ear and produce inflammation in that organ. DR. LUttLAND, Even though the attack or rever has been very mild and the little patient hardly sick at all, there may be serious trouble in the ear. The parent should be on the outlook for trouble and report it to the doctor as early as possible. , Sometimes the child seems to be almost or quite well. AH at once he becomes irritable and the fever returns. There is extreme restlessness. Occasionally the child cries out suddenly, or may continue to cry. When there are paroxysms of crying With no apparent cause in a child who has been sick, do not fail to examine the ear. All too often that is the seat of the trouble. Earache is bad enouggh in an adult. If you ever had it you have an idea how terrible it is. It seems as li a rea-not spuce was oeing anven mio ure umm. Think of a little child having such a symptom. You can well un derstand why It cries out in agony. Measles is one of the diseases which has earache as a symptom. Scarlet fever Is another. Influenza may have <ar trouble as one of the many serious complications. Have you-ever thought how near the ear Is to the brain? Back of the ear and opening into the middle ear are the honeycomb cavities in the bone. These spaces, known as the mas toid cells, are very near to the inner surface of the bone. Resting on this table of bone is the brain substance, separated by a layer of bone some times no thicker than paper. If the nose and ear contain fluid teeming with pus-producing germs we have all the makings for serious trouble. The germs creep into the honeycomb cells I have mentioned. Pus forms so rapidly that it cannot drain away. In such a case the boney wall may be broken down and the brain itself is bathed in pus. Bear in mind that you must not neglect baby’s running ear, or for that matter, anybody’s running ear. | The ear is too close to the brain to be overlooked as a cause of trouble. I All ear symptoms demand a con-1 sultation with your family doctor. He will advise as to what should be done. Earache is such a common thing among children that we are apt to grow careless about it. It Is unwise to disregard the warning. In every instance give it the attention it de serves. Answers To Health Queries. M. S. Q—I am 17 years of age, have never worn high-heeled shoes, and would like to know if they are detrimental to my health and how? A. —Too high heels are bad as they throw the body weight in such a way as to produce strain. B. F. Q.—How much should a girl aged 20, 5 ft. 5 1-2 Inches tall weigh, also a girl aged 17, 5 ft. 3% ■fficfiesTall? .■ 2. —Is white bread more fattening than potatoes? 3. —Is once * ««ek too often to shampoo the hair? A.—They should weigh respec tively about 125 and 118 pounds, 2. —No. 3. —No. R. B. Q.—Is it possible to inherit a discontented nature? 2.—Can a nature of this kind be cured or helped in anyway? A.—Yes. . 2.—I would suggest that you prac tice self-control. Self-control must be cultivated and does not come overnight. Be patient and make up your mind not to let things up set you. Persist in this attitude and you will soon find that you are able to control yourself to a great ex tent. JUDGE WEBB TO EXCHANGE COURTS WITH T. B. FINLEY North Wilkes boro.—Judge T. B. Finley of this city will preside over the March term of Wilkes superior court which convenes in Wllkes boro March 4. Judge James L. Webb, of Shelby, was scheduled to bold the court, but he has ex* changed courts with Judge Finley and will conduct a term at Hen dersonville for the local Jurist Judge Webb' was sick several weeks ago and at that time it was thought that Special Judge John H. Harwood of Bryson City, would hold the court. However, Judge Webb has fully recovered and is now holding a term at Wades boro There are over 500 criminal cases on the docket for trial at this term among them being six prom inent.mucder gases,- . __ Star Advertising Pays EflSTSIDE BATCH i OF WEEKLY ITEMS <Special to The Star.i Rev. J. W. Suttle filled the pig pit here last Sunday morning in an exchange with Rev. H. E. Waldrop who preached .at Mr. Suttle’s church at Waco His sermon was inspiring and we hope to hear him again soon. He was one of the greatest factors in the organization of a Baptist church in this com munity. An appreciative congregation heard Rev, T. B. Johnson at the Jefferson school building Sunday evening. His subject "Why be a Christian" was clear and to the point and was much enjoyed. The W. M. U. held its monthly meeting with Mrs. L. A. Devine on Tuesday evening. The program on "Where Races Meet" gave us a new conception of race conditions in our country and our great re sponsibility in meeting them right ly. A report was given on last year's work and was very encouraging. After the program Miss Annie Dc vine assisted by Mrs. F. P. Ligan served the ladies with refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hinson of South Shelby visited Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Smith Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Toms and children spent the week-end with Mrs. J. R. Toms. Mrs. Ed Lee and children of South Shelby spent Saturday after 30x3_-.$4.50 30x3} —. $4.95 29x4.40 _$5.95 29x4.40—SW —-$4.95 30x4.50 _$6.60 30x4.50—8W_$5.95 SMITH’S GARAGE FALLSTON, N. C. TIKES noon with Mfra. W. E. Gantt. Miss Doris Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. Hamrick of Gastonia visited Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Alexander re cently. Misses Mae Harrlll and Eva Mae Hopper spent the week-end with Miss Hopper's parents near Gaff ney. - Mrs, W, J. Cashion had as her guests Sunday Messrs. G. L. and ’iJohn Wright of McAdenville and 1 ....... ■ . Miss Murlch Wright of Shelby. Lit tle Betty Cashion accompanied them to McAdenville to spend a week. Mr. and Mrs. Ouy Webb and baby of Kings Mountain were the guests of his mother here Sunday. Mrs. O. C. Tinney spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Bob Cooper on S. LaFayette street, Mrs. P. H. Smith spent several days last week with her mother, ....■* '•"'•TT Mrs. Rollins, at Henrietta f Mr. and Mr*. V. E. Kale of Cherryvllle visited Mr. andMrv L A. Devine Sunday. Mrs. L. N. Buchanan and ebil dren spent Saturday with Mrs. F. H. Glenn in Week Shelby. Mr. B. C. Wallace of. Lawndale was an Eastslde visitor Monday.*'' Mrs. J. P. TonWto ia -*ittt m*4t this time. Her many friends Hof* to see her out soon. t .t*>' I -r, ■■ r? becomes a partner in American Business TODAY in increasing numbers women are becoming partners l in American corporations. . Nearly one-half of the Southern s 18,000 stockholders are women, who now own 375,000 shares of Southern stock. In the past three years the total number of stockholders has in creased thirty per cent, while the number of women stockholders has increased fifty per cent. The Southern is proud of the fact that so many women thus have ex pressed their faith in the future of the Southern and the South. A From the Northern Qatawaya at Washington, Cincinnati and Louie rille ... from tba Wee tern Qatewaye at St. Lonla and Mam* phia ... to tba Ocaan Porta of Norfolk, Charlaaton, Savannah, Brnnawick and JackaonaiHa ... and the QtjW Pona of Mobila and New Orleana . . , tha Southern Servee tha Sooth. aSsHW-feii-das.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view