Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / April 12, 1929, edition 1 / Page 7
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Let A Star Want Ad Sell It For You At Small Cost Kates For Want Advertisements In This Column. Minimum Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. Tills 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 fo> first insertion. IF VOU ARE PLANNING TO build, let us make an estimate Plans and sketches cheerfully ;.ub mltted. First class workmanship guaranteed, Louman Brothers, con tractors. Phone 727-J. tf Irtc MEAT SCRAP FOR SALE, anallwa 55 per cent protein. Excel lent lor hog and chicken leed. $70 per ton. City Abattoir. Apply at City Hall. tl 7c I HAVE SEVERAL thousand dollars to lend on improved farms in Cleveland county. See or write Marvin Blanton, Led better building, Shel by. W-Ftf SHELBY AUTO AND WAGON Company, speciaiilzng in rebuild ing wrecked ears, building commer cial bodies, duco painting, top up v holstering and glass work. Black smithing. Phone 753-J. South Mor gan Street. tf 15c HARMON & MOSS Electrical Contracting and Repairing. Locat ed under Chocolate Shop. Phones: Office 230. Res. 203. tf-25 A 1200 PAGE WEBSTER SELF Pronouncing Dictionary for only 65c with a year's subscription to The Star. Better get yours now. The dictionary is worth $3.50. the ** paper all we ask for it; 52.50 per year by mail or $3 by, carrier in Shelby and suburbs. tf OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR salt: at The Star office. Twen ty cents per hundred. Call at the press room. tf-26x OATS IN 50 BUSH vEL lots or more. Spe * cial prices. D. A. Beam & Sons, Phone 130. 6t-lc -WE ARE HAVING WONDER FUL hatches and livability with our chicks this year and can fur nish each Wednesday fine Hocks. Reds and Leghorns if order placed in advance. Poultry bringing top prices now and ouiiook lor over n year for high prices. This is the year to go in tor poultry. Try Sut tle rhlcks and be pleased Sut.tlr Hatchery, tr-3e Cranes Vulcanizing Plant, tires 30x3 and 30x3 l-2-$3.75. 6t-5p BUILDING LOTS—GOOD LO * cation. C. S. Young. tf-12c NANCY HALL SEED POTATOES free from disease, *1.25 per bushel. Pred Newton, Kings Mountain. Route 4. 3t 10c FOR RENT: 5 ROOM FURNISH fd house, good location, reasonable rent. See I. !I. Kendall, Stephen son's Prus Store. 3t ]0p Ice Boxes, Refrigera tors, Electric Ranges and oil Stoves, new and used at bargain prices, Arey Refrig erating Co. 5t-3 FOR RENT: 5 ROOM HOUSE tin furnished. Modern conveniences. Near hospital. Sec J. M. Green or A. M. Hamrick. tf 10c I HAVE FOUR GOOD FRESH rows for sale, two of them are fine •* cows; also one young Jersey bull. Will exchange any of them for1 beef cattle. 13. O. Hamrick 3t lOt: | CANE SEED, PEAS Soyja and Velvet Beans, Pod Corn and Peanuts, Sudan Grass and MiMet Seed. C. C. KirW. -Groceries and , Field Seeds, Gaffney, S. C. 3t-10p A YEAR'S RENEWAL AND 6;>C gets a Wcbsters Home, Olliee and School dictionary containing r_’00 page, and information everyone should have. It is soli pronouncing and profusely illustrated. The Star Shelby. tt OLD ILOORS MADE NEW— and new iloors neatly sanded Have most up-to-date machine ui town For estimate of cost phone 33. Frank M. Newton. 310 W. Marion street. tl 18c EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER desires position. Call at Star Of fice tf-29c VISIT WEBBERS SERVICE station at the Log Cabin just above Mooresboro. Barbecue, hot dogs, groceries, gas and oils. Alma Web ber, proprietor. 91 Ip : TOMATO PLANTS I >R SALE Choice varieties. Mrs Ralph G. Hamrick, Shelby, Route 4 ti 3e FOR SALE — ONE 102S l Pontiac. Coach. One 1021 Buiek Coupe. One 1921 Hoick Sedan, One 1925 Nash Tour j in^. One 192(1 Pontiac Coach, ! One 1928 Essex Coupe. A. H. jC. Motor Co., Arey Bltlir. tf-5c j FOR RENT: THREE-ROOM UN furnished apartment. Desirable lo cation. Close in. Phone 275. Mrs. W. L. Packard tf 8r I - - - - .—v FOR SALE: FRESH MILK COW. H. C. Allen. Shelby, R-6. 6t 8p | LOST SATURDAY LEFT’ AUTO at Ideal Service Station. German police dog, female. Wearing collar with owner's name. Reward. Ray McKee, R-1, Lattimorc 3t lip WANTED TO DO Floor Sanding. Satis factory work gnaran I teed. C. A. Morrison i & Son. 12t-8c | __,__ .__\ '___; ’ O N SATURDAY April 13th at 9 o’clock I will offer to highest bidder a part of my household furniture. B. C. Hicks residence near Lawndale. Sev eral articles may ; in terest you. R. C. Hicks. lt-12p FOR SALE: DRY STOVE WOOD ready cut. Call 320-R. 3t 12c “NATURES STORV." 'By Lloyd Mauliry.) By the side ol the open Wildwood Where the murmuring of the trees, Brings the smell of budding blos soms Faintly on the gentle breeze. By the side of the wooded glen ; Where the shadows love to play. Where the singling of the gay birds Make sweet music all the day. In the, midst of the towering limbs i Where the trees rise dark and tall, i And the singing of the bush bird Clearly rises and gently falls. In the pathway of the forest Where the trail grows very dim, In the calling of the breezes There you eo to talk with Him. ! In the shadow of the giant tree Towering upward to the sky, Where the mist of fleecy clouds Fleck themselves as they pass by.; In the land of shrouded mystery | Where the wild life loves to play, I There's the place you'll go to find Him That Is what they often say. By the trunk of some dead tree Where the toil for life has ceased.1 There you find the thing you wish for There will be the place of p^irc. I In the place of bounty and eharm Where the wild life all resides. There’s the place you'll be another' And forget vour foolish pride In the heart of man and nature Where the will is just the same. Each is striving ior the better Working for some worldly gain, In the life that lives about us Let this now our slogan be. Let us always love each other And not think so much of "me" * GUS AND GUSSIE ’- Just A Package O’ Gloom. MV'/I Opw*' A OAO* *AASi W‘NN:NC» oUSS E AMD STilL ojs atTT^o K > M?>RT 'S T .> A m'.c.H .. .. But -.ot a m tch - up! I TfcLLPC foresees SO - f|-tE OfOES ■V V ' s '( OuT with l. >.*, \Ow CEo'lak _ leaves •j ME SO clAT SOU II " COUL.O V'lAV-vS y j ‘Alk n’ ’ I y O^' A MAC t-tOUR. APTER. MO'JR. - vVA'TlXj . v\'A' ~, k. WATCH! Vi POR HER. OOTSTE"PA LAST 6*0 Vi POP. A SiJhT OP HER Oh joSSiF. GuSSiS, WMV DO HOU DO \ae OlVE POU Do * y\ M'LO. OLD STICK* home • ) THERE ARE why DON t vou <30 out /Still. SOME GET YOURSELF SOME NICE ' HAVE SOME (LOYAL HEARTS \ AND 7 j SEATIN' IN / THIS FUNNY VOUNOWORSB.. AN' DON' MENTION tkat Swear*word ^girlLh HAS (SUSSIE DECIDED IT LOOK* A8 TMOuAH SMS AMO Wilt* kt HOOT J*-, AAV AlU S*T To 40 amo DO IMS «A«M osio — Poor/ <30* / SHOULD SMS HAM© him SUCH A _ BMCMASs” ,1 A Painful Omission. >■ 6ome EsiC'JCiH 'To A’-fe ? ■ w~. P'.OM’ mAVc TO Tel1-. '*-4E VAHC \ WORLD /d ■srir Mi t Ifeue OR. NOT AND \ / OH I'm not SAVING VES \ so it's OR NO-IT WAS AN | THATT WAV • ON ACCOUNT OUTRAGE To HJ0USM ) \T WRlQHT VN'tUU BE FURIOUS MAvee vou Cot UNDlQMANT BECUC J MY PEEUN’S /' MIGHT BE HURT / o- HIM Vou RE - J sore * i Thought l ahy Should Your, ^eeumss 33 HURT "2 VOUR. NAWi ' WASMT A’lEMTOWED im tue paper. - j CKUBL ? <9uts H***T IS Sick. . AND -STILUS TO* 0* IT ALC/rtDU K*»* HIM IN TWrtl AOQNi£lN» dUSPEHS* HOW WILL IT ALL END % Jonas Shares His Office With Man Dodging A Black Congressman LaOuardia, New York, Offers To Take Of fice Beside Negro. ■Washington. — Representative Charles A. Jonas. Republican mem ber from the ninth North Carolina district, has come to the rescue of Representative George M. Pritchard Republican of the Asheville district He is harboring him in his office on the third floor of the house of fice building, far removed from Representative Oscar DcPriest, the Illinois negro congressman. The Pritchard name plate has been re moved from room 132, the telephone taken out and the doors Icckcd. Mr. Pritchard's secretary is at I he Jctnas suite of offices But this is temporary arrangement. Soon Pritchard will have a room to him self. The house leaders arc moving to quite him. Among Friend'.. Representative Fiorcllo 11 La guardia. Republican of New York today wired Speaker Longworth that he would take a room by Rep rescntative Do Priest. This enables the Republicans to place DcPriest among friends The prospect is that DcPriest will be sandwiched in be tween Laguardiu and Represent a tive Melvin J. Maas..'Republican ol Minnesota, and that Prrchard will have a room in another section of the spacious building. Native .New Yorker. Laguardia who offers his services in this pinch was born in New York in 1882. He is a stocky Brown skinned man of everlasting energy. During the World war lie was an aviator. His people are of Italian For .Mayor. I hereby announce my candidacy lor Mayor of tire City of Shelby ant' pledge the citizens of the coni munity tnat if I am elected I will endeavor to perform my dutie. im partially and give the people the \orv brs' r»rtice- of which J am capable. ENOo I BEAM. CASH OR SYMPATHY? Would you prefer $25 Weekly Or Sympathy? Would you, in case of death ffive your family S.'iOOd or Sympathy? Protect your income, and loved ones with insurance through MULL M. PATTERSON D:#trict Agent, Shelby, N. C. Collegians Have Higher Ideals, Says College Man University Dean Asserts American Collegian Is Not ‘‘Collegiate” Has Higher Ideals. Washington.—The modern Ameri can collegian is not “collegiate'' hut "liar, higher ideals and purposes docs belter and more serious scho I lastic work and lives by a highci [standard of moral conduct than | the student of any preceding gen J era t Ion.” That is tire conclusion. Henry Grattan Doyle, dean oh.^pen oi George Washington university, ha [drawn from his own observations I and from statements by the presi j dents or deans of men of about 300 colleges in reply to a tfuWHonnairr. | He undertook the inquiry, he ex plained in an announcement of the jicsults today, with a de ire “to.con tribute something toward the cor rection of what I believe to bo cr ! rencous public opinion concerning jthe college man and woman today." 'He will make a detailed report this 'week at the annual'meeting here of | the association of deans and ad i riser., of men. ( The “collegiate" of the stage and I comic papers represents only one | or two per cent of the student body. I the replies agreed.. and almost all ^declared that the siouehy appear - i blood. Very lew members of the [house care to run into him in a de bate. He has courage, daring and delights in a rough and tumble scrap. Although lie is u lawyer nov. I he is said to have been a barke r once, and worked his way rip to a creditable position in lii: city and congress. BLOATED FEELING \nd Other Troubles Wen! Awsy After This South Carolinian Had Taken Black-Draught. Iva. S. C.—“I have used Black Draught, at, Intervals, lor about five years.” says Mr. J. F. Ollllland, of this place. “I take it for Indigestion. I “After eating. I would liave a tight,, bloated feeling, and pains In my chest and stomach. I would spit up my food, and some things I ate would not agree with me at all. “I would be hungry, but afraid to eat on account of the indigestion. I would be constipated, too. “Some one told me that I should try Black-Draught, which I did, with good results. I take just a small dose after meals, and I feel like a different person. “I do not have any more trouble of that kind. I can now eat al most anything I want, to, at any time, and It does not hurt me. “Black-Draught is a splendid medicine. I can recomend it to others." Thousand,-, of people have found relief. In cases of common Indiges tion. by taking a, pinch of Black Draught. after meals, and continuing this treatment for several days Take Thedford’s Black-Draught tt is purely vegetable and acts m t lelpful way, without the bad effect if mineral drugs. ThtdftrSi I NC-tB9 lackdraught Miit Tolbert Co. Here Next Week One event that is always looked forward • to with a great deal of pleasant anticipation is the annual engagement, in this city, of the Milt Tolbert Chautauqua Players. The people of Shelby have grown ■ on that it has grown to be more mingling with the players each sea soi that it has grown to be more or less ol a community enterprise. Each season Mr. Holloway has as sembled together an organization of talented players whose efforts have been received graciously wherever they have appeared. He has spared no effort or expense in bringing the finest class of amusement avail- i able anywhere into the cities ol | North Carolina where he annual- { !y" exhibits. This season he has outdone all ! previous effort.-, in getting together anee, tumble-dow n socks, three-day shirts and rumpled collars were ex ceptions and were disapproved by ;iie majority of collegians. Most college men, they said, were serious ■ minded, particular about their ap pearance. kept their hair neatly trimmed and their shoes shined, wore clean line, and eschewed the coonskin coat, the gaudily painted flivver, hard drinking atid bad manners. , Plenty of Eggs! Your hens will give you more eggs, Letter eggs, ana produce them at a profit if you feed Quaker FUL-O-PEP EGG MASH This egg-making feed contains just the wings that a hen needs*, fresh oatmeal, other grain prod* ucts, minerals, cod liver meal and molasses in dry form. Start ing it now—we have it for you. For Sale By 'MCNIGHT & CO., Shelby, N. C. the finest company yet to appear here. From the four corners oi America they have come to Shelby during the past three weeks prcpa tory to the opening. All plays being presented this year are the latest royalty releases, nothing being repealed. All the vaudeville la brand new and differ ent from anything heretofore pre sented under canvass. On Monday night the "It Girl,” a brand new snappy drama of modern life, deal ing with the (lappet; am! her prob lems will be presented. Plenty of comedy situations are injected Into the piny and there are surprises galore. The woman will Ire seen In a dazzling array of feminine finery which will cause more than the usual comment Miss Betty Edwards, charming leading woman, v ill be seen in the title role. Boyd Hollo way himself will support her in the \ery pleasing role ol Ted Layton. All the members ol the newly as semblrd company will be seen tc good advantage. Music by the new fRinous Virginia Serenades will be heard throughout the evening aac is guaranteed to drive the bluer away. Ladles will be free on Monday night when accompanied by a pale adult ticket. The tent is located on the Ruda* sill property, Just behind the Victor hotel. “I’d call my new Certain-teed roof a sound investment—” —And, hundreds of homes are being modernized, made more valuable, given longer life . '. . through the right choice of the right Certain-teed Shingle. For instance, there are some types of homes which need the Certain-teed Hexagonal Shingle (as shown above). Others de mand a square-butt Individual Shingle or a long straight shingle of diverse colors. The Certain-teed line fulfills most any require ment for color, design, coverage, or price. Perhaps you are planning on building a new home ... it will well repay you to look over our Shingle line first. Or, your old roof may be in such bad condition that a new roof is necessary. Made of finest materials—known all over the world for value— Certain-teed Shingles are always a worthwhile buy. We have the types, colors and prices that will interest you. You Can Rely Upon Oar Knowledge of the Building Field Our experience in taking care of home-owners and others m this community may be of value to you on your roofing, remodel ing or repairing problems. Make use of it as freely as you want. The confidence and satisfaction of others we have dealt wi4*. arc indications of the type of service wc can render you Servl for votir copv of the new Certain (eeJ Sbinijle Circular: “Color, Color, Color”. SHELBY HARDW ARE CO, PHONE 330 “VVE SERVE TO SATISFY”
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 12, 1929, edition 1
7
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