Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Aug. 19, 1929, edition 1 / Page 2
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Around Our TOWN Shelby SIDELIGHTS By RENN DRUM I •'NOTICE," NOTICES A READER OF THE COLYUM. “THAT THE colyum has iinally noticed that Shelby so tar lias had no Pajama Papa’ stride about town in his stepping garb. It seems to me that it is about time something was done about it. Shelby cannot lag along in this man ner; even the little burgs down In South Carolina have had their pajama parades. If some young fellow about town does not get up his nerve and stroll out, I'm inclined to think that Shelby can take a back seat and be content to pick up the latest In styles two years late Just as we did year back before the census man told us that ue were getting in the city . class. 'It'* Just too bad. but It goes to prove a contention of mine that the girls of Shelby are more up-to-date than the boys (wonder if tlie coiyum's Lsiend isn't a girl herseuv > "Why, It hardly got in I he paper* that movie actresses out on the coast were starting up the bare-leg tad, or the stockingless show, until norne of our pretty and pert little flappers about town started strolling forth with nothing but, pink flesh In view from the dimpled knees to the dainty-colored socks about their •hoe tops The first, time or two these girls stepped out t wonder who the Shelby flappers were who 1 .1 -BILLIARDS Cleveland Cigar i Store Hotel Charles Rldr- Corner Trade and W. Warren Sta. — Dr. Charlie H. HarriH—1 v — Dentist — • Office in Judge Webb Bldg. | Over Stephenson Drug Co. Office Phone 830, Residence 630 SHELBY, N. C. Dr. C. M. Peeler —DENTIST— ! Office Over Woolworth Residence Phone 460-W. Office Phone 99-W -■ DR. H. C. DIXON DENTIST Office Over Woolworth’s. TELEPHONE 195 Peyton McSwain [Mtomey-at-Law Civil and Criminal Practice In All Courts Office: Union Trust Co, Building CEO. P. WEBB — REAL ESTATE — Farms and City Property ( UNION TRUST BLDG. SHELBY — Telephone 454-J — T. W. Ebeltoft Grocer and Book Seller Phone *—* 82 DAN FRAZIER Civil Engineer And Surveyor Farm Surveys, Sub-divis ions, Plats and General Engineering Practice. - Phone 417 - Have Your Eyes Examined Regularly DRS. H. D. & R. L. WILSON OPTOMETRISTS Office Over Paul Webb & Son’s Drug Store. k started It?) we admit there'were a couple of traffic Jama on the First National corner which worried Po lice Chief Mac, taut in a week or so the men folks, except for a few of the old boys, (tot accustomed to thr strange and enchanting sights, and now bare legs flit daily about the streets of Shelby—fat legs, slender legs, shapely legs, ugly legs, and a few pairs that would make Ann Pennington's eyes turn green with Jealousy. But, for all of that. Shel by’s girls have kept up with the styles Some of the mothers may have offered slight objection a' first, but no modern mother isn t going to object long and loud when her daughter has a craving to ke'p up with styles, for mothers have that craving themselves If you don't believe It. look about at some of the ages parading in sun-back dresses, and not such long dresses, either. They perhaps have private, and entirely personal reasons, about permitting their daughters to keep up the bare-leg fad by themselves "But. the boys! They're just sit Administrator'* Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs, E. A. Taylor late of Cleveland county. N, C , all persons holding claims against the undersigned on or before 13th day of August 1030 or this notice will be pleaded In bar of any recovery thereon. All persons Indebted to said estate jvtll please make Im mediate payment to me. ThU Aug. 9, 1929 J. L. TAYLOR. Adminis trator of Mrs. E. A. Tay lor's Estate. B. T. Falls, Atty. ._:___ SALE OF VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY. Under and by virtue of the au thority conferred upon us in a deed of truat executed by P. F, Mc8wain and wife, Minnie McSwain on the 7th day of June 1927. and recorded in book 141, page 527, we will on Baturday the 7th day of September. 1929, 12 o'clock noon at the court house door In Shelby, N. C„ Cleveland county, sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder the fol lowing land to wit: Adjoining the lands of Robert Dover. Mrs. Jane E, Dover. J. B Price, Ernest Herndon and Mrs. Wm Jennings and Mrs. Fraidy and being lot or tract NO 1 of the J. M Dover land, as shown by the map of said tract made by A. P Falls, sur veyor, August 28, 1919, said lot or tract bounded as follows: Beginning on an iron stake, Rob ert Dover s corner in the old Green public road; thence north 1 east 4.23 chains with said road to a stone in the road; thence south 69 east 15.20 chains with line of lot No. 5 of the said J. M. Dover land to a sour wood In J M Price’s line thence south 241* west 38.25 chains with the Price line to a stake In the middle of Beason Creek, corner of lot or tract No. 2 of the said J. M Dover land; thence north 73 chains with middle of said creek to a stake; thence north 77 west 5.62 chains to a stake at mouth of old channel of Buffalo; thence north 63 east 2 chains to a stake: thence north 25'* east 1.30 chains to a stake; thepce north 11 west 3.40 chains to a stake in oid channel of Buffalo: thence north 54'a east 3.82 chains to a box elder in line of tract No. 3 of the said J M. Dover land; thence north 64'j east 380 chains with line of tract No. 3 to a stake and pointers: thence north 84*4 east 10 chains to a small pine; thence north 35 east 5 chains to a stake in gulley; thence south f>8 i east 12.R6 chains to a stake in the old Green road; thence north 29 east 3.67 chains to a stake in said road; thence north 12>* east 10.10 chains to the point of beginning 95.3 acres and the same being a part of the J. M. Dover land con veyed by deed from Clyde R. Hoey. commissioner, in special proceed ing No 1182 recorded in the clerk’s office of superior court, Cleveland county, N. C., to Mrs. Jane E. Dover and said commissioner's deed being of date of December 31. 1920 and recorded in book EEE. page 539 of the register's office of Cleveland county. N.C.to winch deed and special proceeding is hereby made This sale is made bv reason of the failure of p f. McSwain and uii3, Minnie McSwain to pay i>ff and discharge the indebtedness sec ured by said deed of trust to the North Carolina Joint Stock Land Bank of Durham, A daposit of 10will be requir ed from the purchaser at the sa’c This the 31st day of July, 1929 FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF DURHAM. Trustee. Durham N. C. Bynum E Weathers, Atty Shelby, N. C ting around, hipping sodas and smoking Chesterfields while the town's well-dressed reputation slips away. ■ What are (hey worrying about? A decent pair of pajamas with a tie 10 match would show a lot of them oif. better than some of those shrunken, hang-all-over-you, sum mer suits they wear. "Who's going to be Shelby's 'Pa jama Papa?’ Around Our Town we hope is not going to permit 3helbv j to lagalong like this?" Well, man or lady, whichever you may be, the eolyum will do, and has ■ done above, alj that it dares do! about it. That's as far as we re go- | mg to go. We re broadcasting the appeal, but foi a couple of sum mers yet, we'll stand back and let the other boys be your 'pajama papas' But It does seem a shame, doesn't it, for the llapers to stroll around in their sun-backs and stockingless attire, while their collegiate friends swelter in their business suits as they wonder what the girls would think of them in their pajamas. But you'll notice the girls care very little what the boys think about, them when they pick up n new fad of course, we don’t suppose many of the boys have kicked about the bare legs. THE FOLLOWING SO-CALLEL' poem, entitled "Freedom of the Press," Is snitched from Jonathan Daniels column in the Raleigh News and Observer. Around her waist I pul my arm, It felt as soft as cake, “O dear," says she, "What liberty You prlntermen do take!" "Why, yes. my ga>. my charming gal," <1 squeezed her some, I guess > "Can you say aught, mv lo"«. against The freedom of the press?" I kissed her some; I did, by gum1 She colored like a beet; Upon my living soul she looked Almost too good to eat! I gave another kiss, and then Says she. "X must confess, I rather, kinder, sorter like The freedom of the press." OCCASIONALLY TELEPHONE numbers get tangled up—some of the beauties among the hello girls y’know, must occasionally take one hand away from the connections long enough to keep that school girl complexion in school. As a result of one such slip we are told of a comedy of errors which was enact ed over the telephone In Shelby recently Mrs. Oscar Suttle decided to tele phone Mrs. Lee B. Weathers to in quire how Mrs. Weathers' sister, Mrs. Henry Kendall, was getltn? along. She called for a number, a voice answered, and then Mrs. Sut tle asked to speak with Mrs. Weathers. "All right,'* came back the voice, ‘‘wait Just a moment." Then another voice, answered. Mrs. Suttle thinking It to be Mrs. Weathers Inquired "Well, how are you feeling today?" "I’m not feeling so well since leaving the hospital." came back the voice. "Why, T didn't know you had been in the hoepital.” exclaimed Mrs. Suttle. "Oh. yes. I was in the hospital some time,” the voice at the othe: end of the wire replied. Thinking it best not to reveal that she had not known her friend. Mrs. Weathers, was in the hospital, Mrs Suttle moved on to another subject. "Well, I called you because I was curious to know how Mrs. Kendal! Is.” said Mrs. Suttle. “Why I hadn't heard she was sick.” came back the voice. That almost floored Mrs. Suttle. She couldn’t get the Idea of Mrs. Weathers not knowing that her sis ter was sick. Never had she been In such a mix-up. First of all she had not known that Mrs. Weathers had been sick, and here Mrs. Weathers didn't know that her own sister was sick "Say," exclaimed Mrs Suttle "this is Mrs. Lee Weathers Ini talking to. isn’t It?" "No." came back the voice. “This is Mrs. Will Roberts." And so the comedy of errors was explained. So. as we say. telephone girls na turally make errors just as other women do on occasions when they permit the beans to scorch- and as telephone girls do themselves after they connect with the right number and quit being hello girls. ENOLSHWOMEVS FREEDOM BOOSTS SALE CANNED FOODS London—Relinquishment of the "Roast Beef of Old England" for canned ffcods and salads was de scribed by Howard Heinz., president of J. H Heinz & company. Mr. Heinz is here to supervise building an addition to the pres ent Heinz British plant which will employ several hundred Brit ish workers. He said that the sale of tinned foods here has increased 500 per cent in the last ten years. He attributed this to the ireer life of the average English housewife who no longer "sweats in the Sftchen,” but spends much of icr ay in sport. Salad consumption also has increased, as indicated by an increase of nearly 500 per cent in sales of salad cream since the war Try Star Want* Ad*. ‘Frisco's Chinatown, The Big Trees And The Yosemite Park Longest Bridge In World Across Ba>. Nevada l>t Wrt. August Snowballs. i By RKNN DRUM.) San Francisco, the romantic Frisco of all the old legends of the far west, is perhaps the most wide ly known of the lures which take an easterner to the west coast. 'Frisco and her Barbary Coast, the Golden Gates, Chinatown, the bay. and the most cosmopolitan swarm of human beings to be found out of Europe. On a main thoroughfare there within one hour, the observant tell you. may be seen more classes and grades of people than can be seen in any other spot' in the world within a similar length of time except in Paris. The rich, the poor, the pious, the degraded and depraved, the cultured. the dope fiends, "snow sniffers,” sol diers of fortune, and refined—all drawn by some mysterious influ ence to the great port city of the west coast, built upon the high hills which jut out into the Pacific, Built upon a mountainous pen insula which runs its head far into the waves, San Francisco has the steepest streets of any city in America. Many of them are too steep for automobiles to travel, and on others the street cars ascend and descend in safety only because of ground-level cables to keep them from running away. Due to the city’s altitude although upon the coast, and also to the fact that the big bay Is on one side and the ocean on the other. August nights in ’Frisco require overcoats and heavy winter wraps. If comfort is desired. Fifteen minutes after the far-famed golden sunset sends its last charming rays over the Golden Gates, a chilly wind replaces the warmth of the day. Night scenes there In midsummer are similar to those of eastern cities in midwin ter. In Chinatown. Of all Frisco's limes Chinatown is without doubt the strongest for the tourist. Covering block after block in the heart of the business district —chop suey houses, curio shop?, hotels, dope dens, and whatnot—it is the largest Chinatown, out of China, in the world. It is there where the “ blossoms are broken' one reads and hears so much of. A "blossom” to the Chinese is a young girl—the breaking is the sinking to the depths of life, usually brought about by the irresistible contact with drugs and dope. Yet Chinatown on the surface is a thoroughly modern American business district. Smiling, alert, keen-eyed business men and women. But behind the alert eyes that searching, silent study which gives the unsophisticated the shtV vers, and from the rear rooms thee mystifying. fragrance of burning incense Such is Chinatown every where. Frisco’s is merely the larg est. Side visits in San Francisco take the traveller across the bay—by ferry, auto and all—to Oakland, the twin city, and to Berkley and the university: and out to the world famed Golden Gate park. Lincoln park, the Legion memorial park with Us expressive statues. . fins museum and magnificent view out across the Pacific into the sunset. In the city proper "rubbernecks ’ spend hours comparing old 'Frisco, that part remaining from the eartlj quake and fire, with modern Fris co. her giant business buildings, her “Wall Street of the West,” and he.' great theatres, of which Fox's five million-dollar movie house is the newest and most outstanding. The Longest Bridge. Leaving San Francisco, cutting back southeast towards the heart of California to Yosemite National park, the tourist nowadays drives over the worlds longest bridge seven and ohe-tenth miles long and one of the most beautiful engineer ing achievements in the world Crossing this bridge by motor the traveller practically lohes sight of land either direction. The Big Trees. At Wawona. as one nears Yose mite proper, high in the Sierras, is the Mariposa grove of big trees, the largest trees In the world. These giants of the forest, although in the Mariposa grove, are known as the Sequolan trees, being named for an Indian chief who first ta/Ught his tribe to read. The greatest of the trees is the ‘‘Grizzly Giant ” which has a girth of 93 feet, a diameter of 39.6 feet, and whose height is 204 feet. An opening could be cut in the trunk of this tree, the government statistics assert, through which an ordinary wagon and two street cars could pass side by side and still leave the sides strong enough to support the tree. There is no way by which one can really appreciate this mammoth size and majesty ex cept by looking upon it The tallest tree is the General Sherman, 273 feet high. Automobile roads 26 feet wide run through the trunks of two trees, the California and the Wa wona In Yosemite. The Yosemite valley, one of the three outstanding national parks, covers an area of 1.126 square miles or 720.H2 acres. Noted points of; interest are the Three Brothers. 1 Capitan, Bncjalveil Falls, Cathedral Spires, Mirror Lake, and Glacier Point. The remainder is made up or singing mountain streams, beauti ful water falls, Innumerable lakes, lofty granite peaks, snowy mountain I tops with pinnacles 13,000 feet above sea level, and forests in which it seems the world might be hidden. Going into the valley from the west entrance the tourist first of all looks down upon the valley from Glacier Point—a look down a sheer cliff, 3,254 feet, down into the val ley where autos appear to be only black specks, tents are only whit* dots, and the Merced river Just a silvery trace on green velvet. Later down in the valley, after dropping down for an hour or so, the travell er leans back to look up at Glacier point. Each night at 8 o’clock a giant bonfire is lighted atop Glacier Point for the benefit of the thous ands of tourists camped in the val ley far below. At 9 o'clock the hun dreds watching see the bonfire above pushed off the cliff, and tumbling down the granite wall to the val ley floor for 15 minutes it resem bles an illuminated waterfall—a firefall in itself. In Yosemite high up in the high Sierras the tourist encounters the wild life of the virgin forests mucn as it is in the Yellowstone of the Rockies. Deers and bears, streams filled with trout, and forest-covered mountains over which all kinds of wild game roam. In Yosemlte as In Yellowstone the black bears and the deer become so affectionate that in the morning they shuffle from one tourist camp to another seeking something to eat. Here, there and everywhere about the big camp, in which thousands live in cabins and tents, one sees snapshots being made of bears standing on their hind legs eating sweets, or deers, with spreading antlers, eating ap ples or flapjacks. Out Above The Clouds. Leaving Yosemite by way of the famous Tioga pass the auto tourist climbs from the valley floor to the peaks above and then travels across them. 10,000 to 13,000 feet high, to the pass. Hard driving, thrillingly dangerous at times, yet one of the mo«t scgnic auto, rides in the world. It is therp that one may toss snow balls by the roadside in July and August. Tioga Pass, frequently seen In the movies, was first built as a road outlet for a gold mine by Chinese labor in 1881. In travelling out this way the tourist goes near the Hetch. Hctchy Valley dam, 300 feet high.] from which San Francisco secures her water. Dropping down to desert j lever through Tioga pass the motor ist climbs down, in “S” curves, seven miles of sheer cliff. The average driver makes the drop down in low gear with his brakes on, and the fellow who believes there are no "kicks” left ip life nfceds to try it. The "Weirdest Freak.” Not long after leaving Tioga Pass the tourist reaches Mono Lake, which Mark Twain described as "the world's weirdest freak." On an island there are,, two springs within ten feet-ot each other, one emitting boiling water and the other cool water On the waters of this lake the seagulls of the Pacific are bred, the gulls flying hundreds of miles inland to the warm lake for their breeding. Lake Tahoe. On beyond Mono lake as the tourist prepares to leave California for Nevada, and not many miles distant from Carson City, is Lake Tahoe, California’s most beautiful lake and perhaps the most scenic body of water in the world. More than 6,000 feet above sea level with green-clad mountain peaks all around, the reflections upon the Mediterranean-blue water form a never to be forgotten sight. The lake proper is 13 miles wtde and 23 miles long. And This Is Nevada. Nevada, to the fellow who hasn't kept up with his geography and populationifigures. offers one of the big surprises of the west.. Tire state is sparsely populated and is becom ing more so. Mining is not what it once was, there is little farming ex cept in the irrigated regions bor dering upon Utah and In many sections the last resort of the west ern desert, cattle grazing. Is playing out because snows are not so heavy as they once were, and the wafer for the great herds must come from the melting snows. Carson City!—Something about the name goes with nearly every thought of the west. Memories of the old mining days when western history was made. Corbitt and Fitz simmons fought there in 1897, and at the time 7,000 people lived there Today, though it is the state capi tal. the total population is only 1. 700. Many of our Southern cities have more population than the en tire state. Incidentally, we Eastern ers and Southerners pronounce the name of the state somewhat differ ent from the Nevada residents. We accent the first "a” as in “hard': they accent the “a’’ as in “had.” Reno, the metropolis and Amer ica's divorce city, has a population j • IW RESIDENCES ST1TJT TOLUCA (Special to The Star' Mrs; Lola and Docia Boyles en tertained the following guests on last Friday evening: Mrs. George Mull, Misses Willie Roberson, Clar ice Rhoney, Lottie Brittian, Pauline Lackey, Messrs. Luth Houser, De vaughh and Ear! Boyles, Harris Ha'l man and Frank Houser. Cake and lemonade were served. Wonderful messages are being de livered at the tent in Toluca now each morning at 10 o'clock a. m. and 8 o'clock p. m. Let’s all come out and hear them. The contractors have begun work on Mr. Roland Boyles hand some new home. Messrs. F. A. and L. E Boyles have let the contract to a contrac tor of Shelby to erect a six room bungalow on their place near Tol uca. Work has begun and they ex pect to complete it in a short time Miss Pauline Lackey spent last Thursday night with Mrs. M. S Boyles. Miss Ima Carpenter, Mesdames j Lucy and Charlcie Carpenter of Knob Creek, Mrs. Estelle Vickers of Shelby also Mrs. S. A. Sain were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Boyles on last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dixon Boggs of Iredell county are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Boyles. Mr. Cecil Boyles of Morganton is! spending this week with his brother Mr. M. S. Boyles. Mr. Fletcher Sain spent last Sat urday night with Mr. Ralph Falls of Belwood Misses Helen and Ora Sain spent last Tuesday night with then brother. Mr. and Mrs. John Sain cf Lincoln county. Messrs. Fletcher Sain and Ralph Falls attended a party at the home of Mr. Clyde Whisnant of Polkville last Friday. Miss Winona Willis spent the past week with Miss Novella Lackey of the North Brook section. Miss Ora Sain returned to Mor ganton last Friday after a two weeks stay in Toluca. Mrs. Sarah Hoyle of Burke coun ty is spending some time with Mrs. Jane Mostella and attending the tent meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Propst of Cherryville spent last Sunday at th; home of his brother Mr. and Mrs. E. i. Propst. Home Coining At Palm Tree. Home coming will be observed at Palm Tree church. Belwood charge, Sunday, August 25. Rev. S. C. Wrifht of Warrington will preach in the morning and the afternoon will_.be given over to home-comers for short talks. The public is most cordially invited Glover Reunion. . The annual Glover reunion will be held at the home of Mrs. Fannv Edwards. August 25, 1929 All friends and relatives are invited to be there with dinner. Hoyle Reunion. The Hoyle reunion will be he'd at Kadesh church, Belwood, on Thursday, August 22 of only 17,500. A little larger than Shelby, and not so large as Gas tonia. One attraction about Nevada, if properly known, would keep many tourists from going to Mex ico. If you get us. Meaning that they do not call them "speakeasies" there: they open right on the main streets and do business as openly as do the grocery stores and other business houses. Leaving Nevada the tourist head ing east strikes Utah right at the edge of the Great Salt desert. That for another story. (The next installment of the sights to be seen in a transcontin ental anto tour will take up the Salt desert, the Sait Lake freak. Salt Lake City, “a rose blooming In a bleak desert” thanks to the hardy Mormon pioneers. America has few more beautiful cities or a more en terprising farming section—and the story of the Mormon church and its pioneers not so many years ago was directly connected with an event transpiring In Shelby.l SPECIAL EXCURSION FARES TO FLORIDA SATURDAY, AUGUST 24TH. 1929. VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Round-Trip Fare From Shelby N. C. To Jacksonville, Fla. ...... 515.50 Miami, Fla. . 525.50 Tampa, Fla. .. 523.00 Brunswick, Ga. ..._ $12.50 Havana, Cuba . $50.25 Savannah, Ga. $7.50 Tickets on sale August 24th. Final limit, Savannah August 31st. Brunswick and Jacksonville Sept. 1st. Other destinations September 5th, and Havana, Cuba September 12th. Round-trip fares to other re sorts in Florida. ASK TICKET AGENTS. I I Speed Vitamins. London.-—Maybe there's a "speed vitamin.” Italian fliers entered in the Schneider Cup races have sent their own cook ahead. Administrator's Nolite. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Amanda Jane Wright, deceased, late of Cleveland county. N. C„ this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at his home in Fallston, N. C„ on or be fore the 17th day of August, 1930, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment R A. LACKEY, Administra tor of Amanda Jane Wright, deceased. Quinn, Hamrick & Harris, Attys. Married In Bathing. Paris.—Becoming engsged after n | courtship on a Riviera Eeacii. M: [Hilda Von Herricic, of Kansae C;: > and Maurice Chalcxr. of Censes i tir.ople, were married, attired r bathing suits, and started the . honeymoon with a swim in the surf Executor’s Notice. Having qualified as executor r the estate of R. H. Wright, decease late of Cleveland county, N. O. tins is to notify all persons having clatrr ; against the estate of said decease< | to exhibit them to the undersign I ed at his home in Fallston, N. C„ or or before the 17th day of Augu.v 1930. or this notice will be pleade in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate w:l please make immediate payment. This August 17th, 1929. R. A. LACKEY, Executor of R. H. WRIGHT. Deceased. Quinn, Hamrick & Harris, Attys. Final Tax and Street Assessments Notice We are preparing our list for the advertisement of City Taxes which have not been paid for the year 1928 and prior thereto; also property against which there are pavement assessments not paid. We are forced to do this to meet our obligations. CITY OF SHELBY, S. A. Me Murry, Mayor and Board of Aldermen. The Service Dry Cleaning Co. IS MORE THAN A NAME The Word SERVICE this firm style means just that—SERVICE, Service in keeping your clothing in apple pie order- ; Service in keeping you spic and span, and looking and feeling FIT. Call us PHONE 33—and give us the op portunity to serve YOU. * Location: West Graham street, next door to Ideal Ice Plant. SERVICE DRY CLEANING CO. “PERMANENTS” For those desiring waves late in summer we are offering this wonder ful opportunity for ONE WEEK ONLY — STARTING TUESDAY — $6.50 Including Shampoo and Finger Wave Also Sampoo and Marcel $1.00 Shampoo and Finger Wave $L00 FOR LONG HAIR $1.25 Also introducing Mrs. Anne Brooks of Chattanooga. Tenu., an expert in Permanent Waving. Call tor appoint ments in advance. Also evening ap pointments made. “KNIGHTENGALE” BEAUTY PARLOR — PHONE 542 —
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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Aug. 19, 1929, edition 1
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