Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / March 3, 1930, edition 1 / Page 7
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20,000 People Read Star Want Advs-The Cost Is Small; Result Good Rates For Want Advertisements In This Column. Minimum Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. This size type 1 ■Mint per word each insertion. This size type 2c per word each insertion. This size type 3c per word each insertion. Ads. that amount tc less than Joe o BATTERY SERVICE. At* tonobile Class Replacerionts. Starter ard Generator Re pai n?. J. E. GAFFNEY tf-c TO RENT A FULL ENE EOFS-” err I to the rlr’’t man. R. c. Cov ington, R-l, Lattlmn•« N c. 3t jft. ■. DEPENDABLE SEEDS JUST received. A very choice lot of early E rdrn beans, corn, watermelon and cr.ntfilcupe seed. The e seed rank j K"h in germ'nation and purity. S. J C Kctnrick; Erookdde Service Star 1 ttrr>, i: ' way No. 20, 4 miles west ‘ of S'relby. 2t Jp FOUR ROOM HOUSE IN GOOD iccrtion for sale on 'easy - term' or e ill trade for vacant property » Horace Kennedy. »} 25c ! -PMILCO niAr:o: d coo batter fes Ai l.-iuo’) le Elec ic Co. Rhone CO N. VVa hire-ton St. tf-6c !Tor-«T cas:i prices paid 1 1 ■scrap copper braes, aluminum j ba.Uiies. radiators iron, ruboci and rags Fink Ir^t, and Metal Co Trade Alley, rear Kendall M •* ctnr Co Phone 580 tf 10c NEWTOWN INCURf TOR, 3v0 css capacitj Canopy moodsr capacity, both for $20 ,r>hn Wri Jit, Lattimore. 3t FAMILY Washing, wet v/ash, rough dry and “Thrifty” wash with flat work ironed. Shelby Steam Laun dry. Ph:ne 18. tf-12c WE BUY JUNK AND WRECK ed automobiles. F.nk Ir5n and Met al Co., Trad? Alley, rear Kendall Medicine Co., pnone 530. tf 16c DO YOUR TERRACING- JOB right with that good Cook Ditcher, j It is just what you need, on sale oy O. E. Ford Company. 3-26p __;___ __ FOR BARGAINS IN Jewelry and watch, clock and jewelry re pairing ree Morrison’s Jewelry Shop, ups'a rc over Wool worth, herd of steps. tf-3c radio” BARGAIN — A five tube Battery rad’o com p’ete with tubes and speaker. The f?rr;t cash c-st "et~ it for S20. Sterchi Bros., Inc. tf-Sc one GOOD 6-ROOM HOUgE for rent. See H, Clay Cox or W A. Broadway. tf-lOc CHOICE VACANT BUILDING lots Desirable location Water ,nd sewer connections Good neighbor hood. Near school. Reasopaole r ~ end terms C. S Young, Shel by. N. C tf 23c WELDING — ACETYLENE nr ELECTRIC. A’to nob le Ra''!ator Rrafri~'». un to date equipment, fir e i t r’o~® ri"V. SHELBY RADI TOR SHOP. 3t-23c FOR RENT: NTCE FILLINC station and store room and also six room house close to burlness seclhn on paved ‘treet; Rovstej oil Com pany, Shelby. N. C. 3t 2Cc WANTED—TO REN.T A GOOD large one horse crop on shares at once. F. L. Beck, Shelby, N. C., R-4 3-28-c GET YOUR RADIO TUBES from us.. Majestic, RCA, Cunning ham, Eveready, Slyvania and oth ers. All guaranteed ONE YEAR Pendleton’s Music Store, 2t-2A FCR SALE LITTLE ROOK.ER cotton seed for planting. L. L. Willis, R-2, Vale, N. C. 3t ~p FOR SALE OR TRADE ONE nice brick bungalow; 3 rooms, bat Will trade for car. For interview write P. O. Box 691, Shelby. 3t 3p *sET FULL Details about the Aladdin Hcrjrii'gr Lamp we _ _ _ • • f - T* ’ r r c.vrc.v. SLeiwy Kaiotta ** 0>. i 3t-24c] LOOK OVER THE BIG U8ED car bargains at Charles L. Eskridge Garage. , 2-2Ac USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE Pink Iron and Metal Co.. Trade Al ley. rear Kendall Medicine Co., phene 580 t! 18c FOR SALE. ONI ELECTRI'"' Kclr.ter radio. Se* $V Mauney Bros. tf 23-: ULED CAR A1VD TRUCK BAR galns. Charles L. Eskridge. 2-28c SIMILE A-]' ILE. POSITIVELY —e i.i your own home. . ree information. Andrews Chem* al Co., Fergus Falls. Minnesota. 5t 3p I HAVE SEVERAL EXTRA ood irceii cows with young calves .r sale, or will exchange for good roof cattle. B. O. Hamrick. tf 19c K*-. - S: ALT0M03ILE, FOR my make of car. Automobile Elec ,ric Co. tf 17c FOR SALE: FORDSON TRAC tor with Athens side plows. Bar r.in. Clyde G. Putnam, R-3, Shel by. x 5t 3p FOR RENT: 6 ROOM HOUSE, S. Washington Street. B. T. Falls. 3t 3c TWO ROOMS FOR RENT ON East Marion. Mrs. Gene Gamble 2t 280 FOR SALE: TWO FRE3H JER sey milk cows. Heavy milkers. S. W Dellinger, Cherryville, N. C. 2t 28;i FOR RENT: FOUR ROOM apartment with private bath. Close in. Phone 41. tf lOt FURNISHED ROOMS FOR ight housekeeping. 305 South D? Kalb St. 4t USp ~FOR RENT—ONE HALF OF MY store room. Major Hopper. tf-lOe FOR SALE—BIG BOLL RUCK er cotton seed 90c, per bushel. B ES. Scruggs, Hollis, N. C. 3-28p BABY CHICK, time. A fine lot of ^eds and Rocks each Tuesday. Book ahead to r'nsure gett'ng them when wanted. Subtle** Hatchery. tf-24c mulesTwill RE CEIVE two car loads Tennessee mules, all broke. Four to seven years c!d, 9 to 1? hundred pounds. M. C. Johnson, dealer in live stock, Lenoir. 3t3c C. H. REINHARDT, Locally Owned and eperaisd, not paying tribute to ^'all street. Fleur f3 39; Flour 2^s, r’a'n or self r:s* *rg -C^c; kiln dried sweet prtatees $1.?5 " uckel, 3c lb.; milk, ’arpe C'o 10c: sma1! can .rc; Teven C'C'cch Coffee 18c lb.;, Eight ocun-’s pnowdri^t 98c No. 2 Green Beans 10c. v 2t-3c TRADE DAY IN C A S A R Saturday, March 8th. We have Trade Day on Second Saturday of each month. There w*ll be -■'enty of h~gs for sale t !so I w:Il have a car load of Tennessee mu’es, well broken, we’ght from 9 to 12 hundred lbs. Also I have second hand mules for sale. Come o-. D. O. JVIeU^n, C-'sar, N. C. lt-3p TOOTS AND CASPER Generous Measure. r OH, TOOT-5,: TM 40NNA HOP IN bed AhlD SEE IF I CAN) BUST UP THIS COLD? KA- CMOO-O-Ot the. DOCTOR CjAVE me A "PRESCRIPTION WHICH I HAD FILLED AT THE. DPOOr -STORE ! WHERE IS THE BOTTLE? A HOT TODDIE IS WHAT I uFfn ME A ) TEASPOON1, j ffllilhlMlllltlMHIIIil Nothin^, DOit^r'. the Dissections on the bottle eAY A TEA •SPOONFUU AT BEDTIME-' AND ALU A *TEA«>POOMFUL ? BAH', that MUCH WOULDN'T CURE. A MOSQUITO! BRiKkjr ME A TEASPOOM r OR 40 .WITH OUT'. I COULfcWT riNt> A "TEASPOOM, "TOOTS. »UT "THIS SOJP DlPPEQ. v/iu. do Oust as well V/OM-T IT ? Cross Words. I I'LL start DIWN3*, Caspeh. J 7^-THAT'S FINE, [ TOOTS, BECAUSE I'M <^OIN<^ TO TORN ON THE. RADIO. AND THERE'S NOTHinZi I LlWe ©et-thq THAN MEALS \N1TH MY MUSIC' IT this *3 station > -v Z WE NOW PRESENT A HUMOROUS SWBTCH ON MARRIED LIRE ENTITLED * HUB3V COMES HOME AT TWO . IN THE MOQNIN6 ' OSCAR • 'WHAT DO YOU MEAK1 BY COM IKi4 HOME. AT this HOUQ. op the. morning? answer, me! STOP THAT «&ia.Y 4RJHM\W6 AND ‘=>PEAW UP’. bOYOU HEAR?" <T WAS TVIIE WAY, MAUD. SOME OP THE BOYS ASVED ME TO PLAY A PEW HANDS WITH THEM AT the CLUE, and;* mV wo«B'. TMI^ Ie, TH8, HOM*, OI= toot* and CACsPCR*. Dony tkLl M* T«)»E "'SHOT UP,YOU WRBTCHl I COULD WB'Nl* YOuia NtCW i VS put UP wrrM YOUQ NON&WNSE. LOMOr BN10U4H » CM HOME V TO MOrrMBBL*' , f rPOM *kc TVtiV -•»<! AsO r«x> IN PUBLC YU NVOULDN T ■» -Ajwt Twrv tv(« «Mt » A C»0«»* V*>** *% BACH OTH»P You CAN'T OUQ^I BY OU—NvaPD ORAB«B Nobody’s Business GEE McGEE— Be Broke Out Of Debt. Mr. Hittem Hard wound up In bankruptcy last week after a 7 years struggle with adversity and all Is quiet around his little store 3ince the sheriff called. Mr. Hard went Into the mercan tile business in 19 and 23. At that time, he owned a 75 acre farm, but conditions became so bad in 19 and 27, he sold the farm to his wife for "5 dollars and love and affection. His creditors never did learn what he did with the 5 dollars. Mr. Hard has nothing left now except his wife and her automobile and her radio and her farm and her household goods and her children and her house and lot—which she bought with the money she made in the store. (She clerked on Satur days). The future looks dark for him, but he thinks mebbe they will move back to the farm. The oil company sent and tool: up his tanks. The scale agent re possessed his 2 pairs of computing scales. The cash register salesman levied on the cash register owner count of Mr. Hard skipping 2 pay ments. BUI Holdem claimed six months rent and got that. Tire tau coUector quizzed folks and other; about the past due pledges to the tax commission. The flour and meat and lard an ' coffee and sugar and crackers an salmon had been sold and possibly eaten up. Mr. Hard's married '"son owes for the rations he bought dur ing the past 3 years and the crei itors will come into possession o Jerry’s bill. Mr. Hard says the ac count is plumb good—provided Jer ry ever gets the money. Jerry is ail right, but is a good debt dodge himself. The referee In bankruptcy hue charge of the "corpse” and will possibly pay the 1 per cent divi dend that the creditors will get within the next year or so. The ass slgnee sold the stock for 4 dollars The assets were $245.00 but all of them could not be located. The liabilities totalled $6,555.55, and he had no trouble locating them. We feel mighty sorry for Mr Ilittem Hard. He did the best he could when the high cost of hign living is considered. Then the de pression caused by the stock mar ket bust must be considered. Oaso line and garage bills were exorb' tank. And the children had to have things. Poor, poor Mrs. Hard: she looks so sad riding around in ths* Super-Six. Our heart g~e« out t .cr an1 the ki a! on? with ou receipt to Mr. Hard. Two Of a Kind. I saw in the paper the other day where a shystef lawyer cha3ed au ambulance and wtjfcn he finally overtook.it, he fo*d that It con taiued another atapirter lawyer. Shy ster lawyers serve a good purpose. were it not -h>r them, shysters in other lines of activity would have no one to represent them in their business of shystering. They all be long to a club known as “The Get Something-Por-Nothing-Order." <F, S. We have no shysters in our town —they are all in yours. 1 Looking Up. An agent for a “Coat of Arms.’ society called on me the other dav and wanted to get me and my fam ily a nice set. He first wanted to know if we had a family tree. I told him no. but it was our purpose to sprout one next summer when the ground got dry enough to cultivate He said he could trace my ancestry back tef England. I explained to him that the guards in seme places were not very particular, but trac ing the steps that we had already made did not interest me. I told him I'd take cne of those nice cig ars, but that was all for the pres ent. Cotton Letter. New York, Mar 3.—Boll weevil emergence was 4 compared with 14 last fall, including your weevils, red ants, bed bugs and book agents, and (his together with Bombay hedging forced July spots down to March futures In sympathy with the farm relief board which will announce its policy In 19 and 32 The nearby months are allowing some weakness because of probablt curtailment In wash rags and lip sticks. Wall street is normal ex cept many seats are vacant bqgpu-c of suicides and foreclosures. We look for July the 4th. Spring Is Here. flat rock, s. C., martch the 3, 130. hon. u. c. snaiks, Washington, d. C. deer sir:— plese send me some free seeds for my wife’s garden ansoforth and allso some guanar to put under :ame and try to hunt up some seeds that will come up. Them you sent last yr. and yr. befoar last come up in some places, but the canty loap: was squashes and the tomatoes wa • puinkins and the pepper was onions and the peas was beans get some boddy to pick this new lot who can see better an read gooder. if 1 plant cabbages, i want cabbages, rot tur nips or spinnix. rite or foam if ' can count on you sending the seed or had i better buy elsewhere, yores tr*,u. mike Clark, rfd. Try Star JVants Ads. ) *iw.. .... .. ...... . - 3AYS ELECTRIC LIGHTS DON’T FOOL ALL HENS St. Paul, Minn.—Add the hen to those who can't be fooled all the time, says Dr. F. B. Hutt, poultry specialist of Minnesota state col lege. A few of them, he says, will con tinue to augment their aay's work by laying another egg at night If electric lights are turned on after they have gone to roost, but most hens will 6trike when they discover their mistake and lay few eggs, day or night. Twelve hours on the roost and 12 hours In the scratching pen or nest is the ideal working schedule foi the productive hen. Dr. Hutt says TRtiSTEEii SALE IN BANKRl’FTCY. In the Matter o! George Alexander— A Bankrupt. This l* to give notice that the under signed trustee in bankruptcy wit, on the 17th day of March. 1930, at ii o'clock a ci. in the George A.exander Jewelrv ttore on LaFayette street In the Wool worth building, Shelby. North Carolina oiler lor sale to the higher,t bidder lo. cash, the complete stock of Jewelry, fix tures and other property belongjtg to the aforesaid bankrupt. Prospective bidden may examine the atockNby application u the undersigned trustee. This the 39U. day of February, 1930 J C. NEWTON. Mch 3 and 10 Trustee m Bankruptcy, ..OTICfc OF SERVICE OF SIMMONS BY PUBLICATION. 'Orth Carolina, Cleveland Countv in Super.or Court, Before the Clerk Josepn.ne Queen, plaintiff vcrsui A. T Queen. Notice U hereby given and pubHsheci that an action ae entitled above haa been jegun wherein the plaintiff, Josephine -Jueen is asking, through action duly fil ed in the superior court, for a divorce absolute lrom the bonds of matrimony, which action is pred.cated upon statu tory grounds, and the said A. T. Quee: will further take notice that he ta re quired to appear at the office of tin superior court of Cleveland county, ft. t at the court house on or before the filh day of March, 1930, and answer or de mur to the complaint In this action o. the plaintiff will apply for the relief de .handed In this cause. A. M. HAMRICK, -'*f*r 3 Clerk of Superior Court. SALE OF VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY. Under and by v.rtye oi the authori.y ronferred upon u* in a deed of t.uat ex ecuted by J. E. Street and wile. Laura A. Street on the 21st day of January', 1936 and recorded lu book 131, pane 57u we will on Saturday the 88th day of March. !M0 13 o'clock noon at the court house door .n Shelby. N.'C., Cleveland county, »all at public auction lor c5fh to the highest -udder the following laud, to wit AU that pleoe, parcel or tract of lard situate, lying and being In Number Pbur township, Cleveland county, state of North Carolina, and adjoining lande of J J. Wilkins, O. O.'Boone and W L. Plonk on the north, on the east by C. R. Palls, on the south by John 1'hoinbu.g, and being mors particularly described aa follows: Beginning at a black oak, W. L. Plonk's ne' thence with said line fa. 62 W. II poles to a stone: thence wish O G. Boones line N. 46 w. 7 poles to a etone; thence with J. J. Wilkins line south #7 w. 11* poles to a dogwood. thence with John Thornburgs line east 32Vi po.ee V> a stone; thence with the three lines of the school land north 5 E. 14 poles to a stone, north 85 E. 16 poles to a atone; thence 8, 15 w 18 poles to a atone In John Thornburgs line; thence with his line E 24',i poles to a pine thence 8 *5 R 49Vs poles to a stake In C. R Falla tine; thence with said line north 3 ear: 65 poles to the beg.nnlng, containing J4V« acres, more or less. Reference Is hereby made to that cer tain deed from D. D. Hambright and wife, Pearl Hambright to'j. E Street and wife, Laura A. Street, dated November 21, 1925 and recorded ta book 3-R at ovge 329. ThU sals u made by reason of the failure of J. E. Street and wife Laura A. Street to pay off and discharge the In debtedness secured by said deed of iriat. A dap >stt of 10 percent a IP be required of the purchaser at the sale. This the 2let day of Feor. »ry. 1930 FIRST NATIONAL COMPANY OP DURHAM, INC Trustee, formerly P.rrt ["’.tonal Trust Oompsnv Dur ham, N. C. Bynum B. Weathers, Atty. 4t 3c Star Advertising Pays 156, NEVER TOOK DRINK AND HAS BURIED 11 WIVES Istanbul.—"One hundred and fifty-six years old and never took a drink,’ la the boast of Zaro Agha, Turkey's longevity champion, who will abandon a job as bookkeeper at the city hali her at the end oi April to sail for New York at the invitation of the American Anti Alcohol society. The society Intends to exhibit the aged man throughout the Unit ed States, calling attention to the teetotaler's mental and physical vigor. Zaro, who has burled eleven wives, will leave his twelfth at Hi) Own Car. “I've been watching that me chanic for the last IS minutes. There's a man who knows his busi ness. He didn't split a drop of olj on the ground. He put down the hood gently, fastened it securely, and left no fingerprints on it. He wiped his hands on clean waste be fore opening the door, spread the clean cloth over the upholstery, meshed the gears noiselessly, and then drove slowly into the rtreet.' “Yes, that’s his own car." home when he embarks for Amer ica. Kinston.—Lenoir county is lead ing the way in tax reform in North Carolina, its “business administra tion” having reduced the current levy more than 60 cents from the previous year’s levy. Only two coun ties in the state have made great er proportionate reduction. Greer, 8. C.—Former students of Due West Women's college are Do ing urged by Ranees Wideman, chairman of the infirmary commit tee, to send in contributions to be used to furnish the newly complet ed Infirmary for the woman’s divi sion of Ersklne collet" 4 l y.j'w c £> 8/ c mi sfe? RESOURCES OVER FIVE MILLION. CONSIDER National Bank First THE MAN BEHIND THE BANK THE foundations of a bank arc more «K^n metal rid money; glass and gold. They are human too. The of a Bank Is the truest criterion of its merit—*the basis of judgment. The officers of this Bank are all men who have watched the commercial development of this community—men who are keenly alert to opportunities— who are ever ready to lend the helping hand to any project that bids fair to augment further the community's pros* THAT is why our Bank stands back of so many local business enterpris es. THAT is why we will give close attention to your ideas on business development and expsns* sion. CHAS. C. BLANTON, PRESIDENT RESOURCES OVER FIVE MILLION DOLLARS.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 3, 1930, edition 1
7
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