Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / July 7, 1930, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Only Half Of Farm Boys In School, Shown pnty On* Out of 11 Receives Traln Inr Which Will Help In Farm Work. Raleigh. June 26.—Figure* sent »ut by the federal board for voca Honal education show that of every 1000 farm boys *n North Carolina set.ween the ages of 14 and 20. "2 are sut of school and 48 are In school, iccordtng to Roy H. Thomas, state mpcrvtsor of vocational agriculture. The federal board for vocational education statistics show that the farm Boys between the ages of It and 20 number 111,830 and that they comprise 14.7 percent of the date’s entire male population. Of this number 54,065 are attending tchool while 57,884 are out of ichoo*;' \ Of the 54,006 Who are In school Only one out of 11 is receiving train* . big designed to prepare him for the •twines* of farming and life on the (arm. This specific training for lire »n the far mis being given by de partments of vocational agriculture in 154 high schools. A survey of 1,000 farm boys In 33 Kunties of the state shows that e average North Carolina farm |>©y out of school between the ages »fT4 and 21 Is about 18 1-2 years of sge and has an education midway between the seventh and eighth grade*. Of these boys out of school, I* percent (nearly two-thirds) work •n the farm as helpers, 28 per cent let a share of the crop, and eight !mf cent are part owners. The sur vey also reveals that of every 100 4»oys out of school on the farm now, pi left school to help at home; 41 Stopped on account of being dissat isfied with school; 81 left to make money; poor health and failure In ichocl work aatited six to leave, and only one of the 100 graduated from high school. DR. R. C. HICKS — DENTIST — Office Phone 421. Residence Isaac Shelby. Phone 74. special: LOW FARES Round-Trip SHELBY To Niagara Falla— $35.45 Tickets on Sale June 27. July 3, 11, 17. 25, 31; August 8, 14, 22, 28; Sept. 5, 11, 19, 2*. TO Atlantic City, N. J. $25.60 Tickets on Sale July 2, 8, 16, 22, 30; August 5,13,19, 27; September 2,10,16. Tickets Limited 18 Days. For Information Call Agent SEABOARD Constipation L, Troubles "I hav* used Black Draught aa a family [medicine for a good many years,” aaya Mrs. Sallie Laugh ran. of Huntdale, N. C. "I hava found it an excallant ram |edy for conatipation and the troubles (that follow it. I | have suffered fre quently from paa pains, and whan I am bothered that way I begin at once to take Black-Draught. Relief follow* quickly. 1 give Black-Draught to the children whan they era constipated, and it la not long until they are running around again.* Thousand* of others have reported good results from the use of this purely vegeta ble median*. Insist on the genuine Bedford's comnrgyioa. iuiobstio* w'ni<« I; ■tuooaatse who coed a' toiflo should taka Caeotn. Vsad over 50 years....... nwwmwrattnnnnrinnnBWBf Future Officers in Uncle Sam’s Army I New arrival# at the United State* Military Academy, West Point, N. Y„ march in*. *ome what racredly, from the gym nasium oalMin* to their bar* • Tacks after they had taken the ♦ oath of allegiance to the Na tional emblem. The “kaydete,” whose military career start# in earnest in September, will show marked Improvement in their marchin* rhythm one veer from now, when they will parade mere deeorooely. Onunttlnel XtmtMi! TIKE SUPPER TO HOME HIES • Special to The Star.) Double Shoals, July 7 —The farm er* have their crops m food condi tion. Cotton Is at Its best this dry weather. Sunday was a food day at the Baptist church a large crowd was present for the children's exercise, several visiting singers were pres ent. The Alexander quartet from near Shelby sang to the delight of all who heard them. A large crowd heard Dr. Zeno Wall of Shelby In the afternoon when he bought a great soul-stir ring message to an Appreciative au dience. Many visitors from various sections were present. Miss Florence Seism who Is at Boone In teacher training, spent last Saturday and Sunday at home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Seism. The W. M. S. of Double Shoals carried supper Sunday night to the Cleveland county home for the In mates of the home. Mrs. Sanders of Hamlet is spend ing the summer with relatives in the county, Mrs. Sanders Is a sister fb J. M. Green of Shelby "The World’s Reward.” (By Lloyd Mauney.l | It a a Jump and a run from the start to the end: ■ With the whole world frowning with enemy or friend, jThe bumps that you get are never repaid i I But heaped with misery on up to the grave. The best that you have Is laughed at in scorn You’re twisted and shoved from the day you are born, • The harder you try why the great er you fall Life in itself seeni3 nothing at all. You are lifted with laughter or low ered with tear But from the beginning the world gives a sneer. What you do that counts as a good or a gain Is twisted and lowered by a knave of a name. The world plays havoc with those that are weak Dealing injustice to the good as a sneak, The measure of Laughter is naught to the Tear The sunshine is blemished over weighted with fear. No matter the task on which you begin The world will buffet you on the chin. Leaving you trampled on the sward The way of the earth and the earth's reward. 666 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in S minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malarle In 3 days. 666 also in Tablets. 3br your Vacation COACH FARES j off To al 5««b(»fd pomu in^MuuncM Em of nh* MwnBfo Sodh/and r»cKjd»ng Cow OMnaft. St Loum and W*sivnf«r A fr* *nmphr* of **** W «eund Hno I* 'wn :r : r-r* ’ — Richmond __$13.12 Norfolk --$15.73 Washington __$16.88 Jacksonville_$18.58 Miami-$33.06 St. Petersburg .... $27.88 Any Seaboard Agent '.WJv H w*, j*Zi *7 m- *» <| Seaboard W Htt.t BMtwAV Off for Cruise in Southern Seas Count ui Count**# Foils Von . Luckner and the group of fifty boys on the four-masted schoon er Mopelia, just before they called on their two-months’ cruise in Central American waters. The German “sen devil” is in command of the fifty millionaires' son* and crew making the trip. tTafernntUMJ NmrMl) new Artmfnisrralor v Taken Reins of Office Colonel Amo* Walter Wright Woodcock, new prohibition ad ministrator, aa he appeared after being sworn into office as the ftret dry chief to serve in connection with the Department of Justice instead of the Treasury, as pre viously provided. (lateraetlensl k«tw>|) SPECIAL EXCURSION J FARES TO Georgia, Alabama, Mississ ippi and Louisiana FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1930 ROUND-TRIP FARES From SHELBY, N. C. Atlanta, Ga. __$6.75 Chattanooga, Tenn. „ $8.75 Birmingham, Ala. __ $8.75 Mobile, Ala.$21.75 Biloxi, Miss.$21.75 Gulf Port, Miss. ... $21.75 New Orleans, La. $21.75 Greatly Reduced Fares To Other Points. Ask Ticket Agents. “TRAVEL BY TRAIN SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM BLAME MOTHERS CHILDREN'S TEARS ■■■" \ ■ The raucous crying of babies, the greatest menace to their popularity, in many cases can be blamed upon mothers who themselves were cry-babies In chlhihood, in their teens and often after marriage, according to Ruth Moore Morris*, writing in the County Home, “If mother* would realize the true significance and insignificance of tears, weeping, except for legiti mate and honorable purposes, could be stamped out of the race,"’ says the wTtter. “When a child has learn ed in Infancy, the power of tears, they will be use to solicit sympathy for mlladjustraent and sheer awk wardness, rather than for emotion al relief. "A girl will cry because she can not dance as well as older girls. She will weep when her popular elder sister dashes off to parties and she is left alone to the doubtful pleas ure of sleep or a book. “If the well meaning parents still persist in their earlier attitude and pay too much attention to her tears they become an even more fixed habit than they were in early child hood and the weeping adolescent girl becomes the weeping woman. “Women have not only early train ing to combat but all the history of the race—the idea of woman as a weakling and weeping as a neces sary feminine trait. Not so long ago if women didn't do a certain amount of crying they were considered emo tionally Incoherent. Clinics are full of women who have wept their way into hysteria. They are difficult to cure because in the early stages they don’t want to be cured. They means of avoiding life, of not look ing it sanely and squarely m the face.’* Lorraine: Do you serve lobsters here? - ■ Waitress, Sure, we serve anyone; sit down. HOSIERY HOSPITAL, Inc. (of Charlotte, N. C.) Braheh At Mrs. Harmon’s Hemstitch ing Shop (Under Chocolate Shop) Hosiery A Knitted Goods Neat ly Repaired. All ilow Must Be Laundered. PROHIBITION TO BE 1932 FEATURE «*> . (CHARLES P. STEWART.) Washington—Old as he Is, for mer Senator James A. Reed of Missouri really looks like a reason able possibility for the next demo cratic presidential nomination. Due to the two term precedent with President Hoover on his first four years In the white house. Dwight W. Morrow does not look like so much of a 1933 possibility at the head of the Republican ticket— but only just enough of a bare pos sibility to be thrilling. However, the point is sure to be raised that they are impossible op ponents anyway, because both are wet. Strictly speaking, are they?— either of them? Reed certainly displayed a dispo sition to flirt with prohibition In 1923 and undoubtedly would have done it,. If It had showed sufficient promise of giving him an adequate majority in the Houston -convention. To this day wets growl about his attitude there. Morrow is on record as unoppos ed to dry legislation in principle, having declared against it only on a national scale; not as a statewide proposition. Still, admit that they are wets— for argument's sake. As has been recognized hitherto, the nomination of Jtin Reed and Dwight Morrow on rival president ial tickets (supposing such a thing) would upset some theories which at present are accepted almost as gps pel. One of them is the theory that the wet-and-dry issue overshadows nearly if not quite every other is sue in this country today. Undeniably it intensely interests the whole country. But politically? How many large scale candidacies does it decide? Little ones, yes—spottily. But those of the first magnitude? The theory is that a bad wet in variably defeats a good dry in a wet bailiwick; that a bad dry al ways beats a good wet in a dry one; that whenever any other problem needs to be solved, the wet-and dry problem regularly gets in the way and sidetracks it; thus that every election hinges on the eigh teenth amendment and Volsteadism that no progress can be made in the face of prohibition. Let's test this theory. Assume (for purposes of our test only) that Dwight Morrow and Jim Reed, as wets, both, should oppose one another in 1932 on the Republi can and Democratic tickets, re spectively. The drys assuredly would put a dry independent into the field. Does anyone believe that any very formidable number of Repub licans and Democrats would desert Mr. Morrow and former Senator Reed to vote the dry third party ticket? I doubt whether anyone except a few ultra drys will say that, in such a situation, the dry candidate would get, in proportion to popula tion changes, a materially larger vote than the third party dry used to poll in pre-prohibition days. In those days the third party dry was a negligible consideration. Under the prohibition regime a third party wet would have been and would yet be a negligible con sideration-regardless of the in tensity of wet-and-dry sentiment— and the wets know it, or they would have put one up long ago. And if a couple of wets were to be named now by the two major parties, would not the third party dry candidate again be a negligible consideration? Verily, t believe so. Moreover, I think Dwight Mor row would have been nominated for the senate in New Jersey even it he had not declared against na tional prohibition. Representative Franklin W. Fort would not then have been a con tender. Ex-Senator Joseph S. Fre linghuysen would have had the wet running to himself, and my guess is that Mr, Morrow, as the better man would have beaten him—even in New Jersey. Candidates do generally align themselves with what they believe to be their home folk’s wet-or-dry preferences, but there are a few ex ceptions—and they seem to win just the same, if they are due to win on other issues. Montana is wet enough to have repealed its state enfrocement act and its two senators—:Tom Walsh and Burton K. Wheeler—are drys of long standing. Dry Michigan (ex cept for Detroit) sends a wet—Jim Ccuzens—as well as a dry—Arthur H. Vandenberg—to the senate. I defy anyone to find a person who has said worse things of prohibition than Senator Coleman L, Blease-*. and he hails from bone-dry South Carolina. If there were more politician! with the nerve of Senators Tom Walsh, Wheeler. Cousens and Blease I’m betting there would be more exceptions. - If all this is true, there is no sense in trying to line one big par ty up la the dry and the other in the wet column. The wet-and-dry political theory goes flooey. Prohibition is not a political issue —just as the straddling politicians ?11 have been extending senator smoot To Wed Widow In Utah Senator Reed Smoot of Utah and Mrs. Alice Taylor Sheets (above), prominent church and social lead* er of Salt Lake City, will be mar ried shortly and probably leave on July 19 for a honeymoon in Honolulu. tlnUrutlosal N»w»r«l) Joins in Welcome to ' Trtns-Oceanic Flyers Miss Nancy Hopkins, nice* of Lady Astor, in the cockpit of her Kitty-Hawk plane after she flew, from Washington, D. C., to Roose ivelt Field to welcome Major jKingsford-Smith and bis gallant ,erew, (international KmarMl) A Priest at 63^ Tortona, Italy—-Once 'a teacher of mathematics and then an army of ficer who distinguished himself In African campaigns, Don Carlo Pel izzi has become a priest at the age of 65. He delayed taking orders be cause he was supporting two sisters, now dead. Cotton Is dying in Almance coun ty and Is being plowed up and tire land planted to corn. Dangerous Business Our stomach and digestive systems are lined with membrane which is delicate, sensitive and easily injured. It is dangerous business, then, to use medicines containing harsh drugs, salts or minerals, when we are con stipated. In addition to the possibility of injuring the linings of our digestive system?! heee medicines give only tem porary relief and may prove habit form ing. The safe way to relieve constipation is with Herbine, the cathartic that is made from herbs, and acts in the way nature intended. You can get Herbine at PAIL WEBB & SON AND CLEVELAND DRUG CO. (mdv.) Leads the quality field Anheuser-Busdi Budweiser Barley-Malt Syrup LIGHT OR DARK RICH IN BODY NOT.BITTER L executrix's notice. Notice 1* Hereby given that I have thl* day qualified a> executrix of the estate of W. W. Richards, late of Cleveland jounty, North Carolina and that aH people having claims agalnat the said estate mult present tame, properly prov. en, to nve on or bafeve the loth day ot June, 1131, or thta notice will be pleaded in bar of any recovery thereof. All par ties owing the aatd estate are asked to make Immediate settlement to the under signed. This June 18th, 1030. ELLA RICHARDS. Lawndale, RFD, Executrix estate ot W. W. Richards. 6t June I6p. NOTICE. In the superior Court. North Carolina, Cleveland County. Pleat Smith, PlalntlXf v*. Kffle Smith. Defendant. The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior court of Cleveland countty, N. C.. to secure a divorce absolute on account of adultry on the Part of the defendant, and that the' laid defendant will further take notice that she is required to appear before the clerk of the Superior court of Cleveland county at Shelby, N. C. on or befori tin 18th day of July. 1930. and answer or demur to the complaint of the platnttff filed In theXafeove action or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded In the complaint. This the 18th day of June, 1930. A. M HAMRICK, Clerk Superior Court. Jas. Cline, Atty. for the plaintiff. It June 18c Luke Reilly Says, “the Rat Died Before Reaching the River.” “Since moving near the river two years ago, we’ve always used HAT SNAP. Watched a vicious water rat, nibbling at RAT-SNAP outside the house. About 15 minutes ltfter he darted off for the water to cool his burning stomach, but he died before reaching iP’'Three sizes, 35c, 65c, 65c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Suttle’s drug Store, Cleveland Drug Company. ' ' adv. Have Your Eyes Examined* j Regularly DRS. H. D. & R. L. WILSON OPTOMETRISTS Office Over Paul Webb & Son’s Drug Store. —■————# Star Advertising Pays -BILLIARDS Cleveland Cigar Store Hotel Charles Bldg- Corner Trade and W. Warren Sts. L -* CALL MAUNEY BROS. For prompt and ef ficient RADIO SERVICE Parts carried for all popular makes. “Service Is Our , Specialty.” — Phone 518 - DAN FRAZIER Civil Engineer And Surveyor Farm Surveys, Sub-divis ions, Plats and General Engineering Practice. - Phone 417 - T. W. Ebeltoft Grocer and Book Seller Phone —• 82 .— BOILING SPRINGS COLLEGE —. An accredited Junior College "In The Heart of The Pied mont." A capable faculty. Four years of high school and two years of college work. Special courses in vocal and in strumental Music, Art and Expression. Excellent college training offered at reasonable rates. For catalogue and in formation apply to PROF. J. D7 HUGGINS, Dean, DR. ZENO WALL, President. Boiling Springs, N. C. (F=-'- ^.. " QUEEN CITY COACH LINES FOR, ASHEVILLE, CHARLOTTE, WILMINGTON FAYETTEVILLE. FOR ASHEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: Leave SHELBY:—9:45 a. in.; 3:45 p. m.; 8:45 p. ra. FOR CHARLOTTE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—7:50 a. m.; 10:50 a. ra.; 12:50 p. m.; 4:50 p. m.; (6:50 p. m., Saturday and Sunday Dnly,) 9:50 p. m. FOR WILMINGTON AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—10:50 a. m.; FOR FAYETTEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—7:50 a. m.: 10:50 a. m.; FOR FURTHER INFORMATION — PHONE 450 QUEEN CITY COACH COMPANY ■» Roadie* Bedbug* Ants Motbs Gulf Refining Co. ■
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 7, 1930, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75