Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / July 11, 1930, edition 1 / Page 2
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Cur MonprI Of Low l)e grce Becomes Leader Of Ook Tack At Cole New York Telegram Cuffed around. reje< ted and soorn ed by all who knew him, old Snooze Mouse, a colore.ss Mongrel and a cross between an Eskimo and a wolf husky, blind In one eye rna with no physical charms whatever, Her bask- i tag in the cool breezes of the North River aboard Admiral Byrd's flag ship, the City of New Yoik happy in the knowledge that virtue always triumphs in the end ai.d into liis iimmimmmiimimmimiimmiimi Sets the standard for every home use AnfcwwBmA Budweiser Barley-Malt Spup UNBHT OR DAMt IHCM IN BODY NOT BITTER own. f -j Old Snooze Mouse is now the beloved pet of Christ Braathen, the wrai herbeaten msm-of-a-few-wordt, Norwegian ski expert o( the Byrd expedition, who explained today why Old Snooze Mouse happens to be on the Byrd ship Instead o! re maining with his seven former mates somewhere In New Zealand. "Old Snooze was the or'neriest, dpg that I had over wen," said Qraatheu. “He was among a pack of eight that Commander Byrd gave me to handle after we reached the Ice Barrier. Became Dog Driver "I went with the expedition a an authority on skis, but it turned out that 1 was to a dog team so I began to get my dogs into shape. I took one look at Old Snooze and I felt that he was hopeless. Fact of the matter is. he was such an awful looking mongrel that I felt like cuf fing him every time I saw him. (Sal 1 just stuck him at tlu end of the team. He gave no cvldsnre of intelli gence at all and the others seemed to have him. "I worked with that pack for Weeks, 4>ut I couldn't get a, dog to work as the leader. I used all the swear words in the dictionary. None of them had any sense oi harmony of leadership. "Our first long trip Over the ice was facing us and in desperation 1 got up early one morning and mow. j as a joke on myself I ncoked Old Snooze Mouse up a* the leader.' Finds Real header Then, Braathen, raid he got the Bladder Irregular? If functional Bladder Irritation disturbs your sleep,-or causes Burn ing or Itching Sensation, Back ache, I,eg Pains, or muscular aches, making you feel tired, depressed, and discouraged, why not try the C'ystex 48 Sour Test? Don't give up. Oet C'ystex today. Put it to the test, See for yourself how quickly it works and what it does. Money back If it doesn't bring quick improvement, and satisfy you com pletely. Try Cystex today. Only 60c. Buttle Drug Store, (adv> KINGS MOUNTAIN WOMAN Praises Pearson's Herb Tonic and System Cleanser. Mr8._Li.lHe' E. Reynolds writes as follows: “For a long time 1 suffered dreadful stomach tremble, and I had in digestion and 1 was so nervous I could hardly stand my children around me. 1 would have dreadful swimmy headed spells and I was in an awful run down condition and bothered lots with constipation, and 1 began taking PEARSON’S HERB TONIC AND SYSTEM CLEANSER taking several bottles, and now T am doing all mv work and I feel like a new woman. 1 heartily recommend PEARSON’S HERB TONIC to any ono suffering as I did. IMS tar LtfRB Ton.r Svitcm ueanim “MRS. LILLIE E. REYNOLDS, Kings Mountain. N. C, R.F. D. 4, BOX 25.” 'PAUL WEBB & SON, DRUGGISTS. SHELBY, N. C. SUPERLATIVE PbOUR, CAROLINA’S FINEST— »Ci jUAKiW cKW>LJ#4 MADE tAfclt ROLLER MIU. CO. SHELBY. NX. UMVtt \ tit- V. * m '•"» When Another Flour Is Offered Remember That A Sub statute Is “'The Right Article, Made of the Wrong Materials,” Eagle Roller Mill Co. I Roidsville.—J. JR. Grogan, rural mail carrier No. 3, wound up his 27th year last week. In those 27 years he has used six bicycles, six horses, three autos, and one day in July, 1909, lie walked 19 miles of his route,, traveling in that time a little over 193,000 miles. surprise of his life. Old Snooze knew what "gee and haw” meant. He threw his ears back to catch every wo: a coming from the mouth of his driver. Ana lie had to the nth degree that in tangible something which husky dr!-, vers call “leader's sense " That husky would make the other dogs follow him by giving a peculiar tug t" ids harness. Sometimes, if things weren’t working right, he would turn back and mound the others dogs up. The slightest, jerk on the reins would pull Old Snooze up with an alert questioning look. “That old fellow was a gem,'' Bra athen said, his eyes glowing With pride “Prom then on he was the leader of the pack And how he worked_those others dogs! He must have travelled 5,000 miles over that ice barrier with sleds.” Also a Fighter But il Sftooze Mouse was a leader he was also a fighter.-And strange as it may seem, he kept peace among the pack because he was not too proud to fight. He was always, Braathem said, having the end battles r mong the huskies until one eventful high1 Old Snooze licked the whole bunch. But, the husky's real ingenuity w'as not displayed, hi> master de clared. until the flagship docked nt New Zealand on its return trip. There all the sled dogs w ere to be taken off and Old Snooze Mouse was broken-hearted. He loved Braathen as much as the driver loved him. Thereupon Snooze took matters into his own hands. “Believe it--or not,” said the ex plorer, “that dogwent ever to the anchor and deliberately got. his har ness tied tip in it co that he might remain on the ship. He figured, after watching the men about the ship, that the anchor Would hold him. “When X saw that,—well—I made up my mind that Old Snooze Mouse and 1 wmuld be pah for life. Just an soon as X got located Old Snooze Is going to want for anything. I would n't trade him for a million dollar*. . * Cucumbers For Pickling ! Craven county farmers delivered under contract, to the local pickling factory last week “I don't believe there is a medi cine made that will compare with the Saigon treatment. When" I Win. LEE KELLETT •turned seventy’ three years ago and rheumatic pains hit me all over and I had to use a cane to get about, I realised I was in a ‘bad way.’ I went on a strict diet for two years, and took medicines regularly for my stomach add constipation. Nothing helped me until I started Sargon. I haven't a sign of rheumatism now, never have to use a cane any more and my feet and legs are as good as they were 20 years ago. Sargon Pills regulated me perfectly. They act easy and natural, which is some thing I can't say for any other laxa tive I ever used."—William Lee Kel Tltt, 300 E. Coffee 81, Greenville, a. C. Cleveland Drug Co., agents. Adxxitt' Contract Children?t Disease* Adults can, and do, contract many children’s diseases. And, usually, they ■offer from them much mors than children do. For instance, many adults contract worms, an ailment usually associated with children. Sometimes they suffer intensely and take expen «v* medical treatments, without reali sing that worms are the cause of their troubles. Yet, the symptoms are the same as in children, loss of appetite and weight, grinding the teeth ana rest leas sleep, itching of the nose and anus, ana abdominal pains. And, the same medicine that mray and harmlessly ctx« pels round and pin worms from children will do the same for adults — White’s Cream Vermifuge, which yuu can get at PAUL WEBB & SON AND CLEVELAND DRUG CO. l»Jv.£ • - - wU-._ ......-*u*«**u_u.X. u % £ I Hendersonville.—T hey are planning a new church at Kd neyvllle, this eonnty, and Will Rogers, noted humorist, has contributed |25 towards Its erection. Mrs. John Branch, a member of the Edneyvllie church, wrote Will, as well as persons In 12 states asking for subscriptions towards the building of the church. She asked Will if he knew where she could get $100 and he sent her a check for $25. NEW YORK'S DIN SHATTERS NERVES New York, —The increasing din of New York’s street traffic subways, radio loudspeaker and steamboat whistles threatening the health and efficiency of Che city, the first report of ihc noise abatement commission said. A state of emergency exists, the commission reported, and unless the noise Is reduced at once the health and efficiency of the city will suffer Careful study and reserch work disclosed, the report continued, "that the continual pressure of strident sound to which New Yorkers are sub jected tends to produce impairment of hearing to introduce harmful strain upon the nervous system leading to loss of efficiency of work ers and thinkers, and finally to in terfere so gravely with sound, re freshing sleep that rest Is difficult, and in s6me cases impussible.” The commission^ appointed last November, said that steamship re presentatives have promised coop eration in eliminating unnecessary whistling by harbor craft and owners of large trucking fleets have promised aid in lessening promiscu ous blowing of automobile horns. Subways are trying out noiseless turnstiles and a curb has been, placed on radio loudspeakers In :'ne commission’s anti-noise campaign. Women Prisoners Doubled. <F*rom The Literary Digest.) The emancipation of women sees mare women behind the bars. That is the paradoxlal situation observed in New York City, where the number of women criminals in the municipal and penal institutions has more than doubled during the last 10 years. Figures submitted by Richard C. Patterson, commissioner of correc tion, in his annual report, dlsclosa that while in 1920 there were 1,150 women inmates, in 1929 the number had Increased to 2.391. He says that the problems of the woman defender can no longer bo regarded as of slight importance in relation to the broad general prob lem of crime. They Can Afford ’Em. A bricklayer said to a foreman on a new Job; "I'd like to work here, but I can't find a place to park my car, The foreman replied: "I guess you won’t do. This is a high class Job and we want only bricklayers who have chauffeurs. HOSIERY HOSPITAL, Inc. (of Charlotte, N. C.) Branch At Mrs. Harmon’s Hemstitch ing Shop (Under Chocolate Shop) Hosiery & Knitted Goods Neat ly Repaired. All Hose Must Be Laundered. PELLAGRA sap be cured. Have you toy of these trap Mow) Tired sod drowsy feeling with head •nhss sod depression: skit) rough: breaking «»» or cropttoas; ton toooth. tongue, lips *£d throat ftsnvng red: osocb mucus snd efebfctag; indigestion sod nausea fttjing sanatory; diarrhea or constipation. Write (or fy-pnge book ensiled FREE in plain, scaled W”W*W W. J. McCRARY, Inr SPECIAL LOW FARES SHELBY TO Washington D. C. _ $24.85 Baltimore, Md_#27.03 Philadelphia, Pa. __ $32.20 Atlantic City, N. J. $35.31 New York, N. Y. „ $37.10 Detroit, Mich._$40.03 Chicago. III._$44.85 Cleveland. Ohio_$41.68 Toledo, Ohio_$36.93 AND RETURN Tickets on sale ever} Sat urday. June, July, August, Final limit 30 days. < \ For Information Call On Any Seaboard Agent SEABOARD Small Town Life Defended By Sherwood Anderson, Novelist (New York Herald Tribune.) Sherwood Anderson, who is one of the most superb and most con fused philosophers of American life —superb because America is superb and confused because America is confused, too—writes of the cotton mill towns of the South lin the July Scribner's. His article Is a hymn to the machine, a hymn to the village swimming pool, and an indictment of Sinclair Lewis. Many a dapper young critic, writ ing of the American literature of the 1920\s, brackets the names of Sherwood Anderson and of Sinclair Lewis. Anderson published "Wines burg, Ohio," In 1919, and Lewis "Main Street” in 1920. These books seemed to express a common revolt against the narrowness of life in the American small town. But Lewis continued to write diatribes, while Anderson bought a country news paper and returned to the small town life whence he had sprung. He I loves the small town. He wants oth er people to love it. He loves peo ple and wants other people to love them. The hate that crops out in Lewis'writlngs pains him. The whole modern crop of hate literature pains him. To be quite In line bow,” he writes painedly, "a man should he quite hopeless of everything Amer ican.” Of the small town. Of the cotton mill. And he likes them. "On the whole,” this superb, con fused philosopher says, “I like the people X have found in American small towns. ... I like to hang about 'the courthouses of small1 towns, go to ball games there, go fishing with small-town men in the spring and hunting with them in the fall. X like to go to county fairs and the Fourth of July celebrations. At night when the moon is shin ing, I like to get with some small town man and take a walk with him on the country road, preferably in the hills.” Sinclair Lewis wrote of Marion, N. C., as well as of Sauk Center, Minn., a sort of newspaper pamph let, burning with indignation. An derson does not like it. “You can’t quarrel with its facts,” he say»; ‘only It does npt tell enough facts." What Lewis sees the mill doing 'o people is not all It is doing; and even the Southern mill owner is much more than Lewis , saw. Mia workers, mill owners—all are, to An derson, people to understand and get to like; he resents writing that makes of any of them more people to hate. It is very con/used, this article of Sherwood Anderson’s, made up of nostgalia for the swimming-hole days of his boyhood, of the kind of vast content that country sunshine gives and of that balance, delicacy and truth that lie In the machine. His is no sugared “good old days” attitude; he smells the sweat in the factory town and writes of it. But he likes the people who sweat; he does more than complain of the heavy atmosphere. And perhaps thi» Sher wood Anderson that is growing witn in the shell of the man who wrote Winesburg, Ohio,” is a portent of of something that is happening to the soul of America—as significant a portent as “Winesburg” itself was back in 1919. Certainly his under IT AGE 119 SHE ENJOYSJjER SMOKE Mrs. Belle Ryans, born in 1811, when the ronqoests of Na poleon was news.' sat on her porch in Savannah Saturday and philosophised as becomes such maturity. Life has unfolded itself gently for her, and without excitement, al though she was young when this re public was young, a baby when Perry defeated the British at Lake Erie, a young woman when Taylor led his Americans against Santa Anna, in Mexico, a mother when Sherman marched through Georgia. She and those who knew her caid she was born in Tennessee on March 4. 1811. She married Bill McBee at 15, in Knoxville, and lived with him 75 years. They had five chil dren. Two sons were killed iis Con federate soldiers, and all her chil dren are dead now. McBee died when she was 80, and she married John Ryans, 79. He, too, is dead. In fact, all her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren are dead. A great great grandson lives in Florida and sjie lives here with her great great great granddaughter. Mrs. Ryans has not yearn for the horse and buggy days. ‘‘Automobiles,” she said. “are much better. And airplanes? Now standing of Main street, for all its confusion, seems far more complete far more just, far nearer the truth, than any picture that can be gain ed from the shar superficialties col lated by Sinclair Lewis, that’s traveling. I have never been in one, they won't let me, but i would like to fly. "Modern youth? Everybody ask* me about flappers and airplanes. Well, they both fly high. I have no patience with short-skirted, ciga rette-smoking girls. Now, a good old pipe—" And she took a draw from tiers. JUI »»y* * .^iVyyf. * ♦. t.,i B These Hotels ; Offer Superior Aero nun o flat ions for « .Your Next Visit to WASHINGTON, D. C. Martinique 10th St. at >1 Northwest—Ideat |' lor Motorists Slngrlb With bath SU;t‘0 to St.Of Doable with hath Sfl.Ott to <0 ^ Hamilton Hotel 11th at & Street—In the lirar- ft of the (tty ; Single **ith bath S.i.m to jAM Double with bath 35,00 to fji.6* - CAIRO. HOTEL ; Single with bath $u,00 to $&50 v|ue St. nt Kith-Wtshlnftoir* tj 0 1'allcvt Building Double with bath M.uo to $6.0i HOME OWNED STORES You Wouldn’t go to town in a one-horse shay, Would You? r COURSE, v«nst wouldn't! h’s much too siov> ... too tiresome . . . taxi old-fashioned? They’re the same rea sows why the modern housewife has dis carded the old way of buying groceries ... because it’s quicker, more pleasant, and more modern to shop the Q. S. S. way! I Why trudge about in torrid temperatures when the QUALITY SERVICE STORE has everything you need . . . at the prices you want to pay? You wouldn’t go to town in a one horse shay - . * why not shop the MODERN wav? _ MORTON’S IODIZED SALT Round Pkg. ... 9c F. F. V. Chocolate Drop Cookies, lb.35c SUNSHINE SALT1NES, lb. pkg..23c WHITE HOUSE COFFEE, lb.....42c Armour’s Banner Brand Sausage, 1 !/2-lb can 31 c Armour’s Cheese, Daisy or Lone Horn, lb. .. 28c r I I THE BETTER GRADES! Carolina Made, Plain, 24-lb. Bag ..;.... $1.00 ISAAC SHELBY, Plain, 24-lb. Bag ..... 90c COMO LILY, Self-Rising, 24-lb. Bag .... 90c FLOUR QUEEN ] CHARLOTTE . Peanut Butter Pound Jar .... 29c' LIPTON’S TEA 1-4 lb. Pkg. .... 25c BEACON LIGHT COFFEE Per Pound ... 30c Van Camp’s Pork & Beans, large can 23c BECKER’S Master Loaf, 3 Loaves.25c BOST’S CAKE, Oven-Fresh, Per lb.24c' BORDEN’S MILK, Tall .... 10c Small .. 5c EAGLE CORN MEAL. 10-lb. Bag.33c MATCHES, 3 Regular 5c Packages.10c Stanback Headache Powders 4 pkgs. for 32c BLACK FLAG insecticide Pint can . 45c P. &. G. SOAP “White Soap Makes White Clothes Whiter” 5 cakes for 21 c I CHIPSO - Large Package.23c U1LL D FULL DRESS hUi^L' uvvwtu STORES
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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July 11, 1930, edition 1
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