Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / March 18, 1931, edition 1 / Page 9
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(Special to The Star.) *?arl. Mar. 17.—Messrs. Rufus Moss and Vernon Camp, of Taylors, S. C, spent the week-end with home folks. j Mrs, Arthur Mints of Charlotte spent Sunday with her father, Mr. R P. Francis. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Sepaugh and Mrs. Odell Sepaugh spent Sunday in Rock Hill, S. C. the guests of Mrs. Henry Sepaugh. Mrs. B. Austell and Miss Sallfe Bettis motored to Charlotte Thurs day of last week to hear Dr. Truett. Mrs. Lizzie Roberts and daugh ter. Azelia, of Shelby, are at the bedside of Mr. R. P. Francis. He is not much Improved. Misses Jessie Beachum and Pau line Honeycutt of Charlotte spent the week-end at the home of Mr and Mrs. John Beachum. Our Sunday school is progressing nicely under the able management of our Supt., Mr. C. E, Jones. Sun day school ner.t Sunday at 10 \ o’clock and preaching Sunday even- | ing at 7 o'clock-Everyone is cordial- j ly invited. j Miss Vivian Proctor returned home j Sunday after spending a few days j with her sister, Mrs. R. H. Jones,; near Blacksburg. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Surratt and J daughter, Grace. and Mrs. II. P. Haas and children motored to Pied mont Spriygs, S. C. Sunday after- j hocn. Ellenboro Man Wins Poultry.Show Money • Special to The Star.) Ellenboro. Mar. 17,-r-A- u n\ ult of exhibiting his prize White and Partridge Wyandotte chickens at the Central Florida exposition re cently held at Orlando, A. S. Har rlll won a total of $47.00 In cash. In addition to winning about all the prizes in the classes in which he exhibited he was awarded the honor of having the best cockrel in the show. Mr. Harrill has been exhibiting chickens for about twenty years dur ing which time he has won between $2,000 to $3,000. Oklahoma City.—Three Oklahoma City scientists reported that 18 months of intensive study of paraly sis caused from drinking impure ex tract of Jamaica ginger had result ed in discovery of no cure and only slight hope of beneficial treatment. A report signed by Dr. L. A. Tur ley and Dr. H. A .Shoemaker of the Oklahoma university school of med icine, and Dr, D. T. Bowden, former director of the state laboratories, said tricresyl phosphate had been isolated as the drug which crippled hundreds In the South and South west last year. They said the chem ical “destroys nuclei or nerve cells pennanetly.” ■ Short Shots Hogs and lambs are both doing better on the produce exchange. On the stock exchange, when the hogs win the lambs generally lose.— American Lumberman. That twenty-million-dollar relief fund is to be loaned out upon agri cultural property. Our rulers in their infinite wisdom have decided that what the distressed farmer nee's is another mortgage,—The New York er. 'rhe Russian workman, forced to quit a job he likes and work where the bosses need him must rejoice in the fact that he is no longer slave of a czar.—Brooklyn Eagle. TRUSTEE'S SALE. By virtue ol those two certain deeds of trust executed to me on the 15th day of March, 1S30, and recorded In book 166. oases 114 and 115 of the office of the register for Cleveland county. N. C.. to secure en Indebtedness therein described, and default having been made In the pay ment of the Indebtedness thereby secured 1 will sell to the ntghest bidder at the court house door In Shelby, N. C., on, Saturday, April 18, 1631, at 18 eeUek M. at within legal hours the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: 1st lot: Situated In the S. W. square of the town of Shelby. N. c. and being that lot conveyed to M. A. Spangler and J. L. Buttle by Mabel Branton and husband, R H. Branton by deed recorded In book 3-U page 148 of the office of the register for Cleveland county, N. C.. reference being hereby made to said deed for description by metes and bounds. and lot: Being situated tn the eastern portion of the town of Shelby. N. C., and being lots Nos. 7 and 8 of mlock A of prop erty as shown by plat of same made by D. R. 8. Frailer, C. E., in December, 1634. and recorded In book — page 80 of the office of the register for Cleveland county. N. C.. to which map and record reference Is hereby had for better description and Identification of said lots. Terms of sate: Cash (he Mth dey of April, l*jl. B. T. FALLS, Trustee. _«« Mar 18c JOB PRINTING OF aH kinds at lower prices than you have ever paid. Phone 11 or 4-J and let us give you an estimate o n your next printing order. Automatic presses, a c c u r a t e count. tf-24pj Clothiers Pick Perfect Man and Design Summer Dance Suit O * • m m it Before Clothes Can “Make the Ma..,” the Man Must Have Figure and the Knack of Wearing Thera—Despite Conventions, Average Man Is “Well Dressed’* If He’s Comfortable. qJohn Tekpre (°RJ MCE of SEafes&.aagsha-,&i Pav>cond Duncan James' J. Waemer. j New York.—When the Clothing [Designers Executive association met recently In New York, that august body set the machinery in motion for the annual attempt at mascu line clothing reform. One of the pur poses of the convention was accom plished when the committee select ed the "perfect man” from a field of 300 applicants. The jrinner of this singular title is John Tempre, 28, of New York. According to the C. D. E. A., Mr. Tempre has the ideal fig ure for the correct wearing of clothes. And to prove if they mod eled a new summer afternoon dance suit on the lines of his perfect frame. This business of wearing clothes correctly is a subject that should be included in high school curricu lum along with the subjects that equip the pupil with the means for acquiring the clothes. Some men can don a $20 suit and look as if they had just stepped out of the pages of a sartorial magazine. Others are specially tailored by ex perts yet give the impression of having slept.iu their clothes. It Is this art of carrying his rai ment that has earned for Adolphe Menjou the title of the best dressed man in moviedom. Not that Mr. Menjou hasn't the very best duds that money can buy; it is said that the star could change his complete outfit three times a day for a year without wearing the same suit twice. Americans, particularly New York ers, regard Mayor James J. Walker, affectionately known as "Jimmy”, as the peak of sartorial perfection. No one has ever seen Hizzoner ap pear otherwise than as if he had just- been unpacked from a band box. Like Mr. Menjou, Jimmy, is a past master in the art of carrying j his clothes, and from the sales of ffis faultless-footgear to the crown of his inimitably tilted hat he is the last word in style. Bui it is to his Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales, that the honors for the greatest influence of men's fashions must go. Prince Eddie is considered one of the world’s fore most connoisseurs and leaders of masculine styles. He has but to wear a certain type of collar, hat or tie and the youth Of the world will follow his lead. Every once in a while a move ment is started roiling to make the male fashion-minded, but, so far, they have all ended in that conserv ative creature just sticking to the old tried and true standard. Last summer an attempt was made to popularize shorts for hot weather wear. It was doomed to failure from the moment of its in ception f®r the simple reason that men’s knees crave privacy. They do net lend themselves to publicity, lacking ns they do the beautiful’ rounded symmetry that distin guishes the limb of the female* of the species. After all, why bother about styles? The term ‘ well-dressed man" is merely a matter of viewpoint. The average man considers himself wen dressed if his clothing is neat and comfortable and he is quite hapDy If allowed to follow his natural In clinations in the way of what he shall wear. Raymond Duncan, brother of the late Isadora Duncan, has emanci pated himself from the slavery of clothes. He makes his own and they consist of a long togalike gar ment, a pair of sandals and a piece of string around his head. The pur pose of the last named article isn’t quite clear but accuracy forbids its omission. Mr. Duncan in that ‘out fit looks like a carbon copy of an old Roman senator, who would want to resemble Jimmy Walker when it’s so easy to look like Julius Caesar? Even Alfonso’s worst . enemies haven’t put a bonus bill up to him —Boston Transcript. Gin Orgy Death Trial Starts The trial has opened at Val- i paraiso, lnd.t of Virgil Kirkland, who is charged with the slaying of 18-year-old Arlene Draves. The police allege that after a party, at which gin flowed freely, Kirkland and four other youths criminally attacked Miss Draves, Being unable to arouse her, they took the girl to a doctor. On discovering she was dead, the doctor notified the police. Pic ture shows, left, the late Arelcna Draves. Upper right, Judge Grant Grumpacker. who is hear ing the trial; lower right, Virgil Kirkland tn court. Announcement We have just added Standard Westing house and Hotpoint Ranges to our line and we are prepared to give you the lowest prices on these well known Electric Ranges, HOT WEATHER is just around the corner. Prepare for it by keeping the Kitchen cool with an Elec tric Stove and Majestic Refrigerator. Pendleton’s Music Store Seniors Lead On Honor Roll Here •CONTINUED PHOM PAGE ONE i Hamrick. Grady Dover, Forrest (Hass. Elizabeth Fulls, Dora Mc Swuln, Mildred McArthur, Etolse McArthur. Ada Wall, George Mor gan, J. D. Hambright, Evans IJickey. Jane Washburn, Jack Baber. Marlon school—Jack Spake, James 31y Hamrick. Hugh Mauney, Pau line Bridges. Virginia Hill, Joe Spake, Charles Spake, Lillian Cline, Angelina Isza, Evangeline Palmer, Virginia Quinn, Willie Jean Robin »on, Anna Lou Toms, Helen Brid ges, Katherine Bridges, Clara Lee Fitch, Virginia Hurt ness, Benjamin Gold, Virginia McMurry. Sara Now ton, Elvu Ann Thompson, Ned Bast, Lnmar Dover, Eugene Tlddy, Brjan Borders, Shirley Blanton, Helen Mauney, Margaret Nell Putnam, Betty Tlddy. Emma Joe -Beam, Pau llire Bess, Margaret Dorsey, Rose mary Faudel. Jna* Lewis Forney, Julia Smith, Sue Wilson, Walter Eu banks, Walter Laughrldge, Henry Quinn. Frank Troutman, Evelyn Self, Kathryn Spake, Nellie Mae Wise, Rush Hamrick, jr., Avery Wil lis-McMurry,’Eugene Brymer, Mar tha Davis Arrowood, Ruth Beam. Catherine Bailey, Edith Fitch, Vir ginia McNeely, Margaret White. Ruth Wilson, Martha Yeago, Marian Carroll. Mary Hiott, Nancy Jane Lineberger. Henry Cline. Floyd Bast, Sarah Graham, Juanita Bates, Katheryn Dellinger, Roy Marlow, Gene Gladden, John Dorsey. Clyde Grigg, Georgia Bailey, Juanita Esk ridge, Germaine Gold, Eleanor Hoey, Thelma Mauney, Marie King. Nancy McGowan, Margaret Tedder. Jn^k Palmer, jr.. Will Avery, jr, Gather-j ine Wilson. Washington school — France.' Featherstone. Jeannette Mauney, Billy Max Dixon, Billy Origg, Roy Hamrick, O. P. Smith, jr., Matce Une Weathers, Mary Leslie DokuoU, Patsy Maunev, Bam Mull, Isabel Miller, Phyllis Yates, Billy Smart, Ruth Dixon, Ponder itcea Saunders, Ann Smart, Edwin Fold, John Mull, Cecil Webb. Nellie James Stroup, Alphonsine Harris, Paniha Weath ers, Anlinbeth Jones, Earle Hamrick, Jr., Tennie Miller, Keiln Shull, Har old Bettis. Jefferson school—McKinley Case, J, A. Montieth, Mary Urazdl. ^dith i - - ■-.■ • LUIS"——SW——WB—■ j Cook, Margaret Littlejohn, Ruth S-ntrr. Dolores Morgan, Edna Wright, Rachel Shelton, Betty Mc Falls, Beatrice Beamon M^garet Broszell, Billy Buchanan, James Alexander, Elizabeth Swoezy, Vir ginia Fair, Nellie Price, Ava Fitters, Fima Briuflc, Dorothy Bridges, Blair Stephenson, Arthur Williams. LaFayctto school—-Ruth Stewart. Ruth Walker, Catherine Wilson. Peggy Putnam. Zeb Beam. Elmer Padgett, Marjorie Dean Hill, James Millwood, Peggy Huntstnger, Juan ita Noggle, Myrtle Hull. Martha Car roll Fanning, Joe McWhlrter, Ocor gift Hughes, Elsie Putnam, Elton Stewart, Jesse Stewart, Herman Carpenter. George Powell, Mllllcert Hicks, Josie Bowman. Morgan school—Dorothy Black. Patsy Anthony. Ella Mae Grant, Katherine Abernethy, Janice Lee Whlsnant, Broadus Hopper, Decatur Bridges, John Anderson, Helen Yar borough, Annie Mae Hudson, Gar nie McCurry. Elizabeth Blanton. Virginia Gladden, Dwight Ledbetter, Moselle Poole. Roy Sue Turner. Catherine Waters, Ruth Weathers, Ruth Adams, Christine Allen," -Lily Hamrick, Frances Jones, Alleen Pat terson. Cortnne Queen, Alleen Rainey, Adeline Reinhardt, Billy Green, Arlan Kennedy. Ernest Mc Swatn, Ray Parris. Z. W. Watts, Al lred Parris, pccie Brooks, Evelyn Carter, Edna Melton, Pauline Stew art, Pauline Beam, Evelyn Taylor, J. E. Ferree, Boyce Brown, Gladys Anderson, Hester McSwaln, Ethel Patterson, Mildred Whltener, Julian Byers, Kathleen Black, Eva Lane Jones, Eunice Grayson, Hal Whis nant, Burene Hughes, Louise White mr, Esther Howell, Mary Sue Hill, Ralph Greene. ruts TEE'S MU. Bv virtue of * certain deed of tout ex ecuted to me on the JSth day of January. 1829. and r {curdl'd m book 1S3. of deeds. Dftgi) 2.if of the office of the register for Cleveland county. N C. to secure an In debtedness therein dfscribed, and default having been made In the payment of the Indebtedness thereby secured, I will sell to the highest bidder at the court house door ‘n Shelby. N, C., on. Aalurdav, April ilt, 18:11. at IS e’clnek M or within legal hours the following de scribed real estate, to-wlt* Situated on the east side of N. Lafay ette street, and being known as hart of the Haynes propertv. fronting 100 feet on the east side of LaFayctte street, and ra tthdiag back 181 2 feet, reference being had to book 3-0. page 616 for complete description. Terms of . sate: Cash, This the 18th dav of April, liijl. B T. FALLS, Trustee ft Mir Ir tf ill uour suffer from lack of food? YOUR lawn—will It be on beautiful this year as you’d like to have it? Probably not, if you depend entirely upon the nourishment provided by the soil. If you want the greatest possible beauty from your lawn, you must add food. For a rich carpet of velvety green, apply Vigoro. It takes only a little time and effort to give your lawn this scientific aid. The method, as shown here, is simple. Results will amaze you. , Vigoro is the largest-selling plant food—2,000.000 users have proved its success on lawns, flowers, vegetables, shrubs and trees. Complete, scientific, properly balanced. Clean and odorless, pleasant to handle, easy to apply. And inexpensive! Your dealer in law n and garden sup plies has Vigoro. Order from him today. Swift & Company Read simple * directions [j Broadcast I Vigoro evenly ( Wet dotcn thoroughly Vigor* fame9 in 100, SO, ond 25 16. 6o|i, and in S lb. package*. Alev in the nete 12 o*. packages for housejflant* and icinaotc boxes. For real results be sure to order onouih Vigoro l < Get Vtgoro where 1 you buy Lawn and j Garden Supplies j VIGORO W A product of Swift & Company Complete plant food for latent, Jlotvert, garden*, shrub*, tree* Campbell Dept. Stores VIGORO DISTRIBUTORS OWNED and OPERATED BY WASHBURN and CO. EST. 1889
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
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March 18, 1931, edition 1
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