SOCIETY NEWS Mils. KfcA'Y DRCA Editor A'elepnoiie The Star No. i-J Each Morning 8 To lk O'clock. Mrs. Drum can be reached at her home, Phone 713, afternoon ami nights Sod*. April April, Laugh thy girlish laugh Then, the moment aftei Weep thy girlish tear, April, that mine ears Like a lover greet cst, If I tell thee, sweetest All my hopes and tear April. April. Laugh thy golden iaugn’i But. the moment alter, Weep thy golden tears! -Sir Wilnam Wa .oh 1 ortnight Bridge Hub To Aleet. Mr. and Mrs. Remi Drum wiii he hosts to the members of the T ort night Bridge club on Friday even ing at 3:15 at their home on Cleveland Springs road rre-bytrrian Auxiliary To Meet On Monday. The regular monthly bu::ne.ss meeting of the Auxiliary of the Presbyterian church will be heid on Monday afternoon ai the enroll beginning at 3:30. Mothers’ Club TO Have Merlins. Mrs. Ogbnni Luu will be haste., at a regular meeting of the Moth: ;'. ’ club on Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 i.t lief homo on N. Morgan street. Miss Huberts To entertain Book Club Vttfa Minnie Ed hi fie KuberU will be hostess to members of the Con temporary book club lit a regular meeting on Tuesday afternoon at ♦ o'clock ;■ her home on \V Marion street Cake Ami Candy Sale. The .Grahtuu ; tyct vdiool Parent* Teachers 'essoe.iati.cn ns having a cake end candy sale af the Torn Eskridge grocery store this after noon and Saturday morning. Pro ceeds will for IT benefit of the school Methodist Business Women To Meet. The huso" > womens circle of the Central Methodist church will have Its regular meeting on Monday evening 1" the woman's room at the church at 7:30. Mrs. A. E. Darby, Mrs. H. J. Spry and Miss Elsie Har din will be joint hostesses I'irst Division To Sponsor Picture. The first division ot the Womans club will sponsor h picture. "The Fourth'' /Alarm,” at the Carolina theatre on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. A large percentage of the proceeds will go to the club .Mrs. Bluer fey To Be Club Hostess. Mrs. Shem Blackley will in host c»s to member.. of the Tuesday Aft ernoon bridge club oil Saturday aft ernoon at 3 o'clock at her home on South Washington .street. Miss Thomas h Party llonoree Mrs. Dean Duncan entertained iu i ormalfy last evening in honor of Ulss Sue Thomas, of Sparta, who is ■.he guest of Mis.- Sara Dellinger Dtliw out-of-town guests present were Miss Evelyn Stone, of LouLs . die. Ky.. guest of Miss Elizabeth \ustelV. and Miss Marion Chaiubles, if Tampa. Fla . guest of Miss Ruthj JLaughridge. Bridge and dancing were enjoyed and punch wa.s served during the evening. About forty guests were present. Methodist Circles To Meet Monday. The circles of the Central Meth odist church will meet on Mondayi afternoon as follows: the Betty Llneberger circle at the church at 3:30; the Lucy Hoyle circle at the church at 4 o’clock, with Mrs. Hor ace Grlgg and Mrs. Herman Esk ridge as hostesses; the Mary Lee Hudson circle at the church at 3:30 with Mrs. R. Z. Riviere as hostess; the Fanny Thompson circle at 3:30 with Mrs: Charles Laughrldgc at her home. Miss Shoemaker Visits Mr. Gardner. MiSvS Rosemary Shoemaker, daugh ter of Dr. and Mrs. Harlan Shoe maker of I,as Angeles, California, Is spending today and tomorrow with Mrs. J. T. Gardner on West Marion street. Miss Shoemaker lived here as a child when her father was sur geon at the first hospital set up in the c I College hotel building. Her father is now a leading surgeon on the West Coast and Miss Shoemaker is a student in Philadelphia where she is .specializing in kidney sur gery, Mrs. Gardner and her guest will spend Easter In Raleigh at the governor's mansion. Commercial ( tub Holds MMttnti MisSes Sara Lee Hamrick anti Vn> ian Bulee were joint hostesses to members of the Commercial cluo and a few invited guests at tire home of Miss Hamrick on Monday evening'. Bridge was played at five tables during the evening and when scores were added the high score prises were awarded to Miss Aileen Walker and Mr, Harvey White. When the cards were laid aside the hostesses served a delightful salad course with coffee Those playing were: Misses Larue Lackey, Sara Best. Grace Bowling, 'Elizabeth - Riviere, Aileen Walker, Rachel Wells, Ruby Pryor. Juanita Cline, Messrs; Lee Conner, Harvey White, Paul Whisonant, Ruffin Mull. Jimmy Ervin, Pete Green, Jim Grice. Shorty McSwaio, Bradford Moser, Curtis Moser, and Miss Butce and Miss Hamrick. Kittle Miss Jarrett Olebratra Birthday. Caroline Jean Jarrett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E, B. Jarrett, cele brated her seventh birthday at u pretty party on Wednesday after noon at her home on W. Warren street. About thirty little friends in her neighborhood were invited; she received her guests in a dainty frock of yellow flowered organdy. Games pertaining to the Easter season were played, after which the chil dren were invited into the dining room where a pretty birthday cake with seven yellow candles centered the table The Easter Idea was car ried out in the dining room deco rations. Eskimo pies were served and each child was given a colored Eas ter egg and a little-yellow biddie as souvenirs. Caroline Jean received a number of pretty and useful gifts. First Division Holds Meeting. Mesdames J. ft Dover, Thad Ford, Basil Goode* and Coleman Doggett were joint hostesses at a regular IFftdC 111 iko^e <4d unsafe threadWe tires \Do it now ond tav« still more money by deciding: *1 «* W* amhltlm«A( <«•*• •( *-.l" IDEAL SERVICE STATION — ONE STOP SERVICE — J. REID MISENHEIMEK PHONE 191 — SHELBY, N. <j. meeting of the tlrst afternoon divi-! ston ol the Woman's club on Thu is- j day afternoon at the club room.; Mrs. John Beam was leader for the 1 afternoon. An attractive program 1 was rendered, opened with a piano solo by little Miss Mary Wells, af' - er which she played the accompani ment for a solo dance given by lit tle Miss Emma Jo Beam, superin tendent. J. H. Origg made an Inter esting address on ‘‘Consolidation of Schools.” Mrs. Hurry Hudson read a short play, and Mrs. P. Cleveland eiaidf^r concluded the program with a vocal solo. After the close of the program a social half hour was enjoyed during which the hostesses served simple but delightful refreshments. Renaissance In Cooking Is Seen Epicure* Are About To Come Into Their Own, Says Mrs. Vaughn. Los Angeles.—Epicures are about, to come into their own. A renais sance in cooking is at hand. So says Mrs. Kate Brew Vaughn, widely known authority and author of books on culinary art. There was a let-down immediate ly after the world war. says Mrs Vaughn, but‘the science of cooking only went Into a temporary eclipse and now Mas come back with em phasis as modern conveniences have taken away drudgery. Mrs. Vaughn, as an expert, was asked about dishes inert and women like. ‘‘What would the average man or der for dinner in a hotel or restau rant?” ‘ Broiled steak, fried potatoes, sliced tomatoes and either lemon pie or strawberry shortcake,'' “And his wife?" “Lobster, potatoes with white , sauce, asparagus tips and possibly | an artichoke. She would like the | man's dinner too, but at home she | cooks the things lie likes so When ; away from home she will order ! something that's a bit ritzy, looks ; pretty—and is expensive," Mrs, Vaughn learned to cook as a girl in Tennessee, getting her early j instruction from an old “black mammy." “Taste in toOd is geographical,’’ | she says, “A true southerner really I likes only two kinds of bread, home ! made fluffy biscuit and com bread." As for the recent controversy be lt ween the governors of Louisiana ! and Georgia as to crumbling j against dunking corn bread in pot likker, she lined up with the crumblers. Cooking is logical so men make j as good, or better cooks, as women I she said. -ERROR CORRECTED IN COTTON SEED ADV. in the advertisement of Herman A. Beam appearing in Tuesday’s paper offering Wood's Ingold cotton seed, there appeared an error, due ito proof reading in The Star office. 1 "Highest per cent lint at. the gin 89% should have read 39%. It Pay* To Advertise No. 1 Township News Of Week No, I Township, April I!.—A lurjiO. crowd attended the singing that was | held at Camp Creek Sunday after - ernoon. There were several quartets j from different churches. The farmers are getting behind! with their plowing on account cf so much rain. There is quite a lot of sickness in j this community at this writing. i Mr. and Mrs. George Earls of near! Chesnee, S. C. visited Mr. W. P.| Byars Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Byran Mintz of | Cllffsidc visited at the home of Mr. ] J. D. Mintz Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elain Davis of Boiling Springs have been visiting in this community. Miss Wilma Horton of Ashworth community spent Monday night with Mrs. Thurman Byars. Mr. Theodore Earls spent Wednes day night with Mr. Richard Earls. Should Obey Law Or Go Elsewhere To The Star: All I know is what I see in the papers and hear over the radio. When I think of something worth telling and write it out for Renn Drum, before he can get It in his "tri-weekly'’ Star. Will Rogers, Bris bane or Mr. Cooltdge already have it set up and Lowell Thomas and Floyd Gibbons have it on the air. The only way to keep ahead of those bird? is to write about the weather. History is repeating itself so fast these days the only way to keep it recorded is by short hand in this waste paper age. Everything goes to LYRIC The Little Theatre With Biff Productions. She Could Not Love Two Men .. . And She Had No Choice of Either , . . She Toyed With Two Strong Men. And Made Them Like It! LUPE VELEZ IN “THE STORM” Her Greatest Role To Date. LYRIC TODAY And SATURDAY DON’T FORGET THE 1C Sale NOW ON AT Cleveland Drug Co. ~~ PHONE 65 LOVELY DRESSES FOR THE GRADUATE Graduation is a grand climax to school days. The graduating miss dress to the minute for this all-im portant event. We have a new and comprehensive selection of Graduate Dresses crisp and fresh from their tissue wrappings .... stunning in style de tail and material . . . priced unreason ably low at Make your selections now while tht assortment is complete. —Next To Cinderella Slipper Shop—' WARKEN ST. SHELBY, N. C $5.95 lie waste basket tinaily. My doetj. says the best way to cure a cold it ■go to bed and drink plenty of egg nog.''Bring on the cold and plenty of tiie remedy. The doctor Should not be prevented by a state law from giving his patient whatever is best for him. At least citizens of all states should fare alike. But we have our choice: The United States has prohibition, Can ada has government control, and Mexico has wide open barrooms. Take your choice. Don't stay here if you don’t like the Volstead lav/. Twenty million Americans ought to go to Canada and Mexico and find plenty opportunities there to get rich and break no laws having just what they want there. It is a shame for us to keep patronizing bootleg gers, who sell us poison stuff at an exorbitant price, getting themselves on the chain gang and into the fed eral prisons. Many of these men and boys are our best friends and all are good citizens but they take a chance ■or u* and break the law and oe conie criminals all on our account Stop It. Save them and yourself from being poisoned and bumped off be fore your time comes. The Volstead law is here te stay many years vet. We have too much machinery to mix alcohol with it in this high speed machine age J. A. WILSON. A Chinese printer and his family manage to live on eight dollars a month. However, a Chinese type font would make a lot of pi.—Wes ton Leader. Speaker Longworth says that or ganization of the next congress is up to an all-wise Providence. That will certainly be an inovation.—San Diego Union. A visiting British lecturer says that Americans have a bored look. If he'd just stay away from his own lectures, perhaps he wouldn't notice it.—New York Evening Post. VISIT THE CHARLES BARBER SHOP Experienced Men To Serve You Ladies’ and Children’s Hair Cutting A Specialty This was formerly the Willis Barber Shop and is operated by the same barbers: D. L. WILLIS HOWARD BRIDGES J. H. WRIGHT Next To Hotel Charles Entrance PENDERS THE BETTER CHAIN — 2 STORES — N. LaFAYETTE STREET And S. WASHINGTON STREET —FLOUR— Statesville, Snow Cream and Wonder 12’s 24’s 48’s 98’s 35c 69c $1.35 $2.65 TOMATOES— Large Size_...._ PINK SALMON — Can . . EGGS — Guaranteed Fresh ... _ Canada Dry GINGER ALE No. 2 Diced CARROTS PICNICS — Pound .. Mansfield MILK —4 for 11c 10c 23c 14£c 813c 15c 29c SOAPS OCTAGON —7 for ..25c P. & G. — 3 for . .... 10c FREE One Package of Palmolive Beads With a Purchase of 3 CAKES PALMOLIVE SOAP 19c COFFEE Maxwell House D. P. BRAND Coffee . 31c 29c — BKEADS AND CAKES — D. P. BREAD Loaf ...... ...^C Cake, plain and light fruited ... .... 25c SUGAR - loolbs. .. ... $4.60 25 Pounds . .. $1.15 10 Pounds — .46c 8-LB. BUCKET Q1r SWIFT’S JEWEL Lard U 1 C Tall PET or CARNATION MILK —2 for . . . . SMALL Can, .. . ..... 4c NUCOA ..Pound . 19c PALMOLIVE BEADS - 3 for .. 25c Black Eye PEAS.. 5c 15c majestic Electric Refrigerator’s Superior Features All Steel Box— TCh ,DV Zero Insulation 84 Ice Cubes Flat Top Automatic Control And 25 Other Important Features. CH" ‘o ^ 3c A DAY — 5 YEAR GUARANTEE — Pendbton’s Music Store kings mountain We’re Ready To Get You Ready For Easter! Tomorrow A Pve-Easter Selling 100 SPARKLING NEW DRESSES $ 1 .75 At other times selling for $16.75 and $19.75 This price will convince you that we are doing all we can to make this a Thrift Easter for you. Everything that’s styled-right is included in this group. Sunday night, business and street frocks, of Cantons, Prints, Georgettes and Chiffons! A complete assortment of styles and sizes. Early morning- shoppers will get first choice. NEW SHIPMENT OF EASTER STRAW HATS $3.95 $4.95 and $5.95 2 DOZEN IMPORTED SHAMMY VELOUR " TAMS $1.00 Assorted colors . . . berets that are smart and becoming. DRESS UP FOR EASTER AT~ J. C. McNeely Co., Inc. STYLE - QUALITY - SERVICE * SHELBY, N. C.

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