Thirteen farmers In Burke.coun ty have 2 342 breeding blitis after culling and blood testing their flocks for disease and laying ahil - tty. J. B. MEETZE CO. rain ting A Decora ting Phone 564, Rn\ 1.13, (iaffney, S. C. Better Be Safe Than Sorry. Ernest A. Gardner Attorney-At-Law Judge Webb Building Shelby, N. 0. * Practice In All Courts DR. S. F. PARKER — PHYSICIAN - Office Phones 64 and Mo. 2 Residence Phone 12D-.I 666 LIv(ljlD OK TABl.tl'S Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in SO minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria In Ihrce days. 6(iG Salve for Haby’s Cold. T. W. Ebeltoft Grocer and Book Seller Phone — 82 BAKING POWDER SAME PRICE bs double OCh'ncj for over y*ars 25 OUNCES EOR 25* MULIONSOf POUNDS USED BY OUH,c6vtRNMENT Lmeberger Bu«!ding OFFICE DIRECTORY Room No, ANTHONY. O, S. Real Estate 31 I ANDERSON CI.AYTON CO. g Cotton Brokers 15-16 DUNCAN. D. V.. Southeastern Underwriters 23 DIXON, DIE 11. C~ Dentist 4-5 FRA/.lER, I). K. S„ Civil Engineer 10 HONEYCUTT-CAMPBELL, Cotton Brokers » fi HOME SECURITY LIFE INS. CO., District Office Sfc LATTIMORE, DrTeTbZ Physician 7-t MORRISON. Dit l)’ sT Optometrist 26-21 MUSIC STUDIO 17 NEWTON, D. Z„ Lawyer 32-33 N. C. COTTON GROWERS ASSOCIATION. C. C. Horn. Representative II NOLAN. J H CO~ Real Estate 22 PILOT LIFE INS. CO., Industrial Dept. 14 PEELER. DR. C. M., Dentist 1-2 SPEARS. M. T, Lawyer -0 SHELBY PUBLIC LIBRARY 18-19 \ I \ I WEBB, C. R.. Pilot Life Ins. Co. 6-7 & 24-35 Blimp Serves as “Paper Boy • • A unique “shot" is this oen of the blimp Columbia acting as an aerial "paper boy" atop the Empire State Building as a feature of the thirty fifth birthday of the New York Evening Journal.' 'Ihe Itifmp, after pick ing up a bundle of papers from the Itearst publications building, deliv ered them to the top of the tallest strueture in the world, where Al Smith was waiting to receive them. To Fight for Weindcl Riches The fairy godmother may have been a little late in showering Miss Ro:a Dew Stansbury, 7t-year-old spiueter, with some of her choicest gifts, but tills tiny persen, only lorateci relatives and possible heir to the $50, |COO,000 estate of Miss Ella son E. IVrndcl. who died in New York last March, has Just begun to fight for the chance to become one of the World's richest women. Miss Manburv is shown in Raleigh, N. C„ W'ltll her attorney, Winfield Jones, of Atlanta, Ca. EXiXtTOfVh NO ACE Hii v.chf this (lay cmaUfied *s executor of tho r:,tfct© of n Patience Hamrick U.le of Cleveland count?. N C. this is to notify nil persons owning the said estate to present them to in* property, proven on or beiora the 12th day ot Sept . 1952 or this nonce u U he Pleaded in bar %»t ivny recovery thereof. All persons tndebtc l to the suitf estate will make immediate settlement to the mulerrdgnod. This Sen* l ember lith. V93t T P HAMRICK Executor of Is Mtt of 3. Paiifiicu Hamrick, de ceased 6t 14c See The Biggest Picture of the Year “STAR WITNESS” - FRIDAY V/EBB THEATRE Nmhwwi EXT time you are out of fix as the result of ir regular or faulty bowel movement, try Thcdford’s Black-Draught for the re freshing relief it gives thousands of people who take it. Mr.E. W.Cecikaconstruction super intendent in Pulaski, Va., says: "■ "When I get con stipated, my head ackec, and I have thRt dull, tired feeling—just not equal to my work. 1 don’t feel hungry and I know that I need something to cleanse my system, so I take Black-Draught. We have found it a great help.” Sold in 25-cent packages. Thed fords ^1 BLACK' DRAUGHT [WOMEN who s-a run-down, or .set ter every month, should take Car* gut Uaed for over 50 years, ii-i STAR ADVS. PAYS ' Eastside Village News Of Interest Revival Meeting Closes. Child Has Diphtheria. Personal Mention. (Special to The Star.) Oct. 5. -The revival meeting of the Eastside Baptist church closed jthis week with nine new members jadded to the church. Ma ter Hal Sweeny is seriously ill with diphtheria. , Mr. and Mrs. C C Baltimore of near Lawndale spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Baltimore. ! Mrs. Joe Littlejohn and son. Rav ■ arc spending some time with Mr and Mrs. Baxter Van Pelt. Mr. and Mis. Gum Slithers of ; Lawndale spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Baltimore. Miss Mae Han-ill of Gaffney, S. G. spent the week-end with Mr. j and Mrs. I,. A. Thacker:-B n. Mis, L. A. Cox of Greer, S. C. is pending this week with Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Cox. Robert Whitworth of Bessemer City also Misses Ethel and Veia : Liles visited Mr and Mrs. Charles ■ Watkins of Pores: City Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Toms and two ; children, Dover, and Mary Belli. ; also Mrs. C. S. Mull spent Sunday : in Salisbury. Mr. Baxter Van Pelt is .-pending . •cine time in Kingsport, Tenn Mr. C. E. Pendleton of Kanna ' -i--. spent the week-end with Mr d Mrs. Bakier Van Pelt. Master Charles Crawford hat !v‘en very ill the past few days. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Pelt and ! daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Van ] Pelt and daughter, also Mr. and (Mrs. J. w. Van Pelt of Cramertor j spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs j Van Pelt, Have Your Eyes Examined Regularly DRS. H. D. & R. L. WILSON WTOMETRfSTS ; Office Over Paul Weblf & Son’s Drug Store. Don’t Slight Mastoiditis Condition Or. (.opelnml, lJe»erihing i f Symptom* of This Trouble, I- rgea That tlx perl (-are Hr Sot Delayed. B> It. >>. COPELAND, M. D. 0. S S 'hutor from Now York. Corn i C'lLimiiiionfr of Health, I .Nrip York City WiTHIN th* past few months , i remarkable number of mastoid operations ha« been reported. The prevalence of th'm condition is not alarming:, as mastoid disease has always been more or loss common. In the old days the simp I « s t sort of mastoid opera tion caused much uneasi ness and worry. There is no doubt t h a t many young lives were lost because of Or. Copeland iicaiia ii v y Oil the part of parents. Naturally j they feared the operation. A* a j life saving measure, there are i few surgical measures that sur pass the mastoid operation. A suddenly acquired Inflammation of ihe tnaatoid Is spoken of as "acute mastoiditis ” The signs are I usually very plain and there is no difficulty tn lecognlzlrg the nature •f the trouble As a rule, the trouble has been preceded by earache. Uaually this : occurs five or si* days before tho mastoid disease develops. There may be fever, as well as pain, and this ; is followed by a discharge from the | ear. ir the patient is examined care I fully, a swelling Is noticed behind I the ear. This sign Is characteristic of acute mastoiditis. The tissues may fce red -nd swollen, pressing upon it and forcing the ear down ward and outward. It Is difficult to find out from young children whether they have pain or not. They may hot com plain of ft. Upon pressure at a certain spot behind the ear, the ex treme tenderness is made known at once. This test, however, should not be depended upon by anybody but a physician. Continued high fever, profuse dts ' charge from the ear or sudden 1 stoppage of a discharge which baa been present: pain, loss of appetite 1 and restlessness. are signs which i should not he overlooked. When any child has these symptoms, a ; physician should he called at once. Acute mastoiditis is most common In children, but Is met in adults. The symptoms are the same. When the signs are lees pro. j nouneed It is well to delay the < p oration for a short time. However, this is a question which the surgeon \ will answer. j I do not wish to imply that tbs operation ts not a serious one. But ; mastoid ‘disease, it neglected, is far more serious than any operation could possibly be. ! The operation has been ao per 1 fected that it is done elth the min I Imum of risk to the patient. If it ■ Is postponed, the ultimate condition j will cause your child to suffer longer. Also it may require a more ^extensive and serious operation than If It ts attended to at once, CwsrUht. 1MJ. e» Krwaiper Feiturv SwWwl taw I |_Aiiswcr»_to jBeiuth Queries~[ C. F. Q.—Whit would cause the following: symptoms: No ambition, ilifticult breathing, a very tired feel ing ami poor vision—this usually starts about an hour after eating? I have always been troubled with constipation. A —Those symptom* are usually Indicative of auto-intoxicatlon, AVateh your diet and elimination. For full particulars send self-ad dressed. stamped envelops and re peat your question. T M Q Q.—"Would congestion of the Inge bowel cause too frequent elimination or would this condition be more apt to be caused by a nervous disturbance? A. The trouble is probably duo to a disturbance cf tho bowels. For full particulars tend a Seit-sdArsssed. stamped envelope; and repeat jour question. »_ Earle Sipe of Ca-awba county has i begun the establishment of a pure i bred beef cattle herd. He recently | purchased four Angus cotvs. Rocks In Park Half Billion Years Old Missoula, Mont.—What's a dif ference of a mere half million years wireu it comes to rocks! However for the sake of modern scientific estimate, Dr. C. H. Clapp, president of the slate university of Montana here, thinks the records ought to be changed to state that the rocks of Glacier national park are a half billion to 750,000,000 years old. Not a mere 80,000,000! Tire guide books have for years placed the age of the park's rock formations at about 80,000,000 years. "That estimate is absurd in the light of modern reckoning," says Dr. Clapp, who has studied Glacier park's geology for eight years. • The age of the earth,” he says, "has increased by leaps and bounds according to findings of the last few decades. When Bailey Willis famous geologist, surveyed Glacict park at the beginning of the cen tury, the age of the earth was then estimated at 100,000,000 years. Then Glacier park's rocks were thought to be 80,000 000 years old. "But now to say that the earth is a billion years old Is a conserva tive estimate. No scientist would dis pute that. Man has been on the earth only 50,000 to 200,000 years— or conservatively 100,000 years — while there seems to be well au thenticated proof that there arc rock on the globe as old as 1.300, 000.000 years.” This Young Fellow Got A Wife Anyhow Dundee, Mich.—Like a Lochinvar Gerald H. Gartner, 26, dashed in from the west. He was “mounted'’ in an autc, however, and carried not a sword but a writ of habeas corpus. He sought the hand in marriage of Leona Schultz, fair maiden, whose parents objected strenuoly. The law would not be denied—he served the writ—took the girl. Now it was Mr. and Mrs. Gerald H. Gartner. COMMISSIONER'S LAND SALE. Under and by virtue of an order of the j superior court of Cleveland county, N. C.,; made In special proceeding, entitled “If. B. Gladden, Adm'r. of T. W. Gladden, dee d . and N. B. Gladden, personally, and wife, Lillie Gladden, et al vs. Palmer McSwain, Ray , McSwain. Ida Mae Mc 3 wain and William McSwain. minors." the same being No. 1869, upon the spe cial proceedings docket of said court, the undersigned commissioner will, on Monday, Oct. 12, 1931, at 12 M. at the court house door in Shelby. N. C., offer for sale to the highest bidder, or bidders, first hi lots and then as a! whole, the highest aggregate bid being! reported to the court, on terms herein after set forth, the following pieces or parcels of land lying and being in No. 3 township, Cleveland county, N. C.. ad Joinlng the lands of James R. Dover. L. C Camp, and others, and more, particu lar iv described as follows: First Tract: Beginning at a stake In the inter section of the Shelby-Patter-; son Springs road and the Old Post road, and runs thence with the Grover road S 26-55 E. 600 Teet to a stake in center of said road, D. C. Camp's corner: thence with his line 6. 80-25 E. 1430 feet to a poplar stump, his corner: thenee with L. c. Camp and others’ line N. 3-40 E 1145 feet to a post oak. Beam and Camp's corner: thence Vith Beam's line N. 15-35 W. 1432 feet to an iron stake in center of post road; thence with said road the following courses: S. 37-30 W. 372 feet. 8. 25-05 W. 424 feet to the be ginning. containing 43.75 acres. Second Tract: Beginning at a stake in the intersection of the Shelby-Patter son Springs road with the old post road, and runs thence with post road the fol lowing courses: N. 25-05 E. 424 feet, N. 37-30 E. 372 feet to a stake in center of Post road. Allen’s comer: thence with Allen's line N. 74-50 W. 776 feet to an iron stake, Allens corner; thenoe S. 23 03 W. 154 feet to a stake in center of Shelby-Patterson Springs road; thence with said road S. 28-25 E. 844 feet to the beginning, containing 7.56 acres. Third Tract: Beginning at the inter section of the Shelby-Patterson Springs road with the post road, and runs thence, With the Shelby road. N. 28-25 W. 237.5 feet to a stake in center of said road; thence with Dover's line, S. 87-40 W. 635 feet to an iron stake, Dover s corner in Diggers* line, thence with Biggers and Logan's line, S. 23-05 W 749 feet to an iron stake. W. A. Gladden’s corner; thdhee, with his line, 8. <84 E. 334 feet to a stake, McSwain* comer; thence with h|& line. N 21-15 E. 200 leet to a stake, his comer; thence with McSwain'6 line. S. 84 E. 450 feet to a cement post In the old road, McSwain's corner, thence with said old road, N. 17-15 E 410 feet to the beginning containing 10.47 acres. Terms of sale: One-third cash on day of sale, one-third payable in one year and remainder payable in two years from date of sale, with interest from date at six percent per annum, with the privilege to the purchaser, or purchasers, of paying all the purchase price on con firmation of sale, title to the property to be reserved until all the purchase price is paid. This the 11th day of September, 1931. N B GLADDEN. Commissioner Quinn, Hamrick & Harris, Attorneys. 4t sept 14c Toluca And Knob Creek Gleanings (Special to The Star/* Toluca, Oct. 1.—A very larg^ crowd was present on last Sunday P. M. at Carpenters Grove to hear Miss Dora Willis. She delivered a wonderful message She read the en tire. 6th chapter of St. John and her subject was oread and water. Thieves entered the store of Ever ett Leonhart again last week. A quantity of cigarettes and Cigars was missing. They used a crowbar to pry the door open. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Sain visited at the home of their daughter, Mr. pnd Mrs. Alvin Deal of Rockdale last Sunday. Mr .and Mrs. Deal are the proud parents of a dainty 10 pound baby girl, born Saturday morning, September 26th. Mrs. Helen Lackey has returned from the Lincoln hospital and is getting along nicely. Two of Mr. Nathan Hoyle’s chil dren and one of Mr. Clarence Cock’s children were bitten by a dog re cently supposed to be mad, and arc now taking the treatment Mr. and Mrs. Blain Willis have rented the farm of Mr. S. D. Sain and are now living in the house with him. Mrs. Dora Huss of Catawba coun ty visited her father, Mr. S. D. Sain on last Monday p. m. Mrs. Odus Norman and children, of Belwood, spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Sain. Mis Ima Carpenter of Knob Creek spent last Saturday night with her uncle and aunt, Mr .and Mrs. F. A. Boyles. Mr. Tom Propst had the misfor tune of having a fine milk cow bit ten by a snake. The cow is about dry. She was giving four gallons per day when bitten. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Johnson and Mrs. Emaline Wotkmar. of Morgan ton were Knob Creek visitors on last Sunday. Mrs. Burt 3ain and children vis ited her mother, Mrs. Noah Hub bard of Bela odd Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Willis have named their little girl twins, Ola Beatrice and Virginia Bernice. Mr. Carroll Mull and Miss Oline Cronenburg from Charlotte visited his mother , Mrs D. M. Mull on Tuesday. ^ Mrs. Leeanne Boyles and daugh ter, Mrs. Jessie Lackey and child ren have moved to Mrs. Boyles’ old home place near Hebrcn church. Miss Sadie Mull left on Wednes day for N. C. C. W., Greensboro, where sh will enter college for the coming year. Mr. and Mrs'. A. P. Sain, Mr. and Mrs. Grady Sain and son, Theran, of Morganton visited Mr. S. D. Sain Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. E. E. Snow of Fall ston were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Young. Mrs. Ellis Hoyle and children of Lincoln county spent last Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Sain. Mrs. M. S. Boyles spent a few days the past week with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Davis, of Rockdale. Try Star Want Ads We FUl Any Doctor'.: . TOESCRIPtlONS SUTTLE’S For A Registered Druggin PHONTJ 379 1/11 uu u — QUEEN CITY COACH LINES — FOR. ASHEVILLE, CHARLOTTE, WILMINGTON, FAYETTEVILLE. FOR ASHEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—9:45 a. ni.; 11:10 a. m.; 4:43 p m FOR CHARLOTTE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—7:JU a. m.; 11:10 a. m.; 11:00 p. m.; 4:40 p. m.; 9:00 p. m. FOR WILMINGTON AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—11:10 a. m. FOR FAYETTEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—7:10 a. m.: 11.10 a. m.; 2:00 p. m. — FOR FURTHER INFORMATION — PHONE 450 — QUEEN CITY COACH COMPANY Ward's saves you I on Motor Off / % WARD’S PENNSYLVANIA OIL 100'/'; Pure and Dc-Waxed! Why Pay $1.40 a Gallon For The Same Oil? Ward’s Price / 15c Quart y. MEDIUM HEAVY .X. HEAVY In Bulk or Free Crankcase Sen iei Regardless of y;hat other dealers tell jou War<i Guarantees this oil to be the finest motor o you can buy and the same quality that other charge you 30c and 35c quart for. Refined an clewaxed. Montgomery Ward & Co 139-141 So. LaFayette Si. Shelby, N. C. Ready To Serve The officers of the Union Trust Com pany stand ready, at your request, to give you all the information at their disposal in connection with your business problems and to aid you in every way consistent with s o u n d banking practice. Union Trust Co. •IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH ’ For Greater Results In Selling-Try Star Adv. ■IKE A CHARMING HOME, or a luwri out motor car, or an axqukita gown— Goodyaar Doubla Eagla Tirat ara fmar than mara naad raquiras. Thay ara anWron> manf, at wall at aquipmant. Styla, in tha vary batt tanta. Thay batpaak tatta and potition; thay ara tha finatt thing of itt kind that monay can btry. Supar-tirat, imita tad but navar aqualad May we quota the prica for your car in exchange for the present tires? E. D. Bridges LAWNDALE, N. C. Kjfjjouhle

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