Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Nov. 25, 1931, edition 1 / Page 3
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
Board At Boiling Springs Give Thanks Thank* Churches of Association for Tutting College in Their Budgets. The executive committee of the board of trustees of Boiling Springs junior college met in Shelby Nov. i 18, in order to give out a statement! of appreciation to the churches of I the Sandy Bun and Kings Moun-: tin Baptist association for their ^ loyalty to the college. Reports have come from many churches that they ! ha\e definitely placed the college , In their budget for the coming year and that many others will do the same. The outlook is bright becauseI more churches have taken a defin-. ite stand for the college than at any time for many previous years j The executive committee takes this | opportunity of expressing apprecia tion for this loyalty from the! churches and to assure them that, the outlook is bright for new stu dents with the beginning of the next Remister which starts January 14, 1932. Free Will Baptists j To Meet Saturday, - i THe pastors ot the Beaver Creek-1 Free Will Baptist will meet on Sat urday, November 29. 1931 at the South Washington Fret Will Bap tist church at 11 a. m. A Sunday school convention will be held on Sunday, November 29. at 10 a. m * with dinner on the ground and all day service. Any one reading thi ■' announcement is asked to accept! It. as a personal invitation to attend j these services. T*t'STSS'S SALK. Under end by virtue or the authority aeotitamed m a eertatn deed of trust ex-' ocuted by B. O. Stockton and husband,; Tuk Stockton, to secure an lndebteanes:-..; which deed of trust is of record in the! * office of the register of deeds of Cleve land cmmtT, North Carolina in book 1M. • t nag* 3*4, the undersigned trustee named in said deed of trust will sell to , the highest bidder for cash at the court house door in the city of 8heib.?, on Sat urday. Dec 5. 1931 at 3 o’clock p m for the purpose of 3atisfTing said indebtedness, the, following described real estate: A certain lot or parcel of land in or netl- the city of Shelby, county of, Cleveland, township Number Six (St. and: more particularly described as follows. Located in the northwest, square of the town of Shelby. North Carolina and more particularly bounded and described as fol io ra: Beginning at a stake on Lee street * Martin's corner and runs thence with his line north 13 east 205 feet to a stake, his corner; ftience north 2 east 224 feet »o a stake in edge or a 12 foot alle* ihence with edge of said alley north 8/ vest 100 feet to a stake Mrs. Spangler corner; thence with her line South 7 west 508 feet to a atake on Lee street; thence with north edge of Lee street south 7o east M>0 feet to the beginning. This November 2nd, 1931 THF. COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK, High Point. N C Trus tee V.oraee Kennedy. AUy. 4t Nov 4<_ ' TRUSTEE S SALE. Under the power and authority con tained In that certain deed of trust dated Nov. 8. 1930. made by Doci? lsance •un married) to R D Crowder. trustee, same being of record in the offiee of the reg i'ster of deeds for Cleveland rounty, N C . * in hook 170 page 1*. securing an indebt edness to The Southern Cotton Oil com pany and default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness and ha . mg been calitd upon to execute in trust, I. as truslee will sell for cash u» the. highest bidder a; public auction s lhe court house c oor in Shelby N C on Saturday, . Vcember IP. 1981, • t. u o'clock M . the following described property. All of that, certain tract of land lying \n No. 3 township. Cleveland county. N. C■, and more particularly described ns lot lows: On the East side of the Shelby and Ellis Ferry road, adjoining lands of O. t. • Sarratt and others, and a part of the R. Morgan original tract Beginning a Dine, Randall corner; thence with his line; S 88V2 east 53 poles to a Black gum near | ■ he branch, thence N. 32tt W 94 pole*., |o a pine stump; thence 8. 43t» w 113! jnole* to pointers; thence S. A0 K 'JO poles to a stake in old line; thence N.j .Tj E. 39 poles to the beginning, cor-' faming 37»a acres, more or less, except- j Ing therefrom 18 acres, which the part , | nf the firt part convoyed to L Y. Ran dall, said deed being of record in tnt office of the register of deeds for Cleve-j land county, N. C , in book GGG at page *23 This land is sold subject to any ana1 all raxas and prior hens | i This 18th day of November. 1931. I R. D. CROWDER Trustee : Henry B Edwards. A tty. 4t Nov 18c ( MORTGAGEE S SALE OF LAND. Under and by virtue of the authority Contained in that certain mortgage deed r ecuted by N. M. Devinney and wife Done Devinney, to the undersigned mort pagee. »»kJ mortgage deed being dated June 39th. 183# and recorded in the offic: r>r th« register of deeds lor Cleveland county)' N. C. in book No. 139 at page PIS, securing an indebtedness therein named, and default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness, I will s on » Friday. December 4. 1931 let 1* e’elock noon, or within legal hours mi the court house door in Shelby, N. C aell to the highest bidder for cash at public auction that certain tract of land described a» follows: Lying and being in No. 11 township, flleveland county, N. C. and being Jom d on the north by Speculation land, on the eaat by J. D. Page on the south by Wary Devinney and on the west by Miller Devinney and being that land held by William Devinney since the 7th day ot January. 1876 under an agreement to convey entered into by said WtUiam De ' sinney and William Redmond, jr, and Francis M. Scott said land being de scribed by metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at a stone, J. D. Page's be ginning corner and running thence with t Ins line north (Va 3> 133 poles to r stake, hia corner; thence N. 5' = E. 7b poles to a stone near the top of the * ridge; thence south 63 west 72 poles to t gtone near a branch: thence with J. M Devinney’s line south 16*1 passing his white oak corner at 36 poles 18 poles to the beginning and containing 30 acres, more or less. This November 3rd. 1331. J. M. DEVINNEY, Mortgagee. Sno P. Mull, Ally. 4t Nov 4c Toe Itch Athlnt'* Foot and Hand Iteh Why suffer from tho queer skin disease causing: severe itching- of toes and feet, cracking:, peeling akin, blisters, Ringworm, Trench Foot or Crotch Itch, when you can avoid in fection and quickly heal your skin with Dr. Nixon’s Nixoderm? Based on the famous English Hospital for mula, discovered by a leading Lon * don akin specialist. Dr. Nixon’s Nix oderm acts with amazing speed, be cause designed for this particular akin disease Nixoderm is guaran teed. It must stop itch and quickly heal your akin or the small coat will be refunded. SL'TTLE’S DRIG STOKE. Around Our TOWN OR Shelby SIDELIGHTS! By RENN URl'M. SHELBY SHORTS: Recent mention of the fact that the hearse has been a tegular pau of the tralfic on South Washington street of recent months recall* that' a dozen or so prominent, old, or well known residents of West Marlon! street have been transferred to Sunset in the last few years.Rer.i A L. Stanford, former pastor of Central Methodist church, as you may, ot may not know, is the father of a little daughter. In his Shelby j days he was very much a bachelor. Now he's living in Salisbury A former Shelby society girl wrote a friend here—"8ock her in the ear'* (See a late number of Ballyhoo, if you don't understand what I mean)' . . . . . Ira Stilwcll is again seen, now and then, around the cash regis ter at the Piggly Wiggly. Remember when he and his buddy "Mac opened up the first of those things in Shelby? . . The charity night I shows at the Webb and Carolina should fill etcry seat, Claude Webbi and Jim Reynolds can scrape up. Those fellows put on the be. t shows to be found in a town (or city if you please) this size in America o: Borneo.Golden Grain (darned if we know who makes it) is the! most popular economy, roll-your-own-smpke about Shelby these day* | .Ebeltoft has a new cat—black, of course—and the cat has had' kittens .... Business is on the up-and-up this week with merchant.-, who sell shotgun shells to local nimrods out after birds and rabbit* Rumor has it than an initiation rite had several Shelby high school boys tied and gagged in Sunset cemetery one night recently ... And then! some other boys drained the gas from* ao professor's auto.More and more of those snug-fitting knit dresses seen on Shelby streets Maybe that’s why so many men are bumping into each other as they walk the sidewalks ... A pet partridge caromed in last week and made itself at home with a flock of chickens at the home of J. Q Anthon; . Route 7. THIS BISCUIT-CUTTER NEARS A RECORD On November 2, 1894. a young bride, Mr* Prank L. Hoyle, used a brand, spank-fired new biscuit-cutter in preparing the first meal for her husband. It was purchased at the O. E. Ford company, a firm that is still doing business in Shelby. Early this month the cutter rounded out its 3"th year shaping biscuits in the Hoyle family. In that time Mrs Hoyle has reared and fed biscuits to 11 children—one of whom is now sleeping in France. 1 wonder," wonders John Hoyle, one of the youngest of the 11, "how many biscuits have been cut with that cutter? All of us were right fond of mother's biscuits." Someone who is fond of toying with figures has permission to go ahead and make an estimate, JUST A MEMORY OF OTHER DAYS Jay Dee El can remember when the new carbon liable si l\r T. W Hamrick store were the sensation of the town. THEY ALL GET SUCKED IN; A NEW AUTO The mo6t publicized phase of American life today Is football Not long since a veteran editorial writer, in a letter to this depart ment correcting an erroneous statement, said "we all get picked up oc casionally,'’ We do, For weeks and months new purchasers of magazines in Shelby have noticed, and often mentioned, the many football stories. The Saturday Evening Post ran them. So did Colliers, Liberty and the others. Some ot the stories were fiction; others were experience stories by Prank Carideo, Pop Warner, and other famous stars and coaches. A great many of them boosted the prowess and the spirit of a certain American coach killed a short time ago in an airplane crash. You know his name. Everything—the magazine covers and the inside material—has worked together for weeks to make us all football minded. Not that this cor ner hasn't enjoyed it; we're really loco about the grid game. But behind it. we just learned and you may know it by the time this is read, was a gigantic money-making publicity scheme. The Saturday Evening Post that week before last carried a Notre Dame story by Frank Carideo, last week carried two football stories and a football frontispiece. Foot ball everywhere voo turned. And on an inside page, did you notice the big ad of a new auto that would be put on the market soon? An auto that would be named for a guiding spirit in American athletics? A shadowy picture of the man—now dead—was used in the ad. The odds arc two-to-one that you recognized the shadow and guessed the name of the new car. That was the idea, of course. Our guess, if you’re so thick skulled you haven't guessed, is that it will be the Rockne auto. And from inside channels in this newspaper-advertising-publicity game we hear there has been a howl about how some shrewd auto pub licity man got the nation sold, free of charge, on football and the Fight ing Irish coach, before he spilled the beans. Yes, we all get picked up occasionally. Even the smart boys. WHAT THE LADIES WORE IN 1905 Every generation has its good old days. The older folks today hark back to 1900 and ’90s and their dads stepped back another quarter of a century. A. J. Humphries, a route 2 reader of this department, mails in a copy of ihe New Idea Woman’s Magazine of the year 1905. ‘ Some of the girls," he writes, "might enjoy looking at the styles then.’’ They surely would. In the fashion department were pictured the Norfolk waist, the shirt waist with box plaits, the tucked shirt-waist, Uje. seven-gored skirt the redingote (it must have been ar iding coat), and the yoke or bib waist. All the skirts swept the floor, the waists were teenie-weenie things, and the bosoms were—well, as exposing as lingerie advertised these modern days. The fancy stuff included the draped waist and the Bolero jacket—and ruffles and plaits everywhere. And the hats—be lieve it or hot—resembled the Empress Eugenie of today. They were a bit larger and had their feathers and frills, but they sat on top or perched on one side of an immense amount of hair. There was a department in the feminine magazine for men, and there it was revealed that the man without a derby and button shoe, was a nobody. Those were the days when every magazine had flaring ads of Warner’s rust-proof corsets and the original Gold Dust Twins. But why tell more? Any number of readers can remember thOoc days, and those styles and fads, without such reminders. Western Union Has Serial Service Now Serial service, inaugurated by Western Union July 1, on an experi mental basis tor interstate mes sages, bas now been generally ex tended to include intrastate tele grams, and to benefit all towns and cities in the United States. The new service proved its value to business houses throughout the country during its four and a half month trial, and now it takes its place strong such telegrams as the night letter, introduced in 1910. and - the day letter, 1911. ' Serial telograms may be filed in sections during the day for trans mission. The number of words which may be sent in one serial Is unlimited. The minimum charge per day is for fifty words and individ ual sections are rated at a minimum of fifteen words. By using it. a firm can increase Its volume of telegraph ing substantially at a slight increase in cost. Essay On The Mule. Being told to write an essay on the mule, a small boy turned in to his teacher the following effort: The mewl is a hardier bird than the guse or turkie. It has two leg= to walk with, two more to kii with and wears its wings on tti side of its head. It is stubbornly backward about going forward. St. Paul New* Of Late Interest All Day Church Meeting Next Sun day. Mrs. Harrelson Observes Birthday - (Special to The Star.) St. Paul. Nov. 33.—'There will be an all-day service at St. Pau’ next Sunday November 29. There will be representatives from each of the churches on the Cherryville circuit. Mrs. \V. N. Harrelson gave the following a turkey dinner last Sun day on her 46th birthday: Mr. Ralph Harrelson. Mr and Mrs. Broadus Eaker and little son Bobby of near Waco, and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Harrekon of Gastonia. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Harrelson and children. Delora, Betty Sue and lit tie son Michael, visited Mr, and Mrs John Hilton Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Lewis Greene Is spending awhile with her daughter Mrs, Pla to Richard and Mr. Richard of Belw ood. Mrs. Grady Smith spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Worth Lattimore or Polkvllle. Mr. and Mrs. John Canipe and little daughter Patsj, of Shelby, spent awhile Sunday night with his mother Mrs. W. A. Canipe. Those visiting Mr. and Mrs Mar cus Beam Sunday were: Mrs. Char lie McSwain, Misses Dorothy Smith Annie and Edna McSwain. and Missep Vangie McSwain and Lona Beattie of the New Prospect com munity. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dalton of Shelby spent Sunday afternoon with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Harrelson. Miss Nellie Hilton of Cherryville, spent a few days last week with her brother Mr John Hilton amt Mrs. Hilton. Misses Annie *nd Edna McSwaln. Mrs. Jethro McSwaln and Miss Lula Mar Bess of Bess chapel spent last. Friday afternoon with Mr. and I Mrs. Abe McSwaln of the New Prospect community. Mr. and Mrs. W N llarrclson spent awhile Sunday night with Mr and Mrs John Hilton l liaiiip Boy Farmer i Glenn Farrow, 20-year-old Danvillp. Ark., youth, who won the title of “Champion Boy Farmer of Amer ica” recently at the American Live stock Show held in Kansas City, Mo. He Is the second hoy from Arkansas to win the title in three years. Fourteen Cleveland County Students Now At WakeForest, TakingCourses r (Special to The Star.) Wake t'orest, Nov. 23.—Fourteen pons of Cleveland county citizens ; are among the 800 students enrolled j this session at Wake Forest rot I lege, Six are from Shelby, two each trom Bolling Springs and Littimore i and one each from Belwood, Lawn* ; dale. Fallston and Kings Mountain Two members of the group are : studying medicine, three lav., and I nine are taking work leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree. Three are ! members of the intercollegiate de- ' i bate squad: three are outstanding! members of Che Freshman Demon ! Deacon football team: one plays in the band; and another Is a distance! track man. The senior members of tne Shelby delegation is Wyan W. Washburn.; j son of Mr and Mrs. .) C Washburn. | This law is news editor of Old Gold I ’ and Black (college weekly.) belong*1 j to the Euzellan Literary Society and j intercollegiate debate squad. Is a; member of the track team, and is | assistant this session In the college! ; library. C. Y Washburn, son of Rev and j Mrs. D. G. Washburn, is now in his I sophomore year. He is taking work j in thF academic school and is a ; , member of the Euzelmn Literary So- j ciety. B T, Falls, jr,, son of Mi j and Mrs. B. T. Falls, Is a first-year j law student. The captain and “fly ing phantom" of the freshman Ind ents being Dr. and Mrs. Zeno Wal' ents bein gDr* and Mrs. Zend Wall Another star on the football team is J. M. Gold. Jr., who plays the half-back position. He Is a son of Mr and Mrs. .1 M. Gold and is ink ing law. The one musician In tlie crowd is F. B Abernathy who plays, a baritone In the band tie is a member .of the college glee club and the F.uaelinn Literary Society He is a son of Rev and Mrs. O. P. Ab ernathy and is taking his first year of pre-medtral work. The two Boiling Springs men are J, C Hamrick, son of Mr. end Mrs. T. C Hamrick, and Howard Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs M, D. Moore. Hamrick entered this year the School of Medicine He is a member of the William Edgar Marshal' Med ical Society and the Phi Itho Sigma fraternity. Moore is in his sopho more year and is taking work to ward the B. S. degree, The duet front Latttmore l* J. E Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs, .1. C. Martin, and H J. Petty, son of Mr. and Mr.*' J, B Petty Both are can didates for the B. A degree Martin will grndutc next spring and Petty the year afterward. The latter Is a member of the Philomathcslnn Lit erary Society. The singles arc Ralph Carpenter, son of Mr and Mrs. Gordon C. Car penter, of Bel wood: Robert Forney, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Forney, of Lawndale; T. H. Lee, son of Mr and Mrs. T A Lee. of Fallston; and G A. Herndon, son of Mr. and Mrs M. E. Herndon, of Kings Mountain Carpenter is a junior in the aca demic school. Forney has live rank of a sophomore arid is a member ol the football team Herndon, a Jun ior. is a member of the Pan-Hcllen ie council and the Kappa Alpha so cial fraternity. Lee, also a junior. belong:; to the- Intercollegiate debit it squad Wake Forest has students enroll i'<i this seswton from 95 ol the 10< counties in North Carolina. It haf the distinction of being the oldest and largest, Baptist Institution fot men in the United States. Twenty-two Pitt county farmer; will store 40.000 bushels of sweet potatoes this winter, ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTH'!.. Noth-r Is hereby given that I h»ve th;a day qualified as administrator of the e ! Ilr at .1. t, Stary, deceased, late ot Cleveland county, N. c All persons In debted to .-aid estate *111 make Immed iate payment to the undersigned and ail person:, hating rlatms against said estak Bill present them to me properly provrit for payment on or before November U 10M or tilts notice *111 be pleaded In bar <* their recovery, This November I3th. 1931 w J ftniDIIKS Administrator ot till Kstatn of J I Btacy, deed Ry burn A lloev Attys St Nov ig i* AMBASSADOR MU Carolina Mon.-Tues. Nov. 30-Dec. 1 <4r> I’ll stand by tobacco . . . in good times, in hard times ... all kind of times ... it helps a whole lot! ttX GREW up with tobacco. Mostly 1 smoke X cigarettes now — but I’ve smoked plenty of cigars, and pipes, too. And I never got anything but good from tobacco in any form—pipe, cigar, or cigarette—and that goes for every smoker I ever heard about. “Why, I remember as a boy, way back, how the old folks in the fall used to pick and cure tobacco trom a nttie paten they’d raised, and save out the best for their own smok ing. And my father fought all through the war, and lived to be ninety. “He’d certainly appre ciate what we get today, though. Just think about 4 these CHESTERFIELDS f of mine —fine tobaccos from all over the world, and cured and blended just so; you couldn’t get anything purer or milder. Cleanest factories you ever saw, too — never a hand touching the cigarettes . . . everything up to date. “A big improvement over the old ways . . . reckon that’s why I like CHESTERFIELDS so much. I notice most of my friends get a lot of pleasure out of them, too.* ‘ ‘ But what l started out to say was, you can always depend on tobacco, no mat ter how things are going. Probably there was never anything in the world that meant so much to so many people, and cost so little, as tobacco—whatever way they smoke it. “Yes, sir—I’ll stand up for tobacco as [long as I can strike a match!” ®1931. Li&ezn U Urns Iom-xu Co. * NOTE. In the sections where tobacco grown and where people know tobacco. Chester field is usually the largest-selling cigarette. LIGGETT k MYERS TOUACCG CO.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 25, 1931, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75