Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Sept. 23, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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
FAIR WEEK BARGAINS Next week is the “red let ter” week of the year for Cleveland county people. It is the week in which thousands come to Shelby for the South's largest county fair. All who attend the fair will be admitted to the gate with out charge—but the fair will not be the only attraction Shelby merchants have been stocking: up on fall merchan dise, and visitors to the fair will have the opportunity of killing two birds with ont stone by taking in the tree fair and inspecting the low priced bargains in Mielbj stores. If you’re coming to the fair —and most of you are—-it will pay you to read THt STAR for the advertisement* of Shelby merchants so that you can save time, as well a.* money, by going direct to the bargain* you seek. Ttuc to dry weather [armei s In .Avery' county are having to use feed stored lor winter use. In the chivalrous Old South, a gentleman is always expected to of ler his seat to a lady . . . but evi dently Governor Sterling of Texas oouldnt. see it that way when "Ms" FVrguson ran against, him. Ml VR 666 UQrifl — TABLETS — < kfttfcft Malaria in » day*. Cold* first Hr*. WaaAaeh#* nr Neuralgia in 30 minute*. M« SALVE for HEAD COLDS Mnat Speedy Remedies Known milr NOT tears MQygsioiHa 'yo*r shier A<J>t 7/eu f FACIALS <W WFHRtNt ' HK.AGO NEW YORh Auto Body Work* fainting and Repairs Wrecked Body Work A Specially Bishop & Wilson 227 W. Graham St, PHONE 770-J LUTZ-AUSTELL FUNERAL HOME 322 West Marion Street PHONE 33 no toc serrni from Athletes Foot? toet Uch* Are there emu!! •ad soft’CORNS between toe*? Creokert ecaly skin? it thepe agjnntoms ere familiar atnp Athlete* Foot now with j' TOMOLO i 1 Mlm Skin KrUattone Ring • worm »nd Soft Corns. *> ©levdand Drug Co. SHFXBT, N. C. I . 1 • . r 1 "■■■ ■ . .. , TRAIN TRAVEL ' BARGAIN FARES 1 Via * SOUTHERN RAILWAY | SYSTEM I September 30th-October 1st Round Trip Fares From SHELBY, N. C. New York. N. Y._$9.50 Philadelphia, Pa. $8.50 Atlantic City, N. J. _ $8.50 Pittsburgh, Pa._$10.50 Baltimore, Md._$6.00 Washington, D. C. __ $5.00 Tickets on sale Sept. 30th and Oct. 1st. Good on all regular trains (Except Crescent Limited trains 37 and 38.) Final limit Wash ington and Baltimore tick ets Oct. 3rd. other destina tions Oct. 4th. Tickets good in pullman sleeping cars upon payment pullman charges. Reduced round trip pull man rates. Excellent service with through sleeping cars. High class day coach service. For informration and pullman reservations call on ticket agents or address: R- H. GRAHAM, Division Passenger Agent. Charlotte, N. C. | Nobody’s Business liv (.1,1, McCEi; Had Nf»* Prom flat Rock a man was found dead on live south end of fIn t rock last week and hr is unknown lie wits rtdver j luted in the paper, but noboddv claimed hi., corps, he looked verry much like a furrlner, but was pos sibly a yankee, as he had some monnev In his pocket which amounted to c85 a big inquest was hcl over his remains and the ewidenee looked like he was knocked in the head with a blunt instrument and robbed but the jury said lie was not rob bed as his money was still intact In his pocket when the diseased was picked up. the kurriner sent the jury bark for a better verdict and they then decided that he was struck betwixt the pavement and the railroad by a fast mowing object, and come to his death by being killed with an otterrnobeel or some other swift mowing vehicle unknown to the Jury. lie «hs fi leet long and had a snial beard and a few whiskers color, black, and 2 eyes, color blue, and some hair, color gray onner count of age. as he looked to be 45 years old and evidently he worried his .hair gray since hoover prosper ity set in. anyone wishing to claim his remains CRn have same by pay ing for digging him up and for the coffin which cost the county 11$. he had a mark on his inside coat pocket and the jury kinder think.' his name was inr. shaffer mark but no Rddrcss was on same. hr wore a blue coat and a white ha! and black britches and a shirt a! the time someboddy knocked bin in the head with a fence rail am left him laving dead on the side oi the highway. our polecsman says he has 2 fine riues for the culprit, who killed him. he wont tell what It is, but the mayer thinks it is the tracks of a car th^t was running on 2 rims and allso a pair of specs. he was n married man, you could tell this as none of his clothes had any but tons to amount, to annything sow ed on them, and his socks needed darning. it was a sad case: getting killed away from home, and a nice fun neral was given him be rehober church and a collection was took up to pay for a bunch of flowers which was sent by the town coun sel which met in exective session after he was found dead near the cltty. i will rite or foam you if i find out who he was and why lie got killed. yores trulir, mike Clark, rfd. rorry apondent, Washington, O. C., The Politician's Paradise It was my pleasure. If pleasure it might be called, to spend 10 hours and 4 dollars in Washington one day last week. I was surprised to find that the gold-leaf on the Cap itol dome was still intact,-and none of the tombstones had been re moved from any of the public Buildings, meaning the marble Buildings, of course. I noticed that; Mr, Hoover war having the White House re-painted Mr. Roosevelt ought to appreciate his thoughtfulness. I couldn't un derstand it, but it was being paint ed white: after the prosperity wave that has been waving tor 2 years, I think it might have ben better l! the color had been changed to blue. 1 understand now why we hate a deficit of about $2,500,000,000.00, not counting the many concealed obligations. The subway and the garages for the congressmen and senators had a little something to do with our troubles. There we already enough of large office buddings in Washington to take care of England. France. (Treat Britain. Sicily. Europe. Germany and Italy, yet—they are preparing to spend a billion dollars more for office buildings The boys are razing about ,100 good buildings sos they can have plenty room to erect about 100 more buildings that they don’t need. If they would cut out 50 per cent of the red tape used in matters of government, 65 percent of the fed eral employees could be sent home and put to work. It takes 3 different men to lick a postage stamp up there, and the services of 3 steno graphers, and 2 clerks are required to help a boss to sneeze. A man told me that they weir going to build a lQ-mllliem-doHa: inter-state commerce building—as if there was any more commerce of any kind left. All the I. C. C. has done so far has been to hold up freight rates and passenger fares so's the trucks and buses would pm all the business The building for the Forkrtj Tail Tadpole commission will cost in the neighborhood of 3 million dollars. 'Dir building to house the Bureau for the Relief of Blind June Bug? will relieve the taxpayers of only about $750,000.00. The structure that will be occupied by the Commission on Food and Drink for the Colora do chipmunks Will be erected <t less (possibly) than $3,450,686.17. All forms of wild life will have Bu reaus at their backs, and the said Bureaus will sit in nice, marble j bouses. You can actually smell waste, extravagance, idleness, and pin-headed politicians when you i get within 42 miles of Washington, i Your Message t ame Too hale We heard you tell us, Herbie, Of a clilcken In each pm. A car In every household. A garage on ever lot. A radio in each parlor, A smile on every face. No poverty or paupers, A contented, happy race All factories to be running: Every spindle on the hum. The furnaces all glowing. No workers ou the bum The farmer well protected. And the logger doing fine. Our sailors on all oceans, And full'crews in every mine No bleary red-nosed drunkards, No maids of 111-repute To cause our youths to stumble, Their morals to confute The veteran, God bless him, Who was once his country's pride You would so proudly shelter And stand firmly by his side. The banker, poor dear fellow. Was omitted in your speech, 1 suppose because the people Thought him far beyond their reach You told us this, dear Herbie, Just four short yews ago. And now your latest message Just sets our hearts aglow. The chickens have no feathers. And the car will never go. The license Is not paid for Our Income is so low. Our radio now Is silent No cash to pay our bills, All industry is stagnant, You've failed to cure our Ills Our farmers nearly bankrupt, Our loggers in the dumps. The miners and the sailors Have had so many bumps. The drinking now Is greater, But the stuff so vile and hoi Has ruined many virgins And never saved a sot. The veterans, still faithful You’Ve treated very rough. We'll meet, you In Novcmbci With ballots plenty tough. The banker* oil grew richer On phoney bonds we bought We took the hook you baited. Like suckers all got caught. Ai voting lime pext Autumn, We broken pawns of fate Will show you, pompous Herbie, That your message came too late. Attorney Holding; Effort Is Being Made To Oust Rop-; er Who Is Recorder And City Attorney. Llncotnton* Sept. 22 An action! that has excited quite a bit of local i interest was filed with Clerk of Court J. L. Hunter Friday by Dr. W, C. Kiser, leading physician and Democrat In the western part of the county seeking to oust S. M Roper from the office of judge of record er's court basing the pica on the ground that Roper cannot hold the office of recorder and that of city attorney, which he also holds, at one and the same time. Kiser has employed Lawrence E i RudislH. local barrister and former j Democratic chairman of the elec tion board, to handle the case, which will likely come up for set-1 dement at the October term of Lin- j coin superior court. All parties concerned are promi nent in Democratic circles. Roper j being the present judge of record- I pr'.s court by the grace of that par-{ ty. and is now- the Democratic nom inee for the same office in the com-, ing November election. The outcome is availed with in terest.- | —Seneca Fouts. Lincoln The Legionnaires have demanded oeer and the bonus. Wonder what would happen if both were granted at the same time0 Even a lot of burglars are. unem ployed these day.-* No incentive. TRISTEE'S SUE By virtue of deed of trust executed the >th of February. 1930. by John Byers and vlfe. Beatrice Byers. to me as trustee tnd recorded in book 166. page 50 of the egiatry of Cleveland county, N C, and t&fault and demand having been made 1 if ill sell to the highest bidder at the •ourt house door In Shelby. N. C. on Wondav. October 10. 1032. at li o'clock M. he following described real estate Situated m the town of 8helby. and beginning at iron stake in south edge of Buffalo stredv'.V Dr Lord's corner, then “Vith his line $. 173 fret to stake in Bioom Kendall's line, these wi^h his line E 40 feet to a stake, his corner; tftepce ruh H. H. Keatson s line N. 172 feet to *n iron stake in south edge of Buffalo afreet; thence syith same great- 50 feet to he beginning containing feet more "*r leas, according to surrey made by o ~ Thompson, surveyor, on the 15th d«v ?f November. 1925. Terms of sale Cash * This the -ath dav of September 1933. B T FAM.fi Tm.iw j Answers To Star’s Question Box On Page One 1 Rainbow Division 2. Gainsborough 3. 'The Little Dog." 4 "Tlie Courtship of Mile, Stan d'i'sh.” 5 About seven per cent (i Yes. 7 The average lifetime of per sons In a community R French novelist ft. "River of January ■ 10. Five cards of the same suit In sequence. tl A 'slaughter-house. 12. Verne L Reynolds 17. A Spanish magistrate. 14. Shakespeare. 15. Famous singer IS. London. England 17. Latvia. 18. The Black Sea in Oreck mathemetiemn 20. American poet Brooding Hangman Fakes Own Life Worried Seven Years Because He Sent Mote To Death Than Any Other. London.—The world's most, wide ly known hangman was dead here this week by his own hand a vic tim of years of brooding over hav ing sent more murderers to death than finy other living man. He is John Ellis, who auiing 22 years as public hangman executed more than 200 criminals. His nerves began to fail him in 1921 when he tesigned He was foun 1 dead, his throat slashed and a razor by his side. January 2. 1922, lie put to death the notorious Mrs. Edna Thompson, who with young Freder'ex By-wat ers was condemned to death for the murder of the woman's husband She had to be dragged to the scaf fa.fi and this, with his previous Worries over his job. was too much for Ellis. He retired the following year but could not shake off the horrors that haunted him. On August 20, 1924 he spent a sleepless night and was found next day. gravely wounded, with a revolver by his side. He re covered. however, and promised a magistrate he would not commit suicide But the horror continued. Among those who died in a noose he supervised was Roger Casement who was put to death m 191G after he was convicted of having soilght German aid for an armed revolt in Ireland For a brief period In 1927 Ellis w-nt on the stage as a hangman, but it, proved too much lor him. Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat In Just 4 Weeks Mrs. Mar West of St. Louts. Mo., writes "I'm only 28 vrs. old and weighed 170 lbs. until taking one box of your Kruschen Salts .itiSt 4 weeks ago. 1 now weigh 150 lbs. I also have more energy and furthermore I've never had a hungry moment.'' Fat folks should take one half teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot -water in the morning before breakfast—it's the SAFE, harmless way to reduce as tens of thousands of men and women know. For your health's sake ask for and get Kruschen at Cleveland Drug store or any drug store—the cast for a bottle that lasts 4 weeks is but a trifle and if alter the first bottle you are not joyfully satisfied with results—money back. adv. A1 Smith spoke the other day in behalf of a Democratic wet candi date; Which helps to confirm our suspicions that Mr Smith was Dem ocratic and wet. Last Bargain Fares Of The Season Sept. 30th - Oct. 1st SHELBY To New York__ $9.50 Philadelphia __ $8.50 Atlantic City_SS.50 Pittsburgh __$10.50 Baltimore _$6.00 Washington_ $5.00 AND RETCHN Tickets sold for all trains ] September 30th • October 1st—Washington and Bal timore tickets limited re turning to leave destination prior to midnight October 3rd; other points October i 4th. Reduced*round trip pull- i man fares. Stopovers allowed and baggage checked. For information see agent. H. E. PLEASANTS. DPA., 505 Odd Fellows Bldg.’ RALEIGH. N. C. SEABOARD Air Line Railway Class To Study Star In Calif. Nrhnnt of Journalism Is Making A i Study of ( irvrland Star in Southern California. The Cleveland Star Is among 200 newspapers in .18 states selected by Prof. Roy L. French, chairman of journalism at the University of Southern California. for special Study by students enrolled In jour nalism classes at U. S. C. this fall. News story form, types of terri tory served, general mechanical makeup, community, projects spon sored. and advertising are among the [mints to be anaiy/ed by Tro ian upperclassmen registered In a course tn “Community Newspapers’ under the direction of l-'rof. French. With 14 courses in journalistic subjects and four in advertising in cluded in the U. S. C. curriculum, in addition to courses in general college subjects such as economics, psychology. sociology, languages, literature, history, and sciences, ap proximately 25(1 students at Troy arc taking university work in this field. Each spring as field work senior journalism students visit town -ad jacent, to Los Angeles where they publish a complete issue of that community's newspaper. Another extra curricular project consists of an annual program sponsored on "Newspaper Day" which brings to gether university, junior college, and high school journalists and Southern California newspaper edi tors and publishers in conferecc and round table discussions. A yearly scholarship contest is held by IT S, C, and two four-year .till- : tion scholarships are awarded on a competitive basis to our boy and! one girl who are June graduates, of Southern California secondary schools who have newspaper work as an ultimate goal. Germany has ordered another "pocket battleship." Tire worcii "pocket" is supposed to denote the cruiser's size, but it i.s a word that intrigues us just the same, NOTH i: TO CREDITORS Hiving this day qualified as admin is j fralrir; of the estate of J. P. Boyles, late M Cleveland cfirtiity nil pAflotls holding I claims against said estate ni.ll please pTe- = sent the same properly proven to the | undersigned on or before the 25th day o» August. 1933 or this notice will be plead- j ed in bar of any recovery All persons indebted to the said estate will make im mediate payment to the undersigned. This 24th of August. 1932. ADA BOYLES Ad nun is tratrix of J P Boyles' Estate. B T Falls, Attorney. 6t Aug 26c NOTICE OF SIMMONS North Carolina. In Superior Court. Jesse I), Letter, Plaintiff Vs Viola Bradley .Letter, Defendant The defendant herein. Viola Bradley Lefler. will take notice that an action, above styled, has been commenced in su perior court. Cleveland county, of which Shelby is the county seal, wherein plain tiff prays Judgment for 4,0 absolute, di vorce under Sec, 1659, subxsee 3. Ncffth Carolina Code, and ;.ald defendant Will take notice that she is required to ap pear at the court house, m said city, countv and state, and at the clerk's of fice therein, on or before the tenth day of October. 1932. and answer; or demur to the complaint filed herein, or plain tiff will apply at term for-the relief de manded in said complaint. This the 9th day of September 1932 A M. HAMRICK. Clerk Superior Court. W S Beam. Atty. Tor plaintiff,.' 4? Sept, Pc /?r«r« Carton, author of “The Man Nobody Knows? has written this tribute to north Carolina for the "Parade of the States" Monday night programs of l .e t, cneral Motors Corporation, part of an educational plan to make the country nj a whole better acquainted with the individual states—their history, scenic beauty, industries and people. T) North Caroiiha, the jid North Stale, the Tar Heel State, the state whoee greatness has been achieved by her own native sons and daughters, with little "id from without . . to North Carolina, General Motors pays ita tribute. One of the thirteen original states, she has played in many fields the heroic role of the pioneer. On her soil was planted the first English colony In what is now the United States, and the first Anglo Saxon child in the New World was bo.-n. Virginia Dare was the child, and her name lingers on tn our memories, though her fate i.9 forever veiled In the mystery of the Lost Colony ot Roanoke island. In North Carolina, on the wind-swept sand hills of Kitty Hawk, the Wright Brothers flew the first airplane. The Old North State gave the nation Presidents Polk and Johnson, and trom the same sturdy pioneer stock sprang Andrew Jackson. Her rugged mountains bred ruggedness in the character of Daniel Boone. Those mountains have not lost either their ruggedness or their charm. Dreamily beautiful they are . . . the Blue Ridge and the Great Smokies. the i^and of the Sky," . . . covered with virgin forests, cut through with teaming rivers, peopled by hardy mountain folk who still preserve in their speech and customs the traditions of Elizabethan England. From Mount Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi, an empire or -ertile valleys and plains slopes down to the Atlantic, an empire boasting enmate of splendid variety and an almost bewildering wealth of products. Down from the mountains come the rivers and streams to be trans formed into the magic of electric energy, and so to drive the wheels of hundreds of textile mills and the vast tobacco factories of Durham, Winston oaiem, and Rcidsville. Up to the mountains and to the pine forests go tourists from all over our land, to find health and refreshment and delight at Asheville and Pine hurst and many another beauty spot. .. K°- You rtust ride along the famous modem road3 of North Carolina, penetrating every coriur of the state. You must visit Raleigh, the charming old capital. You must eee Greensboro, where Dolly Madison and O. Henry were born; and Guilford Court House: the State Uni versity at Chapel Hill, and Duke University at Durham, so munificently endowed by the generosity of one of the state’s devoted sons; and the great hays along the coast where fishermen and hunters find the sportsmans dream of happiness fulfilled. On North Carolina’s behalf General Motors extends this invitation to the people of America, knowing that a gracious friendliness has ever been the ’039vri!?,C?me.uithin her b0*-ders. Step into your car and go. Go and linger. Nowhere is the past more instructive or the present more in spiring than in the Old North State. Auction Hammer Is Over Old Homestead Beatrice, Neb.-—The auctioneers’ hammer hangs poised over the his toric Daniel Freeman farm—first homestead in the United States, j To save at least 40 acres of the | farm for use as a national park j the Nebraska Daughters of the American Revolution are pushing forward with plans to conduct a campaign for pennies, in schools ot the state. They estimate that $3,500 will be Cost 85 Cents To Put Rheumatic Cripple Back To Work Again Now Joyously Happy While all his family looked on in j astonishment and aU his friends were amazed, one man took the pain, swelling and agony from his tortured Joints in 48 hours and did it with that famous rheumatic pre scription known to pharmacists as Allenru—you may do he same. This powerful vet safe remedy is wonderful—its action is almost mag ical. Excess uric acid poison—the cause of most rheumal.c agony starts to leave your body In 24 hours. Just get one 85 cent bottle of Al lenru from Cleveland Drug Co., or any live druggist—take it as direct ed and if in 48 hours your pains haven't left you get your money back. It works just as swiftly with Neu ritis. Sciatica, Lumbago and Neu ralgia. adv. A $3.50 DICTIONARY for only SOc Here’ How To Get This Wonderful Value Renew your subscription to The Star for a year at $2.50 and pay 50c extra. (For Mail Orders Add 10c for Postage.) For *3 00 from mail sub scribers you get a year s subscription to The Star <155 copies! and this won derful word book contain ing over 1,000 pages. The publishers’ price on this dictionary alone is $3.50 but as long as the supply lasts you get the Star fc. a year and the $3.50 dic tionary all for $3.00. No books sold separately. Each book packed in r, nice carton and the pub lisher's price of $3.50 stamp ed on the container. Ex amine it carefully and il you doii't feel that it i„ worth the extra 50c, return it and get your money back. This is the same wonderful 1,000-page book we Have ben distributing for several years. It is illustrated, has synonyms and antonyms, foreign words and phrases, commercial and legal terms, weights and measures, the U. S. Constitution and the last census figures. , The Cleveland Star MONDAYS WEDNESDAYS FRIDAYS The Cheapest Local Newspaper Per Copy Published In North Carolina, sufficient to buy the 40 acres and state permission for the penny cam paign has been asked. It is now scheduled for public sale on Octo ber 1 for back taxes. Daniel Freeman. a Union Civil war veteran, obtained deed to the homestead January 1. 1863. while he was here on furlough. In 186V he and his family settled on the tract There's one office that always seeks the man. it is the tax col lectors o.fftcp., They say an education pays, but this is the season of the year when the graduations of last spring arc a dead toss to the football coach. GIRLS DON’T BE SKINNY^I GET SOME CURVES!! Fill out those thin places anti give your body the pretty curves men admire. Take Virol uron tonic) a few weeks and you'll be surprised. Vinol tastes delicious aPul Webb & Son, Dmggists. ad Order* German Beer For Delivery In 1933 Uniontown, Pa.—Leon H. U«\:; hotel proprietor, has ordered 5n barrels of beer from Hofbrau Hau of Wuerzburg, Germany, for dr livery on April 15, 1933. By placing his order now. Hryiv, explains, he saves $2 a barrel anti is assured prompt delivery. "In view of the promises marl by both Republicans ♦ and Demo erats, I feel safe in entering inn this agreement," he says. A feminine columnist advocates that married men wear rings on their thumbs—just as if they hadn 1 been wearing 'em in their noses ail the time. Lutz &. Jackson FUNERAL HOME 200 West Marion St. SERVICE DAY AN1) NIGHT — PHONE 72 — Ambulance Service A Specialty LADY ATTENDANT Black-Draught Clears Up Sluggish Feeling "I have U3ed Tbedford's Black Draught for constipation for a ion* time," writes Mrs, Frank Cham pion. of Wvnflf, Ark “If T Ret up in the morning feeling | rtull arm sluggish. a <los^ of BUok ! Draught taken three times a day will i cause tho feeling to pass -awa ;, anh I m a day or two r fe>l like a new i person. After many rars of us* *** would not exchange Black-Draught ! for anv ru*dicin* " P g. if you bare Children, « rAent, the v*\e, p l * a * a n t -1 a * 11 v <7 SYRUP of Tbedford's Black-DraujHt. For laxy liver, stomach and kidneys, biliousness, indi gestion, constipation, head ache, colds and fever. 10* and 35* at dealers. WHAT THE CLEVELAND FARMERS MUTUAL EXCHANGE IS The Cleveland Fanners Mutut 1 Ex change is a Cleveland County Farm organization which buys and sells for the farmer. The Exchange maintains headquarters in the County Agent's office in the Court House. BOARD OF DIRECTORS B. Austell, Pres. J, P. McSwain O. P. Hamrick, Y-Pres. C. F. tVolfe R tv iVlsoi.', sec.-Treas. <i. L Hamrick BUY FEEDS FROM THE EXCHANGE AND SAVE $10 TO $15 ON THE TON We can now furnish you witji Poultry. Dairy and other feeds at prices you can afford to pay. (This is just another service to the farmers, plus the poultry car we have been running since we organized.) our feeds are grown and made from results obtained through many years of experimental work by the State’s experimental stations, and recommended to give economical results. Ask some of the feeders in the County; such as, IT Austell, G. F. Wolfe, 0. P. Hamrick, G. L. Hamrick, P. M. Nisler and many others who are pleased with the results they have ob tained. Our feeds are manufactured with open formulas. For detail information, see any member of the Hoard of Directors (named above) or feeders. • You will always find the Exchange ready to assist you with your feed problems. Why not buy your feeds through the Cleveland Farmers Mutual Exchange and save $10 to $15 per ton '.' DEALERS: J. N. DELLINGER. SHELBY, N. C. C. J. llAMRICK & SON, BOILING SPRINGS, N. C. Geveland Farmers Mutual , ^ Exchange, Inc.
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1932, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75