WKaFtov Want Rates For Want Advertisements In This Column. Minimum Charge For Any Want Ad 25c. Tbit size 1 cent per word each insertion This size type 2c per word each insertion. This size type 3c per word each insertion. *# mvci *v v-»it x ti r iaihu we can fix ’em. Shoes, scissors, para sols. Hedge blades and lawn mow ers at Sellers Shoe Shop tf-llc FOR SALE: COUNTRY CURED hams, each one guaranteed against everything but fat. All sizes. Hall W. Tillman, Fallstcn, N. C. tf 18c TOM WEBJrS~*PEACHES for canning preserving and eating. Closing out Carmens at $1 per bushel. Georgia Belles ready for peach pickles. Special prices for truck loads. #At orchard near Toluca or at I home phone No. 467-J. 3t-3Dc GOOD TAILORING, New Fall Samples for Suits Made to Order, $21, $23.50. George Jacobs, Tailor, Alter ing. ltp PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW for smart hand knitted wool coats, suits and sweaters for early fall. Work satisfactory. Price reason able. Mrs. F. R. Saunders. 703 W. Marion. tf-p "CHECK YOUR OIL LEVEL. Are you burning oil or wearing It out. You may need a ring job. Cee us. We can save you mdney. City Service Station, phone 149 tf 18c ENGRAVED CALLING CARDS Copperplate and 100 cards tor $2 Let The Star show you attractive tine of samples. tf 21p WEDDING INVITATION 3 AND announcements. Three lines and three price grades—printed, embosa and engraved. Attractive prices 8ee samples and prices at The Star of flee tf 21 p TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING -machines repaired, C S pow, Bex 985. Shelby. tfJune22c _FOR right’ PRICES ON FINE jdb printing, eall telephones 4-J or U, - tfp IF YOU HAVE A LEAKING roof or a chimney which need's flashing, see me. I tan stop the leaks and fix the chimneys. also paint your tool First class work J. W Denton, telephone Nr> 11. tl-23p ~WILL DRIVE YOUR ' CAR TO Chicago Worlds Fair for my ex penses. Made several trips last veer. George Thompson Cliff aide N. C. 3-25p ICE BOXES. ICE "REFRIGERA tors, all sizes and finishes. $3 up. Pendleton's Music Store, tf June 20c ROYAL PORTABLE TYPEWRIT ers redueed $15 C. S. Dow, Box 985, Shelby. tfJune22c LOST LAST WEDNESDAY AT Fallttcn, in Btamey Co. Store or Gantt’s Store, small leather pocket book containing from $8.00 to $12.00 in currency. Finder return to Everatte Spurllng at Fallston and '• receive reward. lt-30p FOR RENT: GOOD SIX-ROOM house on Hudson 8t. See Paxton Elliott at First National Bank. tt-SOp PLUMBING WQRK. 'sasopable Prices. Dick Dud '•r. PHONE 548-J. tf!8c AXI SERVICE ANYWHERE IN tty 10c. Phone 800. ttf-tc REBUILT TYPEWRITERS—ALL Kinds. C. & Dow. Box 985, Shelby. tf-June 22c mill" HELP SPECIAL — TAXI (are, 50c per week. Phone 800. tf-Ae RELIABLE ELECTRIC REFRIG - srator service. Ten years experience. Work guaranteed. L. C. Toms, Lat timore, N. C. Phone 182 Shelby or T2 Lattimore. tf-37c MONEY TO LOAN ON IMFROV ed farm land. John P Mull. 13-37C AWNINGS MADE. ALL SIZES. Freeman Shoe Shop. tf Apr 37c COUPLE DRIVING TO CHICA go will take two passengers, $15 each far round trip. Leaving Sun day, August 5. returning to Shelby August 10. DeSoto car. Cameron Shipp. Star office, or telephone 270-W. 3-30p COW FOR SALE — FRESH IN August 9. T Young, phone 2T1. lt-30c Revival Services Begin At Grover i Padgett To Conduct Service*,- El liott T3 A: list; Give* Dinner On Birthday. (Special to The star.) GROVER. July 29.—A ree.val be gins at the Baptist church Sunday | morning, July 29th and will con 1 tlnue for a week, sendees at 1! o'clock each nio’-niii® and at 8 o'clock each evening. The Rev. Syl • ' ester Elliott, pastor of the First baptist church at Paris, Ark., will •st-1st the pastor. the Rev. Rush "’adgett. The Rev. Mr Elliott is a native of Pleasant Grove commun ity, Cleveland county and at this time is in Cleveland county on va cation from his regular pastorate Mr. and Mrs. T. F Jenkins *rd daughter, Luemma of Poplv Springs community spent Friday with Mrs. Rush Padgett. Miss Mary Hughes and Nesbitt ! Hughes of Charlotte spent Friday end Saturday with their aunt. Mrs. C. F. Harry. Mis. Alvah Bridges visited Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Keeter of 8helby from Monday until Thursday. I Mr. and Mrs. Max Kennedy of Charlotte were guests of Mr. and ■ Mrs. Alvah Bridges last Sunday. Mrs. Alton Bell's mother, Mrs. T. i A. Ballard and Eloiae Ballard spent Wednesday and Thuraday i with Mr. and Mrs. Bell. Mrs. V. O. Moore gave a chicken supper last Saturday evening in celebration of her birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Shuford, Mr. and Mrs. John Ooforth, Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Ponder, Mr. and Mrs. Sulli van Roark and Mr. and Mra. Dick Wray and. their families enjoyed her hospitality. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Montgomery .announce the birth of a daughter Thursday morning at ten o’clock. Bank Re-Opened In Cherryville Town Rejoices As the National Bank Returnee Business On Unrestricted Baals. Cherryville rejoiced last Saturday afternoon at 12:40 more than it had 'or over a year. The rejoicing centered around the re-opening on an unrestricted basis' of Cherryville National bank, closed since the banking holiday was declared. March 6th, 19S3. The barJc h2s been operated under a eoneervater, E. V. Moss, aince a short time after the holiday was declared. Under a conservator however few of the normal func tions of a bank were permlsaable. Prom the time the bank opened at 12:40 last Saturday until it closed at 4 o’clock there was a steady stream of citizens and de positors going in and out of th* bank, congratulating :lie officers of the institution and the town also on the suspiciousness erf the day and the occasion. We learn that the increase in deposits since the opening of the bank is most grati fying. During the day many new ac counts were opened, many of them with substantial deposlts.~-Cherry ”1110 Eagle. Rutherford Folk To Attend Meeting RUTHIRFORDTON, July 29. — Rutherford county will be well rep resented by 25 to 30 people thl* week at the state farm and home convention in Raleigh at State col lege. Miss Myrtle Keller, home agent, took three girls and two boys with her to Raleigh Wednesday to the 4-H club convention. The West End Home Demonstration club, lo cated between here and Forest City, will give a pageant. “Kidnaping Betty,” Thursday, August 2. This play won first place in Rutherford county this spring in the elimina tion contest Heat Is Cause Of ' Dillinger’s Death CHICAGO. July 29—And now John DUlinger possibly may be marked up as another victim of the heat wave, despite the fact officers bullets cut him' down. The Herald and Examiner said it learned that because of the heat wave DUlinger discarded the bullet proof vest he usually wore, therebv tossing away his protection agatntt bullets , Morganton-Lenoir Road Project Gets Large Allocation Commission Set Aside $137,000 For Construe:ion of New Highway, LENOIR, July 29—Allocation of 500 of federal funds for con duction of part of highway No 18 ‘tween Lenoir and Morgan ton -rtngs the long-awaited dream of a new route between the two count? ,-eats one step nearer realisation. The state highway and public works commission has set aside that amount for construction of ap I croximately ten mile; of the route ! one new section beginning at the western end of the present project 13.9 miles wes* of Lenoir, and the other beginning at the Burke conn j ty line, continuing toward Morgan . ton for a distance of five miles. Already work is completed on the Trading of No. 18 at Johns river and a contracting firm is rushing to completion the new bridge which I spans the stream.. That project be I gins near Chesterfield and conttn j tie* for .14 miles, replacing the 40 i year-old bridge with a modem | concrete structure, i Specifications for the new Units : have been drawn, and upon appro val by the bureau of roads ir. Washington will be included in a letting of state contracts. Another encouraging fact Is that a party of engineers has been at work on the Morganton end of the road, surveying a proposed route from Lenoir evenue In Morganton to the Johns river project, i The work in Caldwell countv. which Is for about five miles, will cost $97,500, while the Burke work will cost about $40,000. It is quite probable that bids will be received some time in August and that actual construction work may start in the early fall. Work Discontinued Until Inquiry Ends RALEIGH, July 39.—Work on the $4,000 PWA stadium project $' Nor$h Carolina State college eon tinued at a standstill as PWA and smergency relief officials continued their Investigation of alleged irreg ularities on the project. The work was ordered stopped last Saturday by Dr. H- G. Baity of Chapel Hill, state PWA engin eer. Mrs. Thomas O’Berry state relief administrator, who is vacationing in Morehead City, issued the follow ing statement today: "On July 33, J. M. Coleman, state engineer, reported that or. July 19 he had discovered certain irregularities on the project at State college, and that he had shut down the project on Thursday night until he could make a thor ough investigation. “At our request, after I had con ferred with Mr. Coleman, federal investigators came immediately to investigate the situation As soon as this is completed, the full facts will be given to the public.” . THIMBLE THEATRE—Starring POPEYE Say It Ian’t So! ~ ■ ’ - ' - W , 'V BjrtO. SEGAR MV BOV, UJORRVD© S THAT ^ AW VER MORE 8eNT-/VES, VES,> V£R MORE r~f MV BOV STDOPTER,TOOJ(UjQRRV OlD, AlH'T VAT r-^ ^ THAT V By THE ^popeye, IOHAT . fvRt TOU DOING DOWN w this; PfrftT OF T^L UJORWP » WELL-QimOSL IS’ UJ\TH OS ANSHE’S , GOT ASPtN\TlS-lGOTi TO GET MMlFRDtT j for r I To Go North Is To Go “West/’ WHKT VA rA CRV.NG ZWMX’yyjXj KOC'PC KINGV» J/ oL"N6 TO (!>*<*<* > l HORTHERH ...—.~v i s NfcTAUfc THE VJ ( tDHVTE SWAGES - I tTS KfcRO TO LO$C ' A GOOD fRlLHO LIKE '■oa P0P6V& i tUON"1' 61 shouco ti l-N \.IP€ ^—■> S)-n<ixMC, Inc, G:eai Bnmn n Thirteen Million Income From Eggs And Chickens In '33 Better Poultry Means Bitter In come—Careful Grading And Marketing Plana (By Extension Department) The rapid increase m egg produc tion over the Increase in the num ber of hens in North Carolina dur ing the. past decade attests a de cided improvement in the quality and management of poultry flocks. Yet there Is still more room for development in the State’s poultry’ industry, says Roy 8 Dearstyne, head of the State College poultry department The lnc.:me of $13,200 000 from the rale of chickens and eggs in 1938 Is far short of the figure which can be readied by taking full advant age of the opportunities awaiting development,, he continued. The chief factors in the further |development of poultry raising are: increasing the size of farm flocks, developing commercial p o u It r y farms, developing local markets and | better means of reaching national markets, improving the quality of eggs and fowls sold, reducing poul try mortality, and exercising more care in breeding, feeding, and gen eral management. The size of most farm flocks should be increased. Dearstyne said. Too many farmers have only small ; flocks to supply eggs and birds I only for consumption on the farm. [The money-making possibilities of | noultry are all too often overlooked, since it Is hard to realize any ap Ipredable profit from small, neglect ed flocks. Careful grading and marketing of high grade eggs and birds will build up the demand for North Carolina products. Poultry mortality, however, is probably the most acute problem facing the Industry, Dearstyne said. Special work is being done In this field. But more cooperation from email growers Is needed. An In crease in livability will reduce over head costs and Jeave more net profit for the poultrymen. St*te Is Rapidly Being Motorized RALEIGH, July 29.—North Caro Unlans are making rapid reoovery strides in their use of automobiles and are headed toward tha slight I ly more than half a million motor i vehicles owned by them at the peak [year of 1929. The number will not be reached this year, although the Very Much Improved After Taking Cardui “I have suffered a great deal from cramping,” writes Mrs. W. A. Sewell, Sr., of Waco, Texas. ”1 would chill and have to go to bed tor about three days at a time. Z would have a dull, tired, sleepy feeling. A friend told me to try Cardui, thinking it would help me — and it did. I am very much im proved and do not spend the time in bed. I certainly can recommend Cardui to other sufferers.” Thoussnds ot women testify Csrdui benefited them. If It does not benefit TOU, consult » physician. ’ Will Study Wage Problem In South! ’’’robe In Carolina* Will B* Marie By Chairman of Planning Board. — i WASHINGTON. July 39 - An exhaustive study of wage problems arising In connection with the con struction code m North and flouth Carolina. Georgia. Florida and Ala bama. will be made next month bv Sullivan W. Jones, chairman of the national construction planning and adjustment board of the national recovery administration Acting under instructions from l the board, Mr. Jones on August 1 will leave for North Carolina to study the situation as applying to construction work During May. it, was explained at the administration, general contrac tors and others engaged In con struction m the eeveral southern states protested the minimum wage of 40 cents per hour for common labor employed upon construction. They submitted petitions for a stay of this wage provision of the code. Subsequently a public hearing on the petition was held In Washing ton. The petition* for the stay and the statements made and briefs sub mitted at the public hearing con tained little or no factual Informa tion. There was no proof that con struction had been curtailed because of the allegedly high wage. No one In NRA felt competent to make an Intelligent decision as to what should be done. numbers have Increased remark ably. but If the rate of recovery continues another year, the 500,000 mark may be made. Motor vehicles licensed to far this year, the first six months, are less than 6.000 under the total of 409,005 licensed In 1933, and are some 4,000 less than the total of 497,455 licensed in 1932. Already this year the number Is not far below three times as many as were licensed in 1931—150.568., Registration in the first six months of this year reached 393,131. Including 79,344 trucks and 31.f,787 automobiles. Austrian Winter J Peas Suggested J For Fall Planting J _ i Seed If Low tn Price end Crop* En- 1 riche* Soil and Make* Good a Winter Feed. « (By Extension Department) r Though all three of the winter- * growing legume* commonly planted ’ in North Carolina each fall are . nearly equal In value for forage and 1 soil improvement. It appear* that this l* the year to plant heavily of Austrian Winter pea* My reason for making thia sug gestion la that the aeed of the Aua- 1 Irian pea la comparatively low in ’ price aa compared with crtmaon clover and vetch." aay* F.nos C. Blair, extension agronomist at State ! College. "Field demonstrations show that when other things are equal, crimson clover, vetch and Austrian Winter peas make about, the same yield of hay. They also give about he same increase In aoil fertility when turned under; but, for some reason crimson clover seed and vetch seed are high tn price this season and If the winter peas may be purchased at a less price there i Is no good reason why they may ! not be substituted for vetch and 1 clover.” Blair says the price of crimson , clover seed la nearly three times tsplalna ftilly the marvelous Vi 1 lard Treatment which has brought amasing relief to thousand* everywhere. Willard’* la designed for relief of Stomach or Dmdonal UJcmrt, Poor Digootion, Acid Dyt popoia, Gaooinoot, Sour or VpmtStomAeh,Bloating, Heart bam,Constipation, Sloop» besneee. Bod Brooth .Poor Appo tito,Hoadachoo,duo to Excctt Acid. Ask about Willard'* 18-Day Trial Offer. Siittle’ii Drug Store Phone 370 — QUEEN Cm\ COACH LINES - FOR. ASHEVILLE, CHARLOTTE. WILMINGTON. POINTS: FOR ASHEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: j LEAVE SHELBY for ASHEVILLE: 9:10 A. M„ 8:10 P. M. FOR CHARLOTTE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: I LEAVE SHELBY for CHARLOTTE: 10:20 A. M.. 2:20 P. M., 4:25 P. M. FOR WILMINGTON AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY:—10:20 A. M. FOR FAYETTEVILLE AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS: LEAVE SHELBY: 10:20 A. M.; 2:20 P. M. — FOR FURTHER INFORMATION — PHONE 450 - QUEEN CITY COACH COMPANY j nd the price of vetch seed Is over »-ler that being asked for Austrian 'Inter peas. Assuming that 30 ouods of either clover or vetch or 0 pounds of Austrian peas is the Istht amount to sow on one acre of md. the cost of seeding the vetch 1 90 percent more than for tht pens nd the cost of seeding crimson lover la about 300 percent more He suggests that all growers plan ini to aow a winter cover crop this all, investigate the possibility of lantlng the Austrian peas Way Boost Scott For Farm Position RALF.IOH. July 30—When the forth Carolina farmers and farm roman meet her* this week m their annual convention aentiment la ex pected to take auoh shape aa to de termine for W. Kerr Scott, peat master of the North Carolina frente whether he will make the fight In 1836 to defeat Oommtaaioner W A. Oraham of the department of agri culture for renomlnatlon Mr Scott admits that he would like to run. But one thing atande in the way, he sajre, and that la money. He would not enjoy hock ing hla home to get the naoeaiary money. 666 UQIID TSaLITS. aALVI. ca*«k( Malaria la a 4a»a. ■Mlthu ar N rural* I a l_ __ , Fins Lmtire and Ttxtle Moat Speedy :>Twgp DO YOU NEED MONEY? W* can arcane* a day*. If you are pany you oan get payments and get M. A J. FINANCE CORPORATION CAPITAL ANt> SURPLUS $100(000 Resource^ Over $20i;000.00 SflOtBV, N. C. WEST WARREN ST. TELEPHONE BLANTON & HINSON, G«**ral loo. FIRE — AUTOMOBILE — SURETY BONDS Agent* PACIFIC MIJTUAL LIFE. Tel*phon* 8S6-W JIMMY DOESN'T T GET ’ QUARTERS NOW! THOM f* Timmy doesn’t get to spend those dimes end quarters his fond relatives give him. Mother or Dad now puts them in the bank for him. And some day Jimmy himself will see the percentage In It . . . when he finds that interest can multiply money pretty fast. Instead of a few quarters, he may have s fund large enough to put him through college. Union Trust Co. SHELBY, Ns C. ‘ •' •..

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