Perfume Flowering Abandoned But Expert Tells Of New Plan H»"T pl»nt Hover beds for color «Dd decorativs mini, kitchen ptoi— for utility, herb gardens for savor, but only a taw plants for perfume In the garden or in cut „ Women of Martha Washington’s thne knew how to sa' e the delicate went of rose petals by putting them in Jan with salt, or they made a potpourri of different flowers, they gathered damask, roses, and i lavender and dried them to make l linen drawers sweet, or used violet water. They liked the scent of lllles Cf-the-valley and lilacs. It Is possible to plant shrubs and y*"— and flowering annuals and perennials to add to fragrance of the garden— roses, English violets, carnations, and little dove pinks, and some of the fragrant peonies for Indoor vases, say floriculturists in the United States Department of Agriculture. There are so many fra grant annuals and perennials for the home garden that a choice de pends on preference and climate. The perfume garden is so plan ned that one group of plantings is succeeded by another, each with its own a peal, such as sweet alyssum. mignonette, pinks, perennial Phlox, sweet heliotrope, stock and some of the nicotians. Nasturtiums have a spicy fragrance. The leaves of rose geranium are both fmigrant and ! spicy and may scent s flngerbowl of flavor t mil! Jellv Many shrubs are dellghtfullv fru grant—the reddish velvety ‘sw^t-! shrub" or Calvin thus; lemon ver bena: lilac; and m- ckorange. called Philadelphus or swings t In the north. Carolina ciwrrv In the south; the butterflybush (erroneously call AIMIINlSTRATOa'S NOTICE flavins qualified at administrator of the estate ol John A. Weaver, deceased, late of Cleveland county. North Carolina, thb, la to notify all person* having claims against the eatate of aatd deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Shel by. N. C., on or before the 13th day of April, 1*37. or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persone In debted to laid aatata will please make Immediate payment. This the 13th day Of April. 193S. J. H QUINN. Administrator ol John A. Weaver, deoeased. * Quinn, Hamrick it Hamrick, Attys. at law «t Apr 15c NOTICE Morth Carolina, Cleveland County |B the Superior Court Wunla Hart, Plaintiff Hart, Defendant. The delendsnt Ernest Hart will take notice that an action entitled as abov. has been commenced In the Superior court Of Cleveland county, North Carolina. Whereby the plaintiff la seeking a divorce at the defendant on baata of separation; aad the said defendant will further take Smiles that ha la required to appear ai Iks oil ice of the clerk of the Superior Ert of said county In the court house •bolby. N. C„ on the 23rd of May, I, and answer or demur to the com plaint in (aid aotlon, or the plaintiff wi apply to ths court for the relief demand at In the said complaint. Thu the 2 lit tay of April, »2S. ■ A M. HAMRICK. Clark Superior Court. B. Edwards, Atty. for plalntllf. 4t Apr 22c AN ORDINANCE TO REGULATE THE DISPOSAL or TRASH AND REFUSE BY INDIVIDUALS. FIRMS, AND COK rORATIONS or TBE CITY OF SHEL I. It shall be unlawful for any peraon. firm, or corporation of the City of Shel by. to ptaoo loose trash, paper, or reluae. either t* (he front or In the back of then placet At business In the buslneas dis tricts of the City of Shelby, and all such pa pass, trash or reluae. shall be placed In a boa. trash ean. or a similar recep tacle, so that It will not be scattered by ordinary winds or otherwise. 3. Any peraon violating the provisions of this ordinance, ehall be (Utlty ol n misdemeanor, and shall be puntehed by a fine of ft.00. for each offense, or sen tenced to 30 daye In the common jail of Cleveland county. North Carolina. 3 This ordinance ehall be in force end effect from and after passafe of same bj the board of alderman. Thla ordinance waa unanimously adopt ed by the mayor, and board of aldermen at the meeting held In the city of Shel by. N. C., on Monday. April 20. 1030. It. FORNEY, City Clerk. 4! Apr 30c — COMMISSIONER'S SALE Pursuant to an order of the court made In special proceedings No. 2300. the under signed. as commissioner, will on Saturday. May 30. 1130, at It o'clock noon, or with in legal hours, sell et public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, et the court Rouse door In Shelby, N. C.. the following described real estate: Beginning et a stone in the west edge •I North Lafayette street and the south east corner of W. C. Whlanant'e lot and rune thence west with Whlanant'e line 200 feet to a stone In an alley; thence south 131 feet to e stone: thence east 300 feet to a atone In the west edge of North La Peyette street: thence along the edge of North Lafayette street north 13$ gleet to the beginning corner. Also an alley 30 feet, more or leas, by US fast deeded bv John Hopper and wife to Amandle V l*e. to rear of above described lot. mak ing lot 330 feat, more or less. by 12$ fee The foregoing sale is being had undet otder of the court for a d vlt on amo" the hetra of C. T. Hord. The above de •: 1 lb*<I property be.ns Wie residence 0 tbe ’St* C. T. Hord and is being offeree: for sale free and clear from all encum brances. * deposit of 10 percent of the amoun MB wm bo regulred on the date of sale. This the nth day of April, 193$ PEk ION McSWAIN, Commissioner M Apr 3Se TRUSTEED BALE OF REAL ESTATE br virtue of the authorlt’ that certain deed of trus oT7r*—. — wm* uccu 01 uri Jftoi January *s, 1*33 and recorded ■Mettles of the register of deeds county, N. C. in book 171 . *!0 and assumed by Hudson Han ring an Indebtedness thereti ———-default having been made l: Ibe payment of said indebtedness and be -- to sell s»ld property, 1 wi: JJ » tfeloek noon, or within legal hour: • •he court house door in Shelby, n. C to the highest b dder ler cash ■ *«Mle auction that certain lot or pare a* tend described aa follows: Baginnlng at an Uon stake, northwe: sorner of the Oardm lot, and on U •net odga of North Lafayette street, an mnalhg thence with the north aide 1 Mid tot B. S»Vb R. 3M feet to an lrc Boha, northeast corner of the Oardm nt. thence N. 3 1-g E. 53 feet to an lrc Bake; thence N. as* W. 300 leot to a Iran ateke to the east aide of North Li Payette street: thence with east edge ■aid street a. 3 l-» W. U feet to the b fhmtegand being that same lot whu 0 recorded hi the register of deed s offic nevalend eonty, H. C., In book 3-X, pa INIs rale eubleet to au unpaid tans and Thla April tl. ISM. It Aw »s JNO. P. MULL, Trustee. ed “summer lilac") from China, whose long drooping rich violet blooms give off deep fragrance all summer. The sweet-scented sum mer-blooming honey-suckle vine of the south Is the naturalized Japa nese honeysuckle, Lonicera Japonica, ranging from Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Missouri south; the beautiful and fragrant Chinese and Japanese j wisteria and various sweet speclas of clematica. Mount Sinai Has Week-end Visitors (Special to The Star) MT. SINAI, May 6—The home demonstration club will meet with Mrs. Oscar Holland Thursdaay aft ernoon at 3 o’clock May the 7th. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton McSwain spent the week-end with Mrs. Mc Swain's father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Edd Davis of Shelby. The guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bridges Sunday were as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Glee Bridges and family of Kings Mountain. Mr. and Mrs. Erastus Williamson of Pine vllle, Mr. and Mrs. Reid Blackburn and son. Bob, of Lawndale. Miss Aileen Hawkins and Mrs. Mary C. Lovelace of Bolling Springs snent the week-end wEh Mr, and Mrs 8. A. Clnrv. Miss Martha Roberts of Shelby snent a few days the past wee': w'th her cousin Margaret Holland. The W’e"k-end guests of Misses Ocle, Mlenon and Essie Harrlll and Olive Han-111 included. Mr. nnd Mrs. Ector Her rill of Kings Mountain, Mrs. Thurman Hamrick and Miss Sdma Hamrick of Ponlar Springs. Mr, and Mrs. L. E. Weaver of Onffnpv were dinner guests of Mrs. Doda Rollins Sunday. Mr. n"d Mrs. Oav Putnam snent a wh'i» Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. •rio’-d Wrieht of Patterson nnd at tended memorial services at Pleas ant. Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Elliott of Shdby snent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. M'ller Ellis. Mr. nod Mrs. Wnvt Ha^el and famUr pf B«nver D°m snent the day Su«d»v With Mrs xv W El»lds. Mr. and Mrc. w-mo Hunt snent. the weph-end wt*h Mr nnd Mrs AUou of Pleasant BUI w M. TT. wi'l meet at. the rhi.rrV, JJvntlott nft"rrwvm May 10 for their remd-tr meeting. ,1cfe%)esf *till wondering how much farmers, under AAA. paid hired men to not help them not plant corn. • * • With conventions In Cleve land and Philadelphia thi9 summer it’s a question which town will steal Chicago’s fame as the ‘windy city " • • • Sally Rand s enthusiastic fan waving was more than art when a swarm of bees invaded ‘ her dancing stage The cus tomers wondered at such wild abandon * • • • Peoria. 111., laundry men are urged to enter political fight That’s one way to offset those mudslingers • • • Prisoners in New York State read an average of six books a month, which would almost make the prisons centers of learning, if not reform Pleasant Ridge News Of Current Week-End (8peclal to The Star.) PLEASANT RIDGE, May . Memorial services will be next Sunday morning, May 10th. The teachers meeting will be at the church Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Arssn Dixon of Flint Hill spent the week-end with Mr. end Mrs. Lindsay Dixon. Mr. and Mrs. John Jones and family, Mr. and Mrs. Kermlt Blan ton and *son, Bobble, spent Satur day night with Mr. and Mrs. Char lie Jones of Lattlmore. Joe Wright of Ellenboro spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. D. R. McSwaln. APRIL NEW CAR SALES TOP MARCH IN STATE RALEIGH, May 6.—North Caro linians bought 4,931 new automo biles and 1,439 new trucks during April, the Motor Vehicle bureau re ported today. In March there were 3,420 new cars and 1,120 new trucks sold In the state, and In April 1935 there were 6.394 new cars and 1,591 trucks. In four months this year there were 13,509 new cars and 4.475 new trucks sold. Fifty-five 4-H club members of Jones county attended a recrea tional school last Week In which they were taught games and ex ercises to carry back to their local dubs. Tal.':s To j Parents l_ _ By BROOKE PETERS CHURCH Newcomer The doctrine of "original sin" seems to have answered a basic need In the hliman race. In spite of all the teaching to the contrary and their own better Judgment, parents and teachers alike continue to go on the theory that children are bom naturally bad and must be taught to be good. Children are not born bad or good. They are newcomers in a strange world and must be taught the rules and regulations by which they will be expected to live. One gives a foreigner, newly landed and with no previous knowledge of the country, every kind of allowance. He makes mistakes, Is rude and gauclle, but Is not at once told that he Is bad, or laughed at for his er rors. People are polite and sympa thetic. For some reason, however, chil dren very often are not given so much consideration. They are sup posed to know by Instinct what they can and cannot do, and are punish ed or scolded or laughed at for many things which they did out of pure Ignorance. To tell a child who throws a cat Into the pond that he Is wicked to treat the poor thing that way may be quite unjust. If he has had no previous experience with cats, he may have thought It would swim like a dog, and enjoy the ducking. To laugh at a child for a breach of etiquette or a misuse of English Is to humiliate him as one would nev er think of humiliating a foreigner Often a little careful explanation Is all that Is needed. The small boy who, when he has learned better tortures the cat, Is often the one who was punished the first time he did It, and Is now.getting back at the cat for his own pain. Children naturally are reasonable and eager to conform to the accepted stand ard. Native Of County Going Abroad With Marines On Quincy Private J. D. Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jason Turner of Lawn dale R-l, who has been with the Marines for the past two years spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents. Mr. Turner has made an excellent record since he ha* been with the Marines,, and is with a prise organization. It really is a prize organization in view of the fact that so many men have tried to get into it, and only the best of them made it. They are at pres ent stationed at the Sea School barracks, Norfolk Navy yard, Portsmouth. Va. Some of the men have been there 6 and 8 months waiting for the organization to form. Now they are like one big happy family and anxious to ram ble. They will board the U. S. S. Quincy on May 18 for Trinidad or Gibraltar, Southampton, Amster dam,, Hamburg Kiel, Stockholm, and Edinburg and return to New York. Laundering in soft water requires less soap than In hard water. -.-— Pulitzer Awards Are Made 1 To Leaders In U. S. Writing j NEW YORK, May 6.—(/P)—Robert E. Sherwoods 'Idiot’s Delight” has been awarded the 1936 Pulitzer prize for the best drama by an Am erican author presented during the current season. The prize for the most distin guished novel published during 1935 by an American author was award ed to ‘‘Honey In the Horn" by Har old L. Davis. Other awards in letters were: History—“The Constitutional His tory of the United States," by An drew Cunningham McLaughlin.' Biography—“The Thought and Character of William James” by Ralph Barton Perry. Verse—“Strange Holiness” by Robert P. Tristram Coffin. 1,000 Prizes. Each the awards carried with it a cash\prlze of $1,000. The five prizes In Journalism were as follows: \ For the mclst distinguished and meritorious public service, a gold medal valued at $500 to the Cedar Raipds, Iowa, Gazette, for Its “cru sade against corruption and mls govemment” In the State or Iowa. For distinguished services as a foreign correspondent, a cash prize of $500 awarded posthumously to Wall Barber of the Chicago Trib une for his reports of the war In Ethiopia. For distinguished editorial writ ing, there were t^o awards, carry ing cash prizes of $500 each; to Felix Mobley, editor of the Wash ington Post, and to George B. Park er, editor-ln-chlef of the Scripps Howard newspapers. For a distinguished example of a reporter’s work, $1,000 In cash to Laurel D. Lyman of the News revealing that the Lindbergh fam ily . was leaving the United States to live In England. There was no award this year for a cartoonist’s work. Honorable Mentions. Honorable mentions were award ed as follows: To a newspaper: To the St. Paul (Minn.) Daily News for Its cam paign against corruption and mis govemment in St. Paul. Washington or foreign correspon dent: Webb Miller of the United Press association for his reports of I the Italo-Ethlopian war; Ashmun i Brown of the Providence (R. I.) i Morning Journal for his correspon j demce from Washington; Jay G I Hayden of the Detroit, Mich., News I for his series of political articles i written on a tour of the country; j James A. Mills of the Associated | Press for his story on leasing of I Ethiopian oil concessions to the Standard Oil company. Louisiana has the greatest ex tent of navigable water and the greatest arer of alluvial land. WIN $500 CASH | Or $250—Or $100 . What well-known Georgia town ;does RAYSCOWS spell when the letters are properly arranged? Rush I your answer on a POSTCARD to Contest Manager of American Life. Dawson, Ga., and you will get an opportunity to win one of 20 cash prizes to be awarded In the Georgia Cities Game. HOW'S yam HEALTH BittMby Dr. logo QttldtKm to* thr Nru- Vari Kieiemi of Motaat The Time To Vaccinate. Unquestionably the great triumph of modern scientific medicine is that of smallpox vaccination. The present generations of men are in no position to appreciate the rav ages which were once inflicted by this horrible disease. To gather any idea of the toll in life and disfigurement which small pox exacted, one must turn to his tory. The eloquent pen of Lord Macaulay thus described smallpox: | “That disease, over which science has since achieved a succession of glorious and beneficent victories, was formerly the most terrible of ail the ministers of death. The havoc of the plague had been far .more rapid; but plague had visited our shores only once or twice within living memory; and the smallpox was always present, filling the churchyards with corpses, torment jtng with constant fears all whom it had not yet stricken, leaving on those whose lives it spared the hid leous traces of its ower, turning the i babe into a changeling at which the Smother shuddered, making the eyes jand the cheeks of the betrothed maiden objects of horror to the lover.* The triumph of science over this minister of death stands to the eternal credit of .Tenner. Smallpox vaccination spared man the haz ards of the disease. However to profit most completely and with the least risk by vaccination, It should be administered during the first year of life. The evident exception ;to this counsel, of course, is in the ! instance of emergency vaccination ■ necessitated by the appearance of smallpox in the community. Vaccination is urged during the first year of life because in a small, insignificant percentage of cases, smallpox vaccination given at a la ter stage in life may be complicated by the appearance of what is known as a post-vacclnlal encephalitis. Another counsel for the escape of this complication is to administer smallpox vaccination after a child has been immunized against diph theria. Local B. and L. Men Attend Convention Representatives of the three St^lby building and loan associa tions' left yesterday afternoon for Rocky Mount where they go to at ; tend the convention of the North; Carolina Building and Loan league! which will be in session Wednes day, Thursday and Friday. LIGHT - USED CARS - FINANCED BY - Rogers Motors - I i Search for beauty. You'll find it in the Norge. Search for time-saving convenience and money-saving economy. You’ll find them in the Norge. Search for the biggest dollar-for dollar refrigerator values you ever saw. And you'll find them right here in our store. Come in and prove it to yourself Choose the Refrigerator with the Press Action Laxilatcb • Combination Bottle and Dairy Rack • Sliding Utility Basket • Adjustable Shelf • Improved Automatic Flood Light • Closely Spaced Shelf Bart • Many other improvements and refinements. l Or 2 JlL Ffil |" ?nrrr ; j 1 J. O. Propst 6c Son PHONE 45 - SHELBY, N. C. ' ELKIN YOUTH’S BULL |l BRINGS HIGHEST PRICE ATHENS, Ga., May 6.—A young bull owned by Thurmand Chatham, of Elkin, N. C., brought top price of $700 among 25 blue blooded Guern sey cattle sold at the second annual consignment sale of the Georgia Guernsey Breeders association, held at the University of Georgia College of Agriculture. Single people.' were allowed a chair apiece, but married people selves at the dinner table in early Egypt. 1 LISTEN IN State-Wide Radio Network to SANDY GRAHAM Friday Night, May 8 8:00 to 8:30 O’Clock Aiff FOR GOVERNOR Contest Closes May 10 $15, $10 and $5 CASH PRIZES to the man or woman, girl or boy, over Ifi years of age and a resident of Cleveland Coun ty who will write the best reasons “WHY EVERY WOMAN SHOULD REGISTER AND VOTE FOR CLYDE R. HOEY” Limit your letters to 250 words. Write on only one side of the paper. Write your name, age and address on a sep arate clip of paper and pin to your letter. Send it to The Star office by May 10th. Enter this contest now. This is the last week in which to prepare and submit your let ters. There will be no extension of time. The judges of the contest are Capt. .J. Frank Roberts, J. R. Davis and Mrs. John Wacaster. CONTEST EDITOR The Cleveland Star SHELBY, N. C. 1 STAB EVERY OTHER OAT S2.50 PER YEAR i MOTHER’S DAY I I’ Yes! It’s HER day—one day set apart in all the year on which we can show how much we love her. And what better way is there to prove our love than to shower Her with Gifts? Gifts she will for their beauty and practica bility along with7the sentiment. — MILLINERY — Give Her at Hat! A pretty Dobbs hat will make her feel younger. We have a nice assortment of Straws, Felts and Fabrics. $ 1.98 to $ 10’OO WASH DRESSES — Linens, Batistes, Laces, Swisses and Voiles. $1.98 to $5-95 - LINGERIE - She likes pretty under wear. Gowns, Pajamas, Negligees, Slips, Bed Jackets at $1.95 TO $10.95 — DRESSES — Every Mother needs. Fashioned for youthful ness and gentility. $4.98 TO $24.95 — FLOWERS — They look real and they stay real looking. A nice assortment. 39c TO $1.00 Dress Shoes for Mother Made of Soft Gomfortable leathers. Medium Heels. Arch Type. Two Tones. All Whites. Brown and Black. In Tics or Straps. $2.98 $3.98 $4.98 $6.95 IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU And WRAP ' YOUR PACKAGES FOR MOTHER’S DAY. WD KV’ Q lADIES’ II i\ ft I 0 SHOPPE —* SEE OUR WINDOWS — REGISTER AND VOTE FOR CLYDE R. HOEY

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