SHELBY DAILY SJAR Published By Star Publishing Company, Inc. No 1 Bast Marion St Shelby, N. C Lee B. Weathers, Pres.-Treas. S. E. Hoey, Secy Published Afternoons Except Saturdays and Sundays Business Telephone No. 11, News Telephone No. 4-J Entered as second class matter January 1, 1905. at the postOffice in Shelby, N C.. under an Act of Congress, March 8. 1897 NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Bryant. Griffith and Brunson 9 East 41st St New York City MEMBER or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled Jo the use lor publication of nil news dispatches in this paper end also the local near, published herein All ri*hts ol re-publlcstton of special dispatches published herein are also reserved SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN ADVANCE By Mall Iff Carolina* One Year ... ....44.50 8I\ Months .2.25 Three Months . 1.25 Bv Mail Outside The Carolina* One Year _45 50 Six Months _2.75 Three Months .. 150 Delivery By Carrier At | Your Door In Cities. Suburban And Rural Districts One Year ...._$5.00 Six Months-2.50 Three Months_1.35 Pour Weeks _ .45 Weekly Rate_ .12 MONDAY. DEC. 14, 1936 A HALE ( HOP The latest gin report for Cleveland coun ’\r InHinulovo ciolil fhic vc.ir nf onnenvimnte. y half of the crop we made in 1935. This is liseouraging and disappointing. Naturally t has its effects on business, but it cannot rtean that our farmers have only half as nuch money as they had a year ago. The price has risen and quality cotton s bringing a premium. To the premium we 'an add the higher price for seed and the soil conservation benefit payments due to trrive early next month. Instead of holding first place among the North Carolina cotton growing counties, we lave dropped to fifth position. This does lot mean, however, that our farmers do not enow how to grow the staple. Weather con iitions were unfavorable and directly caused he biggest drop in our cotton yield in the listory of the county. , Fortunately, the textile business has im iroved and the 4.000 or more employees are ■>ack on full-time, thus making up a weekly mv-roll which offsets to some extent the ‘ffects of a short cotton crop in the markets if retail trade. PUBLISHING DRUNK DRIVERS If an auto driver is convicted of driving bile drunk and his license is revoked, his >me town paper may overlook the court item, but it never escapes the Raleigh News and Observer. Periodically the capital city paper publishes the complete list, whether they live in Raleigh, Murphy or Manteo and keeps up with the statistics. Since this law has been in effect, 7,398 drivers have had their licenses revoked for reckless and drunk driving. The law has been on the books for nearly two years and some! of those who were deprived of the privilege of driving have lived to see the per iod of their penalty expire and their license restored. Last week 82 were re-licensed. . It is the policy of most newspapers in North Carolina to publish the names of con victed ones—not merely for the sake of add ing shame and humiliation to the guilty par ties—but as a warning for the other motor ists to avoid them. A safety campaign can not be successful unless the public aids the officers in seeing to it that habitual drunks ire not allowed to take the steering wheel of a high powered motor and pilot it along a public thoroughfare, endangering the lives of others. ou, ii a aruiiK urivei « name escapes tuc home-town paper, it is sure to make the columns of the News and Observer. The re porter’s daily check-up of the State High way Safety Bureau. WHAT AILS MARRIAGE? Caroline Miller, Georgia novelist, won a decree of divorce this week from her hus band, Will D. Miller, which brought final confirmation and settlement to rumors to the effect she would divorce him which be gan soon after she became suddenly famous four years ago when her first novel, "Lamb In His Bosom” won the Pulitzer prize. In the course of the divorce proceedings she charged “mental cruelty and incompata bility,” and her husband testified that he had been a "faithful and affectionate hus band” and that the two had gotten along well together for thirteen years before his wife’s success went to her head. The chances are both told the truth. Every marriage has its moments, even its hours or days, of incompatability, of mental cruelty, when husband scowls wife down .be cause she ignores his two-bid or leaves him holding the bag on one-doubled; but, just so, every marriage has its happy hours when faith and affection exist, when husband is kind and patient with wife who can’t cook, and when wife darns socks and sweeps up ashes when she loathes both. Perhaps Caroline has forgotten the years when Will shared his none-too-sturdy bank account with her and worked with her over the manuscript of the book which gave her economic- independence. Perhaps suc cess did go to her head. On the other hand, it may be that Will is a small-minded, small town, ultra-conventional school man whose mental development has not kept pace with that of his wife, and that there no longer exists any community of interests between them. - Whatever the truth about the mattei may be, the final divorce which breaks uj home for three growing children and ends a marriage which has made sufficiently satis factory adjustments to weather thirteen years of life together makes one bite one’s lip and wonder which is at fault, the institu tion of marriage itself or the human race in general. What Other Papers Say POVERTY 'Raleigh News and Observer) There is» undoubtedly truth about ail of us in the statement of Sinclair Lewis that "there never will be i a time, no matter what system of government we have, when a large proportion of the people will not think they are poor no matter how much they have.” Hunger Is absolute, but poverty may be an entirely relative matter. Sadly enough even the millionaire may have to come regretfully to the conclusion that he Is too poor to possess that second steam yacht. And much further down the social scale there are plenty of well-fed men and women who In lesser things must wistfully compare desire and pocketbook. Such a poverty growing from the faUure to meet of the ends of what we. want and the ends of what we have may be eternal and inevitable as Mr. Lewis sug gests. But if there is any reality in the promise of our progress, it ought to be possible to envisage a time when nobody is so poor that they have not enough to eat. nobody is so poor that they lack a roof to keep out the rain, nobody is so poor that he need lack clothes to keep him warm, medical care to keep him well. Poverty as a state of mind may be not only In evitable but also valuable as the Itch that keeps us stirring; but poverty as a social disease should never be accepted as Inevitable by a civilisation proud of Its achievement and determined on Its progress. FOR A UNITED STATE 'Winston-Salem Journal) Governor-elect Hoey does well In pleading for a united state. It is only through co-operative, har monious effort that North Carolina can rise to high er levels of prosperity. But let us all remember that unity implies a meeting of minds; that before the State can become thoroughly united it must resolve the grievances and difference of opinion which now exists in the cruc ible of equity. So long as the East holds a balance of power in the legislature while the West polls the preponderance of votes, there will be sectional friction. So long as our tax system is inequitable, those whom it dis crinRnates against will sound a protest and friction will exist. It must exist, it must make itself heard, for true unity can never be attained on a base of injustice. That foundation is sinking sand which will cause the whole structure to tumble down. If we are to seek unity, then we must build on strong and sure founda tions which embrace justice and equity in the rela tionships between classes and between geographical unite. - SIC 'EM. DAVE! < Greensboro News* David Clark says the request of State college students for his removal from the athletic council is "silly and asinine.” Tubbe shore, Dave, tubbe shore; in fact, it reminds us of some of the suggestions you have made to the University trustees concerning Frank Graham. Nobody's Business — By GEE McGEE „ GONE. BUT NOT FORGOTTEN - .No family anywhere, white, black, red or yellow, ever has any more ups and downs than we have at our house all circumstances considered. -About 30 days before Thanksgiving day, we In vested in a great big, broad-chested, 43-pound turkey gobbler. He looked like an ostrich. He was indeed a fine bird. .We put this Thanks-glvlng offering In a pen In our back yard where we could feed him and water him and fatten him. He could out gobble any ani mal I ever heard of If I had not been "deef," he wt*uld have proven a nuisance (That's what some one said*. — Days came and went. Ever once in awhile. I would ask the colored boy who eats at our house and pretends to work occasionally if he was looking after the turkey: he always smacked his lips and said: ‘‘Yas-sar, I sho is ” (I’ve been wondering what he did for this fowl*. We planned the biggest Thanksgiving dinner that had ever been staged in our block, or any other part of town as for that matter. We invited all of our kinfolks but 9. and they lived in Australia. ----1 event went so far as to invite my > living friends to this feast, and told them to fetch their wives along. Everybody that I mentioned these to generously ac cepted the invite. The day before Thanks-giving, we received the shock of our lives. The cook, the boy, the wife, the kids, and I went out to slaughter that mnstrous gob bler. We entered his pen. There he lay dead as a doornail on his back with his feet in the air. .Death had overtaken him before we did. He had passed on to turkey-heaven where they possibly cat | cabbages for Thanks-giving. My *11.30 was gone Tears began to roll down cheeks that had never known tears before. What a calamity: folks, relatives, peo ple. and friends coming to eat a turkey that ain’t. : We got by tho: I bought 3 chicken hens and 2 roosters. i\Ve devoured our stuff without complaint or dtscus Ision. but I'm cured of buying big gobblers ahead ot I time. FRANKLIN COMES HOME ; Washington j|3 Daybook By PRESTON GROVER (AinonlaM Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON.—Many adminis tration figures were annoyed at the tough break President Roosevelt had on world publicity he might have expected from his South American visit. The Simpson ease at crowded the Roosevelt stories off page one far inside to “wrapped around a prune ad," the saying goes. His principal break was the Simpson story did not hit full stride after the speech HBTOH L Gtovtf in Buenos Aires opening the Pan American peace conference. Tha allowed full play of his pronounce ment that land hungry or war ma< nations had better hunt elsewher than in the Americas for satisfac tlon. • • • • Italy Answer* Sharply All in all, however, the reactioi at large was to accept the presi dent's speech as marking a rea epoch in international affairs. H wanted trade. And he said the American republics were in a hand some position to show the othe three continents that here were tw< continents enjoying a Democrat! form of government in reasonable peace of good neighborliness. Upon this theme there was i startling development. Mr. Roosevel said that If the Americans couli continue successful operation o their form of government, “It wil spread and supersede other method by which men are governed.” "Only a day or so later, Fulvii Suvlch, new Italian ambassador t< the U. S., In a speech before thi national press club In Washington said: “Italy likes fascism. * * Trouble! start when countries try to divulgi in other countries living under othei systems ideas they cheerish anc practice at home. * * * You als< have highly thought of institution; and they fit your needs. We certain ly do not dream of suggesting tc you to change them.” It was explained afterward that Suvich. his speech prepared day; In advance, had no intention ol thus sniping back at Roosevelt That was for the record. Inescap ably it represented the official Ital ian reaction the president's sugges tion. League Foes Pleased League foes like Roosevelt's state ment that "this is no conference tc form alliances.'' World court critics who have been fearful the presi dent would take advantage of the prepondemat Democratic majoritj in the senate to again urge ad herence to the court, hope those seven words mean he now Is more wary of foreign conn ret ions, anc will not. ADULT EDUCATION | PROGRAM IS NOW ! MAKING PROGRESS Is Operating In Nine ! Nine Centers Of County i An increase in atendance and in the quality of work being done in the nine centers of Adult Education i in the county was reported today • in an interview with Mrs. E. B. Olive of Kings Mountain, director i of the program. In one small town in the coun ty, unnamed for obvious reasons, Mrs. Olive said a prejudice against schools and education in general has been removed, and that the center now has a parent teacher association which works through ! the entire community. Attendance at school of chil i dren of persons on relief or those i who are in some way being aided by the government has in five of the nine centers been increased 100 . | percent. "Better homes” has been a slo 11 gan and a model house had been • | projected, but until the first of the I year efforts are being directed to ward Christmas programs. Enrollment in the county for Au gust was 253, September 303, Oc i tober 316 and for November 392. ■ General attendance was 173; llt 1 eracy classes has 245 and home ; making classes 141. i Hitherto underprivileged persons - are now studying what needs to be ■ in a good wardrobe, learning to > read and to write, taught physical ; and mental health and many other ! practical things which they had no chance to '.earn when they were i young. Mrs. Olive said. 1 Hungary Women 'Want Positions On Police Force BUDAPEST — Hungarian women . want to undertake work with the Hungarian police' detective force, . and thy base their demands upon 1 the success achieved in such work by Miss Claudia Majdan, who re cently passed on. i Miss Majdan was the first and only woman detective in Hungary and carried on her duties in Buda 1 pest for the last 10 years silently and without attracting notice from the ordinary public. Only personal friends caught! glimpses, now and then, of the kind i of work which passed through her 1 hands; of her genuine sympathy for those whom she herself brought to justice; of the understanding which enabled her to persuade the ! authorities of her city to set up a j workshop, where men and women j due. by police regulation, to be! transferred to their own districts.1 or possibly to the frontftr. might be1 usefully employed during the time1 they waited for their removal. A 1935 Iowa agricultural ceusus Just reported shows that a majority of Iowa farm operators have been on the land they now occupy more | than five years. EVERYDAY LIVING Spirituality “Often you use the words spirit ual, spirituality, and the like,” writes a young man, “and I wonder what you mean. No, I’m not trying to be smart, but the words are just empty sounds to me. "They must mean something, but I do not know what it is. If a man has spiritual ity, what does he have; if he lacks it, what does he lack? Please do not think me itn pertinent—I want Jo'eoh r°rt N,wUo to know.” It is a fair question, and my read er has a right to ask it. But it is not easy to answer it because we have such vague, misty ideas of the sub ject. Or we just use the word with out any meaning. A Chinese student said to Stanley ] Jones: “Do not tell us to love our i enemies, preach spirituality to us.'’ To him spirituality was a soft pious emotion which made him feel cozy : on the inside. I But that may not be spirituality I at all. To be sure, it may stir us deeply, but spirituality is more than emotional excitement, or someting quite different—and far more worth seeking. The Bible tells us that the fruits of the spirit are love, joy, peace, kindness, patience, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. Here we are nearer the truth, and the words be : ffinc fn haua mcanlvan Put plainly, a spiritual man is a man who is alive to the value of life; its true values, not the things which people mistake for values. It is a right estimate of the real worth j of things. All things, that is. not merely re- I ligious things—art, automobiles, i books, banks, music, politics, science, sport and the rest. Spirituality is the insight which sees what is real ly worth while. All these things have value, each after its kind and in its place, but! they are not the things that have the highest value. The spiritual man put the highest things first, and everyting takes its place. The highest, value in life is a I sense of values. If a man lacks it,! he mixes things and makes a mess, j If he has it. he is not to be fooled in the midst, of noise, fashion, fads, and unreality. I LET - Rogers Motors - REFINANCE YOUR CAR — CASH WAITING — M’KINNEY NAMED ALUMNI LEADER Troy McKinney, member of the class of '32 and county auditor, was elected president of the Rutherford Oleveland Duke Alumni Association In its annual meeting and dinner held at Kings Mountain last Fri day night. Prof. F. M. Bigerstaff. principal of the Kings Mountain high school was made vice-president and Mlsf Bara Kate Ormand of Kings Moun tain was named secertary-treasurer Mrs. Paul Mauney of Kings Moun tain is the new representative tc the alumnae conference. Dr. J. W. Harblson of Shelby if the retiring president of the body Dr. Raymond CrispeU of the Dm« University faculty was the speaker fox the dinner, an enthusiastic gath ering. Dr. CrispeU traced the origin of education In the south and North Carolina, Duke University's connec tion with the progress since I83g, and prophesied for its passible tu ture. “Education should fit the timet i he said. “We live in a new age ana i a new day, I believe Duke wtu in that new need.” Dr. CrispeU reviewed the succest of the Duke football teams and de fended the athletic policy 0f the school. At the same time he said there should be the continued lead ership In libraries. “The libraries | should keep ahead of athletics " Do Your Colds Hanq on and on? Do You Ca+ch Cold Easily? To Help PREVENT manq colds VICKS VA TRO NOL FOLLOW VICKS PLAN FOR BETTER CONTROL OF COLD*; BANKING SERVICE To Suit Every Need Whether you are a business man, a housewife or a young fellow just staring out in the world, you’ll find here every banking service you need. We have the facilities to aid you in all financ ial matters, and a willingness to give you the best of service. Checking accounts and loans are invited. Or you might wish to use our interest hearing certificates or savings accounts. FIRST NATIONAL BANK SHELBY, N. C CONDITIONS ARE BETTER Had you thought of how important it is to lay aside a few dollars each week? Create a little nest egg with which to build that, home, educate that child, purchase real estate or make some investment that will bring in a return. A few dollars put away each week in our Sav ings Department will increase faster than you real ize and also draw interest. ATI deposits insured. UNION TRUST CO. — SHELBY — FALLSTON — LAWNDALE — — FOREST CITY — RUTHERFORDTON — NOTICE To Farmer Friends Beginning December 14th I Will Gin Picked Cotton On TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS and Snapped Cotton On WEDNESDAYS and THURSDAYS Of Each Week. Let Webb pick your snapped cotton, with the latest additional equipment—just installed. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, SEE TOY B. WEBB ! DIVIDEND NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a second dividend of Ten f 10%' per cent is available to holders of Participation Certificates 1* Trusteed Assets of certain assets placed In our hands as Trustees at the reorganization of the First National Bank of Shelby, N. C j on June 27th, 133. Sufficient collections have been made on these • assets to enable us to pay a second dividend of ten <10'~c> per cent on each Participation Certificate issued on waived deposits. We have arranged an office in the First National Bank of Shelby. N. C.. for the bookkeeping of our funds, Mr. C. S. Mull. t« pay the dividends. Bring your participation Certificate to Mr. Mull at the First National Bank after December 1st, 1936. and receive your dividend check. You must bring your certificate so that the amount of the dividend check can be credited on the back of the certificate, and payment cannot be made unless you tiring the certificate. After the dividend credit is entered, your certificate will be returned to you to hold for future payments. We also call your attention to the fact that Mr. Mull hM funds with which to pay in full all original certificates of $5.00 c less, which have not yet been paid. Full payment is provided onlT where the face of the original certificate is for the sura of or less, and all certificates in this group must be delivered to Mr Mull when the payment Is made, so be sure to bring your certifi cate when you call to get your money. This November 30th. 1936 R T LeGRAND, C. S. THOMPSON. THAD C FOB it Trustees