f r ri .J"' .-a. el 3(4,1 f ,j We Do Job Work the Linotype Way Lt Us Figrure on Your Work. Phone No. 11 1 !ri at VOL. XXV. NO. 90 THE CLEVELAND STAR, SHELBY, N. C TUESDAY NOVEMBER 6 191' $1.50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE published. fJvcry ; Ti.i-iy and Fridrv jtoj- -p'tiai and B;1 p. or in This Sectior PATHFINDING PARTY HERE kvi:kal members EXPRESS thkMSELVES IN FAVOR OF THK SHELBY ROUTE MR. E. Y. WEiiB ENTHUSIASTIC. The pathfinding party of the Bank- head National Highway association arrived in Shelby Friday from Kings Mountain, at 1 o'clock and was met iv 500 or more school children, a uni- formed band and many prominent men h,i ladies. The high school girls serv-' (i coffee and sandwiches to the path- finding party and seven or eight nrominetit uanney citizens wno went to Kings Mountain to meet them and rtrort them on their way. Secretary I. C. Griffin of the Hoard of Trade dis tributed cigars and after three brief speeches the party proceeded to Gaff piloted by Banker C. C. Blanton and Mr. Charles L. Eskridge, a prom inent automobile dealer and one of tkt best drivers in the country. Five or six cars full of Shelby men and ladies went to Kings Mountain Friday morning to meet tne party and CSCOrl ini'in lu.oueiuj, vungresaman Webb having been instrumental in jetting them to detour via Shelby to iispect the roads which are much bet ter than via Blacksburg, although 7 er 8 miles further from Kings Moun tain to Gaffney than the established . ii olii. r" highway. The three men who are to select the highway are John Olive La Groce, night, was still alive at last account chairman of the pathfinders commis- and it was believed that his recovery fion and editor of the National Geo- was possible. graphic Journal; M 0. Eldridge, Unit- Mjg8 Dora grown 19 years old an ed Suites office of public roads and , of Erwin cotton mi at member of the pathfinders commis- j Durham, was struck in the back by ion; A. B. Batchelder member of the broken of machi and executive committee of the American a bucde on the mi of Mt in Automobile Association and member fli d injurjes that caused her death of the pathfinders commission. i Other members of the party are Elsia Stansbury, aged 16, was filled Senator J. H. Bankhead who was in- at Spencer Monday by falling from a .urumental in securing the appropria-' 1 idder a distance of 20 feet. He was tion for the road and for whom it has 'employed at the railroad shops and ton named, Congressman E. Y. Webb(was finishing his first day's work in who lead an active fight for the bill hat capacity when the accident oc in the house, ex-Congressman P. S. curred. Plowman, president of the Bankhead After an anday search off the National Highway Association; J. A. Knrt-.nn 'nt the North Curo- Houndtrce secretary oi tne mnKneaa , ... ..... . . T- 11 .National Highway Assocation; v. r. In-lmd. assistant secretary of l,,i tne a.M.. iatmn; Mrs. Kuth Kramer, mem ff-r "f the woman's board; Miss Seleri' i "a nif-i : n of Birmingham, Ala., Cel. liir.hani Cameron of Raleigh W. P. Fa' . state highway engineer; Clar li.izelweod of Washington ar.l !.. I'andolph of Jefferson, Ga. party was delighted with the :"ni King.-i Mountain to Shelh m- judges who usually keep their ii-; to themselves expressed the'r i n i Mrv Ti a i,1 nj'ini surprise to find such an exeellent r- ml. l'nri leaving Shelby they wti'.l ia B-iling Springs, thence across the i',"v. st,., 1 bridge at Broad river. -tarn curve or two,a short stret' h r.agh surface and a litle more mile 1h:iM the lr;ivo road caused th Shi"iy people to fear that the most I '.ivnralile route had not been Uiken ' t" I'-ave ,i c-nod imnression uixm the W.-tr; r.f fhn rnmmission. The UP- per Hroad river route was chosen, tawovtr, because there is a polo i'ri.ige at the crossing at Pr.ivo in lif-rokee which Messrs. Eskridffe and Kli.nten were warned to avoid. The I'nv) route, will be submitted to the "mm:, -ion before they make up their 'iuisi..:.. Cleveland's part of the roads sre all riirht and if the Dr.avo bridge built the Bankhead highway is al f1 sure to include Shelby. Mr. llnundtree, secretary, mountid thf elevation at the Confederate rn" - unimt and in a few well cnosen wonis the people that the object of the ! ur was to locate this coast-to-coast highway for which Congress had made si appropriation of 75 million dol lars and that the men to select the '"uie were picked from neutral xerri- tftrv In ..-J Mrtt ho ' tof.v in order that there may not be v favoritism. The government is to give for the construction of the road $75,000,000. This is to be djvided among the 13 states through which the highway will pass. North Carolina will get about $1,500,000. Senator Bankhead appeared very nappy when he faced the bright school children who are to receive the great "st benefit from this proposed high way. He complimented in most gener is terms Congressman Webb and the hKh rank he holds at the capital. Congressman Webb was the most enthusiastic member of the party. It ws through his influence that the Pay came to Shelby and he was proud to stand before his home peo Pje and tell them that the Bankhead hlRhway would be the longest and "st magnificent in the world. He compared it with "the famous Appian ay of Italy and said when this high ly is built, it will be a' great artery travel into which thousands of other roads will pour their traffic; it "! be the connecting link between Ife Sunny South and the Golden wt rbetween the canital of the United States and the capital of the Confederacy; between the capital of the Old North State and the capital other Southern sister states. He Poke of the Kings Mountain Shelby stretch .and the complimentary man ner in which tt inn .. S Sz:: via Vlhulhir Cleveland countv would i,D J in making the finest road along the entire route. I The party spent a short time in Gaffney, going on to Spartanburg and Greenville for the night. Whether tni snme commission will go over the entire route or not, we have not been able t fi"d out. The highway extends from Washington to Birmingham, thence to Memphis and across to Los Angeles, California. The. Shelby Board of Trade will keep 'n ouch with the commission and fufsh additional data as to roads, nuis Kw. NEWS IN CONDENSED FORM. terns of Interest Gathered Over the State. From Britt Martin of Anson county was : riding a mule in a trot, the saddle girth broke, the mule fell and the young man's head was hurt so that he died three days later. Stephen Lauzanne, chief editor of Le Matin, a leading newspaper of Paris, was in North Carolina this week and made addresses in Raleigh and Durham. Fighting in France was his subject. Charlie Moore, one of the men re ported killed in an automobile acci- dent at Cary, Wilkes county, Saturday na coast lor two surimen oi iue Pia s and am Oretron inlet station, u Oregon inlet station, !f request to pay up, but our i a Tuesdav in a pale,.,, 1 . , - , mining " men was Cleveland county friends are ........ - ....-. .1. :,,! f Tii,,;, u- in ft p-i e : HH7 UI llVU ' ;---- no trace of the found. Ollie Tout, farmer of Bunn, Frank lin county, was kiliil Sunday when his automobile turned over, the re front, tiro. Mrs ."Ull "-'1 I,'!".. WMl ... ,Tout was hurt lut not seriously. Three other occupa-ts of the car escaped in jur- I Salisbury i.:ii:..ei:al secure I'otion on fron officials will i ."() to l.OOi) !conls of wood in order to guarn against possible suffering those citizens during the Charlotte will ai:o ctabl'.-h cipal woodyard. among winter, ,,,: Ernest Mourn "i '' ' 2S years old, .-hut away par 1 .ft' jaw and the crrntr of hi moutn a'-U-mpting SUIO and was ;.li !at last account, hem rejected for ruin; "f his en-: Ment:'.!lv off. Han army service on al conditio:-.. fter iin.ntlis of waiting, New F.orti jincl-eased 50 per cent, the wages i. at la-t assured of a line of boats -. over ;,;;;::L,K:i;;!t . l& a year the eight !i. expi red to dock at taut port o.i the j 'XrSy- ' Arrcsted at Fort lb. son, Indiana, where h jain-.n li.irri was serving , i !;,,,) states army, Charles A. 'crt - ws, Jr., formerly city ticket agent of the Southern railway in was u. i.nM tn Iia eiirn to an- .. . .u,iin,r :rl.71 itwer a cnarge oi vmLM...i...e. L.v,ii in the employ of the railroad , IIe was released on 5 ' $700 bond o r H-irL-fr of Greensboro, died Sunday morning in a hospita at Mt. Airy, the result of his skull being fractured when he was thrown from an automobile. He was 38 years old and unmarried, was an in religious causes ana wneu . ceived the fatal injury was en route to a sunrise prayermeeting. Red Cross Receives Prizes. The Red Cross chapter of Shelby . i rn i.nm'thA secretary ofheCGaston county fair for prizes. p r. Brady received two blue ribbons (tot Pl-.lfice who work all the year for intr crown anu nuopn rberk sent to her for the above $2.25 was generously turneu over shelbv chapter. Mrs. C. R. Hoey re-) reived the red ribbon second pdize, Z her hospital bed shirt. The Shelby chapter is very proua oi ;, t n manv nnzes at the' tne wmi's Gaston fair. tii:n;m J Wise of New Britain, i""'" -' . enlisted soldier, -vas lounu guilty at Hartford on Tucsaay on ui charge of murdering Mrs, Aijna Tobin of New Britain in September He was sentenced to be hanged December 14. SAM CUSTER LATTIMORE, TOO!) ADM'R. Sam is a farmer of no small proportions. He has been called from the field to administer on the food situation for the govern ment in Cleveland and is doing a service of meritorious value for which he receives no compensation whatever. In fact the office makes it necesary for him to devote val uable time and spend money out of his own pocket He hopes to enroll four or five thousand ladies of the house in Cleveland in the campaign to con serve the food supply by practiQ ing economy and stopping waste. Should the pinch come, he will be the man to supervise the allot ment of sugar, meat, flour and other necessities, but he hopes there will be such strict economy that this time shall never come. Last week was the time for all housewives to sign their pledge cards and thousands responded in the 75 school districts of the coun ty, but there is yet time to enroll your name and enlist your sup port of the government in an ef fort to whip the Kaiser, establish peace, democracy and freedom of the seas. Food conservation is said to be as powerful as men, guns and powder. Sam Custer Iattimore is gratified with the support the housewives are giving him in his work of sacrifice, love and patriot ism. AN APPEAL TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS The Star has subscribers from the rocky coast of Maine to the Golden Gates of California, 2,600 of them. Out-of -county subscrib- ers iiave uceii lespunuuig utiuy ,,0f r.m- nn linfnnr iu our it'U lit? M ii Uii up, uui um r j n ,1 1 , 4,.;.J r, I backward. We want to Urge that since the year i.s almost gone. ... that POOd prices are prevailing on all farm products, that we are I ... . serving you Wltn a liberal 'jon 0f neWs tvice-a-week por and trenuine barsrains by the mer chants, that you favor us with a remittance on your subscription. Tis true the subscription has advanced. We were i .price I forced to it or quit business. At nmr.ty.ithe $1-50 a year rate, the paper t of his is cheaper than a weekly at $1 or a foreign paper which has no news of a local nature to interest ar-'you and yours. t j.car tis in mind. Taper has business, We must COl- lect over $8,500 a year before we have one cent oi prom. Less than one per cent of our subscribers are Stopping because of the advance in subscription rate. To counter balance this, we are adding new subscribers ev ery day, but we must collect from all who are due us in order to survive. Don't make it necessary for us to send a statement of your ac count. A letter stamp costs 3c and to send a statement to every subscriber would cost us $178.00 besides the stationery and time. So we appeal to you to remit now. We want every subscriber who is in arrears to pay up this month. Don t overtook this obli !gati0n on your part. We have LavpTI pmnloves in The Star of- , , , ,y0u, furnishing you the news wice-a-weeK ana you gei an ui , $1 , ,vui , -r 'not that reasonable enough? MUSICAL COMEDY AT PRINCESS. Don't miss seeing the Big Musical Comedy Company at the Princess to- iivv. ' . . i-t.:v n,ght a company oi eleven pcopie iuKu class musical cornea y num. This troupe comes to Shelby nigniy recommended as a nice, clean and up- tn-date show, admission at night 20 and 30 cents. oN seats reserved. Adv ST, 1 - Ma V GRAND JURY REPORT. Recommended that Lighting and wiPr i,.t.m k ino.wii County Home. 'strongly built buildings, but a major The grand jury of the fall term of !ity of tnerri agt ni(rht mi to pre court last week filed the following re-!fer th safety of their own homos, port over the name of its foreman, ; Whan t.ht lmirlea sounds! "all rWr" "ii.o. iraMnKvr. v.r,g (Hsposed of coming before us, we jn a kdv and found ? n.iving uisposea or ail me t)U: cmmi . - , cominc before us. w visited the in: . ' ame in a sani- tary rondition and the prisoners well caf.(. for' . We visited the convict camp by committee and found everything in k) condition, with the exception of me nomiing which we think should have more straw. We al.;o recommend that better ventilation be provided at the camp. "We also visited, by committee, th county home and found everything in a very satisfactory condition and the keeper faithfully H-rforming his du ties. We recommend that the county put in a lighting and water system as soon as this can be done. "We found the offices in the court house well kept. Some of th" toilets need repairing and we recommend that this he done at once." AMERICAN OFFICERS SEEKING PATROL IH TV A dispatch from a correspondent with the American army in France savs: Conditions in the sector in which the Americans are stationed jwere normal today. The artillery work I work continued. The weather was howery and much colder. For the last two days there has been considerable aerial observation; late yesterday three German plane flew over the American trenches. So j-reat is the enthusiasm among the Americans to go on patrol that the French commander has ordered than none of the higher grade offi cers perform other than thcir regu lar duties. It is the duty of the jun ior command officers and he non-commissioned officers to go with the pat rols, but the officers to go with the patrols, but the officers of high rank, such as major, were anxious to go out The quartermaster now has sup plies for several days within reach of the American position as a precau tion against any transportation diffi cultes with the bases. 3 KILLED AND 21 HURT IN AIR RAH) ON ENGLAND London, Nov. 1. Eight persons were killed and 21 others were injur ed.in the German air raid last night, according to an official statement is avwiuni w -w sued by British war depart- mem The heavy barrage which was put up to protect the metropolis seemed to disconcert the raiders, who dropped bombs indiscriminately as they ap proached. Several of these fell upon spaces, several shaking little subur ban settlements where there was lit tle or no protection from bombs or the shower of shrapnel. As the Germans crossed the coast in relays the barrage arose as each relay made its appearance. Alter the Ujrnerience of former raids, the pub- ;c n0w takes to cover as soon as the FOR CLEVELAND! warning of an enemy approach is giv- en, with the result that before the l18 P thcir "kim of shrapnel the streets were derted except for a few policemen. Some persons found protection in the subways or the more there was no crowding into the . - . . I.... i i w i i.i, uu,, u.i Himsc wnvu ui i i - : .i- - a r ; Lilt' HI. 11II III LIU 11 llftC SILUtl LIU II 1 U T , populace to make up for lost tfleep. Other Court Proceedings. ' In the case of C. 15. Byers by his next friend, Forrest Byer.-, minor against Southern railway for damages for personal injury, judgment was en tered in favor of the plaintiff for $75. O. G. Falls, Walter Hilling, Cora Hunter and husband, B. It. Hunter, Thos. Harmon and Chus. Harmon, and Charlie Harmon, plaintiffs vs. Maiy Falls and others defendants, judgment was that the matters of difference between plaintiffs and de fendants he settled by selling the lands and dividing the proceeds; that F. i idling and R. L. Campbell be ap pointed commissioners to see the la:. (is and make division. PREPARATION NECESSARY FOR WARS AFTERMATH j Mr. Garland Green, Miss Gertie London, Oct. pS. "After the war .Greene and Miss Euzelia Hamrick the world will l e weary, cold and hun- 'spent Sunday with Mrs. Lyman Love, gry and if we are to avoid famine and at Cowpons. revolution something will have to be Miss Ethel Wofford reported a de done at once," said Sidney Webb, a lightful visit to Lincolrton Sunday. political economist, in a speech at the London school of economies. He as - j sorted thot peace would come suddenly I and unexpectedly and then the world would be forced to face a great short- age, signs of which were already vis - ible. The wheat stocks of the world, he said, had been reduced to the small- est amount ever known and there would be a shortage of one pound of wheat a day to each person, t locks and herds all over the world would be much diminished. Even the pig was rapidly disappearing. Metals, coal, timber, hides and leather and all building materials would be at famine scarcity. One-eighth of the world's popula tion he declared, was engaged in non productive work. The economy that could be set up against that was very small. There would be a long interval be- tween demobilization and the repair ing of the devastation and waste. Dur ing that interval here would be unem ployment in all the countries, causing an unproductiveness that would mean rather a money famine than a food famine. "We should now be making prepar ations to revitalize the world if we are to avoid a shortage "developing into a famine," said Mr. Webb, i Camp Sevier Men Home Sunday. . . i ' q Col. J. T. Gardner, Lieut L. W. Gardneralid Lieut T. 0. Grigg spent Sunday at bjpme. Sergt Price Hoey is enjoying a five days furlough. Sergt Edwin Hutchinson and Mr. Stephen Cassell were Shelby visitors Sunday. ' . THREE AMERICAN SOLDIERS KILLED GERMAN BATTERIES DISPLAY UNUSUAL ACTIVITY AGAINST THE SECTOR HELD BY AMERI CAN TROOPS IN FRANCE. With the American Army in France, Saturday, Nov. 3. Notwith standing the rainy weather Friday night and early Saturday, the German Batteries displayed more activity than normal on the part of the French line occupied by the American troops. Ger man sheila were distributed impar tially among the trenches, the Amer ican batteries replying in the same fashion. The enemy is using both high ex plosive and shrapnel in sending occa sional reminders of the war toward the Americans. Reports reachiag headquarters, however, are that the bombardment could in no sense be considered "lively," merely being a departure from the normal state of quietude at night on that particular sector. A high officer in he United States army Saturday afternoon talked with the commanding officer of the first battalions visiting thenches and ob tained their statements of their expe riences. It is believed that the infor mation will prove invaluable in tas training of new contingents for their turn at the front Washington, Nov. 5. Advancing under protection of a heavy barrage fire, a German raiding party befsre daylight on November 4 stormed a trench held by American infantry, kill ing three and wounding five and cap turing twelve, according to dispatches from General Pershing received by the war department tonight American infantry were in occupa tion of a small salient for instructioas when cut off from main body by heavy bombardment of German artillery. General Pershing reports the capture of one prisoner. Enemy losses are not known, says the dispatch. The official statement issued by the war department is as follows: "The war department has received a pispach from the commanding gen eral of the American expeditionary ' -..w fOTep(, which Rtfltpd thar hnfnrp rta- ! ion.ee wnun siaieu wiai oeiore aay- light November 3, a salient orcupied for instruction by a company of Am erican infantry was raiifed by Ger mans. The enemy put down the heavy barrage fire, cutting off. the salient from the rest of the men. Our losses were three killed, five wounded and twelve captured or missing. The enemy's losses are not known. Oae wounded German was taken prison er". BOILING SPRINGS NEWS. Mrs. Cade May Spend the Winter in Mexico. Public Schools Open November 12th. Special' to the Star. Mrs. Baylus Cade spent several days 'of last week visiting Mrs. Jabex Hamrick. Her many friends were de lighted to see her. Mrs Cade will probably accept the urgent invitation of her son Baylu3 to spend the winter with him in New Mexico. Misses Hamrick? Quinn, Dover Bad 1 Wofford of Boiling Springs High 'School faculty with Messrs B. C. Mc Craw and Dan Moore attended the 'Hallowe'en party at Mr. A. J. Jolly's .Wednesday evening. Prof. Rowell, principal of the pna- lie school at Boiling Springs was ia town getting things in readiness far the opening of his school, Nov. 12ta. He will move his family here next week. The work on the pastor's home is well under way. The building com mittee hopes to have it completed by January first. There was a public debate in the auditorium by the Kalagathian so ciety, Saturday night, November 3rd. Mrs. Jack W)entz, a student in the high school, spent the week end m Charlotte. NATION WILL TAKE OVER GERMAN OWNED PATENTS Washington, Nov. 3. Medicinal preparations, machinery, electrical apparatus, chemicals and a wide va- riety f ther commodities manufae tured under German-owned patents, will be available to the American public at much lower rates than in the past as the result oi .tne. action oi the federal trade commission in li censing aliens to manufacture these articles. i The commission has determined that no commodity protected by a German patent and made under an American license shalul be. sold at an extortionate price. Miss Lucy Hamrick who is teaching n Kings Mountain spent the week-end with, her parents on N. LaFayetts street,