Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoon#. By mail, per year (in advance)_f2.5L By carrier, per year (in advance) |3 (R What’i THE News .THE STAR’S REVIEW. While a cold wave sweeps over the country, dropping far below zero at some points, Shelby is well fonte’it with the mercury at the free ing point along with frozen automobile and icy streets. Only 17 North Carolina counties have smaller debts than this coun ty, The debt per Cleveland county inhabitant is very low according to statistics in today's Star. Mr. A. V. Washburn, one of the best known and most successful chinch and Sunday school workers in the state, will change his field of work, it is announced in this paper. During his service to the Kings Mountain Baptist association the Stmday. sehool enrollment has pass ed the ehwrch enrollment. An important trade announce ment of today is'that A. V. Wray and six sons have bought out the interests of W. H. Hudson in thy Wray-Hudson firm. Trie new Superior court solici tor, Spurgeon Spurling, native of this county, will prosecute at the next term of court here, according to a news item. Can you guess how much gaso line Cleveland county burns in o ie year? Read the figures given by The Star today and mind how “you step on it.” Castonia is pulling for Shelby to get the P. & N. Extension. Shelby shouldn’t let any slack get in her ♦wn pulling. The second session of the exten sion school here begins next week. * * * New' officers of the Cleveland Springs Golf club were elected on Thursday night and a big spring and summer of golf is expected here. » * » Has a divorce case ever been con tested in this county? Local law yers do not think so. The Star says today that one may be contested next court. * * * Inquiries about tobacco sales centers of Shelby reveal that very few Shcdby girls smoke—or at least, very few of them buy their own cigarettes. * * * Shelby is to back the Boy Scout movement it is learned froju .a re port of last night’s Kiwanis meet ing. Several minor wrecks have been reported in Shelby today. A Mor ganton man was right painfully in jured early in the morning when his truck skidded and turned over. * * * Interesting items on every page of this issue. The Star today has more “home news” than any aver age newspaper published in the state. S. S. Membership More Than Church Roll Of Baptists In the two years A. V, Wash h'.ir has been Sunday school worker in the Kings Mountain Baptist association. the Sunday school enrollment has increased 2720 and now exceeds the combin ed church membership of the for.v odd churches in the associa te according to latest statistics available. This record is equall ed or exceeded by few associations in the Southern Baptist Conven ’ on Usually the Sunday school enrollment is considerably under tha church membership, but due to t’r" active and effective work of Mr. Washburn, this situation has been reversed. In 1924 when he became assoeiational worker there no- 9.499 church members with in the association and 6,9^4 on the 'l| - of the various Sunday school?. T^r« has been an in ncasc the church rolls " le thtSfljicreases on the Sunday ^hool ruli like I to see the electric line run- J ning through the < runty of Cleveland. 1 Effort Will be Made by the Manu facturing Plants and liiwanis Club to Sponsor Scouts. Following the report of a cor..-j mittee composed of John W. Har-j bison, R. T. LeGrand and I. C ! Griffin who had held conferences j with the pastors of the various, churches and heads of local indus trial plants recommending that an effort be made to sponsor bojr; scout troops in Shelby that $500 be raised from the industrial plants and $500 by the Kiwanis club, President George Blanton appoint-; ea unver Anthony, Jonn McHnignt. and O. M. Mull, a committee from j the churches and John Torus, J. R. | Wyckle, Jack Dover, I. €. Griffin' and R. T. LeGrand a committee : from the industrial plants. Each' corhmittee will endeavor to raise i a $500, thus establishing a fund to j support the cause. It was recommended that scout troops be organized in the various churches and in the several indus-: trial sections with a view of train ing the youth in scout affairs. A! ready there are two troops her 1 and a third was organized at the Presbyterian church Wednesday night of this week with Jimmie , Blanton as scout master. The effort the Kiwanis club ;s ; putting forth is in line with the an nounced » nr pose of Kiwanis Inter national to do something for un derprivileged children. The two committees will set to work at once and if the $1,000 is! available, steps will be taken to per feet a number of organizations. -. Cupid Minds Not Age In Business Of recent weeks Cupid’s pranks in Cleveland county seem to have been centered on the elderly folks, j Yet hearts of any age never seem j puncture proof against his shafts.! One of the first license issued here this year was to a couple far beyond the half century mark, while on Wednesday of this week Register Andy Newton sold the necessary marriage papers to a colored man of 67 and his happy bride of only 70 years. The couple came from the Poik ville section of the county, it is said, and returned to that section to be married. Here To Establish Automobile Agency J. C. Park, special field repres entative of the Oakland and Pon tiac automobiles and J. J. Barnes, of the Barnes-Young Motor com pany, Charlotte distributors for these popular makes of cars, were in Shelby yesterday looking to the establishment here of an agency for these Genera] Motor products. They have a number of prospec tive dealers in mind and in all probability will close in a few days thus establishing an agency for both the Portiac and Oakland here in Shelby. The Pontiac is a new product of the General Motors company and has met with won- ] derful success since it was intro- ] Firemen Answer Early 'Morn Call, •The city fire department answer- i ed an alarm about 6 o’clock this j morning at the home of Mr. Nat i Bowman on West Warren street, where a small fire had started un der the floor below the grate. The blaze was extinguished with very little damage. It is thought that coals sifting through below the floor caused it to catch. in guvs out OKI im FOB OIS 0 BOSS Big Retail Store Hereafter Opera te:! by A. V. Wray and His Six Sons. In a large transaction consum mated thin week whereby A. V. \\ ray purchased- the half interest of \\ . If. Hudson in the retail de partment of the Wray-Hudson com pany, A. V. Wray becomes sole owner; takes in as his partners in bn"iness his six sons, Victor, George. Robert Lee, Harvey, Char les and Slough Wray. Mr. Wray has seven children and the new firm would have another . partner except for the fact that one son is a girl,-Sara Ellen. When she finish es school, however, she may become book-keeper, saleswoman or take some active part tn the business. It hns been suggested as a matter of alliteration and oddness that the firm luma be “A V. Wray and Six Sons.' However Mr. Wray prefers that the pome go as “A. V. Wr.-y and Rons.” Mr. Hudson retains a half inter* est in the wholesale and iobbing department which will continue as Wrav.Hudson Co., Messrs. Wray and Hudson remaining as partners in this business. Mr. Hudson will continue to travel on the road in this territory for Armstrong Ca to*- eomnarty. a large Baltimore wholesale jobbing house with which he has been connected for a num ber of years, leading the list of salesmen in volume of business for this house. Ho will give a part of his t'me on the road to Wray-Hud son Co., wholesalers and jobbers, sellintr a stanle line of merchandise that does not conflict with the lines he jhnndles for the Armstrong, Ca ■for,. company. vv raj ano nuoson have been as sociated together in the retail bu siness here for six and a half years. It was a weil matched team, p;uh partner holding no secrets fni* the other. They have worked ‘n fterfect harmony and the Wray IIiBson Co., last year did the larg esBjbusiness in its history. The di issjhn of interests in the retail ljn-» was made in order that Mr. Wray might give his boys a chance to learn the business and enable Mr. Hudson to devote more time to the development of the wholesale end which has grown at a very grati fying rate during the past year or two it has been in operation. Sir. Hudson has been on the road for the Baltimore house for ten years and is declared to be one of the best salesmen on the road, while Mr. Wray has devoted his time to the retail end and is con sidered one of the best buyers and at the same time a top-notch sales man. The trade was made yesterday, so hereafter the Wray-Hudson com pany is the wholesale department and A. V. Wray and Sons make up the retail department, both lines of business being conducted in the same stand as heretofore. Driver Hurt When Truck Turns Over On Frozen Street Morganton Man Gets Foot Crush ed. Mules Will Not Enjoy Car Rides Again. ! R. V. Cope, Morganton lumber | dealer, is in the Shelby hospital | suffering with a painfully cut foot | which he received about 8:15 this morning when a big truck driven j by him slipped and turned over on the icy street just off the Cleve land Springs on the Eastside road. Cope, who was accompanied by a man named Smith, -was pinned in the cab of his tiucfc until pass iy attracted by his screams of agony assisted in getting him out. He w'as plased in a passing car and rushed to the hospital. In the rear end of the big truck were two mules being transported by Mr. Cope and it is presumed that hereafter they will be content to travel by their own horse-power instead of by automobile. The mules were partly thrown from the truck bed when the truck turned over, but both were extricated without any apparent serious hurts. Weather Forecast The following weather forecast was issued at 10:45 today by the weather bureau at Washington: Louisiana, Arkansas: Part cloudy rains. Oklahoma: Yonight and to morrow part cloudy. East Texas: Tonight and tomorrow generally fair and warmer. West Texas: To night and tomorrow generally fair. North and South Carolina, arn^ Georgia, slowly rising temperatures tonight and tomorrow. Florida: Cloudy tonight and tomorrow, probably rains and slowly rising temperatures. Alabama: Occasion al rains with slowly rising temper atures tonight and tomorrow. Miss issippi: Rains with slowly rising temperatures tonight and to mor row, warmer eastern and southern portion. T: ” on Quake Shook the Border' * —— - ———■— -ua T'.-.o dawn of l327. iironr.it a iue-slsed eartnquaxo to toe Mexico California border. *”jtTh it allow what happened to a blj war* house at Mexicali, ■Ill No Divorce Case Contested Here In Years—One Likely Next Court Answers Have Been Filed To Several But No Open Court Contest For Divorces On Record Here | No lurid divorce testimony like that of the “Peaches” Browning separation suit hits ever been heard in a Shelby court for thp main reason that it has been years since a divorce suit in a local court has been contested. And sev I eral lawyers say that they do not ever remember one being openly contested in the court room here. In bygone years answers have been filed to several divorce ne j tions by the partner being “given ■ the air” but in every case the | contest was not carried to the court room floor, legal lights here say. Some times a compromise of some ■ kind would be arranged before ; trial and in other contemplated re sistance the one offering to con test the divorce would back out before the trial, or the same de sire not to have too much court “airing” would cause the suing I partner to call off a divorce. Anyway it seems that no one in Shelby ever remembers a divorce being resisted here and for that reason divorce trials have not drawn any big crowds to the pub lic hearing, because usually there is just one side and nothing more than legally necessary of that. The fact that no divorces have been contested appears rather odd, however, since it will be remem bered that scores of divorces have been sought and secured in the local court rooms of recent years. But—to get flown to the pith of this news item—a report is heard indicating that one of the several divorce suits coming up in the March term will be contested. No check-up is possible on the report as yet because the attorney said to be handling the case for the life partner who will resist divorce is out of town. Shelby Ha* Very Few Feminine Cigarettes Smokers Sales Show Cigarette smoking with milady of Shelby hasn’t become a very popular fad as yet, judging by the j small sale of cigarettes here to women and girls. A report recently emanated from I Charlotte saying that one-fifth of the cigarettes sold there are smoked by feminine followers of the great god nicotine. Shelby apparently is still just a country town then if class is de noted by the increasing users of cigarettes. One local drug store says that it has sold quite a number of cig arettes to girls and women of re cent months, but in an added statement it is said that most of j the sales were to “women passing through town,” such as tourists, j motorists en route between the larger Carolina cities, and a few school girls having a lark be- ( tween home and school, or' vice | versa. Yet it was also admitted , upon questioning that a few packs of puffs have been sold to Shelby | girls and women. Just how many wasn’t remembered, but it lacked a considerable amount of ap proaching one-fifth of all the cig arettes sold by the store. An added item of interest by the cigarette sales folks was the information that those who do buy them usually have a favorite brand and call for it instead of: just a mere pack of cigarettes. So,! what few there are in town must be discriminating smokers. Taylor* Build New Home Plant Rutherfordton, Jan. 27.—The People’s Ice and Fuel Co., of this place is erecting: a new office building adjoining the plant. It will be 20x44 feet, one story. Work is going forward rapidly on it now. It will be the home office for the five plants of this firm which now has plants located here, Spin dale, Shelby, Marion and Morgan ton. The firm owns three ice cream plants and is among the largest manufacturers of ice cream in the state. J. L. Taylor and son, Leslie L., are the owners and promoters. Life Term* For Doctor’s Murder Two of the four officers in the party that killed Dr. Robert Lee Lattimore, native of Cleveland county, in Pineville, Kentucky on Christmas day, were given life terms in the state penitentiary of that state, when they were tried a few days ago. It will be re membered that Dr. Lattimore was shot when officers went to his house to place him under arrest in a coal mining district. The evidence tended to show that Dr. Lattimore was in no wise at fault and that the murder was cold blooded. One paper carried the report that a number of the county officers had resigned in resentment o fthe verdict against the two officers for the killing of Dr. Lattimore. Spurling Appears In First Docket Here Next Term Newly Elected Solicitor is Now Prosecuting in First Court at Lincolnton. Here in March The next term of Superior court in addition to facing a heavy dock et here will also have as a prose cutor a new face after 11 years. For at the next term Suprgeon Spur ling, of Lenoir and a native of this county, recently elected solicitor, will handle the docket for the state. Mr. Spurling succeeds form er solicitor R. L. Huffman, of Mor ganton, who served the district as solicitor for 11 years. Solicitor Spurling is prosecutor for the state in the Superior court term now on at Lincolnton, accord ing to press dispatches. In his first appearance here as solicitor the former Cleveland boy will not face any case of great importance such as would place him in a prominent role at the outset, but his ability as a prosecutor will be tested in many cases of minor importance that are already listed on the locket. 4' * a m GASOLINE BURNED HERE EACH H TOTHS BIG Si Three md a Half Million Gallons Burned by County Motorists. Pay State $110,000. What does it cost hCftvdand county to motor ? Every year those who operate automobiles, trucks and tractors in Cleveland county pay around $840, 000 for gasoline. Robert A. Hoyle, gasoline inspec tor, Estimates that three and one half million gallons gasoline were sold in this county last year. At an estimated average of 24 certs per gallon that would mean $840, 000. One local oil firm, it is said, re ceived 110 carload* of gasoline for local distribution during 1920. The state tax per carload runs around $325 to $400, it is said. Big Tax Sum. With those figures it is estimat ed that the motorists of Cleveland county pay $140,000 taxes to the state of North Carolina on gaso line. This sum goes to the highw'ny building fund. The tax is four cents per gallon and yearly this county pays for quite a number of miles in paving for some highway. «o rarm lax. It is thought that quite a num ber of farmers in the county do not avail themselves of the privilege of a non-tax gasoline for farm work. The tax is not charged for gasoline used in tractors on the farm or w road construction. The farmers who buy gasoline for tractor use pay the full price but receive a receipt and are given a rebate for the amount of the tax. To ride over one paved highway Cleveland county motorists faj $840,000 annually for gasoline $140,000 of which goes for roads And that, in the cost of motoring does not include car repairs, tires and incidental expenses. Two Wives Of One Man Are Friendly; One Is Wed Again Two Husbands and Two Wives are Nothing Unusual to Georgia Colored, Record Shows. The only trouble about a man having two wives and a woman hav ing two husbands with no divorces in use is that the law may hear about it. # Quite a number of years ago Polk Barron, a colored tenant farm er now in this county, married a colored girl by the name of Lucile in Georgia. Later they separated and came to North Carolina. In the time that passed since becoming citizens of the Old North State, Polk became enamored of “Louis ana,’ who also had migrated up from Georgia, and last fall they happened to go back home on ». visit about the same time and, it is said, were married while there returning here and living togeth er as man and wife. Officer this week arrested them and placed them in jail charging Polk with bigamy. Questioning brought the information to officers that Lucile, Polk’s first wife, was also living in this countyand, according to re ports, was married again herself. Then Lucile was brought to jail where she formed an acquaintance with Polk’s second mate and be came friends. The double-barrelad bigamy case came up before Recorder Mull Fri day morning, but as Ladle’s report ed second husband was not in court no evidence introduced could be used to show that she had married again but for Polk things did not break so well for his two spouses were lined up beside hiM at the bar of justice. From the evidence it was decided that Polk undoubtedly had two wives—and odd enough they were not jealous of each other, one still has him and the other, it i? said, has her another man. Like wise there was hints of evidenc about Wife No. One of Polk hav ing a Husband No. 2, but no on< could say so definitely and no mar riage certificates were introduced and divorce papers were also absent. The result was that Polk will be held for Superior court on a big amy charge, although he is sai to have stated that “down honn when they get tired of each oth they separate and hunt up new m trimonial partners. The two wivi one of whom may be anoth man’s wife, or has been living wi a man in that role, left the cov room free for the present. Att< neys Horace Kennedy and Peyt McSwain represented the conglo eration of husbands and wive* such a conglomeration that it w hard at times for the court to t» just who was which, or which wa or wasn’t.