Dr. Lackey Building New Home— Teachers Oo To Gastonia— «&, Other Items. i (Special to The Star.) Fallston. Oct. 22.—A mistake was made by the printer in last week's Fallston news. Two items were com bined and several lines were omit ted. The item (as it was printed) read as follows: “Mr. and Mrs. Stough Hopper of Shelby visited friends in Boone Sun day." The items should have read as the following two now are: Mr. and Mrs. Stough Hopper of Shelby spent Sunday here with Mrs Hopper’s sister, Mrs. Alice Esk ridge. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Spnith and family visited ffiends in Boone Sunday. Miss Ruby Biggeretaff of Hickory spent the week-end at her home here. Mr. Tom Alexander of Gaffney, S. C. arrived Thursday to com plete the new home of Dr. A. A. Lackey. Mrs. R. W. McBrayer and Mrs. Fritz Morehead and children of Mooresboro were Fallston visitors I Thursday. Prof. W. A. Moore, principal of the Waco high school, visited tlV Fall ston high school Thursday. Mrs. D. A. Beam returned Wed nesday from a week's visit with i relatives in Gaffney. S C. Misses Alice Gantt and Ola Boggs j made .a trip to Charlotte Tuesday. | Mias Fay Boas has accepted a | position as teacher in the Waco , high school. Mrs. C. T. Stamey and daughter, | Mary Francis. visited her sister. Mrs. Dave Dodd, of the Sharon community Friday. Messrs. T. A. Stamey and C. C. Stamey and Mrs. John Lackey and daughter. Miss Mathalee, attended the Lincoln county fair last week. Mrs. M. E. Spurting of near Bel wood spent a few days last week here with her son, Mr. E. G. Sparl ing. Among the Fallston folks who went to see Ben Hur were: Mr. ana Mrs. C. C. Falls, Prof. C. M. King and Prof. R. L. Pruett. Misses Terah Pinkleton, Mesdames Robt. Cline, A. A. Lackey and T. A. Lee, Messrs, Griffen Murray, Hulo Sweezy, Hoyle Lee and others. Prof, and Mrs. W. R. Gary mid most of the other teachers of the Fallston high school attended the Southern fhedmont division of the N. C. Education association which was held at Gastonia Friday and Saturday. Mrs. M. L. Murray left Saturday for Greensboro where she will visit I I _I Wanted 100 Bales of Cotton We will give 2 cents per pound over the mar ket price for 100 bales of cotton in exchange for Furniture or anything we handle, (if the local market is 20c we will allow you 22c per pound.) You get the furniture at cash pric es. Now, if you need furniture, here is where you make $10.00 on a 500 pound bale of cot ton, and ten dollars isn't to be laughed at these days. We will require middling cotton, deliver ed to the Planters and Merchants Warehouse, Shelby, N. C. You bring us the Warehouse * Receipt properly made out to The Paragon Furniture Co., Shelby, N. C„ or as we may in struct. You to trade out amount of cotton you deliver. We agree to allow you 2c per pound over the market price,' Shelby, for mid dling cotton—give you cash price on Furni- j luce and deliver the Furniture to your home as you may direct. YOU MAY WONDER— How we can do this—Well we’ve never been in the cotton business, and we want to try it* out. We like to know and experience is the best way to find out. We may lose and we may not—SEE. Anyway we are game— Bring us a bale or two, select your Furniture, dress up your home, make your family happy. As we write this article the price of cotton is, 19c—but we would allow you 21c today, Oct. 21st, in exchange for furniture. COME TODAY, TRADE WITH US. OUR STOCKS ARE THE LARGEST IN Ol^R HISTORY AND PRICES THE LOWEST. The Paragon Furniture Co. “ON THE SQUARE.” SHELBY’S AND CLEVELANDS LEADING FURNITURE DEALERS — HOME FURNISHERS. We also have a hundred and lift y lots in Shelby, we will exchange, for cotton. These lots are enhancing in value every day. If you want aetion, see us. Take your choice —FURNITURE OR REAL ESTATE. THE PARAGON We Mean Business — We Do Business. Attend Our Second Hand Furniture Sale In Lineberger Building, Next Door To The „ Kendall Medicine Co. her daughter, Miss Pearl, who is a nurse there. Toomu VIOLATIONS OF LAW Chief Weakness Of Present Age In Regard To Law Enforcement. Speech To Poliee. Durham —The chief weakness of the present age with respect to law enforcement, is not the/fact that the criminal element, as it has a;ways done, opposes lav/ and order, but the I tendency on the part cf some lawM abiding people to overlook this atti tude because it does not directly af fect them, Governor McLeain, in his message to the state convention of police chiefs assembled here, de clared. The governor, because of the press of business at the executive ! offices in Raleigh, was unable to at tend the convention personally and | his message was delivered to the! law enforcement chiefs of North nhd South Carolina and Virginia in j writing. "To aid and abet in the violation I of a law by winking at it consti tutes a serious offense against so- j ciety and the sovereign will of the people as expressed in rules and regulations designed lor the protec tion of life and property, which we call laws,” the governor declared. “Law is a solemn compact be tween the governed and those they chcose to govern them. It cannot be treated with disrespect without dire consequences. The ill results may not be immediate, but they are inevitable. Social and governmental morale cannot hold out when it is attacked from the inside. A war of defense against a common enemy or even a war cf aggression is more eas ily won than a war involving inter nnl t.l.rifp "Law enforcement is more im portant than punishing those who violated the law. Prevention is al ways better than cure. Anti-toxin is more preferable than a case of diphtheria, typhoid fever or in fluenza. No state or nation where the lawless are in the majority can be as healthy, from a civic or social standpoint, as that in which the cit izens frown as a unit upon revolt against constituted authority ex pressed in lawless acts. "You are more than so many men in uniform making your rounds daily. There is much drudgery at tached to your work. There are many discouraging factors that enr ter into a proper performance of your duties. But, above all, you are charged with responsibility peculiar to your calling. You protect life and property—you render to the law what is commonly known as "first aid." During the still hours of the night you keep vigil. You search our dark corners to see if, per chance, danger lurks there; you take your stand on the busy street to see that citizens are protected against injury. MONEY ON ' COTTON— This Bank is in position to lend money on cotton stored in bonded warehouse. If inter ested see us. CLEVELAND BANK & TRUST CO. Shelby, N. C. >. ...J STATEMENT OF THE OWNER SHIP. MANAGEMENT. C I R - CULATION, ETC., REQUIRED —BY ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912. Of The Cleveland Star, published tri-weekly, at Shelby, N. C. for Oct 1st. 1927 State of North Carolina Comity ol Cleveland. Before me. a notary public in and for the state and county aforesaid personally appeared Lee B. Weath ers, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the president and editor of the Cleveland Star and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true state ment of the ownership, management of the aforesaid publication for the | date shown in the above caption, re quirea Dy tne Act oi August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443. Postal Laws and Regulations, to-wit: 1. —That the names and addtesses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher Star Publishing Co.. Shelby, N. C.; Editor, Lee B. Weath ers, Shelby, N. C.; Managing editor, • Lee B. Weathers. Shelby. N. C.; Business manager. Lee B. Weathers, Shelby, N. C. 2. —That the owners are: Lee B. Weathers, S. E. Hoey, C. C. Btan I ton. George Blanton, Wm. Lineber ger, J. F. Harris. E. Y. Webb. T. W. Ebeltoft, A. P. Weathers, B. H. Pal mer estate, all of Shelby, N. C.. and 'John F. Schenck, Lawndale, N. C. 3. —That the known bondholders, mortgagee*, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of ( bonds, mortgages, or other securi 1 ties are: None. LEE B. WEATHERS. Sworn to and subscribed before [ me this 22 day of Oct. 1927. OEO. B. BLANTON. N. P. (My commission expires Jan. 4th, t 1928.) i “Alibi Al” Has | Fair Week In Football Games \ > ) Wins Six Out of Eight Picks in Football Games. The Scores on Last Saturday. Alibi Al. The Star’s football expert when the breaks go the right way. hasn’t any alibis to offer for Saturday’s football out comes. Wining six of eight guesses, with the two losses quite close, isn’t so bad. Al picked Charlotte to teat Shelby; Navy to t eat Duke, Tech to beat Car olina, and also named Alabama, Georgia and Maryland as win ners. / There were good guesses. Predict ing a victory for Davidson over Wake Forest wasn’t so good Al gave Davidson a two point margin— Johnny Cox tcok the margin away. ; Likewise Alvin of the Alibis looked fer Florida to beat State by a close socre. Instead State, to the joy of numerous fans hereabouts, won by a touchdown. The scores Saturday; Daudscn 13; Wake Forest 13. Navy 32; Duke 6. Georgia Tech 13; Carolina 0. Ltncir-Rhyne 20; King 0. State 12; Florida 6. Alabama 24; Sevvanee 0. Georgia 33; Auburn 3. Maryland 10; V. M. I. G. Rutherford 19; Abbey 6. Drinking Fountain For Horses Has No Asheboro Courier. As a newspaper records the birth of a person or enterprise, it records the end. As relates man, the end is certain. As regards an enterprise it may die Efhd it may not. These may carry on from generation to genera tion. Specifically. this newspaper re corded in 1915 that Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Armfield, Jr., had donated in spirit of public benefaction, a drinking fountain for horses to the town of Asheboro. This week, in the month of October and year of 1927, is recorded the end. Workmen have torn down the fountain. It has outgrown its usefulness. It has no use to serve. Placed on the street in front of the Bank of Ran dolph, a most convenient location, for years its sparkling waters quenched the thirst of meny a thirsty horse. It made the long, hard grind of a day’s work in the j traces a little easier to bear foi many a dumb animal. But. now hardly one animal passes it a day whereas at its beginning there were scores. The foundtain is relegated to the scrap heap to take its placj with the buggy. The difference !s that whereas the buggy may decay, the rust eat into the last piece of iron in its ancient frame, the fountain may rise again. But not to give drink to herse or mule. Some day it may on a grassy spot on a well-kept lawn be renovated, be surrounded with the figure of a swan or some ether appropriate work of art. and made to serve to beautify its sur roundings and to furnish water and baths for birds. This fountain gives way to the motorized age. Where once was the creak of the loaded wagon and the janklc of the trace chains is now the swish of the rubber tire and the shrill honk of the automobile horn. In its place are the red and yellow tanks that vend gasoline for the horse of the present age is the automobile. equipped with a gas tank which must be filled to quench | the thirst of a much cylindered gas i oline engine. If dumb animals could speak, they would arise to call the foun tain blessed and also its donors. If it could have been followed to its resting place in Mr. Armfleld's back lot, its funeral train would have been a long line of horses and mules of every age and condi tion. But It was carried in no horse drawn bier and there was no long line of animals behind it. It was hauled on a truck, on one of the family of motors which helped to deliver the death blew, and its fun eral train was the scent of burnc-d gasoline. SPRINGS LAUDS LINDY AS GREATEST AVIATOR Rock mil.—Capt. Elliott Springs, author and aviator of Fort Mill dined with Lindbergh while he was at Spartanburg. In a speech at the Winthrop Poetry banquet Captain Springs told about his conversation with Lindbergh and, about his meeting Ruth Elder in New York at the "Pilot Club. ’ The captain declares lhat all the superlatives the news papers have used about Lindbergh are true and not overdrawn. "The Prince of Air” is just inter ested in flying and not in the least conceited about his success. In fact Mr. Springs says the famous flyer seems to be indifferent to success and praise. "Ruth Elder,” the speaker declared, “is a charming woman, who conducted herself with ease at the Pilot club in New York. She was not ’fazed’ at all because she was the only woman present.” TRY STUB WANT MS. LONGER STAPLE I COHONMC.I North Carolina Surpasses Georgia | In Length Of Cotton Staple; Jietter Prices. j_ i News and Observer. According to report issued by the U. S. department of agriculture, bu reau of agricultural economics, Washington, under date of October 4. based on 213,507 bales of cotton ginned up to that time in the state of Georgia, the Georgia cotton was running 67.09 per cent 7-8 inch in in staple; 27.14 per cent 15-16 inch; and 5.58 per cent one inch and bet ter staple. The records of the North Caro lina Cotton Growers’ co-operative association up to that date make an interesting comparison. Thirty-one per cent of their receipts were run ning 7-8 inch; 36 per cent 15-16 inch; 20 per cent 1 inch; and 13 per cent better than one inch. Only a few years \ ago Georgia cotton was known far and wide for its superior staple; in fact, there was so much demand for North Georgia cotton that, it has been said that while they produced only one half million bales of North Georgia cotton the trade sold annually two and cne-half million bales. But comparatively little is heard of Nor h Georgia cotton now. Five years ago North Caiolina was producing a very inferior grade of cotton, and in some sections they are still growing the extremely snort varieties—just cotton. But the North Carolina Cotton Growers’ co-opera tive association soon learned that farmers had a valuable market right at their doors with Carolina mills for a better grade of cotton than was being grown in this state, and they began to hammer it into their members that the way to get a better product, and market it in such a way as to get the premiums that a better product was entitled to, it was stated at the association offices. The records of the associa tion show that the members has been increasing the length of staple year by' year as evidenced by the above table of figures. Otto Wood Out For Capital Punishment Raleigh.—Otto Wood, convict ed murderer, is a believer in capital punishment—with reser vations. The one-armed slayer of a pawn broker in Greensboro is on death row at state prison, where he has ' something over 25 years yet to j serve before he can shed prison garb. “I believe in it, certainly, but with reservations," the prisoner said in an interview. "Any man that commits a brutal murder or any man that commits an attack upon a defenseless wo man should be made to pay with his life, but I think the guilt of any one should always be proven before he is sent down the line to the chair. “But.” he continued, “I don’t think any man ought to be sent uuwn on what the courts call cir cumstantial evidence. You know, the courts could be wrong." To bear out his claims that he reads sometimes. Wood pointed to his bed. The bed was literally cov ered with newspapers. There were also some magazines. Not content with reading alone, Wood has been supplying the condemned negroes on death row with reading matter. Asked if he were thinking about dcing another book, Otto replied he was through with writing Wood said he disposed of about one thou sand copies of his book, ihe main theme cf which was to show that crime does not pay. “You can say for me that I do not intend to do any more writing any time soon," he said. Hep, Hep! “Diamond Tires belong to the‘UniformRank,’” says Diamond Dan. , They're so uniform, in fact, that high mileage is the rule with all of them. They are uni* formly good all the way through—bring ing uniform savings and dependability. Drop in and see these uniform tires. A. Blanton Grocery Company Diamond Tires One-Man Army Of Oklahoma Is Dead Oklahoma City, Okla.—The death if Frank Canton, the "one man irmy," recalls the colorful career cf mother of the west's picturesque men. Born at the height of the Kansas icrder wars, Canton, whose real name was Joe Horner, died peace fully at his home in Edmond, Okla. His life was like fiction. As a boy tie tended horses in the union army. Later he was a muleskinner, driv ing government wagon trains from Port Leavenworth to ' California, When such a trip was about as haz ardous as a transoceanic flight is today. In his later days he bunked with Flex Beach, the novelist, in hio Klondike geld rush to become one if the heroes in Beach's novels. As r peace officer lie hunted had men in Oklahoma and Wyoming, being the first adjutant general of the Sooner state and a sheriff in Wyo ming. Once Canton killed the head teamster of a California wagon train, using a neckyoke as his wea pon. He was ecquitted of murder and went to Texas, where he was reputed to have killed three negro soldiers in a saloon when a negro captain demanded he drink with them. Canton led many attacks on cat- j tl%rustlers. As adjutant general, he ! earned the sobriquet "Oklahoma's 1 one man army” when, instead of calling out the militia on several oc casions—such as county seat wars and race riots—he took charge of the situation and singlelmnded quelled whatever disturbance broke the tranquility of western life. COST OF OPERATING COURT ON INCREASE Cost of operating United States court in the 40 counties comprising the Eastern North Carolina federal court district is showing a steady increase, it was learned from United States Marshall R. W. Ward. For the quarter ending September 30. last, was $124,362.92 as compar ed in this district totaled $14,193.30. Figures .just compiled by Marshal Ward show that the; cost of operat ing the federal courts in the East ern district for the fiscal year end ing June 30 last was $124,582.92 as compared with a cost of $110,328.32 for the preceding fiscal year. The figures for the last fiscal year would probably have been higher had the courts been allowed to operate without curtailment which came about as the result of Congress failing to pass the general deficiency bill at the last session. Funds ran low and court sessions were curtailed. Thus the cost was reduced. iVorid Will Soon Be Educating Its People By Radio, Opinion Of Marconi A Judge's Wise Action Sulkuury Post. Judge Stack poured oil on trou bled matrimonial waters down at Raleigh the other day, the result being the saying of legal action brought by a husband to compel his young wife to return to their home in Charlotte, the young girl remains at her home near Raleigh until she is ready to go of her own free will. The action of the judge was not based cn the law but on an appeal to reason and 'common sense. Many a threatened family disturbance might be averted if the courts could postpone and make way for things to work out. Often times an outside meddler, a relative, friend cr neighbor interferes with the course of true love, or with sensible deportment and men, and women rush into court to adjust their do mestic troubles before they really reach that stage where the law ought to be invoked. Judge Stack doubtless did a wise thing when he sidestepped legal intervention and sent the young couple home to think ft over. ; Washington—Although more than a quarter of a century has paused since he startled the world with his invention of wireless iel*>. graphy, wnnam Marconi still works ;with all the vigor and enthusiasm j of his younger days to improve me thods of radio communication "Only the feeble minded or the prematurely old stop and abandon their life's interest for the sake of idleness,” Marconi said here, -j have laboratories wherever I g0 and whereever I go I work. I have workshops in Italy, in England, and now here the Radio Corporation of America has put at my disposal its plants for any experiments I ,nay want to make; in addition, when r require special concentration, re moved from the calls that are al ways made upon me on land, i have my, yacht, the Electra. which is completely equiped with appara tus for my researches." "This is the radio age,” Mr. Marconi said. "The world is coming more and mere to doing everything, amusing by it. It will son be edu cating its people and regulating all its life by it,” The Estate Heatrola THE ORIGINAL CIRCULATING FURNACE. Heat your home with the most healthful heat known. Pure moist hot air. Let us show you the most complete line of Heaters on display. Shelby Hardware Co. “WE SERVE TO SATISFY.” — PHONE 330 — COMPLETE TIRE SATISFACTION “For Shelby Motorists” With GUM-DIPPED TIRES — STEAM-WELDED TUBES We Have Taken on a Complete Stock o f Those Famous Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires and Steam-Welded Tubes To Give Shelby Motorists “Most Miles Per Dollar.” -SPECIALS TODAY -COURIER CORDS- | - | Guaranteed By Firestone i 30x3'/2 REGULAR.$5.95 ! i 30x31/2 EXTRA SIZE ..$6.45 i [ 29x4.40 FULL BALLOON.$7.30 j CAMPBELL’S STORE — Exclusive Firestone Dealers — SHELBY LAWNDALE