Weatehrs To Speak At ^College Press Meeting Editor Lee B. Weathers ot The Cleveland Star, president of the North Carolina Press association will speak Saturday morning at Davidson college to the editors of the North Carolina Collegiate Press association. Representatives from every college in the state where there Is a publication of any kind will hold a three-day session at Davidson on Thursday, Friday and Saturday and Mr. Weathers will speak Saturday morning on “The , ^Making of a Newspaper.'' Last Resort. She—“Do you believe in clubs for women?" He—“Yes, if kindness falls."—Ex. WE AGREE— SHAKE 4 They are now using phre nology to determine the guilt or innocence in cir cumstantial cases; we wouldn’t be a bit surprised if judges would soon start instructing juries to use ouija boards for the same purpose; circumstances point to the fact that Sin clair gas and Opaline oil in sure a clean engine with its consequent operation effic iency. Mileage in gas de pends largely upon its pep and driving power. Both of these essentials are em phatically realized in Sin clair gas. Cleveland Oil Co. Distributors L. At The Theatres The Princess is featuring “No Other Woman," starring tlje dainty Dolores Del Rio, for a two day run —Thursday and Friday. Miss Del Rio is one of the screen’s stellar at tractions. She appears here in a play with a Biarritz background— Biarritz being the world's play ground—the Palm Beach of Europe. The director of the piece is none other than Lou Tellgen, one time husband of Geraldine Farrar. Don Alvarado appears as Maurice,sup porting in the feature role. It is a Fox film. Today the star attraction is George Beban, in "The Loves of Ri cardo.' It is a play of great emo tional power Beban is rated as one of the greatest of emotional play ers, and hi this place he has full range for his marvelous powers. The Webb theatre presents Wed nesday Glenn Tryon in "Hot Heels” with Patsy Ruth Miller. A comedy with the kick of youth, a hot ro mance in Cuba, the land where the 18th amendment ends and fun be gins. Thursday Buster Keaton. Bus ter's coming is enough without the title of his show, out this time it is “Steamboat Bill, Jr.” A river ro mance that sets its audience in a roar. A famous navigator charting the continent's biggest flood of rare American comedy with sensational success. Down in New York a one-act play has been seen and heard over the radio. Well, when we tune in on a New York play on our new tele vision radio set we re going to have it fixt so that the air-waves pass through several inches of chlorate of lime, charcoal, and formaldehyde. We don’t want the people next door to tis at our hotel to think we are saying those things.—Chicago Tri bune, Oysters are back again after a four month's vacation. Almost any man can patch the leaks in his roofs, so they give no more trouble until It rains. TAOS ram Penny Column FOR SALE CHEAP. ONE FORD j truck with new motor and new j tires. G. C. Jones. South Shelby. 4t-31p WANTED. A YOUNG LADY TO do office work in a department store in Shelby. Address "G” core Cleveland Star It 31c FOR RENT: TWO CONNECT - ing rooms. Close ini on East Marion street, S-e Mrs. Jean Gamble lt31c WANTED: FIRST CLASS COOK, must have references. Mrs. J. B. Muldrow. 201 East Warren St 3t 31c ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS cards now. Beautiful line at. moder- J ate prices. Individual cards bearing | your name in any style of type. Call '■ The Star office, telephone 11 and ; our representative Mrs. Ruth An- I drews will call and show you sam ples. tf 31p FOR SALE: ESSEX COACH 1929 model. Driven very little. Big discount if sold this week. Party going north. See Newton Ferree, at Gilmers. 2t 31p WANTED TO BUY NICE HENS and fryers. Will pay highest cash price. W. E. Crowder, Sanitary Meat Market. It 31c FOR SALE: 1929 MODEL ES sex coach. Driven very little. Bar gain for quick sale. Party going north. See Newton Ferree at Gil 2t 31p mers. Large Crowd Attend At Double Springs Number Of Churches Represented. Mrs. Greene Suffering With Blood Poison. (Special to The Star.) Double Springs, Oct. 29.—We had a large crowd Sunday night in B. Y. P. U. All three of the unions gave special program. The seniors gave a radio and conversational' program combined and the inter- j mediates had a campfire meeting, j The churches represented were i Sandy Plains, Pleasant Ridge. Bea ver Dam, Union, Latttmore and Zion. They did us much good. Hope they will come back again. The B. Y. P. U. and Sunday; school are planning* a social Hallo we'en night. There is a jolly good time in store lor everyone. Mrs. Nancy Bridges of Lattimore spent last week with Mrs. G. W. Greene and Mr. Bate Bridges. Mr. and Mrs. Sammie Brooks vis ited Mr. and Mrs. Lane Brooks Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Fletcher Davis and daughter of Charlotte were week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Davis. Miss Daisy Crowder spent Satur day night with Miss Willie Falls. Mr. Max Gardner visited Mr. Walter Davis Sundny. Dr. and Mrs. C. D Falls and Mr. and Mrs. Switzer and son from Woodruff, S. C., and Mr. and Mrs. E. Y. Harrill were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Falls Sunday. Messrs. Robert Falls and Virgil McSwain attended the Carolina Georgia Tech football game Satur day at Chapel Hill. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Hawkins and son visited Mr. and Mrs. Grady Brooks Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Koven Carpenter and children visited Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hawkins Sunday. Mr. S. W. Greene and family were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Moore Sunday. Miss Sybil Hamrick w'ho is at tending business college in Char lotte spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Ham rick. Misses Eliza and Vernie Brooks, Bertha Hawkins and Reba Lee Messrs. Olin Greene. Dufaye Bridges, John L. McSwain and Ty ree Greene and Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Hawkins attended a party a: Mr. Cliff Carpenters on the Fallston road Saturday night. We are sorry Mrs. L. C. Jones is sick, hope she soon regains her usual health. We are sorry Mrs. Della Greene is suffering from blood poison. She is making her home with her daugh ter. Mrs. O. Crowder. Mr. and Mrs. Olin Toms and son visited Mr. and Mrs, R. G. Stockton at Shelby Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Berry McSwain and little daughter and Miss Tensy Mc Swain spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. M. Brooks. Mr. John L. McSwain visited Mr. Dufaye Bridges Sunday. Misses Alda Hawkins. Lois Brooks and Etta Jones visited Misses Selma : and Reba Davis Sunday. Misses Dorcas, Virginia and Ida Lattimore visited Misses Beatrice and Nelene Blanton Sunday. Mr. Jane McSwain and sons Ar thur and John L. visited Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Putnam in the Zion community Saturday' night. Misses Lala Davis and Julia Jones students at Boiling Springs jr. col lege spent the week-end with home folks. Mr. W. H. Gardner and family ] visited Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lovelace j Sunday. Miss Janie Greene visited Miss Bernice Lovelace Sunday. Misses Mary Sue and Jennie Blan ton had as their guests Sunday Misses Ailene Crowder and Francis Greene. Mr. Rebern Washburn visited Mr. J. C. Moore Sunday. This paper was not quated in The Literary Digest last week. The Di- ! gest is geting terrible—Mesa (Ariz.) Journal-Tribune. j SPEECH OF IIOEY HERE ON MONDAY HISTORY MAKER (Continued from page one.) the talk since, have told every one else about it. Along different lines from his for mer speech here he defended Smith against the three major issues hurl ed against the Democratic candi date—religion, Tammany Hall, and prohibition—with a denunciation of a misrepresented charge against the candidate as to immigration, j “You know,” he declared, “when this campaign is over the Republi can party should credit A1 Smith with reforming them. When he was nominated they, for the first time in their lives flhme out for pro hibition, civilization and Christian ity. Never heretofore have they ad vocated either. “As to prohibition -how much difference is there in the stands of the two candidates for them to raise such a hullabaloo over. Hoover doesn't know whether he is wet or dry for he doesn't know which way the most voters are. It took him 45 years to decide whether he was a Democrat or a Republican, and he hasn’t decided about prohibition : yet. He says it is a noble experi ment and that when, and if, elect ed he will appoint a committee to see about it. On the other hand A1 Smith says that there lias been considerable criticism of prohibi i tion as it is, and we can look about | us and see that is true due to the 1 Republican lack ot enforcement in eight years, and since there is criticisms lie says he believe that the people should he given a right ; to say whether they want it chang j ed or not and that the people’s de ! cision shall be the law which he will enforce as they want it. Mr. Hoo ver's idea ot turning it over to a committee is a typical Republican move—they turn every problem over to a committee and no one hears of it again. Isn’t it best to let the people say what they want rather- than a committee? Smith promises, and he has never broken one. to enforce the law—the Re publicans have never enforced it— but Mr. Hoover contents himself with calling prohibition ap experi ment and promising to turn it over to a committee. What have the committee done to aid the farmer and the flood-stricken questions? Get*. On Bishop. At one part of the address the usually cool and kind talker seem ed to grow sarcastic as he express ed his disapproval of the methods used by some of the bishops in his own church, the Methodist. in fighting the Democratic candidate. "I believe a bishop or a minister should be made to stick to the facts and the truth just as any other man. Bishop Cannon’s expres sions c«i Smith’s immigration views are misrepresentation. His declara tion that Smith would put liquor in warehouses everywhere is without foundation. We didn't have such here before the 18th amendment and every fair-minded citizen knows w'e would not have such v.rith the amendment repealed which it will not be.” “They try to make you believe A1 Smith is dishonest because he be longs to Tammany Hall, an organ ization in which Boss Tweed lived and stole before Smith was born. Do you think that a church is dis honest because a mission secretary runs away with the money? I know you don’t and surely they don’t think they can make us believe that a man born after another had served his time in the penitentiary is crooked because the later was. Not hardly. Tweed lived years ago. The Vare and Thompson machines. Republican machines, which would make Tammany Hall blush at its worst, are present day machines— why do they not refer to these and the Ohio gang? Every southern Democrat living in New York who is anything belongs to Tammany Hall and if I lived there and you lived there we would belong. Tam many Hall is the great Democratic organization of that section. That’s the main reason the Republicans yell so much about it—it's just Democratic.” Oyster Supper For Benefit Of St. Paul There will be an oyster supper at the home of Mr. J. W. Craft on Sat urday night. November 3. Also sandwiches, ice cream and candy will be served, the proceeds from the sale of which will go to St. Paul Methodist church. Not Quite That Bad. — Mrs. Smith—“And I suppose you argued with him until you were black in the face?” Mr. Smith—"No, just around one eye."—Capper's Weekly. Grover Youth In Wreck In Which Four Were Hurt Leonard Hope’s Car In Collision. Gaffney Girls And Boy Injured. Gaffney, Oct. 30.—Three daugh ters of County Commissioner J. E. Humphries of the Macedonia com munity, and Troy Clary, son of John E. Clary, also of Macedonia, were patients in the City hospital here yesterday following an auto mobile collision that occurred' on the Chesnee road about 12 miles out from Gaffney Sunday evening about dark. All of the Humphries girls were suffering from internal in juries. Mr. Clary's skull was badly fractured and one arm was smash ed between the elbow and shoulder. Reports from the hospital at noon yesterday said that Miss Edna Hum phries, 23, and Miss Addie Hum phries, 15, were suffering greatly. The condition of the two girls was described as "pretty bad." Miss Al ma Humphries, 17, did not appear so severely injured. Mr. Clary, who had been unconscious from the time of the wreck until yesterday morning, was also said to be "pret ty bad." The four young people were in a touring car that collided with a se dan driven by Leonard Hope, of Grover, N. C„ son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Lee Hope, of Grover, formerly of Gaffney. The collision occurred »t a point on the Chesnee highway near Thickety mountain. Mr. Hope escaped with only minor injuries. He received a few small cuts and scratches from flying glass, and was shaken up and bruis ed. One of our Democratic subscribers writes in to remind us of the great “Passenger Plane Has Dining Room,” says a head-line. And now it is up to Miss Emily Post to sug gest something salty but polite ior the passenger to say when the ship goes into a tail-spin during dinner and spills the soup in his lap.—Ma con Telegraph. HUMMING BIRL H ATS ! 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THESE COLD DAYS CALL FOR A TOPCOAT You will find here just what you want. All new patterns. PRICED AT— $16.50 TO $32.50 IT WILL TAKE A NEW PAIR OF OXFORDS To make your outfit ' complete. * The new Nunn Bush K and Selz’s are here. PRICED AT— $5.00 . TO $10.00