r“.. 1 1 * 8 PAGES TODAY VOL. XXXVI, No. SHELBY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1, 1930 Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons. By moll, per yeer (in advance) $jt50 Carrier, pc.-year (In advance) $3.00 I LA TE NEWS THE MARKET. Cotton, strlci mid_— W't* Cotton Seed, per bn. ....... 36c Showers Likely. Today’s North Carolina Weather Bleport: Increasing cloudiness and f Vinner, probably showers tonlgat. ® Thursday cloudy and colder In west L portion. 72 Children Die. Seventy-two small boys and girls were killed yesterday afternoon at Paisley. Scotland, when a panicky krush for the exits in a theatre (ol j^^ined a yell of fire In the building, r The majority of the youngsters were k trampled to death or suffocated from gas. It is one of the worst 9 New Year eve tragedies on record. Shelby Schools I Open Thursday i Teachers R:s'gn Misses Suttle And Tweed Resign. Replaced By Mias Dobbins And Mrs. Hudson. The Shelby city schools will re open Thursday morning after be ing closed for the Christmas holi days. Two new teachers will be on the faculty tomorrow when school takes up. Miss Helen Dobbins, of Ruth erferdton, a graduate of N. C. C., W. will replace Miss Elizabeth Suttle who resigned, while Mrs. Harry Hudson, a former teacher, will re place Miss Pearl Tweed, another .teacher who resigned. f. Cleaning Buildings. , This week and last all the city ' school buildings were thoroughly cleaned and the floors oiled In prep aration for the spring opening. The alternation of the heating system of the South Shelby school, which Is being done by J. G. Dudley, will oe completed for the opening. Princess Theatre To Install New Talkies Interior Of T eati~ ^lng Changed And Extensiv "rovements Being Made. V Manager Sipe, newly appointed head of the Princess Theatre forc es in this city, makes the announce, ment today that the ere planning to re-equip the play house with modem sound apparat us, and to remodel the Interior of the building, to bring it up abreast qf the demand for the fast step ping amusement period. There will be, according to Mr. Sipe’s statement, four notable changes in the equipment: First, a De Forest sound equipment will be installed; second, the interior of the dieatrf will be changed by the engineers to perfect the accoustlc properties; third, a new lens will be installed on the projection ma chine to bring the picture closer to the audience; and fourth, a new and enlarged sound screen will be hung. Mr. Sipe says the new sound equipment will cost seven thousand dollars. This, he asserts, is the last word in modern sound reproduc t;on. It is a “sound-on-the-film” system, which is the most perfect yet devised. The new screen will be 22 x 24 feet in size, as compared with the present 16 x 18. The new equipment is expected to arrive in Slielby today, and will be installed at Mice. So that within the next ten aays it is expected the modernized playho se will open its doors to the local public. | Mr*. Jesse Washburns Cousin Found Killed ,.A /itfsl Jesse Washburn, formerly Miss Edna Jordan of Hartsville. S. C., received a message here last night stating that her cousin, Sen ator Frank A. Miller, had been found shot to death while out on a hunting trip yesterday afternoon near Hartsville. Senator Miller was president oi the South Carolina bar association and was expected to be a candidate , for lieutenant-governor. The death \ wound in the head was termed ac cidental. First Baby Born In New Year Gets Star For 1 Year Who will be Cleveland county's New Year’s baby? Following a custom I he Star will give a year’s sub scription to the first 1830 white baby born in Cleveland county, or rather the first 1930 baby to be reported. Happy parents and attend ing physicians are ur-ed tc rey -t cs ea-!-* as p—ible the firs*, s! o~t ir ’e by the «tork in the county after the clock tolled twelve last night. Who will be the New Year’s baby? Watch Friday’s Star. Post Office Here Retains First Class Ranking I Necessary Quota Just Is Secured Vocal Office Retains First-Class Ranking By Narrow Margin. Stamp Purchases Help. The Shelby post office just barely managed to retain its first-class ranking for 1930 due to a rush of stamp buying by local business enterprises yes terday, It was announced today by Postmaster J. II. Quinn. Due to a decrease In business during the'June postal quarter, a decrease felt all over the coun try, there was some doubt until the last minute whether the local office would be able to hold the ranking it received in 1929 for the first time. Just Beyond Mark. To get on the first class list a postoffice must have a postal receipt business totalling at least $40,000 per annum, and at the end of 1928 it was found that Shelby had passed this re quired quota by a scant $200. It was then anticipated that the city, with increasing business, would easily retain the ranking in 1929, but the June quarter, a period of slow business general ly, showed a decrease, and al though all other quyters of the year measured up to or passed the receipts of the same quar ters in ninteen and twenty-eight the total receipts of 1929 were still more than 11,000 shy of the $40,000 mark yesterday morning, the last day of the year. Dur- , fng the day a rush bf stamp buying by local business men for their first of the year bills and greetings and a belated batch of New Year cards carried the total over the top. As a final departments? check-up had not yet been made Postmaster Quinn today could not give out the exact total, but was positive that the ' $40,000 mark had been reached. Shelby Artists Will Broadcast By Radio Between seven and el?ht o’clock tomorrow to how this county might best follow the live-at-home plan he Is urging upon every farmer to the state. He Intimated that after travelling over the state he found very few counties where a bigger percentage of farmers "live at home and board at the same place" than is the case to Cleveland. He does, however, be lieve that the farmers of this coun ty purchase a quantity of hay and feedstuff they could produce on their own land, and that a greater production of milk, butter and cream would keep many dollars, now going away, at home. It was cheering information to him to hear that the local Kiwanls club headed by William Lineberger, a dairy enthusiast, means early to the year to sponsor a live-at-home program and an increase in dairy cows. Everywhere he goes to talk ing to North Carolina farmers he mentions his home county, and it is his ambition to tell them that Cleveland farmers live at home as well as produce as many bales of cotton to the acre as any other sec tion. Police Catch Car And Eleven Gallon* Local officers continued their rampage against the whiskey tiaf fic last night when Police Chief Mc Bride Poston and Patrolman Pai’l Stamey stepped on the gas In the police car and captured Charlie Black in a car containing 11 gal lons of whiskey, the capture being made after a chase through Freed man. Black lives about nine miles on this side of Morganton, and presum ably was delivering his cargo here. In county court this morning Judge Horace Kennedy made it II, 200 to fines to two days by fining Black or giving him the alternative of doing eight months on the No, 6 chain gang. Farmer At Elhnboro Shows How Cotton And Dairy Go Teg ther (Special to The Star.) Ellenboro—Eleven bales, 5192 pounds of lint cotton, Is the yield received by E. C. Suinmey of near Ellenboro from seven acres of land which he cultivated as a project in cooperation with the agricultural department of the Ellenboro school this year. His yield per acre figures 742 pounds of lint. That dairy farming is a big fac tor in the production of good crops at a cheap cost and a good ■profit is effectively demonstrated by Mr. Summey's project. He fer tilized with three loads of compost ed mrnure and 200 pounds of a 12-5-4 fertilizer per acre which re sulted in more than doubling the average yield of lint cotton for the state. His per acre cyst of produc tion as determined from his record book kept under the supervision of J the agricultural teacher ior the school allows that tt cost him $55.90 j to produce an acre of cotton. His costs include the following, seed, fertilizer, manure, rent of land at $10 00 per acre, use of implements at $1.50 per acre, men labor at twenty cents per hour, horse labor at fifteen cents per hour, ginning at $3.00 per bale, and picking at $1.00 per 100 pounds, the price that he paid for this Job. Manure was val ued at $3.00 per load but only charged at $100 since not more han half the value of the manure Is used by the cotton the first year hat it is applied. Mr. fcimimey will attend the bale per acre” banquet at Char otte, Friday, when 600 men and boys who conducted projects under agricultural teachers will be ban queted. _ Many Favor Fanner For AMenMy Here. Bulwlnkio Likely To Run Again. Cleveland county* heretofore rep resented In legislature by a lawyer, or another professional man, may send a farmer to the next seaalon of the general assembly. That Is the talk to be heard about Shelby as New Year political activity perks up. Those supporting an embryo movement for a real farmer to rep resent the county In the law-mak ing body believe that the county's state senator should be a profession al or business man, thus dividing proportionately the Interests, of the county. The major reason advanced for supporting a farmer as repre sentative Is that the state and the county have enough laws now and Instead of merely making laws the next session of legislature should give attention to problems not or dinarily handled during a rush of creating new legal regulations. To Help Gardner. Another reason advanced Is that a capable farmer, representing Gov ernor Gardner's home county, could be of much service In aiding the governor to convince the state that the executive’s live-at-home pro gram is the fljst and most Import ant step in getting North Carolina agriculture