A Good Credit Is A Great Asset-Keep Your Credit Good For Future Use-This Is Pay-Up Week For Everybody
8 PAGES
TODAY
VUi, - A XVI. No. 136
SHELBY, N. C.
WEDNESD’Y, NOV. 12. 1930
Published Monday, Wednesday ami Friday .yrei-nouns.
Hy Mall, wot year, no
Carrier,, pev year. On advanee*
LA TE NEWS
THE MARKET.
Cotton, per lb...10c to lie
Cotton Seed, per bu. .......... 30c
Continued Rain.
Today's North Carolina Weather
Report: Oecasional rain tonight and
Thursday. Little change in tem
perature.
Observe Armistice Day.
New York, Nov. 12.—The anni
versary of the Armistice struck 12
yesterday and one hundred million
Americans observed it with a solemn
■ imultaneous silence. They paused,
these Americans, wherever they weie
at 11 o’clock yesterday morning and
hared their heads In memory of the
moment when cannon sent, their la
roar of horror echoing across a
shrapnel-ravaged France. The sound
Ing of taps, the halting of business
the bombing of salutes were among
the tributes America paid.
Methodists Get
Their Ministers
Sent Back Here
Fitzgerald Leaves
Belwood Church
Haves, Jenkins, For’is Return To
Shelby. Stanford Remains At
Statesville Church.
Very few changes in the
Methodist ministers of this sec
tion were made by the Western
North Carolina con'erence at
Greensboro this week, the con
ference chan-in? only a few
pastors who had not served
four years at one ehwvh.
The one chenge noted in the
county is the sending of Rev. E. E,
Snow to the Belwood to replace
Rev. J. W. Fitzgerald who was'sent
' o the Memorial suburban church
at_ Salisbury.
Rev. L. B. Hayes, was returned to
Central Methodist church. Rev. W
R. Jr nkins to LaFf yeite Street
church, and Rev. R. L. Forth 3 to the
She’by circuit.
The district presiding elder is
Rev. R. M. Courtney.
Rev. A. L b'anford, former Shel
by pastor,'remains at Broad Streei
-hurch in Statesville and Dr. Hugh
K Boyer, another former Shelby
’CONTINUED ON -AGE filOHI <
Come To Lay Floral
Offering On Tomb
Of Judge J. L. Webb
Mrs. Jas. L. Webb and her daugh
ters, Mrs. O. Max Gardner and Mrs
Madge Webb Riley arrived in Shelby
yesterday from Raleigh to visit theh
home which has been closed for the
winter and mainly to place a floral
■'tiering on the grave of Judge Jas.
L Webb in Sunset cemetery. Today
•.roula have been the judge's 77th
biithday. He was born in Ruther
ford county, Nov. 12 1853 and died
in Shelby Oct. 1st. Mrs. Webb and
Mrs. Riley have closed their hand
some colonial home on S. Washing
ton street and are spending the
vinter at the mansion in Raleigh.
Mr. Covington St-lt
Semi Conscious Here
Mr Joe Covington, well kno'.r
fsrruer of the Un on community is
0t ;il in a semi-conscious condition
at the Shelby hospital where he is
being treated from an injury he re
ceived; Friday evening when he ,vras
stiuck by a cotton truck at Cairn
Call. He has a fractured skull and
has been in a very serious condition
since the injury. ^
Some Of Today’s
Leading Bargains
Star pages today announce
many interesting bargains fot
housewives, husbands and
families. Retail prices- are
down. Now is the time to buy
and save on the merchandise
that will be needed later on.
Here is a short list of items
taken from the advertisements
of today's advertising mer
chants:
Women's shoes $1.98—$2.87
Men's Suits cleaned and press
ed - ----— 50c
11.95 women’s silk hosiery
—1.00
Horse and Mule Collars .. 98c
Electric Light Bulbs_17c
Children's Coats __ $1.87
Men's Heavy Colton Sweaters
—98c
Work Shirts ..SI.. 59c
Theatre Admission ..... 10c
These are outstanding val
ues, and there arc manv
more to be found in the ad
vertising columns of this pa
per. Turn the pages and see
for yourself.
——- —— ----- -
Armistice Day
Observed Very
Calmly In City I
Big Contrast To Day
12 Years Ago
Cfty Went Wild In 1918. Barbecue
Last Night For Vets. Flags
On Streets.
November II, 1930, in Shelby
was as different from November
II, 1918, as day is from night,
Twelve years ago yesterday
Shelby staged her wildest, most
enthusiastic, and greatest cele
i bration. Yestreday the city was
enveloped in the peaceful quiet
I ude of a lazy Sunday afternoon.
f- A barbecue for veterans of three
wars held la t night, the unfurlin''
of flags along Shelby streets, and
the closing of banks, and many
business houses were the only out
side indications that the anniver
sary of peace was being observed
Yet Shelby remembered. The calm
and silence of the day, the little
groups gathered here and there re
calling 1918, and the many famil’
dinners over the county, at which
the “boys of T8” were special guests
all grouped together let it be known
that the county had not forgotten
although there was no outward
show.
Many Shelby and Cleveland
county people motored to Forest
Cjty and Spartanburg for big cele
brations there, or to the Legion
air show’ in Charlotte. Others spent
the day quietly by the home fire
sides.
i
isiu. lu ininioir-—.
It was a different Shelby 12 years
ago when a faithful telephone op
erator started calling numbers Jn
the overhanging dusk of early
morning to let Shelby and Cleveland
I county parents know that tjie war
was over and those living of 600
boys the county sent away would
be coming home soon.
A Wild Parade.
i By daylight the town was filling
tup with excited, jubilant throngs.
Mothers weeping with joy, fathers
with tears of happiness swelling up
in their eyes/ brothers and sisters
eager, wild, to participate in the
celebration. By 8:30 a great parade
formed about the city, whistles
shrieked, belts tolled, guns boomed,
old and young ye^ed together.
School turned out for the day.
Youngsters maddened with joy
joined in the reckless melee. The
parade moved east; to Kings Moun
tain and back again. All day the
parade and tumult reigned. Late
into the night it continued until1
one by one the weary celebrants
wended their way home, too tired to
celebrate more, too wrought up,
! CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT !
American Lesrion
Auxiliary To Meet
Mrs. Tom Gold, chairman of the
American Legion \uxiliary chapter
Le e announces a meeting of the
chapter for Friday afternoon at
3:30 at the womans club room. All
members who ha\ o not paid their
dues for 1931 are ‘.rged to come to
the meeting* prepared to pay up.
WOODMAN DANCK SATURDAY
NIGHT AT WOODMAN HALL
Ti.ere V.111 be % round and square
tarce at the WoxLnen of the
World hall Saturday night. Music
■a U! start at 8 o'clock.
Hawks Sets New Record
-j
When Captain Frank M. Hawks, <
famous American speed flier,
set his Texaco No. 13 plane
down at the General Machado
Airport, in Havana, he was
greeted by an enthusiastic crowd
as shown above on his record
breaking flight. On his return
► journey to New York, he set »
new record of 8 hours and 46
minutes, and brought pictures
of his take-off for International
News Photos and Hears'. Metro
Tone, through arrangement with
Harry Bruno of the Texaco
Company.
’ 11«U w »r**l)
Three Hundred Veterans Of 3
Wars Enjoy Legion Barbecue
Served By Legion Auxiliary
Pay-Up Campaign
Meets Results In
Cleveland County
Thousands of dollars have oven
paid so far this week on old >.■ re
counts, according to bank clearanc-’
figures. This is the result of the
pay-up campaign which has run for
several days and will continue
tlirough Monday night of next week
Credit merchants and firms have
been gratified witn the response to
the pay-up campaign. Thousands of
accounts have been settled in full,
while equally as many have been
paid in part and arrangements mud
with the creditors to carry balances
for awhile. Firms doing a credit
business are thus enabled to meet
pressing obligation* they have and
thus maintain a good credit for the
coming year.
Most of the credi. firms have been
mailing mid-montn statements with
enclosures calling attention to the
pay-up campaign and these firms
which are putting individual ef’.ort
if: to the drive are reaping results
The response has been gratifying
indeed and it is fait that credit will
be much easier and business condi
tions greatly improved after Mon
day night When the pay-up cam
paign closes.
Coltrane Declares Schools Not
Burdensome As They Justify Cost
As Modern Basis Civilization
Head of North Carolina Education
Association Spoke Here
Monday Night.
—
Many citizens have an erroneous1
idea about the cost of public school.:
and at the same time do not take
into consideration that the public
school is the most important factor
in maintenance of civilization, was
the opinion expressed in Shelby
Monday night by Supt.-E. J. Col
trane, president of the North Caro
lina educational association.
Mr. Coltrane spoke here before
the Parent-Teachers association as
a part of the program of the ob
servance in the city schools of
American Education Week. Daily
programs are being held in the
schools, parents are visiting and be
ing urged to visit the schools, and
| .CONTtNt'Ep ON PACE' ElOHT i (
Mrs. Jno. Schenck, Jr.
P T A Council Head
At a general meeting of the six
pan nt-teachers associations of Shel
by, held last night in the high
school building. Mis. John Schenck,
jr., was elected president of the City
Council which heads up the six or
ganizations. Mrs. Harry Hudson was
elected vice president . Mrs. Hugh
Mauney secretary. Mrs. R T Le
Giand treasurer and Miss Selma
Wcbt historian.
Washington street schooi won first
tenors for the argest number of
pa> ait-teacher members in attend
in't . Marion street school second
ano the High school third
Short, Informal Program . Presided
Over by CommarAer Speight
Beam, Singing. Wanning.
Nearly three hundred veterans
of three wars—the YVorld war.
Spanish American war and Civil
war—enjoyed an Armistice dav
barbecue last night in the Huey
building to the rear of the post*
office, the delicious meal being
•errctl by the Legion auxiliary.
Fine Spirit Prevails.
It was the largest gathering pt
Legionnaires the county has ever
had. Twelve years after the signing
of the Armistice, they silently re
called memories of that memorable
and bleak October day, but noth
ing In the program refreshed then
silent sorrows of tire awful conflict
Tire majority of those present were
veterans of the World war and it
was a fine looking body of • high
| spirited men who now wield a won
derful influence in the civic, social
and religious life ot Cleveland,
Singing and Ample Food.
There was an abundance of good
things to eat. After the plate of bar
becue meat, a said, potatoes, sand
wich, coffee, rolls, celery, pickles and
a desert of Dixie cups and delicious
homemade cakes. Rev. Zeno Wall,
Rev. L, B. Hayes, Editor Lee B.
Weathers and Jake Thomas made
very oner, uuormai rants, comman
der Speight Beam of tire American
Legion was master of ceremonies
anti he brushed aside all formali
ties. Lead by a if orchestra directed
by Flay Gardner and group sing
ing by Dr. B. M. Jarrett. the men
who wore the gray, the blue and
the khaki joined in singing stirring
war songs to which the boys march
ed and fought in Belgium. France
and in American war camps.
As the guests arrived, the gallant
ladies of the- Legion auxiliary who
gave their unstinted support to the
boys in war times, pinned red, white
and blue ribbons on coat lapeis
. and asked them to register in or
der that the American Legion
chapter might secui* the names of
the names of the Legionnaires in
! the county.
Following the barbecue, a square
dance was enjoyed in the show
| room of the Chevrolet building on
I East Warren street.
I ____
Visiting Afternoon
At Marion School
—
On Thursday afternoon, from one
thirty until three o’clock, the pupils
and teachers of the Marlon street
school will observe "visiting after
noon." All the patrons and friends
of the school are invited to visit the
rooms during those hours and to
lobserve the work.
Hold Red Cross
Roll Call Here
On Oct. 19-21
May Secure Nurse
For Winter
i.wrrat Organization To Aid In Ch.vr
i(\ Work Ilurlng BItirr Winter
Month*
The annual lied f'ross roll
rati in Shelby and Cleveland
county will be held on Wed
nesday, Thursday and Fridav,
Oct 19, 20, 21, It was announc
ed by Attorney Henry B. Ed
wards, county chairman.
I In connection with the date it -vu
also announced that if the roll -Hit
for relief of distress is sufficiently
'supported here there, is a posslbt'ltv :
that a Red press nurse can be Se
cured to work in Shelby during a 1
couple ofthe wor t winter raontt
chen suffering and want are at'
their worst. ,
Fought leilaitra.
Mr. Edwards hopes that the rcl!
cat! will meet vrtt i a fine respon e
so that a nurse can be secured to di
rudfeharity relief work here. In that
loslpectlpn it. Is ('■minded that tli
I'xsel Red Cross gave $200 to the
:$jr>t on pellagra in Cleveland couii
y last summer.
Pne drawback 'o charity v pri;
V.cic is that the: ■ Is no organlz. o
1 ouue through w»u;h the funds can
'.In: expended. A Red Cross'nurse lor
... portion of the Winter would solve
i'tb.'j problem.
.iinnry suvj nerr
V, ospeetive members and eonui
: tutors are reminded that only 5C
i cents of every membership pledge
<?pes to the national organization
which serves the entire world. The
; remainder remains in the county tor
j local relief
Hon. Chas. Evans Hughes. Su
preme Court Chief Justice, in mak
ing an appeal for the roll call, has
I this to say:
1 "Every citizen sliould support the
American Red Cress. It is our na
i.onal agency for relief in every
emergency requiring immediate *ttd
v ell-directed assistance on the large
settle which only an effective or
jsanizatiqn under competent leader
ship can give. It affords play for our
generous sympathies while jllustr >t
11,g the efficiency of American ''li
ter prise"
Stray Bullet
Strikes Youth
Nine-Year-Old Boy Did Not Know
What Struck Him Until
After Operation
Barkley Hord. nine-year-oid
son of Mr. and Sirs. JLoron Hord
o Shelby, was struck In the head
and painfully in'ured by a stray
bullet Tuesday afternoon, the
youth not knowing what struck
him until after the operation in
which the bullet was removed.
The youngster hid been playing in
f he yard when he suddenly started
| screaming as if in agony. His motner
i and father could not determine wnat
j was paining him. and his father
'rushed him to Dr. E. B. Lattimore.
!Thc wound behind the left ear wa.,
i discovered, and af f r putting the ho>
tu • eep the physician located and
i removed the bullet.
Although a painful injury it is not
! considered a very serious one.
just where the b.diet, a .22 calibre
| rille bullet, came frrm Is not known
: but the youth was fortunate perhaps
that it did not strike a more vital
riOOtr.
Asked For Money
He Got An Uppercut
Would-Be Highwayman Had Clever
Way of Stopping Driver. Cost
Article Left In Road.
The driver of the bread truck
which operates between Morganton
and Shelby through Toluca on
■ highway No. 18 saw a new auto lire
| in the road a few days ago. He
stopped to get it. As he stepped out
of the truck, a man suddenly ap
. peared from the side of the rdad
and threw a-pistol on him, de
! manding that, the driver give up his
[money. In turn the. driver gave him
! a lick under the chin, stunning him
and knocking the pistol to the
ground.
The would-be highwayman ran
and the driver followed firing the
pistol as he fled. The driver failed
to hit his mark, but returned to the'
truck, picked up the new tire and
went on his journey with the high
waymans pistol. ]
Mauney Robbed 8
Times In 5 Years
Hi' hastside Store is Knlerrd and
Front Amt Thieves Leave
At Rear. j
I uterine by the front door and
leaving by the rear, a thief or
thieves robbed the store of •*.
M Mauney of the Eftstslde mill
village last night. Robbers seem
to pick on Mr. Mauney. For five
years he has b-r.n operating
stores tn mill villages In Shelby
and suburbs and this makes the
eighth time his store has been
robbed. Shoes, shirts,, ties, cig
arettes and other articles were
missed from the stork when Mr.
Mauney entered the store this
morning.
Mr. Mauney estimated that lr«s |
than J50 worth was stolen. The
robbery was reported to poller
who are on the look out.
School Youth
Missing Since
Early Monday
Willie Williams. .Student At Ross
(Move School, Misaing Since
Monday.
Willie William.'-, 16 year old .son ut
C IS Williams, and a student at the
Roes Grove school just north of
Shelby, has been missing since Mon
day His father who lives two mile
east of Shelby tn the Rock Cut sec
tion has made a vigorous but fruit
less search and this morning ap
pealed to The Star to help locate
the youth.
He left home Monday morning as
usual with his books across his
shoulder.* He did not, go to school
and was seen in Shelby about 9
o'clock Monday morning. Since that
time nothing has been heard from
him and Hie parents are becoming
' alarmed. Never before has he left
| liome like- this or made any threats
r of leaving. He wore a blue ,suit with
a striped pair of overalls over the
suit. His father describes him us
weighing 100 pounds, freight 5 feet,
light hair, dark blue eyes. Across
his nose is a scar, the nail on the
second finger of his right hand is
broken back and the knuckle on the
little finger of his right hand has
been knocked back about an inch
from its natural place.
Mr. Williams will appreciate any
information reported to him or to
the police as> to his whereabouts.
Thackson’* First
Visit In 24 Years
Mr. S. D. Thaekstoh of New Lon
don, Conn,., visited his brother in 1
booth Shelby last Gunday. This w»s j
Mr. Thackston's f'rrt visit to the
South since he left his native home
in Spartanburg, S C., more thgn 24
vtais ago. Mr, Th tekston visited a<
for south as Jacksonville, Fla... and
as a result of this visit, he thinks ne
car. understand now why his brother,
Mr. H. A. Thackstoit. moved to Shel
by and made his t ome 20 years age
for he thinks that North Carolina in
the banner state of the South. Al
though he was bo’.n and reared in
South Carolina he said he would
have to hand it, to North Caroline
and especially to Cleveland county
Masonic. Notice.
Cleveland lodge No. 2U2 A. F. and
A. M. will hold special communica
tion Friday. Nov. 14. at 7 o'clock
for work on the fellow-craft degree.,
La ail Pilot Forced
To Jump Near Casar
Dick Merrill, Flying Night Air Mail, Get*
Lost In Storm, Leaps From Plane 5,000
Feet Up. Chute Fails To Open For 1,500
Feet. Plane A Total Wreck, Mail Saved.
Dick Merrill, widely known air mail pilot, flying the
night mail from Atlanta to Richmond, became lost in the.
rain storm last night and was forced to jump from his Plane
near Casar, this county, about .'1:.‘10 this morning when his
gas ran out. The plane was-5,000 feet; up when Men ill
jumped and his parachute failed to open until he had fallen
1,000 to 1,500 feet, hut the pilot escaped with only an in
iured ankle. The mail was saved almost intact.
Merrill Tells
Of His Greatest
Thrill At Casar
Hurled Headlong From Plane It*
< i uld Not Find C'or<i. Mascots
Not \lullg.
Milk Merrill, mir of liule
> urn's most dependable and
1 veteran air mail pilots, sat in
the Shelby post office today
and despite an injured ankle,
and a night without sleep—a
night which had brought him
Ins greatest thrills—found two
things worth griming about.
First, he was alive after maU'rv;
hi; lust forced parachute leap
which automatically makes him a
member of the to mods Csterpiiia •
Club, and. second, by some stt'ok0 o
tuck he had not carried his masco.
wit .i him when lie left Atlanta ut
o'clock with the flight air mail .0/
UsrUmoml.
He seemed hith-j pleased about
,!,3 mascots—a lio:. cub, a cougar
and a squirrel. Often lie cafries
them with him as he flies his lonely
route across three States. Hut had
he carried them tn.si, night he would
hove had tut mascots today. Hurled
from his plane, at '1:30 this morning
near Casar. he did hot have time Ui
get his parachute ripcord in his
hahd before he l . tped, niucl^ less
(CONTINUED ON 9AOF MOHT i
Meets Girl Friend
Of Buddy Who Died
Flying Night Mail
In Shelby this morning Dick Mer- !
r.'lt night mall pile:, met and break- j
fasted with a former girl friend oi,
his old flying pal, Syd Malloy. wr«
was killed while flying the ni^ht a*r
mail !
For a long time Merrill and Mat
ley flying the mall together out h
Atlanta, were bosom pals. Then one
night Malloy's plane crashed inf' >
beacon and he was killed. Some
' ears ago Malloy operated a plane
at Cleveland Springs and became a
ir.end of Miss Betty Suttle Merri..
had heard Malloy speak Of her. and (
tin: morning after he reuehed Shel
by. following his forced jump from j
his plane near Ca. ar, he telephoned
her and received an invitation to
nave the mornin » coffee that hi
<vrecked plane and parachute jufnn
caused him to mV; i
World-Wide Revolution Planned
By Soviet By Undermining Trade
And Destroying World’s Market
Congressional Committee Hears
Methods of Gigantic Plan
Bared.
Washington, Nov. 12.—Testimony
that the soviet five year industrial
program was instituted to produce
economic depression in capitalistic
nations preparatory to world wide
revolution was presented to the
house communist investigating com
mittee this week by three witnesses
Rev. Father Edmund Walsh, vice
president, of Georgetown university,
testified that through the program
the soviet was enabled to dump in
the so-called capitalistic nations |
products of "enslaved labor" at]
prices which were destroying world,
markets. I
Dumping Products.
Bernard S. Barron of New York, i
general counsel of the American
Manganese Producers' association
and E s. Clark of Phoenix, Ariz: t
counsel for the Chaplin Exploration
company of Chicago, testified that
Russia was dumping manganese and
other conscripted labor products on
American markets at prices below
the cost of' production.
The fourth witness was William
F. Long, general manager of the
Associated Industries of Cleveland
He said communists had concen
trated on Cleveland industries and
had. become a menace to workers
and employers. The movement, he
said, .was spreading with disastrous
effect.
"We feel like; we are sitting.on an
industrial volcano.” he said.
Recites From Book
Police officials of Cleveland fail
ed to appear to testify. Chairman
Hamilton Pish indicated he would
i me subpoenas when the commit
tee reconvenes here November 24
continued on cage eight.) 1
The plane, which fell about one
half mile from where Merrill land
ed with his chute, was a total wreck. > •
every comportment being smashed,
the lg bags of mail carried by the
v mg night, mail pilot came our
uscratched, only a .- light hole lx -
big ripped in one of the bags. '
* . Merrill and his chute hurtled to
arth near the home at W. D. and
C. D. Downes. Due to the fact, that
lie fell a great distance before hi.*
chute opened, there was a conuon
. like crack as it‘opened, and the
Downes family heard it. They reach-,
eel Merrill soon after he struck the
ground. A search was immediately
instituted lor the plane, and the
wreckage was found just before
daylight on the Harnp Brackett,
farm, only a short distance out of
Casa:. ■
\V. b. Downes and C. b. Do when
brought Merrill and his mail to the
Shelby postdffice early this morn
ing and the mail was dispatched by
train to Greensboro to catch the air
mail plane there.
Lost For Hours.
The pilot underwent one ot the
most nerve-wracking nights of his
life us he battled with the fog ant!
rain, trying to save himself, hw
mail and his plane.
He left Charlotte, he said, short
ly after U o'clock last night, head
ing for Greensboro. He had refuel
ed at Spartanburg. After leaving
Charlotte Merrill says that he tad
trackuof all lights on the ground du ■
to the fog and ratm After flying for
some time without reaching thi
Greensboro airport, he became wor
ried. It was then, he says, that he
circle back, or attempted to circle
back south, knowing that he should
be able to see tire lights of Salis
bury, Concord. or other cities in t-ht
Charlotte area. For hours aftci
hour he kept searching but coulc
see nothing. Around 3 o’clock thi?
morning he realized that he was lj
a mountainous section. He knew
that his gas could not last muck,
longer and he climbed as high m
he could before his gas ran out.
Took Thr Leap.
He knew that with the plane out
of gas he was losing altitude anti
.soon might hit a mountain or hill.
He prepared to "bail out"—jump
with his 'chute. As he got one foot #
out of the cockpit to jump, the
plane went into a spin. He crawled
back in and righted the plane
Again he started to Jump, but hail
to right the plane out of another
spin. A third time he began crawl
ing Out. This time the plane in spin
hurled him out. He was sent twirl
ing headlong from i he falling plane
before he could reach for the rip
cord of his chute. Over and over ha
twirled in such a dizzy manner that
for minutes he could not find the
cord. Finally, after what had seem
ed hours to him, his fingers clutch
'd the cord and yanked. The chuu
opened with a bang, and short i t
thereafter Merrill struck the ground
After reaching Shelby Merrill
immediately communicated with a.i
mail officials and reported his mai!
safe, the first duty of the mail pilots.
Then he had his injured ankla
bandaged and communicated with
friends worried about the fact than
he had been missing for five hours.
Get Wrecked Plane *
Today; Roar Of
Plane Heard Here
A' noon today it was stated tlia;
Spartanburg nirpoU officials would
dome this afternoon to get" the
wrecked air mail pinna near Casar
f: q n which Pilot D.> k Merrill jump
ed early this meaning after beine
lost 4 1-2 hours in the storm.
Many people haerd the roar of
Merrill’s motor emly today as ha
flea- about trying to find a place to
l.tna Several hearJ it In Shelby,
r.t lawndale and Fallston many
nestl'd, tire plane some 30 minutes ee
torc the crash. -