ZION COMMUNITY BATCH OF NEWS Hal Cornwell Horae From hammer School. Personals Of People Vis iting Abont. 'Special to The Star.) Zion; Aug. 2.—Mr and Mrs. C. A Gold o( Chesnee S c„ Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Barner. of Springfield. Ill were visitors Wednesday at the home o‘f Mrs F ' O. Gold Miss Mollie Dalton from Ruther .fordton, Miss Mar” D Palmer, o( Polkville and Mr. Kent Harris were guests of Miss Lyda Poston Sunda' The young people gave Miss Ver me CapanLSj a surprise partv Sat urday night Mr Hal Cornwell is home from the summer school at Chapel Hill Miss Ray Withrow of Polkville visited h»r grandmother. Mrs. C. G Poston Sunday Misses Ora Jones and Willie Walker of Lattimore visited Miss lyda Poston last week. •Mr *nd Mrs. K. K. Keeter of Pi'elby vi ere dinner guests Sunday of Mrs Charles Cabaniss Mr. and Mrs. D B Simmons and daughter. Miss Mabel, of Kannap -rlis Msited Mrs G. H Simmons ever the reek-end. Miss Lvda Po~ton entertained her group of W. Y A girls Tuesday afternoon at her home Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cornwell end family visited Mr and Mrs. D C. Weathers of Hendersonville Thurs day. Mr and Mrs. Hugh Neal of Pat terson Springs were visitors at the h*me of Mr and Mrs T P Caba mss Sunday Miss Hermme Hoyle and brother ,T'a~ren of Cherryville. are visiting ‘heir gr-ndparents. Mr. and Mrs. A J R. Hoyle Miss Annette Blanton of Latti more is spending the week with Miss Vemie Cabaniss Mr and Mrs. Hoyle Lee of At lanta. Ga.. is visiting relatives in the community. Mr. and Mrs. George Spake Mr and-At "Sr Hubert Lon*--of-■ Shelby w»re dinner zuests Thursday of Mrs Ellen Wilton. M" and Mrs. Fon* Williamson " ’re dinner guests Sunday of Mr. rnd Mrs Foster Jones of Lattimore. Mrs C. G. Poston visited Mr. and Mr: R. C. Covington Sunday Mi and Mrs. Tom Cabamss ,ir.. ' -sited Mrs. Plato Gettys of Hollis r-'-idav. Misr»:- Beatrice and Josie Wilson »od Mrs Ellen Wilson spent Wed nesday with Mr. and Mrs. Tipton ' mid of Hollis Wednesday. Mrs. D. T. Harris and children heve returned to their home at r-oth Meuntam Institute after ■ oM % ‘g a month with relatives in the -county. Belwood News Of Current Week Warlick Club to Meet. Fme Rains. Personals of People Visiting About. • Special to The Star.) Belwood Aug. 2:—The farmers were gladato see rains which fell Thursday and Friday afternoon. The crops are looking exceedingly fine. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Boggs, Mrs. Zeno Couch and son Mr. Early and Mr. Russel Sain visited Mr. Zeno Couch at the Durham hospital on Thursday. His many friends will be sorry to learn his condition is quite serious. Mr. and Mrs. John T Warlick and Mr: and Mrs. Beam nave returned home after spending some time with relatives In California. ■Miss Ethel White of near Casar spent several days the past week With friends in the community. Revival meeting at Knob Creek ehurch closed Friday night. Rev. A. D Shelton delivered some inspiring sermons Mr. J. D Autry of Fayetteville is visiting friends here. Messrs Ambrose Lail. Woodrow Davis, Dixon and Tilden Ccok spent several days the past week rear Nashville, Tenn., on a turtle bunt. They reported a fine catch. Mr. Blanche Warlick and Mr. and Mrs. June Wilhs and children of Washington, D. C.. are spending some time- with their mother Mrs. Mack Warlick. Miss Lucy Maie Richard was the dinner guest of her cousins Misses Fearl and Mayo Gantt Wednesday Mrs. Lov’d Guess and children of Vale, spent the w eek end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. C G Rich ard. Mr. and Mrs. Everette Morrison of Lawndale visited her mother Mrs M J.. Wellman Wednesday after noon. Mr and Mrs. A. O Goodman of Raleigh, spent several days the past week with Mr and Mrs C. T, Good man and Mrs Jasper Childers. Mesdames Jasper Childers 3. L Gantt and C. T. Goodman visited Mr and Mrs Amos Ledford of the Delight community Tuesday The many friends of Mrs. Ledford will be sorry to learn that she is quite in. Mr and Mrs. Tom Dixon, and chil dren of Lincolnton visited Mr. and Mrs C. L. McMurry Sunday' after noon lir Thomas Willis of near Lrn ' rointon spent Thursday night and Friday with Mr. Jack Gantt.. Mr. Mack Smith 1* quite 111 at this writing. Miss Elva Richard and Mr. George Brown of Morgan Lon visit ed Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Richard on Friday evening. i Misses Mayo Gantt and Ilia Lon |don were the spend-the-day guests [of Misses Pansy and Georgia Queen Friday. I Mr. Hose King of Vale spent last ; week with his grandparents Mr and Mrs. Will Willis. Miss Veda Dayberrv of near Lawndale was the dinner guest of Miss Flora Ivester Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Dock WtAis and children of Lineolnton were the I dinner guests of their parents Mr. land Mrs Will Willis Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Plato Meade of Saint Paul community spent Friday I with her parents Mr and Mrs C. G. Richards. Mr. Theodore Weltmon spent last I week in the eastern part of the state with friends Mr Charles Goodman spent Sun with Mr. 'Cecil Deal of Rockdale. Mr and Mrs. Worth Canipe and Ison Mr. Arnold, of Wadesboro vts jited Mr. and Mrs MacK Smith Sun day Mrs. Canipe remained for a ! week's visit. Miss Tula Ivester who teaches | near Casar spent the week end with her parents Mr and Mrs. R A Ivester. Mis* Lucy Maie Richard spent the wee* end with her grandmother Mrs. Ledford Gantt of Vale. 1 Those visiting at the home of Mr and Mrs. Mack Smith Sunday aft ernoon were Mr and Mrs Paul '■ Cline and children of Lawndale. Mr 'and Mrs. Hoyle Costner and fam j ily of Beams Mill. Mr. and Mrs. M |L. Smith and family of Fallston Mrs. T. C. Greene spent the week I with Mr. and Mrs. Dargan Greene Mr Blanche Johnson of hear Ca sar spent Wednesday night with Messrs Bob and Everette Richard. Several from this community at tended the singing convention at St. Paul church Sunday The Warlick club will meet at the home of Mrs. S. A. Peeler Friday afternoon at 2:30 All members are 'asked to be present. Visitors wel come. H Mr -and Mrs. Ivey Willis of At lanta, Ga-.. spent the week end with jMr and Mrs. Hugh Hoyle. , Mr. and Mrs E E. Elkins and : Messrs B, P and •> Lackey Peeler j the week end with Mr and Mrs. R iL Pox of Charlotte. Mi and Mrs Elkins attended the Elkin reunion in Chatham county Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Beam of Cher ryville, were visitors in the commun lty Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. ePeler had as their dinner guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Parker and children and Mrs. John Parker of Lincoln - ton. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Peeler aViti Mr. and Mrs. Jim Peeler. Mr and Mrs. Blaine Melton and -family of Glenn Alpine spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs Prank Stamev. They were accompanied home by Mrs H. G. Stamey to spend some time Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hoyle and ; guests. Mr. and Mrs Ivey Willis of [Atlanta, Ga . were the dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thompson 'of Play Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dixon and children of Lincolnton were the dinner guests of Mr. , and Mrs. Wayne Brackett Sunday. , Mr. and Mrs. George Grigg and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Shuford of near Polkville. Mrs. Ida Thompson of Shelby is visiting her daughter Mrs. J. W. Brackett. A western college reports the en rollment of a man 70 He must have won that magazine scholarship at last. (Our traders ran ret an answer to The Cleveland Star. Washington Bureau. 1322 New York avenue. N. W., Washington, D. C. Write yooi name and address on one side of the paper, state your question clear ly and enclose 3 rent Un stamp* for reply postage. Do not write legal medical or religious questions.) Q What does the term silv-M standard mean in relation to money ? A. The silver standard exists when the unit of currency of a country is silver, and silver coins are full legal tender, accepted in commer cial exchanges and the value of other coins are measured in stiver. Q What caused the business de press ion of 1873? How many un employed were there then? A It was a world-wide depression that started In Australia in Mav. and spread through Europe. As the United States was unable to market her securities abroad, and could not (obtain needed foreign capital, this country became deeply Involved Speculation was credited with being the chief cause of the depression Practically every line of industry had been overdeveloped in the tn 1 dustrial period following the Ctvi (War. Other factors were the over [expansion of railroads and the rie I monetization of silver During th three years of the depression ovp 20.000 business failures were record ed more than a billion dollars wa lost, and about S.OOtT.noo men were unemployed. Q How many members has the (united States Supreme Court, anc by whom are they appointed? A. The Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices comprise the 8u preme Court They are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Q. When was the state of Idahc I organized as a territory, and wher did it become a state? Give the area, capital, largest city and mean mg of the name? A. Idaho was organized as a ter ritory in 1863 and entered the' unior as a state on July 3, 1890. Th< area is 83 888 square miles. Boise is the capital and largest city, anc the name is derived from an India; ;name meaning 'Light of the Moun 1 tain." <5. Where is the original of thf proverb A house divided againil itself cannot stasd?" A. The Bible, Luke 1:17. | Q. Under what circumstances die ! Patrick Henry make the famoui statement: “If this be treason makt the most of it?" A. He coined the epigram in a speech before the Virginia conven tion, prior to the Revolutionary War during the cource of which he said “Caesar had his Brutus. Charle; the First his Cromwell, and George the Third—"Treason'' cried the Speaker—Henry continued —•'may I well prifit by their example II this be treason, make the most ol lit.” Q. When was the first steel sh’p built? A. It was a paddle steamer "Ma Robert" built at Birkenhead Eng land, in 1857. for the Livingstone expedition. Q. Was Amelia Earhart Putnam born and educated in the United | States? Did she serve in the Red ; Cross during the World War? A. She was born in Atchison. Kansas, in 1898. and graduated from Hyde Park School. Chicago, and Ogontz School for Girls in Phila delphia She entered the Canadian Red Cross and served as nurse’s aid from 1917 to 1918 Q Who is the American Vice Consul at Riga, Latvia? A Bernard Oufler. Q How large is the organ in the Chicago Stadium'1 A It has six consoles the pipes and trappings represent the equi valent of twenty-five complete brass bands of one hundred instruments each A one hundred horse power blower furnishes the air to operate it. Q Do employees of state and city governments pay income taxes on their - salaries? A They are exempt from Federal income tax on their salaries, exeep1 those whose duties are not of a strictly governmental nature, such as employees of public,v owned Uti lities. etc. Dollar Bill Bears Name of Reynolds Hickory Record A dollar bill bearing the name of Smith Revnolds—evidently in the handwriting of the Winston-Salem heir to tobacco millions who wa» shot to death recently—came througth the window at one of the teller's cages at the First National bank tn Hickory, Saturday The name was written in ink and was as follows: "Smith Reynolds. 3-8-'32.’’ The dollar was part of a deposit at the window presided over by Ro bey Houck A little later, Sterling Menzies had his attention called to the autographed bill and he decid ed to take it up for keeping until he could find out what significance the signature has. if any li mifjm iiHVf wen given oy young Reynolds a* a tip to some one who sought to have it auto graphed as a keepsake." was the ex planation of one of the boys at the I bank "How do you account for the jlceepsake' being in circulation | now?" someone else inquired. "The Hoover depression.” was the ready answer And since Hoover is being given the blame for everything. that seemed a logical explanation and the little gmup whose curiosity had been stirred, disbanded. Lumber Mills Start Operation In Miss. Hattiesburg Miss.. Aug 2.—Mill of the Tatum Lumber company re sumed operations today at Bonho mue, three miles away, calling 25( men back to work on a fulltimf basis, according to F. M. Tatum ON THE, SCR££N AT LAST / HEADED IWOMAN waritlt HARLOW MORWI& _ WEBB THEATRE Monday - Tuesday Budweiser m,vit tit / Let s quit now .. MaS got something good for us” and Ma knows the way to a man's heart He knows that Ma has good recipes and that she’s had enough experience to realize that a good recipe calls for perfect ingredients. Naturally, she gets BUDWEISER ' MALT.;.3 lbs. in the big red can—light or dark. Budweiser MALT BM 11 ANHEUSER-BUSCH * ST. LOUIS Ex-Husbands Get A Backer In This Judge Alimony Kn» Arouse* Sympathy Of Judfe Colllln Vnrmplovrd Cannnt Pay. New York Husbands thrown In jail because they fall behind with their alimony payment* have • ! champion in Justice Salvatore A CotUlo. The first ItjtU»n-Am*>nc»n-elect ed to the supreme court, bench in New York sailed for Europe last week with the announced intention of dcvottttB his vacation to an ef fort to find some way out of their problems "Why keep men tn Jail for not ravine alimony," he demanded when ihey haven't even enough monev to pay rent. They can't earn money In jail, so why keep them ihere?" A* for himself. Justice Cotlllo doesn't keep them there Last De cember he freed every alimony pns oner In the Bronx county tall. jther«by setting * precedent. [ ' With the depression.” he said, "I | sew no useful purpose eerved In | keeping these men In letl. Most of 'hem were unable to pay end hold ing them in custody did thetr wives !ard children no good "As fur as possible I shall refuse ! to commit for such contempt, un | less of course, it, is shown 'that, re llusal to pay alimony Is a deliber j ate and wilful intent, to flout the court and withhold support from a wi fc." The Jurist, who will be called up on next fall to face about 2.000 irate wivea. waved Ills arms in a Latin gesture of despair, ahat 111 do with them. Their hue* bend* ere out of work end cant P*y It * not only e legal problem, it’s • sociological problem da well. I hope to find the answer In Eu rope.” Although he has passed upon many thousand* of matrimonial souebbles during his nine yean on the bench, Justice Cotillo’s hair is yet ungrayed. During hi* months abroad. Jus tice Cotlllo will study the handling of alimony ctaea In Italy, France. Germany and England. When he leturns he will tgporfc hi* recom mends tions to the appelate dl rial or of the supreme court. the Cigarette that’s Milder the Cigarette that rettes couldn’t mean more.••Here’s the greater mildness of pure, sun-ripened, milder tobaccos — Domestic and Turkish—cured right and aged right. Then Chesterfield blends and CROSS BLENDS these finer better• tasting tobaccos ... till no cigarette could be milder or TASTE BETTER than a Chesterfield. r All that’s ever been said about dga Uoojtn & Myim Tomcco Co,