Zion Community
Has Influenza;
Class Has Party
. lSprrlai to The Star>
_TO« COMMUNITY. March 13.
,Vh Mrs Marcus Martin are
f * „* from an attack of Influ
lmprow5, A.lccnc Gold of Gaffney,
JJ; nas been nursing them for the
^'woman's Missionary society
... Wednesday afternoon at
S home Of Mrs. J. F. Williamson.
interesting program has been
Janned and all members are ex
ited to be present.
Charlie Hughes visited relatives in
community over the week-end
nd made an interesting talk along
* lines oi Sunday school work.
Mr Hughes is doing some research
,wk in the community.
Mr? Yates Brooks has returned
to"her home from the Presbyterian
hospital in Charlotte where she has
taking treatment for the past
jeo weeks.
jjttie miss Ruth Poston daughter
0f Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Poston Is
better after being sick for some
W. Irvin. M. W. Martin and
0 t Cabaniss attended the enlist
ment meeting at Boiling Springs
college 'recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Latham Wilson or
Belwood were dinner guests of Mr.
,nd Mrs. J. M. Gold Sunday.
Mrs. Tom Cabcniss jr., and chil
dren spent part of last week with
relatives at Hollis.
Mrs. Walter Davis spent Wednes
day m Charlotte visiting relatives.
Little Miss Galeria Austell of
Shelb; visited visited her grand
father. Mr. G. P Irvin over the
week-end
Miss Maxine Cabaniss entertain
ed the senior class of Lattimore
high school .with a party Saturday
night.
SI'BVKF OK SIMMONS BX
PI BLICATION
Carolina, Cleveland County,
j- .hr Superior Court, Before the Clerk
0«r- A McDowell, plaintiff
vs
Lime Hudson McDowell, defendant.
The d-fendant above named will take
notice that an action titled as above
bis w»n commenced In the Buperior
cou'i of Cleveland county. North Caro
lina to obtain an absolute divorce on
pin o' the plaintiff, said action for dl
nn being predicated upon statutory
pound: and the said defendant will
further lake notice that she Is required
lb appear at the office of -Che clerk Of
Superior court at the court house In
aid county where a copy of the com
plaint in this cause awaits her and In
apt time as prescribed by law, answer
or demur to the complaint In this cause
or the plaintiff will apply to the court
lor the relie! demanded in said com
plaint.
This February 8. 1935.
A. M HAMRICK, C. 8. C.
4t Feb 13c
It l
Thursday, April 11th, ISM
the courthouse door of Cleveland county
SKby. North Carolina, aell at public
ett-tion (or cash to the highest bidder,
‘nt following land, to-wtt:
* ''rt>'n lot or parcel of land lying In
It near the town of Shelby, North Caro
iiti, «nd
Beginning at a stake on the east edge
Morgan street, and running thence
with the north edge of a twenty foot
: ‘•0 '"I *o a stake on the west edge
" * 't1 r” foot alley; thence north with
, , , lpv 110 feot to a stake, Luts' south
-comer: thence with the south line of
Wtt lot .an feet to a stake on the east
Mr o, Morgan street. Luts' corner;
inter- south with the east edge of Mor
nn s r-i no feet to a stake, the point
beginning, containing 24,300 square
■tf. mor- or less, and being that lot con
0 R,orcoc E- Lut* by Chas. p.
w ! Rnd wife, by deed recorded In
J*- of deeds 3-R, tt page 53, ,n the of.
'hf register pf deeds of Cleveland
«■».. North Carolina, reference to which
rJ, ?nd ,the record of same la hereby
norm - ,urther description and tdentlfl
“ton of -aid lot.
,made on "eeount of default
fct ^0f indebtedness secured
3 ?.ddMd of fust, and Is subject to
*»»r- ss-es.*ments against sajd
rt.. whether now due or to become
Or v>- ai.i. u
Cni-r and by virtue of the authority
rinl-rrrd by deed of trust executed by
ikscoe E Luts and wife, Mary Austell
dated the 15th day of rebruary,
- »nd recorded in book 150. page 139,
the office of the register of deeds for
v-land county. V. S. Bryant, subsu
med trustee, will, at twelve o'clock noon
1ISJ
tteuir-d Hl,?’ e*sh deposit will be
T- ,h°r -h,1’ highest bidder at the sale.
‘ the ,th day of March, 1935.
5 BnYA-vT, Substituted Trustee
4t Mar 11c
Mt“ ' ''k' 4B'E rABM PROPERTY
tr.-.-L d bv vlrtue of the authority
tu*d V. "P0" u'„in » deed of trust exe
^f irf R nStr and w,,e' Mattte
* ‘ B Stowe and wife, Cora
'’ or,.d .,hK Jith day of 193«. »nd
«S Sl'Ue-,' 14,» P**® 125- *■» WW
:r!r'1 (»! »f March, 1935
1- o'clock noon
.h?!,se door in Cleveland
N C., sell at public auc
r. 'or e,ti . ' , •* »«• puouc sue
v.m. ,b *“ th® highest bidder th<
t..ln* :’nrl. to-wlt:
*» i 4 ‘ownship. partly In th.
.. .o 0, th„ tQwn of K)ngJ Moun
MUWd (Y1UUI
’d'sed on i"nd J0lLnty' N- c- and belr
lfilUe, by the lands of Lerc
r- South^l N,,b, M|tchem, on the E. I
<V« rvto? M?',,Way ,r*ck’ on the s- l
fr- w b , Mli' snd West Cobb, and c
•' and th. ” Mduncy. Herschal McQtr
if carter *1 r0ad' and be,n* con
«'er;v- ,ar‘of.'hose two tracts of Ian
o' i ,- r,r,d..'ds.rcg|st'red In the oftl.
N r °L deed» of Clevelani
,• ,n bo°k 130 page 475, an.
"5 and being described b
»ftes ,nd hn , .Rnd being described I
*! *7 'on . aa fol,°*s: BCglnhh
"»<i corner n' „?n,the E- edge of publ.
"est Cobb and Jim Mau
*on p
thence s
d Dm on rr A° E * 45 chain* to i
as-, r , * of Stowe St., th
7 w % J jl chains to a stone, th'
■ : - eha ns tn - _
thenc
th'ehr
. 1 W j m a Bione, mei
343 -h!,ha n,s t0 * “take, thenee
P 45 chains , t0 a thence N.
- ■81,15 10 » 'take, thenee S.'«8
chain* - . ——• o. na
chains t„ . , * 8tooc. thence S. 32 W.
"‘ms fo . ,„i, ° .v ' tn®ne« a- « W.
hams to a thence 8. 47V« E. 13.7
5? ra'l*av \rack n.n c',nttr 01 Soft
direction abou, w' in * northerl
. '"n about w' . ,n • northe
cn M,k. h. 12 E. 24 chains to
track
■n a * LU a
ee » 'r,ter. of said rallroa
,,ck th.nee » «, ,, ®*>o railro
1 hike Vah „**. * W. «Va ehalna
v : r -in kJ,lPhem's corner, them
• ** 77 18 07 Vh" "* t0 • “take, them
v: 7 0S :ba!ns 'o a atone, them
- 4 v Zu lo ■ *tone,
ll tep-ov Vailai?*!?* to » 'take, corn
**'”f fe s “?"• 'hence N. a#* w. 5.1
J?5'-thene, Vfit w°n.?' ed*e °f WW
-j' w,4K IT T’ OI DUD1
s IS (r EKe,d«« of Mid publ
ro»n .h.n’ ’ to a stake <
t W' 5 hhaln.
o’ h#e»i«w.4 ” • a tn»ma
^ mor. 0e I,*, "*' containing 52
'‘nd
**<e
Th
Pius
i* "le 1a
'old subject to all unpa
*“tee -0fr -V 7a,.d* b-v reason of t
2” «nd H nSt£T® ,nd w,f®- Mati
52*' fo Da. ®. 8,<rwe and wife. Co
fcttfrinw< —-,,^1 *nd discharge the 1
deposit nf Bald d**d Of tru
■ft.■>ureh,se?*T.C**n.tK *HI ,** -™»utr
Toil the |,,k7r *t the tale.
S'TVf^T.-ri'' Ertmjary. 1935.
CORPOR
UO\’ e ' " arvuo _ _
ham n S'’S!,,'oted Trustee'.''
fifth c ...
U** *o.3Suhl51Un‘i *tty. 4t M
Interesting
PEOPLE
What Headliner* Are Doing
At Horae And Abroad 5
KING PRAJADHIPOK, of Slam,
who last week abdicated his throne.
Is collecting "unemployment Insur
ance.” Several years ago the king
took out Insurance In Paris and
London against the loss of his
throne, which he surrendered Sat
urday a week ago. His first pay
ment was nearly $1,000, and since
then premiums have been paid
regularly. Now, for the remainder,
of his life, he will receive "unem-1
ployment Insurance,” his checks!
amounting to approximately $40,-1
000 a year.
-
MRS. FRANKLIN D. ROOSE-!
VELT picks eleven women whose!
careers “show the world is progress-!
ing.” They are: Dr. Anna Howard
'Shaw, suffragist, who died in 1919;
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, suf
fragist and world peace leader;
Jane Addams, settlement worker;
Lillian D. Wald, social worker and
publicist; Mrs. Mary M. K. Simk
hovitch, social economist; Mrs.
Phoebe Fairgrave Omlie of the fed
eral bureau of aviation; Amelia
Earhart, aviator; Dorothy Canfield
Fisher, novelist; Frances Perkins,
secretary of labor; Josephine M.
Roche, assistant secretary of the
treasury.
JOSEPH STALIN, dictator of
Russia, is praised like a god in cur
rent Soviet political speeches. They
call him: "Our darling Stalin,” "Our
best of best, our 8talln,” “Our
guiding star, our leader,” "Stalin,
the sage leader of all oppressed
people.”
H. G. WELLS, 68-year-old author,
biologist and former draper's as
sistant, arrived aboard the Bremen
last week to "get a whiff of the j
American atmosphere.” He wants to!
read the newspapers, confer with
backers and opponents of the NRA
and sit in an American family par
lor and to listen to Huey Long and
Father Coughlin. He Is convinced
there will be another European
war in 1940. “He Is a great man,
your Senator Long,” he said, “but
please put a query against that re
mark, for 111 know better about
him after I’ve been here three |
weeks.” He challenges the accur
acy of many of Long’s statements.
J. P. MORGAN has sold his 114
foot oil burning yacht Navette, but
is keeping his other famous float
ing palace, the Corsair. Already
this year, Mr. Morgan, who is seek
ing to get his estate “in more man
ageable form” has sold six paint
ings for $1,500,000; has placed on
the market a 31-acre estate at Glen
Cove and an 18-acre estate at Lo
cust Valley. In addition, his collec
tion of 900 ivory miniatures, valued
at $600,000, will be sold at auction
in London. /
MARIA GREGORIEVNA RAS
PUTIN, 36-year-old daughter of
the murdered Mad Monk (or Little
White Cow, as he was known dur
ing the rule . of the late Czar of
Russia), has pome to the United
States as a wild animal trainer.
She will appear in a Jungle animal
act with the Hagenback-Wallace
Forepaugh-Sells Bros, circus in Chi
cago opening April 20. Rasputin was
the character enacted in the films
by Lionel Barrymore. The Mad
Monk's daughter says: “I like tig
ers better than men. Tigers attack
from the front. Men strike from
behind.”
SIR MALCOLM CAMPBELL has
decided that 281 miles an hour Isn’t
fast enough for him and that he
will stay at Daytona Beach and
continue to shoot for his goal of
300 m.pJi. until past the fatal tides
of March if necessary. Sir Malcolm’s
son Donald, at school in England,
sent a congratulatory message of
just J-»o words to his dad. He said:
“Hot stuff."
FRANK GABLER, fresh from the
Giant’s Asheville nursery, is the
boy to watch in the' baseball world
today. So reports Richards Vidmer,
veteran sports scribe, from Palm
Beach, where the Giants are soak
ing up sunshine in winter training.
They beat Conni# Mack’s club 5 to
0 last week.. Gabler worked the
first three innings, and held the
menacing men of Mack, Jimmie
Foxx, Cramer, Williams and Mc
Nair, to one hit. Dick Bartell, brand
new shortstop, played that spot
like a cat, and. smashed the long
est drive of the game.
MRS. PAYNE WHITNEY’S
TWENTY GRAND, which won his
way in the hearts of American turf
men to a place with Man o’ War,
Gallant Fox and other greats, aft
er his Kentucky Derby victory of
1931, has been shipped to England
to conclude his racing career. He
faces a two-year campaign with the
Ascot Cup of 1936—a stake no other
American horse has won—as his
goal. He was brought out of retire
ment this winter after two and a
half years rest.
Only a little more than a hun
dred years ago the city of Chicago,
now one of the largest cities in the
world, was a village with only a few
streets. Even as late as 1840 it had
but 5,000 Inhabitants.
•Tennessee.
Grover Woman Furnish Church
Kitchen With Needed Utensils
(Special to The Star)
OROVER, March 12.—Mrs. C. F.
Harry reports that her son. C. F.
Harry. Jr., who Is Rt the Oastoma
City hospital very ill with pneu
monia, was resting some better
Monday. Mrs. C. F. Harry. Jr., is at
her husband’s bedside. Her father.
Dr. Henry O. Johnson of Montgom
ery, Ala., and her brother, Dr. H.
D. Johnson of Memphis, Tenn..
cam* Monday to be at C. F. Harry's
bedside.
The Woman’s Auxiliary met at
the Presbyterian church Saturday.
Mrs. F. B. Hambright presided over
the meeting. Miss Elizabeth Dendy
gave the devotional. Miss Sarah
Jane Robinson rendered a voer.l
solo. Reports were given from all of
fleers of the auxiliary on the past
year’s work. The following officers
were elected for the ensuing year:
Mrs. W. A. Hambright, president:
Mrs. F. B. Hambright, vlce-pres.;
Mrs. Martin Hardin, recording sec.;
Miss Elizabeth Dendy, treasurer.
Misses Edith and Mamie Ham
bright were hostesses during the so
cial hour and served a chicken sal
ad course with accessories.
Homer Jackson of Edgefield. S. C.
spent the week-end with Rusn
Padgett. Jr.
Manly Fulton visited his sister,
Miss Georgia Fulton, at the hos
pital in Gaffney, S. C. Sunday aft
ernoon and reports that she la im
proving nicely.
Dr. George Oates, Phillip and
Frank Oates Jr., and Miss Bessie
Turner spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. T. F. Oates of Rutherfordton.
S. A. Crisp spent the week end in
Charleston, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Baumgardner
visited Mr. and Mrs. Hurlie Muff is
of Charlotte this week end.
The W.M.S. held its regular
monthly meeting Saturday after
noon in the basement of the Bap
tis church. Mrs. V. J. Hardin pre
sented a program on “Christian
Education”. Miss Aline Mulinax,
Miss N. M. Llvingtone, Mrs. B. F.
Bird and Miss Bessie Turner tak
ing part. Besides the regular pro
gram a special feature had been
planned for this meeting. Realizing
the need of more equipment for the
church kitchen Mrs. B. A. Harry
and Mrs. B. F. Bird committee on
arrangement, issued Invitations to
the women of the church to be pres
ent and bring a gift of silver or
some useful equipment for th«
kitchen. Mrs. W. I. Beam, who pre
sided at the register, reported that
40 brought or sent the gifts requesl
ed, some coming from out-of-towr
members. Mrs. Rush Padgett ex
pressed the gratitude of the W.M.S.
for the response given. Miss Bessie
Turner and Mrs. Ophelia RolUns.
social committee, served a salau
sandwlch course with acres.'ones.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Ellis of Spin
dale visited Mr. and Mrs. J. B. El
lis Sunday afternoon.
J. L. Etters of Grover R.F.D. cel
ebrated hts 78th birthday Sunday
when a large crowd of friends and
relatives visited him. A large taolj
was spread and a bountiful din
ner served. Jonquils were used as
floral decorations. There were more
than 100 persons present for the
occasion who accorded Mr. Etters
best wishes.
W arlick-Bel wood
Home Club News
BELWOOD, March 12.—The War
ilick-Belwood home demonstration
club met in the home economic
room at the Belwood high school,
March 8th, with Mesdames Chap
man, Martin and Young as host
esses.
There were 16 members present.
The roll was called by hav
ing each member write down, on a
slip of paper what they had done
on home improvement since the
last meeting. Seventy-five percent
reported work done.
I Mrs. Boyd Warlick was appoint
ed to attend a poultry short course
at Newton, March 12.
} After the business meeting, Miss
Prances MacGregor, home agent,
gave a very helpful lesson on how
| to rearrange our furniture In living
rooms for comfort and cheer. She
then carried us out to Mrs. H. M.
| Young's home, and pointed out the
excellent arrangement of her fur
niture and also the good taste of
her picture selection.
Waldrop Gets Help
Toward Gospel Tent
Many friends of Rev. H. E. Wal
drop are making contributions to
him to aid In the purchase of a tent
and other equipment for revival
meetings which he expects to con
duct. It will be remembered that
ijMr. Waldrop who served as pastor
of several churches In this county,
.resigned some months ago. He has
! since decided to do evangelistic work
and the announcement of his plan
.has brought contributions from
; friends. Other contributions will pe
II appreciated by Mr. Waldrop.
Back
there is over 20 billion
deposit in the
tremendous
619ii. Ijcssn ft iirai Xomcoq Co,
.. .and back of Chesterfield there
is more than 85 million dollan
invested in mild ripe tobacco...
for milder better taste
Because you cannot make
a good cigarette from just one
year’s crop there are today 4H
miles of warehouses filled with
cigarette tobaccos from the
crops of 1931-32-33-34—most
of it for Chesterfield cigarettes.
Just as money accumulates
interest, two and a half years
of ageing makes these tobaccos
milder and naturally sweeter.
Think what this means—an
eighty-five miUion dollar reason
why men and women who
smoke Chesterfields will always
enjoy a milder, better-tasting
cigarette.
- Liggctt & Mrs** Tosaoco Co.
—