The Cleveland Star __ SHELBY, N. C. MONDAY — WEDNESDAY — FRIDAY THE STAR PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC. LBB B. WEATHER* ...--—--President and Editor^ *• ERNEST HOEY. Secretary and foreman CAMERON SHIPP.. News ^UK L. E OAH> ... Advertising Manager MRS. RBNN DRUM .. Social Editor SUBSCRIPTION PRICE By Mall, per year . <260 By Carrier, per year .$3 00 Entered aa eecond class matter January 1, 1905, at the pon offioe at Shelby, North Carolina, under the Act of Congress, March S. 1|B7. Ve wish to cell your attention to the fact that It Is and has he*n our custom to charge five tents per line lor resolutions of respect, cards of thanks and obituary notices, alter one death notice has bun published. This will be strictly adhered to. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Tne Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re publi.atuon of all ncas dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ciedited in tfc.- paper and aiso the local newa published herein. • RID AY, OCT. 18. 1935 A mnn who ran constantly deceive his wife is a v. M W and don't know i*. £ Tiv-p new 19.°,6 model cars are a3 tempting to gs'iwn-.nns as ^andv is to a child. it tVh,it the Agricultural Administration is trying to achieve - parity: wlmt Governor Eugene Talmadge ia living- to gei, evidently, is a party. » i'r^fderf Roosevelt on a cruise, Vice President G#r.n and ‘Our Boh” Reynolds bound lor the Philip f*rte Island'. The brains of the nation on vacation. It's tough on teachers trying to cite the value of education to youngsters who work in mills half the day—amhftlake more than their tutors who hold college degrreiw. m 5 ?.%*> —-*— , It s a strange world when you find a county news paper Writing headlines in African and Latin. Impos sible? Not at all. Wednesday's Star said “Selassie In vades Somaliland." THE McCOV It sounds paradoxical at first, that Cleveland coun ty -lionds should bring such a low’ rate of interest while we at the same time brag that our finances are in such admirable shape. The low rate merely means, of course, that the bonds are desirable and that financial houses are so confident they will not be repudiated that they art willing to pass up greater premiums for the sake of security. Cleveland bonds, then, seem to be just that—com modities that have become in these upside-down days, and with the memory of debacle still echoing over the moneychangers’ counters, the real McCoy: securities. . FEDERAL BENEFITS t After all of our fretting about getting the proper benefits from the federal relief agencies, now comes the WPA with approximately $116,000 for Shelby improve ments, including water mains, sewers and a comrhunity house. The county gets about a quarter of 'a million from tfie PWA for schools. All in all, Cleveland is to far and ahead of any other county in these benefits. * Gratitude should be expressed, we think, not only to Director H. G. Baity, of the State PWA, and to George Coan and John Grictf of the WPA, but to Mayor Harry S. Woodson and to the school authorities, notably, J. Horace Grigg and B. L. Smith. The county itself voted taxes in order to get the PWA, grant, but without the wise leadership of these meh. we might have missed the opportunity. AMBUSCADE night happen, even as these words are being cast >JJb< - It might happen that the wooly warriors of "it educated Emperor Haile Selassie would de scend Horn their hills, bonnetted and speared, with dirks in their tfeeth. to catch an Italian army unawares. Into Somaliland a few days ago Selassie thrust a wedge of tribesmen, reinforced by recruits from the Somalis, who also dread the Italians. Through coves and passes and around deep cliffs, coming down from Eritrea, and toward Rarrar from Djibouti, Italians drive tanks and fling troops. Mass formations of men. airplane bases—these things are out of place in such a country. Sooner or later, those feathered black fighters will catch a battalion or so from the \anguard of a Roman Lejfiofli And cut off their noses. Brutal treatment; but our guess is that from Pek ing to Bryson City the so-called civilized world will lfufgh~and not up its sleeve, either. TRUE MOUNTAINS Now comes the time of the season, with the thrust o{ fangs of frost through cold earth, with a newer ex hilaration in the morning air. when to the west the great solidly pillowed mountains break through cloaks of dark green with slashes of scarlet and gold. Like whltelthreads curled through the folds, swift highways spipto the top. * And the world goes around: go. look and see, exalt yotjrself with the lift and the majesty of those tremen dotjp hills, and refresh your eye with variations of* col or that plunge from the timidest pastels to the most savage reds. j* Ao4,jP&emher, those are real mountains. They JU^ol Tom remarks that, since it was discovered that there are so few arrests for drunkeness in the wet coun ties, Pasquotank, for instance, the Drys are wryly as serting that the Wets are so many old meanies for be ing good. Now comes Captain Charles D. Farmer, head of the state highway patrol, with statistics. He shows that 260 persons were arrested for drunken driving in this stale during September. He adds that most arrests were of people who bought their liquor in wet counties and returned to alleged dry areas to consume it. There were 361 accidents reported last month. 42 persons killed, 265 injured. According to our unconfirmed and inaccurate re- i ports from the war front, that is close to the total loss es so far in the ltalo-Ethiopian war. Whether there is less boozing in a wet or dry coun ty it is not oiir point to argue. That the presence of 18 wet counties surrounded by a thirsty Sahara of 82 dry counties is a very, very bad mistake we do not argue either. The argument is obvious. Such a system won’t work. That there were 260 arrests for drunken driving is an atrocious record, but astonishing as that figure may be, it isn’t large enough. There were more drunken drivers than that, and they should have been locked up. Not fined—locked up. As the new drivers license law goes into effect, we prayerfully hope that it will give law enforcement of ficer^ another lever by which to pry the drunken driv er from the chauffeur’s seat. Nobody’s usiness By GEE McGEE Mike Wants HU OswiMBl Cheek mr. henry walll* seeker-terry of the agger-culture washihngton, d. C. deer sir: what in the world is the matter i can’t get my 1934 govverment rent check?you all have sent my papers and applercatlon backwards and fairwords betwixt here and Washington., *cl. C., so many differ ent tln.ee you have just about wore them out. it seems that onner count of a nuiher tennant working this land in 1933 that you ca’t get him sep perated from me. and if i don't soon get my 14| 1 will be too old to spend it. t have signed everything ecept the declaration of inder pendence trying to get this fixed, an it is wrong ever time. county cape smith do not live in the county much less on thU farm, I so why don't you leave his name off ! and send me my monney? holsum j moore aays you have got this mat j ter so mixed up with red tape that I lie doubts if i will ever get holt to . iny check why don't you keep yore [ red tape away from my papers no ! how? it was returned once because the man failed to dot his "i", and the next time, he didden’t cross his “t” i and the third time you mistook a fly-speck for • a period, and the fourth time you sent it back you asked for a coppy of the title that great brittan give to my great-1 great-grampaw when we took over america. I as soon as you get to the place where you can’t find no fault with my papers, plese have the seeker-* terry of the treassuiw male me my | chek, 1 have alreddy wore out 6! sets of half soles walking to the' farm demon strator offi* to help, you understand this matter. _ i i worked the land myself and rape moved off enduring januwary and it got there in martch. his name was scratched off, ao why keep him thinking he mought gel my check? do you all ever tink. or do you find it easier to send the papers back lo ask for information? mebbe that's why you need so many! hands in yore department. if i, don t sei it bv december the 4 ' plese ju.'i keep it. i am wore, put ! with yore patience and am sick of' ■sicii b';nr yores trulie, mike Clark, rfd. Wall, Weil. Well. the town well vu cleaned out again laat friday. this Is one of the annual events and haa attracted verry wide Intrust in flat rock and the nearby community, and it is highly attended, the poleesman thinks the well ought to be board* ed in ao's he could charge admis sion. by doing so. e thinks the floating dett could be paid off ever it seems that everboddjr who has missed annything enduring the j past, 12 months expects to find the same in the well, so far, a great manny things have benn re-posses-" sed in this manner, and that is why it excites so much curry-ossity. it ewer fetched as manny aupprises this year as heretofore, but the crowd was on hands Just tha same. heaey kiah johnson give up hopes of ever finding his mult which dis appeared last spring, the well was his last chance, miss Jennie vaeve smith got her overshoes which got out er closset at the school house enduring april. the boys played a joke on her with them, holsum moo re recovered his spare tire and rim which was stole while he was asleep on the front seat one night. mrs jerry slmkins found out what had become of her persian cat; she recker-niaed It by her sil ver collar, mrs. chatter moor# got her milk pail and strainer back of; which she was proud. pug white found his anvil whic was stole from is blacksmith sop; it was rusty, but will be ok for shooing mules, horses anso/orth. the happies person pressent was his false teeth, but whoever stole old man hop skinner, he recovered tem off of his washstand that night picked all of the gold out of samo before dropping them into the well for safe keeping, about 15 knives and fork* were fetched up in the filth tub handled by the wind lass turners, they were missed by mrs. art square, she knew them on sight as they were all marked ,‘can itol hotel." ¥ nothing else of value showed up tom heads caff was not m there nor waa ret. will waite's ,unday britches which weir missed from his winder a few months ago the reward they offered still stands for ten- return dead or alive, everbody is happy to know that they will have nice, clean watte for a while most of the frogs come up alhe and so did the snails, it east the town counsel .1$ to have this work done yores trullie, mike Clark rfd Mi Washington Daybook By HERBERT PLUMMER iAssociated Pres* Staff Writer) WASHINGTON.—The administra tion. particularly those charged with responsibility for the nations for eign policy, worried more than out siders were aware when Senator Bor ah announced his intention of mak ing a speech from his home in Boise on "America and the Present Crisis” Their concern was occasioned by two facts: First, the Idaho senator’# an nouncement was made Immediately after President Roosevelt had proclaimed his three point program of action toward the Italo-Ethiopian conflict. And, second, no one yet has been able to foretell with any degree of success what Borah will say when ha makes a speech. Conceivably the “lone lion of Idaho” could have upset carefully laid plans not yet given the oppor tunity for trial had he so chosen. His speech, coming within 48 hours [after the prescient’a proclamation, (had what is known, in newspaper (parlance as “time vale.” • • * Interest Great Some observers noted that state j [department officials displayed morel interest in Borali than they did lr , the vote of the League of Nations Council to apply sanctions to Italy ‘ which was taken the same day, Everyone from Secretary Hull down the line knew only too well the Idaho senator's staunch views on isolation. Each was aware, too, that if he chose to attack outright the neutrality machinery set up by the president there was imminent danger of the whole proposition be ing made a poli'ical Issue at the very start. / Borah nc only ha.1 been men tioned as a probable candidate for the Republican nomination in '36. but he also is the ranking member: of his party on the senate's foreign relations committee. Purely Abstract As it turned out. however, there was nothing in the speech to alarm the administration He neither ap proved the president's three point neutrality program nor did he con demn it. As a matter ol fact, he didn't mention it specifically. He tackled the whole problem in the abstract, demanding that this country pursue a policy of "honest neutrality." If Secretary Hull or anyone else at the state department were to make a speech on the subject in the same abstract fashion as did Borah, he probably would use substantial ly the same language to express his position. Perhaps Borah. who usually is pointedly specific in what lie has to cay, hasn’t quite made up his mind yet on the president's neutrality program. Or it may be that he is willing to see it tried before he makes comment. Whichever be true, this can be set down as a certainty: If he finds later the program runs counter to i his convictions, he’ll let it be known In no uncertain fashion. • I Rice For Food Is Advised By Nutritionists A fancy grade of white rice, what ever the variety, has no greater fcotl value than •broken" rice, which may be much cheaper. Tire higher grades are more attractive when cooked and so command a better price. Brown rice, however, says the Bureau of Home Econo mics, has both a higher food value and more llavor than white rice be tause only te outer husks have teen removed, while the bran and the germ portions are retained. Any kind of rice, like all other cereals is rich in starch and ranks high among the foods that supply the body with energy at low cost The bland flavor of white rice makes it up. excellent extender for more flavored foods in such com bination^ as meat or cheese cro quettes, meat loaf. Spanish rice, or curried rice. Cooked in milk, or milk and water, it makes nourish ing desserts as baked rice pudding, or creamy rice to serve w ith fresh or canned fruits. Nutritionists call attention to the fact that rice polishings, from milling brown rice to make ordin ary white rice, are high in food value. They make an especially valuable addition to restricted low-cost diets. The polishings are rich in iron and other minerals. they contain vitamin b vitamin G. as well a: protein irom the b.an portions-of the kerne Rice polishings are :, e ing them with corn' :»fV flour and then making ti into bread, rolls, bisem:' and cookies. Because ings soon become ranch ally are not carried in generally can be obtain^ mill. ana » fa no p by ! or tore, • omt and mu* ' boat a till t ■J'hni -Iis.il* ■ but a r,( • 'VACO COLORED ClHRCn BEGINS 68T11 >! >Mon The C8th anniversar- 0' . Washington Baptist church. "coV cd, of Waco will be held sunda °ct. 30 with .he pastor speak:"* ,, 11.30. it will be a homecoming 0 with a number of rcprescntatlv. choirs, quartets and other .. present. Rev. S N. Davidson is pa,„: aiv1 invites all friends of the church t* ti’.e service. James Chalmers. she Scottish missionary to New Guinea killed by cannibals at Goaribari i< land in 1901. Laxative combination folks know is trustworthy Bi«k-Dr*u*ht ®^B °* *^ Dr.u,h. Vt ► shUdrm. The frown folk. ,\,.k Sleek-Draught th. P*»bably will prefer U when ,k T TO**“r' tb.«r childish lor. it US* Adame, of Murray. K; wti>«. rCvW nwd Thedford’. Sleak-Drlmh. l h*" •Wat thirteen mrs. tailne^ for m!4*' bom. Blsek-Drau(ht mu win foe t1”* ■lwsys pleased with the multa ? V 12 * food, reliable ta*»Mr. J£f l behJ*n thSv* "rrjp of ■wk-Ori.wS ® LACK-DRAUGHT The only complete low-priced car D. “HUSS” CLINE Inc. EAST WARREN ST. _ PHONE 678 1_WILL BE uliN DISPLAY AT JjilJQui ALL CHEVROLET DEALERS