18 THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C., SUNDAY MORNING JUNE 5, 192T. l ; ! ) FRENCH LEADER SCORES WILSON France Must Not Meddle With American Affairs Minister Warns. By NEWTON C. PARKE, Intel-national News Service Staff Cor respondent. Paris, June 4. Gaston Douomergue, Tormer Prime Minister of France, .and vice president off the Senate Committee . on Foreign Affairs, has advised French diplomats against attempting tyj induce the United States to enter the League of Nations or to, ratify the -.Versailles treaty. France's policy, he sid, should be to abstain from anything that might be construed as meddling in Ameripa's internal affairs. "The flat rejection of the treaty of Versailles and of the covenant of the League of Nations is certainly evry painful to us," said M. Doumergue. "France has no other legal claim on Germany except that provided 'in the treaty. "Bpt America's action should have . surprised no one. It was a conse quence, almost inevitable, of the error committed by France and her allies in ignoring the fact that President Wil son's signature obligated no one but himself. A better understanding of the constitution of the United. States and of American public opiiion weuld have enabled us to avoid this serious mistake. V, "It is too late to repair a fault'; al ready committed and there is nothing to be gained by weeping over it. . It is much better to retain this lesson; two peoples, who possess mutual es: teem and friendship for one another! have permitted a misunderstanding with infinite consequences to raise it self between them. Only absolute frankness and courageous confidence will cause it to disappear. "We can only bow with respect be fore the frankness of President Hard ing, who, in the face of his own coun try and of the other nations of the world, refuses to approve the personal policies of his predecessor. We have no reason, cn that account, to diminish bur confidence in the loyal America who gave her blood on our battlefields for justice and liberty. It is the un deniable right of the United States and Of hI- COVPrnmPnt to tnlre a snvcr. tigrn and independent attitude and to reject a treaty which she has not con stitutionally ratified. ANOTHER "SCRAP OF PAPER." ." . "France has too much respect for the interior and p-s-t friends and allies to permit anything wmcn mignt resemble an attempt to jneddle in American affairs. It should be a matter of dignity on our part to make no observation's on the subject of the treaty of Versailles, which has been rejected by the United States. "But France csn and should say, dip lomatically, that she renounces none of her rights in the face of a Germany too much tempted to evade her respon sibilities, he signature of France is at the bottom of the Versailles pact and it has been constitutionally ratified by the French parliament. - We have not the right to go back on our sig nature. It would be a fatal impru dence fcr us to permit Germany to con sider this treaty as a new scrap of pa per solely because some of its clauses were judged incompatible with the Con stitution and national sentiment of the United States. , HADRING'S POLICY AUUROVED . "This reserve, it seems, should be as easily accepted at Washington as we accept in Paris, the reserves of President Harding. Between honest people there is never any misunder standing. Indeed, there are indica- "Silent Cal" Coolidge Sphinx Of The Senate Has Little To Say And Seldoni Says It BY GEORGE R. HOLMES, . International News Service Staff v Correspondent. Coolidge they, called him up in Massa chusetts, where he used to' be Gover nor. And "Silent Cal", Coolidge he re mains here in Washington as Vice President. , , Being second in command of the Administration ship has not changed "Silent Cal" to any noticeable extent. Perhaps he grooms himself a bit bet ter it's unbelievable . the amount of social activity demanded of a V. P. tout otherwise he plods along about the same. Silence with him still ?s Great was the satisfaction' thereat. It was thought that "Silent Cal" wouli be a 'liaison" officer beween the Ad ministrative .and Legislative branches of the government, that1, ;he would keep the Senate informed about what was going on in the Cabinet and the Cabinet informed about what was go ing on in the Senate. In short, he wf.s to be a go-between, a harmonizer and an all-around grand little fixer. Has he been? He has not. "Silent Cal" has observed what went on in both places and kept his observations tightly locked in his own bosom. He has gone from the Senate to the Cabi net room and from the Cabinet room to the Senate with the same quietness golden and he is , wealthy- beyond J ani taciturnity that has always mark dreams of avarice Day by day he sits'in what his pre decessor, the inimitable "Tom" Mar shal, was wont to facetiously term "The Cave of the Winds," otherwise the 'austere United States Senate. Ora tory to the right of him, oratory Co the left of him may volley and thun der, roll. and crash, echo and rever berate, but the slender, sandy-haired chap from "down East" sits quietly on his dais observing much and saying little. The taciturnity of the new V. P. covers not only his constitutional du ties. but extends also to his social ac tivities and his participation in Cabinet meetings, according to those who have had ample opportunities to observe him under all conditions. When President Harding first' pro posed having a Vice-President -do something else besides preside over the Senate it cretaed no little com ment and stir in Washington. When it actually developed that the V. P. was to sit in at.Cabinet meetings and express himself on the affairs of state that are considered by that weighty body, there was a flutter of anticipa tion." NOT A GOOD "LIAISON" OFFICER. "At last," it was thought in Con gressional circles on the Hill, "we will ed his demeanor in whatever he was doing. Cabinet meetings are held on Tues days and Fridays. They usually occupy two hours from 11 until 1. "Cal" is usually on time for the meeting. He sits at the foot of the table, facing the President. Occasionally he puts his oar in, but usually he listens. When the mee'ting is over he glides that is dis tinctly the word he glides out, gets in to his car and returns to the capitol. Arriving there he finds 'out what his been going on the Senate having ccn veied at 12 noon and then he takes the chair. All this he does with minimum of speech. STENTORIAN SILENCE. None of the reporters who cluster about the White House executive cm cers on Cabinet days ever tackle the V P. to find out what has been going on within the sacred chamber. They clear an aisle for him and let him slip through unmolested. Occasionally correspondent for some .Boston paper will walk out with him, but the mat ters broached are usually far afield o what has been . transpiring In the ses sion Only one other man Is so fortunata in this respect. He is Andrew W. Mel Ion, the Secretary of the Treasury. Mr have" some representation in' the Cab-Iellon eases in and out of the side met. we will nave one of us sitting at the table, and at last we will know what those fellows talk about down at tne other end of .the avenue." tions in the attitude attributed to the new president of the United States that he disinterests himself neither from France, nor the subject of reparations, nor the future of peace and the safe guarding of civilization in the world. That should be sufficient for us. "There ;?.re two things which the United States will never dream of throwing aside, whatever the vicissi tudes of her, interior politics. The first is the unanimous and spontaneous spirit of a great people aroused by a flagrant crime, conscious of the dan ger threatening the liberty of the world and resolved to give her last man and her last dollar for the triumph of the cause which she knows to be just. The second is the sentiment, ni nate in the American conscience, that justice siouid have its dues, cost what It may. and that the innocent should not suffer for th eguilty. 'Here are our best guarantees In tht face of a Germany inspired by bad faith and becoming insolent; the Franco-American fraternity of arms and the sentiment of justice so sacred with all Americans. It was not with the. purpose of leaving us without defense before ai enemy still more prosperous in defeat than we are. ruined hv Ar bloody victory, that the legions of Am erica have crossed and recrossed the Atlantic." door of the White House, usually walk ing on the balls of his .feet and shun ning inquirers. Mellon is cut from the same pattern as the V. P. It has been said of them since they came to Washington that if they ever got to gether in a closed room there would be a silence that one could hear for DIOCKS. Whether that be true or not, it is true that of all the hew officials Wash ington is trying to learn to know, the most difficult are the Vice-President and the Secretary of the Treasury RED TAPE CONVERT. Portland, Ore. Never again will IC. P. Cecil, former lieutenant in the American Expeditionary Forces, con demn governmental red tape. He works on the principle that everything comes to those who wait long enough. Three years ago , at Chalons suf Marne, France, the lieutenant parted company with his ; carryall .when, a baggageman failed to toss it aboard the train on which his troop , was leaving "a shell-shattered town on a dark night. He failed to - miss the equipment until the train was welt on its way, and with a philosophic' "6' est le guerre," bought another kit.. ". A few days ago in Portland Ceci? and his lost dunnage met once more It was all there trench coat, boots army tent and blankets. Cecil was a lieutenant in the - artil lery corps. I - A nnouncing The Ethefedge M otor Go AUTHORIZED XUE UNrVEUSAL CAR AND 51 A-vJO'Jl::!Oi2H: DEALERS We have purchased the interests of 'Ryan Motors Co. and. will continue in the same location. SERVICE Will be the . "predominating feature of our organization. SALES Our sales department will be composed of men thoroughly familiar with both our and Ford Motor Company policies Y PARTS SeL3 ?JeiJ conPlete line of Genuine Ford Parts at cienSn? 4eP n WiU be of very effll' Fcmr&aM Poplar Streets PHONE 4082 FRENCH DEPUTY CALLED COWARD Charged With Evasion of Service and Also Prof iteering. Paris, June 4 "The war did not kill war," said Minister of War Bar thou recently. He might have added that war also did not kill war scan dals, - for today another has broken out which is likely to have far-reaching consequences. War and politics and even .-food supplies find their way into the latest scandal which" is mov ing the whole of France. It concerns Deputy Ernest Vilgrain, Under Secre tary of State for Food Supplies in the Clemenceau Cabinet. V The first accusation brought against M. Vilgrain by Deputy Barthe , was that he organized or tried to organise a corner in wheat and also that he used politics to avoid military service in the war. The whole affair has been aggravated by accusations . made against M. Vjlgrain that he volun tarily wounded himself or had him self wounded while far from the firing lines in order that he might be dis charged. Some have gone-as far as to say that Vilgrain deserted from the army and that he prvented impeach ment by pulKng political strings. ; Explaining his wounds at the front Deputy Vilgrain says that while on a mission for General Fayolle, to whose staff he was attached, he was attacked by a man wearing the French uniform. Vilgrain closed in with the man and taught him by the neck with his right hand, while . with his left he tried to seize the revolver the other man was firing. He failed, however, and a bullet pierced his hand. At that moment a dispatch rider came on the tescene and rushed Vilgrain to a hos pital wniie the other man got away and was -never found. In a written statement the doctor who attended Vil grain says his wound was very slight. Vilgrain, it is stated, then began to pull the : political strings and succeed ed in escaping infantry service by com plaining of attacks of appendicitis. Doc tors' reports stated that Vilgrain could be of no use in the armv till he h-id been operated upon. His accusers say ne never made any effort to undergo the operation which would have en abled him to fulfill his military obliga tions. ' - - Instead of this, by the aid of political friends he found employment .in ti e Food Supply Service and soon claimed he was indispensable In that brancK His friends are .supposed to hav'e en couraged, nim in so far t hat they wrote to the military authorties repeatedly claiming exemption for -Vilgrain. - Before the war M. .' Vilgrain v. held, shares In one. or two wheat mills.' To day it is claimed that heowns most .of the mills in the country tihd is pos-; sessor of an immense fortune. .The formal charges Deputy Barthe-- makes against M. - Vilgrain are -, three-fold. First cqm.es the accusation of "attempting--to constitute, to his . profit p.nd to- the prejudice of national inter ests, if V not -the impossible corner in -wheat,' ?at5r least, a control on French, jmills,;which ' would have made him master' of '. the price of bread'.';. secondly of having "taken - advantage of his position in thef ministry : to organize this corner or ;-control and of having abused his official functions to carv out his personal affairs to the detri ment of the State"; thirdly was only - able- to' occupy Y"at terial post by fraudulent aiiiyns -uLners a volunta,,, which, enabled him ta i itary service during th- Wa .,5 S Ai judicial inquiry has concerning, the-first t-.. ,,"een 0.,. a court martial is making!5, hi uons concerning m, ViloT..V,'"4estit during the war. rjm 8 w01IJ New Low Price Makes Chalmers a Finer Investment UNEARTH MASTODON SKELETON. Arlington, Ore. The complete skele ton of a' mastodon with tusks nine feet long and twelve inches in diamet-ir, has been discovered in Butcher Knife Canyon, four miles east of here. 4li the bones have not yet been unearth ed, but it is believed to be a complete specimen. Arlington citizens plan to have the find exhumed and brought here to be mounted and placed on es hibition for automobile tourists. William Marshall, sheep herder. made the discovery. He noticed whxt he thought was a stake protruding from the ground which on' closer in vestigation proved to be one of the tusks of the prehistoric mammoth. At the new lcrtf prices, the Chalmers is a particularly satisfactory investment. It is a remarkably good valuer; and it costs the owner less by the month or the year.: Since last fall, the Chalmers has been reduced $300 to $450 in price, accord ing' to. the type, bringing it down fo about the price asked for many smaller cars. It's upkeep is exceedingly low. Replace ment and maintenance charges are. less. The life of the car is longer. This is largely due to the wonderful Chalmers motor. Fuelis Pre-Heated. - ' The hot-spot pre-heats the fuel bef ore- it enters the : cylinders. Combustion i3 much better and more complete. Scored cylinder walls, burned bearings . and other motor ills are avoided. Ad justments are less necessary. Costly shop lay-ups are almost unknown. A Beautiful Car Besides being .fine mechanically, the Chalmers is a beautiful car, worthy of comparison With those costing a great deal more. y Its - design, its fittings and its uphols tery are all in ' thprough keeping with the wonderful motor. " . We suggest that you permit us to clem onstrate the marked Chalmers supe riority. . New York, June 4. Another Ameri can peace delegation this time com posed entirely of women was enroute tonight to another peace congress in Vienna. A delegation of forty American wo men delegates to the convention of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, headed by Jane Adaams, Chicago, sailed today on the Neiuw Amsterdam for Europe. ' NEW PRICES 5-Pass. Touring Car $1545 7-Pass. Touring Car $1795 Coupe . .... .... . . $229 ) Roadster .... $1495 Sport Car .... . $1695 Sedan .......... $2445 ' Prices F. O. B. Factory, war tax to be added. ; r " Charlotte, N. C 211 So. Church St -V - Phone 834 GHAMERS . .... . .... ..... i ........ ' - ; """"""" "" mmmmm mmmm wmaai mm MMMMMMMaMnMnanmHri - a.-J- 1-r iT An A nnouncem The Studehctker mt mi Cotfoomtion Eight months ago, when the costs of material and labor appeared to have reached their peak, we made substantial reductions in the prices ; of Studebaker cars. These reductions were in - antici pation of our ability, after the turn of the year, to purchase materials and to fabricate them at lower costs. - . ' ; The expected savings have been realized. With them other savings have been made, as a result of the greatly increased volume which Studebaker has this year enjoyed. r'. During the first five months of 1921, our volume of business has exceeded that of any other auto mobile manufacturer except Ford. The Studebaker plants are running at capacity with unfilled orders on hand for over 7,000 cars; In this, quarter we shall produce 21,000 automo biles against-11,000 in the : corresponding period of last yearl This is an increase of approximately 100 per cent. . . : No other, automobile manufacturer is making & comparable showing. - We believe that the confidence .of.the buy ing pub lic, which has' made and Vis making this record possible, will continue, because it is supported by the qualityand value of our products, and these we shall uphold. : ,;; . We expect that a-s xa consequence the present economical and , efficient production basis can be maintained and thai, we are justified in making turther reductions in the prices of Studebaker cars. Touring Cars and Roadsters LIGHT SIX 2-Pass. Roadster. . . $1300 LIGHT SIX Touring Car . . . ... . $1335 SPECIAL SIX 2-Pass Roadster $1585 SPECIAL SIX Touring Car ... $1635 SPECIAL SIX 4-Pass. Roadster $1635 BIG SIX Touring Car . . . : . ... . $1985 NEW PRICES OF STUDEBAKER CARS F. O..B. Factories, effective June 1st; 1921. Coupes and Sedans LIGHT SIX 2-Pass Cdupe-R'd'f $1695 AjxvTxix oiA o-rass. seaan . .... siyo SPECIAL SIX 4-Pass.vCoupe SPECIAL SIX 5-Pass. Sedan BIG SIX 4-Pass. Cmipe .. .:. mu-siA 7-Fass Sedan $2450 $2550 All Studebaker. Cars are Equipped With THIS IS A STUDEBAKER YEAR ; Detroit, Mich. The StuEebaker Corporation of A South Bend, Ind. menca Walkerville, Canada L. MORRO W GO 514 S. Tryon St. Distributer Charlotte Phone 218 c ... -