THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 27, 1921. The Charlotte News Published By THE NEWS PUBLISHING CO. Corner Fourth and Church Sts. XV. C. DOWD .... Pres. and Gen. Mgr. JULIAN S. MILLER . . . . Editor JASPER C IIUTTO .... .. City Editor V. M. BELL Advertising Mr. Telephones. Business Office 1IJ Circulation Department City Editor,' ?7T Editorial Rooms 3f- Printing House .v....s.v. 1530 affmrRR ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exdusivefyj entitled to the use for reoUDiicauon ox all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited . In this paper and also the local news publisheu Ail rights of republication of special dispatches herein also are reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier. One year $10.00 Six months 5.09 Three months 2.50 One month -85 On Week '20 By Mail. One year Six months Three months One month 8.00 4.00 2.09 .75 Sunday Only. (By Mail or Carrier) One year S.fiO Six months ... 1.30 TIMES-DEMOCRAT. (Semi-Weekly) One year rr. 1.50 Six months .75 MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1921. AN ACCEPTABLE POLICY Chairman Griffith of the Mecklenburg Highway Commission declares that it will be the policy and purpose of his board to build good roads to the churches and to the school houses of Mecklenburg county and that, in his judgment, if this county can develop a system of consolidated schools, cen trally located and have them accessible to good highways, one of the chief bene factions of good roads will have been realized. And unquestionably he is cor rect. Good roads are not primarily for the purpose of enabling people to get to and from their trading centers. That is, of course, one of their chief objects, but it does not stand out as the only bene faction to be derived. The construction of a system of good roads throughout the county, arterial and lateral high ways together, will develop the life of the country church and in this under taking wrapped up also the very des tiny of the country school. Time was when children were accus tomed to walk three or four miles through any sort "of weather and over any sort, of a road to a country school. That was the habitual practise and in those times nobody had figured out any thing better than this in the way of an educational development. Now, how ever, children don't walk, that far to a school house and are not going to. They are demanding a school either within easy walking distance or they are requiring a big truck to haul them to the central neighborhood school. And whether one admires or d!slikes this in novation, it is obvious that this is one reform that is here to stay. The edu cational policy and system of the whole State is leaning in the direction' of the central consolidated school and good j-oads leading to it so that . children from a distance may be transported by trucks thereto. It would appear, therefore, that the chairman of the highway commission is thinking in terms of modern- education al thought, when he expresses the de termination to give first aid to those communities whosechurches and whose schools a.re requiring better road ad vantages. And we venture, too, the assertion that in the execution of such a policy, the road authorities will find themselves meeting with widespread favor and gain ing the liberal support and sympathy of nearly 100 per cent of the citizens of the country. The umpires in the South Atlantic league are beginning to have their troubles. As the season advances, the leaders are naturally on keener edge and the losers are getting sorer and sorer, which makes the situation in creasingly difficult for the arbiters. Added to this very natural condition has been the excruciating heat, enough of itself to incite almost anybody to" acts of criminality. However, it must be accepted by both players and spectators that the umpires are mere human beings, without super-gifts and with only the same number of eyes pos sessed by the race in common and that when the time comes that they are the autocrats of the diamond, the game itself will deteriorate into final nothing ness. . WHY OPPOSE IT IF IT IS GOOD Dr. H. Q. Alexander of the Farm ers' Union and other of this organiza tion's officials declare that they are in no wise opposed to the idea of co operative marketing that, they have Jong been giving themselves over to a study of some plan to bring this about, and that they favor it and are working for it, but, nevertheless, they are opposed to the idea of such marketing which is being prompted by the farm bureau. And the reason they oppose this plan is because BIG BUSINESS seems to be behind this organization. It really would seem, however, to make little dif ference who is behind it, if it is the right thing,- and admittedly it isit ought to be uniformly supported by ev ery man and every association of men having the larger interests of the farm ers at heart. Could it possibly be that these officials the Farmers Union are opposed to this plan of co-operative marketing because, forsooth, it was somebody else who fathered it and not the union itself? We are merely ask ing for information. ' WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH THE COUNTRY? "Preaching the baccalaureate sermon to the graduating class of Dartmouth, Rev. Luke White of Montclair, N. J., declared that . one of the great trou bles with the country toddy is an ineffi cient parenthood. He asserts that the disposition to blame the young people with air maladjustments of the times is wftfng and that it is rather the parents who are to be censored for many of the wrongs of today and much of the evil-doing. ; That's pretty good gospel. The rear son that the children of this generation arre disobedient, for instance, is because the parents are not making them obedi ent, for instance, is because the par ent. No child, in any generation would have been in subjection of parental con trol if such control had not been brought into play. It is instinctive in children to want to have their way and, there fore, to be disobedient. They get that from the old Adam and the parent who rocks along under the conviction that his child will grow finally into obedience and parental respect of its own accord is proceeding on the wrong theory. Parental punishment has practically become obsolete- Time was when par ents regarded themselves as in authori ty and had instruments at their com mand to enforce such authority. You see very little evidence of such author ity in these times. Parents lament the way their children carry on, but it is hardly more tnan a mere lamentation. They are not resorting to those means to enforce their authority which was common in the old days. Another cause for the inefficiency of modern parenthood is the exaction which modern society is entailing upon fathers and mothers. Time was when a mother regarded her household as her castle and her children as the worthy objects of her untiring care and inces sant zeal. She hau no other burden commensurate with this. There was no other duty falling upon her shoul ders in any wise comparable with this. But today's mothers have a great many other things to do. They turn over their children to the house maids and seek the bargains up-town or attend the social functions which are a part of modern society's program. When it comes to the mental development of their children, they turn over this im portant task to intellectual wet-nurses and get out from under this tremendous ly exacting task. In the case of the fathers, the duties of business, the demands of industry, the keenness of competition, the acute ness of trade rivalry, are making such demands upon them that they have little time for the duties of the home. They are forced, they say, to turn the de velopment and care of : their children over to the mothers and the mothers, in turn, pass these duties on to the hired servants, so that; in the long run, par ents are having but little to do with the care' and culture and development of the child of today. And it is this that is auguring so ill for the coming generation- The chil dren of today are developing into man hood and womanhood without having learned the fundamental . lessons of citi zenship, the chief of which is obedience to authority. Learning little of such a duty in their relations today, they will soon pass On' out into society with no ex perience in tb.e art of subjecting them selves to the will of the majority and to the mandates of those who are duly set up to govern. Hence, the wide spread disregard of the law and order and authority and hence, also, the grow ing 'evil of having a childhood in this generation that is shaping its own des tink and give its own slant to future citizenship. "The sword has been broken in Ger many. We must go to work" is the eminently sane advice which Chancellor Wirth gives to his fellow-Germans. And the pity of it is that in the United States the sword is being sharpened and that the government is not planting itself in the direction of the - constructive de velopment Vof its' people, but rather in the direction of further domestic insol vency and international strife. AROUND THE CONFERENCE TABLE The London administration is making a worthy move in inviting the Irish leaders to a conference where will be discussed the details of the long strug gle which has kept England and Ireland in a contrant and rumors war- If the conference is approached in a spirit of amity and for the honest purpose of trying to smoothe out difficulties, it will be effectual toward the promotion of the peace so ardently longed for. If, on the other hand, malice is brought I to the table and jealouies and , the old vicious spirit which has so long char acterized the Irish leaders and the Lon don stand-patters, then the effort can only prove worthless. The world is in sincere and earnest hope that the disturbance over the waters may be calmed, for the good of both countries. It is a mockery and a travesty upon modern civilization that England and Ireland can not live together in peace and contentment. and devote their mu tual interests to their constructive de velopment. Admiral Sims, somewhat facetiously remarks that he got what he deserv ed, but even so, he did not get all he deserved. KILLING DISARMAMENT The understanding was that as a re sult of the league of nations covenant, there would be no further need for specific treaties between any two or more countries, but the surprising fact develops that England and Japan are about to renew their alliance and that effort is being made by the present Washington administration to bring about an alliance between this country and Great Britain. If these things continue, there is no hope for a limita tion of armaments. Countries that are not in these' special alliances will not think of curtailing their armaments and it would hardly be reasonable to ex pect them to, whereas the countries making the alliances are careful to avoid any agreement tending to reduce J their naval and land strength. THE PROPHETS ABE CHANGEABLE One has to make up his own mind as to whether or not business condi tions are getting any better or getting any worse. Opinion of those who, be cause of their intimacy with business matters; ought to have expert judgment on this subject, varies with, the change ableness of human moods- Ask a fin ancief today what the outlook is and he may tell you that it is much bright er and that the upturn has definitely set in, that money Is much . easier to get, that business in showing a keen edge on all sides, that industry is fast recuperating and that by. early fall, we will never know that we have been pass ing through Baca's valley. 5 Ask this same man a week from now and he may have eaten salmon balls for supper and not have slept well: or some thing might have happened to him that made him grachy and unpleasant, and consequently, h is likely to tell you that business is in a plague of a fix, that 'industry-is about to starve, that money is hard to get and people are dis posed to buy nothing at all and that, unless some miraculous change comes into the markets, we will all be facing starvation by the time another harvest is reaped. That, we dare say, is an experience that many- have been having in their ef forts to find out from those who are expected to know what are the symp toms of business betterment. Any sort of an outlook is usually determinable from the prophets of the watch-towers in accordance with, how these feel or how their digestive apparatus is work ing. The thing that sticks in one' craw about Jack Dempsey and his muscular prowess is that he might have utilized a lot of his punch against the Ger mans, as did so many thousands of his fellow-Americans not nearly so large ly endowed with brute strength as he is, but he didn't. COST OF LIVING FIGURES The Concord Tribune presents a very interesting comparison of retail food prices today and thTs time a year ago in the form of an advertisement taken from the window of a grocery firm in Kannapolis. This advertisement shows, on the one hand,-that 100 pounds of sugar cost this time last year $30, whereas today this same 100 pounds of sugar costs $8 and if a purchaser is disposed to spend today the $30 which were required for a bag of sugar last year, he will get in addition to the su g;ar, 98 pounds, of good flour, one peck of. ground coffee; 16 pounds of rice, 10 packages corn flakes, bushel of Irish potatoes, 12 cans" of corn, ,12 cans of tomatoes, 12 cans ' of salmon, 12 cans of pork and beans, 7 cans of sauer graut, 6 packages of oat meal, 6 pack ages of grits, 6 packages of washing powder, 6 cakes of soap, 8 pounds of lard, 10 pounds of syrup, 8 quarts of white beans, one broom, half bushel meal, all of these, JLtdms in the aggre gate being "worth only $30. "Verily, it would appear that the cost of living is not as high as it is "cussed out" to be. ' The Baltimore Sun is alarmed because there is a storm brewing in this coun try, but the real cause of alarm is that there is so much , of the other stuff brewing also. ' " " ' The genius of the rain Saturday was that it was nothing less than a downpour and nothing less than that would have been sufficient for the needs of the ftelds. CURB MARKET IS IN OWN jpLDING For First Time in ... Its His tory, Sky is Not Roof of the "Outside Market." New York, June 27. After several decades of nomadic existence along the main highway of the financial district, the "outside market," cor porately known as the JJew; York Curb Association, today moved into its jiwn spacious quarters on the western fringe of Wall Street. For the first time in its long and picturesque history, "the curb," to quote one of its chief officials, "will cease to have the sky as its roof and will find shelter within its . own four walls." The new building of the New York Curb Market, now virtually completed at a cost of about $2,250,000, in cluding the ground, is an impressive structure located on Tripity Place, di rectly back of the famous Trinity graveyard and extending westward to Greenwich street. Already the executive offices of thfc association have been installed and, although the financial . district is pass ing through a period of post-war de pression, the guiding spirits of the curb believe the new headquarters will mark the beginning of a new and prosperous . career. Of the entire membership as now constituted variously estimated at 400 to 600 almost 25 per cent of the old guard of veteran members have threat ened to hold aloof and continue their operations in the roadway of Broad street. This faction may find itself balked, however, by the attitude of the city authorities. The police long ago found it necessary to "corral" the members within an irregular square because their Increasing numbers obstructed street traffic. Among the members of the Curb Association are a number of men more or less directly connected with the "Big Board," as the Stock Exchange is known In the Wall Street vernacu lar. Some Stock Exchange firms have voiced their opposition to the idea of a regular home or headquarters for the "curb." Others believe it will add to the strength and responsibility of that organization. - One of the arguments advanced In favor of a fixed habitat for the curb brokers has been that it would elimi nate an undesirable element. An Unforgetable Monumental Spectacle "LYING LIPS'' BROADWAY Mon., Tues., Wed., ThursT GOOD GRAMMAR HELPJX) WIVES Elegant Speech Big Aid in Holding the Affections of a Husband. By MARJORIE REX, International -News Service. New York, June 27. Cultivate your speech, married women", if you would be permanent wives. Grammar is the best friend of the woman who wishes to retain her .hus band's love, according to Miss Aubrey aton, of the Chicago branch of the Y. W. C. A., whose classes on how to get and keep a husband have brought great happiness to her students, it is said. Man is certain to be lion-ated by such expressions as, "Gea, ain't them waffles grand!" or "I ain't nevor drank such swell coffee," when they come from the rosy lips of his careless sponse. "Poor grammar," Miss Eaton s.iys, "has caused more domestic intcl'cities than all the burnt soup and nard boiled eggs in the world." But there is a deeper reason fcr un happiness brought about by Jistv'ng to such perversions of English. The one who commits the transgressions against correct speech engenders in the mind of the other something which causes martial dissatisfaction. Miss Virginia Terhune Van De Water, famous author, who has writ ten many novels . and stories treating of martial problems, told me today of her convictions ojf this subject. "This touches upon one oi: my neb bies," she said earnestly. "I have a firm belief that the secret of a great deal of disillusionment in marriage is the fact that one of the ..parties to the contract is ashamed of the other.. "Such secret shame kills love. "For instance, suppose I kno;v some woman who has a very presentable hus band. She is. proud of him and wishes to present him to me. He meets Ji.e, and .in his speech may either double a negative or perhaps make a coarse remark. He has thereby wounded the sensibilities of the wife" who viahvd him to make a good impression. "I think if a man had to hear man gled English at the breakfast table, pro vided he were an educated man, he would contsantly have a feeling of shame for his blind folly in marrying beneath him. "'Poor grammar," with all 'due res pect to the lady who used the phratse, doesi not exist. There is no such thing as 'poor grammar' or 'bad grammar.' "Grammar is the standardization and the science Of correct use of language. "But I do not thing an educated man unless caught when very young, would marry a woman who expressed herself poorly. Such speech . offends the ear and the sense of good taste. "There is another point: Although many ill-bred women offend men with mistakes in English, many educated men offend their wives with slang and coarse stories sprinkled in conversation. "I knew a very charming woman who, in a fit of pique, married a man far beneath her. He has little self -qonr trol and. when excited or angry lapses into the" vernacular, with which he is familiar. "Believing as I do that secret shame of one's life .partner causes most of our martial infelicity, I always urge women to keep themselves up. There is a time in youth when it is very in terestlng to dress, to give attention to the accessiories of one's toilette. "Later on in life, when good looks often vanish, then it is an absolute necessity to look well. The office work er, any woman in business, realizes this. "It is the business woman's duty to keep up. What does a man think after working all day with women in his office who are as well and appropri ately dressed as they are able, when he goes home to a woman who no longer takes any Interest in her own appear ance? He loves , his wife and wishes to be proud of her, but she won't let him, and it hurts him by her own indif ference; ' She has let go." ELECTRIFIED GRAIN THE LATEST THING Carmangay, Alberta, June 27. Elec trified grain seed has been planted ex tensively by farmers of southern Al berta this spring for the first time in Canada and, as far as known here, for the first time on the American con tinent. . A plant for the treatment of seed by this electric process has been establish ed here. It is already taxed to Us full capacity and will be enlarged immediately.- The electrification of seed, it is claimed, will increase the harvest yield, eliminate the germs of fungoid maladies, and improve the quality of the grain. The process consists in placng the seed in a bath containing rietallic salt, such as calcium and sodium chloride, and weekly electrify!-: the liquid. After the electric current has played over , the grain a certain fixed time the solution is drained off ;nd the seed dried. The object of the salt, it is traid, is not only to decrease the resistance of the seed coat, but to maintain conduc tivity during the period of scermmn tion. Calcium and sodium chloricM in correct proportions, it is declared, tim ulate growth and give strength to ihe new roots. The new process has created wide spread interest among farmers in this part of western Canada and many of the largest wheat growers of the re gion, which is a heavy grain producer have sown hundreds of acres t.h5.3 year with electrified seed. N. A. A. C. P. IN SESSION. Detroit, June 7. A parade of sev eral thousand negroes Sunday opened the 12th annual convention of the Na tional Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The meetings are to continue through Friday. At th- opening session a message of greeting from President Harding wate read. COPS USE THE WIRELESS. Pasadena, Cal., June 27.- Wireless telephones installed on the automobiles of the anti-burglar motor fleet of the Pasadena police department recently, enable officers to communicate with headquarters while their machines are in motion. Every machine operated by the department has been so equipped. F D A A READY FHIENP IN TIME OF TROUBLE ATTESTED BY LONG RECORDS OF "MONEY FOR ASHES" ALEXANDER'S F. D. THOS. L. Insurance. Alway Protects Never Sleeps. TIME REMOVES NOTED OLD ELM Landmark Named for Inr ventor of Telegraph Killed ' by Diggers. Washington. D. C, June 27.The famous "Morse. Elm" is no mo.vv 9he old landmark .which has stood itthe corner of. Fourteenth street aril Penn sylvania avenue aincfe the national cap ital was laid out v has succumbed at last to time and the exigencies of me tropolitan' civilization, despite the lnsti efforts of government tree sur gepnu land forestry experts to save it, The famous tree has just boon re moved by order of District Superinten dent of Parks Clifford Lanham. nn-1 its aged trunk will probably be broken iP into souvenirs. ! Except for the "George Washing' on 1 Elm," at Cambridge, Mass.. unoer whose spreading boughs the general. is said to have assumed command of the Continental array, the old Morse Kim might claim the distinction of be;ng :he, best known tree in America. It v.-ia one of the " first trees to hi ivn a place in the Hall of Fame for 'Trees', with a history by the ; American For estry Association. It w.is named " Samuel F B, Morse, : inventor of the electric telegraph, who, according to tradition, often, sat beneath its friend ly shade in the days before ht had achieved fame and recited to none ieo credulous acquaintances his pI;um fc-r transmitting messages by electricity. Before the tree was removed a dele gation from the John Burroughs OiuU visited the spot as guests of the Amer ican Forestry Association, ani Super intendent Lanham. who had char ef the obsequies for the old elm. explain ed why the tree had died. "Cutting away many of the roots to permit the widening of Fourteenth street. heip-d to kill the old elm, and the undr? ground heat from the hotel boiler room hastened the work of destruction." Irfih ham said. Guticura Soap Clears the Skin and Keeps it Clear Soap. Ointment, Talcum, 25c erywher. Samples free of Cuticara Laboratoriea. Dpt. Z. Hal tan, Haas. STERLING SILVER HAND-PAINTED CHINA CUT GLASS We are sure our showing will of- fer many helpful suggestions. In workmanship, quality and beau ty, every article we display will be found genuinely pleasing. B. F. R0ARK Jeweler, Diamond Merchant Silversmith 10 North Tryon St. a word to the wise If you haven't bought a new suit in recent months it means you haven't seen the new lower prices on Kuppenheimer good clothes. Don't buy a suit until you do. The Men's Store 34 So. Tryon J .k THE SECOND FLOOR WILL OFFER MONDAY REMARKABLLE VALUES IN AN IMPORTANT SALE OF Women's and Misses' ..v:..-ouP-.Dre$ses You will find on sale on our Second Floor tomorrow, Monday, a very extensive col lection of these Voile Frocks, closed out to us by one of the-largest manufacturers in the country at great price reductions. LOT NO. 1. lie Every style that discrimination can sug gest. In plain and pastel shades. Sizes 16 to 46. Represented in this lot are values to $10.00. Specially featured for Monday's selling LOT NO, 2. Voile Frocks EIGHT DOLLARS AND NINETY-FIVE CENTS is the particularly attractive price tomorrow, Monday, for this group of voile Dresses, which represent values to $15.00 and specially priced for get-acquainted purposes at $8! INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S DRESSES ON SECOND FLOOR AGES 1 TO 6 M For Monday on our second floor a Wonderful Sale of if ants' and Children' Dresse Fine White Organdie and Sheer Voile Dresses priced 98c $51 ' Some of them slightly mussed from handling, 1-4 to 1-2 off for Monday. BEL EC BELK BROS, LOT NO. 1 rocKs LOT NO. 2 BROS 0 SELL IT FOR LESS r