THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C TUESDAY AFTERNOOK, skrTKMBKK 6, 1921. WAR PRICE FOR COTTONIS SEEN Local Buyer Declares There is No Telling Where Price May Go. "Cotton will soon be selling higher than during war times," declared a well known Charlotte buyer this morning as he came out of an office where the tick era were telling thoso interested in the sensational upturn in the cotton mar ket that the advance Tuesday morning was nearly $7 the bale. The opinion of this gentleman was not generally shared by other buyers, but the general sentiment was to the effect that 20-cent cotton would be a reality be fore Saturday night and that, unless some unlooked-foy development turned up, 25-cent cotton would rule within tlm next two weeks. In fact, many buyers expressed some doubt as to where the price of cotton might go unless more favorable developments are speedily re corded. The situation over the belt is reported over the wires and by local cotton fac tors as affording a possibility for 40-cent or 50-cent cotton, provided business shows any disposition to get normal at any early date, these men say. The severe weather of the past week has had .-i marked effect of deterioration on the crop, buyers declare. The weather BOARDOFHEALTH i COUNTY'S RATE WILL BE KAtiUiU ISSUES WARNING; Fake Eye Specialists, Dr. Rankin Says, Claim They Represent Board. Raleigh, Sept. 6. Unscrupulous men pretending to be eye specialists are oper ating in a number of sections of the state and fraudulently advertising them selves as representatives of the- State Board of Health, according to reports which are reaching the board. Rumors of such operations have been received from the counties of Caswell, Buncombe, Wilkes, Cumberland and Wake. In all instances the reports in dicate that the operators have been vis iting the smaller towns and rural sec tions, posing as representatives of the State Board of Health sent out to give free examinations of the eyes, and then fitting and selling glasses. They ap parently confine their operations to a few days in a given community, and then move on to fresh pastures. Such alleged specialists are fakirs and frauds of the rankest sort, declared Dr. W. S. Rankin, State Health Officer, in discussing the matter yesterday after noon. He said "The State Board of Health does not now have, nor has it ever had, any eye specialist engaged in field duty for the examination of the eyes of the people this section where farmers are be-A-and the fitting of glasses. From time in ginning to report the premature burst ing open of cotton bolls, as well as shedding to a severe degree, is for the most part duplicated throughout the South. Mecklenburg farmers say thftt cotton is losing every day and that un less the blistering sunshine is mingled with showers, what ten days ago appear ed to be prospects for a full crop in this county will turn out to be less than half of a normal production. DEATHS FUNERALS MRvS. EDWARD F. KILLIAM. Mrs. P. F. Dawson has returned to Charlotte from Atlanta where she at tended tlv funeral of her only sister, Mrs. Edward T. Killiam. Mrs. Killiam died after a brief illness, her home be ing in Kirkwood, Ga. The deceased was an active worker in the civic and social life of Kirkwood. he is survived by her husband and t-ix children. Her two little daughters, Amaryllis and Judith, returned to Charlotte with Mrs, Dawson, with whom they will make their home in the future. MRS. M. E. SNYDER. " Mr. J. L. Snder was called to his home at Si mm.it Point, W. Va by a telegram announcing the death of his mother, Mrs. M. E. Snyder, on Saturday afternoon. Mrs. snyuer was s eai& old. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Snyder left Sum mit Point last week, where they had been spending the summer with Mr. Sny .dtr's mother. THOMAS BATTLE WILLIAMS Chapel Hill. Sept. 6. A telegram an nouncing the death in St. Louis of Thomas Battle Williams, an alumnus yf the University of North Carolina, was received here today. . Mr. Williams, whose home was in Chatham county a few miles from Chattel Hill entered the University Law School in 1916 at the age of 21. When ihe had been there a year he enlisted in jtha army as a volunteer, He served in 'nhe infantry until the spring of 1319 fThen, upon being discharged from the military service, he went to the Uni versify of Missouri and became a stu dent in the school of journalism there He was taken ill a few days ago and Avent to St. Louis for an operation. .' He is survived by his father, Fred H. Williams, and two sisters, Miss Ramie Williams and Mrs. C. L. Diggs. The funeral services will be held this week the date and hour to be announc ed later, at Merritt's Chapel church, on the Chapel Hill-Pittsboro road. to time in the course of the medical ex animation of school children, nad in con ncction with the examinations made at the tonsil and adenoid clinics held by the board, children manifestly in need of attention tor their eyes have been referred to their parents with the recommendation that they be taken for treatment to a reputable oculist recom mended by the family physician. The alleged eye specialists who make a prac tice ci traveling through country, giv ing carelessly superficial examinations of the eyes and fitting glasses have done untold harm. Any &uch person claiming io represent the State Board of Healtli, and holding out such claim as an inducement for patronage, is a takir and fraud of the rankest sort Such person is guilty of obtaining money under false pretenses, and snould b epromptly arretted and prosecuted. r MUCH GOLD COIN AND SILVER BARS ARRIVE J. P. SHY WELL Carthage, Sept. 6. J. P. Seawell, who died at his home in Carthage last Wed nesday midnight, was the fourth Con federate veteran in the section to pas3 away during the past month. About a week before his death Mr. Seawell was talking to a friend standing in front of a local garage, and was sud denly taken ill, falling to the pave ment, striking the back of his head on a rock. He was carried hime, but was unconscious most of the time until his death- G. L. PHILLIPS. G. L. Phillips, well known farmer of the Belmont section, dted suddenly at his home in the country early' Tuesday morning. No arrangements have yet been made for the funeral. Mr. Phiillips appeared to be in the best of health Monday afternoon, ov eral of hfs friends having visited him and talked with him. He dropped dead early Tuesday morning. He was 63 years old. Surviving him are his wife and sev eral children. New York. Sept. 6. Gold coin an oiunon ana suver oars having an es timated value of $8,000,000 were receiv ed at this port today from Germany, 1 ranee, Turkey, Egypt and Latin American countries. The metal was consigned to prom: nent nnanciai institutions ana numer ous importing and exporting houses. The German reichsbank forwarded approximately $3,000,000 to the Fed eral Reserve Bank, presumably in con nection with further German repara tions obligations. Private cables from Berlin referred to impending additional shipments of gold in large volume from that center .to this country for th same purpose. Fiscal agents of the German govern ment here professed to have no in formation on that point. It was statei, howover, that Germany probably would continue to make further remittances of gold to the United States during the remainder of the year in accord ance with the terms imposed by the Allies. - Commissioners Forced to Provide Means for bet ting More Revenue. The Board of County Commissioners at their session Tuesday afternoon win fix the tax rate for tne county next fiscal year and will prooabl raise it from 48 cents on the 100 dollars worth of property, where it was last to about 70 cents on tne iwu- The raising of the rate irom w around 70 cents, if oraerea, wm u result of legislative enactment and not the voluntary action of the Mecklenburg county board of commissioners, il io k.. tiv lYipmhers of the board. The i"a,uvu : ' J. . . - A i War rate will navel to De mcieascu m that more revenue may be obtained for paying current and extra expenses of government and operation of various oles. For example, the is- Ann nnn work of bonds for l-iiilrlirny maris in Mecklenburg county will have to be carried. It will take a onnoMomWfl sum to nav tne interest oi the issue. The State has aiso maue n obligatory that a minimum oi six months' schools be provided throughout the State. The ciemana ior juncaacu efficiency among teachers in the schools has resulted in the employment higher-paid teachers and the result is stpn in sn increased school budget. These and many things require, tne members of the board of commissioners exclaim that t:ie tax rate be raised. No agreement was reached at the morn ing session as to iust what the rate will be made, but it was expected that about 70 cents on the 100 dollars wouia be the uropert amount. tvia pfimmissifpers will also draw a list of jurors Tuesday afternoon for the special term of court that will be called here September 26, Governor Morrison having promised Solicitor George W. Wilson that hs would order the special term. PROF. HOODTHE CHIEF SPEAKER Rotarians Listen to Address on Subject of Psychology in Business. M'WADE THINKS STRIKEENDING abor Commissioner Satis fied That Operatives Will Soon Return. FORMER SERVICE MEN FILE CLAIMS ON LAND Gmaha, Neb., Sept. 6. Today is the first of three days set apart for ex service men to file upon the newly-opened irrigated units in the Goshen hole district, Wyoming, and thousands . of former Yanks are pouring into Liman, Neb., and Yoder, Wyo., many of them driving across country in automobile parties. The first rush of tourists by rail is expected today. Liman and Yo der, the new towns on the Union Pacific extension, are well prepared for the invasion, officials said. , The drawings will take place at Tor rington, Wyo., on Friday. There are claims for approximately 10,000 applicants. Dr. jrVaser Hood, professor of psycho! ogy at Davidson College, was the prin oipal speaker at Tuesday's luncheon the Rotary Club, Dr. Hood speaking on the general theme of psychology in business. The speaker declared that it was erroneous to conceive of psych ology as an abstract study, fit for the intellectuals only and the so-called high brows, that, on the other nan J it has come more popularly fo be re garded as just as practical and just a concrete as chemistry and just as vital in the transaction of modern business and commerce as many another mor generally accepted science. He spoke of it in its relation to commerce. Preceding this feature address of tho luncheon. Sloan Hoggard gave a "shop talk" on the business of manufacturing bagging and ties, this being the indus try represented by the speaker on t.i club's roster of members. Brent Drane reminded the Rotarian of the resolution of the board of V reetors that the club undertake i once the completion of the task of financing the Boy Scout band and mov ed that the club proceed to go on ie ord as to what extent it desired to h held responsible for the future, main tenance of this band. Cards were passed around for sub scriptions for $1,500 which was de clared by the promoters of the band o be urgently needed at this time and while the cards had not been canpass d at the close of the meeting, it was said that the subscriptions would greatly ex ceed the amount sought for. ABOUT 10,000 IN CITY'S SCHOOLS Record Enrollment of Pu pils First Day, Superin tendent Declares. Ttinri A TTC OUT; SUAREZ JAlLfci; . . . r. r A dispatch to Buenos Aires, oej.- -- ndent at Lt Prenza from SS a report Quito, Ecuador today, quotes of received there from Bogota. Qlution Colombia, as saying that a mbI has broken out there. aAAeA TRANSPORT WORKERS HANG OUT RED FLAG THREE COUNTERFEIT NOTES ARE REPORTED Washington, Sept. (?. Detection of three additional counterfeit Federal re serve notes was announced by the Treas ury Department today and the public was warned to be on guard. The first described was that of a $a note of the Federal reserve bank, of Kansas City, which was said to be iden tical with ona recently detected except the latter was on the Federal reserve bank of New York. The second was a $20 note on the Richmond, Va., Fed eral reserve bank and was said to be plainly the work of an amateur. The third was a $10 note on the Federal Bank of Boston and was said to be so poor it could easily be detected by the ordinarily careful handler of money. i ne ucnmonu counteneit oears a portrait of Cleveland and the signa tures of D. F. Houston and John Burke. It is printed on two pieces of paper, between which silk threads have been distributed. In the portrait of Cleve land, the face is so indistinct as to readily attract attention. Cork, Sept. 6. (By the Associated Press.) Representatives of the trans port workers' union this morning took possession of the offices of the harbor board, owing to the refusal of the board to grant the employes a minimum wage of seventy shillings a week, and the red flae was floating from the building at midday. The transport men propose to run the business themselves and pay the wage demands, but are encountering difficul ties since the books and records are locked in the safes. The residents of Cork believe the Irish republican army may intervene. Meantime, the interests of the port are seriously affected. DR. LITTLE TO SPEAK AT FEDERATION MEET Rev. Dr. Luther Little, pastor of the First Baptist church, will be one of the speakers before the county federation of home demonstration clubs at the court house Saturday at 2 o'clock. He will speak on the subject of the propos ed anti-tubercular campaign in the coun ty. Miss Eloise Rankin, assistant super intendent of Mecklenburg county schools, wil lalso speak at the same MRS. SHERRY BRIDE OF WTT T TAM "R'RINT'I'FT'FT T demonstration agent, will visit a number WILLIAM iSKlINU ULIjV of c,ub8 ln thenty dm.inff thift wk. meeting. Her subject will be "How the: County Clubs Can Aid the Schools. The addresses of Dr. Little and Miss Rankin will be only two of the leading features of the meeting. An interesting program is bein arranged, according to officers of the federation. Presidents of the county clubs will have a meeting at 1 o'clock on Saturday, one hour before the federation is called together. It will be held at 'the court house. At this meeting plans will be considered for an active campaign for the clubs during the fall and winter. Some of the plans will be laid befr.re the federation at its meeting begin ning at 2 o'clock. As a preliminary to the federaion meeting and as a part of her regular schedule also Miss Marion Davis, home That striking textile operatives will l-eturn to work within the next two or three days, despite their failure to go back this morning, was the belief ex pressed by Robert Mc Wade, federal con ciliation commissioner, when asxea re garding possible future efforts to end the strike. No statement was forthcoming this morning from union leaders. When Harry Eatough, textile union organizer, was asked by The Charlotte INews If he had a statement to make, he replied: "Aw, I've got nothing at all to say. A sharp noise as though the receiver had b?en slammed on the hook followed this declaration. Mr. McWade said that, if reports con cerning the manner in which the opera tives reported at the mills this morning were true, his advice had not been fol lowed. He said he suggested to the union people that they go back to their jobs as they had done prior to the strike. He advised against congregat ing about the mills, telling the people to leave their homes and walk into the mill with their dinner-baskets as under ordinary conditions. . Reports from Concord were to the ef fect that operatives gathered at the mill a few minutes before the opening hour and asked to be received for work as a body. They were told by mill owners that application for work must be made individually to superintendents or over seers. The workers refused to accede to this demand and walked away. RAN OPERATORS AWAY James F. Barrett, president of the state labor federation, telephoned Mc Wade this morning and complained that Concord pojice, v.nder direction of Har ry Joyner.ie new1 chief, were running operatives away from the mills. Mr. Barrett was advieed to protest to Con cord authorities and that if he could get no satisfactory assurance from them to notify the Governor. It was presumed policemen ordered away workers who had gathered at the mills in a body. "The strike is ended," declared Mr. McWade, adding' that although it failed to terminate this morning the next two or three days will witness the return of all operathc-s. He expressed assur ance that his recommendations would be carried out; he was somewhat sur prised that they had not been this morning. The commissioner said he believed Mr. Barrett would be able to straighten out the apparently troubled situation which has again appeared. His infor mation concerning the State president, Mr. McWade said, was that he was a level-headed and honest man and ho is quite certain that this morning's diffi culties will be relieved in a short thne. Mr. Barrett went to Concord yesterday to address the labor people and he re mained over today. McWADE'S ADVICE Mr. McWade thought that the opera tives should net allow a petty ru-ing of mill owners to stand in the wav of ending ths strike. He advised th?m to be "good sports," returning to work with the idea of doing their best and trusting to the magnanimity and hr-n-esty c-f their employers to co-operate with them in straightening out existing uitferences. The commissioner expressed confidence that the mill owners will be found to be square and honest men and that they "will do their part by their employes." ' He said he had planned to leave Char lotte within the next day or two but he will remain haie until the situation has been finally and' completely cleared. He expressed himself as confident that if the strikers will carry out his recom mendation The strike can be settled to the satisfaction of both employers and employes. Tha action of strikers in demanding to be accepted as a body was presum ably in compliance with the suggestion of Organizer Eatough made during an address to the union people of Concord Monday afternoon. "Meet at the mill gate about five minutes before time to return to Work, and enter the mill in a body," advised Mr. Eatough. "If the superintendent, or overseer sends one of you out, $-ou all can walk out. If you get back to work in a bodly, you can keep your organiza tion, and not only will you benefit from this action now, but later on you will get better results." The prolongation of the strike had been due to the refusal of mill owners liberal elements. The u.i .rQ jail that the revoiuuomm- ----- and president Suarez, Bl8teJr the pres the conservative candidate lor tne v idency, Pedro .Espina. WILL SAIL OCTOBER 14. Tokio,Sept: 6.--(By the Press) The J aiu : fl d Far conference on aisa",iawashington will Eastern questions ir "Washington sail for Seattle lt October 1-i Kaisho Maru on or about ct oter The delegates K", where immediately tor JjMjnf, mem. Ship of the delegation has not ye been announced. The city schools inaugurated regular work for the fall term Tuesday morn ing with a record enrollment of ce dents. Every room was crowded to ra pacity. Superintendent ldaraing s.n". and the formation of new classes may be necessary. Figures showing the actual enioli ment were not available but the su. j4. r. i-,o number in tho. pel llltfllUfllL oaiu. mo . ... cnTrm-ci cnVinnic urn c lnrcer than naui been expected. The year's enrollment is expected to reach 9,500. -- The schools opened Saturday morning when the students received their pro motion certificates, book lists ami completed all arrangements for enter ingttively into their studies Tuesday I morning, regular scneuuieo ui t have been worked out now anu m authorities expect study work to pro ceed with ease ' and ' system. The faculty has been increased by eovomi teachers to accommodate the increased number of students, a.ts teiichers organized for their duties at their first monthly meeting of the term held in Mr. Harding's office Saturday TEXTILE FORCES (Continued Frofr. Pace Onr.' ENORMOUS PROFIT is EARNED BY RAILWAYS Chicago, Sept. C Profits oi -h. (., cage surface lines havo avera? than a million dollars a month tvr vear, the total for the Jht months sing $8,512,515. Ph., is the largest ever earned. ,,r:cori to report; filed with the Illiiv,;s rnerce Commission. Reduces ing expenses were declared rf-.-r.on, or.the showing, a smaller nu -nbp,.''; fassengera being transported 'hati; year. RECEIVERS IN EQUITY. Newark, N. J., Sept. 6. H,,c.3i in equity were appointed today ,v p.',' eral Judge Lynch for the A ' Motors Corporation of Plainfielri t)n ,J tition of attorneys claiming t., rcp'.;' sent 80 per cent of the creditors. A, sets were listed at $5,500,000 and la bilities at $600,000. Proctor V Han' and. James Kerney were app( intei ," ceivers. The corporation ass-nt .. the receivership that application for work must be made individually to overseers. The Mecklenburg mill here did not have a full force this morning but it was largs enough to justify the re sumption of operations. Application for work was made individually at this plant, according to a report from the efnee. The Hoskins and Louise, which were cpened by tie Chadwick-Hos-kins people two weeks ago, were in operation as usual but with a limited force. Offi cials reported an increased number at work, however. Mr, Bwelle refused to make a. statement as to plans for re opening the Chadwick and Calvine mills. "When v. e get ready 'to open these mills we will open them," he said. "Our workers know what to do when they want to ctme back to work and they will be expected to do that. Notices settin-j forth the conditions have been posted at all the mills for sometime." Striking employes of the Highland Park Mills Nos. 1 and 3, the Johnston Manufacturing company, all of Char lotte: the Anchor mill of. Huntersville and the Johnston mill of Rock Hill went back to work several day a ago af ter they had voted to ask for re-employ ment, accepting the same wage' basis and general working conditions that ex isted when the strike was called jast June 1. These plants are of the John ston chain. Striking operatives of the Norcott and Brown mills in Concord, I oth Johnston t lants, also voted to go back to work last week but they con tmued to strike vhen officials refused to accept th?m except as individuals, re quiring individual application to the su- rerintendents and overseers. For Infant. Jov.lW. ndGfnihndren I TheOriginalFood-DrinlcForAUAges for INFANTS & INVALIDS ASK FOR Horlick's The Origiaal Avoid Imitation., and Subctihitei. Rich Milk, Malted Grain BKtract In Po wdtr No Cooking Noumtua Digetill( ANNIVERSARY OF (Continued From Fage One.) at Bell- the fol- FURCELL'S Women's Garments of Quality PURGE LL Salisbury, Sept. 6. William Brince field and Mrs. Imelda Sherry were mar ried Sunday evening at the rectory of Sacred Heart Catholic church, the cere mony being performed by Rev. Father William in the presence of only a few intimate friends and relatives. After the ceremony the couple left for a trip to New York and other points north and upon their return will make their home in Salisbury ,where they are popular among a large circle of friends. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Fleming. The groom is a member of the clerical force of the Spencer plant of the Southern. DEFER QUARTERLY DIVIDEND. New York, Sept. 6. The Guantanarno . Sugar Company, today deferred its quarterly dividend, due at this time. Three months -ago a dividend of 25 cents a share was declared and prior to that 50 cents. JACKSONVILLE BANK FAILS TO OPEN DOOR How To RevitalizeWornout Exhausted Nerves Your nerve power depends on plenty of good, rich, red blood of the kind that organic iron Nuxated Iron helps make. Nuxated Iron is like the iron in your blood and like the iron in spin ach, lentils and apples, while metallic iron is iron just as it comes from the action of strong acids on iron filings. Nuxated Iron does not injure the teeth nor upset the stomach; it is an entire ly dirfererit thing from ordinary me- tallic iron. It quickly helps make rich, red blood, revitalize wornout, exhaust ed nerves and gives you new strength and energy. Over ,4,000,000 people an nually are using it. Beware of substi stutes. Always insist upon having genuine organic iron Nuxated Iron. Look for the letters N. I. on every tablet. Sold by all druergists in tablets only never in, llq.uid form. Jacksonville, Fa.. Sept. 6. The Guar anty Bank and Trust Company, of this city, failed to open its doors today, having been taken over by the state comptroller at the request of the board of directors. W. M. Eostic, president of the in Btitution, said the bank was placed in the hands of the comptroller because withdrawal of deposits, due to the in aictment or several oi its omciais in connection with the Federal investiga tion of the liquor situation here, had exceeded cohectiens. SEARCH FOR BANDITS DRIVEN OVER BORDER Nogales, Ariz., Sept. ' 6. Sheriff George J. White and a posse of local men today were enroute by automobile for the vicinity of Ruby, where it was reported seven Mexican bandits, who were supposed to have murdered Post master and Mrs. Frank J. Pearson, at Ruby, ten days ago, had beert driven across the international boundary from Mexico into the United States by Mexi can , soldiers. General Carlos Plank, of Magalene, commander of the Mexican guards in Sonora, wired Sheriff White that a Mex ican army captain had notiod him his men had chased the bandits across the boundary. On Tuesday afternoon she will meet with the club in Huntersvillo township. On Wednesday morning he will be -vith the Sharon club and in the afternoon with the Observer club. On Thursday she will visit the Park Road club 'ind cn Friday will visit the Trinity club. POLES ILL-TREATING RUSSIAN PRISONERS to re-employ a few union leaders who were charged with being instrumental in bringing the strike and creating diff erences. The mill owners have held to this demand and the vote of employes Saturday to go back to work was thought to be with the understanding that some operatives would not be giv en places in the mills. WHOLE-TIME HEALTH OFFICER IS FAVORED Riga, Sept. 6. In" connection with complaints of ill-treatment of Russi:'.! prisoners of war in Poland, the? Ros'a News Agency, the Russian Soviet of ficial news organ, Monday charged thaf, of 130,000 Bolshevist prisoners of war in Poland, about 60,000 have died with in the last two years. Ony on the 19th of August, it ehargedPolish sol diers shot into a group of prisoners be ing repatriated and that when they protested the soldiers killed one a.i wounded six cf the Russians. The news agency also charged that, on August 31, the Russian Ukrainian Repatriation Commissioner, M. Radzi- valoff, was attacked by rifle butts by an order of Polish officers at one cf the prison camps. The Russian So viet government has protested officially against what it claims is a violat'cn of the Riga treaty. 0 Talked Like a Dutch Uncle "My father is a physician and. nat-urally, I was opposed to all patent medicine. So when a friend told me to' try Mayr's Wonderful Remedy for my stomach trouble, I laughed at him. Some months later, after my father told me he had used all known remedies in my case, I met my friend again and he talked to me like a Dutch uncle "and finally induced me to try it. All my symp toms have now disappeared." It is a simple, harmless preparation that re moves the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflam mation which causes practically all stomach, livr and intestinal ailments, Including appendictis. One dose will convince or money refunded. John S. Blake Drug Co., Charlotte Drug Co., and druggists everywhere. At last Mecklenburg county is to have a whole-time health officer. The Board of County Commissioners was im portuned Monday by the County Board of Health to make provision for a whle-time health officer by making an' appropriation. The request came as a surprise to the Board of County Com- missioners, it is said, because tlvs body has hitherto been the only one in the county that has shown a dis position to decry the need of such an officer. - The County Board of Health is com posed of J. B. McLaughlin, chairman df the Board of County Commissioners; Dr. W. W. Pharr. Dr. R. L. Gibbon. Mayor James O. Walker and Superin tendent J. M Matthews, of the countv schools. Prs. Gibbon and Pharr and ouyciujiciiuwit iwaunews were taa members of the Board of Health, whj appeared before the Boar dof Countv Commissioners Monday at their infe rnal session and made the request f--an appropriation for a whole-tie health officer. The Board of County Commissioners will consider the request formally Tues day afternoon at their session. Tna State will pay $2,000, the County Board of Education $1,000, and the Bo-iri of -County Commissioners whatever ad ditional sum it may requireto secur-i the services of a whole-time health of-ficer. roes who died at Saint Miehiel eauwood, at Chateait Thierry.' Amnassador Jusserand sent lowing: "The ( vents of immense importance which Washington and Lafayette could never have forseen confirmed and made even safer for all time their life's work which was American independence and Franco-American friendship. The Marne and Verdun. Chateau Thierry, and Saint Mihiel it is impossible to imagine what could put them in jeo pardy. Woe to any who try. Bless ings to all participators in our faiths." -Marshal Foch cabled that the double anniversary was a "reminder of the mighty bonds which will ever unite our two countries." A message from Marshal Joffre said: "The name of Lafayette awakens th -same emotion in all Americans and nil Frenchmen; it recalls to each the re membrance of the friendly nations and their common ideal of liberty. May the memory of the great Frenchman remain forever honored' on both shores of the Atlantic and may it remind each generation of all the bloodshed in common on the battlefields of fr dom." "We honor the great French general who cast his lot with our fathers, and pay our devoted tribute to the, galUnt men or the Marne our comrades in the World war," said a message ffom General Pershing. "May these mem ories serve to unit the two countries still more closely in bonds of mutual confidence and friendship." FALLING SCAFFOLD HURTS THREE MEN Three negro laborers engaged on the Calloway building, which is being erect ed adjacent to The News building on South Church street, were injured at 11 o'clock Tuesday morning when a scaf folding on which they wore working fell a distance of 20 feet, the negroes being Eugene Ingram and Charlie Streeter brick layers, and Otho Pennington, labor er. -enmngton was the most seriously wounded. He was taken to the Good Sa maritan hospital. The other two were badly bruised, but suffered no serious in juries. They are employed by the South eastern Construction Companv, which has the contract for erecting this three-sory-building. three r etticoat Specials dinary ixtraor At $2.39 A straightline Petticoat of White Wash Sateen; fitted top and neat scallop finish. A regular $3 value. At $5.95 A Petticoat of Pussywillow Taffeta with deep, hemstitched hem. This one slips on over the head, the elastic band eliminating the necessity for a placket. Choice of f black and colors. At $5195The slinkiest of Silk Jersey Petticoats, fancifully ruffled and in a good variety of desirable colors. Quality and making give it unusual value worth. BICYCLE THIEF IS TO FACE WARRANTS Jim Harris, alias Jim Barber, the al leged wholesale bicycle and porch chair thief, will appear before Recorder Laur ence Jones Wednesday morning to an swer charges contained in a score of warrants. Harris, the police claim, has been specializing in the theft of bicycles and purloining chairs from the front porches of Charlotte homes as a side-line. While detectives were collectine 17 bievclea ho his alleged to, have stolen they discovered mat J im had procured a valuable collec tion of porch chairs as the- result of visits to several homes, including those of W. H. Martin, G. G. Galloway and Dolph M. Young, Morehead street resi dents. Boys have been calling at police head quarters since the.rscovery of the bicyc les Saturday night seeking to identify the wheels. Several have been returned to their former .owners. Harris "camouflaged" the stolen ma chines and sold them in several sections of the city, the officers claim. The porch chairs also were sold. GENUINE ni n n n n 99 O LL mmm. WW I n sum DURHAM tobacco makes 50 good cigarettes for 10c We want you to have Ihe best paper for "BULL." So now you can reoeive with each package a book of 24 leaves of KIU.. the very finest cigarette paper in the world. C ft Vl .Mutt. 32 L ' .4. mtvur i m r C . IO BR ANSE axe r-Pi a n o 1921.Re.duced Prices: $495 Convenient Terms of Payment The Andrews' Music Store, Inc. Mf ftUfc 213 North Tryon St. Fhone 3626 Success Seldom Comes "By Accident" ... Pi11 'work and thrift will create the great things of lite, it is sniftlessness and thrifthless that pushes the ?lgl- SVmi.the ed2e- Failre to plan ahead leaves R?J he ??an vho is always waiting for some thing to turn up" usually gets turned down. LaJf ?u 5lan to save .systematically you are sure to have ultimately:. $1 or more will start a 4 per cent sav IliL account in this strong bank. Remember success seldom comes by accident. Commercial National Bank Corner Tryon and Fourth Sts. Capital, Surplus, etc., Over a Million Dollars