THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, FRIDAY AFTEKJNOOJN, StirrttjfrlL n .'catacombs are 1 OPEN TO PUBLIC Old Pauper Burial Ground of Paris Again Open to American Visitors. ! . KINVIX W. HI LI.1NGEK, i nitod Tress Staff Correspondent. .1 i lis, Pert. 9. Unique amone his , i! show-places in the world on.l ,.1 for centuries on both continents, , aiacomhs of Paris were recent ' .p.iuil to visitors, having been six years on account of tha celebrated tombs, undistubed by inn visitation while the world wis -v t-ghtinp above, have been a pop r drawing point for the big influx American tourists in Paris this sum ;. Long lines of Yankees from re,--:y outside the gates the two after- month the catacombs are noons a open. r-iZu Pac!? "nderground, in a labv m?llirt' cJdM are skeletons of three million, of Pans dead, neatly piled in rectangular , stacks against the walls cue passageways or cleverly ar ranged in all manner of artistic pat terns mosaics, and designs, giving ,hc Interior of the death compartments an atmosphere of the uncanny that would be hard to duplicate. Many -of the patterns were most elab orate and cleverly drawn. On nno wn was a huge spider, its body formed of entuus, us legs 04 crossbones. On others, skulls were grouped in beauti ful crosses, against a background of crossbones. In a miniature chapel, built of bon.'V sat a complete skeleton, on a bench made of bones, his lower jaw dropped in a devil-may-care grin. In anothe compartment was a hearth, construct ed from bones, with a mantlepiece of skulls. The catacombs owe their origin to the .necessity of finding stone for the building of Paris. They served as quarries for years until, in 1784, a' gov ernmental decree ordered the "evacua tion" of several large public burying grounds which had become, over-crowded. The authorities began by remov ing bodies in tombs where families hsid failed to keep up the rents in France most burial plots are rented, not pur chased, as in America. The practir j was repeated from time to time, un til the catacombs became the dumping place for all Parisian pauper burying grounds. Thousands Write Grateful Letters of Apprecia tion As Famous Medicine Continues to Accom plish Remarkable Results---Great Tanlac Lab oratories Running at Top Speed to Supply Record Breaking Demand Over Half a Mil lion Bottles Behind With Orders. TRYON TO VOTE ON STREET PAVING BONDS BY CHARLES MURRAY GILBERT ATLANTA, GA., September 9. "Tanlac made me feel young- or." "It put me back on the payroll." "I now have a fine appetite." "I can cat whatever I want." "No more dyspepsia for me." "I gained weight rapidly." These and scores of like expressions are i now heard daily from ten3 of thousands, as grateful users of I Tanlac tell of their experiences. Leading drug men of the country are amazed at the tremen I dous sales of Tanlac, and point out enthusiastically that nothing has ever equalled the phenomenal demand for this preparation. i v.- T Tryon, Sept. 9. An election will be held in Tryon in the near future to vote on a proposed issue of bonds in the sum of $60,000 to repave the city streets. This was decided upon at a meeting of the city officials Monday night. The general sentiment among the ttax pay ers is in favor of better streets and it is believed the bond issue will carry by a heavy majority- The exact date of the election has not yet been set. Due to heavy traffic during the sum mer a number of the principal streets in the city have become so badly worn tnat tneir upkeep is a more expensive proposition than it would be to re build them and finish with a hard sur face, either watebound or macadam or penetrative asphalt. An effort will be made to have the work done as rapidly as possible, so the connecting link of roadway through the city will be shaped up with a smooth bnrd surface by the time the road for Suartanburg to the Polk coun ty seat at Columbus, six mils awsv. shah nave been finished. The road will come into Tryon and has been sur veyed as part of the state project of road building In Polk county, connect ing with the South Carolina highway through Spartanburg and beyond. The road to Columbus will later be con tinued to Rutherfordtpn but has not yet been completed. At the great Tanlac laboratories at T'ayron, Ohio, letters and telegrams pouring in dally asking that ship- 5 ' j v.nnts of Tanlac be rushed at once, j Many of these orders are for full car- ' id shipments, and quite a few of i il-.om for two and three carloads. A. though running at top speed, the Tanlac laboratories are now over half :i million bottles, or approximately twenty-four carloads behind with or J ders. This announcement will -no I ti 'ubt be received with great surprise I i:- the drug world, because business in any lines, especially in the drug and -.-jdk-ine business, has been off from 40 ' : 50 per cent. i AGENTS IX EVERY TOWN. 1 One druggist in every city, town and village in the United States and (.'anada where agencies have not al i 2 t idy been established will be awarded k the exclave publicity agency for Tan ' l.j.c within the next thirty days. These I r. ireneies will carry with them a big i publicity campaign exclusively for the one druggist in each city and town I who secures the agency. Tanlac is going right ahead more k vigorously than ever before. For Tanlac there is such thing as busi ness depression. In fact, Tanlac does not believe there is such a thing as hard times; at least, not in the drug business. Things are getting better every day. In a few weeks' time crops will begin to move. Hundreds of millions of dollars will be put into cir culation, and business will soon be bak on a better and sounder basis than in years. NOTICE TO DEALERS. Many wholesalers and manufacturers stopped pushing at the very first sign of a dark cloud. The result being that many drug lines slumpecT. Tanlac went right ahead and the result has been that more Tanlac has been sold during the first six months of the present year than in any correspond ing period in the past. Line up with Tanlac. Connect with a product that sells no matter how the times, because of its superior merit. Although Tanlac has been on the market over six years, it is an actual fact tha more Tanlac is being sold today with the same amount of adver tising than during any time in the past. Tanlac will not , only prove your greatest seller for this year, but for many years tV come. Tanlac is sold in Charlotte by The Jas. P. Stowe Co. and by leading druggists everywhere. HEROIC WORK DONE BY DR. PEDRO RODRIGUEZ GREEKS BEAT THE TURKS FN YARNS Sending Out Much Propa ganda Which Has no Ba sis in Fact. Angora, Turkey, Sept 9. Competi tion between the Greek and Turkish JNationanst omciai press bureaus is one of the phases of the war in which the Greeks outclass the Turks, due to Greek control of communica tions. Here's an Athens dispatch that we have just hanged six Frenchmen in Angora," Hussein Raghib Bey, director of the Turkish bureau, said to the correspondent, tossing the copy of a wireless across the table. 'There's no truth in the yarn, of course, but by the time we are able to get out a denial, the news will be printed every where in the world, and . nobody will believe our denial, any way, or take the trouble to print it. The most as tounding untruths are spread about us." As the Nationalists have, but one feeble wireless station, which receives news from the outside world, but sends only a few . hunared miles and in a wave length not known to the Ameri can or Allied ships in the waters of the Black and Mediterranean seas, frii mediate, news from Angora reaches the outside world several days old. The Greeks have the advantage that they censor press telegrams. They recently took the added precaution to place a censor on cables originating in Constantinople, inasmuch as the only cables from there pass Greek ter ritory. The Nationalists are arranging a more powerful wireless to talk to the Tiflis wireless station which in turn transmits to Moscow. For internal propaganda, bulletins are distributed by the daily newspaper Hakimieti Millie (National Sovereignty) which ia printed on presses brought on donkey back from Constantinople. Its editors are Constantinople journalists. LOVELY MATERIALS FASHION TEA GOWN Madrid, Sept. 9. Heroic .work was done by Dr. Pedro Gonzales Rodriguez. a naval surgeon, during the fighting along tne Alhucemas coast betweai the Spanish battleship Catalun.i and the Moroccan rebels, says The Diario Universal. The warship directed a heavy fire at Moorish positions on shore, and large numbers of Moroccans fell seriously wounded. They were making vain efforts to escape when nr. Rodriguez asked permission from the Cataluna's captain to land and attend the wounded. The landing was made In full view of the enemy, who, observing the humani tarian effort of the Spaniards, ceased firing and allowed the landing to be mado without resistance. After render ing aid, the doctor returned on board the warship, accompanied by the men wrhose lives he had saved. THEFT INSURANCE IS RAISED TEN PERCENT New lork, fcept. 9. New Yorkers who want to insure their belongings against theft, beginning next Mondnv, will have to pay ten per cent mora than m the past, it was announced to day. Declaring the increased number t-i robberies here was playing havoe w.tn profits, the Burglary Insurance Under writers' Association decided on the in creased rates at a meeting yesterday The rate on wines and liquors was boosted to $75 for each $1,000 of insur ance. NEAR NORTH INDIANS MAY BECOME EXTINCT X- TO RELIEVE CATARRHAL, DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES - Edmonton, Alta, Sept. 9. Indians in the near north are in danger of becom ing an. extinct species unless measures a r a tlr:ri Vi- tVo iirnHnrfl t r c fornix them aerainst. rnntairmiis riifiAasPsT r ! and add to it 1-4 pint of hot water V. w Roll bfitv. innnr ,wia i and a little granulated sugar. Take If you have Catarrhal Deafness or are hard of hearing or have head noises go to your druggist and get 1 once cf Parmint (double strength), This lovely tea gown Is made- oi ?ale blue chiffon brocaded in silver, t is fashioned on Grecian lines with a silken cord at the waist. Wings of chiffon in a gray tone with a single row of sequins on tho edge fall from the shoulders. The tea gown is gaining in popularity and with models such as these it is no wonder. SUN'S ENERGY SOURCE POWER Vast Powers Ready for Utilization Awaiting Chemical Research. in a report made public today follow ing a trip through the Wabaskawa dis trict. Dr. Bell also attacked the Govern ment ration issue. declaring it aone mucn to degrade tne - Indian. Many of them, he asserted, use ths rations only as stakes in gambling for prunes and raisins which they use to brew "hootch." one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breath- I ing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into tne throat, it is easj' to prepare, costs little and is pleasant to take. Anyone who Nhas Catarrhal Deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. ; m 5 li S J -' 31 .a 1 m '4 r. 5 ky 1 1 h 5 t-.'ll 1 r.rl We are offering for Saturday and Monday hundreds of pairs of fine shoes at closeout prices. These are all high grade shoes fashioned on trim, stylish lasts for beauty and service, and they are not of inferior quality in any respect. But owing to the fact of having many broken sizes and odd lots on hand we are closing them out at prices that make the best shoe you have ever seen. omen's acrifice Prices oes i ti m !l fWen's and M MS 1 . You should be on hand early Saturday morn ing to share in this great event for the shoe buy ing public has confidence in our merchandise and prices and the bargains that we are offering for Saturday and Monday will be snapped up quickly frine:Oray Slhop. j Fifth Avenue Shop of the Carolina gT 1 jJS II . j -V''':"":nEu.oirs 1 Tailormades 1 ffcxi j Kir 77 "iFTFEn M l mm Li 1 East de Xew York, Sept. 9. The problem how to harness the energy of the sun to as to utilize it for the direct benefit of man was presented to the chemises of the United States and Great Brit ain here today, by Dr. L. H. Bakeland, honorary professor of chemical engi neering in Columbia University. He wa.s speaking at an international meeting of the Society of Chemical Indusay of Great Britain and of the American Chemical Society. He pointed out th-j necessity of chemical research for the advancement of American industry and warned manufacturers against discon tinuing that work during the present period of business depression. Sneaking on the problem of how '.o utilize the rays of the sun, he briefly told how these rays acting upon plant life produce sugars, starch, cellulo.s and other foods. He said: "No sun, no crops, no life. So that, after all. the whole living world is dependent unon a delicate photo-chemical reac tion. "Our vast coal beds and our petro leum wells and our natural gas are merely the result of light energy stored up from the plant or animal lif of former geological periods. This, la itself, ought to impress us with ih enormous possibilities of photochemu'.il synthesis and yet, here is a field where the scientist or engineer has accom piished next to nothing. In the utiliza tion of this marvelous energy, we have not gone beyond the art of mak ing photographs. "When it comes to transforming light energy into chemical synthesis we have left thus far the monopoly of this agent tonature; we have bee;i acting as Rip Van Winkle. "Where is the Farady, the Amp.?"', the Leonardo da Vinci; where is th? Archimedes who shall show us how to use the sun rays for charging our elec trical storage batteries, or who will teach us how to handle the photochem ical action of sunlight, or to emulate nature in her delicate, synthesis of plant life? WTho will utilize this deli cate method instead of our hitherto brutal processes of synthesis? "To the wide-awake manufacturer the present industrial depression should be an incentive to engage more chemists, to do more chemical research work, in stead of laying off the men of theif chemical staff, as has happened in too many instances since we got out of that fool's paradise of so-called 'pros- "Most of our industries badly need "fertilizing" and fertilizing is bett.r done While the land lies fallow than during planting or harvesting time. "Whenever I see such shortsighted ness which is bound to stunt our in dustrial efficiency for the future, ..hen I wonder whether some of the nan; c'al or -business men at the head of large industrial enterprises are not oc cupying their position on an assumed and unearned reputation." GRIBBEN GOES TO ' CHURCH AT WINSTON Wilmington, Sept. 9. Universal re gret will be felt in Wilmington when it becomes known that Rev. R. E- Grib-tr- nf St. John's Episcopal church and one of Wilmington s most popular ministers, win Ka.c next month to become rector of St. Paul's churchi Winston-Salem. The res or, r,f Mr. Gribbln was reluctant ly accepted by the vestry of St. John's q mptfn,c" last' night. It has been - known for some time that Mr. Gribbin was considering the Winston-Salem parish, but it was hoped v,,, v,io fHpnds here that he would de cide to remain in .Wilmington, although it was feared that he would accept, as the charge in the Twin City offers a far wider field for service, being the nnlv nnrish there- Mr firibbin became restor of St. John's "in December, 1916, succeeding n w. E. Cox. who Is now located at Richmond. Va. In January, 1918, he hewn service in the army; as a volun teer chaplain, receiving his commifcsiou as army chaplain In April of that year, wo wna later annotated at Camp Wads- worth and continued as chaplain of that outfit after it arrived overseas. He performed signal service in Prance with the Third Pioneers in the First army. Ha returned to Wilmington and re sumed charge of St. John's in No vpmh?r. 1919. and has since cont-nued rector of this parish. He has endeared vimself In the hearts of the people of dt-noniination in the city who Yia p. watched him go abount the streets into tha homes cf many needing his nhristionN ministrations: and his words of counsel and cheer were not confined simply to Episcopalians, for ne ssemed to love and believe in the brotherhood How often a snug fitting tailored coat pulls out across the back but never in a Mellon tailor-made. "Are they all wool?" is almost the first question women ask nowadays. We can answer emphatically "Yes." And not only are the fabrics all wool but they have been carefully shrunk so that a woman need not fear that every raindrop will make a spot on her suit. $50 and up. Third Floor Distinction Economy Distinctive ; patterns, fabrics that will endure and correctness in every detail make our fine as sortment of Fall Suits unusually attractive to men who know styles. We are proud of our showing this season and you will agree with us when you look them over. M ELLON So Serviceable! Such a Pleasure To Use '""' And it's so easy to keep clean and pretty. What a joy to have your whole kitchen fitted with either white or blue and white enamel ware. Here you'll find utensils for practically every purpose in either color. J, N. McCausland & Co. "IN THE BUSINESS 37 TEARS" 2Z1 Sonth Tryon St. Phone , 314 T 1 A i' r r a- : . in I 1" ii- t a:. i ' i at. t- M, - . . ,: '"ll'ifl'llW of man. I)