THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 14, 1921. 12 SENATE CHANGES HOUSE MEASURE Many Alterations in Tax Revision Bill Agreed to By Committee. "Washington, Sept. 14. The tax revi sion bill to be presented to the Senate one week from today will differ in many essentials from the measure pass, ed by the House last month. The most Important changes made thus far by the Senate finance committee are an ad ditional 2 1-2 per cent increase in the corporation tax, effective next ycir, and repeal of the capital stock tax, beginning with the levy due next July 1. Other alterations agreed upon or re garded as practically certain include re tention of the transportation taxes im express packages and oil by pipe lines and the removal of the exemptions on the first $500 of income from invest ments in building and loan associations and contributions by corporations for charitable purposes. STATEMENT FROM MELLON'. What changes, if any, are to be made in the House provisions repeal ing the transportation tax on freignt and passengers, and reducing or changing the levies on candy, cos metics, perfumery, proprietary med icines, cereal beverages, soft drinks, o called luxuries, sporting goods and t'u articles, will depend upon a final de cision by the committee as to the amunt of the savings the various x ecutive departments can effect tlvs year. Senators are not convinced that all of the $350,000,000 cut in departmental outgo promised at the AVhite House conference last month can be real It -d. In order to satisfy themselves, they have had Secretary llellon prepare a detailed statement in writing, showing the exact items on which it is planned to make savings. The committee has been told that $3,200,000,000 of internal revenue will be sufficient for this fiscal year, but, should Senators decide that additional funds must be raised, part of the transportation tax on freight and pass engers may be continued, at least for 1922, and some cuts in other taxes made by the House eliminated. BURGENLAND The Graustark of 1921. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine Take Aspirin only as told In each package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin. Then you wili be following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and proved saie by millions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you see the Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia. Rheumatism, Earche, Toothage, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tab lets cost f'-w cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade rr.irk of Bayer Manufacture of Mono-a.ceticacidv-ster of Salicylicacid. Washington, Sept. 14. Burgenland, scene of Europe's most recent "side show war," might just as well be Graustark, so far as its existence upon the usual map of in the general refer ence work is concerned, according to a bulletin from the Washington. D. C, headquarters of the National Geograph ic Society. Explaining what and where is this scene of hostilities between Austrians and Hungarians the bulletin says: '"By Burgenland is meant the West Hungary of 1.684 square miles and some 345,000 people which was carved from Hungary and given to Austria by the Treaty of St. Germain. "The strip resembles nothing so much, perhaps, as an. old shoe, with its flattened heel touching the Danube opposite Pressburg (or Poz.sony), its in step arched along the Austria-Hungary border, its toe nearly tipping Jugo-SIavia. 'In Burgenland the parenthesis comes into its own. The map or time table which neglects to give one alter native for a city or town, and some times a third choice, will handicap its user. Tact also would require that if one speak of the principal city of the region to an Austrian he call it Odenburg (also spelled Oedenburg); but that if he mention the same city to a Magyar he speak of it as Sopron. "Odenburg has claims to fame on its own account, notably its Church of St. Michael completed eight years before Columbus discovered America, and its cattle markets of the days before the war. But its principal association is with the names of Esternay and Szechenyl. "Both north an deast of Odenburg are castles of the Esterhazy family. Along the Neusiedler See is the Hun garian Versailles' where Haydn was conductor of the private orchestra of one Esterhazy. Nicholas Joseph. At Mattersdorf (Xagymarton), where Au strians have established a provisional government, is the chateau of the fam ily among whose scions were a palatine of Hungary, one who refused the king ship of Hungary, another Who was the emissary of Louis XVI to Marie Antoinette, and one who, in 1917, form ed the Hungarian cabinet representing the parties opposed to Count Tisz-i. "The castle of the Szechinyi family is nine miles southeast of Odenburg. Kossuth, his political opponent, called Istvan Szechinyi the greatest of the Magyars.' and time seems to confirm this unbiased judgment. Figuring first as a sort of Paul Revere, in ' his ride through enemy lines to convey a mes sage of two emperors to Blucher and Bernadotte, then as a Magyar L'Enfant in his effort to make Buda a capital beautiful, this nobleman has to his credit such other divers achieve ments as placing the first steamboat on the Theiss and Danube, suggest ing canals between the two rivers, writ ing a book on horses racing and jr'v ing a year's income to furthering the wider use of the Magyar tongue. "The principal concern of both Au stria and Hungary with Bi.'rgen land probably is the coal region at Brennberg, near Odenburg. In the vi cinity, too, are the towns of Ruszt and Balf, centers of wine production. "Neusiedler See, not far from Oden burg, is a shallow body of water more than 20 miles long and averaging sev en miles wide. At . times it shrinks to half its size. About the time of our own civil war it dried up altogether." GRAY TONES ARE STILL GOOD FOR AFTERNOON WEAS 3 J ml. M ! History's M ysteries No. 46-The Fate Of "Fighting Mac Copyrtjnr, 1921, by The Wheeler Syndicate, inc. J PUBLIC IS I TramFm AT ATI ID 17 i' m k j i 'JUs n m i fa n u is i. m - S WARNING Despite the bid for first plaea made by black in the new fashions, gray tones are still much in de mand for afternoon wear. This at tractive frock is fashioned of gray( chiffon on simple lines to accentu ate that "square look" so charae-' teristic of the newest models. Self-j toned bead embroidery is intro-j duced in elaborate design. j DILWORTH REVIVAL MEETING PLANNED Plans for a revival meeting in Dil- worth September 25 will be discussed at a meeting of the members of the Dilworth Methodist church Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. The proposed revival will last until October 9. The question of constructing a sp; cial tabernacle for the revival services will be considered at the meeting. The church building is thought to be toa small to accommodate the crowds ex pected to attend the revival. Rev. Lee A. Falls, pastor, has re quested that all possible be present, -is counsel and good judgment is needec. Rev. Dr. L. B. Bridges, general evan gelist of Georgia, has been engaged to conduct the meeting. UWHM )llllll..i..T. .... iMlffmiMHifl i tfi I II T IT8 .mi- i SUCCESSFMJHPEIESS MMMTIMS The name CALORIC identifies the heating plant with exclusive patented features that make pipeless heating such a wonderful success. It identifies the heating plant that is sold under a Money Back Guarantee of your satisfaction that has made good its guarantee in over 125,000 homes. The CaloriC fills every room with summerlike warmth in coldest weather and cuts fuel bills H to K There is only one CaloriC. The name is on the feed door. It's your bond of heating satisfaction. Come in and let us show you how you can have your home more comfortable and healthful-how you can banish dirt and drudgery-and have every room warm and livable with as little trouble as tending one stove. CHAS. F. SHUMAN CO. , Distributor Geo. K. Hummel, Manager of Sales. "WE DIG YOUR BASEMENTS Phones 1323611 Q 1920 The M. S. Co. 0 ill I II 'P V raiisiyM flares The son of a Scotch laborer. Hector McDonald commenced his eventful life in the most prosaic of manners first ts a barefoot plowboy and then as a clerk in a country store. As far back as he could remember, however, he had wanted to be a soldier and, as soon as he was old enough, he enlisted as a private In the Gordon Highlanders, carrying- the musket of a private sol dier. Then, during the Afghan cam paign of 1879, came the opportunity which was to mean so much to him. In company with a small body of men. McDonald found himself sur rounded by some two thousand or more natives, bent upon the total destruction of the British soldiers. The officers having been shot, McDonald took com mand of th? detachment and led them in a dashing bayonet charge which rip ped the ranks of the enemy wide open and cut a lane through which the Eng lish marched to safety. As a reward for his exceptional bravery. Lord Rob erts offered McDonald his choice of the Victoria Cross or an officer's commis sion and, without a moment's hesita tion, the Scotchman chose the latter, despite the fact the prejudice existing against the exceptional officer who had battled his way up from the ranks. During the years that followed, Mc Donald's career was one of almost con tinual success. Dturing the Sudan cam paign he was raised to tha rank of Colonel in appreciation of his defeat of a Dervish attack upon the British flank and, during the Boer AVar, his military accomplishments were so marked that he was knighted and made a brigadier-general. During- the. interveing years, how ever, he had been constantly waging another war one against the prejudice and enmity of certain officers of the army who were jealous of the former private's advancement and who. in con cequence, tried to do everything in their power to belittle and humiliate him. The honors which Gen. McDon ald received at the hands of the Quen wiped out some of these scores but only intensified others and, after his appointment to the command of the military post at Caylon. certain grave charges were preferred agajnst him which were" undoubtedly without the slightest foundation. His nerves frayed by the constant strain under which he had labored and feeling that he had been abandoned by the friends he had made. Sir Hector applied for leave of absence in order to return to London, where he had a per sonal interview with Lord Roberts, who is reported to have advised him to re turn to Ceylon and fight the accusa tions to the limit. Other officials of the "War Office were outspoken in their demands for an instant court martial, but whether this radical step was taken has never been made public. "Fighting Mac," as he was affec tionately known to the rank and file of the British Army, accordingly left London supposedly for the Orient, but only proceeded as far as Paris where he registered at a rather secluded ho tel and kept strictly to himself. Not long afterward alii England was amaz ed by the news of the suicide of the general, who was reported to have sent a bullet through his head after reading an acount of the charges against him. But his reported death by no means ended the strange sequence of events connected with his career. Although the Scotch soldier was supposed to ba a bachelor, his family was informed that the general's widow had taken the body back to Scotland and that the interment had taken place quietly, with no military honors whatever. Little by little a rumor gained credence to the effect that "Fighting Mac" was not dead, but that he had returned to the Orient under an assumed name and had offered his sfarvices to the Mikado one story stating that V fa mous General Kuroki, who al h 'ed such prominence during the Russ. Jap anese War was none other than the Scotch general. But the British War Office took no cognizance of these re ports and adhered to1 its original state ment about General McDonald's death in Paris. Incidentally, the commission of in auiry into the charges against him in Ceylon returned a report completely absolving him from all blame but no inquiry, official or otherwise, has ever swept away the veil of mystery which surrounds the fate of one of the most gallant officers who ever fought under the British flag. Next "Who Killed Charles Le Farge?" NEGRO IS LYNCHED BY LOUISIANA MOB Columbia, Louisiana, Sept. 14. Gil mon Holmes, a negro, arrested Tues day on a charge of murdering Sidney Manheim, station agent here, was hanged by a mob at 11 o'clock Tuesday night, the body then being riddled with bullets and set afire. Holmes is alleged to have confessed to the posse that captured him. He had been trailed with bloodhounds from here to Riverton, where he boarded a train. He was captured at Grayson. another small town nearby. He had from the stattion. Manheim was killed by being hit in the head with a heavy stone. Thousands of People puffer Permanent Loss of Health Because of Neglect Nature has Set the Danger Signals J? Us and We Cani Afford to Pass Unnoticed the Warning That She Gives Us. Good digestion means good health; bad digestion means b,.; health Asound stomach is worth a hundred times its weight in Probably eighty per cent of all diseases originate m the digest organs. Dyspepsia, or what is more commonly known as indigo tion is not onlv one of the most prevalent, but it is one of tb most difficult to treat of all present day diseases, and has f ovo vflFiprf.tTiP skill of leading specialists everywhere. V KsL. J wuiiivv. nave lecuncu tuau it i-mjimuiv pinv Stomach trouble is almost always followed by a complicatici of dis eases. One of the first being" an over worked liver, with all the symptoms of biliousness, followed in turn witn headaches, coated tongue, nausea, dizzy spells, pain in the back, palpi tation of the heart and other distress ing symptoms. Sooner or later the kidneys will become involved and tnat is just whv these danger signals should be heeded in time. A wise man puts out the fire before there is too mucn destruction: the same theory should apply to stomach trouble. Gas in the stomach means fermen tation instead of digestion; decay, In stead of nutrition for fermentation pro duces poisons, which are absorbed by the blood, and which frequently bring on the condition known as auto-intoxication or self-poisoning. This is also why we develop acidosis, which brings on so many complications such as rheu matism, hardening of the arteries, high blood pressure and . other conditions, which may mean permanent loss of health. Acidosis is one of the main forerunners of Bright's disease and diabetes, hence it is evident that if we have stomach trouble, however slight, we are foolish indeed if we do not take prompt steps to correct it. If we are not fit as a fiddle in the mornir; if we don't feel better than when we went to bed; if our breath is offensive; and we have that bad taste in the mouth; nature has set the dan ger signals for us and w-e cannot afford to neglect the warning that she gives us. That is just why the demand for Tanlac, the great Stomachic, Systemic and Reconstructive tonic has broken all "World's records. The American people me surest, Biiirni.. aim nuiunest. remM for all such troubles, and millions un, ; millions have taken it with the astonishing and gratifying results "" Tens of thousands of men and j pn of all ages and in all walU Z I afflicted with stomach, liver and kidn " in?, as well as thousands nf - " t L V V,.- men aim verge thin, nervous entlv on the women a-,-,. of col'.anse v,.'. testified publicly that they have h fully restored to their norma! h?a;l' strength and weight by its u.. others who seemed fairly well, yet v" suffered with indigestion, hoadac'r shortness of breath, dizzy sp-lls, ?D',i gassy stomachs, coated tongaes. f0 ness of "breath, constipation, bad ec plexion, loss of appetite, sleepless at night and terribly dejected, pressed feelings state that they Vj". been entirely relieved of these ciistrf ing symptoms and restored to ha; and happiness by Tanlac. NOTE: Tanlac Vegetable p, ,.. an essential and vitally important of the Tanlac Treatment wheievj constipation is present- You cannot hope to get satisfaotc results from ' the Tanlac Treating without first - establishing a free ar regular movement of the bowel?. ; stands to reason, that no treatment do the greatest amount of good whir you are suffering from constipation c: biliousness, or when your system clogged up - with waste products sr.: poisons. Tanlac and Tanlac Vegetable Pi;:, are sold in Charlotte by Jas. P. Sto. Co., and in .Mooresville by Mooresvi... Drug Co., and- by leading druggi;-, everywhere. fa"" The"dlcir:igg. 'M vessel but progress demanded something bet- Hi ter, and got it the ocean liner. fmfmM V Lime Cola is the big 20th century improve ment in soft drinks. Made from an original formula, unlike all other soft drinks. A smooth, rich, mellow cola drink blended with the dancing vivacity of the juice of limes ripened by tropical suns. Your first bottle of Lime Cola will be a drink your second a ceremony-a 'foretaste of many happy "here's hows" to come. In bottles to prevent Yaridtion wherever soft drinks are sold Lime Cola is a guaranteed drink. If you are not satisfied that it is the best cola drink you ever tasted, the dealer will refund your money and we will reimburse him. Bottled in Charlotte only by Lime Cola Bottling ComDanv 203 South Poplar Street, Phone 4158 0 Lr-m Iia Cola Compaq ' i.SijkT'yy1' ' I- n.