., SUJNUAY MOKNING, SETYISMBBB 18, l2t
mxTT niTAm httr KWS: IH AKLUTTE. N. C
xl Ej -nmvjjvxxju " -
By C. L PAYNE
REVERSE ENGLISH ON HIS RETICENCE
CHINA MAY NOT
SEND DELEGATES
Reported to be Displeased
Over Attitude of the
United States. 4
?,y DUKE N. PARRV.
International News Staff Correspondent
Toklo. Sept. 17. Dispatches from
OairiT, i-nniatcxi hrrfi today claim mat
China, will refuse to send delegates i
omnmt pnnfprpnc'e called by
President Harding in Washington. No
vember 11. The dispatches declare J
China is displeased with the attitude o.
th United States toward the dispute
between japan and China over t
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SCATTER POP? , , . -7.
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IvAMLLlP vjftBMV00a AU LT T WTOT J -J el A & J
VILHE., N ANoTBR( NEVE'R j f H INTO ? r 3 (T SoW. NoW J SY
t.( r.qirino from Pekm say It IS
understood that China has instructed
her Minister at .Washington to brlns
the question of China's attitude to the
attention of officials of the United
States Government. -
Official ' circles at Pekin are said to
be concerned over reports that Presi
dent Harding intended limiting Chma 5
place at the conference, but govern
. ment officers denied that China had
any intention of withdrawing.
CHILDREN'S ARK
SAFE IN RUSSIA
Eight Hundred" Little Rus
sians Returned to Their
Families.
V Jf Vil V (CoPyrlxM Ifcl. by The Boll Syndicate InO .
I . ,Hr'"A l ' v v-- 1
I I I . I I '
I . ' '
By WILLIAM C. CAYCE
International News Service Staff
Correspondent
San Francisco. Sept. 17. Ninety per
.-vf ti-o Sfin T?ussian boys and girls
of the Petrograd Children's Colony, -vht
were taken practically around the world
in an effort to reach home by th-2 Am-
erican Kea cross. nae men
turned to their parents.
The remaining few whose relatives
could not be located are beir-K cared
for bv the Society of Towns oi 1 etro
srad in a good boarding school, iccord
ing to Dr. Herbert M. Coulter, who
had charge of the "ark" which took
the children from Vladivostok to Riga
and vho arrived here recently.
Dr Coulter brought an interesting
account with the reunion of some of the
youngsters with their parents, in scl
eral cases parents did not recognize
their own children.
The trip from Vladivostok to Alga
and Petrograd was accomplished in
three months, with stops made at San.
Francisco, New York and Brest, where
supplies were taken on-
"Wher in Brest, said Dr. coulter,
"we took on enough supplies for six
did not know where
c-q ooincr to land next. From
Brest we headed for the Baltic Sea via
the Kiel Canal. The Baltic Free States
iw fripndlv to us. but did not
want so many Russians to land on their
shores. A ,
"Ui.on our arrival in Petrograd we
secured the use of the Halla Saniarium.
ivn huilt bv the Czar shortly
iwr.,-.. tho vnv for treatment ot tuber-
UC Hi' - j " T 4.
,.,i!m.. mtiV-nts but was never used vvitn
this as a headquarters we- were able
r. .iitrii,ntr the children in an orderly
m.niinpr nnil in jrroups of one hundred
at a time until all were disposed of,"
yaid Dr. Coulter,
RAILWAY UNIONS
COUNT BALLOTS
General Strike of R. R. Em
ployes Threatens Country;
Stone Hopes for Peace.
New Yodrk. Sept. 17. Four hun
dred delegates of the five big railway
workers organizations, representing the
Eastern district, will meet Sunday af
ternoon in Hoboken to watch the count
ing to 500,000 ballots on whether the
railway employe shall go -on strike or
accept the 12 per cent wage slash and
submit to revised working conditions,
it was learned tonight.
ThP rleleerates. who represent work
ers on all railway lines between New
York and Chicago ana in Eng
land and the Atlantic states are said
to be more concerned over further
threatened wage cuts by railways and
over loss of advantages as to hours and
working conditions than over the orig
inal 12 pe rcent wage decrease.
The 12 per cent wage siasn is 10 go
into effect this month.
Delegates who will attend tne jnooo-1 nas not been ram enougn
CROP SITUATION
GENERALLY GOOD
Good Weather Has Helped
All But the Cotton Crop;
South Needs Rain.
BY DAVID j. BLl TMEXFIEL.D,
International News Staff Correspondent.
VTashinston, Sept. 17. A plentitude
of sunshine and generally good weat-i-er
have contributed to the crop situa
tion the . Department of Agriculture
stated toniaht.
Corn, wheat and oat producing dis
tricts show genera' progress. The cot
ton crop, however, will not be helped
materially, due to the staggering blow
dealt by drought and storm.
Threshing of wheat is rapidly Hear
ing completion, plowing and seedi ig
has generally made good progress; de
lavs only occuring in Missouri due to
excessive rain and in Nebraska an.l
the middle Atlantic states, wneie mmc
DOPE TRAFFIC
UNDERATTACK
Drive Will Be Made to Wipe
Out Dope Selling in Num
ber Countries.
In Montana
t-pn mpetinsr renresent the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood
of Locomotive Firemen and. Enginemen,
Order of Railway Conductors, urotner-
hood of Railway Trainmen, ana tne
Switchmen's Union of orth America.
The meeting will be addressed ry
Timothy Shea, vice president ot tne
Brotherhood of Firemen and Engine
men. John II. McNamee, editor of the
magazine "Brotherhood of Firemen and
Enginemen," Jones McBride, cniet or
ganizer. T. E. Ryan, cnairman ot tne
New York state legislative board of
the "Big Five," and others.
STONE HOPES FOR PEACE.
New York, Sept. 17. "The last thing
any sensioie man wains is a 011.,
said Warren G. Stone, grand cnier or
the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi
neers, here tonight, discussing tne cri
tical situation in the railroad field.
'Members of the 'Big Four orotner-
hoods will not count their ballots un
til October 10 in Chicago. It the vote
favors a strike, then the next question
an attempt
to he decided is whether
Mow some of those grateful parents ,vjii he made to settle with roads sep
uvnmpri their 'lone lost' children was aratelv or whether we shall deal with
certainly more than Touching.' said the them as a whole. I hope for peace. I am
doctor. "In many cases wenere x ue-4making no predictions
livered the children m Keval to tneir
ra rents in person they did not even rec-
nsrnire them. This is easily explained
for the half-starved children of two
years ajro were quite a contrast to the
well fed and two years older children
vMnrned to them. In many cases moth
ers and fathers had given their children
nn as lost or dead. a they did not know
they had fallen into the hands, of the
Red Cross
MOTHER SWOONS AT REUNION
"Onp ca.se I hall never forget was
MINERS INDICTED
(Continued From Page One.)
the mine wars, as that county is par
tiallv unionized. At present is it under
a form of State martial law, with the
ronstahularv in charee.
It was protest against this form ot
martial law. and to compel unionization
of the Mingo county mines that the
miners' army started its march troni
that nf a mother who refused to taKe L111"1
cDvontPpn.vp.'ir-cld son hacK 'intn
shn had been fully convinced that ne
y.fv rpfi 1 flesh and blood.
"Aqnother touching casa was that of
a mother who fainted when she saw
her daughter. It was two licurs n
for the mother was revived to sign
the papers for the return of her daugh
ifr." Dr. Coulter said.
Rpcauae American were not assured
of eettine out of Russia' once they
nut foot on Russian soil, the children
were taken to the middle of the bridge
at Petroerad and there turned over to
the Society of Union Towns, who saw
to it that 'they were properly delivered
to their homes.
The greater percentage of the chil
dren who were abroad the CANT READ
from the better families of the pro
fessional clas, and there were also
one or two titled members in the party,
according to the doctor.
Federal troops intervened
After visiting some of the towns near
Williamson, the next logical place for
the Senators would be the Logan dis
trict. After this it was believed the sub
committee would motor along the 70
mile route traversed by the miners
in the march from Marmet southwest
ward to Blair, the center of hardest
fighting along the recent firing line in
Logan county.
Other centers if investigation would
be Charleston, St. Albans and possibly
Huntington.
Observers, who have been in touch
with West Virginia conditions for
years, agree that hhe mine guard sys
tem is the prlnciptl root ot evu tnere.
and that the sub-committee must con
centrate on this phase of the situation
in an effort to determine the merits
and demerits of the system and the
possibility or providing a substitute.
about 20 per cent 01 tne spring v-iu.j
remains to be harvested.
Moisture is needed in the Southern
States to facilitate fall seeding of oats,
but oat crop threshing for the whole
countrv is practically completed.
Threshing returns show a marked in
feriority to last year's crop statistics,
officials announced.
A good yield of potatoes is generally
Tate Irish potatoes have im-
thp Northern States. A I
good crop is expected in Montana de
spite severe frosts. The early potato
crop is already harvested and the gath
ering of the late crop is already in
progress, the report declared. Sweet
potato crops will come on favorably
with a little more rain.
The fruit crop generally shows im
provement and is encouraging. Winter
and late Fall apples are increasing in
size since the rains, but the total yield
is forecasted as being low. Oregon s
crop has deteriorated owing to drought.
Reports that grapes were dropping
owing to the excessive heat caused a
small panic in western New York and
erane nickinsr has been rushed accord
ingly in that district. Massachusetts
and New Jersey reported good cran
berry outputs.
Livestock conditions are favorable ex
cept in a few isolated localities where
reports are current of hog disease.
Hay and pastures are generally good.
Meadows are reported in excellent con
dition except in some sections of the
Eastern Atlantic States, where rain is
badly needed. The general outlook for
Winter feed is favorable, officials declared.
MINERS DECLARE
STATE CORRUPT
BY SAUL. HAAS.
International Sews Staff Correspondent.
.New York, Sept. 17 Plans for an in
ternational drive on . the dope traffic of
the world, which has for its object the j
wiping of illicit dope selling in America,
Canada, England and France, were an
nounced here today by Dr. Carleton Si
mon, chairman of the narcotics bureau
of the national police conference, who
is at the head of the drive.
..-Already every large city in America
has sent to headquarters of the drive,
located in New York, pictures of every
known drug addict and seller. The
New York office, under Dr. Simon is a
clearing house from which these pic
tures, as well as finger prints are dis
tributed to every city taking part in
the drive. The mere appearance in any
city of any person listed by the inter
national clearing house is to oe ioiiow
ed by arrest.
.Accordinar to Dr. Simon, headquart
ers of the gigantic dope smuggling ring
are located in Germany and japan.
"Almost every ship which touches
nnv shnrps brinsrs some narcoitcs," Dr.
Simon said.
-Into Vancouver. Seattle, San Fran
MRS. OYSTER BEGINS
FIGHT TO BREAK WILL
Washington, Sept. 17. Attorneys for
Mrs- Cecil Ready Oyster, of Syracuse,
N. Y., the 26-year-old widow ot tne
former millionaire Washington dairy
man. Oeorere M. Ovster. today began
proceedings in probate court to contest
the validity of Oyster's will, under the
provisions of which the widow would
receive only $25,000.
The aged Washington dairyman died
last Spring in Atlantic City, only a
few months after he had married Miss
Ready. Shortly before his death, ne
executed a codicil to his will granting
his vouna: widow, who, at that time,
was not with her husband, $25,000 in lieu
of her dower rights.
In the action begun today, the widow
alleges that, if the codicil was actually
drawn by her husband, it was done un
der duress and because of undue in
fluence.
HARDING PARTY RETURNING.
Norfolk, Va., Sept. 17. The yacht
Mayflower, with President and Sirs.
Harding and party aboard, left Hamp
ton Roads at 9 o'clock tonight bound
for Washington. The yacht will dock
at the navy yard in Washington about
noon Sunday, winding up the .fresi
dential vacation of nine days.
.
DR. POE PLEADS
(Continued from Pag-e One.)
J. 1
itv county, or state. A large per cent
of ihe growers of any one product must
sien legally binding agreement to mar
keTalfthat they produce through the
marketing association, which they
iranizecommercial
,y, and not just f raternal ly or sent!
mentally, it is auei fraternal
organizations, to develop the fraternal
spirit, provide social iub-. -the
sick, bury the dead, etc., but . ir
in fret better prices xui y
products we must have an organiza-
tlOll sueciiiuaiiijf uv.v.--,
particular job. .
3 vvp must orKtiiiiD i-
ly, not temporarily. We shall never
be successful and we shall never
00 sur-fpss until we me
and willing to stick to one another in a
compact business organization
thick and thin, for better or worse, till
success is won. Tne con;rtui
five years. . .
"4 We must organize legallj , not
loosely. We have no place for slackers.
No organization can succeed unless
every member is legally bound up
through an iron-clad legal contract
to do his part in making the plan a
success.
NO DECREASE IN
(Continued From Ptvo On.)
oi and San Pedro come the drugs
f,.nm janan. Tnto New York. Boston estate in order to support our fam
and Baltimore comes a large portion of ilies and to stay in the business of
the German dope." making teed, tobacco and cotton 101
"New York and Seattle are the cen-j other people. We are exactly in the
ovs nf thp t.raffio for America. In 1919 . plight of a merchant who finds his
the Government estimated that there
were in this country over a million dope
addicts. The number has increased tre
mendously since.
'When all the dope peddlers are in
jail, the dope traffic will be ended. It
is our object to accomplish this pur
pose. "One hundred and eighty-seven cities
in the United States and Canada are
participating in the drive in addition
to the larger cities of Europe and
Fcmipo Frnm France alone we have
already obtained the complete records
of 800 persons engaged in dope smug
gling and selling.
Dr. Simon pointed out that the oper
ations which have their center in Ja
pan come about as the result of the law
which, while it places restrictions on
the sale of narcotics in this country,
does not regulate exports of drugs. Th
lptritimatelv shipped out or
this country after having been bought
from honest firms here. It is then
smuggled back into the United States,
through Canada, Mexico, or some Amer
ican Pacific port.
The source of supply which origi
nates in Germany is said by Dr. Simon
to, come from German chemists who
had stored tremendous quantities of
narcotics before and during the war.
inventory showing him woth $100,
000 in January this year, $90,000 on
January 1, next year, and $85,000 the
following January. Such a man would
be paying for the privilege of selling
food and clothing. We have been pay
ing for the privilege of producing food
and clothing for other people.
"But; granting that the farmer has
not been living on his annual income,
but has been sacrificing a part of his
capital that is to say, his land
year after year, in order to continue
in business, what has been the trou
ble? And what is the remedy?
"Here are some of the ountstand
ing answers.
"1. We must organize by commod
ity1 and not by locality. That is to say
we must organize to market a specific
product scientifically, not just organize a
miscellaneous lot of farmers who hap
pen to be living in a certain commun-
$5 a barrel on 2.75 beer when the bill
goes to the Senate.
TVvo cftmmittep adopted an amena
ment providing for a tax of 10 per cent
on hotel rooms in excess of $5 a day tor
$R a dav for two per-
sons. Chairman Penrose declared that
this tax will be paid ty noteis anu hul
Susts- ....
A nmiristyflTlV'fi TeaiUrCS llltiuuc.
both a whole-
sale and retail business are permitted
to compute the tax on retail saies
v, hQcic nf wholesale selling prices;
net losses , may be deducted from the
net incomes of tax payers tor next wa
year; Commissioner of Internal Reve
nue, with the approval 01 tne oic
tary of the Treasurer and consent of
tax payer may make final settlement
of tax cases.
VALERA SOFTENS
(Continued from Pagre One.)
ceive your delegates upon this status
would constitute official recognition of
Ireland's severance from the King's
domains. It would entitle you if you
saw fit to do so to make a treaty with
the King's government, and it woul-1
equally entitle you to make no treaty
at all, but on the contrary to break
nff the conference with us. At rhe
same time it would give you tne ligiit
a richt we had already reccr:::,.-.
- Viol,,.-..-.,. r .
negotiate an amaic " r- e;and
and any' foreign power. It m-o-:M en
title you, if you insisted upor ,;lother
appeal to force, to eii" "u .1 iore.
powers the rights of lawfu' -eiligv.
ents against mo .m0. u iU:tl
you as a sovereign and n;f pendent
state we should have no right t0 com
plain of others following our exampi,.
"These would be th conseraen, es ,y.
receiving your delegates as .ne rep-v.
sentatives of an independent Hate,
are prepared as you were inform
in the note of September 7 to dis
with you how the association of i,.
land with the community of na-.;,.
known as the British Empirt ar,
be reconciled with the national ac
tions of the Irish. But we car not
abandonment, however
formaj of the principal of l:..h
giance to the King. The whose
OI ltl (
stitution within it are based upon & .
principle. ...
It is tatai iu iiiai. puiinij.'. n
delegates in tne propose i:-uiw,
should be there as representatives ,;
an independent sovereign state: wh.t
vmi insist upon claiming that a r.11
ference between us is impossible'
NO CABINET MEETING.
On account of the Premier s physia
condition it is unlikely that the
ish Cabinet will be assemble at Gau'.o-h
for several days. The Premier is 5t;:
suffering from intermittent rhills w.
in addition, a septic absorption has
suited in an abscess on the face. Hi?
physician has told him that absolve
rest is essential for a few clays.
The view was held in well intorrr.1
circles that De Valera will have t
abandon his claims that the Irish cr
eates enter the proposed commence ,.;
representatives of a free state. It !
lenown that the Sinn Feiners chen:
the hope that the Sinn Jem LHp;
will discover a formula which wH.Wr.
able an early meeting on terms wh
will "save the faces of De alera a"
nniiea-iips." Delay will also g..
time for moderate opinion in Irekr.'
to assert itself.
The Premier's letter today was :r
reply to De Valera's note of Fiw
De Valera in his note explained c
attitude of the Sinn Fein Cabinet ar;.
again insisted that, as Ireland had J
clared- her independence, that the s.:r
Fein envoys should enter the comm
ence "free and untrammelled.
The armistice is stjll in effe, ?
South Ireland, but the situation.:
Belfast has again become danger
as the result of clashes between s
Feiners and Unionists.
whother Ireland is to have peas-
war should be determined before "
lapse of another week.
I 1
t ATrT? TT?rkTTr"FTnxr to RAILROAD ORDERED
xTTrAnorr TTVPtfTni? a TSJTQ TO REINSTATE MEN
1 UiTlUHilV- llTllTJ.XVJXVrti XWJ
I r,ViirnT Sprit. 17. The. Tlnit.pd
Washington, Sept. 17 How the new gtates Ranroad Labor Board tonight
3 per cent immigration iw its ivceyuis ordered the Butler Railroad Company
out the hordes of would-be immigrants to reinstate two foremen, who had been
was revealed tonight in ngures issued discharged because they belonged to
by the bureau of immigration of the te same union as workmen under
Department o laoor- tn June, tne them.
first month of the operation of the new Tne company was ordered to J take
law, there were 46,093 immigrants, ad- tne men back and to pay . them differ-
mitted, while in May, the last month in ence ln money they would have earned
which immigrants could be admitted un- ana what they made since their dis-
restricted, was 69,64. I he average charge in December.- 1920. The road
monthly admission of immigrants dur- wag ordered to restore tliekr seniority
ing the first five montns oi tne yeari rights also.
before the three per cent, law became
operative was 03,338.
Vigor
Of Youth In
A New Discovery
Kelrnre Produces a Vitnliacr Superior
to Fnmou Gland Treatment Masic
Power oi a Baric irom Aincu.
The Jise was laid before the board
by a petition of United Brotherhood
of Maintenance of Way Employes.
FOUR VACANCIES AT
WEST POINT ACADEMY
Have you lost your youth, vigor and
"en"? Does lie seem dull and work a
tz-rind? Don't worry. Science has dig
covered a new vitalizer superior even
In the much discussed "goat gland"
and "monkey gland' treatment.
ThA nrinciDal ingredient is an
T i i O
BY PARKER ANDERSON,
Staff Correspondent ot The New,
Washington. Sept. 17. Four vacan
cies exist in North Carolina for admis
sion to the Military Academy at West
Point next July, the War Department
announced today. The vacancies are
in the third, sixth, ninth and tenth
districts.
Florence Cain has been appointed
acting postmaster at Elizabethtown.
t-rart from tne Dark OI an Aincau J- lie i uoiuuitc jjcimiucui oiaics liiil
tree, it is said to bo the most amaz- J the applicants for the postmastershjp
ing invigorator ever discovered, um- at Winston-Salem who. took the exam
bined witn it are otner tonic anu vi- j nation on Aucust 9 are Joseph E.
talizing elements or proved merit, in
most caseSs, the compound produces
marked improvement in a day or two,
and in a short time the vitality is
raised, the circulation improved and
the glow of health is ielt in every
p8The new vitalizr contains expensive
or.Tnif;als but manufacturing in euor-1
mous quantities has brought the .cost
within the reach of all. Furthermore,
Fry, Charles Hamilton, Sam F. Vance,
John T. Benbow, John R. Walker, Nix
on L. Cranford and Levi W. Ferguson.
MARINES WILL FIGHT
BATTLE WILDERNESS
the laboratories producing this new vi
talizer. which is
Washington, Sept. 17. President
talizer, which is caueu ite-xvu-Taos, i naraing, vice iresiaeni ooiidge, sec
are so confident of its power that Iheylretary of the Navy Denby and a dis
oer it on the basis of no results, tinguised party of official Washington
nAvy"reader of this paper may test wA1Le witnesses of the battle of the
tha new discovery without risk. Send Wilderness," to be staged by marines
no money, dui juu yuur name liiuiiiuui viudiuiuo on tne oia vivii war
address, to iue n:u ournione, pattieneids in Virginia the latter part
IfJS aWfuyil treatrnVn?"" " eSS of September, it was announced today,
fes wfllbe fanedDeposYt ?2 and The maneuvers will be staged by
f. not delighted by the results at the ling the marine forces at the Quantico
end oi a ween., ""vy uw iuraiunea base. They will occupy several days,
1 yoJI ?n,i n,rteWd'5 Uurtngr. the phases of the histori-
this test otter, as it is iuiiy-guaran' i "V111 w mmei uwuera
icde. AAV - I conditions with the newest weapons.
Issue Broadside of Charges
Against Government of
West Virginia.
BY MILDRED MORRIS,
International 'ews'Staff Correspondent.
Williamson, W. Va., Sept. 17. Wide
spread political corruption of public
officials of West Virginia by the non
union operators is charged in a brief
to be submitted to the Senate inves
tigating committee by miners officials.
Among" the charges made in the
brief, it was learned tonight, is that
Governor Morgan was elected in a cam
paign largely financed by non-union
operators.
The brief also declares that a rec?nt
Governor of the State is now president
of one of the large coal companies op
erating in the non-union fields of Lo
gan county; that several judges are
heavy stockholders m coal companies;
that one resigned to become one of tne
special prosecutors of the miners in
dicted for murder in connection wic'i
the slaying of seven Baldwin-Felts da
tectives in the battle of Mateawan an J
that the present prosecuting attorney
of Mingo county is a coal operator.
It is also charged that many mayors
and other munition and county officials
are coal company employes. This al
leged control of public officials through j
"VmsiriPfi rnnnpptinns." nrivate emn'ov- ,
ment, or bribery, the brief charges, is
equally responsible with the employ
ment of mine guards from "the notor
ious ' Baldwin-Felts detective agency
for the war that has torn the State
and stained its hills with blood.
Only the authority of the Federal gov
ernment can bring about a speedy set
tlement "with peaceful means", the
brief declares.
Miners officials will press tipoi the
committee their demand that Judge E,
H. Geary, chairman of the board of
directors of the United States Steel
Corporation, be summoned as a witness
before the committee, it was learned, j
They declare they have evidence to j
support their claim that the " steel cor- i
poration directly or indirectly, controls
the most important of the coal fields
of West Virginia and directed the in
dustrial policy "which brought about
civil war in the state."
One of the exhibits to be turned over
to the Senate committee during its stay
in the State will be a heavy bomb which
it is declared, was dropped by the
State police from an airplane . on the
town of Blair. The bomb is non-explosive,
but is heavy enough to kill with
its impact. It landed between the wives
of two miners, who were hanging out
their family washing, according to wit
nesses. The committee may be invited to visit
Stringtown, on the Kentucky side of
the Tug River, where, it is claimed,
the miners have established an armed
camp which has laid siege to Merrimac,
non-union stronghold? on the West Vir
ginia side for nearly a year. It was this
camp which, according to State officials,
began the firing responsibile for the
battle of Tug River, fought for three
days and three nights on a nine-mile
front.
TODAY
VALU
in
Medium
Price Class
is best
expressed
in
BRISCOE
OQpo'price,
?1085
Another New Queen
Anne
In
Walnut and Brown Mahogany
Just Opened Up
Typewriters of all makes sold, rent
ed, exchanged or repaired. Pound &
Moore Co. Phone 4542. ' 2?.rf
J.H.HAM
Distributer
306 N. Tryon St.
Phone 352
$400 down and ten
monthly notes of $80
will buy you a Bris
coe, F. O. B. Charlotte,
interest and insurance
included.
BWSCCS MOTOR CORPORATION
lacluoa, Micfe-
1 Tht rnoA complete) tquipped
corinAmerica inits price dass
This dainty suite is one of our new fall "leaders" the biggest
value we have yet been able to offer for $195.00. Suite has full Van
ity. Case, new French bow-end Bed and roomy Chiffonier.
Every woman is proud of a pretty. Vanity Suite, and the one
priced here is pretty enough to be placed in any home and the new
low price coupled with our convenient terms' brings it within
reach of the average purse. .
&
Co
Get It at McCoy's