THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. 0.. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25, 1921. EFIRD'S REMAIN IN OLD QUARTER Temporary Store Will be r i xt a nnn upenea, xiowever, ai aw West Trade Street. Temporary quarters of the Efird Department store will be opened witn- in the next Hen days in the building at '209 West Trade street formerly occu pied by the John W. Post company. These quarters will be used while the Efird building, at Trade and College ' streets, recently damaged by fire, is being reconstructed. The company will ! re-establish its permanent home in its , former location after repairing"and ren ovations have been made. The Charlotte Mercantile Company, the Efird Brothers' wholesale estab lishment, will be located temporarily in the building until recently occupied by the H. J. Lamar Automobile com pany, on North College between Trade and Fifth streets. None of the salvage from the fire, which destroyed more than 75 per cent of the company's stock several days ago. will be offered for sale in the new location on West Trade street, Presi dent J. B. Efird announced Saturday. The insurance company will remove salvaged stock to the building at 218 1-2 South College "street for disposi tion. Since the first of the week before last officials of the Efird Department , Store and the Charlotte Mercantile .Company have been engaged in clearing away the mass of details .work result ing from the destruction of the store building and $300,000 worth of stock. Arrangements for establishing tem porary locations for the two concerns were completed Saturday and new ar.r. iiHll 1-in nla(ei1 in VirvtVl tllP retail department store at 209 West Trade street and in both the retail department store at 209 West Trade street and in the wholesale establishment on North College street. Both of these stores are expected to be open and ready for business within the next 10 days or two weeks, Mr. Efird said. Perhaps a month or six weeks will be required to reconstruct the build ing at Trade and College streets which was badly damaged by the blaze. Con tractors will go to work within the next few days and the job will be rush ed to completion. All goods which can be salvaged are being removed from this building to the storeroom at 218 1-2 South College street. Although "it was estimated that 75 per cent of the stock was destroyed by the fire a big supply of stock js being taken from the building for dis position by the insurance companies. A large portion of the damage to stock was caused by water. Some of the goods damaged in this manner can be dried out and rendered of possible use. Although the Efird brothers received a request from tie Wilmington Cham ber of Commerce to establish the mer cantile company and headquarters for the chain of department stores there, Charlotte will continue as the main of fice of both businesses. The company has large interests here, and the offi cials are making plans for establishing their permanent home at the sama place in which they build up the busi ness from a small and stuggling enter pri se to one of the largest mercantile companies in the South. WasTooBadToBeAny Worse So Misch "Joined" The Force Knight of the Broom at Police Headquarters Has His Past Writ Up for Public Consumption and, Private Preservation Has Run the Category of Crime. By BROCK BARKLEY. "Misch" Brown, being now in. the sixth year of his life as Knight of the Broom at Police headquarters and a bona . fide member in good standing of the upper or social strata of this town's population, is highly desirous of having "writ up" for public' consumption and private preservation a record of . that eventful portion of his career, covering a period of 37 years, in which he was one of the most dashing figures of the local underworld. "Miseh" in his day, has done every thing the law said he musn't do, from purloining a five-cent piece to the sale of the cold body of ai negro woman to a bunch of medical students for $12. He has served 20 years on the chaingang and he estimates the number of times he has been arrested at 300. And it all took place in Charlotte. "Misch" used to say, back in the old days, that the only reason for hiring Jim Johnson and Mack Earnhardt, Char lotte's veteran sleuths of 10 years ago, was to hunt .him. Every time ha saw a policeman he would run, urged on by a guilty conscience. Whenever business was dull about headquarters and officers had no arrests to their credit that day, they went in search of "Misch," satis fied that he was guilty of something. And he admits that he always was. HAS HAD ONE JOB "Misch" estimates that he ha handled in stolen goods about $10,000. He never held but one job in his life, outside a chaingang job, and that is the one he now possesses. He started to work six years ago for $3 a week. "Don't say how much I'm getting now, but it's a considerable increase," he advised Saturday afternoon, after ob taining acquiscence from the reporter to duly record his life after the delation of some of the things he had done which he ought not have done. The night preceding the day "Miseh" reported for work af the police sta tion he made a raid on the late Stone and Barringer Book Store and carried away two pocketsfull of fountain pens. These were in his overcoat pocket when he went to work next morning but en route to dinner that day he threw them into a sewer and, holding his right hand high in the air, swore: "Never again." And he's lived straight since; a re formed bad man; a bold bad man, "Misch" used to consider himself, be cause he never ran from anything but a cop. He's in entire agreement with this effort to record his history, not because he's proud of his career, but because he's proud of the past six years in view of that career. RECALLS SOME EVILS. It would be impossible to recollect all the unlawful things he has done, Brown explained, but several "stuck out" clear in his mind. He will never forget the day he "went wrong". He 31t If 4f life Be Happy with a VICTROLA Music , and dancing are the most natural ways of expressing happiness. With a Victrola you can play the music of the world's great artists, or dance to the best orchestras. A . Victrola brings joy into your home. We furnish the most attractive models at a moments notice. Let us explain mr easy terms, Andrews 'Music Store Inc. THE OLDEST MUSIC STORE IN THE CAROLINAS 211-213 N. Tryon St. phone 3626 was about six. His mother sent him to an uptown grocer to buy a nicked's worth of baking powder. His moth er never got that baking powder, but he got a licking. A week later he purloined a supply of meal from the back porch of a house now standing' at Trade and Graham streets. He sold the meal to a. grocer and spent the money in riotous living. He was caught and licked. He first became acquainted with the chaingang when he threw a rock through the big bass drum of the Char lotte Drum Corps wrhile a lively march was in order. The reck went through both sides of the drum and landed on the head of a musician standing nearby. "Misch" went to Captain Little's camp for ten days. "Ah nevah did hard labor on the roads but foah yeahs of de twenty," Brown boasted. "When ah first started going out ah was watah boy, and when ah got grown ' ah developed into a first class wagon driver and a town boy." SOLD DEAD BODY. Captain Little and the guards soon become well acquainted with "Misch" CLARKE RESIGNS OFFICEIN KLAN Also Asks That the Resig nation of Mrs. Tyler Be Accepted. Atlanta, Ga.. Sept. 24. Edward Young Clarke, imperial kleagle of the Ku Klux Klah, in a letter to Col. Wil liam J. Simmons, imperial wizard of the klan, tonight demanded that the wizard accept his resignation, together with that of Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler, head of the klan's women's auxiliary. These resignations were submitted to. Colonel Simmons, following publication of charges against Clarke and Mrs. Tyler. The charges were followed by demands from A. Donald Bate, kleagle of the state of New Jerstey, that Clarke and Mrs. Tyler be dismissed. ATLANTA BADLY STIRRED. Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 24. (United Press) Climaxing a week of agitation and rumors for and against the K. K. K. which has literally rocked Atlanta and divided its citizens into two - camps, rumors that a "serious break" has oc curred in the "inneir circles' of the klan were circulated here tonight. William J. Simmons, imperial wizard of the organization, could not be lo cated. Members of his family state he is out of the city on klan business. Efforts to locate E. Y. Clarke, im perial kleagle, who, with Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler, head of the woman's department and propagation bureau, has become the storm center, were unavailing. He was reported out of the city, but his whereabouts remained a secret. Intimations at the klan headquar ters were that Simmons had practically This Wa ViavA hsen tnlltlnsr terms about the caloric value of food and the necessity of knowing these values in order to avoid eating too much or too little. I have orten saiu TIH5 VALUE, OF FOOD , - milk in geneia tuecop " "" ,,vhPMmes a is wnere reauunis. ,, inves burden to the stout woman who love, cakes and pastry, rich puddings and ina.ii .i.j such delicacies more that the whole matter is as simple as else. - . .riven' the eyes elementary arithmetic The only thing L Edith-If you have give jney to remember is that some people are tempermentally so constructed that one will stay thin by nesvous exnausuon too mucn - '7 " refresh constant reaums ' rrvila is them by using hot compresse s Tl his hv snturatine a cloth with noi after his ten-day visit. He remained J completed his investigation of publish in town only a fejy days until he went back. Brown's job regularly, after he became a veteran, was to haul per sons who had died in camp or at the county home to town and bury them. He brought the dead body of a woman hert once and, being in need of money, sold it to medical students at the old Charlotte Medical College for $12. He put the pine coffin in for good measure. The policemen about the station who were on the job in Brown's day will tell you that he was the slickest thief in the game. He was' wiser than most of the bad men, and he was harder to catch. That's the reason he got away with a lot of things that' he did- ! "If I'd got caught every time I stole anything, I never woulder got off de chaingang," he explained. Once Brown was caught with 12 bolts of silk valued at $600. In court, he swore and got by with it, that he won the silks in a gambling game with unknown parties in High Point. He had sold them here, to another negro and tti? cops had arrested that negro. When Brown came clear, the court returned the silks to him, and he sold them over again. He con fessed many years later that they came from a local department store during stock-taking season and he had pulled the marks off, making identifi cation impossible. TOOK 32 HATS. He walked into Ed Mellon's in broad daylight once and walked out with 32 panama hats while clerks were busily engaged waiting on customers. He sold hats all over town. . In fact, it looked as if half the negro population were wearing panama hats. But It took months to trace the theft down to "Misch." On another occasion, he broke into the old Chambers- Moody Company and stole over $700 in cash and checks. A rat terrier dog was kept in the store to warn a sleeper upstairs should burglars break in. Brown wrung the dog's neck, made his haul and was a free man for 18 months. Detective Jim Johnson had a dull day and picked Brown up on suspicion. He had failed to take an l$-months-old check from his poqket and Detecitye Johnson thereby solced the mystery ofr the Chambers-Moody robbery. "Misch" re visited Captain Little's camp for a stay of two j'ears. Brown worked as a youth for the family of the late W. W. Ward- This family practically raised him, he said. In his eagerness to see a circus unload one day when he was about 10 years old. his head came into collission with a freight engine. The railroad was sued and Brown got $3,000. GOT $3,000 DAMAGES. This money with interest was turned over to him when he reached 21. It took him three years to spend it, and he remembered that his last nlckle went for a lunch In an East Trade street restaurant. But he lived high those three years, visiting all the big cities, drinking good liquor and riding within, rather than underneath, railway "Misch" was so -successful in nia chosen profession that he never found i tnecessary to obtain a job, which is aaying a good deal for bad men around this town. He Money In this Bank is in active use earning interest for you and making the Nation prosperous. It is at . your command whenever you want it and absolutely protected from burglary, theft or fire. Hoarding money keeping it in a stocking or safe exposes it to the danger of loss besides it is earning nothing for you and ing no good for the community. - v - Every dollar deposited in the COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK is insured against loss, may be withdrawn whenever wanted, and helps to build up this city and the nation. 4 per cent paid on Savings accounts and Certificates of Deposit. Commercial National Bank Corner Tryon and Fourth Sts. Capital, Surplus, etc., Over a Million Dollars. ed charges that Mrs. Tyler and Clarke were arrested here in 1919 on a disor derly charge. Developments in the investigation of the klan continued with kaleidoscopic charges tolday. United States District Attorney Hoop er Alexander ruled that the article written by Carl F. Hutcheson, local attorney and member of the city board of education In todav's issue of the Searchlight, alleged organ of the klan, was not violative of any federal law. W. F. Brandt, local attorney asked for a ruling on the article), He de clared it was treasonable, in that it "would Incite war against Catholics." ENGLAND IS HIT BY MOTOR FEVER American Flivvers Becom ing Kingpin of the Roads; Other Cheap Cars . By EARLE C. REEVES. International ' ews Service Staff Correspondent. London, Sept. 24. Despite the high price of motor cars and the compara tively higher price of "petrol'' England is motoring. Henry Ford has something to do with it. Sundry long headed manufacturers who have tried to compete with Ford have evolved little two-cylinder, air cooled engines, around which they have built what looks more or less like an automobile. The slump in trade, hard times knocked the bottom from, the automo bile business. The showrooms of large cars are not crowded and have not been all Summer. Cars of standard five passenger size or bigger are not for ordinary individ uals in this country. The cheapest sell for prices seldom under $2,500. The cheapest two Beaters of what might be termed standard size and construction cost $2,000. The motorcycle and side car ranges from $480 1o $900. Motoring isn't ,for the skilled mechanic in thls country as it is in the States. Mr. Ford's well known and much joshed prdduct sells for $900 stripped - i i i i n while a more placid tempered inaivia- aone Dy Hannahs "7 the eve lids uni imrui iroin troicrht nn the identical water anu iaji6 " Some people prefer to. use xm, of this treatment and get thme ef feet from ice water, but whichever Kmperature is the most efreshipg r will h the one vou should decide , upon, nothe help will be to have your reading light fall over .the left shoul der and do not sleep in any position where the light from a window will fall directly on the eyes c.on.?u doctor about the strength of the-' solu tion, which will be used as a douche for the eyes. Lena If a gentleman asks you for a dance after your card has been filled n ir,Mi or verv sorry, due uul, linn - 1 -,1 V Wu perhaps another time you1 will be able to have a dance with him. All inquiries addressed to Miss Forbes in care of the "Beauty Chats" depart ment will be answered in these columns in their turn. This .requires consid erable time, however, owing to the great number received. So if a per sonal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope The Editor. ual will gain weight on the identical amount of food. If, after you have found out that you should eat about 2000 calories of food & day, and if after testing this you still find you gain you must reduce the amount below 2.000. You cannot pos sibly starve while your body has fat to consume. You cannot injure your digestion or health as long as you eat sanely, unless you deliberately starve yourself. Today I will mention a few of the most fattening foods, things which the stout woman should avoid eating. Yet I must warn her that it will do her little good to refuse potatoes if she more than makes up for this sacrifice by taking a second helping of dessefrt. Foods for the fat woman to avoid include practically all meats except lean rare beef. She may have fowl and all fish except salmon. She may eat most vegetables but 'not white or sweet potatoes nor baked beans. She may not eat any candy nor sweats at all. nor butter, sugar, milk, cream nor cheese, except the cottage HEAR BURGLARS , AT. DUKE fioi MORRISON DENOUNCES MOVE BYMINEOWNERS Washington, Sept. 24. Efforts of mine owners to secure a court in junction against further attempts by unions to organize the Mingo counyt coal fields, were assailed tonight by Secretary Frank Morrison, of the American Federation of Labor. Charging that the mine owners are now turning to an injunction judge to aid them in their peonage purposes, Morrison declared an injunction would accomplish nothing toward restoring pace in the mine war district. "The West Virginia situation," Mor rison said, "cannot be cleared up by an injunction any more"than it can be by gunmen andthuggers. The only remedy is the widest publicity." BRYAN SETS STYLE IN BETWEEN SEASON HAT 205 pounds sterling. For there's an epidemic of them on the roads- With dad astride the saddle ;he boy in a seat behind and mother and daughter comfortably packed into a fairly roomy side car. many a holiday trip has been taken this Summer. ENGLAND MOTOR MAD Father prefers the motor cycle and side car combination because with it he gets about sixty miles to his 65 cent gallon of gas. It isn't the cost, it's the upkeep, that causes many a family which in the States would own a good car to stick to the "squab basket." Tfae fnakers of cheap cars have im proved on their models in the last year. At home the cheap car means Henr5 naturally. But the Ford is a lord of the road compared' with British cheap cars. Here the phrase may mean four by Here the phrase may mean four bi cycle wheels, set narrow guage cov ered by a tub like body, under which chugs a very cheap motorcycle engine price $400. It seats one person or a rare exception, two, one behind the Washington, Sept. 24. William Jen nings Bryan, here to call on President Harding, has a hat that 'joins Summer into Autumn. It "has a felt brim and a straw crown. "A sort of an equinoxial hat," Bryan remarked. SMALL BOAT CUT IN TWO BY CARONIA New York. Sejt. 24. Three men Were believed to have been drowned this af ternoon when the small auxiliary cruis er, John Hancock, was rammed and sank by the Cunard liner Caronia, out bound, near Staten Island. The "schooner, struck amidships, broke in three pieces, and sang immediately. PREMIER BRIAND TO ATTEND CONFERENCE "Paris. Rpnt 9A. PfPmior Pn'on ir,r But a lot of people are finding then Ambassador Jusserand will attend the wasnington disarmament conference, it was learned tonight. Briajid will stay enly a short time, however, returning as soon as possible to France to avoid compromising domestic affairs. MAN BRUISED WHEN HIT BY AUTOMOBILE Charles Darnell, a young white nian, sustained severe bruises about the head and body when knocked down by an automobile driven by R. P. Steffy near the 1.000 block on South Mint street shortly before 12 o'clock laat night. At St. Peter's hospital it was not thought his injuries are serious. He was conscious. Information obtained by a police in vestigation indicated that Mr. Darnell had started across the street to, catch an approaching street ear. Upon pee ing the approaching automobile he turned back towards the curbing. Mr. Steffy had directed his machine to wards the curb to dodge the man and the change of direction placed him in front of the car. Tlje police considered the accident unavoidable as Mr. Steffy was drivin?! at a moderate, rate of speed. The au tomobile was going south on Mint while the street car was approaching froi the opposite direction. NEW AND GRAVE (Continued from Fa ere One.) Police Answer Two Call from Watchman Report ing Attempt to Rob Kousc " Two reports of attempts u, ize the new home of James i; if' in Myers Park were made to ih,'. J" last night "by the night wat-:nnyr 5 the property. Officers respond.' searched the house twice, ;u,fi , arrested two white men. H. -;. s and B. Swearingen, who v..,e fQ i loitering near the grounds. The night watchman tekph nn(j ' lice headquarters about 10 ociork ,;' the house had been entererl. qV accompanied Deputy Sheriff . p'w perman to the home and sarchti . premises. Shortly after tkjr ret ' ' to the city neighbors telephony tv ' two shots had been fired from the Dr house. Another trip was made i, rPS to this call. It devolopw that f watchman had fired twioe a? tv0 v ures observed running fr(,m fl grounds. oiarnes aim fcwearWf were found near the ground, both !.! rtr the influence of whiskey. th lice reported. They were confined? the city jau awoiuus j.muit-r invest', tion. - . . ' . Mr. Duke, although in the cltv not residing m "ume as consM contractors. j. vkhuiuhui uas oeen. tinncri there at nignt to nrntan .'I nishings in the house and keep ioid irom '.ne Biuuuua. , The property is outside the city its ana me luutti pun5 uuve not i n4t.. in ansnror n call nri.i... X in accompanied by a county nfv mi Depujy snerin reopeimau wasathei1 quarters at wie nue auu ne went the omcers. GOVERNOR WILL (Continued From Ykzo On,,, mounted behind their machines, had poured several volleys into the gun men. ! An interview wkh Arthur Griffiths, Sinn Fein minister, clearly outlined the? Irish viewpoint on the conference prob lem. Griffiths declared Ireland insists upon its right to independence but that it does not desire that England recog nize it as a republic before the peace parley. Secretary Churchill's speeh at Dublin relieved rumors of a dual monarchy in the United Kingdom with a king for Ireland. It had alread been proposed that one of King George's .. sons be placed upon the Irish throne. HARMNGS STAY AT HOME. Washington, SejpU ,24. President Harding is spending the week-end in "Washington for the first time in several weeks. At the White House, it was said he plans to stick to the job here until October 19, when he speaks at William and Mary College, Williams burg, Va. ' RIOTING IS SUPPRESSED. Belfast, Sept. 25. Crown forces gained control of the situation shortly before midnight after fierce rioting be tween Catholic and Protestant mogs had lasted throughout the day. Machine gun volleys, poured down the streets in the battle area, sent both factions scurrying for cover and defi nitely quelled the fighting; although here and there a sniper continued to fire occasionally until after midnight. Early todav everything was quiet. The death rqll in Saturday's fighting was two, with four wounded. speaking, and although very t to physical condition, spoke -with old time power and fire. It was p of the most powerful appeals made it this famous case. It did not carry & invective and denunciatory eloqwntt of Judge Frank Carter on the first da of the heading, but 3 a plea for tt 4ife of the prisoner on the groat; that every act in connection with &. murder lacked evidence of deferi tion and premediation it was a pn erful appeal back up with soirj reasoning and logic. The former Governor called attemh the fact that this murder was crrj mitted in the open, and that no eftc- was made to conceal1 it. That, in itselif was evidence of the lack of premeditatif and deliberation. The prosecution self, Governor Craig pointed out, ' driven to jhis conclusion, and km that it could not account for sjr an act by a sane man unless it co supply the motive for the killing i supplied this motive through the Re Livingston Mays, who claimed to hav heard Monriish with his dying bm . whisper the word "Moonshiners," ther by connecting Harris with the tip Monnish was supposed to have be' making against the Illicit whiskey mai era in the RIdgecrest section of & mountains. It was Mays who suppl, the evidence of deliberation and pp meditation, when he stooped over tr prisoner in the back seat of the trail -which was carrying him to Asheville i surrender to the authorities, and claia that Harris told him that he did rt take a drink of whiskey before t murder because he wanted to he ' his right mind" for an act of t't kind: ' -;" ; r - There Is no dispute said Goerr Craig,, about the, testimpny of anyri hess save Mays and it was Mays a supplied the testimony of premefo tion and deliberation. ' Governor Craig thought that I'l, evidence was as unreliable and 5 unworthy as the life'behind it, Ha' T life should be spared. He closed k an effective description of the heei , of Harris and declared that the cr of the blood was in Harris, that he r suffering from some sins of his fi'M BECK ACCEPTS PLACE. Washington, Sept. 24. James M. Beck, solicitor general of the United States, today accepted a place on ,t?ie national executive committee of the Belleau Woods Memorial. Association. AVIATOR FALLS IN LEAP FROM PLAM i Oklahoma City, Okla., Sept- 24. Li ' tenant Arthur Emerson, head of i "flying circus," was dead tonight cause he missed a rope ladder vfc leaping from one airplane to another r mid-air. He fell from a height of . feet and was instantly killed. . ,z ; "lomer. ur it may oe a xnree-wneeier, fu!ir ln anY h.ne -other tn two seats and dinkey seat behind. Pri- the one he chose early in life, The cops kept getting "Misch rrequently that they considered that day on which they failed to arrest him a "perfect day." Every effort .was made to get him on the chaingang for life, satisfied that this plan alone would solve half the town's big rob beries and relieve the law of much burden and expense. WAS MADE JANITOR. Former Police Chief Horace Moore reformed "Misch." The last time he came into court, the ex-chief called him aside, told him that he was so darned crooked that he could not get worse; consequently, he considered it possible that he might grow better. He offered him a job as police janitor, a position which would keep him con stantly, under the eyes of the police and make a long haul unnecessary 15 i eJenl il should again fall to lock up mcers to brlnS him to the 30t- "lr on the force believed that Misch" would reform. He ad mits himself that the morning he re ported for work he carried in two pockets a load of fountain pens. He fought the battle of his life that first morning on the job, endeavoring to decide whether to give up the fasci nating, profitable profession of bur glarizing and sneak-thieving and settio down and live the cut-ad-dried life of a law-abiding citizen, or vice versa. , When he went home to dinner he emptied his final collection of booty in a sewer and has followed the straight and narrow, path since. He has proved of Inestimable value to thl policemen. He knows every negro crook SmSS? KnTS WuMch croc r dW aCp0ark ticular job by the manner in which the job was performed and knows the hang-out of many of the crooks. DEATHS FUNERALS CHARLES LEE KINNEY. Charles Lee Kinney, jr., five-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kinney, of 1907 Park Drive, died last midnight after an illness of about 10 days with diphtheria. Funeral services had not been complet ed early this morning but services prob ably .will be conducted at the residence Monday. The parents and two brothers and sisters survive- J ces vary, but are usually around $1,000 so: mere are cnmumtive cars witn ooaies built on racing lines, with a long and impressive hood which houses merely the passenger's feet, the motive power coming from a motorcycle engine at the rear. Others, some having excellent body work, glistening bonnets and looking altogether like arlstrocrats are pro pelled by a good two-cylinder motor cycle engine which occupies a small portion of the space ostensibly reserved for engine power. These Will set you back about $1,400. Like the American flivver, however, these near-cars all go. And English roads are built for light cars, being for the most part better than we can display at home. The roads are full of them. They solve the problem of com paratively cheap initial outlay and cheap operation. TRINITY PARK WILL GET GOOD COACHING Durham, Sept. 24. Members of Trinity Park School teams will thi3 year receive training equal to that giv en freshmen in institutions where the one-year rule is in effect. This is as sured by the institution of a coaching staff under the general supervision of the Trinity College coaching staff. This new system is expected to turn out some expert players for the varsities of Trinity. Located in the same campus and closely associated with Trinitv College,, some of the star Methodist players of the past have come from the Park School. The new system is instituted with Watts Norton and E. K. Powe, former University of Virginia players, as foot ball coaches. Norton is in charge ct the backfleld while Powe is whipping the line in form. , S. T. Carson, captain of last year's Trinity baseball varsity, has ,been se cured to coach this sport in the Spring. Carson is ,now playing with Tarboro in the Virginia League. In a few weeks, an experienced man will be secured to coach the basket ball team. MEXICAN OIL DECISION. Mexico City, Sept. 24. The Supreme Court hag definitely ruled thar" article 27 of the Constitution,, against which American, oil interests strongly protest ed, is lion-restrictive. The text of the court decision wa smade public today. ANOTHER BIG BEDROOM NITURE VALUE FUR iY ' " : ! ' $1 75.00 This Pretty Four Piece Ivory Suite Is Only . ' . ' . . . Suite has large dresser with pattern mirror, roomy chifforet, bow-foot bed and triplemirror dressing table. This would be just the suite for the guest 'room or the young lady s room. And can be had for $25.00 cash and $25.00 per month. W. T. McCO Y & COMRA N Y Get It at McCoy's.