THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1921. GED MAN HURT WHEN RUN INTO lie McWhirter Being Held for Driving car in intoxi cated Condition. rrlvin? an automobile at a rate ?u1 tr- have been terrific, Vic Mc-V':ii:-ttT. young white man, crashed ? roar end of a buggy, driven i.. .loncs, bo, or bouth Fesram W'. Saturday afternoon on Central , : . 1 . . IV'y) 'feet into a nearby yard and f 'jVhirter was arrested and lodged . ':, c -!1 at the police station charged i,;-, operating an auromoDiie while tinder the influence of whiskey. At a late hour Saturday night he had been unable to arrange bond. The accident occurred near the rsir ucr.ee of Dr. R. M. Gallant, who with Dr. Van Matthews, first rearhort injured man and carried him to his nome. tie was bruised about the arms, legs and shoulders but physicians were unable to ascertain if he had received internal injuries. Mr. Jones has twice suffered a stroke of paralysis and because of his age, it was feared that his injuries might prove fatal. Eye witnesses to the accident re ported to police that McWhirter was moving up the hill on Central avenue, going away from the ritv Wo said to have been swaying from one fciue or me street to the other. Mr. Jones was also drivlnsr from tho ritv when the big machine bumped into tue rear of tne buggy. He is said to have been as close to the curb as it was possible to be! "When the car struck the buggy Mr. Jones was hurled across the sidewalk into a lawn. The horse was turned completely over and the buggy torn into a hundred pieces, it was re ported. McWhirter escaped without the slight est injury: "Millions Now Living Will Never Die." Free Bi ble Lecture by W. J. Thorn, of Boston, Mass., in assem bly room, Selwyn Hotel, Friday night, Nov. 25, 7:30 o'clock. Seats Free. No collections. 20-6t BUSINESS WOMEN OF STATE TO MEET HERE The annual session of the North Carolina Business and Professional Women's Association will be held here next Friday, it is announced by mem bers of the Charlotte council of that organization. The organization comes to Charlotte on the invitation ex tended them by Miss Jean McMillan, president of the Charlotte council of business and professional women. There will be two sessions of the State body here, one in the forenoon and one in the afternoon. ' The; place of the meeting will he annuonced later. Women in business and pro fessional life from all parts of the State are to be here. The officers of the association are Mirs Elsie Riddick, of Raleigh, presi dent; . Miss Carrie McLean, of Char lotte, first vice-president; Miss Lillian Massey, of High Point, second vice president; Miss Amy Emanuel, of Ashe- ville, recording secretary; Miss Susan Iden, of Raleigh, - corresponding secre tary; Miss Julia Farmer, of Wilson, treasurer; Miss Mary Moses, of Chapel Hill auditor, and Miss Allene Hurley, of Salisbury, historian. WEATHER BULBS 50 POINTSLOWER Weather Forecaster Says Such Extreme Change is Now En Route. ROUGH RIDIN' "MULE." Sikeston, Mo., Nov. - 19. Rather mean hospitality, the strangers called it, when Deputy Sheriffs Tom Scott and Lee Morrow arrested them and took their "mule" after the two strangers had invited ,the officers to have a little "nip." It was a matter of "compensating the good Samaritans for the proffered ' ride in the official car that the "nip" was offered. They were "hot-footing" it away from here when the officers "asked them to ride." Careful householders, prepare to stoke the furnace and to cut off the water, for, by nightfall Sunday, the thermometer will have dropped 50 de grees from the highest mark registered Saturday. This timely ; warning is issued by G. S. Lindgren, meteorologist in charge of the local weather bureau. Mr. Lindgren said Saturday night that th balmy temperature of Saturday, .win give way to more Win try -like atmos phere as soon as the winds change and, according to indications Saturday night, the change .was liable to occur at nay moment. The mean temperature Saturday was GS degrees, which was 1.9 "degrees abov". normal for the day, Mriandgrentsaid: The man on the street was about ready to agree that the temperature was more than that degree for, thig satge of November. It was the ad vent of an early Spring: or the return' of summer, for him. ? The storm center was along the Mississippi . River, said the weather man, . nad moving eastward. Around the Great . Lakes Wintry weather was in evidence, snow being reported in Chi cago and .vicinity. According to. the calculations of the-local weather sage; churchgoers will be wending their way to houses of worship Sunday in over coats and heavy wraps. . Prejudice: Any "honest conviction held by the opposition. if. 0 N MRP'S pi Jul & v u 11 AY p 'Ai. 111 I " 1 ill Hi SB ' ill5 If n A 0 s a Lor n e a e a o e e reels Biggest Display of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Ever Displayed at One Time in Charlotte Our buyers have spent the past four weeks in New York buying Ladies' Ready-to-Wear for the opening of this department, and we have bought Suits, Coats and Dresses at half and less than half their original price early in the season. We have priced them accordingly for our opening sale. If you have a dress, coat or suit to buy it will pay you to attend this opening sale com mencing Monday morning at 9 o'clock, lasting all week. Departments Complete All departments in our store are complete. Woolen and Silk Depart ment, Clothing and Furnishings and Shoe Departments, Cotton Piece Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, etc., and as usual prices are lowest at EFIRD'S. Largest Department In The South Today In rebuilding we have arranged the largest Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Depart ment in the South, on second floor, j E D r lacfc -M The Old Stand Comer Trade