nr i NEWS n r 6 NIGHT EDITION e JLJL J AND EVENING CHRONICLE TODAY "GREATER CHARLOTTE'S HOME NEWSPAPER" niUU.nUK KWS F.jtnltliKlaorl. Daily. 1SSS; Snnday, 1910. i;U;M(i CIIKOMCXE Established, 1JMW, CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 29, 1921. THE CHARLOTTE NEWS ( Consolidated IpTJTPT? T?TYri? PTTXTTC THE EVEXLXC CHRONICLE (May 8, 1914. ( IVlrj riVL JCiil 1 0 PAGES Vi r. , fflffijlMS lav mmiw cpa no if lull VIC QlRm-. uthorn Motion Picture rvtsition Will be Opened j Tuesday Night. miominent" visitors. j7 ov. Notable Figure in j Industry, Will Attend ! Paring the Week. . :ccomo, overnight, the - ,.f n'i a We figures of the motion industry, Charlotte awaited iht' day Tuesday with eag .1 ,i;t;on for the approach of the ,.; which would mark the for :i;:i!i of the Southern Motion .-' imposition, the first event of . , h,-iii in the Carolina.?, ; ., i .-.' promoted on a scale :,.'.! eat brilliant promise of a : ; ;'ur days. , i , nii. day was designated M.'ippum 1 'ay in compliment to ;',.po Hampton, one of t hs First . -.ai'star. who arrived here Moa wis accnueu many attentions ,!..; a nd Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. - ii'ai'.-neid prominently known in .:,. h u p:et ure industry, aecom- j ; I:.- Louis. Jr.. who has won K :. a banc an ! orchestra director ! lr.s tender years and small sta- , 'lis weigh: being only 43 1-2 , and his sister. Miss Clarice : :it kl. a t'alous dancer, also were j. .-..'.s of Monday afternoon, j ;,. -hard Barthtlmess. a popular star, i. Wi'.'iains. general manager, and h , ; !;(!. secretary, all of the First Sl , tm' organization, arrived in Char ! Tu-.-sd.iy morning. Miss Shirley f. , a. -;ar of Fox pictures. Mrs. Mary , f iinuus portrayer of "mother" iwv playing und-. r the Hodkin i .- ; i (;.:! . and a number of other fa- oers(. n;ig s in filmdom were ex ! .1 during Tuesday and Wednes-.i:-y taonring. IZI KOIJ IS EXPECTED. one of the greatest - in the industry and president of ..i.io -.-s 1 'layers-Lasky Corpora ,va expected to arrive from New a'.c Tuesday or early Wednesday. XV-: tied that he would be ac- ; ",.y several executives of his .I : , ..! hundred theater owners of a.-oiiiu-s. members of the Caro a.i.V: n of the Motion Picture ; Owners' Association of Arner .".i signified their intention of :!:.' 'In exposition, which was .; .u tmi" auspices of the asso President Percy Wells, of :iu on. a me to Charlotte Mor. ;:i .?'abiishr-d association heacl-i- at the Selwyn hotel, which nwtnining the other distin-g-.-'-ts of the exposition. The ;': n v.-id hold the sessions of its winier meeting here dur i, prrgress of the exposition. pv.ph-r of matters of peculiar i-n' to the t! eater owners were : t rojrrams for discussion and action, no announcement doming during the morning .-;(" if; e information relative to i if ( i5 to be considered. 1' i S. 1 I I K. HI AM) TO PRESIDE. n.arles A. Bland, former Char- will formally declare the - :. opened and make all speech f introduction when the prominent '"r ure presented to the exosition : ::! Secretary Herbert C. Wales d Tuesday morning from his - tabMshed headquarters at the hat the doors of the exposi ' i -I; will be held in the City i :!. ihji. will be opened at 7 o'clock ''! program will begin promptly s 'i'ifk. Thi- ensuing hour will h f, 8. . '. t n to introductions, short talks Ix.r of visiting film stars and th.' features of the evening :! beginning of production of ' siuon's feature photoplay, the scenes of which will be i the Auditorium stage in full the exposition visitors. Miss . Mr. Barthelmess and other ilay--rs before the camera, as h- young Carolina beauties, in ilif popularity contests re-tiduct'-d by theaters through two States, will appear in s made Tuesday night. I V.'INNERS COMING. o' ' ' v.-iiiors of the contests at thi ; "'"''''' ;: : the Imperial in Charlotte ' etivly Miss Ursular Heiclt -L.-s Odi-ssu Hunter. Winners in ' ' were arriving Tuesday '' '''-'i on almost every train and the ' ' raiiuber, about 30, were expected ! - i' Charlotte before the opening ' '' --iiss Mnrnpton has volunteered, ' :r!ii(,i.meeil, to asist these young 1 1 1 i!i thi-ir "make up" and in other- f' sCTiinf them briefly in the most " t; ' "ay it portraying the parts -'.M them. Freeman II. Owens, , 1 . o . n ihrector and motion picture "' i , will have charge of the :,''.i-J ;u.,n ativities. -, ening during the four days of ' '' ' - h additional scenes of this ir" 1 be made on the Auditorium da ny other scenes will be made !r;;"!!"! interest in nad near this - scenario for this nicture was ; : Uailey T. Greerne, a Char--pai). -r iuan, in collaboration 'tor Owens. thiee sides of the Auditorium ii i : ; v b 0U(J ' "ii arranged double rows of ex ''joths, in which producers and :,i of motion pictures and deal ! i - aue wiuipraent have arranged y of unique interest to the pub " Y'eil as those whose interest is 'f'l'y in the producing, distributing a. jJtiiitr iihasf s ttf the. indnstrv. : 5 1 1 ., "AM EACH EVENING. i f i'hjf it v. ning at the conclusion of ihe 11 Programs, dancing will begin, 'r- visiting stars participating, nsyivania Serenaders, one of 1 hia's far. ous orchestras, v;hich 11 augmented for this occasion, 1 ' '!' ! this musical programs. Ex ''' opening day, afternoonj and g programs will be rendered, it '"flounced. A grand ball, which xl"jsition executives declare will ' ' i' 'lie rr-ost briliant affairs of i "r held in Charlotte, is one "it standing features of Friday Amerir - Expelled FronWlexico City l-xif .x.. Nov. 29 WUliani F. I?uc resident of Hie American As n of Mexico, crossed 1 lie In. today, Graving been expelled fron .lexico Cil.v. CRAIG DEMANDS NEW PROPOSALS Must Be Made by Tuesday or Irish Negotiations Will Come to An End. Belfast. Nov. 29. By the Asso-c-uied Press) "By Tsiday. next, these negotiations will have broken down or the Prime Minister will send me new pr posais for consid eration by the Cabinet," said the t statement made by Str James Craig to the l ister Parliament today with regard to the Irish peace negotia tions. "Meantime," the l ister premier's statement added, "the rights of Ul ster will lie in no way sacrificed or compromised." Kelfast. Nov. 29. By the Associated Press.) !ir James Craig, the Ulster Premier, speaking before the Northern Parliament here today, said he had told Prime Minister ldoyd-George that the British Government's proposals to Uls ter for the settlement of the Irish ques tion were utterly impossible. He said Ulster would not enter an all-Ireland parliament under the present conditions but was prepared to discuss other avt nues lor settlement. The Premier said the accounts of the Government's! plan for an all-Ireland Parliament that had appeared in the press were "fairly accurate." Sir James made these statements in speaking to a motion for adjournment. Replying to a ciue.-tion, he dd the Xorthern Ireland Cabinet had given -iructions for the immediate enrolment of 700 whole-time "specials." and live thousand part-time "specials" to com plete the establishment of these forces. I.onduii. Nov. 29. (By the Associated Press) Admission of the possibilitv that Ulster and the south of Ireland may some day unite "of their own free wills" in the government of all Ireland is ascribed to Sir James Craig, CTs.vr Premier, in an interview published lo clay by The Daily Mirror. "I do not say that Ulster will r ever accept an all-Ireland council, though the Sinn Fein says it will never aceppt any other scheme." Sir James is quot ed as saying. "What we say is, let. 1he Sinn Fein first prove its ability to gov ern itself along constitutional lines. Iet it win Ulster's confidence Dy practical proof of its fairness towards P.e soutn ern unionists. Then, in the course of time, the two Irish governments might coalesce of their own free wiiis." "I cannot sav whether this would b good or bad; of that I am not ( i.nviuced. it might be very bad, for. while Ulster -emains a part of the United Kindlon, England can always land troops :n Ire ond by way of Ulster, if Great Brita'n's -afety is jeopardized by anv cause af fecting Irish harbors or coast?." "If Ulster conceded all th-? Sinn Fein's .Vina nds." he continued, "the whole world would throw its hats 'nto the air in a frenzy of joy and relief. There would be world-wide thanksgiving ser vices in the churches and wonderful scenes of happiness. But Knglaud would then banish Ireland from its mind, and turn its thoughts .to its ovn problems, and, if the Sinn Fein began to oppress Ulster under the all-Ireland council. England would then answer Ulster's complaints by saying 'You ac cepted the council: you must, manage your own affairs now'. Indeed, Eng land would have no right to interfere." Sir James was quoted as outlining imaginary eases of oppression, such as the enforcement of Catholic teaching through legislation. "Remember reli gion is behind this historical quarrel, although little is said in that regard," he was quoted, "and that is the sort of thing that would be likely to happen. Another supposition was that th? Sinn Fein, with its lack of experience ir. industrial affairs, might easily wreck Ulster's important industries by ill considered legislation. Sir James contended that the guaran tees promised Ulster by Premier Lloyd George would not protect her against such liabilities. MISS CLARKE SUBJECT TO FITS MELANCHOLY Orlando, Fla., Nov. 29. G. L. Smith, who has been assistant postmaster at West Palm Beach for the last four years, was the rirst witness put on the stand by the defense in the Lena Clarke trial here today. Mr. Smith testified to the erratic conduct of the firfpnriant. who. he said, after the deaht of her brother Paul, was subject to fits of melancholy, we wouia otten hnve to call her several times before he could get a response, though Mis3 Clarke was nearby. Another of her peculiarities, he said, was her fascination for the blending of colors. She would often put a fifty-cent stamp on a letter, he said, to make the color or the stamp blend with the envelope. DECISION IS UP TO SECRETARY MELLON Washington. Nov. 29. While his own judgment is that the agent is blameless under the circumstances, Prohibition Commissioner Haynes has decided to refer to Secretary Mellon for final decision the charges made by Mayor Stewart, of Savannah, (la., that Special Prohibition Agent E. B. Hen son raided a home without a warrant. The Savannah mayor complained to President Harding and the Georgia Senators that Henson ha I entered the home of Miss Bessie Gaiden "without justification and apparently without a warrant." An inuiry by Commissioner Haynes was said to have developed that Henson had a warrant for the raiding of another dwelling and enter ed that of Miss Garden by mistake. FAIR 4 an1 -trifririiitv; Fn.ii innioht, VUti mw v ' w and Wednesday; little change in tem perature. Gentle west and northwest winds. North and South Carolina: Fair to night and Wednesday; no change in temperature. fr u General Improvement is Shown in Industrial and Employment Situation. DEMOCRAT"" ELECTED. Mark Squires Succeeds J. E. j Kanipe in the Senate; Shipman Worried. . BY jn,E B. WARREN. ; Staff Correspondent of The Aews. Raleigh, Nov. 29. That there is a general improvement in the industrial and employment situation in North Carolina is the opinion of the "Indus trial Employment Survey Bulletin" published by the Federal employment service which has been making a study bf conditions in all parts of the coun try. The "Bulletin" draws its conclu sions 'l'oni reports received from 1S6 cotton mills, 40 lumber plants, IS fer tilizer manufacturing concerns and a number of other industries. Tile publication runs about a month behind and it is reasonable to presume that conditions are somewhat better now than they were when the copy was prepared. The following- notes about the different towns show that there . s a large housing shortage in nearly all of th.' larger towns with the exception of Winston-Salem. Charlotte reports a very marked increase in biuldin activity during the past few months with better prospects for meet ing the housing shortage. A number of the cities report that the letting of road contracts has prac tically absorbed all of the common and unskilled labor in their sections, while building operations are giving employ ment to a large number of carpenters and other skilled wood workers. The additional lettings of contracts since the reports were sent in will help con ditions in other sections of the State. The report of the six free employ ment bureaus for the week also shows some improvement over previous weeks. The bureaus found jobs for 326 of the 365 who were referred, which was about 95 per cent. Regis trot ions of those seeking jobs during the week was 40 per cent more than this number, however, there being 513 applications or registrations with the different bureaus. The number of wo men seeking work this past week was larger than usual, 112 registering with the six bureaus. There were requests for help for only 301 people. Wilmington continues to lead in the number of placements made. This of fice found jobs for 28 people during the week; Raleigh with 82 was -second Winston-Salem third with 49 Asheviile had 35; Greensboro 34, and Charlotte found jobs for 28 people during the weke. Of the total 63 were women and 263 jobs were found for men. A DEMOCRAT ELECTED Reports have reached Raleigh to the effect that Mark Squires, of Lenoir, who was defeated for the State Senate by J. E. Kanipe a Republican in the general election, has defeated his Re publican opponent for the honor of sit ting in the special session. The district is nomally Republican and its election returns ran true to form in the gen eral election when Mr. Kanipe was sent to the Senate, although Mr. Squires made a very good run. Since the last session of the Legisla ture Senator Kanipe has been appointed to a Federal position with the marshal of Western North Carolina, and conse quently resigned his seat in the Senate. When the special elections were called Mr. Squires announced that he would be a candidate for the short session, and while there was Republican oppo sition, bested his opponents. He got an unusually good vote, while the Repub licans failed to poll their normal strength. JIITCH SHIPMAN WORRIED One of the difficulties and perplexities of woman's entry into .the political arena is now confronting Commissioner of Labor and Printing Mitchell L. Ship man, who is trying to correct the copy for the roll calls for the House and Sen ate for the special session. Despite the fact that some of the members of both houses have resigned and the names of the new Representatives and Sena tors have not been officially sent to Raleigh, Mr. Shipman got along with out the slightest hitch until he came to the name of the Representative from Buncombe county. It so happens that Buncombe, show ing its belief in suffrage, sent a woman to the Legislature in 1921. On the old roll call for the regular session she was listed: as "Clement", for it was Miss Mary Exum, a woman lawyer of Asheviile who came down here with Representative Young to represent Bun combe. But since the last general session Miss Clement has married. And therein comes the hitch. Mr. Shipman is wrest ling with the problem of whether or not he should put the Buncombe county Representative down as Mrs. E. E. Stafford, or Mrs. Mary Clement Staf ford or Mrs. Mary Exum Clement Staf ford, which he thinks decidedly too long for the roll call. Legally Buncombe's (Continued on Page Thirteen.) BOY MILLIONAIRE LEAVES SHOW GIRL fev 15 1 "AH Vr 1 - - PL V. J7 JJ&f 5 t i ts. V 1 V.-. vX .......... Am 1 Mm :.. v. -.v.v ...t-. Jessie Reid CaswelL Dan Caswell, boy millionaire of Cleveland, O., whose elopement a year ago with Jessie Reed, beauti ful Follies show girl, caused a sen sation, breakfasted with his wife at a Boston hotel after havinpr at tended a Hallowe'en party with her the night before. Th"i3 on the eve of his institution of divorce proceedings against her. j GUY'S PATERNITY AGAIN IS ARGUED Stiliman Divorce Roarings Resumed Today Before Referee Gleason. - - i ' PoTighlteepsie, N T., Nov. 29. As a defense of the paternity of Baby Guy Stiliman, the register of the St. Regis Hotel in New, York was introduced to day in the divorce suit of James A. Stiliman against Mrs. Anne U. Still man to show that Mr. and Mrs. Stil, man had a suite of rooms there tor two weeks beginning February 15, 1913, nine months before the birth of Guy. On February 16. it was said, the register disclosed that Fred Beauvais. part Indian guide, who Mr. Stiliman alleges is Guy's father, was assigned to a room at the St.. Regis, and a nota tion was made to charge it to Mr. Stillman's account. Mr. and Mrs. Stiliman. Beauvais. two of the Stiliman children and a nurse remained at the hotel two weeks, it was understood tr have been testified by Charles Nascond and Theodore Roth, employes of t'?c St. Regis Just before the hearing began. Mrc Stiliman arrived bv train and wa'kd to the chambers of Referee ""Xaniel .1. Oleason. Mr. Stiliman, as usual, was not in attendance Beauvais" rocrn was on the fourth floor and the Stiliman suite on the sixth floor, Nascond was said to have testified. He. told of seeing Mr. Still man enter the apartment where his wife was a guest, more than once, it was reported. Roth, a head waiter, testified that Mrs. Stiliman often dined with her mother, Mrs. James Brown Potter, but he had never been her with her husband,- although he had noticed both of them at the hotel. When these two witnesses had been ( ross-examined, an adjournment was taken until Tuesday. WEEK SET ASIDE FOR RAILROADS HEARING Washington. Nov. 29. The railroads will be given from December 14 a il tc justify in hearings the present level of transportation charges, the Inter state Commerce Commission announced today in making public a question naire to the carriers. It is intended to guide all persons interested m appearing in the general investigation the commission is to make. The roads are asked whether present rates are reasonable in the aggregat3 i: the country as a whole, or reason able in the territorial rate groups, and if not, to what extent they need modi fication. It asks definite financial showing as to what returns the car riers are earning and what prospects they have for the future; what h is been done to reduce operating ex penses; what charges have alreaav been made in individual commodity rates, and what has been expended oft maintenance. The commission also invites arg-i ment as to what rate of return rail reads should be entitled to earn upon their property holdings after Marc'i 1. 1922, .when the transportation act's 6 per cent standard of railroad earn irgs expires. NEW ENGLAND CITIES SLOWLY RECOVERING Boston, Nov. 29. New England cities arid towns were ' recovering slowly to day from the damage and confusion caused by the storms of the last two days. While efforts were being made to restore lighting, communication and transportation services, a new storm of hail began in eastern Masaschusetta, the weather turned cold again and the icy burden. that prostrated wires, poles, and limbs of trees increased. Hope that ights' could be provided -tonight for nearly two score cities and towns, that were in darkness last night, lessened-. . . . Harding In Ft nanciai Important Step in the Direction of Readjustment of World Exchange and Trade to be Taken; Admin istration Finds Co-operation Essential. By DAVID LAWRENCE. MaA" Correspondent of The 'en. Copyright, IB21, by Aews Publishing Co. Washington, Nov. 2b. America has decided to join hands with the other Powers of the world in an effort to sta-'will hardly be passive even though her bilize international exchange. j delegates will not have the power to The United States has accepted the I commit this country to any definite plan invitation of the allied governments to! of action. The Harding Administration be represented at a conference to be ! intends to throw the full weight of its held abroad in the near future at which j influence on the side of financial recon the whole question of exchange will be ' struction. This has been urged for many examined. J months by leading bankers as well as This is the most important step in by such influential organisations as the the direction of financial readjustment j United States Chamber of Commerce, which has been taken since the armis- j So vital has the question of international tice. If successful the movement may, finance become that men like Frank have a far-reaching effect upon the re- Vanderlip and James Simpson of Mar vival of business in America and partic-1 shall Field and Company, who have just ularly in the restoration of markets for! returned from Europe are insisting that the sale of American agricultural and j chaos will follow if America doesn't man u f a c-1 u red prod u ct s. WILL TAKE TIME r a long time there has been a persistent effort on the part of Euro pean countries to elicit America's inter est in an international financial con ference. There has even been a sugges tion that the question of the war debts of the Allies might be discussed at the armament conference at Washington but the idea has been abandoned. The movement to reconstruct the world's finances will be a slow evolutionary one and will not be confined to a single con ference but to a series of meetinsrs which may take the better part of the! year. The whole thing is the outgrowth! of the recommendations made at the j last international conference at Brus-1 sels but it now has the moral support of the United States government which means that more results will be accom plished. Just who the American representa- j l ives will be is not known but undoubt-j ny some hanker- or bankers ot prom inence. 1 hese men will be in the nature f observers and will not be authorized j to conclude any agreements binding the United States but will explore the! whole field and brinr back to this coun- ; 1 ,ir vaf.nmi'innfMj tirino XTrll1 mio'nt VA ! laid before American bankers in a series of conferences such as President Hard ing held at the White House last Spring. When there is agreement among American bankers as to the proper course to be pursued, there prob ably will be a final conference in Wash ington at which the whole fiscal situa tion of the world will be reviewed and NAVAL EXPERTS FAILED TO MEET Conference " is""" Postponed Until Tomorrow at Re quest of Delegation. Washington. Nov. 29. (By the Asso ciated Press) The meeting today of the "Big Five" naval experts, ihe first general conference of the naval men, scheduled for nearly a week, was post poned until tomorrow at the request of one of the delegations. No official statement as to the reason for :iio postponement or the da egation making the request was given The meeting called ior todav had been looked upon as of particular sig nificance because it w.ts kn .wn that the experts have pract Tjaily concluded their examination of fne facts and fig ures which underlie Se :"'iy I'r.ghes' proposal for a ten-year holiday and a subsequent limitation af naval arma ment on the basis of a ratio, as regards Great Britain, the United StatAi anrl .Tflnan TM-.- r Yn,.r: ivf 1111- 1 derstood to have been dealing for the last dav or so in the inter-group ex changes of documents wih factors of the proposal of stco-idary inipa:,,an-'e as compared with th .-ppl cation of the plan to capital ship strength. There was some ind'eation that th. Japanese had sought the postpone' ment. although this was r.ot capable of confirmation in conference circles gen orally. It was known h j ever, :n view of the statemer.t las", night ly Vice Admiral Kato chief i.ail exp. it of the Japanese group i'wt ."apan still was hopeful a 10-"'"-I fleet ratio would be accepted instead of the American "5-5-3" proposal'. Because cf this, it was regarded that the commit tee of experts might still face consid erable discussion before a reoort to the conference committee itself vaa framed. For the American viewpoint both as to American experts and i.s to the membership of the American delegation, it was asserted that no al teration of the "5 5-3" ratio would be acceptable to the United States. Stew Nugent writes his mother from Michigan that he wuz th' only one in a class o' fourteen t' successfully pass . j a . rw" i l an auto ineii examination , at ioieau, Ohio,' recently, is takin' tongue mussin' her lips- Miss Tawney Apple control t keep from Decides To Join conferences definite plans laid for financing the trade of the globe. WILL TAKE ACTIVE PART America's part in the deliberations save the financial situation abroad Along this line cablegrams from Paris today tell of the decision of the repara tions commission to appoint a commit tee of bankers and experts in interna tional exchange to devise means fo preventing a snoek to exchange rates whenever Germany pays or fails to pay her regular reparation payments. Al though the United States doesn't re ceive any reparation money, neverthe less mis country is deeply interested in international exchange and therefore America will have her observers at th conterence to be heid in Paris next month which is described in the Paris press dispatches. I'OLICY OF CO OPERATION In other words, it may be taken for granted that the Harding Administra tion has embarked upon a policy of co operation with other Governments not merely for the reduction of armament i burdens and the settlement of such matters as disturb the peace of the Far ' East but financial questions which have I been hanging in the air ever since the j war ended and W'hich admittedly have ; clone more to disturb business condi tions evorywnere man any other sm gle factor. The drop in exchange ha? prevented America from selling her goods abroad. All sorts of artificial measures to relieve exchange have been suggested but the tendency now is to avoid experimental measures and to go the root of the trouble. The theory t upon which the next conterence will j proceed, it is suggested by persons i familiar with the Administration view (Continued on rage Fourteen.) STREET WORK IS S00NT0 START Commissioner St ancill Hopes to Begin Operations Ear ly in December. When the street improvement bonds, sold last Saturday, are delivered in New York December 9 and the money is available, a start on the paving of more than 14 miles of city streets will be made, says W. S. Stancill, Commission er of public works. Contracts for the work have already been let to Blythe Bros., at a figure slightly in excess of $500,000, and as soon as possible the work will be initial ed and as much done before Winter sets in. Priority of streets to be paved will be determined bv the amount of pre liminary work already out of the way, the commissioner explained. Those streets, for which paving has been peti tioned, and on which curb has been put in place, grading done, and gas, water and sewer mains laid, will be the first to be actually paved, said" Mr. Stancill. The weather will also determiii" which streets will be worked first, he continued, pointing out that thosf streets whjch are greatly traveled will have to wait until the coming of warm wreather. He said that it will be im possible to dig up a street, which has heavy traffic and let it remain torn up for a week, a month or longer, because the weather does :ft permit work. If all things were equal Mr. Stancill said, the first streets to receive a coat ing of asphalt would be those on which paving would benefit the greatest num ber of persons. Yet there are many en gineering unequalities that creep in and each particular situation must be met, the commissioner said. More than 14 miles will be paved be fore the program is finished, including the pavement of streets and sidewalks. Property owners have petitioned the commissioners and they will pay for the pavement abutting on their proper ty. The city will pay for the pavement at street intersections. The commissioners are planning wa ter and sewer extensions in conjunc tion with the paving program. The re mainder of the $1,200,000 bond issue, taken last Saturday by New York bond buvers, after the $500,000 is spent for streets and $200,000 for the erection of a filtration plant for the water depart ment will be used in the water and sewer extensions.- Streets which are to be paved must have the water and sewer mains laid before the pavement is put in place. M. Stancill explained. He also pointed out that some streets which already have water and sewer mains, must again be dugged up. Some of the mains have been in the ground nearly 40 years and they must be replaced before the pavement is laid, he added. OHIO RIVER FLOODS SWEEPING LOWLANDS Pittsburg. Pa.. Nov. 29. The first November flood in more than 20 years was today sweeping down the Oh'o River from the upper reaches of the Monongahela and Allegheny, the e-sult-of an almost continuous rainfall for several days. The flood stage, 22 feet at the Point Bridge, was reached before daybreak and a few hours later the Ohio was rising three-tenths of a foot an hour,-with predictions from the Weather Bureau that the crest will be reached soon after noon. Scores of persons living in file low lands of the north side wero taken from their homes in boats by the po lice, while rising waters compelled the suspension of operations in a number of mills and factories. Reports from points along the Mo nongahela River said the damage would be heavy but no estimate could be made until the JJopd had receded. COMMANDER OF LOST BATTALION TAKES OWN LIFE Lieut. Col. Charles W. Whit tlesey is Missing from Steamship Toloa. WAS AMERICAN HERO. Surrounded and Without Water, He Told German, "You Go to Hell." New York, Nof. 29. Secret brooding over the memories of his experiences in the war, from which he emerged one of America's greatest individual heroes, was ascribed today by friends and relatives of Lieut. Col. Charles W. Whittlesey as the cause of his taking his life Sunday while on the way to Havana. Leaving several letters, presumably explaining his act, the commander of the "Lost Battalion" disappeared from the steamship Toloa, 24 hours oiu from New York. His intimate friends had no idea he was making an ocean voyage. Members of his family and business associates were incredulous at first when a wireless dispatch reported him missing. But, as evidence accumulated, they reluctantly came to the conclu sion that the missing man was Colonel Whittlesey. And then they recalled in cidents, which, pierced together in the iight of his tragic death, might have been recognized as indications that hi. spirit was shaken by recurrent mem ories of his brothers-in-arins, who had died before his eyes in France. The last blow, they said, more try ing than the rest, was in Washington a fortnight ago when he took part in the funeral services for America's Un known soldier. He returned from the capital more depressed than before, the haunting visions clearer than ever, bearing him down. There he had met hundreds of former friends md had marked anew the gaps in the . anks of the men he loved. "His mind stopped," was the explana : ion of Robert. Forsyth Little, of the aw firm of White and Case, with which Colonel Whittlesey had been as sociated for about a year. "It had all t could bear, remarkable mind though t was. I don't think there is a man n tre country wno nas nad tne try ing experiences Colonel Whittlesey has '.iad in the past, two years. LWAS ACCESSIBLE. "He w;as the hero who was always5 accessible . to. those who thought lu ould help them. The disabled, the tobies'1!, the friendless, the widows of :he 'war rail of them were on his mind constantly. For the last two rears ihere has scarcely been an hour ivhen the grief and horror of the war ivas not. brought vividly and specifically icforo him." Colonel Whittlesey had told no one. apparently, that he was going to Ha vana. When he left his office Fridny afternoon, it was with some cheery re mark regarding the Army-Navy fool ball game, which he intended to sec. At his boarding house on East Forty fourth street, he told friends he was going away "to be by mlself to rest" when he left Saturday morning with a traveling bag. He was in the habit of taking week-end trips and his go ing was unmarked by any unusual cir cumstances. Colonel Whittlesey's uncle, C. W. Whittlesey, of New York, agreed with his nephew's legal asosciates that h had come back trom Arlington with the recollection induced by the memorial services weighing heavily on his mind. John B. Pruyn, Colonel Whittlesey's lose friend and former law partner, also shared the general, view of the a use for the tragedy. "His experience in the army, partic ularly in the Argonne, was a tremend ous strain," he said. "It affected him more than hie friends knew. His was always a re served nature, and kept his feelings himself. He did not break under tnii strain, or anything like it. To all ap pearance he was normal. DEPRESSED BY UNKNOWN. "But on Armistice Day, he went tx Washington and took part in the cere monies as one of the medal of honor men. This, added to what bad gom before, was more than he could stand. Outwardly, there was no great change in him after he came back, but in talk ing today with those who knew him best. I have come upon little details, in significant temperaments which indi cate, when woven together, great de pression of spirit." Colonel Whittlesey's name leaped in to world-wide promim nee overman through his retort to the German offi cer who caled on him to surrender af ter he was surrounded in the Argonne. For four days and nights his com mand, the First Battalion, 308th infan try, 77th division, had lain under fire, cut off from aid. without food or fresh water. All but 87 men had been killei or wounded. Blindfolded and under the protection of a white flag", a German soldier stum bled into the American strong point. "Surrender," he cried, "in the name of humanity" and he told how. from the German trenches, the agonized cries of the American wounded could bt heard. But Colcrel Whittlesey's mes sage to the enemy was not that he would lay down his arms, "i'ou o tc hell," he said. , A few hours later, American reseives attacked all along the line, the Ger mans were pushed back and the little band of survivors saved. On his return to the United Stat. s he was voted the Congressional medal of honor, the most coveted American decoration for heroism, and a few months after the armistice, the Ger man officer, who called on him to sur render, made a public statement ex- tollinar the courage and dogged del r- mination of his former foe. News of the famous soldier's disap nearance came in the following mes sage, received here from the captain of Ihe ship: "Passenger named C. W. Whittlesey disappeared. Left several letters." ITALIAN DESTROYER SINKS London, Nov. 29. The Italian des troyer Centrauro has gone down in the Mediterranean off the port of Adalia during a storm, according to advices from Brindisi to The Daily Mail, (ine listed in available na- Centrauro is not val registers).