THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, 1921. 15 i7 wvx v Ajtkj ARE CAPTURED tvm Near Raleigh; Cap- tuied tiie .Next uay. Nov 29. Mike Bray, of ..vlv county, and Grover Cleve U.r.Jkrson, of Madison, two of the ,,ri:,n.rs who escaped from the 1 ('ni.p Friday night, were recap fj'auiVilay night b y prison guards inrrisviilP. ?v who is serving 18 months, and V. , n.. 10 years, said their lour , s ;.re traveling together and J.'.'.. in the dark gray honor 0"( -.riling of the prison. The pris- '.'.s are pending out circulars p!otc photographic descrip tion, every convict having these cuts of himself made when received. The missing men are Toy Clayton, of Cumberland, serving 20 years for murder In the second degree; Lester Kennon, of Cabarrus, in the first of five years for larceny of an automo bile; Pink Perkins, of Rockingham, do ing: three years for .robbery Charlie Helton, of Caldwell, serving from two to five years for larceny. The crimes have been such as to make any concession unlikely. They were bad fellows before they came up and are still bad. Clayton seems the degenerate of the crew. He wears a tattoo of Jesus Christ on the Cross and carries a gunshot wound under the shoulder blade. The prison people were not able to say -whether the guards who fired on the men hit anybody. One prisoner fell in the firing, but rose and took up his bed. Rewards have been of fered for the capture of the men, Clay ton being good for $100, Hensley was good for $50, and the others for $25. 5N TTF P0 KENT v n all mi maucemeni HI Ltirisiiiiai opers All i'athc Phonographs and Records Back to Old Prices Ctl 30 R.Gdu ON ALL Phonographs This is your greatest opportunity to own one of the finest Phonographs on the market at prices that represent a net GO per cent saving to you, on terms that you can afford to pay. At these new prices this is the greatest instrument in the world. Every machine is equipped with the famous Pathe Sapphire Ball, eliminating the changing of needles, plavs ail makes of records and carries, one of the highest guarantees for service. Come to our store early and let us demonstrate these machines for you, then you can place one in your home on our easy payment plan of a few dol lars down and weekly or monthly payments. 10" RECORDS REDUCED TO 65c. PRICES No. 3 -Was $55. Now $38. $4 Down. $1 Per Week. No. 7 Was $125. Now $87.50... $8.75 down, $1.50 Per Week. No. 110 Was $150. Now $101. $10 Down. $2.00 Per Week. No. 125. Was $175. Now $121. $12 Down. $3.00 Per Week. No. 17 Was $225. Now $157. $15 Down, $3.50 Per Week. " No. 3 Was $50. Now $35. $3.50 Down. $1.00 Per Week. This No. 3 Pathc Machine is one of the biggest values in its price class $1.00 per week and $3.50 down will put this charming little machine in your home. The case is of Gold en Oak, with the standard Pathe machine. he Banner Frarniture Company "OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT" ' ht 'I' 5 mm ' ri 5 7 A Good One! It pays to buy clothes of known Quality no regrets. Nothing better than one of these Hart, Schaffner & Marx Overcoats. The style is right; belted models; Ulsters? Raglans, all the new ideas. The best woolens and tailoringCold weather is here ! i BETTER BANKING FOR THE FARMER Among Needs of Farmer Better Credit Facilities and Lower Freights. Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 29. Adapta- ' tion of theb anking machinery of the ; for new growth and the natural pro- country to the credit requirements of the farmer and reduction of freight ( rates on farm products were advocated ' as the most pessing needs of the agri cultural industry in an address here today by Representative Anderson, chairman of the joint Congressional commission of agricultural inquiry, before the fifth annual meeting of the ' National Milk Producers' Federtaion. i J Pointing to the farmers' need for velope. credit cf a maturity corresponding to his turnover and his ability to pay, i Representative Anderson said he favor s ed permitting all existing financial in J stitutions dealing directly with the ; public, including National and State ! banks, to make loans to farmers for j periods of three months to six years, j They should be able, ha added, to re discount the paper with the Federal Land Eanks or act as the direct agent ! of those banks in making the loans, ! the farm notes then to be used as a basis for issuance of short-time deben tures by the land banks, n turn, the . AM ii A J j 6yj a ment will be answered in these columns in their turn. This requires consid erable time, hewever. owinv; to the geat nmrJter received So. if a per sonal or quicker reply is desired., a btamped ar.d sel;'-'.a iressed enveiiue must be enclosad with the juosticii. The Editor. NEW YORKERS TO FLY TO THE MOUNTAINS ANSWERED LETTEKS. H. A. R. There is no other way to tion, you will not improve your ap- WESTERN UNION TO USE AMERICAN COIN ' restore the hair to grey, but to wait cess of the bleaching out of the dye. Y. W. G. You are about 30 pounds below the average weight for your height and age. But you have many years still in which to grow so there is no reason why you should be concern ed. C. B. G. F. The formula for the eyebrow tonic will be mailed to you if you send a stamped addressed en- Fair One. If powder does not ad here to the skin on your nose, try us ing a cream first, which is not a van ishing cream. If you care to make such a cream. I will be glad to mail you the formula. Beatrice. Massage the calves f your legs until you reduce them to the size you desire. Ue a motion much the same as kneading. Sarah E. If the skin is loose and the muscles' flabby, it shows that tho pearance by making any change. Federal Reserve banks, he said, should ; system is run down. If this condition be authorized to buy and sell these followed reduction tnrougn some rapid process, consult the doctor about it. Reducing the weight slowly through a choice in foods will not leave one flabby, but will tone up the system as the excess weight is being consumed. B. M. M. With brown eyes and a clear olive skin the hair could be the shade cf henna; however, if nature has given you the rich chestnut shade which usually goes with this combina- i debentures and also to rediscount for the land banks, within six months ma turity, other farm paper. The farmer not only needs an imme diate downward revision of transporta tion rates on his products, Representa tive Anderson said, but also material reduction in other elements of the spread between the producers' and the consumers' prices, which, he stated, constituted half the latter price. The problem of distribution costs, he adckd, could not be solved by the farmer alone, but required the co-operation and understanding of all who enter as factors in distribution. Development of sound co-operative methods by farm ers, however, he believed, could con tribute much to the solution. R. W. B. There is no reason why you should not regain your hair, even though you are almost 70 years of age. Your health must have improved by reason of these operations and the growth of hair depends upon general health, plus cultivation. Send a stamp ed addressed envelope for a formula for. a tonic and meantime, massage the scalp each day until it glows from the increased circulation. ( Mary Q. C. Massage the ankles with cocoa butter which will fatten them. The preparation j'ou mention $s a patent article and I do not know what it contains. Jane L. You will have to wait un-! til nature restores your hair to its natural color.x You had better have some of it cut off, than to try any more experiments to even the shades. I Dampening the hair before rolling on the curlers will not affect it beyond making .a tighter curl as it dries. Sammie. Olive oil does not act as a ; laxative except with some people, who would be sensitive to it. Taken with the meals it is assimilated with the food, giving that much more nourish ment. It depends upon your power of assimilation how fast you will take on weight, hut three months should make a great dmerence. Some people show an improvement in less than a week. Tomorrow Developing The Arms. All inquiries addressed to Miss Forbes in care of the "Beauty Chata" depart' Saranao Lake, N. Y., Nov. 29. It ia reported here that a group of wealthy N.ew York men who own campa in this section of the Adirondacks are planning an aerial passenger service between the metropolis and northern Adirondacks, to be put in operation next summer. Plans call for the construction of six hydro-airplane3 that will each carry seven passengers. This estimated cost An innovation in the way of meet- Gf the planes is $8,500 each. One way ing the emergency of ths constantly fare will be forty dollars and landings declining German mark on the interna- will be made at Saranac Lake. Paul . . . . - i Smiths, Saranac Inn and Lake Placid. tional exchange has been devised by Time between New York and the re- the Western Union Telegraph Com- sorts will be four hours, against twelve pany, according to Manager Ramsay by railroad or motor. The service will Dulin, cf the Charlotte office, instead be Pen to the general public. ,. . .. . , . It is said organization has been com- of sending money by the cable route pleted and that the contract for the to Germany, using the German mark hydro-airplanes will soon be let. to pay for the cable, good American money will hereafter be used. The j Western Union Company has adopted this policy both for its own protection and for the protection of its patrons. The new arrangement went into effect Monday. The same system has also been adopted as to Italy and as to Great Britain, according to Mr. Dulin, al though the fluctuation of the exchange rate of the Italian lira and the Brit ish pound sterling has not been so er ratic as the fluctuation of the German I mark. I Therefore, when a person filed a ' cable with the Western Union here either for sending money to Germany ' or sending a cable message, the cost of it was paid for in German marks, for which American money was paid. If it were a day or two in delivery, it might be found that $500 cabled from here on a certain dato was i worth $450, or maybe less, when it reached Germany. The actual method . of transmission has been for the tele graph company to buy as many Ger I man marks as would be equal to $500, i cay, on the date when the cable was filed. OGiCAL ADVICE! 8 Strike at the root of weak- ness is lexical advice to 1 g those rundown in vitality, m Scott's Emulsion nourishes the body, tones the blood arid helps build strength. g Scott & Msimn; Bloo infield, N. J. ALSO MAKERS OF (Tsbiets or Granules) B For indigestion! CINCINNATI HOME OF COL. PROCTER ROBBED Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 29. Police to day are seeking four armed robbers, who late last night, raided the residence of William Cooper Proctor, president of the Proctor and Gamble Company, m Glendale, a suburb of Cincinati, impris oned three woman members of the household, who were alone in the house, in the cellar, and then ransacked the home, escaping with jewelry valued, Cincinnati police say, at more than S100.000. The robbery, which, for boldness, su-- passese any residential burglary in Cin cinnati or vicinity for years, was ev- ccuted with such dispatch and through- ness as to indicate, police say, that it had been carefully planned. The robbers eescaped in an automo bile, leaving no clue except such des criptions of them as the frightened women were able to furnish. ARE PREPARING TO ATTACK Melilla, Nov. 29. A despatch from Zoco El Had says that the Benisicar, a tribe of Moors friendly-to Spain, is pre paring to attack the rebels concentrat ed near the river Kert. SALE OF VALUABLE OFFICE FUR-! NITURE AND FIXTURES. Under order of the Superior Court, I will, beginning at 11 A. M. Satur day. December 3, 1921, and continuing I until all property is sold over tho store of the United States Wooien Mills Company, 33 West Trade street, Charlotte, North Carolina, in the office of the Wizard Automobile Com pany, sell for cash at public auction all the office furniture and fixtures of ths Wizard Automobile Company, cv sisting of one mimeograph machine one Wales adding machine, two iron j safe cabinets, a number of wood and steel filing cabinets, flat roil top and tvnAwrltpr desks, tvnewnters. chairs. rug, and a large lot of other office furniture and fixtures. All furniture of very high grade. This November 23rd, 1921. J. A. LOCKHART, ! Receiver of Wizard Automobile Com pany. 27-7t-daily Ii ! rvV'.':"'.::- THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE It isn't so much a question how much you pay for your shoes as it is the real value you receive for "what you do pay. W. L. Doudas Shoes are always worth the priceyou pay for them We also have a full line of the latest style FOOTWEAR for Women and Children NATHAN'S 38 E. Trade St. Phone 122. Soak Your Duds in Grandma's Suds No Rubbing, No Boiling, Washday Made Easy Easy Washing vs. Hard Washing A powdered soap, all ready for washing, sifted into the tub quickly and without effort vs. the cutting and slicing of bar soap. The use of as little powdered soap as you need vs. the wasting away of a whole bar of soap in the water. Economy in washing vs. expensiveness. Which will you take ? Choose GRANDMA'S POWDERED SOAP for easy, quick, economical washing. Choose Grandma for wonderfully clean, sweet clothes. GRANDMA soaks the dirt out Put your clothes to soak with Grandma. Rub the hems and cuffs just a little. Wring them out and hangthem up. That's all there is to washing your clothes in the romping, bubbling suds of GRANDMA'S POWDERED SOAP. Use Qlobe Soap Co Wiht 1921 Hart Schaffacr tz Mar. MELLOWS