THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 1, 1921. The Charlotte News Published By THE NEWS PUBLISHING CO. Corner Fourth and Church Sts. W. C. DO WD Pres. and Gen. Mgr. JULIAN S. MILLER Editor IV. M. BELL Advertising Mgr. TELEPHONES: Business Office 115 Circulation Department 2793 City Editor 277 Editorial Rooms 382 Printing House 1530 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for renublication of all news despatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches, herein aiso are reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier. One year $10.00 Six months 5.00 Three months 2.50 One month 85 One week 30 By Mail. One year 8.C0 Six months 4.00 Three months 2.00 One month ,75 Sunday Only. One year 2.60 Six months 1.30 TIMES-DEMOCRAT. (Semi-Weekly) One year 1.50 Six months 75 "Entered as second-class matter at I he post office at Charlotte. N. C, under I ho Act of March 3, 1897." THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1921. IN PLEASANT PLACES: The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup; thou maintainest my lot. The lines are fallen unto me in pleas ant places: yea. I have a goodly her itage. Psalm 16:5, 6. HUNTING SEASON. The season for hunting in Mecklen burg county opened Thursday and the cannonading of game began early in the morning. Hunters from the county and hunters from the city crossed each other in the fields and kept up a veri table bombardment during the day .The season lasts only 40 days and the sports men of the city especially wanted to get an early whack at the game in local (ields. Some very effective work has been clone through the efforts of the Mecklen burg Game Protective Association to keep premature hunting down to a min imum and farmers report that there has been less hunting before the season was legally opened than has been the case in many years. There is one other caution to be re minded of even now when there is legal right to hunt, that is the necessity of getting the consent of the landlords before going on their fields. This is not merely a courtesy that is due the own ers of lands in which game abound, but any person who fails to recognize' such as proper is liable to arrest for trespass ing. Any farmer has a right to forbid any hunter from coming on his land if he pleases. Often as not the man from the city who has friends in the country simply supposes that it will be all right to hunt on these lands of his friend and then to branch off a little, perchance, and get on the adjacent lands of his friend's neighbors without any disturb ance being raised. Some reported ill feeling has come to the motice of sportsmen in the city be cause of the efforts made through the formation of the protective association to break up early hunting and if there is any widespread misunderstanding among the rural folks of, the purposes of such an attempt, this will only go to add to their annoyance and irritability if urban hunters roam their fields with out having exercised the courtesy of seeking permission. TEUTONIC HOSTILITY. Some rather eminent Philadalphia doctors are raising a rucus because of the way New York is treating the re nowned Austrian scientist and surgeon, Dr. Adolph Lorenz who has come over to show his affection for this country and his appreciation of what it has done for Austria in its late national calami ties by performing operations without cost on the poor of the metropolis. One I'hiladelphian objects to the reception of Dr. Lorenz because "he is a Teuton", which, of course, he is, but if the Amer ican people propose to put embargoes on all who are simply Teutons or who have Teuton blood in them, we might be left somewhat lonely as well as in great need of the services of some of our brethren. We can quite well understand the en mity that has sprung up in the world against those of our enemies in the late war and how that it will require genera tions to eradicate this hostility from the veins of the American people, but in the case of Dr. Lorenz there seems to be no reason for entertainment of hos tility toward one who aims to utilize himself so practically and so essentially for the healing of those in this country who might otherwise never receive the touch of surgical alleviation. PSYCHOLOGICAL DEFEAT. If the conference in Washington does not end in dismal failure, it will not be the fault of many of the writers who are assigned to "cover" this epoch making event. They are spending the most of their time pointing out where in the leading envoys of the nations are apart from one another, wherein the conference is not progressing a had been expected and then they proceed to indicate how it is that one clan is pitted against another and how envies and jealousies and intrigue are being built up at the foundations of the con ference in order to undermine and ulti mately to defeat it. It is unfortunate that there should be so much of this tone of writing. It has a disastrous psychological effect. It will creep into the minds of the con ferees inevitably and there produce a spirit of depression and abject despair. If the writers would confine themselves more to hopefulness, pointing out th? differences of opinion only as these may be smoothed over instead of magnifying them, then it would be possible to bring about a better atmosphere and produce a great spirit of co-operation and of unity in purpose. In their dismal forebodings, suggests The New York Times, they overlook the central facts in the project for naval disarmament. One is that the scheme as presented by Mr. Hughes has marvel ously well stood the fire of criticism. The naval experts of both Great Britain and Japan acknowledge the skill and completeness of the American proposals. Only in non-essentials have they been challenged. This puts our Government in a position to insist upon the main features. These, indeed, have already been agreed to, and the rest will surely follow in due time. And the other fac tor which the doubters and desponders ignore is the immense pressure of public opinion, all over the world, which was brought to bear upon the conference from the moment when Secretary Hughes made the bold statement of the American plan. The delegates of all the nations represented at Washington are keenly aware of what is demanded of them by the desires of all peoples, and also of what will happen to them if they do not rise to their great opportunity. In their hearts they know that there must be no such word as fail. VALUE OF CROPS. The bureau of the ceusus has shown, from the data- collected in 1920, that corn heads the list of American crops in value and that cotton comes along third. The acreage in corn, however, was two and a half times what the acreage in cotton was. ' The 20 leading crops of the United States in 1919, arranged in order of val ue, were corn, hay and forage, cotton, wheat, oats, potatoes, tobacco, apples, barley, sweet potatoes, rye, rough rice, grapes, peaches, kafir and milo, oranges, sugar beets, peanuts, dry edible beans, and sugar cane. The total value of these 20 crops was $13,754,290,926, which rep resents more than nine-tenths of the total value of crops shown by the Four teenth Census. Corn heads the list, with a value of $3,507,797,102, or almost $1,000,000 more than hay and forage, which stands sec ond on the list with a value of $2,523, 050,224. Cotton ranked third, with a value (including cottonseed) of $2,355, 169,365, and wheat ranked forth, with a value of $2,071,078,801. These four crops combined represented a value amounting to $10,460,095,492, or 70.9 per cent of the total, value of all crops harvested in 1919. The next four crops in order were oats, with a value of $855,255,468; pota toes (white), with a value of $639,440, 521; tobacco, with a value of $444,047, 481; and apples, the leading fruit crop, with a value of $241,573,577. Japan may not like to be overridden in its wishes about increasing the ratio of naval armament, but it is not likely that Japan will have the daring to try to break up the conference because it is in the minority. THE MATERIAL DESTRUCTION OF WAR. No intelligent country can come to the conclusion that it can keep on at the present rate in preparing for future wars. Anybody with even fair intelli gence ought to be able to reckon, judg ing only from the record of destruction of the past war, tha-; a halt must be called before the whole world will be forced to ask for a receivership. The direct cost of the Great War is estimated to have been 186 billions of dollars; its indirect cost 355 billions. Its direct cost alone is . seven times that of all the wars from the French Revolu tion to the present combined. The late war has impoverished the world. The national debts of the world, given in dollars, have increased as follows: that of France today, has increased seven fold, and her forty-six billions of debt mortgages half her wealth. The debt of Austria has increased ninefold, mort gaging the greater part of her wealth. The debt of Germany has increased thirteenfold to fifey-five billions, repre senting far more than half her wealth. That of England, twelvefold, to thirty nine billions. While the United States has increased its debt nearly twenty fivefold, or from, one to nearly twenty five billion dollars. The total debts' of the world now stand at 2-79 billions, or more than a third of the world's wealth. An English economist estimates that England"has lost through the war the entire savings and economic gains of a generation. Other countries have lost much more. The world is a poorer world than it was in 1914. The decision of the Supreme Court in regard to the charter of the Rama Rural Community means that the county board of education is still su preme in the authority of fixing school districts and that nor attempt toward incorporation overshadows the 'original rights of the county board. ANOTHER LANDMARK GONE. Hardly had the embers of the historic Chambers building at Davidson cooled that a landmark at the University of North Carolina also went down in ashes, the old University Inn, one of the famed Institutions of Chapel Hill ancLa build ing about which cluster many tradi tions. Unlike Chambers building, how ever, the University Inn was generally regarded as an eyesore and it had been the plan of University officials who bought the property some time ago ultimately to destroy it and build upon the site a new structure for University Use. And this will greatly temper the Regret over the passing of the landmark. VOLUNTARY WAGE REDUCTION. Thousands of employees of the e-reat packing houses of the country have voluntarily accepted wage cuts. They sent representatives to confer with ron. resentatives of the packers, looked at tne Dooks of the concerns, balanced the accounts, saw what the packers w spending and what they were making, ana men decided that out of self-inter est, it would pay them to take a reduc tion in their wages. This is one of the most satisfactory developments of the times in reference to the attempts being made toward re adjustment. Perhaps, factory owners and other large employers have not been sufficiently aggressive in the way of indicating to their employes what their financial situation is. They have left the workers in doubt as to wheth er or not wage reductions were really essential to a proper conduct of their business and, therefore, the employes have naturally given the benefit nf tha Utoubt to themselves. They have reason- KU on ine supposition that the com panies are able to pay the same old wages and unless it is shown otherwise, they will continue to have that notion! The packers revealed their books to their employes, made clear to them the financial situation; put the proposition squarely be fore them either of accepting the wage reductions or forcing the industry into a standstill and when these work ers saw the truth they did not hesitate as to which course to pursue. THE STANDSTILL IN THE MARKETS. Those who expected that the econo mic system of the woVld would bo straightened out in a year or two after the war are finding that they were de luded, that the disarrangements of the war will require a much longer period than they expected to become cleared up, and order established again in in dustry and in trade. That accounts for the fact that today in one part of the world people are starving for corn and in another part ofythe world they are burning it becatise they can't sell it and the further fact that cotton is con gested in the South and people are freez ing elsewhere because they are without the fabrics with which to clothe them selves. One country has raw materials another has machinery, another has coal, and yet there is no process of co operative exchange between them. The whole economic system is still badly battered and shattered. EXPOSITION HAS (Continued From Pajje One.) while she made a little speech about him. "You people here have seen Mr. Barthelmess' pictures and admired them as everyone else has but there is one thing I want to say about him. You have never yet seen him in a play that contained the slightest sug gestiveness of any kind, and you nev er will. You 'will never see this boy in a picture that your young daugh ter or young son may not view with entire propriety and with the assur ance that there "is nothing hurtful about them, but, on the contrary, much to uplift." The statement drew the biggest applause that has been showered upon any speaker since .the convention opened. SHIRLEY MASON DAY. Thursday is Shirley Mason day at the exposition. The noted star of the Fox studios arrived in Charlotte early Thursday morning and was given a great oation by the movie people here and by the public. She is petite and attractive off the screen and about the streets as she is on the screen and Ma son fans had no trouble in picking her out at once. She held an informal reception at the Selwyn hotel, where movie fans, theater owners, salesmen of the pro ducing houses, press representatives of the movie houses and many others gathered to pay their respects. She was to pay a visit to the exposition building during the afternoon and will also be there Thursday night to take a stellar part on the program. Thoso most interested in the exposi tion expressed regret Wednesday af ternoon that Adolph Zukor, nationally famous picture producer, could not be here as he had anticipated. H. B. Var ner, president of the North Carolina Division of the Motion Picture Exhibf. itors' League of America, . received a telegram from Mr. Zukor Wednesday afternoon expressing regret that he would be unable to be here. Sidney Cgjien, president of the Mo tion Picture Exhibitors' League of America, was one of the notable per sonages it the convention Wednesday afternoon and night and spoke Wed nesday afternoon at a called meeting nf exhibitors at the Selwvn hotel. ; BUSY MAKING PICTURE. On Wednesday and again on Thurs day Secretary Herbert C. Wales, Cam eraman Freeman H. Owens and others were busy making the picture that is going to be one' of the big souvenirs of the convention and that is to be shown here. The first few feet of it were made in Ivey's department store Wedrt23day morning. Other parts of it were made in Myers Park, with Rich ard Barthelmess helping in the direct ing and other features of it are being made at Myers Park and at other places about the city Thursday. Queens College, Lakewood Park and other places about the city are being used as "location" for the nicture. THURSDAY'S PROGRAM. The program for Thursday after noon and night at the exposition fol lows: PROGRAM. Shirley Mason Day A Fox Star. Thursday Afternoon. 1:30 p. m. Doors open. 2:30 p. m Concert by Pennsylvania Serenaders. 3:30 p. m. Louis Kalbfield, Jr., and "Clarice," Klever Kids. 4:00 p. m. Actual production photo play scenes. 4:30 p. m. Final selection by orches tra. Thursday Evening. 7:00 p. m. Doors open. 7:30 p. m. Light opera airs by Penn sylvania orchestra. 8:15 p. m. Louis Kalbfield, Jr., and "Clarice." 8:30 p. m. Introduction of stars. 8:45 p. m. Production of scenes in photoplay. Freeman Owens, director. , 9:00 p. m. Dancing. Music by orchestra. Mr. R. C. King Tells a Wonderful Story About Rats. Read It. "For months my placewas alive with rats. Losing chickens, eggs, feed. Friend told me to try RAT-SNAP. I did. Some what disappointed at first not seeing many, dead rats, but in a few days didn't see a live one. What were not killed - are not around my place. RAT-SNAP ' sure " does the trick " Three sizes, 35c, 65c, $1.25.. Sold and guar anteed By Wohlf ord-Porter Drug Co Charlotte Drug Co., Tryon Drug Co ' Southern Hardware Co., John S. Blak Drug Co., and Charlotte Hardware Co' Mrs. Luxenburg Doo Little was buried this a. m. She passed out in the town's hospital from a lack of vim. She killed herself by taking pills to cure imaginary ills. Fhe said, "I'm yellow at the gills. My chance for life is I sum. iier gizzard was m perrect state, postmortem doctors swore, but still the wretched reprobate complained that she was sore. Each morning for the past 10 years she told her friends through limpid tears that she had sharp j pains in her ears and rheumatiz galore. ; Each day folks would pass her by and ask, "How do you feel?" and she would answer with a sigh, "I'm ailing in the heel." She was never loath to shout to all the world about her gout, and daily yelled her sickness out with cus tomary zeal. She might have lived a hundred years if she had worn a grin and dispelled all her sundry fears about her flimsy skin. The old hag crossed the river Styx because of countless daily kicks. The Devil crowned her with some bricks and clubbed her on the shin. Those who shout their daily ills to each who passeth by, and .swear they're yel low at the gills or feeble in the eye, will go up through the Devil's flue as pessimists are went to do. The city has no place for you whose one word is a sigh. Even if you have a corn that J is so large around you cannot get your right shoe on see that you make no sound. With kale campaigns and in come tax the folks have too much on their backs to listen to your feeble quacks. Let surplus smiles abound. Copyright, 1921, by News Publishing: Co. PATTERSON CLEARED OF MURDER CHARGE Orlando, Fla., Dec. 1. The case of Lena M. T. Clarke, former postmis tress at West Palm Beach, and Baxter H. Patterson, a chauffeur, jointly charged with the murder of Fred A. Miltimore, former employe in Miss Clarke's office, who was shot to death in her hotel room here August 1, was expected to go to the jury late today or tomorrow. The defense closed its cass yesterday and the State, in offering rebuttal tes timony, announced just before court adjourned that it had only one witness to introduce at the forenoon i essicn today. Indications were that argu ment of counsel for the prosecuion and defense would be lengthy. Miss Clarke, In her testimony, said Patterson had nothing to do with the killing of Miltimore and that he had been employed only to drive her from West Palm Beach to Orlando. TO DIVIDE SHIPPING ROUTES? New York. Dec. 1. A plan to divide the world into shipping zones and allot routes to the various nations by joint agreement, "thereby restricting cut throat competition and restoring pros perity to the maritime industry," was made public yesterday by Frank C. Munson, president of the Munson Steamship Line. What is "A Blessing on Your Head" ? ED. PINAUD'S HAIR TONIC of course! HI II Shoes That en Prefer M Combining the qualities of com fort, serviceability and style with moderate price. Craddock, Hurley, Johnston & Murphy $51 t0 $141 These shoes will, and must, give satisfaction The manufacturers' and DeLane's' prestige is the wearer's assurance of unusual value. 36 East Trade Street. .MUlliyiJt.lH .lll II III n I iihw OSTEOPA THY Is the science of healing by adjustment. DR. H. F. RAY 313 Realty Bldg. DR. FRANK LANE MDLLER 610 Realty Bldg. DR. ARTHUR M. DYE 224 Piedmont Bldg. Osteopaths, Charlotte, N. C. INFORMATION BY REQUEST With Christmas Very Near We Are Offering Useful Gift Suggestions On The Second Floor ISA..:?." FURS If ff FURS And surely there could be no more appropriate gift. Every one new style and good quality. Large fur scarfs of Narobia, Coney, Lynx and Fox. And the small choker that is so very popular, of Stone Marten, Dyed Opossum, Baum-Marten and Hudson Bay Sable. All at prices much less than a year ago. $12"J2TO$75a NEW COATS For Friday and Saturday. Another shipment of Ladies' and Misses' Coats. Just in time for you to have a new one for Christmas. Plain and fur trimmed models, in all the new shades. And of par ticular interest are the prices $9it0$4&i2 - Lounging Robes Beautiful corduroy and wool Eiderdown Robes of the bet ter kind. In colorings, Rose, Purple, Copen, Pink and Grey. Very appropriate for wife or daughter. BATHROBES Large assortment of Gor geous Bath Robes in two-tone, floral and pastel shades. Some are trimmed with silk cords and buttons, others with pink, -blue and lavender satin-and lovely loops. For husband, brother, sister, wife or daugh ter $2it0$7iQ Silk Breakfast Coats Of soft Taffeta, very attrac tive in Pink, Blue, Rose and dainty two-tone shades. Beau tifully pleated front, pockets and sleeves. Long tie sash S19.50toQ1Q.50 EMBROIDERED CARPET SLIPPERS Pink and Blue 98c CHILDREN'S BATH ROBES 2M and $3H u BQMRANY. JELL IT FQR