THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 8, 1921. The Charlotte News Published By THE NEWS PUBLISHING CO. Corner Fourth and Church Sts. V. C. DO WD Prs. and Gen. Mgr. JULIAN S. MILLER Editor W. M. BELL. .... . . .Advertising Mgr. ' i TELEPHONES: Rusiness Office !, Circulation Department 22i; City Editor 277 Editorial Rooms 6v Trinting House "30 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paprr and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein also are reserved. t SUBSCRD7TION RATES. By Carrier. One year ....$10 Six months 5 Three months 2 One month , One week By Mail. One year . 8 Six months 4 Three months 2 One month Sunday Only. One year Six months 1 00 00 50 .85 .20 00 .00 00 .75 .60 .30 TIMES-DEMOCRAT. (Semi-Weekly) One year 1.50 Six months 75 "Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Charlotte. N. C, under I he Act of March 3, 1897." THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1921. LOVE DESTROYS FEAR: There is no fear in love: but perfect love cast ?th out fear; because fear hatli tor ment. He that feareth is not made per fect in love. 1 John 4:18. DR. LOR EN". It is inconceivable that the medical profession in America is behind the movement to eject Dr. Lorenz, the eminent Vienna specialist, from this country to which he came to perform '.i gratutious service to suffering human- ity, to lend the acuteness of his marvel lous science to the lame and the halt In America simply as a token of his personal appreciation for what Ameri cans have done for the little children of his home city. Dr. Lorenz is not over here on a money-making tour. AVere that a fact we could understand how a very few representatives of the medical frater nity might take exception to such a mission and move to have him expelled. He came, however, without any promise to be rewarded and without any motive to make charges for his services. He wanted only to indicate to this country, he said, how thankful the people of Vienna are for the saUaging agencies et in motion there by the American people and to show in his limited way something of the depth of appreciation which is in the heart of the Austrian people because of such American serv ices. It looks, therefore, worse than mere ignorance and stupidity that a few American doctors are making it so hot for him that he is about to return to his native country without the oppor tunity further to express the gratitude of his people through his ministrations of mercy toward crippled American children. If there is not more to the 3tory than we have seen in the des patches, if there is not something being withheld about him and his work, then the only conclusion to be drawn is that the small section of medical men in this country who are bucking him are moved -by a prejudice that is hardly less than barbaric. . The mere fact that this distinguished scientist and surgeon is a Teuton, as one Philadelphia doctor complained, ought certainly not to weigh heavily in the premises. If we propose to show hostility toward everybody in this coun try who has a little tinge of Teuton blood in his veins, we will be kept rather busy displaying our animosity, and we might happen also to be called upon by this inner devil of spite and hate to take our weapons out against some who have been particularly friend ly to us, certainly against some who are standing today among those at the top in achievement in the arts and in the sciences in this country. ADVANCED STEP IN PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. A far-reaching step in the interest of public health will have been taken when the city and county join hands in the promotion of this1 service and combine their health agencies, as is about to be done. There is no reason that such a combination should not work satis factorily and; successfully. Given an as sistant and sufficient nurses, Dr. Mc Phaul, who has been especially aggres sive since coming to the headship of this department in the city, ought to be able to cover the entire county, treat ing it as a whole and making his plans with that end in vfew. That, as a matter of fact, is the sen sible program to follow out. There is no reason to isolate the one from the other, to lift the city out of the lap of the county as a whole and regard it is specially worthy and needful of health offices which the balance- of the county J can get along without. There is just as much reason that a health officer should ( be utilized in the rural parts of the county as in the city, there is just as much work to be done, just, as fine a field for educational efforts and just as luminous an opportunity to institute preventative measures for the promo tion of health out there as there is in the city which, heretofore, has enjoyed a concentration of health energy. The people of Mecklenburg may Avell rejoice that such a movement is under way, that the county commissioners and the county board of education, with the aid of an appropriation from the State, have set aside enough money to guarantee the services of a competent health officer and nurses and that an effort will be made, according to the present understanding, to offer Dr. Mc Phaul the work of supervising health activities in the entire county, an as sistant to be given him for these en larged duties. When we think soberly of the situa tion, we will reach the conclusion that, after all, nothing else is as important as the health of the people and no other form of public service is so far-reaching as this. We can get along without a lot of other things which we are demanding and which are good enough in their place, but we can not get along with out our health. That is the basis of everything. It is the first requisite of a satisfactory social, civic and moral life. It is the foundation of material wellbeing. A sickly citizenship never makes much commercial headway. An unwell population is a constant liabil ity. Disease and deformities of the body bring about an economic loss that would be staggering to run out into figures. So that, when we contemplate Ihe meaning and worth-whileness of health, we will concede at the outset that this sort of work is worth all it may cost and that no money which is extracted from the pockets of the people in the form o ftaxes goes to a more per manent and far-reaching purpose than that devoted to public health activities. There ought to be developed in this connection and in association with the plans for the merger of city and county efforts along this line a plan by which the school children, as well -as all chil dren of the county, might have the bene fit of clinics, by which they would be examined at the opening of school to see if they are physically competent to proceed with' their studies, to? ascer tain if they have any deformities which will remain in the way of their mental development, if left unattended, and to make such a survey of their needs as would1 fit in with their efforts in the school house. That is being done throughout the county generally, not only in the schools, but in the colleges, It has become a part of the education al system to look, first "of all, to the physical foundations of students, the theory and the fact, too, being that un less there is a physical basis, there will never be any great mental superstruc ture reared and unless there is the sure ground of good health to build upon, the development will always remain tot tering and unsafe. This newspaper- feels that a great step forward is about to be made in this community along this line and it deserves the cordial sympathy and co operation of the citizens generally. CONFIRMATION OF MR. WATTS. If there was ever any reason to sus pect that the Legislature would fall out over the confirmation of Colonel Watts as State tax commissioner, his unan imous Democratic endorsement by the General Assembly must be -a tremen dous setback to those who had thus been speculating. As a matter of fact, however, the idea that Colonel Watts would be opposed by an element in the Legislature that is thought to be none loo friendly to him was conceived large ly in imagination. AVhile there are still many Democratic leaders who think that Mr. Maxwell was the more logical man for the place, there remains the impression that Mr. Maxwell is filling an office right now where he can be of equal, if not greater benefit to the people of the State generally. Charlotte is having a host of visi tors during the week. With the depart ure of about 4,500 Shriners who have been attending the annual meeting and Fall ceremonial, we are face to face immediately with the coming of several hundred boys from all over the State to attend a T. M. C. A. conference that will present an especially' strong staff of speakers and furnish a program that promises to be of delight to the dele gates and redound as well to the 'edifica tion of any others who may come within the purview of the convention. NEEDS PUSHING. The mere fact that the Boy Scout movement is a good thing is not enough to put the local campaign across. It won't succeed on its own momentum, Just because a thing is good and right and virtuous by no means guarantees that such a thing will prevail without human activity concentrated behind1 it. The trouble with the Boy Scout move ment here, as indicated in this cam paign, is not that the people are unap preciative of it. but that there are not enough of men who are trying to put this particular effort across. Workers 4re needed; the field is white and invit ing to the harvesters, but it will take gleaning to gather the grapes. GROWTH OF LIFE INSURANCE. It is being brought out at the conven tion of Life Insurance Presidents now being held in New York City that the amount of life insurance written during 1921 exceeds that of any other year with the exception of 1920 which was an ex ceptional year in this industry. Reports from companies as to 1921 business in dicate that 13,150,000 new policies were written for an aggregate of $8,535,000, 000 insurance. In 1920 the number of new policies was 13,248,000 insuring $10,105,000,000. More than three times as much life insurance is being written today as was written 10 years ago. Monroe need have no. fear that Mar shal Foch will not be greeted by a crowd of North Carolinians who, both for numbers and for standing, will be thor oughly representative and fitting for the occasion. Charlotte will send its quota down to the capital of Union and expect to meet there a cosmopolitan throng from all quarters of the State to pay homage to the greatest living exponent of the military art. WHAT IF, THEY DO? President Harding declares, in connec tion with his Red Cross message, that the. Amerocan people may never a?ain be called upon to pour out their riches for such a cause as this because "we are Koing to succeed beyond our fondest Lopes" in the armament conference. But whatever success may come to ti e armament conferences anJ. de voutly trust that it will attain much beyond what was in the minds of the most ardent promoters of the move ment, there will be no actual and ab solute or permanent guarantee against war by merely scrapping a few battle ships and limitation of such naval arma ment. w Tho naxlons are merely considering the advisability of eliminating some of their present naval strength in the in terest of peace. If they conclude that ti.e limination of half of the present sea f:rces, for instant:;.', will make for world- peace, why not, as former Secretary McAdoo suggested, scrap the whole business and make it all the more sure? What's the use of having any battleships at all if the world is not going feo have any other wars? The truth of the matter is that, at best, disarmament will only tend to ward a postponement of war. Nothing will be done by this conference looking toward the setting up of some power that will be effective in seeing to it that armament agreements are carried out. Nothing is being done to eliminate the war-mind from the world. Nothing is being done to bring about that men tal disarmament which is certainly as vital to the cause of peitce as the scrap ping of a few battleships. For that reason the President and his advisers may find themselves greatly deluded over their accomplishments, even conceding that the technical pro gram of the conference is carried out be yond their fondest hopes. The most essential thing to be done in the interest of the peace of the world is to brins the powers into an associa tion whose whole program of ' action will have to do with the elimination of international friction and jealousy, an association that will discuss the causes of any offense which may be given a nation, and an association that will have the machinery and the force to dare any member-power to make war against another. Hiram Hank's new dry goods clerk has grown incensed, and knocked off work. He only stopped to leave a note. This is what they say he wrote: "Yesterday Mrs. Wittless Brown de sired some lace to drape a gown and made me spend the afternoon in show ing her some cheap maroon. In efforts to please this hag Brown I pulled a thousand samples down Boxes filled wjth cotton thread fell down and crown ed me on the head and 13 times I hurt myself by ramming some sharpe pointed shelf. Each time .she would feel the lace and sigh, 'It's too thick at the base', or tell me that she wished to buy some fretwork that was not "so high. Then I'd have to put it back and pull more trimmings from the rack. She looked at fringes and brocade of every kind of shape and shade. Up and down the shelves I sprang. Boxes hit me with a bang. More than once I slipped and fell in efforts to find stuff to sell. Lace and trappings filled the floor, but still she bellowed, 'Pull down more!' When I'd shown her all we had the old has seemed to be quite sad, and sigrhed. 'There's nothing in all that to mak.va ribbon for my cat:' I'd have to be a mental-lack before I'd put' those boxs back. I did not even get a thank. I'll have to leave you .Mister Hank." That is why the clerk left town and you can see this old hag Brown on a1 most any afternoon searching for some cheap galloon. No one likes to sae her face. The brainy clerk will hide his lace. We hope some day she will drop dead when some box falls upon her head. Copyright. 1921, by Xw Publishing Co. MOTOR ASSOCIATION FOR BLUE SUNDAY ELLON'S Second Floor VITAL , FACTS AS TO CANCER. The Health Bulletin, current issue, is devoted to the dissemination of some facts about cancer which, it says, is kill ing 1.000 persons in North Carolina every year. Many of these deaths, it further concludes, were preventable if the people had only possessed the proper information about the disease and, by reason of such information, had consult ed competent doctors soon enough. From what is presented by the Health Bulletin and from what recently was brought to the attention of the coun try during the observance of "Cancer Week", is it obvious that this disease is one of the most widely-prevalent causes of deaths in this country. In all of continental United States, the annual mortality from cancer is estimated at 90,000. It is probable that if all these deaths were correctly ascertained and certified, the total would reach 100,000 for the year 1920. The mortality rate fOr cancer is somewhat below 85 per 100,000 per annum .As a group of dis eases, cancer ranks with pneumonia, tuberculosis, and kidney disease as one of the five or six causes of death which stand second only to heart disease in 'he Census Bureau's annual report for 1917. The mortality from cancer is appar ently ' on the increase throughout all civilized countries. In the United States the annual increase in the cancer death rate is approximately 2 1-2 per cent.- It is almost exclusively a disease of adult life, for of the total number of deaths from cancer at all ages, about 95 per cent occur after the age of 35 is reached. Cancer appears in a variety of forms, affecting practically every organ or part of the body. The most important form for both sexes is cancer of the stomach, which, including the liver, accounts for about 35,000 deaths per annum. The number of deaths from cancer of the female generative organs is about 13, 000 per annum; from cancer of the female breast about 8,500 (a very high frequency, for it occurs in only half the population); from cancer of the mouth and tongue about 3,500, from cancer of the peritoneum, intestines and rectum combined about 12,000 from cancer of the skin about 3,500, and from cancer of other organs or parts about 14,500. Asheville, Dec. 8. The Asheville Automotive Trades Association, meet ing at the Battery Park hotel last night, went on record as favoring a blue Sunday for purchasers of gas, oil and automobile accessories. Start ing with the first of the year no more sales' in these supplies will be made by members of the association in Asheville on Sundays. Gnly the storage departments of the firms adopting this action will be open on Sunday,, all other branches of the bi.pinesses being closed. Tho Automobile Trades association includes in its membership about 2r of the leading- automobile dealers in the city. The action taken last night means that practically the entire gas anci oil supply of the city will be under lock on Sundays. Traffic laws and the sale of second hand cars were, discussed but no action in the form of resolutions was takn. WOMAN GANG LEADER DOING FANCY WORK Canon City, Colo., Dec. 8. Fancy work, flower making and china paint ing occupy the time of Colorado's best known women Criminals serving sen tences in the State penitentiary here. Eva Lewis, black-eyed vixen of the famous Lewis gang, is making fancy-work-in the "big house." She is the last of the band that engaged in many a gun battle Beside her, mumbling to herself, sits Mrs. Garramcne. former proprietress of Denver's only "murder farm," where the aged Italian women slaw her vic tims and buried them. She is mak ing artificial flowers which are sent to Italy to be sold on the streets of Rome. May Jones, former queen of Den ver's underworld in its ney-day, paints china. They have few words for visitors, these women, as they work at their hobbies behind the gray walls. SHOT FOX FOR RABBIT. Salisbury. Dec. 8 M. L. Early, while hunting rabbits two miles from Salis bury, shot an animal which hia Jiogs were running thinking it was a rab bit but it turned out to be a grey fox. He crippled the fox which put up such a strong fight with the dogs that a second shot had to b5 taken to kill it. The fox is a rare animal about here. GASTON TO HAVE OWN J5UILDING Will Erect Building for De linquents at Jackson Training School. Gastonia, Dec. 8. As the result of ac tion by the board of county commission ers in regular monthly session Monday Gaston-county is to have in the near future a cottage at the Stonewall Jack son Training School at Concord for the housing of juvenile delinquents from this county. The sum of $21,000, the amount stipulated by Superintendent J. P. Cook as necessary for the construc tion and furnishing of a building to acomrnodate 30 boys was appropriated for this purposa. It is understood that the construction of this building- will be commencewd at an early date. Speaking on behalf of the committees present at thejaoard meeting represent ing the Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs, the Woman's Club and. various other local civic organizations, Mr. J. H. Separk presented the matter to the hoard. He made a strong plea for the appropria tion, citing among other things the fact thatt he State reformatory is so limited in facilities that it is almost an impos sibility to get a boy in. Gaston unfor tunately has many boys who are too young to be dealt with otherwise and yet are of the criminal class which needs training and from which the pub lic needs protection. This building will afford the means of taking care of at .least 30 of these boys at a time. THIN, FADED HAIR NEEDS "DANDERINE" TO THICKEN IT 35 cents buys a bottle of "Danderine." Within ten minutes after the first application you caji not find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair. Danderine is to the hair what fresh .: showers of rain and ; sunshine are to vegeta- tion. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them helping your hair to grow long, thick and luxuriant. Girls! Girls! Don't let your hair stay life less, colorless, thin, scraggy. A single application of delightrul Danderine will double the beauty and radiance of your hair and make it look twice as abun dant. . r OSTEOPATHY Is the science of healing by adjustment. DR. H. F. RAY 313 Realty Bldg. DRi FRANK LANE MILLER 610 Realty Bldg. DR. ARTHUR M. DYE 224 Piedmont Bid?. Osteopaths, Charlotte, N. C. INFORMATION BY REQUEST VICE-PRESIDENT COOLIDGE SAYSj "There Is no argument against the taking of life insurance. It is established that the protection of one's family, or those near him, is the one thing most to be desired, and there is no medium of protection that is better than life insurance. Our government has given close at tention to the insurance companies, and they are on so sure a founda tion that it is in substance a guaranty method of protection for our people." Braswell & Crighton, Agents Prudential Insurance Co. of America 803 Com'I Bank Bids. Phone 1607 y til ill Gifts of Leather From Santa A Traveling Bag or Suit Case makes a worth-while gift always useful always handy enduring. ) Quality should be paramount in selecting such a gift. A bag made of genuine leather handsomely put together presents an appear ance of dignity. It evidences good taste in the donor and cre ates a feeling of pride in the recip ient. 0 You can select just such a gift here. "Our assortment is varied and complete Overnight Cases Weekend Fit ted Cases, Fitted Bags, Gladstone Bags. - JBS!H!)Hmt?)'.'i Jlfi p hi I I a si IB ill 1 1 Furniture Ch rtstrnas You can make your xooms much more attractive if you use plenty of lamps. Many new styles are now on display for the first time and our showing can not but help to please you. Mahogany andFiber Table Lamps i Lamps for the Bed Rooms, Lamps for the Living Room, Lamps for every room in the home. This illustration shows one of our beautiful Fi ber Floor Lamps we are olfering at under value. Parker-Gardner Co.