HE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 24, 1S21. Luke 2:14;-Glory to God in the highest; on earth, peace, good will toward men. True Peace Is Found in Cfrrist. Pray for Peace. GO TO CHURC tl TOMORROW Published in space of J. B. IVEY& CO. By Chairlotte Ministerial Association. "CHURCHES FIGHT ( OVERDIVINITY JlHunt'npton Ministerial As- Butiacion ixpeis iwo Members. SAD PLIGHT OF RUSSIANTARTAR No Food in the Soviet Re public of the Far East; Typical Case. By ROBT. STARR THORNBUK'J. International Jiewm Staff Correspondent. Huntington, V. Va.. Dec. 23. Huntington, the bluest blue-law town m America outside of Zion City has been plunged into a'; theological war over the question of the divinity of Jesus Christ. Two Congregationalist ministers have been expelled and pub licly rebuked by the Ministerial Asso ciation, bitter sermons have been preached in many of the churches and pro and con resolutions adonted hv religious organizations. The Rev. Fred W. Hagan, graduate cf Yale Uniiversity, is the central fig ure in the religious storm. Has;an stands for prog-csslve religion which will harmonize with modern sciientific teaching. He believes Jesus: Christ was a man not a God; that the Bibl is a l ook prepared by men, in which were written prejudices and idr-als of the past and that Biblical miracles were no more miracles than those of tho wireless and airplane- of to-day. the Ministerial Association, headed by Dr. Join S. Jenkins. Southern Methodist, adopted a ivsolutiicn char acterizing the Rev. Hasan's state- ments and his rermons as offensive. Tf':h Kafjan and his assistant, the Rev. H. N. Dukes, were dismissed from the ministers' society without a Hearing. "I have no apology to make." Hagan declared after the meeting. "I believe a liberal Gospel is the hope of the Church. If the Church will put its teachings on a reasonable basis men everywhere will accept religion." t r , , . nagan suggested tnat there are many ministers in Huntington who belive in a liberal Gospel, but are afraid if trey teach it they will be thrown out of their churches. The Congregationalist minister, while a student at Yale and after his graduation, preached in seventy-three different churches in New England. "I found in New England, in the West and on the battlefields of France in the World War, men would not. ac- I cept the teachings of the Church be cause they could not reconcile them to common sense and scinece," he said- baptists, Presbyterians, Southern and Northern Methodists and Conere- . rationalists are alike in this belief." The minister describes Jesus Christ as a great personality, but he refuses to belive His birth was the result of a divine conception. The Rev. J. Layton Mauze, pastor of the aristocratic First Presbyterian Church, led tiie attack again.?c the Rev.. Hagan and the Rev. Dukes. He propscd the resolution which dis missed them without a trial. His reso lution alleges Higan was untruthful, offensive and that his teachings are harmful to the Church. A still more bitter arraignment of the Rev. Hagan was made by the Rev. M. L. Wood, pastor of a Baptist church. "If we accept the natural birth theory of the Christ we will have to I elieve that Jesus was an illegitimate child that Mary, proclaimed in the Scriptures as highly favored of God and blessed among women, was really a fallen Jewish girl and that Joseph was a dupe and a fool," declared the Rev. Wood from his pulpit. The Congregational Church, with a big and wealthy membership adopted resolutions backing the Rev. Hagagn. The resolutions exepressed belief in their preacher, in spite of the vigorous attacks of the other ministers of the city. The. former Congregationalist preacher was an organizer of the Min isterial Association, the constitution of yhich provides that none but those believing in the divinity and deity of Jesus Christ i3 eligible ' for member ship. Huntington is said to have the largest church attendance of any city o its size in the eontry. From fifteen to twenty thousand persons are regu lar church attenders. Ludogovka, Tartar Republic, Dec. 24. The fourth anniversary of the es tablishment of the Soviet Republic in Russia found this peasant village of 600 people in no mood for celebrating. Foodloss and cheerless, the starving population could have no heart for any sort of jubilation, even if it knew what the political maneuvers at Moscow mean. Like most Russian peasants, the unhappy folks of Ludogovka have neither the learning nor the will to study politics. Bread, wood and warm Ned Gelute has licked his spouse and kicked her madly from the house. "And you would kiek your wife out, too,," he cried, as he wiped off his shoe, if she should want a different hat and gown to wear to this and that. The world is in a hectic mess about a varied kind of drees. If my wife, Jane, went to the clothing are their three desires. They show Oie wore a dress .of indigo COLLEGE GIRL WILL HELP SOCIETY OUT Chicago, Dec. 00. Through the Influence of the college girl a change for the better will be brought about in the character of society, in the opin ion of President Henry Noble Mac Cracken of Vasrar, who has been nd dressing alumnae meetings in Chi cago. The college girl, according to Dr. MacCrackcn will not be content with perpetual frivoiiy. "Too much frivolty bores the col lege girl," said Dr. MacCracken. "She will not tolerate the unwholesome things in sociey life. And because she has been trained to be a leader the will do away with them." Dr. MacCracken said the college girl will substitute pleasure and culture for frivolity and speed. "If girls must be happy," he de clared, "they must have something :nore to think about than style." haven't enough of any of these Winter has laid its first heavy coat ing of snow on the flat prairies, and the peasants have started, grhn-faced, on their endurance test to see how many can survive the six months of cold and privation. Many of the younger children have been deemed so completely underfed by the doctors in the employ of the American Relief Ad ministration that they will be given one good hot meal a day. Ludogovka is a typical peasant vil lage of the poorer class. It is 60 miles from Kazan and many miles from the Volga and railway commu nication. Unpainted log houses are scattered along a main stret. The houses generally have two rooms. Some have three. Frequently the ani mal sheds are built against the houses for warmth. Many of the stables are at the back end of long vegetable gar dens which yielded few potatoes and cabbats this year because of the drought. The stables are chiefly de serted. There is no forage, no grain for the animals which have survived up to this time on the dry stubble which will soon be under several feet of snow. Russian doesn't have blizzards such as are known in America. In late Oc tober or early November the snows be gin and continue gently nearly every day until the earth is covered to a depth cf three or four feet. This Winter will not bring its cus tomary round of Winter sports and recreations. There are no horses to draw he troikac; and jingle the bells which ordinarily enliven Russian high ways through the hor1 days and long nights of frost. The home ol Ivan Ivanovich Petroff is typical of the most poverty-stricken houses visited by .the correspondent. Petroff is a farmer, as practically all the villagers are. He has the use of several dissiattrics of land, more than he was able to cultivate because of lack of animals and seed He had once been a sturdy giant, over six feet tall. But his ragged trousers show his legs have shrunken to mere bones and his i scraggly beard cannot conceal the! emaciation and sallowness of his face. J His wife is lying-, ill, above a large masonry stove. A gangling, hollow eyed boy of 16 stands listlessly and gapes at the strangers. A little girl of eignt. who is getting the American meals and two others, slightly older, who were not designated for the for eign food, stand near their mother. The furnishings of the room are al most nil. It has the smell of poverty and neglect. In good seasons Russian peasant houses-- are seldom clean. They are never ventilated. But the smell of cabbage soup and tea make them less offensive in normal years. When asked , what the family had to eat Petroff pointed to two loaves of green bread which lay on the stove and said there had been nothing else for his family in ten days. He threw open an adjoining room and pointed to a pile of the improvised "flour" out of which the bread was made. It was nothing but ground up grass, leaves, sunflower seed and other trash of a similar character. The visitors offered him money. He took it unwillingly and asked: "But what shall I do with it? There is noth ing to buy in this village and I can't go in search of food. Neither can my family." One of the American relief workers thereupon offered to buy some flour in a village many miles away. Through out the remote villages of the Tartar Republic and tne Samara Government American workers have found the same lack of food. She bought a gown like gray sea foam to wear at night around the home. Whenever she went for a ride she wore a black frock on her hide. My bank account las suffered shocks from indoor skirts and outdoor frocks. Each morning that my wife cavie down she wore a different breakfast gown. She then put on some other duds to diddle in the posie buds. A little later in the day she went out in a new array, saying that that special garb was made for mingling with the mob. When in the pantry making pies she wore a kind of kitchen guise and every time she wrote a note she donned a dainty writing coat. Her harness often changed at noon to one of crepe de chine maroon. A golfing frock and walking dress, a suit for bridge and one for chess, and every kind of sport ing gown she bought from merchants in the town. Had not I kicked her out, methinks she'd soon have one for tiddle-dee-winks." One can't blame poor Ned Gelute. Where are the days when one good suit would last a maid throughout the day at home, outdoors, at work or play? Ned did right in licking Jane. The modern styles are quite insane. Copyright, 1931, by Notts Publishing Co. CHICAGO LlQtTOR RING EXPOSED BY OFFICERS Chicago, Dec. 24. Exposure of on9 of the most thoroughly organized liquor rings ever operated in Chicago was ac complished here yesterday, according to Federal prohibition agents follow ing the arrest of three men and the confiscation offil barrels of whiskey. The ring was exposed, according to Federal agents, after attempts had been made to bribe prohibition agents with a view to flooding Chicago with whiskey during the holidays. The. men under arrest are Dr. I. Val Freedman, Samuel D. Freedman, his brother, and David Brumfleld, all of Chicago. According to Edwin L. Weisl assistaaf district attorney, warrants are being prepared for the arrest of several other persons, including a number of prominent politicians. The liquor ring was brought to light, according to Federal authorities when an attempt was made to bribe Col. A. C. Earnshaw, chief of the intelligence unit of the Revenue Department. A fund of $100,000 had been raised for bribery purposes and $300,000 for the purchase of the entire product of three distille-ies in Kentucky. Colonel Earn shaw said he was told. He said he was offered $65,000 'to allow the plan to proceed. When arraigned charged with violation of the Federal prohibi tion law yesterday. Dr. Freedman and Blumfield were released in bonus ot $5,000 each and Samuel Freedman's bonds were fixed at 52,000. WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME AT YOUR DRUGGIST AaU for WY W.AME ONlV.avcid CulHtu.l AN IRISH PERMIT IS HARD TO OBTAIN London, Dec. 24. Newspapers pub lish the following as an official an nouncement by Austin Stack, Sinn Fein Home Affairs Secretary: "Permits to emigrate cannot be is sued to persons who have left Ireland without them. :NOT AFFECTED BY THE HIGH ALTITUDES GOVERNOR COOPER GRANTS 31 PARDONS Columbia, S. C,. Dec. 24. Governor Robert A. Cooper today granted . 31 pardons and paroles to prisoners In the penitentiary and on the chaingangs of the- State. Some of the pardons were persons who have been previously paroled, given at this time to restore citizenship. In addition several tem porary paroles were granted to perrjiit. prisoners to spend Christmas Day at their homes. The Governor has not yet acted on the recommendation of the pardon board that Dan Murphy be given a full pardon, although this prisoner, who has served 30 years of a life sentence, says he does not wish to leave the prison. t III"' i S . ,-1 $5,000,000.09 North Carolina School Bonds On Friday. December 30, 1921, at 12 M., at the office of the State Treasuiev, Raleigh. N. C, I will open bids for $5,000 000.00 serial bonds of the Stats of North Carolina, dated January 1, 1022, and maturing $250,000.00 on Jan uary 1. 1927. and $250,000.00 on each succeeding January for twenty years. Rates of interest not exceeding o. If bids are higher than 4Vs, only $2,500,000.00 will be sold. Bidders requested to file bids for bonds at the lowest rate of interest at par. Check for 2 must accompany bid. B. R. LACY, State Treasurer. 24-2t-sat-wed th even gge snorts Hour China Glass Rookwood Lamps Candles Candlesticks Fire Goods TOY Tea Sets Furniture Sets Cooking Sets Pholson Noveltie Percolators Casseroles Community Silver Golf Goods Tennis Goods Razors Knives Shears Scissors Alarm Clocks Watches Wheel Toys Vacuum Bottles Boxing Gloves Roller Skates Air Rifles London, Dec. 24. Many of the na tives fo Peru it is stated, are much less.- affected by the rarified air at high altitudes than are ordinary men of other races who are accustomed to hard labor. It is declared that at an altitude of 16,000 feet they can carry loads of 150 pounds up a steep in cline where the ordinary -person would find it all he could do to drag his OAvn boots up. V The Royal Society is going to try to find out what is the secret that enables them to perform such feats of physical strength under conditions that would fender . the task an impos sible one for the average man. Three scientists have just gone to Peru to investigate the phenomenon. They were Frofessor Meakins, J. I. Barfcroft and J. H. Doggart, the two latter of Cambridge University. Five other scientists from Canada and Canada and New York will join them in Peru. Mr. Barcroft told an in terviewer that the purpose of the ex pedition is to test the strain to which the heart and lungs are subjected by carrying heavy ' loads at such great height, and to endeavor to discover how the natives can stand it. ft ur many years of experi ence in selling precious stoni3 is your warranty against mis takes in judging quality in value. See our showings ot gift suggestions in gems. Diamond Merchant, Jeweler, Silversmith 10 N. Tryon St. ADVERTISEMENT CITY OF CHARLOTTE To General Contractors The Board of School Commissioners of the City of Charlotte invite' sealed proposals to erect and complete thj Central High School, on corner of Cecil Street and Elizabeth Avenue, Charlotte, N. C, construction bond of a surety company therefor in the sum of 60 of the entire contract. Only proposals obtained at the office of Lockwood, Greene & Co., signed by the bidder and left before 12 o'clock noon, Thursday. January 5, 1922, at the office of the Secretary of the Board of School Commissioners, Mr. H. P. Harding, together with a ' cer tified check for , $7,500.00 payable to J. L. Wolfe, Chairman of the Finance Committee of the Board of School Commissioners if the proposal i3 net carried out, will then and there be considered. The bid must be made in duplicate, to be sent as above. The Board of School Commissioners reserve the right to reject any or all proupoala. A deposit of $25.00 will be required for a complete set of plans and specifications, said sum to be refunded on return of drawings and specifi cations. A deposit of $15.00 will be required for a set of heating and ventilating or electric plans with speci fications. Mutilation of the plans or specifi cations will be deemed sufficient cause for the forfeiture of said deposit. Address Lockwood, Greene & Co., Engi neers, 422 Piedmont Building, Char lotte. N. C. Dec.24,25,28,29;Jan.:U THE BEST KNOWN SHOE IN THE WORLD Tou win like the new styles for this seftsea. ALWAYS REJdBJfBER STYLE- COMFORT SERVICE are th three qualities built Into every pair of W. L,' DOUGLAS SHOES and the prlca ia stamped on the sole for your protection. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES HATS BEEN LEADERS FOR FIFTY TEARS with Men, Women, Children They are Utaion Mada. ATHAN'! 3S East Trade St. SMITH-WADSWORTH Hardware Company "The Quality Hardware Store' 29 East Trade Street Phones 64-65 Pay The Last We have numerous gifts for the man that you can select in that last moment with an assurance of pleas ing him H. C Long Co. 33 East Trade. Open All Evening. N Rair promptly dno All wtff strictly gutrntptd QL'ECN CITY CCLC $& "THS RSB FROMT 42 N- Coilefl. Phon 817 'TIS TIME TO GO HUNTING W WE HAVE t.::;v GUNS AND SHELLS - Wo handla several lines of shotgune, all are favorite makes. Our new stock is here and our prices are surprisingly low ,;v. as. i , SEE US BEFORE TOU BUY. "THE GOOD SERVICE STORE" . . M ATHESON Hardware & Paint Co. 30 West Trade St. Phone 175 I irVrr iff 1W t. 1 90 I It M Km. o 1 M If c . . r t f intt i . - f I I .. t..;vr i Till , . -t -, - - it., d f to