PAGE FOUR The Concord Times Sintered as second glass mail matter Bt the postoffice at Concord, N. C* tu»- der tha Act of March 3. 1879. Published Mondays and Thursdays. ■ J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Pnbllslie*- W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor Special Representiitlve FROST. LANDIS St KOHIf 225 Fifth Avenue, New York; Peoples Gas Building, Chlcage. 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta g r- - - - - I - - RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect December 3, 1922. Northbound No. 44 To Washington ' 5:00 A. M. No, 86 To Washington 10:55 A. M No. 46 To Danville 3:45 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To Washington 8:29 P. M. No. 138 To Washington 9:4£ P. M. No. 30 To Washington 1:40 A. M. Southbound. No. 35 To Atlanta * ' 10.08 P. M. Wo. 29 To Atlanta 2:37 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 6:07 A. M. Wo. 137 To Atlanta » 8:41 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 9:25 A. M. No. 45 To Charlotte 3:20 P. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 9:15 P. M. 1 TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS The time of the closing of mails at < the Concord postoffice is as follows: , Northbound. Train No. 44—11 p. m. Train No. 30—10:30 a. m. '• Train No. 12 —G :30 p. m. ] Train No. 38 —7:30 p. m. Train No. 30—11 p. m. Southbound. ' ] -Train No. 37—9:30 a. m. Train No. 45—3:00 p. m. Train No. 135 —9:00 p. m. . Train No. 29—11:00 p. m. Bible Thought For The Day j ■¥■ ; THE FIRST AXI) THE EAST:—I ( axn tht* first, and I am the last: and Insides.'me there is no God. * Is there 1 a Gjoti me? yea, there is no God: I i TAXES REFLECT PROSPERITY. i >; i According to early figures made p*b- ( lie by li. A. Houghton. State Cominis- i sioner of Revenue. 1922 was a pros perous year for the average man in • * North Carolina. This condition is { shown in the early tax returns made & the ytate. §-rcVp to ifcih|uight March 13th. the t/ommiMoaep, had ■ collected in j : income taxes more than two and one half times as much as was received , a during the same period last year. Fed- oral income taxes paid up to the same ( period also reflect decidedly more prosperity in North ( *ayolina' although the percentage is not so great. The State exacts a heavier toll from j - the poor man than does the federal government, the State exemptions l»e --iog $2,000 for a married man and s2oo* for each additional dependent, while the United States allows a married man $2,500 and S4OO for each depend ent. However, conditions are re vers ed on large incomes, the State grad- 1 nation in taxes stopping at the slo.* 1 000 mark while !the federal govern- 4 ment imposes heavy surtaxes on all .Jarge incomes. - > 1 Since the little fellows are the ones who usually tile first the receipts by f the State to date show a much heav- f ier increase over, those for 1922 than is reflected in the federal figures, but ( this disproportion will probably be re- 1 moved when the big fellows have been 1 heard from. : BT j During the entire year of 1922 the *State collected $2,414,726.00 in income ( taxes, $201,011.55 of this amount be- ( ing received on or before March 13. ' During the first thirteen days in March this year Commissioner Houghton lias 1 taken in $452,551.95’ as against $149,- ' 099,32, or about three times the figure 1 in the same period last year. _ 1 V Figures • for the federal government show $4,583,551.95 collected during the ' first thirteen days of March in 1923 as ajjainst $3,587,820.49 during the ! same period last year. Collector Gris som found the thirteenth day of the month far from unlucky, taking in $057,280 or more than twice as much as the figure of $277,170.00 collected on the same day in 1922. All of the figures cited for the State are for in come taxes only while those of the federal government include all taxes. *- It is probable that it will be Mon day before either the'State or Feder al ugeuts know just wtyat was paid iu up to midnight of the 15th. Since the 'large taxpayers, whose returns count piost in the totals, usually wait until the lust minute to pay their taxes and a number of them asked for and ob , tained extensions the tax collectors are not prepared to say to just what ex- H tent the rate of increase noted on the 13th will hold when all of the re 6, turns are in. ~Both are convinced, however, that final returns will show substantial gains over 1922. The income of the average salaried man is really what determines the wealth of a State, and the large in crease iu taxes that this class- of citi zens is paying this year iu North Car olina certainly indicates a healthy spirit financially. Last year w*as a great one iu North Carolina, but we believe 1 ! 1923^ will ■be even better for every class. NEW TEXTILE PLANT FQJi CITY. fc , Formal announcement has been made by the principal stockholders and the ■ ‘incorporators of the Hobart on Mauu-! factoring Company thnt plant will be erected in this city in the near future. The charter for the company has been received, machinery has l»een ordered and the contract awarded for the erec- the mill structure. This is probably the most important business announcement made in Con cord in recent years. The plant will represent the first textile mill erected here since before the World War, and indicates that the cotton mill business here is so prosperous that other mills may he erected soon and additions built to several of the present plants. The success of the project is assur ed by the announcement of the men who are hacking it. The principal stockholders and the incorporators are men who have made good in other textile enterprises, men who have 1 been associated with the textile in dustry for years, ami wen who are characterized by sound business judg- 1 meut. One of the most interesting phases of the announcement of the new pom- \ pany is the statement that the proj ect is being financed with local capital and that local workers will be em- j ployed. LITTLE INTEREST IN ELECTION. A municipal election will be-held in Concord- on May Bth. but so far little general interest is being shown in it. In fact, so far as we can learn the vot ers apparently do not care much about who is to lie Mayor or Aldermen, and while rumors of strong opposition to j the present, administiQition by an In- ! dependent ticket are current, no tick ets of any kind have been announced. The present administration has been especially active in regard to build ing paved streets, and when the work under contract now lias been complet ed this city will have about 10 miles iff i«i\ed streets and 20 milt's of ce ment sidevValks.. Rumors of* an Independent ticket ire rather persistent, and out* rumor tleclares "a clean sweep” is to he aiade in the.city ball if this is possible. Who the Independent candidates are :o be is not known, and sH far names | 3ave been omitted in the rumors. It is believed that Mayor Wornble mil certainly some of the presept al bumen. will he candidates again. A j •lose friend of the Mayor declares that he city’s chief executive lias not made ip his mind yet as to whether or not no will be a candidate, hut it is be loved if his friends insist, Mr. Wom >le will enter the lield again. FINDS FOR LENOIR COLLEGE. The Lutherans of North Carolina ind of the entire Church membership, for that matter, have an important :ask lxTore them iu raising a fund of ?K50.000 for Daniel Rhyne College, formerly Lenoir College. The cam paign lias been ably presented to the Lutherans of this district and there is every reason to believe the quota for the district will lie easily raised. Mr. Daniel 11. Rhyne lias given the college $300,009 oil condition that the remaining $550,000 be raised. The Lutheran Church in this State lias agreed to raise $.300,000 of this, and friends and former students of the college who are not affiliated with the Cbureli in this State are expected to raise the remainder. Money invested in Christian educa tion is money well invested. It brings dividends in t character and soul build ing and that's the finest kind of divi dends. We expect to hear in the near future that the campaign lias been a complete. success and that Hamel Rhyne College is in position to take the place in education it lpis offered with the securing of the fund. ——" mmmmmm —— 4# THE VALLE OF MILK. Federal veterinarians who have been conducting bovine tuberculosis clinics in this county for a number of mouths, have about completed their work, and in their last report they stated that the cows in Cabarrus County are iu fine shape and they recommended that everyone give more 'attention to milk drinking and make milk one of the biggest factors iu their diet. Milk is recommended for every member of the family, not merely the children. The Charlotte Observer notices that I)r. William 'Emerson, entributing to the literature of the day* says that “when we turn to the problem of diet in connection with the nutrition and growth of children there is no other factor of greater importance than the adequate use of-milk. It is the one food which contains the many ele meuts essential to the proper upbuild ing of the body. - \ “For adult a quart a day is good health insurance. ’ “For invalid a quart a day is a good life insurance. “For child a quart a day is an iu k dispensable food.” , And these are some of the conten tious for milk: 1. Supplies building material for bones, teeth, muscles. 2. Strengthens nerves and every other part-of hotly* ! 3. Supplies growing force wl*jfh mates weafebodl#® strong. 4. Helps keep heart beating. The Observer thinks a child should have “one quart of milk a day if pos-, sible—a pint without fail. A glass- of j creamy, clean milk is the best tonic for boys and girls. It helps make them active and sturdy, with energy for the play and a chance to grow into , strong men and women. ‘•Milk is so efficient a food that on this single item of diet, the young in fant will triple its weight in twelve t 1 months. v ‘Good, clean, fresh milk and sunshine are the best safeguard against rick ets. “Milk contains more lime than any other common food. Lime is the chief constituent of bones and teeth. “Milk is the best food we have Re quires no preparation; has no waste; is most thoroughly digested ,of . any foods.” j* In this county now we are paying especial attention to the care of cows | and it is right that we should. Where a few years ago there was not a great amount of milk in Cabarrus County I for sale, we now find large herds and much milk is being sold in the dairies in addition to that consumed by the families which own their cows. HARDING* IN THE RACE. Attorney General Daugherty comes forward with the statement that Pres ident Ilardiug will be a candidate in 1924. Though the Attorney 'General lias not announced that lie will be the President’s campaign manager in the next election, lie is still considered one of the leaders of the President, and or that reason his statement can he taken as official. The announcement will cause no surprise. When Mr. Harding appoint ed former Senator New to the,cabinet as Postmaster General tlie public saw that Mr. New would Re Mr. Harding’s campaign manager iu the next elec tion. Mr. New is regarded as a wise politician. Being a member of the “old guard” and a close friend to many of the Republican leaders, Mr. New is expected* to got the Republican nomi nation fbr Mr.'Harding without much trouble. But, as The Charlotte News put# it. “it is not the nomination of Mr. Hard ing that Mr. New is. so particularly exercised about. After that will come the deluge and such a deluge as this new Postmaster General, even though ‘politician to his finger-tips,’ will not be able to avert.” The State Highway Commission ex pects to construct 800 miles of im proved highways in North Carolina during 1923, with half of the roads hard surface. The first 1923 meeting of the board was held recently in Ral eigh and plans for the new year were made. There is every reason to be lieve the 800-mile goal can be reach ed, Ivast year the commission super vised the construction of 1.000 miles of roads, with 000 miles in hard surface. If tlie< cement situation, which lias caused some delay to the work, can he straightened out and the supply in creased, the SOfltmile program is al most certain to be a success. The com mission last year tried to evade the cement shortage by purchasing their supply from a foreign country, but the plan was not feasible, and the work has already been delayed to some ex tent by the shortage of this important factor in road building. To Scatter Man’s Ashes in Mid-Ocean. New York, March 1 (*.—Miss Anna Rolchi Benjamin, adopted daughter of l’ark Benjamin, wealthy New Yorker .and father-in-law of Enrico Uaruso, will cast Mr. Benjamins ashes into the Atlanta from the deck of the liner Presidente Wilson when that vessel is in mid-ocean next week. Miss Benja liiiighas engaged passage on the Presi dente v Wilson to sail for Italy tomor row. Two days before Mr. Benjamin died, according to the statement of the adopted daughter, he requested that his ashes be scattered into the Atlan tic at its exact center, or as near the center as possible. The ashes .are noV*- in an urn held by Miss Benjamin and she will carry this urn with her when she boards the ship: Miss Benjamin received the bulk of her adopted father’s estate under the terms of a will, which cut off the Ben jamin children: including Mrs. Caru so. with $1 each. The five Benjamin children contested the will, but the contest was withdrawn after the chil dren had received “substantial finan cial consideration.” according to a statement issued by their counsel. Did Not Ask U. S. to Intervene. Washington, Mar fill 17. —State de partment officials have received a statement of Germany’s position in re gard to reparations hut they declared today that the. information as deliver ed yesterday by Dr. Hans Heinrich Dieekhoff, councillor of the German embassy, called for no action by the Washington government looking to mediation or intervention by it in the reparations dispute between Germany and France. The information presented by Dl\ Dieekhoff was characterized as a statement of Germany's position with out any request f(lr aetion by the • United States. Officials’ said tUfsy would make no reply, nor wouftl they call it to the attention of the Freeh government. . ~ . The elephant does not smell with his. trunk. His olfactory nerves ure contained iu a single nostril, which is in the 'roof of tliejmouth,' near the front • „ \ • ' t: „ w '.'l • n \ ” •Jt “ t; ' V • • 1 • * «k. THE CONCORD TIMES [♦***X*XK £ * % * X * ♦ iserious wreck * t* . IN RUHR VALLEY. * * t m ' '■% Berlin, March 17 (By the As’so- ' fr. tinted Press). —A report from • Rrietersheim, a Rhine town near i Luislmrg, says tlmr forty soldiers ! were killed and many injured I when a French troop train collid- rK i ed with a freight. The impact j rJ? was so violent that several of the coaches were telescoped. * „ * COUNTY-WIDE PLAN OF ORGANIZATION STARTED i Franklin County First in State to j Move Under New Legislative Act. Raleigh. N. C., March 16.—Franklin is the first county in the state to move, [under the new school code passed by the last general assembly, to establish I a county-wide plan of organization of j schools, according to reports made to [Hr. E. (’..Brooks, state superintend ; cut of public instruction. In order to conform with the re quirements of the law, the board of education rank tin has called a meeting* in Louisburg. April 16, all school committeemen and trustees. At this meeting, the county-wide plan of organization will be discussed and formulated. No election will be end ed or any change made in any dis trict until after the organization con ference. « I>r. Brooks called attention to Sec tion 73-a of the new school code, which covers county-wide organization. ‘ The county hoard of education shall create no new districts nor shall It abolish a district, nor shall it consolidate districts or parts of dis tricts, except in accordance with a county-wide plan of organization as follows,” reads the section. "I. The r county hoard of education shall present a diagram or map of the county showhig tlit* present loca tion of each district, the position of each, tlu* location of roads, streams and other natural barriers, the num ber of children in each district, the sizti and condition of each school build ing in each district. The county hoard of education shall then prepare a county-wide plan for the organization ] of all the schools in the county. This plan shall indicate the proposed cluing- • es to Ik* made and how districts or parts of districts tire proposed to be consolidated so as to work out a more advantageous system for the entire county. , ”2. Before adopting the county-wide plan, the county -board of education shall call a meeting of all the school, committeemen and the boards of trus tees and lay the proposed plan Indore them for their ad vice and suggestions. After receiving the advice of commit teemen and trustees, the county board ■*»(' education, shall have authority to adopt a county-wide plan of organiza tion. and in* districts or parts of any district, including non-local tax. local tax, special charter districts, hereafter referred to in this article shall l>e consolidated or the boundary lines changed, unless the consolidation or change of boundary lines in i ac cordance with the country-wide iplan of organization: Provided, that ill the event the county board of education deems it wise to modify or change the adopted plan, the hoard shall *otify the Committeemen and interested pa trons and give them a hearing if they desire to be heard before any changes shall he made. M The county I ward of education shall have authority to execute the entire plan or any part of same, but the county -board of education shall have no authority to creat a debt for the execution of any ]>art of the pro posed plan unless authorized by law, and if the amount necessary to put in to operation ail or any part of said [dan shall be greater than the amount that may he reasonably expected from the operation and equipment fund for this purpose, the amount shall be guaranteed by* the districts affected by the execution of -the plan, or if the districts do not guanuitee the funds the county board of education shall lay the proposed plan before the coun ty commissioners?, together with the estimated amount necessary to put the same into operation, and if the amount necessary to carry out all or any part of the proposed plan shall lto approv ed by the l county commissioners, the county board of education shall then have the authority to organize the dis tricts in accordance with thp county wide plan. “When the proposed county-wide plan is adopted the county hoard shall notify the committeemen and I wards of trustees us to what part of the board proposes to carry out first and in what order the other parts of the plan will be considered and the ('renee shall he- given to those districts* in which the needs are greatest if the funds for providing the equipment are made available. “5. In the event that any child or children of any district or any* part of a district are without adequate school advantages, and these advant ages may be improved by transferring said child or children tq a school or schools /in adjoining districts, the county board shall have authority to make such a transfer. But this shall ►not empower the county board of ed ucation to abolish or divide a district unless such act shall he in harmony with the county-wide plan or organi zation. The temporary transfer of such child or children may he made until such time as the county-wide plan will provide more advantageously for them.” _ Child Dies From Injuries. Rocky Mount. N. f\, March 16.—■ Lola Mae Howell. 9 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs: C. (>. Howell, of this city, died last night at a local hospital from internal injuries received yester day afternoon when she stepped from a school truck in the path of an au tomobtyt?rUhe,driver,of--which, was ex dnera|(fd. : v 1 ' * v Estranged Wife of dcmciiceau Dead. Milwaukee. Wis.,. v March 16.—The deatli in Paris of Madam Pary Plum mer Clemynee.au, estranged wife of the “Tiger” of France, and wartime premier, is announced today by the Milwaukee Journal. I Madam Clemeuceau was a native of ■ Durand, Wisconsin. JlB BEAD VVD ABOUT 1«« K| ISJVHED BY TORSADO £ ' \ Property Damage Estimated at $300,- ' l 000 to SIOO,OOO. —Hundreds Are a ; Homeless. * i Memphis, Tenn., Mar. 16. —Eighteen i dead, approximately 100 injured and property danfhge estimated, at 03- i tween $300,000 and $400,000 made up 4 the known toll tonight 01/a tornado 4 which swept seven delta counties in 4 northern Mississippi last night de ; me)lished one village—Savage—arid , left a trail of property damage and „ dead and wounded in a dozen “Or more towns and farming settlements. 1 Seven hundred aie homeless. Os the known dead nine lost their I lives when the storm battered the remnants of the town of savage— , badly, damaged two months ago oy a tornado —into debris and carried half i a dozen dwellings into Coldwater , river. (Mrs. C. W. Mabry, A. G. Mabry, nis i wife, and John C. Kerr, a merchant, ■ are among those killed at Savage. > Five negroes also were killed at Sav- 1 ■ age, six others lost their lives when i their cabin were wrecked near Lam-i ■ bert, and one negro child was killed ! at Walnut Lake, his death being at tributed to heart failure incident to the excitement of the storm. * Os the injured about 15 were re ' ported seriously hurt. The list of the injured includes: ■Mrs. Velma Rich, Savage, condition critical. y Mrs. Addie'May Roland, Walnut Lake, arm crushed. Charles Kidd and wife: Mrs. Lois Chamber, Robert B. Mabry. H. L. Cochran, all of Savage. Ten of the negroes injured were seriously hurt. \ The storm, ft whirling wind which swept in from the southwest, in its rush northeastward tore paths i through the towns of Olive Branch , Holly Springs, Sardis, Hernando and j Phillip, after leveling the village *of j Savage and wrecking a dozen or more ’ farming settlements and hamlets. Savage was tonight a mass of I splintered wreckage; at Sardis a • dozen buildings were wrecked and < the front of a hotel was smashed; I at Holly Spring the McDermott hotel ! and the Frisco railroad station was damaged; half a dozen buildings were j wrecked at Hernando and at Walnut Lake the storm took its heaviest toll »on the plantation of L . C. Cannon, where nearly a score of cabins were swept from their foundations and the plantation dwelling was damaged. •Wire communication with the af fected area still was crippled tonight, and only meager reports had been re ceived from inland'' villages in the , path of the tornado. MEDICAL SCHOOL IDEA IS NOT YET ABANDONED University Intends to Keep on Work ing Until End Has Heen Achieved. Chapel Hill, Marclils.—The Univer sity intends to keep on working for a four-year Univoxsity Medical school. This was made plain today when President Chase issued the following Statement : “I* have been asked a number of times recently whether the fact that the Legislature made -no appropria tion for the expansion of the Univer sity medical school mctfns that the pro ject for /i four-year University medical >ehool lias heen abandoned. “Under * the resolution of the U ni versity trustees, which I believe nrouses a definite determination to see tlie matter through, this is not the. case. The University is deeply in terested in the matter, and so, it seeius clear, is the medical profession of the state. Plans for the expan sion of the .school into a four-year ■ degree-grunting school will, with the permission of the lioard, be. laid be fore the Legislature, and I believe that the sentiment, of the board is clearly to keep at work on the idea until (hi' school is established. “J tliftik that tlie. discussions j>f the matter in the last lew months have been of great value in bringing home to the state the need for a full four year medical school, and I am hopeful that proper provision for such a school may be made two “years from now.” THINK HARDING PAYS $17,990 INCOME T\X Donimnit Filed, by the President at Columbus —He Is the First Execu tive to Pay. Columbus, Ohio, March 14. —The first, full year income tax return ever tiled by ’ a President of the United States was in the local internal reve nue office today—President Harding's report for 1022. "An amendment to tin* income tax law making the Presi dent's salary taxable went into effect when Mr. Harding took office, hut Ids . return last year covered only nine months of his salary. Other government offieiuls who filed returns today included Attorney Gen- General Daugherty, United * States Senator. Willis, D. R. Crissiuger. Con troller of the Currency, and the Presi dent's Selretary George 13. Christian. Jr. in the revenue office here figured that Mr. Harding would pay a tax of $17,000 on his presiden tial salary of $75,000 a year. - Col lector Miller pointed out. however, that no information on what the Pres dent's total income tax is will lie giv en out. No such information as that is made ..public, lie said. Raid LadPrs Turkish Bath; Seize Litfjor. Philadelphia. Pa.. Mar„-Js.—“Ladies Day’’ in a Turkish hath house was] rudely interrupted by ten prohibition ' agent? here yesterday when the offi- i cers raided the establishment in | search of moonshine. A still, in opera-' ; tion and forty gallons of alleged ’ moonshine whiskey were found and, fifty women went scampering for, cover. , . Two Germans Killed. Dysseldorf, .March 17 (By the As- Press) Germans jAyere.j shot and killed by French * | (luring the night—one at Reckling ' lmuseu and the other at Essen. I ’I J i * j The highest, pripe ever paid fop a * poem was G.OOO golden crowns paid ! to Sannabaro by the citizens of Ve.uice : for his eulogy of their city—a poem 1 of sis lines only. k CLUBBING KATES. You can save money by subscribing for other papers in connection with , The Times or Tribune. We will send you The Times ard Progressive Fanner both one year for only $2.50. This is a saving of 50 cents to you, and makes The Times cost you only $1.50 a year. We will send The Times and the At lanta Thrice-a-Week Constitution, both one year, for $2-75. Wa will send you The Times and New York Thrice-a-Week World, both one year, for only $2.75. The Times and McCall’s Magazine, both one year for $2.75. - The Times and Youth’s Companion, both one year for $-1.15. We will club any of the above pa pers with The Tribune, adding the prices as follows to The Tribune’s sub scription rate: Progressive Farmer, 50 cents; Atlanta Constitution .75; New York World 75; McCall’s Magazine i 75. If you have already paid your sr.b --j scription in advance either to The (Times or The Tribune, we will order ,any of the a hove*'papers for you at jjusfc what they cost us, as indicated above. We will order them for you at any time. PLAN BETTER MACHINERY TO COMBAT BOLL WEEVIL Plans Outlined by the National Insti tute of Progressive Farming. Chicu/6, March 1(* (By the Associ ated Press). —Plans to defeat the boll weevil and help restore prosperity to southern farmers by speeding up of their farming system, were outlined here today by the National Institute of progressive Farming. The institute ladieves. after an in vestigation, of the evttv that yearly causes so much loss to cotton growers, jtbat the best means of combatting it I is in the introduction of farm lpac-hiti- J cry to replace whaVit terms tin* “one I mulefund-a-«-olored-liaml system.” < ’o- J operation w'itli agricultural colleges and ex|>eriment stations*- county agents, chambers of commerce and ag rucuitural higher mechanical stand ‘ards. j “Prof. G. 11. Alford, formerly with the U. S. Department of Agriculture and a prominent agriculturist, lias summed up the boll weevil problem by saying that - while it can not Ik* eliminated, it is possible to defeat it with intensive cultivatnm. ‘‘Early fall plowing buries the pests before cool weather drives them "off the fields to seek hibernating quarters per acre have been downward for the for the winter.” he says. Cotton yields per acre have lieen downward for the last sixteen years, last year being the lowest recorded. Larger farms and plantations, manned with fewer-and mdre highly skilled laborers and im proved machinery, appears to be a solution. “While the average lowa farm is equipped with $1,440 worth of ma chinery and the average farm of the north and west carries about $1;444 worth, the cotton belt farm has but s2]f>, and depends largely upon one- , horse tools and hand labor.” NO DOC FT NOW ABOUT HIGHEST TENNIS TITLE French Star Defeated American Ace in Two Love Sets.—American Never Had a Chance. Nice, March 10 (By the Associated Press). —Suzanne Lenglen defeated j Mrs. Molla B. Mallory G-O, G-0 in their j tennis match today. The American champion received a severe beating from the worlds title holder, not taking a single game to 1 deuce in the first set, and only scoring H points. In the second set Mrs. Mallory took two games to deuce, but scored only II points. Mile. Lenglen showed su periority in every department of play. Mrs. Mallory was game to the finish, hut was.tumble to make her pluueky stands count for much in the scoring. S. C. KRESGE 18 BEING SUED FOOR DIVORCE All Papers in Case Have Been Sup- and the fomplaint Is Not Known. —* . Detroit, March 17.—S. Kresge, proprietor of the National chain of stores bearing his name, has been sued for divortfe by Mrs. Anna Harvey Kresge, it was learned today. All pa pers ih the case have been suppressed < and the ground upon which the di vorce is asked has,not been made pub lic. ' Mrs. Kresge, who before her marri- ; age in 1807, was Anna Ilarvfv. of Memphis, Tenn.. is said To be in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Kresge have 5 children. Priest’s Thank Offering. New Orleans, La., March 17.—Au in teresting story which had its begin ning in one of the memorable sea trag edies of the World War will culmin ate here tomorrow in the rites attend ing the laying of the cornerstone for a new Catholic church. six years ago Rev. J. F_Wareing, a Josephite priest of New Orleans, on his way home to England to die was a passenger on the Cunard liner which was tor pedoed ami sunk by a German subma rine February 25. 1017. n e escaped in a lifeboat and made a vow to GodS that if his life were spared he would erect a memorial church in. this city to the Allied soldiers and sailors. Camp Fire Girls Anniversary. \ New York, March 17.—The eleventh I .anniversary of the Camp Fire Girls is j |to be celebrated throughout the conn jtry today with anniversary exercises] , and special meetings at which efforts j will be made to double the membership ‘ | <>f the organization. It was eleven I ! years ago today that tlie Camp Fire] ' Girls came into existence. Since that : ! time a total of 700,000 girls have been , enrolled in the membership. The or- : j gaiiization has spread to seventeen * | Countries. Weather Forecast for Next Week. L f - ' March 17.—The wyath-1 er outlook for the, Week beginning i Monday: I South Atlantic States** Rain at the t beginning of the. wi\-k* tindi again about Thursday or Friday; otherwise mostly fair. Much colder Monday and Tuesday, probably frost 'to north Florida Monday or Tuesday night; rising temperature thereafter. » Monday, March' 19, 1933 PENNY COLUMN rrs 1 "■ 1 b Japan Clover, Red Clover; OrT~~~" grass, Timothy, ml ton. s mv ' ' J April 11th. Fresh lot s- e .,j 11 f| r Cline & Moose. > 0 J. g For Sale—2s-Horsepower h> n . ~ engine, 25-horse powerstcaiu n, ‘ gine, one Ford roadster. on( , b ° Tie brood sow. R. F. Kindi,. v Pleasant. * 1 j 1 v■ " ■ ", . 1 : ’ j For Sale—Mill Building andT7 brick-making outfit. Switumintr-w . Four acres. K. F. Kimllev N Pleasant. 1 - J -W). > Wanted—Cropper For One horse farm. Applv C .1 mm, • Route 4. ' n, l l'T -2 - W’e Hereby Forbid Anyone (0 ) harbor Raymond Bnrrage. Any v 1 latioi* of this notice will ho ; iro^' ' miteostions. SIUO monthly. Exm-ion, , unnecessary. For free list iM.siti., n now ojien. write R. Tern ( | civil Service examiner) llu. 0 , Hanis ter. Gldg.. Washington. I). c ll)-4t-p. Found Pocketbook and Money. (all~K U. C. Paige's residence No Young street. Describe and j» a y T.'r this ad. ltLRt-p Lost—Black or Brown Mare, ing about 750 pounds. Blaze stocking foot, long tail and mauc alnnit 1 1 or 14 years jy ; ., K Smith. Route G. Concord. » 1 <*-i,. ( , The Repair Work of 1). \V. Snider on your sewing iiiiichine. organ, talking machine, or clock will pass as th" 16 very best anywhere. I also ftiruish parts for all makes of niadiinis. Forty years’ Call ,n --write when in need of ni.v services 1). W. Snider, Mt. l’leasaur. \ c 15-gt-p. For Sale—Several Cottages, $8(HI (o SO,OOO. Several desfraMi* fciniN Jno. K. Patterson, l*-”r-|i. Wantetl—Tlie Talassee Power ( y 1 '” ' 0 f friends during th» iilu* -- n ' ' ' Li.' our dear husband and fai*"■*• . v ' Heavens richest blessing" abide with them. . y. • MRS. JNO. LINKER and i--*-* 1 "*