-THE UNION COUNTY PAPER EVERYBODY READS IT." "THE UNION COUNTY PAPER EVERYBODY NEEDS IT.- The Monroe Journal PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS VOL.23. No. 61. MONROE, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1917. $1.50 PER YEAR SU. THKSK BE THE FIRST TO GO The Fifteen Men of This County, lie. inn First Call, Will Leave Sunday Morning. The following men constltue the five per cent of this county's quota and the first to go to the ; :'.nlng camp. They are ordered to uport at the local office in Monroe at 2 o'clock Saturday and will take the train at fix o'clock Sunday morning for Camp Jackson at Columbia: 2 Joseph Hampton Price, Koute 5, Monroe 3 Charley Maness, Koute 18, Matthews 21 W. B. Cole, Monroe 74 Ernest Harry Broom, Route 4, Monroe 98 Murphy Dudley Honeycutt. Monroe 1S6 John M. Nlven, Wazhaw 190 Dan Smith McCollum, Route 3, Monroe 351 Vade Helms, Mineral Springs 377 Lee Calvin Broom,. Waxhaw 426 Anthony Wayne Brooks Route 3. Monroe 455 Joel Solomon Collins, Monroe 347 Henry Morgan, Route 2, Union- Tille 53 Clarence A. Wingate, Waxhaw 690 Filas C. Efird, Rt, 2, Unlon vllle 975 Stephen Lee Welsh, Monroe Alternates. 100 Sanford Louis Forbis, Mat thews 196 R. M. James, Route 2. Union vllle All the above named with two or three exceptions volunteered to go In the first Increment. With one excep tion they are single men. Xon-Commlssioned Officers Appointed The Messenger and Intelligencer says that Col. A. L. Cox has appoint ed the following non-commissioned officers of Battery D, First N. C. Field Artillery: First Sergeant H. W. Shepherd. Mess Sergeant A. B. Fairley. Supply Sergeant J. W.Helms. Stable Sergeant F. B. Huntley. Sergeants S. P. Griffith, C. W. Yancey, Lloyd Price, J. A. Robinson, Jr., B. C. Blalock, N. T. Bobbitt, E. F Liles ' Corporals M. E. Austin, F. P. Billlngsley, J. G. Boylln J. H. Cov- ington, A. B. Crowell, J. Q. Derrick, B. F. Eubanks. Wilbur Gaddy, C. N. Hart, R. L. Hayes, Carl Hendrlx, J. H. Hutchinson, M. D. McLendon. T. L. Niven, J. H. Thompson, N. W. Wil liams, W. H. Williams. Chief Mechanic J. J. Hlnson. Horse Shoers O. B. Garrts, R. R. .. Mechanic June. S.. Maner. , ." Saddler R. A. Rivers. Cooks J. W. McCorkle, C. B. Por ter. L. L. Threadglll. Buglers L. L. Hargrave, J. P. Matheson. Recent Enlistments. The following have enlisted recent ly: E. F. Llles, son of Mr. E. P. Llles; Carl Robinson, son of Hon. L. D. Robinson; Lindon Southerland, Magnolia; Adolphus Cole, Haw Riv er; Charles T. Phlpps. Raleigh; Roy P. Mullls, Unlonville; Samuel W. Dixon. Bolivia; Joseph E. Peele, Clarksvllle. There are now 145 men in the Bat tery. Drafted Man Shot From Ambush. Elizabeth City, Sept. 6. What ap pears to have been a deliberately planned murder occurred this after noon about 4 o'clock, when Daniel I. Jones, night fireman at the plant of the Elizabeth City Power company, was fatally shot from ambush. No motive for the crime has been as signed nor is there any clue to the identity of the assassin. The load was fired from a shotgun at short range and, entering the un fortunate victim's side, tore a great hole In the lower part of his body. He was rushed to the hospital but It was evident that no medical or surgi cal skill would save his life. He died three hours later. Jones was among the number from this county drafted Into military ser vice. Asked if he knew who shot him, he replied in the negative. Those who picked him up and rushed him to. a physician after he was shot say that he carried a gun. No motive for the crime has been suggested. Man and Wife Found in Bed, Shot to Death. Greenville, S. C, Sept. 6. H. Milam Hellams, a prominent farmer of Laurens county, residing about 30 miles below this city and his wire were found dead in their home this morning according to a report reach ing here tonight. Death in each case was the result of a bullet wound in the head, thought to have becn In flicted with a pistol. Mystery sur rounds the tragedy since officers could discover no cause for the crimes, nor clue to the perpetrators. The discovery of an empty pistol in the house lent color to the theory of suicide but the coroner's Jury put lit tle faith In this by finding a verdict In which tho crime was charged to unknown parties. Hellams was a Confederate veteran and was 68 years old. gay Little Children Worked at Still. Morganton. Sept. 6. Joe Smith and Lige Rector,- alleged moon shiners, were brought here yesterday by Officers Boyer and Milholland, who reported that they caught the men operating a liquor still. Two lit tle children, aged four and six years,'1 were at the still getting up wood ana assisting their father, the officers say. The little fellows, who had never been to town, had never seen an au tomobile, a train or a negro, cried to - 4V thai, fdthfir rA thA come iopb " -"- - , officers allowed thera to come along. t Ford Has Big War Orders. Ford Motor Company, according to a statement made by Henry Ford, is manufacturing 200.000 airplane cyl inders of steel for the United States government to be delivered at the rate of 1,000 per day at cost price. The company has Just recently de veloped a method for making the cylinders cheaply and the government is securing th benefit of this new method. Mr. Ford has left the mat ter of prices to be settled by the gov ernment after the cylinders are made, the government and Mr. Ford to fig ure the cost and the government to pay for them without profit to the Ford Company. The price. It Is said, will be very low. Mr. Ford states that it costs very little more to pro duce steel now than it "did before the war and this plus his new manufact uring methods will cause the low price. With regard to exemptions, Mr. Ford said, "We -will not ask exemp tions for any of our men. We will save the places for those who arc drafted. If we are in business when the war is over, they will be." E. DeCartier. envoy extraordinary, and minister plenipotentiary of the King of Belgium to this country, has requested Henry Ford to send tract ors to Belgium. The request has been granted and a number of tract ors will be soon forwarded to por: tions of Belgium outside of the lines where the people will be educated to use them to replace the farm animals of which there is now a great short age. Henry Ford and Son Is also manufacturing 6.000 tractors for England on direct orders from the British government. Serbian (J iris Deported. Ten thousand Serbian girls from ten to fourteen years vold have been kidnapped and deported from Serbia to the harems of Constantinople, to Bulgaria and Asia Minor, says advices received by M. Pasitch, the Serbian premier, who is now in London. "These deportations," said M. Pas Itch, ".have been going on since Feb ruary, 1916, but the number was very limited until a few weeks ago. Now It has been systematized under Bul garian controllers, and it is impos sible to predict how far it will go. "Eight thousand girls have been sent to Constantinople, and two thou sand more to Bulgaria and Asia Mi nor. Prisoners whom we have taken on the Salonikl front tell us that the traffic In our girlhood has grown to be a byword in Bulgaria and Turkey. "The girls are kidnapped and tak en away secretly, particular foni the smaller villages, until at preside dozens of small towns have been quite deduced of the young female popula tion. "I do not think that the Turks are the actual instigators of this gross vi olation of the rules of civilized war fare. All our Information indicates the the Bulgarians are the prime movers of the traffic. "These girls are too young to be of any use for laboring purposes, be sides, neither Turkey nor Bulgaria is seriously handicapped for labor, and in Turkey the use of young women for outdoor work is practically un known. "It is very difficult for us to do anything to help these unfortunate victims. Our affairs in Constantinople and Sofia are now In the hands of the Dutch government and we have made the most earnest possible pro tests through that government. But you know how difficult it Is to get any action from Turkey. We have sug gested, for instance, that some scheme of reparation be put into effect Imme diately, that the girls should be sen: back to some place beyond the war zone. But I fear it is too late to Bave them, and that we can only wait in patience until peace comes." Arrested a Ixt of Grand "Jukes." A lot of grand dukes and their women fellow conspirators have been arrested in Russia charged with hatching a plot to restore the ruling family. The chief conspirators were Mile. Margaret Hltrovo of Tobolsk and Mme. Llubov Hltrovo of Yelaburg, members of a well known bureau cratic family, both of whom were ar rested. In the home of Grand Duke Paul when he was arrested was found a mistress of the court, Mme. E. A. Narychaine, confidante of the former Dowager Empress Alexander Feodo rovna. Mme. Narychaine was not ar rested, but an immediate domiciliary search of her home In Petrograd was made and her correspondence seized. According to the Birzkevlya, a num ber of officers have been arrested and other grand dukes have been taken into custody. The state's attorney re fuses to divulge their names. It Is assumed that one of the Grand Dukes arrested was the candidate of the con spirators for the throne. Senior Class Organized. Correspondence of The Journal. Wingate. Sept. 8. The Senior Class of the Wingate High School was organized this afternoon. Twen ty enthusiastic members were pres ent and Miss Rosa Blakeney, the as sistant principal, acted as chairman until a president could be elected. The following were elected as offi cers: R. H. Trull, president: Miss Mary Trull, vice president; H. Hobart Morton, secretary; Claude Gaddy, treasurer; Will E. Thompson, orator; Miss Ona Biggers, historian. Miss Thelma Carroll, prophet; Jay Blv ens; poet. The class of '18 is In every way promising and the Indications are that the year will be one of the greatest THOUSANDS OF STAMPS WERE SOLI) TO THE SOLDIER BOYS Monroe Iooked Like an Armed Camp lesteruay .Morning INwt Card Distributed Free Among the 'Sum ink." Young Ijiily t.ot Kissed. There may be roughnecks In the army, some regiments possess bad reputations, but the New Jersey lads who passed through here yesterday on their way to AnnUton, Ala., were well behaved, jolly good fellows. Monroe opened wide its arms to these fellows, who will soon be in France, and treated them royally during their short stay. Hundreds of post cards, donated by different people, were distributed among the .boys as they marched up town. As they stood on Hayne street facing the Loan & Trust Building, they presented a picturesque sight as they wrote messages on the cards, using each other's back for a desk. Soon after the distribution of the cards, Herndon Hasty and John Ful enwider, who were on duty at the postofflce, began to realize that thrs country is at war. Never in the his tory of the Monroe postofflce has there been such a demand for one cent Etamps. The boys appeared at the window In droves some only spending one cent, while others bought 15 worth of the green stamps. In an hour. Mr. Hasly estimates, he disposed of 6000 stamps. During the whole day, It is believed, the total one cent stamp Bales amounted to 12,000, which Is a record for a town the size of Monroe. The supply was not depleted, contrary to rumor. The postofflce had a big bunch on hand, and there are plenty more left. The New Jersey troops had been recently paid off, as they were circu lating crisp ten dollar bills among the tradesmen. In quantities that made them gasp. Even the postof flce, which usually keeps more money on hand than any other place with the exception of the banks, came near running short of change. One of the clerks stated that he had never before seen so many ten dollar bills in one day. It was a big job handling the thousands of pieces of mail that went through the postofflce yesterday. One clerk was kept busy dispatching cards all day, and others assisted him occasionally. A single mall pouch of cards was sent to New Jer sey, while hundreds of single cards went to points in New Jersey, Con necticutt, and other States adjacent to New Jersey. The troops commenced to arrive early yesterday morning. Having missed Breakfast "In Hamlet, thirty five officers of the regiment rushed to the hotel, where (Mr. Russell more than made up to them for their loss at Hamlet. Matters were pushed around the Gloucester, as feeding 35 men In addition to the regular guests Is no small item. The private? made a rush to the New York Cafe, and John Tsonls and his helpers had their hands full dish ing out food and drink. Hundreds of bottles of soft drink were sold, while a neat sum was left with John for sandwiches. Merchants up town also received a share of the soldiers' pat ronage. It is estimated that they spent $500 here during their short stay. ' ' Fifteen or twenty troop trains have passed through Monroe within the past ten days. Part of the California, New York, and New Jersey troops have gone to camp by way of Monroe, and there are more to come. It is figured that each train will average 500 soldiers, which brings the num ber to about 7000 that have spent awhile on Union county soil. There has been no disposition on the part of any one to charge the sol diers exhorbltant prices. Few have any mercenary thoughts when the soldiers arrive, but It Is interesting to note Just how much a train load of men can spend in a few minutes for trivial things like soft drinks. John Tsonls stated to The Journal that he sold 1,560 soft drinks Wednesday, which at 5 cents a bottle amounts to $78. Thursday was not such a big day with the little Greek as compared with the preceding day, as the sol diers spent only $60 In all with him. Nearly all the troop trains passing over the Seaboard will make long stops here. This Is the only watering place between Atlanta and Richmond, and It takes thirty minutes, or lon ger, to refill the tanks. The troop movement Is now at Its height, but there will probably be a lull for a few days until the troops entrain for Camp Greene. Many young ladles meet the train, shaking hands with the soldiers, and distributing post cards. The soldiers from their behavior, appreciate the attention of the young ladles, who are really doing a patriotic act by en deavoring to make their stay In this country, before leaving for France, pleasant. As one of the troop trains was pull ing out. It is said, an impetuous, handsome youth Jumped from the car step, ran to where a Monroe girl was standing, and planted a 'kiss square upon her lips. Without looking to see how his action was taken, he jumped back on the moving train, and was soon out of sight. Manv of the lads leave the names and addresses with the Monroe young ladles with the request that they write. Some of the ladles have so many requests to write that they would have to employ a secretary to keep up their correspondence If they attempted to exchange letters with all of the boys. Mrs. Lillian McKlssIck and chil dren of Hartsville are visiting Mrs. McKlssIck s parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Griffin, at Unlonville. TRAVEL NOTES Whole State, A Well A Eastern Nation Full of Money The Hand some OKUer Who l"osrd Before The (iii Is. (From the Wilmington Star.) A trip through the State developes two big, outstanding facts ex ery body has monv-y, there Is taore money flowing hither and yon than ever be fore in the history of the slate; aud the other is, there is a tremendous movement Vf people. Every train is jammed. Seats? You are lucky to get standing room. Of course, many trains have been discontinued, and that accounts for part of the traffic, but there Is Just naturally a huge passenger traffic. The Irish potato crop in Eastern Carolina, and now the tobacco crop here and in other sections, and the record-breaking wheat crop in the piedmont have brought hundreds of thousands of dollars to the state. The camps have sent another stream of money into circulation, and it reaches far beyond the vicinity of the camps. Men by the thousands have flocked Into the camps from everywhere, and incidentally men who haven't been known to strike a lick of work in years. The high wages have inspired them to labor again. At Charlotte hundreds of farmers and others from towns and counties all through that section are at work. They go home Saturday nights and spend the week end. The sorriest ones are getting $5.50 a day of 10 hours, and Monday being Labor Day, those who worked got double time, or $11 for the day's work. These hundreds of men going home each week-end, carry with them sizeable wads of cash which goes in to circulation in towns miles away from Charlotte. The western counties, after be moaning the almost total loss of their wheat crop because of last winter's freeze-out, made the biggest and best crop they ever have made it was really on the ground after all, and the grain itself Is of extraordinary quality. And the price prevailing is about $2.50 a bushel 30 cents more than the government price. A banker in a piedmont town whose entire deposits total about $400,000, told the writer that during August $384,000 passed through his window; last Saturday $24,000 was handled, and Monday $35,000. He couldn't account for the flood, which Is break ing all records at his bank.. The Au gust volume was' 200 per cent more Lthan that in August, 1914, and over 100 per cent more than the record for August, 1916. City prices for food extend practi cally to eyery town, however small. The old conditions have been chang ed. It costs now as much to eat in a village as It does In a city almost. Eastern Carolina corn and cotton crops are fine to see. Farmers on the trains are In fine humor. They made fortunes on Irish potatoes, and they expect additional fortunes from cotton and other crops. One man casually described the operation of selling $200 worth of potatoes per acre from a crop planted between the cotton rows, and figures that count ing Just an average cotton yield, he will clear this year $300 an acre on his place. A man on the train who was dresesd like a ditcher told how he raised 900 barrels of potatoes and averaged $10 a barrel. Tobacco men spoke of 25 cents for "sand lugs" and 50 cents for the quality leaves of the weed. In some tobacco sections the demand for Ford automobiles is so keen and the supply so limited that they say farmers bid $500 a car for the few to be had. From one end of the state to the other prosperity is in full swing. Even in the devastated flood district of the west, where a year ago farm ers lost all of their crops and much of their real estate, they have quit talking about the losses of 1916. There Is work for everybody, and everybody has money. Money Is the cheapest thing there is. Everybody traveling talks about the war. It springs up in every smok ing compartment and is threshed out over and over and over. The man who doesn't believe that the govern ment bus a right to send meu to foreign fields gets little show In a crowd. He is overwhelmed promptly. An anti-draft demonstration in Ca tawba and another in Lincoln coun ties, looked ugly from a dlstace, but at close quarters nobody considered the affair as worth talking , about. Governor Blckett spent the week-end In that section "preaching" at Lenoir and Hickory, Newton and Lincoln ton. He knows where to place a to do the most good. At two of his appointments he actually "filled the pulpit," and took the parable of the Good Samaritan for his text. His ar raignment of the "thieves" among whom civilization' has fallen Is terrirflc, and he declares that the Am erican conscience would have been seared for all time if this country hadn't Joined the allies to save civi lization and freedom the world around. At Selma the other day, a Southern train waited ever so long on the A. C. L. connection, ar.d while passen gers Bought something to Interest them, a squad of soldiers appeared. Two pretty young ladles Immediately raised the window end began look ing. The soldiers saw this and be gan preening themselves. The pri vates were rather awkward, but the handsome young officer took all the compliment to himself and If he bad been a peacock, the air would have been full cf gorgeous feathers. An elderly man with his back to tire car was speaking with him, but It was plain that he heard not a word. He adjusted bis wrist watch, and read justed It, in plain view. He manipu lated his chanting swaggerstick. He smiled vacantly at what the man was savin? and peeped under his hat brim at the girls. He wouldn't let on that he knew they were in the world. Finally he removed his hat, delicate ly to wipe perspiration from his fore head but really to display hts magni ficent head. He had as fine a head as ever you saw on a man; hl3 hair was the least bit curly and of a glo rious color. Every hair was in place. He knew It was a splendid possession and he stood in the boiling sun bare headed so long I feared he would have a sunstroke. And the girls "they ate him alive" with thetr eyes, and when the train pulled out. they twisted their heads until I fear ed me they would dislocate their charming necks. "None but the brave" Artie explorers keep on spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in an effort to discover something far away from home. They leave behinc them the unsolved mystery veiling the common sense of a North Caro lina 'possum. How is it that sly American marsupial has sufficient horse sense to let persimmons hang on the tree till they are ripe and fit to eat, while man hardly waits for anything to come to maturity? This Is one difference between a man and a 'possum. Of course, it no one can discover why the 'possum waits till fruit gets ripe, he or she might dis cover why man Is bent on eating his fruit before the tree gets done with it. John Barleycorn Dies Tomorrow. At 12 nVlnpV Saturday nlcht xall tho riiatllWlpa and breweries in the United States will go out of business. says the Charlotte Observer, until the war Is over at least, not a drop nf liminr ran he distilled lawfully In this country. Food Administrator Hoover has notified all distillers tnat they must close their doors by the time specified. The law stopping the manufacture of whiskey is of the strictest sort. It leaves no chance for the Rlinninir in of anv kind Of food- Stuff. There Is absoluely no loop hole for he utilization or any budsii- tute material for the distillation or strnnr drink. All cereals, all pota toes, fruits, molasses, grapes, apples or by-products, all fruit parings, all cannery refuse, Deet sugar moiasses, sour wine or other foods, feed, "food materials or the by-products there of," are barred. If there is anything else that liquor could be made out of, Mr. Hoover evidently failed to remember it. Many of the distillers have been anticipating going Into ef fprt of this law and have arranged to equip their plants for the produc tion of other commodities, mainiy condensed milk and temperance drinks, and out of the latter enter prise we are going to have quite an addition to the varieties of colas now common all over the country. In some Btates where there had been dis tilleries and in which these Institu tions were closed by the advent of prohibition, they were Invariably con verted Into purposes of the kind In-dicated-f-and with profit to the own ers. Retail Price of Coal Being Fixed. Early fixing of retail coal prices has been promised by Dr. H. A. Gar field, the coal administrator, in a statement outlining the government's coal control policy. Prices will be established for communities with the aid of local committees Into whose hands will be put responsibility for their enforcement. Maximum production of coal at prices fair both to tne producer ana consumer will be the aim of the gov ernment. Dr. Garfield declares. Pro ducers prices already fixed will be revised where they force efficiently operated mines to produce at a loss. Operators seeking revision of the scale are asked to send in cost of production statistics covering a period years. A plan of apportionment of coal will be worked out. Dr. Garfield an nounces, by which domestic consum ers wil obtain everywhere a fair Bhar of the supply at prices which will reflect those fixed for operators and wholesalers by the President. resident After the Disloyal. Hearty approval of the conference of the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy to be held at Minne apolis today, and the task It will un dertake of suppressing disloyalty has been given by President Wilson in a letter to Samuel G-ompers, president of the American Federation of Labor and chairman of the alliance. The letter denounces those who seek to Ignore America's grleveance against Germany and Insist "that a nation whose citizens have been foul ly murdered under tlir;r own flag, whose neighbors have been Invited to Join In making conquest of Its territory, and whose patience in pressing the claims of justice and humanity has been met with the most shameful policy of truculence and treachery, does not know Its own mind and has no comprehensible rea son for defending Itself." "While our soldiers and sailors are doing their manful work to hold back reaction in Its most brutal and aggressive form," the President wrote, "we must oppose at home the organized and Individual efforts of those dangerous elements who bide disloyalty behind a screen of spe cious and evasive phraser." SOMEBODY MUST LOSE TRAINS Seaboard Will Do Its Hot But Rail roads Are Pledged to the Govern ment to Flit Their Equipment at Service of War Demand. Raleigh. Sept. 6. Big delegations from Sanford. Hamlet, Cary, Raleigh and Oxford were here this afternoon for the hearing before the corpora tion commission In the matter of the request of the Seaboard Air Line that it be allowed to take off the Raleigh Charlotte shoo-fly service .and change materially the Henderson-Oxrord ser vice. The hearing began at 3 o'clock and W. L. Stanley, representing the Seaboard Air Line, presented the rea sons for the request, explaining that the necessity of contributing the com pany's part to the government de mands for troop movement and spe cial freight service, really necessi tates the curtailment of the train ser vice asked. Mr. Stanley believes that the pa triotism of the people of North Caro lina would constrain them in the face of necessity to go back to the ser vice of mixed trains and box cars' if the requirements of the country In the winning of the war necessitated such a thing. He believed that we are just on the threshold of the war demands and that train curtailment is really in its inception. The saving: of not a penny or a paltry dollar was Involved in the curtailments asked, he said, but simply necessities of the hour In serving the country in iU hour of need for waging the war. There must be 30,000 men of the na-' tional guard moved at once by the Seaboard, requiring 6,000 cars, and this Is only the beginning of the movement. The railroads of the country are pledged to the government to put their entire equipment at its disposal and operate as one great continental system with Interchangeable service of equipment as necessity requires and with all present equipment of ficially pledged to the government to the end that the government may ir necessity arises draft this or any part or it for any war service, even t taking it to France, Russia or other war zones to assure needed facilities for waging the war. The hearing continued two hours. The Oxford delegation agreed tt the proposed changes In the Oxford-Henderson-Durham service and the commission indicated that a probable solution of the Raleigh-Charlotte ser vice would be that the Raleigh-Charlotte shoo-fly will be taken off and the Ralelgh-Norlina shoo-fly run ex tended to Hamlet and that this wltn a double daily service betweejuClur-. lotte and Hamlet will meet the trans portation necessities and give the Seaboard an additional engine and car for troop movement. The com mission wants it understood that there is no intention of disturbing; the present Chatiotte-Rutherfordton-s,hoo-fly service. Red Cross Notes. Red Cross chapters In many cities have completed their preparations to' serve light refreshments and emer gency rations to the troops of the Na- tional Army who will be traveling to the cantonments. The Red Cross will co-operate In every way possible with the War De partment, both In caring for the com fort of troops at mobilization points and at stations where the troop trams are scheduled to stop, and In supple menting the service of the railroads by having reserves of food ready for ' use In case of any accident or delay which disarranges tho plans for feed- Ing the men en route. Mrs. A. L. Monroe has been made chairman ot this department and with her co workers, if any sen-Ice Is necess?ry they will be ready and able to fur nish it. All members who have paid their dues and have not received buttons please notify Mrs. V. D. Sikes, our new assistant secretary. Money has been handed in at as many different times and places that we fear some one has not been credited with his amount and this will help to get mat ters straight. The West End Unit have added $12 to their Red Cross fund for supplies, making it $34.50. Hurrah for the West End Unit. Another enthusiastic Red Cross worker has finished her one dozra? shirts and has started on the second dozen. Through the earnest efforts or Misses Mabel Belk and Louise Mor row and Mrs. F. B. Ashcraft, all the comfort bags are ready for our sol dier boys and we are sure their hoaie town Is not going to disappoint thent but be ready with a hearty welcome and a vigorous and enthusiastic send off. We hope the Chamber of Com merce and all our citizens will have a cart In this pleasure. Place a one cent stamp on yoar latest magazine, put it in the pose office without being wrapped or any address, if you would like to have one of our soldier boys to read It too. It will be sent to some canip for the soldiers. Don't forget the home talent en tertainment to be given next Monday night at the Bru-Nel Theatre for tlw benefit of Red Cross. Everybody and help the Red Cross. The gift of $500,000 from the Ford Motor Company of Detroit, Mich., to the American Red Cross was an- uuuuiru oryiruiuer jsi. lue gill is in the form of a credit on the ForiT factories for half a million dollars worth of automobiles, ambulance, parts, etc. as the Red Cross may des ignate. Mrs. W. A. Lane, Chm. Red" Cross Supplies. ' f Miss Bright McCorkle has return ed from a visit to relatives near- Marsh vllle. S t