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SOLDIERS' BODIES . 101 IS COMPLETE J & ? ? ? ? Aificrica Plans to Beautify 5'FieNlds of Honor in Europe. ; MANY SLEEP IN LANDS THEY HELPED TO SAVE French Aid in Tender (.are of Graves of .Men Who Died for Them. , lUv Associate! Press.1 PARIS. March 11?The wt'k of re turning to the I'nited States th-"* bodies of American soldiers. v fio died In France was enr; ? t? ?1 today with a final shipment of 1.500 bodies from lire*-! for New Y< -k This brings the tota'! litimher f Aiv.T:c.in bodies re turned to 4." '""C.". The simple : :r.cemcnt _>f the completion of the task marks the close of one ? f the most trying and | difficult pro! ?:? ms ever placed before the- American army. The American Graves R< Kistrat'on Service. the special branch of the army organized for'the purpose, bepan work In Feb ruary, Agents of that service ? ill row go to England and assemble nintty- j sevpn American bodies destined for shipment to America. These were American soldiers who died In wide ly scattered parts of Ireland. Scot land, Wales ar.d England. Five hun drep other bodies of Americans vrhflse relatives have decided to j leate them in England, will he cor.- | centrated in a beautiful little per- I mafient cemetery at Brookwood. Sur rey! England. the British government j ha-ijng given the site. This work wilt be completed by July. AJi extensive scheme <r beautlflca-I tioij has been developed by a special line arts commission f..r the four cemeteries in Prance, which are to be ;Jhe permanent r"ftir.g pla-'* of nearly 3".CiOfl Americans v.-ho fell in thejworld war. OrlKin.il plans called fortthe expenditure of m arly $3,090. OOOcbut in the interest of KOvernment economy, this sum has been reduced to phout } 1.000.000. ^ork will begin Immediately after this appropriation is made by Con gress. Colonel H. F. Itcthers. who han/bcen in charge of th?- graves reg istration work, probably will direct the-work. The four fields of honr r are ?ures nes?cemetery. near Paris: B ? ny. near St. ;.QuentIn: Belleau Wood, near Chateau-Thierry, and the Arconne, or Romagne cemetery, near Roxnagne Botjj-Mnntfaucon. For the latter, a srheme has ber-n worked out. which will m:tke It very much like Arlington Cemetery. Each ceroetery is to have a rent house and chapel for visitors, anil every grave will be marked with a uniform head slope. One of the rr.ojt touching features of ihe four cemeteries has been the wat in which Pr.-n-h people have matfe th^rn the r own. Sunday never gojf. by without s '.res rf French peo ple visit ins- them srnl pln-lrr ?owcr?= on ihe craves This manifestation of friendship ar.d n;:r<- ?-.vj?ed many relative* t le.ve the l-?d!>s in France. The beautifying r.f t?.? "'Ms r>? hortor will take tw v.are but a great d?al of prelirr.lr.-iry w. rk has already > e*r. done ! the rcmefrle* In (heir pr?s.-r.t s*,v- -. ? the Graves Registration Ber vlc? becar. v. rh- : ! . in P".or' tV.an ? . ?. ? ?i<-atter?r! in every J u". f Pr -,r Al?ace-L,'r ralne and ;<-r <r.\. veral thous and n.^r. w .-i y.-rj ur.d. r the <Slr?-t!or. 'f American army officers. Concentration of tv ':?? M.-.f, tbei'.four fields of h ? r h^? 1 u* ? .? inpleted The Grays }'.? v ?tra* -# ?v>.> u .: . mtlntiir k | r-rr ;.r,? rt '?"rt. in pari lor the conv.-nltnce of American vis iter*. Conelude* Itouia Trncrdy Probe. NOP FOI.X VA Mi >. 11. Th arir.y board e itini,- the ?K a traction of th- i ...m. i .0 airshi: Ho n..t. at 11. ** r:: ,p iiis. m^.r* than two week" w >h 1 r. thirtv-f r Mvi ;i? jl injury toother eonclud'-'i ?? Health S.-r\. e iloa; it:;1 at the arm base, today 1 Shaw a Stickler for Strict Letter of Plays NEW YORK, March 11.?I,aw renco Lunger, a director of tho Th<yitcr Guild, tells an amusing Shaw anecdote to Illustrate Shaw's precise Insistence on the strict let tor of his plays. Langer took to livndnn some pictures of the Guild's production of "Heartbreak House" 'ind Shaw at once spotted EfTle Shannon. "Hut she has blond hair!" he cx clalrtU'd. "anil the character Is supposed to have dark hair." ?She was the best actress we could get for the part," Mr. Lung er replied. "Out you must have changed a line!" Shaw thundered. "There Is a distin-t reference to her dark hair What did you do with that 7" Voor Lunger hesitated, while visions of a lawsuit against tho Guild crossed his mind. Then he had an Inspiration. "The actor mumbled it." he said. Mr. Shaw smiled and was satis fied. WIRELESS AMATEURS MUST PAY ARTISTS Actors' Equity tHMirlntlon Culls for Compensation for ktmllo F.ntertnlnor*. [Tty Associated Press] NEW VOKK. March 11.?Apprecia tive. but nonpaylng. wireless ama teurs. who haVv been sitting at home Ht-.'l listening to world-famous en tertainers face an edict of the Ac tors' Ktj'ui'v Association that such performers must be paid fvr their work. Announcement is made that the council of the association has ruled that the radiophone Is competing with the theater, and that those who talk or sing in the transmitting ap paratus must bo compensated. In the last few months there have been numberless free concerts, free statue performances, free lectures and other features supplied to the own er- . radiophones. The efher waves ?arry;s:g tins-.- entertainments have been picked up hundreds, even thousands, of miles distant by re-j ce:ving "sets." which are as common as homo brew outfits. THREE ARE DEAD AFTER I SERUM TREATMENT I Fntnlltlea Among: Former Solcller* in Snnltnrlam Ci?u?e Coroner to Aet. [I3y Associated Press! WAUKESHA, WIS.. March 11.? ; Death of three former soldiers at Rest Haven sanitarium following In jection of a well-known serum for a Mood disease while under tre.it -nent at the institution, caused <" ?runtr I-. F I.e.- today to order an inquest and Governor Blaine to set-.d :i t-tate physician from Madison t;> .iss st in the autopsies. Th* dead are C"pT.ain Pry Baker 3y. Eauclalre; Walter Schumann, JO. ! Milwaukee, and Lto Palace. 24 Waukesha. When Stomach Is Acid, Gassy A Stuort'i t)y?pep?la Tablet StTfrtftm lincl Settle* Tho*e .Sour ItialnK", lirlchloi.' and <, n?* 1 nr?u rThat 1'ullmr l.fktliiK* make ? .r stomach f< el kooiI. It settles down, swe-t-.n?, goes about its huslnma of dlKtitlng the food and you f?-? 1 ior.t<i.' ,n.<l activc. Eat V"'.j .ik". turk'-y dressing, plum pudding,' rich soup, sausage, baked i t'-at.s and s<. on. You may p, the limit prov.ded you always follow ?' ith a S'.uar' H l/.vs ;-o]>s:.i Tubb-i i let a 60 cent box at any drufr stor* roday and > > *'. >;r . a ting abilities ?Adv. turn??a?????? ? fTo Remind You I ?that your income tax return must I be filed by next Wednesday. I Our tax experts?in the lobby of this V [bank?will be glad to help you j (without charge) in the preparation \ of your report. * i Whether you are a customer of ours * 5 or not, you are invited to make use \ of this service. t I National \ State & City Bank KLK VEN'-KLKVKX EAST MAIN SEEK LIGHT ON TANGLES IN MUSCLE SHOALS DEAL Secretary Mellon nml Attor ney-General Dang h ert y Called Before Committee. [By Associated Press.] WASHINGTON, March II.?Secre tary Mellon am! Attorney-General I Paugherty will be called by Chairman j Knhn. of the House Military Com mittee. to testify next week on the question of developing the govern mcnt's war-initiated project a*. Mus cle Shoals. Alabama, now before tno committee. An effort will be made to obtain Secretary Melton's view? on financ ing the Muscle Shoals development from the Treasury in the event ?ne of the offers requiring government financing is accepted 1 y Conirress. Mr. Kiihn said the Attorney-Gen eral's opinion will be asked on ex isting legal complications which he commit tee has revealed In connec tion with the contracts held ov the Alabama Power Co., and the Air Nitrates Corporation, under which they claim exclusive rights to pur chase the Warrior steamplant and nitrate plant number 2. respectively. WIDOW AND NEGRO ACCUSED OF MURDER Florida >lnn'? M vmterloux Knii llelnK 1'roiieii by Di-innd Police. flly Associated Press.] PEliAND, FLA.. March 11.?Copies of letters and telegrams from Wil liam A. Shields to a sister In Wichita, Kansas, pending the arrival of which the authorities had postponed fur ther investigation of the shooting of .Shields near here the night of Feb ruary 6. were received today. Mrs. Shields, the widow, and Pete Smith, a negro, are in jail charged with the murder. Officials stated that one letter, written by Shields on February 13, 1921, mentioned the name of a whitu man to be suspected in the event anything happened to him. The name was not made public, the authorities withholding it in an effort to lo cate the man. Mrs. Shields and Smith again were questioned Inn night. And she again charged the negro with the killing. Smith denied the charge and added that he had something to tell, but would divulge it only to his own at torneys nnd nt the proper time. WINSTON CHURCHILL FINDS NEW "PSYCHOLOGYAS HE CALLS IT J " " Noted Novelist Joins Ranks of British ami American Authors Who Have Dropped Discussion of Material Things to Experiment With Immortality. lly Sidney Fl. Whipple. NEW VOIiK, March 11.?Winston Churchill, .American novelist, has Joined the ranks of Urltlxh and Amer ican authors who. after reaching the heights of literary aspiration, have dropped discussion of material things to experiment with immortality. Churchill has been silent for three years, lie broke this silence recently to explain to the Authors' league In a lecture just what he has been do ing since 1919. and Just what ho has discovered. Hi- believes ho has found a new philosophy?or. as lie would put It. a new "psychology." It Is based on the "duel mind" that is seated in each one of lis. One a ma terial. sensual, ami at times sensuous mind, the other a creative or spiritual mind. It Is the spiritual mind, he feels, that should control and admin ister our lives. The "Primitive" Hind. Churchill calls the tirst of these minds the "primitive." This is the controlling instinct that sees to it that we are fed, clothed, and housed, that our senses are gratified. It reg ulates the physical functions of the body, sueh as walking, eiting. di gesting. It is manifest iti instincts of self-preservation, sex and herd ing. The otln>r better mind, controlling the emotions usually classified as "soulful." Is directly opposed In character to the primitive mind. From the clashes between these minds, according to Churchill, come nil the Ills of the human race. Ills philosophy for complete happiness, therefore, would he to maintain the spiritual mind ns the mental execu tive. the guiding genius, and leaving to the primitive mind all the mechan ical details of feeding, preserving and reproducing the physiological ele ments of man. In this way, without clashing, each mind would perform its own functions properly, hut with the spiritual uppermost In every man. I,rntln to Overlndulaenrr. From tho standpoint of physiology, Churchill places the primitive mind somewhere in our spines or back bones. It is responsible for such ac tions as jazz dancing, scratching one's head, biting one's finger nails. It leads to overindulgenco and sen ?suallty. It Is "shimmy" control of our bodies. If this mind is given free rein, the other soulful mind would become atrophied. enfolding Ills new philosophy, the author Indorsed completely tho psy chology of Christ and St. I'nul. In fact, he bases his argument largely on the theory of Ht. Paul that "the mind of the flesh Ik death: tho inlnd of the spirit Is life and peace." As far as he touched on immortal! That Good Spring IVIedicine ? Hood's Sarsaparilla Has Made Its Good Namo ? By its Bplcndid formula that origi nated in a successful physician's pre scription, composed of roots, barks, tonics and alteratives,?and by its J?ractical success in thousands of amilies. Take it for impure blood na well as for ailments of the stomach, liver and kidneys. Take itfor scrofula, rheumatism, catarrh, sleeplessness. Take it for loss of appetite, that tired feeling, nervous weakness, anemia and low or run-down con dition so common just now. Let the storv of Mrs. I.antz speak for it and leaif you to try it. " I want to tell my story about the pood Hood's Sarsaparilla did inc. 1 nave known this medicine all my life. It is a wonderful spring tonic and bnilder. Once I had ecr.eina on my hands eo bad I could not put them into water for two years. Nobody knowr what I Buffered. I tried about everything else before taking Hood's A ? wSamfev flarsapa rilla at th? Wth urKcnt re* . NgSK quest of my ^5? &5v KJ? mother. It %%y $3* did relieve j 'ho disease ATO&V ""'Walt: u ' thftt u,not /f#j c-cajtti all. T % o years ago I had neuritis, which disappeared on ! taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. This is a true story. llood'B Sarsaparilla will help you." Mn?. Carkik E. Lant^, ' S Gardner Street, Allston. Mass. "THE SHOPPING CENTER" Solid Gold Jewelry No wonder we are so proud of this department?our qualities, our service, the wide extent of our va rieties, no less than our moderate prices. All these combine to make it a real joy to select articles of Jewelry at this store, where novelty in de sign is ever present in generous array. Attention is invited particularly to our displays of? WRIST WATCHES, in white gokl (engraved or plain silver dial); all the newest shapes?rec tangular, square or octagon. Exclusive Vanity Cases (one of a kind) of solid sterling silver; a most beautiful assortment. Cuff Links of 10-k. or 14-k. gold lyooae Links and Jift'y Links, in Roman and green gold; en graved and engine-turned de signs. And there are other items almost without number. An excellent time, we should say, to make a selection. Floor One, West Before You Build YOUR HOME - it is most natural that you should try to picture in your "mind's eye" something as to how the home will look, inside-or out. To materially aid one in building (before the architect has been coiled) are some of the betft Rooks we know of on Home Building. They enable one to plan intelligently; plates, drawings and pictures show (ofttimes) just what one wants. Some of These Books Are: Concrete and Stucco Houses, $:i.50. Architectural Styles for Country Houses, $!i.50. Distinctive Homes of Moderate Cost, $8.50. Low-Cost Suburban Homes, $2.50. Men's Watches?Solid and white gold with open or closed face (white, silver or gold dials); all the newest shapes?octagon, round, oblong and others. Pen Knives?10-k. and 14-k. gold, with green or Roman gold fin ish; engraved and engine turned. Watch Chains?10-k. and 14-k. gold, in all the laiest style links. Allows, by Savior. $:{.50. Ideal Homes in Garden Communi ties, $1.50. The Dutch Colonial House, $11.50, Inexpensive Homes of Individ uality, $1.25. The Half-Timber House, $H.50. Reclaiming the Old House. $! (Jet Them in Our Hook Shop?Basement, South ty?-whloh wa? dono with aomo cap tion?Churchllt establishes a promts*) that belief In after-llfo I# "convic tion"?tho feeling of truth that ono gets whsn observing a Krcat work of art. the fooling that It Is truo "In spite of Inability to prove It." f Whole Secret of I.IvIuk. Nevertheless, he gooa on, although this is not yet science. tho tlino Is coming when Its cxlstcnco will bo proved. "I am not trying to found a now ' religion?heaven forbid," ho said. ?'Nor am I anxious to force others t<> accept the truths I have discovered. 1 didn't want to learn how to bo good. I, wanted to learn how to get In ward creative energy. That Is tho whole secret of living. "I hnvo arrived at a theory of tho nature of tho mind that seems to meet the need, or at least give a duo to It. Modern psychology and biology have paved tho way to understanding, and will enable uo soon to get what wo so deeply need today?tho scien tific sanction for conduct or for social relationships." Auto .skid*. Ono Mnn OlrM. ORLANDO. KI,A.. March 11.?A. G. Frnmbro, of Auburn, Cla., died In a hospital hero today of Injuries re ceived in an automobllo accident near this city. D. I*. Hhackloford, a trav eling companion, was painfully In jured. The accident occurred short ly aftor noon. Tho car in which Kranibro and Shackleford were rid ing turned out of the road to per mit ftnother machine to pass, skidded and turned over. ELECTRIC TRAINS TO PETERSBURG Virglnlu Bwy. Ai Power Co. T.ttvn Richmond 7th A Perry Station. 4: (5 A. M. 3:W P. M. 6:33 A. M. 4:Ol I\ M. A. M. B:t>1 P. M. 7:00 A.M. 5:45 I1. M. S:U0 A. M. 6:00 I'. M. 9:W A. M. 7:0) 1\ M. 10:00 A. At. |:00 P.M. 11 :<0 A. >1. 9:00 P. M. i::<n Noon 10:03 IV >t. 1:00 P. M. 11 :<V P, M. 2:(W P. M. 11:05 A. M. I.eavo P?!t?!r*bur foot iff Swam or* St 5:C) A. M. I* M C:35 A. M. 4:3-1 P II a. M. r. :ti p. ,\t 7:33 A. M. ?:3S 1?. M 8:35 A. M. 7 :<>"? P. M 9:35 A. M. 7.30 P. M 10:35 A. M. SJ5 P. M 11:3"? A. M. P 23 P. M 12:*f. P. M. K:55 P. M 1:35 P. M. 11:41 P. M 1 35 P. M. 12:15 A. M ."TIIB IBOrriNO CENTER DIAMONDS And Platinum Jewelry Buy Diamonds here with every assur ance of the quality you pay for, or even better, and of workmanship unsur passed! For these, as well as consist ently low prices, our Diamonds are justly famed. Our showing of Diamonds in Platinum settings, comprising? v Stick Pins Earrings Rings Engagement Kings Bar Pins Wedding Rings Brooches Cluster Rings, Etc. ?are unusually fine and the service is of high order. " Inspection and compari son invited. Department of Diamond Jewelry, Floor One, West Just Received ? New Shipment of Oriental Rugs To those who treasure the finest of interior furnish ings the year round, and those anticipating" them, we are pleased to announce the recent reception of some very fine Cabistan and Kazak Rugs, which, in addition to stocks already on hand, make a splendid showing of these choice Eastern Rugs. And with this notice of their arrival goes the invitation to come in and examine them to your leisure. The Cabistans are unusually fine, and the sizes average 4i/> to 5i/> feet, $125.00 to $135.00. Heavy Kazak Rugs, average size 6x9 feet, for halls or living rooms, $200.00. Persian Rugs, unusual values in small sizes. Of Oriental Rugs in the small er, more convenient sizes, as sortments are particularly fine. Beloochistan R u g s, average size 3x5 feet, $50.00. Room-Size Persian Rugs, in choicest of patterns and col orings, $400.00 to $800.00. FIFTY FINE ORIENTAL RUGS at $75-00 Medium Sizes A RARE OPPORTUNITY Some very choice specimens in Duzor, Mousoul, Beloochis tan and Cabistan Rugs are included in this offering, the sizes ranging from 3 feet 5 inches by 6 feet to 4 feet 5 inches by 7 feet 7 inches. Wonderful Values! Floor Three, South