PAGE FOUR 'ft* Contort My Tribune. Editor and Publisher Ipft. gßafftßlLli, Associate gditor laßSlswid to the os* for republication of rights of republieation of special PjjMpatClie* herein are also reserve*. IS _ I*s **lfth Avenue. New York t «.rgsa A c a WjerpSU&srs'oS!ssm ■jPrewAat of March t, 1873. ‘ BPBBCHIPTION RATES _*B the C3ty of Concord by Carrier giS&i'nizziziziio three JHontha 1.50 Outside of the* Stated'the ’Subscription! ii the Same as in tbe City Out of tbe city and by mall In North Karolina tbe followlns prices will pre -2* Month »|-gO ©■f*’tes2* t Tbroe”MonthsrTo"Cents 2 a Month Ail Buboerlptlons Must Be Paid In Advance • RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect April 29. 1923. ii NORTHBOUND Mo. 136 To Washington 5:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:55 A. M. No. 46 To DaiA Ule 3:15 P. if.. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To Washington 8:28 P. M. No. 38 To Washington 9:30 P. M. SOUTHBOUND * No. 45 To Charlotte 4:55 P. M. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.06 P. M. No. 29 To Atlanta 2:52 A, M. No. 31 To Augusta 6:07 A. M. No. 33 TO No. 11 To Charlbtte 9:03 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 9:15 P. M. - I X—FOR TODAY— . ii KMe Thoughts memorized will prove a § I9L'-t priceteas heritage in after years. , [g| CHRISTIAN n IXPIDENCK -This Is the confidence that we hnve"th him. that, if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us.—l John 3:14. UNFORTUNATE DECISIONS. decision of Solicitor Long to al- IqW .'Lpc MeHacgue to get away with a mansltonghter charge was unfortu nate, to put it' mildly. His decision was not more unfortunate. than the sentence of Judge Webb. Sheriff Propst was endeavoring to carry out his duty as an officer of tbe law when he was shot down by Me- Hargue. It may have been that the State could not prove malicious intent to show that Macllurgue had started out with the intent to kill the Deputy Sheriff. but that does not get around t tie fact that MacHnrgue shot to kill I even after lie had been told to sur render by the officers and after he saw the officers with drawn guns on him. Is the State willing to say that the shootitig was more or less of an acci dent? %>r that Mr. Propst was kill ed while MacHargtie was shooting at someone else? The sentence is a bad example to set before other )>eople who may hold a grudge against officers. What would the average man care for two years in the State penitentiary if he could get even with some officer? We are not inti niating that MucHarguc lmd anything against Mr. Propst. but if he can get off with two years after shooting down ip cold blood ail officer in tbe perform ance of his duty certain criminals might lie led to believe that they could escape with a sentence equally as light. Officers have none too much protec tion when they are backed with the full, power of the courts, and to let a man 4Mtcape with a two or three year sen tence after literally “taking a town” [ tjhen shooting down an officer will tend 'to create more disrespect of our I laws. sentence was pronounced is quoted as saying with a mnile. “It might have been worse.” He ' Was exactly right, j We are not sur | prised that he smiled, and we expect there are criminals in many parts of the State who smiled when fifty read qf this case. It is enough to make ev f eryone smile except those people who : fcelieve that officers should be protect ed *nd pistol toters- and users given full limit of the law. ipfiit’is hard to understand why Ho -1 licitor Hong and other counsel for the ftftfate agreed to the manslaughter ver dict, but it is even harder to under aland why aludge Webb gave the mau 2' u sentence us he could gt|fipe'ij|veq him. The fact that Solid* Jf'iSr Uong agreed to a manslaughter . plea Bright indicate that he tlitmgUt OMiJ 9©wun jury would free JJac- V liatgup. but we cau’t believe this. If K. Wiefa inen as MucHarguc are to be . frarttl tie might as well discontinue our /y y . -. T— BComord-s-new administration jj.U Httferivay officially Thursday night, r«ncxt‘twi years. The board of al- that they displayed In the* manage ment of their own affairs. We understand that-the board is to inaugurate a period of economy in the city, and while we agree with this: principle we hope at the same tlmo that the members of the board will 1 give serious ‘consideration to the proposal 'that an athletic %ld be built by the city at the new high school. The stu dents need and deserve an additions to the high school plant, and the money -expended for the project would be wisely invested. \'' ======== MRS. WINTERS' ADDRESS Before tne General Federation of Wo men’s Clubs In Atlanta. conscience" I>V asserting "our old rou ted many of its timidities she said, de believe Washington would warn us Atlanta, Ga, May 11 (By the As- : sociated Press). —Development of a “socialised conscience" was described : here tonight by Mrs. Thomas G. Win ter of Minneapolis, president of the ! General Federation of Women's Clubs, as the “first push off toward a new morality." This she declared "is shown • in a change that has gone op almost ' unperceived during the last genera tion.” i Speaking before the mid-biennial of the council here, Mrs. Winter illus- ! jtrated her definition of "socialized : conscience" by assertin “our old con ception of charity—tile giving doles to 1 the unfortunate—has faded into dis repute." ' “What gifts must la> given are now regarded as one would tliiuk of tern- 1 pornr.v medicine to meet an immediate 1 demand," she continued, “but we are not satisfied with such a solution. It looks ugly to us. Nothing really sat isfies us except to set in motion forces ] that will wine out. the need of char ity. through public health, through temperance, through industrial condi- 1 tious. IVe do not want paupers as an eternal means of satisfying our lienev- 1 olent superiority. We want self-re- 1 specting, self rejoicing hitman beings on a level with ourselves." The sitettker cited history in support 1 of her presentation of the "transform ing vitality of an idea.” adding "cer- ! tain new great ideals are striking the i gong today." The greatest danger fnc- 1 ing the old world." she said, „"in this 1 new age is that of this htig?r'mechan ism. this even more intricate and more : marvelous machine .-"■■/■■! •-'.ajLfc*'.',jik^jeaii.«• t u—uaupih ■», J ::^z~7 ts 'heap and forgotten.” People of the present day have dis carded much “youthful falseness of ideals and self-seeking, and elimlnat-' ed many of its timidities she said. deVi daring that “now is the time to turn this mellow ripeness of ours” into pub lic service.' “Modern civilization,” she continued, “goads us to sharpen our spiritual fac ulties by continually doing. I said we had two great fears, one on our right, and one on our left, one the fear of "a: too mechanical world,, the other the fear of too. anarchistic world. Either menace is capable of wiping out our civilization if it gets the upper hand. One would make life too dreary to be lived. Only by some white heat fus ion toward which we are dimly grop ing, but which we have got to woyk out. are we going to get an end urine structure.” ' - A “socialized consciousness,” Mrs. Winters said, “recognized many kinds of standards and varieties of thought and achievement and recognizes them with resjiect. So all down the line we are readjusting our public conscious ness. In nothing is this more visible than in the world of international re lation. It is intolerably stupid to fail to realize that* here our whole point of view has .shifted. I have an idea that if Washington lived in the twen tieth century instead of the eighteenth, in the most powerful nation in the world instead of in' a country just stiuggling into national existence and attempting to try out principles at which all the rest of the world turns longing and hungry eyes and not only for bread- but for a realization of our own magnificent democratic ideals—l believe Washington would tarn -us more today against entangling hatreds Hi,in against entangling alliances.” The sqleaker praised the work of the , Washington Anus Conference, of ; which she was one of the four women members of the advisory committee. ! Tliis. she assertod, was one step, of ' “value only if it is followed by more ] steps and still more steps." , Mrs. Winters declared that "what- ; ever persons and whatever parties of- j fer suggestions or methods by Which we cun substitute la; sciences now. Perhaps, when we think * of the opium trade in China, it is-with j! a little sense of moral superiority and * immunity, but when the best official jj reports that we can get tell us that \ we are consuming more in America ' than any other nation, that there are 1 probably .10.000 drug addicts in New York City and SO,(Kit) in Philadelphia, and 00.0',K) in Massachusetts, and near ly a million in the United States, 1 that we use more opium tjpin France. Germany and Italy combined, and that ninety per cent, of the opium in the United States is used as dope and not ns medicine, awl when we know the relation of this hideous trade to crime, to economic laws, to physical deter ioration and to moral death, perhaps no other single fact can bring home to us more conclusively the necessity for our sharing in the great interna tional movement that.must begin with the prevention of the raising of poppy and then must hound the peddler and smugglers of it until there is no dark spot in any nation in the world where they can hide themselves." American embassies, Mrs. Winters described as “feelers," stretching into all the countries of the world. “A tremendous element in interna tional understanding,” she said, "would be to make sure "that those men and women, have a thorough-knowledge of international law and are also famil iar with the principles of their own government. "It is time to stop aie pointing men to consular offices eith er as a matter of political reward or because they have the money in'their pockets and enjoy the diplomatic game on its social side," she said. Two Robbers Enter Savannah Bank. Savfthnah.’ Cm.,’ Slay ITT; —Two nli ideiitiilerf men entered the Morris Plan company this afternoon at five o’clock, hound the cashier and escup-_ ed with $1,300 in cash and several thousand dollars in liberty bonds. E. B. McCuen. secretary-treasurer of the institution, was alone In tbe bank when the two men entered and ordered him to throw up his hands. Neither man wore a mask. McCuen was taken into the directors’ room ! and bound. When he heard the rob bers leave he got to a telephone and ' ' notified the police. Police officers cut the rope binding MeCueu. THE CONCORD D7QLY TRIBUNE BILL BOOSTER SAYS UP, MR. BUSIHESSktAVn W RAISE SOUR. I GET V OUT OF THE RUT ». DORN BE 1 SATISFIED WTH A BARE FEU.O'MS MO StAAKTEft THAW NOU ARVUiptua \Yt UtAOUSVMES AMO UWU& m wiAMStOMB, BUT twemoiomY tier TUAT VtPN BH tuiCcGlttS ALOUGcVU A RUT* MOStfO. « ljssElt „ „,n Lenoir-810-wing Hock Road to Be Surfaced, Lenoir. May 10.—The rock crusher and cither machinery for use on the Lenoir-Blowing Rock road has ar rived after several months delay. Contract for surfacing .(;he section of road bet,ween Lenoir and the foot of 'he mountain has J. F. Miliigan and, company. Teams and sq uipment have already, been moved here for this work and forces have been put to work preparing tup road for the surfacing material. .Crushed stone and gravel is to be used. This will cover a surface 16Meet wide by 10 inches thick, and is to be put down in layers. It is believed the road will be surfaced by the first«lth. In those first years Jane Lathrop Stanford worked hard and en dured much, but with later years came great wealth, and the opportunity for every luxury. ■ , She was forty-two when Leland Stanford. Jr., was I torn, a son whom she named nfter*the father- —for there was no man living whom she admired more than that stalwart, far-seeing, hard-working pioneer. For seventeen years the mother cared for the boy. and saw in him the high hopes of the fntuYe. Then came the blow. Death rubbed her of her only c-hild. “What lira* IsT all this money!” she thought. “What is there left to live for*?” Then caiue the thought: “There, are other mothers! There are other sons! I, will ■ live for them !” idle talked with her husband, and led him to the found ing of a university—where boys, such as theirs had lieen. could gain an edu (ntion. Together tlrey poured out mere than twenty million dollars for the university, qnd named it in lov ing memory of Leliind Stanford, Jr.— ihe most notable maker of mother love in all the United States. Maybe Right. A lion tamer who bought liquor from n bootlegger stated afterward dint whisky was a necessity for one of, his calling. At that there may be something “to his argument. We can’t Imagine a stone-sober man deliberately walking Into a cage of lions. 1* * P | BALDWIN RE^BIGERATOK | Perfect circulation of cold, dry j |s air. e No mixing of odors. I ltubbet> around tbe doors. j: |i By saving ice, they save the E price. p gee the Baldwin first. jj ’ 1, CONCORD FURNITURE CO. Don’t Forget I MOTHERS DAY SUNDAY, MAY 13th ✓ We have a beautiful line of Mothers’ Day Greeting cards. Get yours today. S| New shipment of Rose -9 ville Lustre Pottery, just in • H Ideal Wedding Gifts x I Musette, inc 3 P. S.—vWe have a Wonder- H full assortment of Flags and ■ Pennants. Also Mothers’ ||j Day framed mottoes. Come SI and see them. ■ ■■■'■7— - ■ *' / w • \ -’-vX-- ■ ■ «► 4* * , V FOR FOLKS FROM Out of Town OUT of town folks can bank with us by mail— and just as satisfactorily as if they come to the bank in person.. . ! Send us yoqr deposit by the Postman—and he will bring you word from us. that it has arrived, and has been credited to your account.' / ■^conclSd;Xokth ! •( "T \ ’ ~ 11 ~r '■ ... ■ t. ". ~OCOOOOOOOOOOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX}OOL1 H. B. WILKINSON UNDERTAKING CO. 1 M Phone 9. Calls Answered Day' or Nigh*. The Penny Get Results—Try Them. Saturday, May 12, 1023.