PAGE TWO PENNY -COLUMN Wanted—Work Baking Light Bread and cleaning housed Janie Harris, 19 Lore’s road. 5-it-p. Wanted —To Hire a Good Clerk for Meat Market and Case. Call 64, Mt. Pleasant. • C. H. Graeber. 2-6 f-p. For Sale—Pony and Saddle. Buggy and harness. Bargain. 187 South Union St. Phone 587. 1-tf-ehg. Boys and Girls Join the Winchester Jun ior Rifle Corps. Ritchie Hardware Co. 4-6 t-c. Wanted —The J. R. Watkins tCompany will employ a lady or gentleman agent in Concord. A few other nearby cities also open. Watkins products ait' known everywhere and our salespeo ple make big incomes. Investigate this opportunity. Full particulars and valuable samples sent free to hust lers who mean business. Write today. The .1. It. Watkins Company, Depart ment 89, New York, N. Y. 2-4-Sats-p. Land Deeds, 5 Cents Each, at Tiines . Tribune Office. CONCORD MEN FORM NEW THEATRE COMPANY' Carolina Amusement amt Vaudeville Company Organized by Local Busi ness Men. Among the numerous new enterprises that are causing Concord's business to take on new life and vigor is the Card's line Amusement & Vaudeville Com puny, which was this week granted a charter by the secretary of state. The new company, which will do a state-wide busi ness. having theatres in numerous places, lias a capital stock of $50,000. The principal office is in Concord and all-the incorporators are Concord citizens. The objects for which the company is organised include furnishing amuse ment to the public, tile erection and maintenance of theatres, tiie purchase and production of eoyprightx and dram atic and musical productions. The company lias-purchased the tent show which has been operating on the Morris property in the rear of the city hall and plans at an early date to pur chaxe other theatre properties. B.- W. Means is president. H. A. Goodman vice president. David Leonard secretary and John Hugh treasurer. * FEDERAL REVENUES IN STATE SHOW INCREASE About 5125.200.000 Collected In 11 Mentha of This Fiscal Year. Raleigh. June .'1 IBy the Associated Press).—Approximately $125,290,000 has been collected in federal revenues in North Carolina: during rile eleven months of rhe fiscal year 1923, this sum comparing with $122,413,300 for tire whole of fiscal 1922. uccoNling to an announcement tonight by Gilliam Gris som. district internal revenue collector. The principal collections now being made are coming in from the manufac ture and sale of tobacco in l the state, over- $100,000,000 of the total registered already beiug derived from this source, according to the collector. Last. year. North Carolina stood eight in comparison with other states in the amount of collections. Illinois. Michigan, New York. Pennsylvania. Massachusetts. Ohio and California ranking ahead. California's collections for last year were approximately $131,000,110. This year. Mr. Grissom expects North Caro lina’s total to run over $135,000,000 and the state to pass California unless the bitter shows a decided increase. The second installments of income tax will fall due .June 10, and. according to the collector, the •government has in structed all officials to proceed promptly with the collection of these amounts, no delays being allowed. When a quarterly payment falls due and is'not paid, the whole amount of the tax immediately be comes subject to collection. Heretofore delays in some raises have been allowed when payments fell due. but the instruc tions this year have been changed, ac cording to Mr. Grissom. Special privilege taxes, which amount to over $1,000,000 annually in North Carolina, must be returned and paid during July, it was stated. Bible School. Beginning on Monday, June 11th. a ten-day Bible School will be conducted in St. James Lutheran Church. This is intended to supplement the Sunday School work. Also to give many some additional work that cannot be gotten in the alloted time on Sunday. The course will continue for two weeks and will be held for two hours each day. The time .each day will be divided into four periods. Beginning at 9 o'clock there will be a thirty minute devotional period with instruction in music and worship. Following this will be thirty minutes devoted to Bible study. Then there will be thirty minutes of play. A competent director will be oti the ground to make this period a profitable one. The day will be closed with an other period of Bible study. So then three things will be emphasized—music, play and Bible study. This school will be absolutely free with text books fur nished by the congregation, and an in vitation is most cordially given to every one who will attend. Put this on your calendar as an important part of your summer's program. Again, Swat the Fly. The number of bacteria capable of being carried by one house fly varies from 550 to 6,600,000. Hence a cru sade against this pest which is motet numerous during the season of the year when epidemics are likely to oc cur win play a great part In preveil . tion and spread of any malady. Angling Made Easy. A Californian keeps a lake proper ly stocked with fish where anglers may throw their line and fish to their hearts’ content by paying a fee for . encli fish caught. It is much cheaper mul just us much fuu us taking a long trip into the country. In their craze for beauty, Parisian women are even having their noses “broken" and re-«et in a different ehape. LI • V ... A .. . . I Lost—Last Saturday oi» Streets of Con- I cord 17-jewel Walthqm watch. Eigh teen size in gold, open face case. Liber al reward if returned to Adam Lipe. 257 North Kerr St. 5-2 t-p. For Sale—Number 4 Geyser Threshing ■ machine. Brand new. A. F. Lefler, i Route 4. 4-2 t-p. Big Dance at Kindley Swimming Pool Thursday night. June 7th. Music by Radin String Band. R. F. Kindley. 4-2 t-p. Children's Play Tents $2.48. Concord Army & Navy Store. 4-6 t-p. Automobile Luggage Carriers. $1.50 Con j cord Army & Navy Store. 4-6 t-p. Ladies’ and Children’s: Bathing Suits— -75c up. Concord Army & Navy Stoje. ' 4-ot-p. History of First Presbyterian Chureh, of Concord, written in 1905 by Airs, j R. S. Harris, ten cents each at The i Times-Tribune Office. 23-ts. Piano Tuning. Repairing and Revoicing. See A. Viola. 44 Loan St. 5-3 t-p. HUGHES AGAIN DECLARES FOR THE WORLD COURT America Herself Has Proved Its Need Her I>oniestic Courts. New York. June 4.—The thousand members of the bench and bar heard Secretary of State Hughes plead for America’s entrance into the world court mmght at the Kent centennial celebra tion at Columbia University. Justice Edward R. Finch, of the ap pellate division of the New York State •Supreme Court, who introduced Secre tary Hughes, also defended the court and pointed out. »that the teachings of James Kent, the former Columbia pro fessor in whose memory the meeting was held, showed that states or nations, being composed of individuals, were sub ject. to wrong doing and should be treated as individauls for their mis- Secretary Hughes said the tranquility' of the world depended upon tin* exist ence of a world court just as the tran quility of tin* United States and its va rious states had depended ami still de pends upon the courts. ••Our 'courts.” he declared, “still re main the assurance of our domestic peace. This is true in international as well as in national affairs. If we have tranquil states it is because the people believe in the reign of law and maintain the integrity of their courts. “If we have a nation with the im mense advantage of national authority adequate to meet all natioual needs, it is because we have the Supreme Court of the United States. If controversies over legal rights are to be determined peacefully, there must be a tribunal to deteennino them. “The American love of peace and sense of right.” he said, “and the conviction born of our experience. made it a definite part of American policy that we should do all in our power to secure provision for the peaceful settlement of international disputes by the establish ment of a permanent tribunal of inter national justice. “Our peculiar interests as a uafion re quire it. in order to give more adequate protection to our rights, and the in terests of world peace demand it.” Secretary Hughes asserted that tem porary tribunals were imperfect both in tip* choice of arbitrators and in the likelihood of the intrusion of political considerations. “Ifow unsatisfactory is such a meth od.” he added, “as compared with op portunity to submit a controversy to a permanent international court composed of the ablest and most impartial judges, acting as a court in accordance with judicial standards and giving their con tinuous and expert service to the inter pretation and application of internation al law. “Those who say that we should per fect international law before we have a permanent court of international jus tice, ignore the fact that in the mean time we must have arbitrary tribunals to decide our controversies of justiciable nature. These critics also ignore the enormous service that an international court may render with the material at its command at present, in the develop ment of international law.” Speaking of James K»*ut as a promi neuet professor, Secretary Hughes eulo gized the famous man and declared he was justly aecmailed as the “father of American jurisprudence.” He pointed out. in describing Kent's life and career, that whereas a century ago. little and poor law was produced , in America, now it was the nation’s chief product thus creating an impera tive need for competent exposition of the law. I FEW FOLKS HAVE GRAY HAIR NOW Druggist Says Ladies Are Using Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur Hair that loses its color and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur in the hair. Our grandmother made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep her locks dark and beautiful, and thousands of women and men who value that even color,'that beautiful dark shade of hair which is so at tractive, use only this old-time recipe. Nowadays we get this famous mix ture improved by the addition of other ingredients by asking at any drug store for a bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul phur Compound,” which darkens the hair so naturally, so evenly, that no body can possibly tell it has been ap plied. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; but what delights the ladies with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound is that, besides beautifully darkening the hajr after a fear applica tions, h also brings back the gloss and lustre tod gives it an appearance of abundance. > - (THF* CONCORD OSIEY TRIBUNE IN AND AROUND THE CAPITOL ‘Mere About Heriot Clarkson. New As sociate Justice.—Reads Many Books. Raleigh, June 4.—Francis Marion, the "Swamp Fox of the Revolution,” is num bered among the ancestors of Heriot Clarkson, Charlotte, North Carolina's new .associate justice of the state su preme court. Sixty years ago, Justice Clarkson was born at Kingsville, S. C„ a son of Major William and Margaret (Simons) Clark son. He is a membeT of the Society of Cincinnati. The mother of the justice was a great great grand niece of Gen eral Marion, and, according to the his tory of North Carolina, her ancestry in cluded other personages of distinction in the history not onl.V of the South but of, New England as Well. "Hardly less notable hns been the re cord of the Clarkson male line.” reads the history. "It is of English ancestry, hut the family located in South Caro lina before the Revolutionary war. Mr. Clarkson's grandfather was Thomas Bos ton Clarkson, a descendant of Thomas Boston, the Jfamouul Presbyterian divine. Thomas Boston Clarkson married Miss Heriot, of the family of George Heriot, a Scotchman who lived in Edinburgh something more than 3(H) years ago. “The name Heriot is one of the most familiar encountered in that Scotch city, upon his death. George Herjot left his property to the town of Edinburg to establish a fund for the practical educa tion of boys. This fund today amounts to several millions of pounds, and tfie schools which have grown up under it constitute practically the free school sys tem of Eedinbnrgh. The Heriot Foun dation probably provided for the first free school system in the world. The hranch of the family in America first settled in Georgetown, 8. C,. many years before the Revolutionary war. Colonel Robert Heriot. a great great grandfather of Heriot Clarkson, was a colonel in the continental line of the American Revo- lutionary troops.” Major William Clarkson, the father of the justice, was a planter and during the war between the states, served in the Confederate army, being promoted to the rank of Major. In 1865. ac cording to the History of North Caro- iua. he was in command of the Sharp shooters at Fort Sumter. Charlestoi harbor, when if was being bombarded b; the Federal monitors. Several mem bers-bf the Clarkson family still are liv ing on the land granted to their ances tors by King George, of England. Justice Clarkson attended the Carolina Milintary Institute at Charlotte and while still a youth entered the low of fices of .Tones and Johnston. Later, Mr. Clarkson studied law at the Uni versity of North Carolina, graduating with first honors in IS$4, refilling t<: Charlotte immediately to practice . He served as president of the Anti- Saloon League of North Carolina am was at its head when the state went dry in 1908. He was chairman of tin Anti-Saloon League in Charlotte ii 1899. Justice Clarkson served Mecklen burg county in the "white supremacy" legislature. From 1!M»4 to 1911, Mr. Clarkson served as solicitor of the twelfth judicial district. He was one of tlie organizers of the Piedmont Fire 1 nsuranee Company. Justice Clarkson married Miss Mary Osborne, of Charlotte, a daughter of E. A. Osborne. They have five children. The new justice was administered the oath of office Wednesday I morning by Chief Justice Walter Clark. In a period of less than two years, the Mbrary commission of North Carolina has issued 136 books to one North Car olinian. The selection of the books has been left to the commission secre tary. Miss Mary I). Palmer, and each lias been promptly read and returned. Among the books the Carolinian has read, coming from his commission, are Barre s Little Minister, Sentimental Tommy, Blaekinore's Lorna Donne. The Americanization of Edward Hoke. Old Crow, How to Live. Broad Highway. Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come. Alan Who Married a Dumb Wife, Y'agnbond iug Through the Ande. Crossing. Richard Carvel, The Rescue, Portrait of a Lady, The New Palestine, Henry Esmond and many others. Couldn't Be a Flapper, so Girl Ends ! Her Life. Chicago. June 4.—Other girls in her | class rolled Their stockings, had their { hair bobbed, anil called themselves flap pers. She wanted to be a flapper, too. But her mother was an old-fashioned mother, who kindly but firmly said “no." So the girl put a rubber hose in her | mouth and turned on the gas. That is the story behind the suicide of Ruth- Hornbaker. a 14.year-'ulil high school of Berwyn. She died today in the home of her father. Albert R. Horn baker. following two days in a comatose condition; Her parents had found her unconscious Friday night on her bed. ' "I can assign no reason for her act." Morn baker told Coroner AVolff. “except that she wanted to have her liair cut. Just last week she came home aud told her mother there %ns only one other girl in her classes Win did not have her hair bobbed. She wanted to have her hair bobbed, but her mother does not like bobbed hair. "Ruth did not appear to be depressed, and we had no thought she had suicide | in her mind. She was unable at any j time after we found her to tell ns any- I thing and she left no notes oi any I kind.” . I Once during her two day’s sojourn in j the half-world the girl indicated she had I not intended to kill herself, but perhaps j only to scare her parents. “I guess I left it turned on too long.” she murmured faintly to her father and smiled wanly at him. Chief of Police Levy, of Berwyn, who investigated the ease, threw light on another angle when he pointed out what may have been a subscribing faofpr to the young girl's act. jJr “I understand." he said. some of her schoolmates taunteu her about her long hair. They said she should have her locks bobbed and shook their short eurls in her face.” Ruth is said to have an adopted daughter-of Mr. and Mrs. Hornbaker. "Bat that had nothing to do with it." the mother sank' “She always had everything she co Ud want." J Court Sustains State Law. Washington. June 4.—North Caroli na's- franchise and ad. valorem property tax' levies against the Southern, Norfolk Southern. Atlantic Coast Line, and the Seaboard Air Lipe railroads was sustain ed by the Supreme Court today. Pola Negri mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Apollonia Chalupez, better known to j the lover; of motion pictures as Pots Negri, the “movie" etar, was born in i Bromberg, Poland. Her fathlr had a good fabric business. Ha died in 1905, leaving hsr at the age of si; with her mother, who later sent her to school In Warsaw. At the age of ton she decided she Wanted to bo an actrpss. At sixteen she made*ner pro fessional debut In a Warsaw theater. Later she received many offers to en ter the “movies” and finally yielded. THE RIGHT THING d th€ RIGHT TIME MARY MARSHALL DUFFEE BREAKFAST And to breakfast with what appetite you have.— Shakespeare. COME of the men back from Franct are full of enthusiasm over the French way of solving the .breakfast problem. They like the habit of taking a light breakfast of coffee and rolls on rising and not assembling for a hearty breakfast until the middle ot the day. That second breakfast, which Is more like our luncheon, is a leisure l.v meal and quite often it is the flrsl occasion of the day when the entire family gathers together. There is not much likelihood that w» will adopt the continental' breakfast, but it is easy to see that we Americans are finding the convenience of having a breakfast that is a moveable feast. That is, we no longer regard it ns es sential for every one to appear around the breakfast board at once. The tim* for breakfast should be arranged to suit the convenience of the one who breakfasts and this is quite possible to manage, whether you have many servants or none. If there are guests In your house they will quite likely ask you before retiring for the firs! night what time you have breakfast in the morning. If they do not ask, ‘you should tell them your breakfast an rangements. A very good thing to do is to tell them that breakfast is served up to a certain time in the morning. If there are some members of yout household who arise from necessity oi choice at a very early hour, that Is no i