PAGE FOUR ' THU ASSOCIATED PRESS / Th* AwKKOated exoluzlTely Uun credited to It or not othertrlee Sni^VMUhTCr^f^ 0 th * lo ‘ _JUI rights ot rcpuhlWctlon ,ot »P«cl4l herein sre also reserved. Candler Building,’ Atlanta 0 ‘ antared as second claaa mall matter ■I the postofflce at Concord. N. CL an gjr the iTot of March »■ !»«. L ' BUBBCRIPTION RATES lii the Cltyaf Concord hr Carrier gJ&KhT— Months Lj>o •Datalde toV¥tas>Tthe~Subscrfptlon Is the Same as In the City Out of the city and by mail In North Carolina the following prices will pre- Sw‘ Tear *J>®® fits Months *-6® PEree Months , _-._-- I.JB Less Than tfj) Subscriptions Must Be Paid In ”. ■ • . Advance , RAILROAD SCHEDULE la Effect April 39, 1923. NORTHBOUND No. 136 To Washington ‘ 6:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:55 A. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. 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 4:35 P. M. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.06 P. M. No. 29 To Atlanta 2:52 A. M. No. 3i To Augusta 6:07 A. M. NO.: 33 To New Orleans 8:27 A. M. No, ' 11 To Charlotte 9:05 A. M. No. 135 To- Atlanta 9:15 P. M. f^4^BIB^THOUGHT| I —FOR TODAY—I II Bible Thoughts memorized, will prove a | Ihl priceless heritage in after years. |g| • TRUST HIM ALWAYSCommit fhey. way unto the Lord; trust also in Him. —Psalm 37 : 5. r < TtStfelA WARNING. Miss Mary Shot well, connected, with, the State Board of Charities and Public AVelfare, while in Coneord recently in-! vektigating an orphanage, funds for .which) had beeu solicited iu various parts of the State without the solicitors holding a li cense to form an orphanage, issued a timely warning to the people of North Carolina about giving funds to beggars or others who are soliciting for a seem ingly worthy cause. The department with which Miss Shotwell is affiliated looks after orphanages and homes of a similar nature, and unless the cause for . which solicitations are made has the sanction of the welfare department peo ple should go slow in giving to it. According to the, story told here by * ‘ Miss Shotwell, two Concord men recent ly were in Oreenville. N. C.. soliciting for the Brookwood Orphans' Home, which they told Greenville people was located here. There is no orphanage of any kind in Concord, although one of the men do ing the solicitor recently purchased eight lots on which it is rumored he proposes to erect an orphanage. That does not prevent him from violating the law when ’ he solicits for the orphanage, for the State Board of Charity and Public Wel fare has never given him permission to conduct an orphanage and until such a permit is issued any one soliciting for the proitosed institution violates the law. People are too gullible. Miss Shotwell stated, and she is right. Anyone with a i long face, a broken or missing limb can ; come along and get money from almost anyone. It is the same with people who : go around claiming they are collecting for rescue work or an orphanage. The aver age citizen has a tender spot in his heart for the orphan or the boy or girl who has gone wrong, and without giving the case the attention it deserves, he goes ahead and {rays out money. . In most cases the beggar needs no public help, and in many instances the money given for the orphanage or rescue home goes into the pockets of slick solicitors. When these beggars and solicitors come around, whether they be seeking aid for themselves or some alleged institution, city officials should make an investiga tion. The department with which Miss Shotwell is associated keeps tab on wor thy institutions and many worthy indi viduals who really need aid, and if the department says the cause for which the B then are .soliciting is worthwhile, then Hf the fund seekers should be allowed to W work iu a city. Otherwise they should W, not be permitted to operate. The people of North Carolina will have to be educated to fight shy of the many fakirs that are going about the State,-and •while we have had enough experiences to be wise, it seems that we still have much to learn. PRESIDENT BOAS+FuE President Harding has had no hesi tancy in claiming all good things for his administration in the speeches he has made in his swing through the west. The President has always been pnrticnmr hot i to cill the trip a iiolitieal visit to those States which have shown strong Demo cratic tendencies recently, but we fail .*V fe see how jt can be (ailed anythin!? else. Jn practically every speech he lias made | he has devoted the great part of his talk ’ to u defense or rather an eulogy to the accomplishments of the government un der his administration. He wants the ■Republican nomination next year and he 'fc bidding high for it. j-> | „ His utterances about what the admin- I*. Ist ratio n has done for the farmers is Democrats in the Senate, forced through % AH legislation that got through. The 88- ministration leaders opposed practically - - —- ' r ~ every bill that finally passed. Yet the.' President is claiming credit for it all. now. W. A. GRAHAM, JR., IN CHARLOTTE HOSPITAL,' Alleged to Rave Been Injured by John- Reinhardt, Lincoln County.—Shull is Fractured. Charlotte, June 29.—State Senator! William A. Graham, son of Maj. William' A. Graham, North Carolina er of agriculture, is in a local hospital; suffering from injuries he is alleged to; have received in a fight with John Rein-; hardt, son of the late State Senator Rein-: hardt, at a church festival last Satur-i day night. Reinhardt has been bound over to the; next term of court in Lincoln county and is under a bond of SSOO. Senator Graham is said to be suffer ing from a fractured skull and a slight concussion of the brain. The fistcuff between the two men is alleged to have occurred at Mncpelah Church in Lin coln county but the cause of the trouble, has not been made known. The Church a Stingy Employer. ; Literary Digest. The church is the richest institution in! the country today, richer even than the. United States Steel Corporation or the! Standard Oil Company. Yet, in spite' of all her “Opulence,” the church keepsj her workmen closer to the hunger points: than' any industrial organization in! America. This is the charge made byj Dr. Malcolm J, MacLeod, pastor of StJ Nichola's Church in Xgyv York, before the general synod of the Reformed Church at Asbttry Park, New Jersey.! Speaking of the poor man’s impeachment of the rich man’s misuse of wealth. Dr. MacLeod asks, as liis address is quoted in the New York press, whether the church knows ‘“how to abound.” His answer is that the Presbyterian minis ter, perhaps the highest paid minister in any denomination in America, receives an average salary of $1,803 a year, or $34.07 a week. A mule-spinner gets $40.39 a week, and a leather-cutter in shoe-making receives $38.11 a week. The facts, we are told, prove that the minis ter is the poorest, paid workman, even iu comparison with the ranks qf tin-, skilled labor,; Yet “his hours of labor are from ten to twelve a day, seven days a week.” And "to:say that a minister’s recompense is found ip the joy -he gets out of his work and the good lie is able to do may sound very beautiful and an gelic. but when we get down to the cold, hard facts of living, it is just plain, pious, platitudinous Wmijiig." Looking thus at tiie facts. Dr. MacLeod asks in dignantly : “How can any mortal interpret the laws of civic* betterment, not to speak of the laws of the kindgdom of God. if he can not honorably look his fellow man in the face? How can a womnn be a leader in the missionary society, if her husband owes the butcher and the baker, whose wives are sitting down there in front listening to her? "Os course, if you want your minister to be a beggar or a parasite, it’s all right. If you want to rob him of liis. masculine independence in the social texture, if you want him to be what the grocer and the storekeeper call a 'bad egg' or a 'dead beat' because he doesn't pay his honest debts, then this policy is ideal. No long as the church is organized as it is and you demand that he keep up a certain standard of living, so long then'do you owe him freedom from financial care, immunity from overaijxlety about tomor row and deliverance from the daily bread of sheriff and the wolf." The indictment is well drawn, thinks the Brooklyn Eagle: "Dr. MacLeod lias not minced words. His frankness has a sting about it. But the church out to be thankful for such truth telling. In the long run reforms - are brought about by preliminary analy r sis of the conditions that need to be re . formed.”' Refuses Cabarrus Man’s Plea. Raleigh. June 23).—.j|. G, Nerble. Cabarrus county, convicted of a statutory offense and sentenced in August. 1922. to serve five years in state prison. Raleigh, today was de clined clemency by Governor Morrison. Verble applied for parole. Enters Suits For $20,000. Charlotte. June 29.—Mrs. Elizabeth Crouch. Forsyth county, has filed suit for 829.000 damages agaiust the Den nis-llhinehart Construction company for the death of her son. Fred M. Crouch, a young convict, who was! drowned at Mountain Island. May 30. Mrs. Crouch charges that her son. who was leased to the construction compelled to work in a "veritable death trap,” and that aid was refused him when he was drowning. On the invitation of the Belgian gov ernment Miss Martha Van Rensselear, head of til* home economics department of Cornell University, has gone to Bel gium for the purpose of iuum-liing a Bet ter Homes campaign in that country. M ss Alberta Raffl. who was graduated in architecture from the,University pf Illinois this year, is the first woman to be awarded the school medal of the American Institute of Architects. ...... ...... -y -- -■ • ' v* y• ■* - . m P ■■■ 1» " ' » * ■)> ■■ "*» -4 I Up feiu Accipemy t .wiqTnamtu ; | 1 ) tAwrcsbuHA ycirayr-f ■■ j . V— , yyJfex' -tr y ( <£sm~ * (mt tri£ cfe. .1— llfarr«l I—- lymr-J F" V^ f/\ ' \ ®>V j,- ->■ g x ' B i t. ~ . . : / - INF CONCORD DSICT TRIBUNI TODAY’S EVENTS » Saturday, June SO, 1933. Today concludes the.first half o.f the perfomance for the year 1&23, counting by months. This is Uncle Sam’s official New Year’s Eve—the last, day before the beginning of the new fist-ai yea,r. Twenty years ago today occurred the (Ifcastrous coal mine explosion at Hanna, Wyo., in whleh 200 miners perished. Friends of Postmaster Edward Morgan of New York City, are to give a dinner tonight to celebrated his 60th anniver sary in the postal service. Viee President Coolidge and the gov ernors of all the New England states are to meet at Poland Springs today for a general conference on New England problems. A commercial commission assembled by the Southern Commercial Congress sails from New York today to make an econ omic and commercial survey of Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Leading phytopatholigists of the world are to assembly in international confer ence iu Wageninoen,- Hollasd. to iiscOss means of eradicating insect plagues and plant sickness. The official opening of the Banff- Windermerp motor highway through the Canadian Rockies takes place tdday. wheiri the last link in the 6*500 mile scenic tour through Western Canada and the United States and be thrown open to traffic, j Sunday, July 1. Centenaft- of the birth of Charles B. Farewell, United States senator from 11- ’inois. Twenty-fifth anniversary of the bat tle of San Juan, one of the imisl import ant conflicts of the Spanish-American War. | . V A three-day celebration of the,sixtieth Anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg will be begun on the historic battlefield today. STIEMWELL IN STRIPES. TREATED AS OTHERS Siven Same Treatment. No Better. No \ybrso, as Other Convicts on Davidson 'CliataipMfc.' The Lexiffgton Dispatch in i.ts last is ■ik* carries the following: , v '- fiJtaStter Sliemwelk . who was arrested, 'n Satisbufy Simday; afternoon, brought o and placed in the count#, 'ail, went to work on the '■ county roads' Monday afternoon to begin a Sentence of hirty months given him by Judge J. Bis Hay for au assault with deadly weapon 'll Wade H. Phillips and J. C. Bower >n January 16, 1921. "Mr. Shemwell was carried to the road •amp which was on Monday at work iu Iteedy Creek township, but today to Sil ver Hill and upper Emmons, where they will be engaged in road construetiqn for several months. Foreman Fred Everhart is in charge ,»f this camp. It as learned here that j Mr. Shemwell was dressed in convict | garb after his arrival at the camp, and | Was placed at work with the other coni ricts. It was stated that the sauie treatment accorded to all prisoners would be given him—no better and no worse—and that no special privilege would be granted him. He is 65 years >f age, but according to the report of the county health physician who examined him Sunday afternoon, is in splendid physical condition." Last’ SIOO,OOO For Big Hglit Raised. Great Fails. Mont., June 29.—The tack Denipse.v-Tom Gibbons heavy weight - championship fight. twice hreatened with collapse within the list two weks, because of financial crisis, lias cleared the last hurdle, and will be decided in Shelby July 4. as scheduled. The final $100,900 of Dempsey's 5800.00(1 guaranteew as raised tonight from 20 influential business men of the tatc. who pledged SS,(KM) each. New Victor Records For July ] NEW VfCTOfe RECORDS FOR JULY | 66158—Rosa - ? De Luca i 74811 —Nocturn Jascha Heifetz Frit* Kreisler 'ithin Your Eyes Jofin JlcGoruiack tiring Olga Suinaro# p Mother . Ernestine Sclmmanu-Heiuk Want When I'Want It Royal Dadimm' Rio Royal Dadmuii le Eagle March Sousa’s Band dets " Soli’s Baud Great Wlilte Way Orch. The Troubadours , Great White Way Orch. K. in K. Y Paul Whiteman & Orchestra i S. S. Leviathan; Orchestra liver S. S. Leviathan Orchestra ■e Mama Every Night Tennessee Teh Paul Whitemau & Orchestra Arthur Gibbs and His Gang ulna Arthur Gibbs and His Gang RRIS Music Department AMERICAN CHAMPS 'FROM RICHMOND Tp DK..MPSEY 1. —Bill Richmond, New Yprk, lost to! Tom Cribb, England, 1805. 2. —Tom Molineaux, Alexandria, >’«>•,! ; lost to England, 1810. , 3. Beasley, Boston, beat. Jacob Hyer, New York. 1816. i 4. —James Sanford, Hoboken, lost to, Andy MoLane. Philadelphia. 1832. 5. —Andy McLnne, Philadelphia, lost; to William Harrington, New York. 7833. • 1 . i 6. —iWillitim Harrington,'New York, retired, IS3B. ” t ! . 7.—Sam O'Rourke, New Orlean, re-: tired, 1839. ' ! 8. —“Yankee Sullivan," New York,: lost to Tom Hyer, New York, 1849. ’ 9. Hyer. New York, retired.. 1858. ! 10. —John Morrissey. New York, beat John C. Ileenan, West Troy, X. Y., 1858. 11. —John C. Heenan handed title by Morrissey, November 12, 1858. Heenan lost to Tom King, England. 1863, and retired. 12. —Mike McCoole, Louisville, lost to Joe Coburn. New York. 1863. 13. —Joe Coburn. New Y’ork. torced to .retire, and title switched hack to McCoole. , JJ4—Tom Alien, St. Louius. lost to Joe Goss (English). Boston. 1876. 15. —Joe Goss. Boston, forfeited to John Dwyer. New Y'ork. 1877, 16. —John Dwyer, New York, retired in 1880. presenting! to Paddy . Ryan. New York. 17. —Paddv Rvan. New Y'ork. lost to John L. Sullivan, Boston. 1882. IS.—Jjhn L. Sullivan. Boston, lost to ,Limes J! Corbett. .San Francisco., 1892. 19. —James Corbett. Spu Francisco, list to Robert Fitzsiminios, New York, 1897. -20.—Robert •Fitzsimmons. New York, lost to James .T. Jeffries, Los Angeles, 1809. 21.—James J. Jeflries, Los Angeles, retired. 1905. \ ,jl2.—Marvin Hart. Louisville, claim ed title, aud lost, to Tommy Burns, 1906. 23. —Tommy ' Burns lost to .Tack Johnson. 1908. ~ 24;—Jack .Ihhnson lost to Jess Willard, 1915. 25.'—Jess Willard lost to Jack Dempsey., 1919. Great Dismal Swamp Fire Fougiit B>' Y Labor Gangs. Norfolk. June 29.—Gangs of laborers employed in lumber operations in the Great Dismal swamp have been busy for several digging trenches to divert the course of fires that, hare been smouldering in ' the immense morass for the last three weeks, and which it is said, may threatened lumber camps in the vicinity. The fire is confined to an area esti . mated at 40.000 acres. | Damage to standing timber is be | lieved to have been inconsiderable. Maine leads the States in the produc tion of wood pulp. Last year her 34 mills consumer 1 279,852 cords of pulp wood. Dr. J. A. Shauers CHIROPRACTOR Maness Bldg. Phone 620 JU 1 Residence Phone 620 J Room Y. Mu C. A. -Hi Mothers erf Famous Men || The Mother of Sam Houston. J When one knows what sort of motherj was the mother of Sam Houslpn he - un derstands how it earn* about v that Sflm; Houston was the intrepid pioneer, the' builder up of the great JJouthwest, • thej man whose name is honored in, the city; of Houston, Texas. ' ’> , 1 Sam was a man who feared( no one. The mother of Sam Houston: was a woman who feared no one. Her, maiden name was Elizabeth Paxton. One had only to look at her to know her; character. She was a woman of strong: muscles, of great size, and of most de termined ways. When her husband died an left her vvitl) six sons and three daughters, she made no appeal to the public for help. Instead of that, sjie iiarnpsscd up the oxen and set off into the wilderness. She crossed the Alle gheny Mountains, and made her way into Tennessee. There she set herself and her children at work, and cleared land, meanwhile keeping a watchful eye on the prowling Indians—for Tennessee in those days wits a frontier place. * She built herself a cabin, aud proceeded to make herself, at home. Sam Houston was then a boy of thirteen. All this made a deep impression on him. There was one woman in the world for whom' he had the utmost 'respect, and that woman was liis mother. He thought: "If I can be a man half way equal in spirit to my mother. I’ll be a great man.' He set himself that ideal, j and out of that ideal he made himself I the great pioneer, the builder of a great section of the United States. Every one loved his mother: for all found her worthy of respect. Her big Irish .heart j went out in sympathy to every one' who j was in trouble. As some one said : “She j was twice the man that almost any one j of her men neighbors was.” When his- j tory speaks of the grit of Sam Houston it ought to speak of that heroic mother of his! America has had few women to equal her. Next: The mother of Henry H. Jes sup. Miss Elizabeth,, Lorraine Wooster, former state superintendent of public in struction, and the first woman tw be elected to a State offi(4 in Kansns. is ’ being urged by her friends and support ers to bpeoDtie n candidate 'for ;the -gov* eruorship. !• ' An imposing soldiers’ monument re ' ently unveiled in Winnipeg was model led by a woman. Mrs. Hilliard Taylor. Cabarrus Savings Bank TP - | ’■ q/ft'cv The furnishings of a man's office give the first impression of his ideas of progressiveness. If they arc not modern they hinder your business. Let •us make estimates on new ones today. •The Modern Way” W. J. Hethcox Electric Contractor West Depot Street Phone 669 . *nns.-*e t... Cl l» £ c T R i c Y’’ II In 111 mp iii'iH'f OFFICEIES ('has. B. YY’agoner President A. F. Goodman Cashier . C. L. Fropot, Asst.. Cashier Boyd Blggers Carl Beaver Tellers DIRECTORS Geo. L. Patterson J. Frank Goodman Alex. R. Howard , " Chas. B. Wagoner, i Dr. W. D. Pemberton E. C. Bnrnhardt • B. Ij. Umberger* M. L. Marsh • A. F. Goodman A. N. James P. F. Stallings Dr. J. A. Patterson BChas. M. Ivey s F. C. Niblock ■■■ ■ ■■■—— ■—*i ■ ■ "■'■■■■■ ■■ ■■■rs Are you entirely satisfied with the furnishings j / *of your home? Do you feel comfortable and i*: fc. V • f i ! 'i rested when spending some time id it, or do you feel discontented or dissastified with the fumish :••• r , > '' •• - • ings? If you are not satisfied, we offer you our services in planning or re-arranging all rooms in your home. \ As experts along this line it will not take us any time to offer you what suggestions you might need. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. “THE STORE THAT SATISftES” IYofir Child’s Health calls for hygienicaUy clean pfllowa; filled with feathers from which every particle of animal matter and slcin have been removed. EMMERICH * ' PILLOWS are the best health insur ance. Take no chaiihes. H. B. Wilkinson OekMfttlPfMttfe 1«4 s KaanapoHs Plmm t OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT lr ---51. ,» ; IM The Penny Adi. G&t Them. ( [ "-isssssssasssa. *1 i X T U R £ S June 36: , 9fw — 1 '■ -" ' -‘-gf vi I Safety for Savings ; t : ; s'.'. : ' : ' - ' t This bank with ample Capital u |sj§j and Surplus, strict State super- & vision, eighteen yeUrs df success ful business and the management . of men well knqwn for their abil ity and integrity affords. UN QUESTIONED SAFETY for ; your Savings and pays four per cent, interest, compounded quar terly, upon them. ** Start a Savings Account today with this strong bank. Savings i ’■ of SI.OO or more invited. CITIZENS • - Concord, N. C. :: v-