Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 14, 1923, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR SaSHKSKSSsw ; aarwa credited to It or not otherwise Caged hi this paper end also the lo- of republfwaSon of epeclal ' pjpatchee herein are aleo reeerved. W\ *? Ist Fifth Avenue, New York *1; reoplea’ Gas Building, Chicago fcfrft Candler Building, Atlanta Batered aa mood* olasa mail matter at the poatofflee at Concord, N, C, an ' pia tke Act of March t, 187 S, ||! ? ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES H In the City of Concord by Carrier fcyjgL. —-ys Kree Monthe 1-50 One Month , .SO Ststde of the State, the Subscription J .la the Same as In the City .’* oat of the city and by mall In North '■tMOaa the following prices will pre nni ’ Year - |K.oo Krae Months - 1-1* bSM Than Three Months 60 Cents a ' ■ Month sn gabaerlptloni Must Be Paid In Advance schedule la Effect April 29, 1028. £1 NORTHBOUND No, 186 To Washington 5:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:25 A. M. No, 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Rrcnmpnd 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To Washington 8:28 P. M. No. 38 To Washington 8:30 P. M. SOUTHBOUND No. 45 To Charlotte —4:23 P. M. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.06 P. M. ■ Jio. .29 oT Atlanta :2:45 A. M. Si To Augusta 6:07 A, M. S 3 To New Orleans 8:27 A. M. 11 To Charlotte 9:06 A. M. •Y3S To Atlanta 9:15 P. It i^BIB^THOUGHT| 1 M-FOR TODAY-i H Bible Thooghte memorized, will prove e § i ■ heritage in after ream. PATIENTLY:—Wait on flie ; dtf- phß ‘aSsanoo )mki2 jo oq : Strengthen thine Ueiirt: wait, I say, on the J»r<l,p-sP,s<tflm 27:14. FILLERS " jpw i>" ' i■< ■ _ 11 1 1- ' 11 SHOULD INSURE UROPfc. ’ ' |The Department of Agriculture (it tVSasliqgton declares that ilie insuring of agricultural •crops of the nation is per-1 fectly feasible, holding it as absurd that agriculture should continue without ade quate insurance facilities in the fare of general application that has been given to the insurance principle in nearly all I other kinds of enterprise. During the past few years rain insurance of all kind has been offered on the market. A man in practically every other line of busi ness except farming can get protection not only on his buildings but on his prod ucts as wen, and it seems feasible that , Borne kind of insurance for crops should !>* pSfovided. - -The Salisbury Post thinks the plan tnight be carried out on a still more ad- Venced theory. That paper believes that “along with insurance of the crops might also go n more adequate insurance of prices for agricultural products.” This is necessary. The Post flunks, because | “conditions are not such as to insure the f man who grows the crop getting the price i he deserves and must have to maintain a r Standard of excellency. The latter pro- I posat is worth more than the first, as valuable as insurance might be made to Work in covering the fields of the farmer. Today the farmer is suffering by reason bf the fact that he is not getting the full reward of his labor, conditions have grown up which mean that others get the rubst of the price which the consumer 1 _ E insurance proposition has been id by the Federal government, and :t should mean that steps are be en now, or Will be taken in the iture by the government, to pio s insurance fpr the farmer. >KW DEMOCRATIC CHAIR- Detnocratic party in North Caro-1 lould continue to prosper under dership of John Dawson, elect ral days ago to the chairmanship executive committee of the State, ople of the State have much con in the Kinston man and he is pupped\to serve the party ade and fairly. committee voted unanimously for Mod, and other prominent men of ite who are not members of the iee, exerted their influence for Je is strictly a party man, always MMggpt up personal hopes and ambitions Xhjkff*: the good of the party, and should pp|tke the Democrats a leader of outstand- K. ONE REASON FOR TRIP. facts begin to come from tile West. Bjteia very easy to see at least one reason ■ Iprty President Harding was so anxious a visit to the middle west. Re glfcljMican business in that section is not *Klpitnf and Mr. Harding was trying with promises a peo|>le who mEgwt been aroused by Republican tactics. HOjnnesota gave President Harding a JEjHprality of 370,000 in the last election. writer of The New York who was on the field at the time ll wrote, declares the Republican candi- Blfa. 4n the special senatorial contest, 5 411 have a hard time winning. He also B«d»JWC the of Harding is unpop i r jlted the'- present Republican tariff, but '§* does not satisfy the people who are Btifto sell their, wheat at a price low- upon pepper as a medicin?. £ GRADY TAYLOR 18 DEAD AND WIFE BADLY WOUNDED Taylor is AUsgod to Have Done the Shooting.—Reports Conflicting. High Point, July 13.—Grady Taylor, 22, is desd and hia wife, Mrs. Grady Taylor, is in a critical conditions at the Guilford General hospital tonight as the result of bullet wounds received this afternoon shortly before 5 o'clock, the shooting taking place in the Taylor borne on the corner of Willow-brook and Rus sell Streets. Taylor is alleged to have dene the shooting. There are rany conflicting reports concerning the homicide and it was, im possible to obtain any authentic informa tion. Mrs. Taylor reacted splendidly from the operation performed immediately af ter she reached the hospital and re gained consciousness within a short time. Physicians ' at’ the" .'hospital ex press the opinion that she has a splen-, did chance' of recovery. She has not; discussed the shooting. Police officers called to the Taylor, home found Taylor on the floor dead with a .32 calibre German automatic re-, volver, about two feet from his- hand. Mrs. Taylor at that time was receiving first aid treatment being hurried to the hospital for medical attention. 1 The officers found 1 two* empty car tridges aud one cartridge in the chamber of the revolver. Apparently one bullet entered the body of Taylor, who lived only a few minutes after the shooting. Mrs. Taylor is said to have been shot in the abdomen and although it W'SS im possible to determine the extent of her injuries early tonight, it was stated that she was believed to be seriously if not fatally wounded. The shooting is believed to have been the outgrowth of domestic difficulties. Mr. aud Mrs. Taylor had been married for about one year and for some time had been making their home in the o!d Cy Cummings house on the corner of Willow-brook and Russell streets. Mrs. Taylor, before her marriage, was Miss Jennie Ooltraue, and she resided near Greensboro. Dr. It. A. Schoonover, of Greensboro, coroner' visited the scene of the tragedy early in the evening and after interview ing a number of those who were nearby at the time of the shooting, derided that an inquest was not necessary. The coroner expressed the conviction that Taylor shot his wife and then took his own life. TODAYS EVENTS Saturday, July 14,’ IMS. Cleberation of Liberty Day in Brazil. French national holiday, commemorat ing the fall of the Bastilc. Five years ago today Lieut. Quentin Roosevelt met death in aerial fight on the western front* President Harding and his party are scheduled to arrive today at the town of Anchorage. Alaska. A number of German-Americaa gym nastic societies have sent delegates to the German national turned convention which opens today at Munich. Today marks the close of the I'nited States senatorial campaign in Minnesota between Gov. J. A. P. Preus, the Re publican nominee, and Magnus Johnson, Farmer-Labor standard bearer. Advocates of world peace by interna tional arbitration will gather in The Hague from many countries today to at tend the meeting of the Academy of In ternational Law. the sessions of which will continue for one month. The departure of an American trade commission to investigate commercial and investment possibilities in the Republic of Panama, which was originally sched uled for today, has been postponed until October, following the meeting of the Southern Commercial Congress in New York. “STOP” LAW CONSTRUED Attorney General Doesn’t Believe Law Means to Include the Spur Tracks. Raleigh. July 12.—Attorney General •Tames Ri planning today construed the “Stop, Look aud Listen” law at grade crossings to mean that spur tracks which are not in general use, are not railroads in the accepted sense and there is no obligation to halt at them. The department will rule that the spur near State College and running into the fair grounds, is not a railroad except during the state fair when the roads use it for delivering passengers aud freight. The point iH close, but the attorney gen eral thinks the legislative intent was to reach railroads where the engines and cars are kept iu service and there is the ever present danger. The two crossings iu controversy are not used at all except on infrequent oc casions. And when the cars are suift ed on them they are in reality railroads Hundreds of machines have been report ed for not stopping at thqpe places, bul no prosecutions* have been instituted. Appropriately Named. “How did your friend get the nick name ‘Louis the Fourteenth?’ ” “From Miss Bright, after he had been Invited to a dinner so that there wouldn’t be | 18 at table.”—Boston Transcript. ——asewp«——■ Up BW NO STOP SIGNB BUY AIiTOISTS ARRESTED i Interesting Point Raised at Salisbury / Relative to New Law.—Men Arrested Indignant. Salisbury, July 13.—The North Caro lina railroad etop law caused an interest ing ineiden here Thursday afternoon. At i the North Main Street -grossing where • thousands of automobiles cross each day policemen caught a number who did not stop according to the new law. In each case the violators of this law were re quired to put up an amount equal to the costs in county court. This is $6.45. Two of the machines caught were driven by John I*. Goins, of Charlotte, and E. P. Garland, of New York, both repre sentatives of Garble Manufacturing Company, with warehouses and offices ip Charlotte. These young men paid the costs but under protest because they claimed there shouhl, have been signs at the crossing ; like there are at other crossings in the ■ state. So keenly did they feel that an 'injustice -had been done and that the city --or some one should see that the . signs were put up that they had two signs painted and secured two posts and were proceeding to plant the posts near the railroad preparatory to placing the signs when Chief of Police Gallimore stopped tjiem. The activities of the young men attracted many who passed but they finally desisted, threw the signs away and filled up the hole they had made for the sign [lost. There is no watchman at this crossing but the Southern has an electric bell to announce the approach of a train. Many local citizens have passed this crossing without stopping as there has been an idea that no stop was required here us the crossing is well protected by the bell signal and by a rule which requires nil trains to stop before pulling across the street. * The young strangers contended that the city should see thnt signs are erected I instead of having officers lie in wait to | catch those who cross the tracks with- 1 out any idea of violating law. The Wty this afternoon took up with' Southern attorneys the matter of having) signs placed at this crossing. Ku Klux Letter Threatens a Judge in New Mexico. Las Vegas, N. M.. July 11.—Judge David J. Leahy, presiding in the trial of Car! A. Magee, Albuquerque edeitor, on charges of contempt, announced in court this afternoon that he had received a threatening letter today signed "K. K. K." "The letter,” Judge licahy announced, ‘was postmarked I,as Vegas. This is what it said: “ ‘You old Irish Judge, yon better go back to Ireland if you don’t, like this country. You try to send men to jail for telling the truth. I wilt be in your presence. I am from Texas’.” Selection of Dawson Approved by Mor rison. Asheville, July 12.—Hearty approval of the selection of John G. Dawson as chairman of the North Carolina Demo i ratio executive committee was given by Governor Morrison when he was called at his rooms in Grove Park Inn tonight and given a rejmrt of the uctiou of the committee. He immediately wired con gratulations to Mr. Dawsou. [NOTHING- WILL EVER SWERVE US ' W \ from the ; Lj) PEST KIND Xg&RviceU p s Any hopes of quicker 9 profits' will never swerve r || us from our intentions || “ to give to the public e j the kind of dependable |] •; plumbing service to o which they are entitled, e When you pay us your good money you receive ! the best we have to offer in return. E.B. GRADY Plumhing and Heating I n Contractors , II CbiMm at. OflM Phase S34W jlfly aaromD hkibuni SAYS STRIKE DECISION i HALTS RAILROAD TIEUP Attorney General Uaugbwty .Declares I Injunction Forever Settles Question. Washington. July'l2.—Attorney Gen • eral Daugherty, in a statement issued here today, declared the Chicago federal , court order making permanent the in • junction asked by the government in the 1922 railroad shopmen’s strike “forever settled the law,” insuring the public against the repetition of. the transporta • tion tieup. "No extensive strike tying up inter state commerce will ever-, take place again.” was a prediction - reiterated by the attorney general who is at his home in Columbus, Ohio, in the statement is ; sued from the department of justice. "This is a comfort to which the pub lic Is entitled.” FIVE-COUNTY league FORMED FOR HIGHWAY Chatham. la-e, Orange, Durham and Granville Join to Secure Rote 75 I’re ject. Pittsboro, July 12.—The counties of Chatham, Lee, Orange, Durham and Granviiie organized themselves into an association known as Route No. 75 as sociation at a meeting here today which was largely attended by delegations from all of these counties. 500 persons being present. The organization was formed for the purpose of endeavoring to get the State highway commission to build a hard sur face road from I’ittsboro to Sanford. This proposition has been indorsed Hnd approved by John Spruut Hill, highway commissioner for the fourth district. 1 IJSE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS MAMmMMHSWWMAAMSM WESTERN I NORTH CAROLINA | “The Land of the Sky” MICHIGAN, WISCONSIN, MINNESOTA; COLORADO, UTAH, CALIFORNIA CANADA, NEW ENGLAND AND Seashore Resorts GREATLY REDUCED SUMMER FARES Now in Effect via Southern Railway System From CONCORD SEND FOR FREE BOOK LET Convenient Schedules Attractive Service Inquire M. E. Woody, Ticket Agent Concord, N. C. Dr. J. A. Shauers I CHIROPRACTOR 1 ' Maness Bldg. Phone 620 I n Residence Phone 620 I jfl Room Y. M. C. A. 1 -f •?. Mothers of fttmoq* Men t The Mother of Edmund Speoaer. Almost nothing is known concerning the mother of the- great Edmund Spen ser, the author' of **The Fa«*ry Queen,” aud the contemporary of William Shake speare in Elibabethan England. Her name was “Elizabeth” —that much is known for certain. The poet, her son, looked upon her memory with the deep est reverence, and treasured it among his choicest possessions. It is provable Hint she lived in that part of England known as Eastern Lancashire, where she looked out upon leafy trees and pleasant hills and hedgerows. Perhaps she felt an especial love for the beauty of the outdoors world, and jioihted ont to her boy all that she herself-lovfd so deeply. That, however, is all conjecture. She had married a man whp,had 2 good name but little els«. The family, though not in the depths Ipf poverty, were prac tically without resource. There was a high tradition of pride, and of rqtrerencc for name and place: and there Wss also it strong belief .in the vain# of--educa tion. Young Edmund Spenser sent to n so-called grammar school, a school not at all like the grammar schools of today, but more like a strictly college preparatoy school—a Latin school, in fact. Then, when he was about sixteen, he was sent on to the University. He became one of the most famous of all English poets, writing with a -grace, a charm, n use of figurative iauguage, a power of imagery,*and a love of the beau tiful that has almost never been sur passed. * It,is pleasant to believe that he drew Ciis love of beauty from that mother who first guided his reading in the Lanca shire home. Next: The mother of James Buch anan. —7 School Books May Contain Germt. Because of the many cases of tuber culosis among teachers in' the rural districts of England, local educational committees have concluded that the germ infection conies from the chil dren’s school books that teachers take home. The Other Fellow—That Is. Any first-class whittler can think up a lot of things a fellow ought to be able to make a fortune out of.—Balti more Sun. Cabarrus Savings Bank I—' Yes, will look up and congratulate your self for having installed our lighting fixtures. They really render a ser vice of two kinds. Pri marily, they furnish you with efficient light, and they are decorative also. “The Modern Way” W. J. HETHCOX ■ Electric Contractor !•: West Depot Street Phone 669 r t. £ c T R ? C \^ar Bit m BP-'' tin Jlm 98 ill at 110: \ lit Are you entirely satisfied with the furnishings 1 of your home? Do you feel comfortable and 1 rested when spending some time in it, or do you I feel discontented or dissastified with the furnish 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 nfeed. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. "THE STORE THAT SATISFIES” STOP! LOOK! AND LISTEN! jj • You ought to see our 10 piece Dining Suites in Walnut and Jacobean. Just what you want. Also our 3 and 4 piece Living Room Suites, iri overstuff ed, Cane and Fiber, upholstered in tapestry and velours. We have a beautiful line and our prices are right. | If you are thinking of a Dining Room Suite 6r a Living Room Suite certainly you do not want to buy until you see us. I '* t Just received a big shipment of Druggets in Brussels, * Velvets, Administers and Wiltons. At prices you cannot get anywhere. Come let us show you. x H. B. Wilkinson * Concert! Pbetw 1M K*tmM>oH* Flmm « \ OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT i *! H. B. WILKINSON UNDERTAKING 00. Phene t. OeDe Answered Day er Night. The Penny Ads. Get Results —Try Them. FT |U |R It IS Saturday, July 14, 1923. ■
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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July 14, 1923, edition 1
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