Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR I f !»:-i== Hie Concord Daily Tribune. J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publlsbcr M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repubHcatlon of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo cal news published herein. All rights of republlcatlon of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Special Representative FROST. LANDIS A KOHN 225 Fifth Avenue, New York Peoples’ Oas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mail matter at the postoflice at Concord, N. C., un dgr the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier One Year 36.00 Six Months 3.00 TKree Months r 1.50 One Month .60 Outside of the State, the Subscription Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices wll pre vail: One Year $5.00 Bix Months - 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid In Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect April 29. 1923. Northbound. No. 136 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 Rrcnmond 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 __ —4:23 P. M. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.06 P. M. No.' 29 oT Atlanta :2:45 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 6:07 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8:27 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 9:05 A. M. No. 136 To Atlanta 9:15 P. M. j A^Brei^THOUGHTI X—FOR TODAY— I I Bible Thoughts memorized, will prove mil | t priceless heritage in after years. |1 „. , THY vnr.4 NOT MlNKTeach hie to do thy will: for thy ayt my (loti: thy spirit is good : lead me into tile laud of uprightness.—Psalm 14.3:10.' DECLARES GERMANY CAN PAY NOTHING. The Institute of Economies, of New iYorly -is an institution with an endow ment "of $2.(*00.000 from the Carnegie Foundation. Parti of its income has been devoted to fin economic investigation of • the extent to which Germany has paid reparations and her capacity to make further payments. Germany at present can pay nothing, according to the con clusions reached by this organization, which has at its head such men as Dr. Arthur T. Hadley, ex-president of Yale: D. A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard: David S. Houston, ex-Secre tary of the Treasury: John Barton Payne, head of the American Red Cross. ■ and Paul M. WaWmrg. of New York. j Tlie report declares it to be the con- i elusion of the Institute's investigation | that since the armistice was signed. Ger many, in fulfillment of reparations obli gations. has parted with goods, money, property and securities worth 20.000.- 0(10,000 gold marks, or about $5,188,000.- 000. This is more than France admits, and the Allies acknowledge the reeenpt of only about $2,000,000,000 from Germany. On the other hand Germany claims cred it for payments amounting in round numbers to $11,000,000,000. A discrepancy between these figures is explained, according to the Institute's report, by the fact that the allied powers refused to allow credit for many of the largest items of German delivery. After declaring that Germany “at present can pay nothing. - ’ the Institute asserts that “whether she will be able to pay in the near, or even distant, future depends on circumstances over which she has no di rect control.” It declares that most of the values surrendered by Germany in fulfillment of reparation obligations have been from capital and not income, and that “she has practically nothing left that, Germany has no more capital to send across the border, no income, except paper marks, which the Allies will not accept, and that the Allies cannot collect anything from Germany so long as they refuse to permit Germany to earn, by foreign trade, money acceptable to them. Whatever may be the truth of the Conclusions reached by the Institute, it is an interesting contribution to the bet ter understanding of the situation. Steady advertising the thing Mr. H. B. Stout, manager of the mer chandising division of the Goodyear tire Bales department, recently delivered a message at the annual dealers’ get-to gether meeting held at Bismarck. North Dakota which is worth repeating sever al times. The substance irf Mr. Stout's message was that consistent, insistent and con tinuous advertising pays. He declared that 94 per cent, of the advertisers of one large Chicago daily, who placed ad vertisements in the paper only spasmod ically were final failures. It was the steady pull of regular and all-time ad vertising that did the job. Mr. Stoat paid: “Goodyear does not depend upon one. two or three times copy. We seldorii | start a campaign that does not run for ht least 52 insertions in the paper and more often it is two or three times a week copy. That is what tells." “But advertising will not do the work alone. There must be service, courtesy and system—the huudmuids-of advertis ing. Too much time is given up to groaning . over mail i competition. . “lured ai*e upou’yoifg toes and attend as much ho V«>ur 'trails'as. fbecmail order hou»«S. they woujd not have a/shnW be side you,” declared Mr. stout.. “I have worked for mail order houses and know their system. They drop into a terri tory and J^te ■Jfa—aaaa—— bombardment of literature. It usually comprises sending a man a series of twenty-four pieces of mail., If they get even so much reaction as a postcard they continue that name for another series.” In New Mexico recently a bold ancj intrepid editor, conceiving it to be his duty to the public, criticised the action of a court. The court hailed him before it and sentenced him to jail for a long term on charges of criminal libel and contempt of court. The right-thinking Governor of that commonwealth, prompt ly issued a complete pardon in both cases, holding rightfully that the liberty of free speech and a free press had been infringed by the court, as the editor was! exercising only his constitutional rights as a free American citizen in express ing himself and saying what he thought. All honor to Governor Hinkle for his courageous act. No' Grade Crossing Accident on 1.232 Miles in 20 Days. Charlotte, July 25.—During the first 30 days of the operation of the new North Carolina “stop, listen” law. not one grade crossing accident occurred on the 1.232 miles of railroad in the state operated by the Southern railway, ac cording to records uuu}c public.today by W. M. Cowliig, general siqiorinteiident of transportation of the Southern lines, east. The new law became effective July 1. Records made public by Mr. t.ow hig showed that during the first 20 days of last June there were five cross ing accidents, resulting in two deaths and injuries to (Wee others. During I the first 20 days of July last year there Cabarrus Savings Bank Dr. J. A. Shauers CHIROPRACTOR Maness Bldg. Phone 620 ! Residence Phone 620 > Room Y. M. C. A. SLL EVER ER.VE US - ROM THE IESTKIND ,OF - SERVICE 1 — i Any hopes of quicker profits will never swerve us from our intentions to give to the public the kind of dependable plumbing service to which they are entitled. When you pay us your good money you receive the best we have to offer in return. E.B. GRADY Plumbing and Heating Contractors 41 Corbin St. Office Phone S34W ■ 11 Bringing. Up Bill*-; mammal , g-A X 3B^ I rrrvsc»un-Hsr\ V. \6ov-M save. i ,/ PUWrS-.iYiSue ( 1 ft i- I A ~ ( ; zr h " 1 " j' " .vcr -VUKTT”' fl . '" ■ 4 T ’‘ tv were two crossing accidents, ins tvhich three persons were injured, none-- kill ed. ~ *■•" A.-:-,,3-- „ TOpAY’S EVENTS Thursday, July 26. 1923. , Festival of Ste. Anne, mother fat the Blessed Virgin. Sixtieth anniversary of the capture of Gen. John H. Morgan, the daring Con federate leader, at New Lisbon, Ohio. John R. Vorhis, the veteran Grand Sachem of Tammany Hall, today inters upon his ninety-fifth yet^r. Gad's Hill Place, the old home of Charles Dickens, near Rochester, Eng land. is to be sold at auction today. President Harding "and bis party arc to be given an elaborate welcome at Van couver today, on their return from Alas ka. The foreign ministers of Czecho-Slo vakia, Jugoslavia and Rumania are to meet today at Sinia, Rumania, for a gen eral conference on the central European situation. Leaders of the Farmers’ party which met defeat in the recent Provincial elec tions in Ontario, are to meet in confer ence at Toronto today to discuss the party's future. Leaders of the dairly industry from many parts of the United States and Canada are to meet ait Waterloo. lowa, today for the summer conference of the National Dairy Council. The cornerstone or the magnificent new Basilica at Ste.*’'Anne de Beaupfie. Quebec, is to be laid today with impres sive ceremonies, which will be jn-esided over by Cardinal Begin. Seventy-two alleged members of the Ku Klux Klan in Springfield. 0.. are to have a court hearing today on charges of distorderly conduct, growing out of their appearance in public wearing masks. Ward's "Crushes” owe their distinctive a7 jfLn.jf' and delightful flavors to the natural fruit j| 1 7* a / /J* Jmi oils of oranges, lemons and limes. To t these have been added pure cane color, fruit acid and carbonated watte- jJCj * A COOL “CRUSH”— for a Hot Night j Not a breeze—too dry even for conversation until someone mentions Ward’s Orange-Crush. Then down it goes and the thermometer seems to go down, too. f=* Orange-Crush has away of tucking itself into your taste and satisfying your thirst. A delightful orange-flavored drink with a zest and sparkle, ice cold. By the bottle, glass or at soda fountains. j=*The Krinkly Bottle is as individual as the “Crushes”— Orange, Lemon and Lime. A telephone call to your dealer will bring a case to your house. * a a a e * Orange Crush Bottling Company ' Spencer, N. C. Orange CRUSH Lemon-CRUSH —Lime- CRUSH X (29) 1 li " 1 - ' ss *** sss= ~__. THE CONCORD DXjtT TRIBUNB ==--i) 4 ■' _ ; '"^"i Mothers of Famous Men 1 ' i ; The Mother of Ethan Allen Hltchock. “We must name the boy after my e, father!” said the mother in 1798 when Ethan Allen Hitchock wgs born. “Ccr f tainly,? promptly agreed the father - “Why, of course, they would name the baby after Ethan Allen !” said aIK the 1 friends and neighbors. 3 Ethan Allen had made a name for himself when he demanded the British f to surrender “In the name of God and . the Continental Congress.” He was a sturdy old fighter: in the days of the s American Revolution, willing to go to . any extent in order to set the American . colonies free from what he regarded as unendurable tyranny. Every one in Vermont was proud of , Ethan Allen, and so the most . natural tiling in the world that his i daughter should name her baby after her great father. She had married a , lawyer named Hitchock, anil she looked . ahead of days of unwonted prosperity. . For her new-born son she could see . nothing except a rosy future. She did not know that he would grow up into , another warrior like her father. She | could not foresee the Mexican War nor the Civil War, the most dreadful of all. . in which her son was to play a manly part, and to keep the name of Ethan : Alien unsullied. *- _' , Her father had been a soldier, that • she knew: and it, was reasonable for her ! 'son to wish to become a soldier. It was a proud day when the boy set off 1 for the military school at West Point. i He could remember his grandfather, old : Ethan Allen. He remembered very r Mearly the day when the old general had crossed the ice of Lake Champlain on a load of hay, and had been driven r> - 1 v. J1 " up to the door of his home— stone dead. That had been a frightful discovery. Through his mother, Ethan Allen Hit chock carried on the spirit of the old Revolutionary general and made Ethan Allen a modern rfynonm for patriotism. It pays to catry on a family tradition. HIGH POINT SAYS HUSBAND DESERTED HER Governor Trinkle Tries to Mediate but Makes a Failure. A Richmond, Va., July 25. — refus ing Tuesday to honor requisition papers for Horace G. Barnes, wanted At Winter Park. Orange County, Fla., on a charge of wife desertion and non-support, Gov ernor Trinkle assumed the role of media tor and attempted to adjust the differ ences between husband and wife, both of whom were preseht at the hearing. His efforts, however,- were unsuccessful. Mrs. Barnes, who was Miss Amanda Hutcheson, of High Point, N. C., before her marriage to Barnes which took place in May, 1921, came all the way froni Florida with her twelve-months-old baby girl to press the charge against her hus band. Governor Trinkle turned down the requisition on the ground that the papers were improperly prepared. Barnes is now in the real estate business in Bristol. Va., having gone there from Florida several months ago. He asserted that he stood ready and willing- to provide support for his family if diis' wife would agree to come to live with hihi in Bristol, but as long as she iuisted upon remaining away from him he did not feci disposed to support her. Barnes was formerly in the furniture manufacturing business at High Point. He went, to Florida to live in October, 1921. because of failing health. Peter W. Hutchison, of High Point, a brother of his wife, accompanied her to the cap itol today. '■ " I" I I ■ ' ■ "' ■ t.'.-ry.i ,1, .1 ;,v»i;"ri u-.«r EXPERT ADVICE The officers of this bank gladly give those who desire it advice gained by years of experi -1 ence and study in investment and financial I matters. ' ' i I By consulting us regarding these matters I you will place yourself under no obligation - I whatsover. The Citizens Bank and Trust I Company wants you to feel that this is YOUR I bank and that it is striving in way to be I of service to YOU. I f!TI7FNS BAN K m^ D | V/l 1 li.l 1 "llj TRUST CR 10-Piece Chippendale Dining Suite •* • • A Set pf Furniture that will appeal it&ar a standpoint of Good Taste and Economy, too, vs the Chippendale Style Dining Set here shown. Table is oblong style, Buffet is 72 inches long, hairs are substantially made, haye slip seats and are covered in Mohair. We have many other styles to select from. i BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. “THE STORE THAT SATISFIES" X i 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 1 Beautiful? Yes—But Above All — I s Comfortable Comfort is essential to enjoyment of the h<sme —and Fibre Furniture is built on the basis of comfort. We are now showing a collection of odd Fibre Rockers, also four piecerFrenclj, Grey Enamelel Suites upholstered in the fin est of tapestry with a silk finish. You are interested in your home—come in and get in- ; , spiration. / H. B. Wilkinson Cooeord Phone I*4 Kannapolis Phono 9 OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT H. B. WILKINSON UNDERTAKING GO. Phono 9. Gads Answered Day or Night ItPays to Put an Ad. in The Tribune Thursday, Juty 26, 1923.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1923, edition 1
4
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