Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 5, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Monday, January 5, 1925 fwHARLOTTE SALESMAN SrtOT VISITING FIANCE Former Husband of Mrs. Burrougs Held in Connection With Johnson’s Death. Greenville, S. C., Jah. 3.—1. R. John i son, 35, salesman. of Charlotte, N. C.. died at p hospital here tonight from bul let wounds received late last night while 4 visiting at the home of Mrs. C. C. Bur -5 roughs, of this city, to whom he was ea rn gaged to marry. Police are holding C. ■C. Burroughs, 40, former husband of Mrs. ■ Burroughs, in connectioh with the shoot- Biug. I A' quarrel between the two men, which ■started when Burroughs went to the home ■of his former wife last night and found ■Johnson there, led up to the shootihg. | Mrs. Burroughs told police that she Baas granted divorce from Burroughs in Hfitlahta, Ga., some time ago. and that Hbhe and Johnson planned to be married ■within a few days. She is the mother Hos seven childreh. 9 Burroughs, in jail here, has refused ■to discuss the case. Causes of Apoplexy. W Youths Companion. R Apoplexy or a “stroke,” is defined as s§.« sudden loss of consciousness followed Sp>y paralysis, the result either of crebral Haemorrhage or of the blocking ot an j Hart cry in the brain. The artery may be by a clot of blood or by a small Apiece of some solid material, usually Hither a small fragment detached from ■a clot in some distant vein or a piece of ■fibrin from a defective valve in the H|Mrt. An evanescent paralysis some nkinee the result of a temporary loealiz- j I ed congestion or of an effusion. The es- I fusion of blood may occur either on R the surface or, as happens more fre ■ quently, in the substance of the brain, p The exciting cause of" the hemorrhage ! may be any one of several conditions, r such as disease of the kidneys, arterios- S elerosis with its associated high blood pressure, extreme hypertrophy of the heart and certain forms of blood poison ing, so-called; but the predisposing cause if disease of the small blood ves sels of the brain, which permits of their i*upt lire when unusual strain is put on them. No one can ever be absolutely oooocxxxjooooooooooooooooGoooootxioGooOoOOcoooddooooOoo |i; Be Gaily and Freshly Clad in a Worn g Suit by Having it |l| DRY CLEANED j In our Cleaning, the lines of the costliest dress or suit i? '!' are retained. i a M. R. POUNDS DRY CLEANING AND TAILORING | ,»! - jrnaufa ■ -■«»» -■ ■ - . , ... -.-—J tJooooocj6ocxx)©aJ?<y<y{K>;...r; . - SPRING STETSONS I Stetson Hats in all the New Colors j and shapes are Here | Stetson Hats appeal to the mail that demands style and quality combined Richmond - Howe Co. *QOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I Now is the time to have your garments cleaned for the holidays. Call us. | QUALITY COUNTS MOST AFTER ALL EAGLE COMPANY PHONE 648 ' tzUOOOOOOOOCMOOPOOOOOOCyXXMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOi ooooooPOOoooooooooooOoooooooooooooocooooooooooooooooc COAL! COAL! COAL! BEST THAT IfIONEYCAN BUY Guarantee full weight and satisfaction. ■» - .... i certain regarding the condition of those 1 email arteries, but he can sometimes I make a fairly good guess. A person of the so-called “apaplectio . type” Is a likely candidate for a stroke, but may never hnvp one. A person of 1 that type is short, corpulent, and has , a thick neck and a florid* complexion. ' He may be good-natured, taking things . as they come without worry, but' more often—especially if the heart and the arteries are diseased—he is -excitable, . prone to anger v on slight provocation and self-willed. Whether irascible or placid, such a man is almost always a , big eater and given to self-indulgence, remaining deaf to' the repeated warn ings of increasing short breath, attacks ,of dlzzinc.il, morning headache and other signs that point to the irregular circulation of blood in the brain. Another type, equally predisposed to diseased brain arteries, is the thin, spare, wiry man, intellectual, domineer ing, bent on having his own way and likely to fall into a rage if balked: In men of those types the heart is overtaxed, the arteries are n'most hard ened, and thus the small vessels iu the train receive the full force of the blow from the pumping heart, and the rigid arteries are unable to dilate so as to moderate the pounding. After a time the repeated blows thin the walls of the minute blood vessels and often cause little localized bulges where the walls may be especially thinned. Then an un usual stain is put on the heart by a heavy meal, an unusual muscular ef fort or a fit of anger one or more of Ihe I little bulging Sacs give way. and the blood, pouring out. compresses the sur rounding brain substance and produces and apoplectic stroke. Symptoms and treatment wfU be considered in tt later article. A young huttiiman not long in ‘this country cattle ftlshittg into a railway ac tion, elbowed his way to the ticket Win dow, and demanded a ticket to Hell.. “Why, we haven’t any train that goes there,” exclaimed the agent hotjy. •’Dot’s funny !** replied the Dutchman, “I’m sure dot's Var the boss told me to go.” In and About the City : episcopal church in YEAR MADE INCREASE i Living Church Annual For 1924 Shows Net Increase of 10,036. A net increase of 10,036 communicants in the Episcopal Church is noted in the Living Church Annual for 1025, which has just been issued. Attention is call ed to the fact in Connection with these figures, that the M’ssionary District of North Tokyo retains now only 885 com municants a- compared with 2386 Inst year, the balance having been transfer red to the jurisdiction of the Japanese Episcopal Church along with the Cathe dral and other churches in the city of Tokyo, in consequence of the establish ment of an independent church there with the election of n nntive Japanese Bishop, in December 1023. “This transfer in no sense stands for loss,” sayß the Annual, “but rather for the beginning of the culmination of the hopes in which all our foreign missions are planned, that they are but the neu clei of autonomous churches to be form -14 when the mission attains sufficient strength to admit of it. Japan especial ly can never be Christianized by for eigners, and the entrance of Bishops of their own race into the upper house of the Nippon Sei Kokwai is the strongest evidpfice of the efficacy of our work.” . The Annual also notes in connection with missionary work in Porto Rico an increase of 577 communicants there, an entire Congregation of independent wor shippers under the leadership of Bishop FerrUmlo having aligned itself with ihe. Episcopal communion. The total contributions for all pur poses reported for 11123, the best figures available Were $39,243,127.47 as eompar ed with $38,752,620.58 reported for 1022. The same report shows that there was ail increase of 48 iu the number of clergy, of 60 parishes, 2041 marriages, I 061 8 middy School teachers and 20,563 BUnday School members. An increase of 3045 confirmations and of 3827 bap tisms is noted in the report. The Aununl presents statements from dioceses in va rious parts of the country pointing out the difficulty particularly Iu the larger cities, where removals from one section to another are frequent, of preserving any accurate records of new members, and it is owing to this fact, it is stated, that the net increase in communicants does not reach a higher figure. Transferred to Another Route. The Uplift. Smiling and alert iln the face of every kind of weather. *TTe rode rural route No. six daily, excepting Sunday, for over twenty years. He was always cheerful, accommodating and efficient. Everybody at the Training School esteemed him and counted him a choice friend, who brought letters, papers, boxes and all kinds of mail matter just as regularly as the dark marked the hour. We ail mourn the passing of Mr. Wil liam H. Heglar. the rural route carrier that hud ridden the route that passes this institution, ever since vtf have been in existence. The genial and enthusiastic soul has been liy- EMpt* Power to another route, and we enter tain no doubts that the. fine fellow is now enjoying the rewards of an earnest and faithful life in a territory not abided with the trials, and skids, the weather and a jungle of poorly addressed mail. Up to his dying hour he had us in mind —we shall not forget him. Mr. Heglar died on the morning of the Both at tile Concord Hospital, where he had been under treatment for a stubborn and what proved an incurable disease, which doubtless bis- exposure and trials brought on. And yet there are people that begrudge a living and decent remun eration to these faithful agents of the government. Dock Tocher Most Supoprt His Wife. Stanly News-Herald. Dock Tucker, a young white man, was in court Monday morning ou a charge of abandonment of his 15 year old wife, Mrs. •May Tucker. The court found him to be guilty of breaking his marriage vows. The decision of the court was such that Tucker must contribute to the support of his wife, the sum sufficient to her sup port. Mrs. Tucker is in delicate health, and he must pay to the Couuty Welfare officer immediately the sum of $25 and ; oh tile first day of each month thereafter the sum of S2O, and the welfare officer Will see that the wife receives the same. A bond of SSO was asked to enforce the payment of such money. At The Theatres. I The Star today is showing May Me i Avoy in “Her Reputation,’’ also a com ! edy. I “The Sileut Accuser,’ featuring Klelin -1 or Board mail and Raymond McKee, also a comedy, at the Pastime today. Florida oranges and ghapefruit are now i being shipped to England, which country J heretofore lias obtained nearly all of its citrus fruits from Italy aud Spnin. Governor IB VBL .111 1 Gw*e HTDern will be inaugurated I governor of Utah dan. 2. He Is the ) second Democrat and second non- I Ptprvrean chief executive this Repub -9 and Mormon stronghold ever kM had. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE 1 ftl§AreAST ING t NEWS l (By the Associate* Press.) (By Courtesy of Radio Digest} ProgrApt for January 6th. IVOR Buffalo (310) 6 music; 8-10 musical. WMAQ Chicago (447.5) 6 organ, or chestra ; 7-9 children. WQJ Chicago (448) 7-8 concert, tnu sieale; 10-2 entertainers. KYW Chicago (536). 6:35 bedtime story; T concert; 7:80 stage review; 8 musical; 8:20 speeches; 8 :45 musical; 10 at home. WLS Chicago (345 ) 6:30 organ: 6:50 entertainers; 7:45 WLS theatre; 8-0 farm program; 0 orchestra ; 0 :15 Shake sperian drama; i) :45-12 entertainers, dance. WGN Chicago (370) 0 organ; 0:30 concert; 8 classical; 10 orchestra. WLW Cincinnati (423 ) 6 concert; 10 orchestra; 10:30 quartet, trio. WSAI Cincinnati (300 ) 7 orchestra; 7:30 chimes ; 7 :45 story ; 8 orchestra ; 9 speaker ; 8:15 solos. WBAV Columbus (423 ) 7 orchestra. WFAA Dallas News and Journal (476) 8:30 musical; 11 organ. WCX Detroit Free Press. (513) 0 Red Apple Club. WW.I Detroit News (513) 0:30 or chestra, tenor, saw soloist. WTAS Elgin (286 ) 6 orchestra: 10:30 orchestra ; 11:30 orchestra, entertainers. WBAP Fort Worth Star-Telegram (476) 7:3-8:30 old time fiddlers; 9:30- 10:45 program. KNX Hollywood (337 ) 7:30 children; 8 music; 10 features; 12 movie celebri ties. KTHS Hot Springs (375) 8:30 con cert. WHAS Louisville Times (400 ) 7:30-0 concert. KFI Los Angeles (460) 8:45 organ: 10 voeal quartet; 12 ballad. KFSG Los Angeles (278) 8:30 ehil- Highways Can Now Be Built Without Cost N. S. Highway Bulletin. In Kentucky and Tennessee one of the great questions of the present campaign to be settled at the next election is the issuance of bonds for highway improve ment, the Kentucky question also to in clude bonds for educational expansion. If the people of these two states are wise, they will surely vote overwhelming ly for these bond issues. A few years ago there might have Been a reasonable excuse for not issuing bonds for good highways, for fear that this Would in crease taxation, but surely that time has long since passed. The gasoline tax, which has.come into existence by reason of the automobile in dustry. provides away of tak»g care of the interest on bonds and fotmligir ulti mate redemption. It is which should pre-eminently •go t« this kind. It has been proven by NortlrjCa’rolina's experience that the bonds issued for the superb highway work that is Being done there do not cost the state anything; nor do they cost any of the people of the state, even those who pay the gasoline tax, any thing. It is a remarkable pl-oposition, unique in all public work, of ability to secure money for a vast expenditure for highways without in reality adding one dollar of burden of any kind to the peo ple of the state. The gasoline tax in North Carolina, which, as our readers know, has been for several years building one of the finest highway systems in America, will take care of the interest on the bonds and their redemption. But some may ask, is not this gasoline tax a burden ou the people? It is not. It is paid only by the automo bile and motortruck people, and they find that the'consumption of gasoline using good roads us compared with bad roads is so much lessened that they are saving money by paying is so much lessened that they are saving money by paying tax on gasoline. They are likewise saving ou their tires, on repairs and on the length of life es their ears. The automobile users arc. therefore, getting these splendid highways absolute ly without cost to themselves, and secur ing thereby longer life for their cars and tires, greater comfort for themselves in traveling, and greater ability to get YOUR RUGS NEED CLEANING? . •Yott- will be convinced by a v\\Uf//U' trial. Send us ohc rug and let us show you how we can improve its Our auto will call if you will in PHONE PHONE “SEND IT TO BOB” dven. * WCCO Minnenpolis-St, Paul (417) C :30 concert. CKAC Montreal (437 ) 0:30 ensemble; 7 :30 entertainment; i) :30 orchestra ; 11 quartet. IVHN New York (360) 6 movie crit ic ; 0:10 employment; 3:30 talk ; 8:35 orchestra ; !) :30 revue, dance, orchestra; 11 entertainers. , WEAF New York (41)2) 0 orchestra; 6:45 song, talk, entertainers; 8 Eveready hcur; 1) orchestra. WJZ New York (453) (i (logs; 6:15 orchestra; 7 Wall Street Journal review; 7 :10 drama ; 7 :25 organ. WBBR New York (273) 8:10 quartet; 8 :20 vocal; 8 :30 Bible lecture; 9:05 vo cal ; 0:15 string quartet. KGO Oakland (3121 6 orchestra; 10 program. 12 orchestra, soloists. WOAff Omaha (52G) G advice to lovelorn ; 0* :25 program; 9 quartet, bar itone. WDAR Philadelphia (395) G:3O talk. WEI Philadelphia (395) G talk; 7 recital; 8 concert; 9 orchestra. WCAF Philadelphia (278) 6:30 talk: 7 concert. WCAE Pittsbrugh (4G2) 6:30 Uncle Ka.vbee ; 6:45 announced ; 7 concert; 8 enterninerx; 9 orchestra: 10 artists'. WKAQ Porto Rico (360) 7 orchestra, pianist, songs, poems, lecture. WOAI San Antonio (835) 8:30 enter tainers ; 9:30 orchestra. Kl’O Sin Francisco (423) 6:30 or chestra ; 7:30 Big Brother; 9 orchestra ; 11 prograan; 12 band. WG Y Schenectady (380) 6:45 drama talk, instrumental; 7:15 comedy; 10:30 organ. KFOA Seattle (455) 8 concert; 10:30 musical; 12 :05 orchestra. KSD St. Louis Post-Dispatch (549.1) 0 concert; 9 soprano. I aroilnd the state and do business. They ! are, therefore, actually making a profit I by paying the gasoline tax. I Some years ago, under the leadership lof a Governor who had vision of what [good roads would mean to the state, I and long before anyone had ever thought i of a gaeoline tax( and, indeed, when there were only a few automobiles in the coun try, Maryland voted a bond issue for the building of highways. It shocked a lot of people who bad been killing to put up with bottomless mud roads in winter and equally bottomless sand ronds in some sections, aud who never seemed to realize that the state would be enrich-1 ed and all the people vastly bcnefitted by a system of good roads. A motor trip then from Baftifiafe to the state capital, Annapolis, 21i.mil§S distant, was a jour ney to be looked upon mfh dread, for no one ever knew when he would get to the journey’s end, so deep and almost impas sable was the sand. The writer was standing one day in a large Baltimore ga rage when the car of a foreign Ambas sador had just arrived after taking five hours to come from Washington to Bal timore, a distance of less than forty miles! Now the road to Annapolis is a splen did highway, traveled every day by hun dreds'of farmers’ automobiles aud motor trucks bringing the produce to market, and the road between Washington and Baltimore carries an almost endless stream of motortrucks aud automobiles. This state never made a wiser invest ment than when it issued bonds for build ing this aud many other highways which have given Maryland the reputation throughout the country of having one of the best general road systems in the country, whereas prior to that bond issue it had the reputation of having about the worst. The whole business life of Maryland and North Carolina, and. indeed, of overy other state which has carried out high way building on a large scale, has been I revolutionized to the good of the people. The farmers are in better shape, the schools are fetter attended, the business of the state his greatly advanced, and no one would for one moment today criti cize the movement which led to these bond issues. BooooooooeeooeoooopooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQ j JEWELRY § ' l I DISTINCTION I Whether you intend purchasing 8 or not, you are invited to come in 8 and view the beautiful collection O how on display at this store. 8 Many new hems have been add- X ed to our ample stocks. | STARNES-MILLER-PARKER CO. ij | JEWELERS AND OPTOMETRISTS CHATS WITH YOUR GAS MAN " # , j. c.L ! { ,« t.* X B ' ’ • f- Y r Our Fires Never Go Out The men at the gas works are think ing about you as you sit down to yoUr New Year’s dinner. The fact that they are on the job stoking the fires that never go out makes it possible for you to spend the first day of the New Year in Comfort. ' Gas service is a 365 1-4 day-a-year service. It is as dependable at three o’clock in the morning as it ts at din ner time, because there are loyal work ers who make it dependable. The gas business does not shut up shop, take a vacation, or move away to some place where conditions are more favorable. It is literally staked to the ground. Its future is bound up with the future of the community it serves. It dare not let its fires go out. Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. “If It’s Done With Heat, You Can Do It Better With Gas” DELCO LIGHT j i Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- ■ | nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- 8 nating current. - 8 R. H. OWEN. Agent j Phone 060 Concord, N. C. 8 vw w wvvvvvswfwvvvvv-itwJ j | Alcohol and Glycerine For Radiators BEGIN THE NEW YEAR RIGHT | We carry a full line of Brest O Lite Burlterles. flfcl&O up. Bearings, ( Shims, piston rings, piston pins, Gabriel Snubbers; a ltd n complete lifte I of accessories. Genuine Foril parts. -) ( ' { • ' t BTIDKBAKEK HAI.KS AND SERVICE AUTO SUPPLY & REPAIR CO. 1 — PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 5, 1925, edition 1
7
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