Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Dec. 19, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Saturday,'bee. 10, 1925 .t ■ yJ&iV Don’t Wait Until jmrWml the Last Moment I&fH £«« Have Your Gowns, Suits and njfil *M Wraps JR 11 DRY CLEANED » NOW-TODAY And be ready (or Christmas an d l^e f es^v > t- ‘ es that abound O&T f?| during the holiday season < Phone 787 OUR PENNY IDS, ALWAYS BET RESULTS Oia* Penny ADS. Get Quiek Results .■mmm MOMEKITS WED *UKET?> UV/E OVER tREASuPE \SLAMD, A PAN OF BoTtfeRED AND DObiT BAFTA GO T‘ BED O'CLOCK ■ by taylobt V**jf hcJt bowser -Avie bocks «U 1 i—7 vtos <koonessi»»Q ENueuop&s- mM!ttn H voums man x. / vjkwt Vodtoi going l v just eiioosH -tb pyw tHe mEEmf/m§ m, ocmmoc. w- J,\ -t&say- got her^s mi —. —|lf Jjj V)^Egß ‘ E ' s " BV CHARLES P. STEWART. NEA Service Writer. Washington—Sunday morning, a few minutes before 11. First Congregational church, Jtev. .Taxon Noble Pieroif, pastor. Tenth and G streets, here ip Washington. Through the main door, this time, some the Coolidges. They're preceded Fby a couple of ushers—or are they secret men? They'll followed by an other pair. There’s no" use mistak ing them. They, unquestionably are of the secret service. The party walks almost the whole length of the main aisle—to the third pew from the pastor’s platform. There it’s seated. Than, down sit the congregation. The service fit no different from any Other Congregational church service. The" sermon is something rather out of the - ordinary, for Dr. Pierce is an exceptionally able speak- The Coolidges behave as any 4>ther human beings would bfhave under similar circumstances. y There’s the benediction, yhe con gregation is standing. It remains standing. The Coolidges and tbeir secret service attendants are tiling out of their pew now, however. Some of the congregation has been snoop ing out through the side door in the meantime, to join the crowd at the main entrance. The well-bejinved bulk of it stands at attention until the •Coolidges have taken their de parture. An automobile receives them. President Coolidige lifts his plug tile to the crowd. Mrs. Coolidgge smiles affably. The auto whisks them away. It whisk the secret service men likewise. What # life!--to be whisked itowhere except ahead of a wake j>t secret serviee men. Latin ceased to be the language of diplomacy near the close of the 17th Century. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE 'CONGRESS TO DISCUSS i BIRTH CONTROL Should Every Child Have the Right to Be Well Bom or Not Bom at AH? Hie Pathfinder. The question of birth control is again bofcfiing about in the limelight and attracting more attention than ever. Its enemies are many, but of late the movement,has obtained some new converts in the ranks of educa-' tors, clergymen and scientists. The other day. in addressing • a session of state health officials, Dr. Clarence Little, president of the University of Michigan, pleaded for “a slowing down in the -production of children to a point where the child can be guaranteed proper care and education." "To produce to the point whevC we cannot adequately care for them is un-Christian.” he asserted. "I am suggesting a revolutionary thing. Limitation is now a fact in many families? The need of limita tion of the population was admitted by th» immigration limit. In our slums “the children are worse off than in so-called barbarous foreign countries.” Dr. Little favors steri liization of criminals ind insane. “Not long ago 1,000 physicians meeting at New York, adopted a res olutioiU asking that more attention be given to birth control. They see a relation between an uncontrollable birth rate and mnny national prob lems, including material mortality child labor, poverty, insanity and crime. President Coolidge was urged to form a Federal birth rate eom rßission to investigate the subject. ’ “Italy’s- terrible infant mortality is directly traceable to too frequent’ chid bearing and ovar-iarge fami lies,” Prof Edward East, of Harvard told the Institute of Politics. "Why should mail emulate the lobster in the matter of reproduction when God has given him brums”? The Rev. Paul Dresser, of Bath, Maine, ascribes social wrongs, crimes and a good share of poverty to indis-' criminate procreation. “In the strug gle for'numbers,” he asserts, “it Has been overlooked that the worst evils civil and religious, are due to over production of the human kind.” He advocates scientific birth control. Though admitting likelihood of abuse of the practice, he insists that in telligent application of the majority would more than outweigli the other. In the presence of Mrs. Ooolidge at the dedication of a new home for unfortunate girls in Washington, Dr. .1. Stanley Durkec, president -of Howard university, urged that, know ledge of birth control be communicat ed universally.. Rabbi Rudolph Coffee, of Ooklaqd, Cal., believes that “it is high time for human beings, by practicing •birth control, to improve the type of Children now being born into the world.” Ho s thinks parents shpuld limit their offspring to conform to the finances of th> father and the physical conditirin of the mother. "Every child has the right to be well born or not be born at- ail,” Owen jLovejoy, of the National Child committee, said recently. "We carapiilt children into tile world and erect legal stockades to prevent the truth from entering. Then we doom whole armies of them to disease and other perils.” i Judge Hen Lindsey, of Denver juveni’e court, is “heartily in favor" of birtli control. On the ojjier hand, because of re ligious doctrines or other * reasons a great mass of otlr best citizens are arrayed against birth control. The government sternly suppresses birth control The Catholic (■Wureh. always a foe to the move ment., is opposing a birth control measure planned to be introduced in the uew Congrem. “Birth control would turn mar riage into an indescribable condition of free love.” Bishop Schrembs. 0 f Cleveland, told The National Coun cil of Catholic Women. “It is not desirable to eliminate the feeble minded class.” remarked the Rev- Thomas Moore, of Catholic Uni versity. “Without them who would do the menial work”? According to Dr. Louis Dubin, sta tistician of the - Metropolitan Life Insurance Company birth control would hamper the American spirit of progress agd ndventure. Dr. Max Scrlapp. director of the New York children’s court clinic, sees peril in the growing number of unfit, but does not think that birth control can remedy the situation. • v One of the largest and most in- ! fluential trade unions in world is the Union of German Metal Work ers, which embraces all workers con nected with the mining and manu facturing of metals in Germany. Let Your Next Battery I Be An EXIDE Use Qnly the | Best Raising Funds Now For National Park in the Smoky Moimtains Nearly cne-quarter of the million dollars, which is being sought in North Carolina and Tennessee for the pur chase of lands in -tfie Great Smoky Mountains (for a national park has been raised. Os the half million to be raised in Nortfi Carolina. $66,525 has been subscribed to date in Ashe ville and Buncombe county, approxi mately $30,00 In Swain county, $lO.- 000 Mi Jackson county and SI,OOO in Clay county. Os Tennessee's - half million around. $132,000 has been sub scribed in Knoxville during the first four days ,of the campaign. ~tn Asheville and Buncombe county, where $250,000 is being sought as the county-city quota, it is expected fiat at least $150,000 will be raised 'be fore flic campaign closes from large gifts, which are now being actively so licited. but as yet no announcement has been made of the large gifts re ceived. The balanee, which being made up by is virtually tiyo-thirds raised and the campaign, it is expected will be suc cessfully terminated this week. The balance of the half million is to be raised in western' North Carolina, w'.iere the campaign will be yarried after the first of the year. The Tennessee campaign which be gan December 7th will be intensively' waged during the present month. In ' Weekly Cotton Review. New York, Dec. IS.—The cotton market has- shown declining tendency during the past week. The break which followed publication of the last government crop report was inter rupted by rallies at the beginning of the' week, but they met increased of fei%gs. and prices eased off again •with May contracts breaking below the 18 1-2 cent level on Thursday un der' liquidation and soutfiern selling. Local brokers ns a rule attributed the declining tendency of thevmarket to a belief that final ginning returns are ■mote likely to exceed than fall short of the government's crop estimate of 15.603.000 bales, and that the supply of cotton available is large enotugh to encourage a conservative policy in buying forces during the balance of the season. Selling on this theory is supposed to have been promoted by prospects for large ginning figures from the census bureau on Monday, recent relatively easy ruling of Egyptian and East India cotton and rather disappointing reports from the cotton goods markets, particularly in the reports from Manchester. Both Egyptian and East India cotton is mqving to market more freely. Prices for these varieties were above a nor mal parity with American cotton ear lier in tlie season, but the recent de clines have placed them more nearly on a competitive basis, and this is supposed to have been partly respon sive for increased discounts oil low glides ill the South. It may also h«w figures to some extent in the re eent relatively easy ruling of Liver pool which not? is selling below a parity with the American markets which leads to some selling here against purchases abroad. Private au thorities estimate ginnings to Decem ber 13th at from 1-1.730,000 to 14,- 760,000 bales which would mean an out-turn of over SOO.OOO bales for the last period compared with 554.000 for the same time last year and would be regarded by local trades as point ing to a crop of probably ovei- 15.- 000,000 bales. Some traders are look ing for an improvement in tile cot ton goods trade right after the turn of the year, and the decline here was held in check toward die end of the week by covering and trade buying or price fixing around the 18’4 cent level for May. Post and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. New York. Dec. 18.—The market continues a pre-holdida.v affair with no suggestion of any important change in Cither direction. The gin ning report due Mohday may supply a fresh incentive for trading but EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO tfeYEe'S SOfffcsTHlNGL FOR. To RCLATJ [ \T'LL. TAKE SOME OF -me conceit u , ~ “Timi OUT o\~ you 1 = Records show that our ot to u . _ yromen arivers are | than • ' <s>o V . rr VO 1 BEUSUIS (T i: |=s#i | TOO NSOU SUPPO SS p-«v # r=_ > _rA" . E>/mecs= xo _ S - ? —~ TKAT IF IT T-\ ~~ /~\ W-311'T SO ,1“ Knoxville $215,000 is being sought by popular subscription, and ijj'Mhe other cities and towns of . eastern 'Tennessee a total of $200,000 is the goal. The balance of the state quota is to be raised in central and western Tennessee, where tt»e campaign will be continued after the holidays. The first million for the purchase of the national park site is being asked of the people of North Caro lina and Tennesee, and when this sum is subscribed, it is the announced in tention of the federal park commission to ask the people of the nation for fae balance of the funds needed to ac quire the several hundred .thousand acres of land in the Great Smoky- Mountains, which are to be included in the proposed national park. Os |the sum subscribed, the campaign pro visions are that twenty per cent, be paid immediately or within thirty days, and t*ae ’balance is to be col lected in three annual installments, but these will be payable only if the government creates the Great Smoky- Mountains national park and takes over for improvement as a park these mountain lands. The three payments of the subscriptions are payable, ac cording to the, campaign provisions, on or before January 1, 1927, Janu ary 1, 1028, and January 1,1921 J. aside from that possibility the mar ket promises to remain dull awaiting developments after the turn of the year. The ginning is expected to be large but as ofteu may prove to have been fully discounted and many that the time is coming and not far off when it will be more fully realiz ed tfiat the crop is of such character ns to render delivery of cotton on contract difficult except in a limited w«n-. » Leading spot interests are credited with buying March freely against sales of almost any other month up to and including October, but wheth er that means that another book similar to December is being built up in impossible to determine of how far the operation will extend. Lack of contract cotton seems /likely to have a more far-reaching effect on May than on March but 'for the time being March is getting more support than May. Any developments creat ing anxiety ns to the next crop would quickly disclose a very exten sive short interest in October with result's to conform. The situation is boo mixed for an.v aggressive views but. all the discounting that has been done is for a crop fully ag large as the highest estimates and even larger as some think with no allowance for any of it iwoving unusable. Changes in either direction arc hardly- safe to follow at present but prices look low enough to cover the bearish facts to date. POST AND FLAGG. Sets Now Lash Record for the Tinted States. | Spencer, Dec. 15. —Hanging up j wtint is believed to be a new record for Hogging in the United States. Miss Mary Chilson, one of the teachers in the East Spencer school, is reported to have inflicted Os! whippings . Mon day. going home one hour later than usual with a very- tired: body and- an arni somewhat sore from swinging the lash. Miss Chilson. who is regarded as one of the best teachers in the school, was determined to maintain or der ami started early- in the day to bring about improvements. One boy, young John Ketchie, is reported to have drawn nine whippings for his part in the day's proceedings while the next highest- "award" was seven, with others receiving only just a few. flog gings during the day. There were dozens who got only one whipping at the hands of the l-psolute teachek who has had a wide experience in selioot -work and knows what it takes'to keep t’ae students lined up. The work of Miss Chilson on Monday is said to have, created a deep impression and brought about a high respect for obe dience in the school room. Twelve Grid Captains Are Named So Far. Charlotte, Dec. 18.—Guards were holding an edge- in the selection of football captains for tjie 1926 cam paign on the basis of returns from three states. North Carolina, Vir ginia afud South Carolina. Twelve institutiNis over this trio of states hud chosen- leaders for the-next season, with three of these 12 flay ing guard positions. Pupa Pair on Every Tree Our Christmas Slippere answer the call for the last-minute shop per. Slippers for every slipper need—for the boudoir, the den, the bath and for the dance. Slippere for everybody you know, even an extra pair is always a, most welcome gift. Price range jOO $3 -S IVEY’S * "THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES" PURINA FEED IS THE BEST BY TEST Chowder for More Egg's Cow Chow for More Milk Pig Chow for More Pork. Come in and We Will Sell you the Best CASH FEED STORE PHONE 122 SOUTH CHURCH Sf. Christmas! Christmas! Merry Christmas! When you decide what you want gerineß, baiyinas and apples' red, to eat, If poultry; friers, hens, and Just drive your car down West De- turkeys, aliv£ or dead. J. )ot If you don’t want to buy we’d be Mhcn you come to the b.ggest gro- g , ad - d wme and look eery store in town, -, ’ Head right in and shut vour engine ls - T<n T c . redlt rat,,l « s S°° d ?<>« down. JPOfi't need your pocketbook. If it’s meat, you can got the choic- " e **>ank you for your patronage est steak's and hams, during nineteen twenty-five If vegetables; celery, lettuce, Irish To serve you better during nine potatoes and yams. teen twenty-six we, will If fruits ; oranges, grapefruit, tan- \ strive. C. H. BARRIER & CO. ~\ DELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter nating current and Washing Machines for Direct or Al ternating Current. m R. H. OWEN, Agent —Phone 669 Concord, N. C. .s®" fee" TUT roes OM Atm PATruat j Novelty'-' 1 Irresistible Charm _ <*“* «*»■*** ss -M, TMfcrf.. Owe, * »«*■:* CQUAI » Black.~ Cold » Dot. OeeeL . Cau«m m THEY’RE HERE AT LAST -53 BEAUTIFUL HAND DECORATED SCATTER £23 TABLES ‘ ’ JUST THE THING YOU’VE BEEN LOOKING FOR - AND SEE THEM. UNEXCELLED FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS H I H. B. WILKINSON Alemite Lubricating Service We do not use any Lubricants except Alemite Trans mission, Differential and Chasis lubricants, one which al lows the easy shifting of gears even'in Zero weather, and greatly reduces friction. , Get alcohol in your radiator before it freezes. 1 Gas, Oil, Tires, Tubes, Accessories, Car Washing. Tire Changing - . % ‘ ,i| CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONE 700 *■ i -■ . . _ _. k I PAGE SEVEN Captains chosen so far follow: Stanley D. Whianant, University of North Carolina, guard. B. G. Baekley, Wake Foresht, quar terback. , F. G. Logan, N. C. State, center. —si Lee Griffith, Presbyterian CotSeggj cf South Caroliua, tackle. Rauber, AV. and L„ fullback. “**w| Payseur, Lenoir-Rbyne, end. Mackail, Virginia, guard. John Fain, V. M. 1., end. J
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Dec. 19, 1925, edition 1
7
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