IThursday, January 7, 1926 188 THE PROPER TIME IS NOW! DON’T WAIT I Many have taken Advantage of This Great Saving and There Are —MANY EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS STILL TO BE FOUND— Specials For Tuesday and Wednesday ' ;T * U S2OO Console Model .... $95 - Phonographs fIL $ $125 Upright Model $55 A A * [ Player Rolls ™ Marvelous HU SIOO Upright Model .. . . $39 $i Per Week Be"' 11 Piano $268.00 Bargains nffH $l5O Upright Model .... S6B |Scarf ... $498 Open Evenings Until 9 O’clock JV ' Come in and See Them IF YOU MISS THIS YOU WILL REGRET IT \ KIDD-FRIX MUSIC and STATIONERY COMPANY INCORPORATED 58SJUNIONST. j MAHLE ROAD ROUTE :hanged out Salisbury [ i Commissioners Want Road to :h Granite Quarry and Rack. I 1 iry Post, January sth. Rowan board of county com- | lers at tlieir monthly meeting t ay took the initial move to-1 laving tlie route of the new Sal-! Albemarle highway routed by j Granite Quarry and Rockwell, j original survey for this new j y does not touch these progres- 1 stern Rowan towns, but takes | se out the Stokes Ferry road 1 t distance and then follows an direct straight line, county commissioners went on as favoring the changing of ate to take in Granite Quarry ockwell and authorized the . an and the county attorney to iroper resolutions and forward te to the state highway commis- This does not mean that the will be changed but it is the »ve by the county authorities to he state highway make the | . Hundreds of residents Iris | pH, Granite Quarry and the j ■Shoes of Quality and Long Wear \ [Latest Styles—Moderately Priced | i I $1.95, $2.95/ s3.9£ltfe to $6.95 j ■ In every detail our Shoes are far above ih quality those j! 1 Hually found at these prices. !], I MARKSON SHOE STORE PHONE 897 j j 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOOOrera&OOOOCOQftrtrtft^. T I Several New Styles in Blond* Kid Both Futnps and Straps. Very Pretty and Reasonable X $5.95 j RUTH-KESLER SHOE STORE 8 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 " I - ftOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC'OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO JANUARY CLEARANCE DRESSANDCOAT SENSATION 25 Per Cent, to 50 Per Cent. OFF No Left Overt Here ALLMILLINERY At Half and Lest » j i] IT PAYS TO TRADE AT ■ FISHER’S: r ; l ********* mtmmmmt j sections around these places petition j ed for the change. * i Evelyn Nesbit Thaw Still Seriously I 111. 1 Chicago. Jan. 6.—Evelyn Nesbit , j Thaw, who yesterday attempted i | suicide by taking poison, tonight was i described as not dying but "mighty | close to it” in a statement by Dr. lAmanti Rongetti, head of the hospi i tal in .which she is a patient. The ; j doctor said her temperature had been reduced to normal but that he was dissatisfied with the rapid heart , action and that a skin eruption, I traced to .the effect of the poison she ' swallowed, has developed. Will Electrocute Unruly r.lephant. Little Rock. Jan. C.—" Tex." the circus elephant that recently went on a rampage near Augusta. Ark., •tore up crops and was sought through the country side for several days, is to bo electrocuted. This was , learned today when his owner. Wil liam Newton, arrived here. “Tex,” is about 100 years old and is reputed , to have killed nine men in all. | In China there is one native j Christian to every 200 inhabitants. *************** TODAY’S EVENTS Thursday, January 7. 1926 Sixty-five years ago today the first flag of the Confederacy was unfurled, at the Mississippi secession conven tion at Jackson. Today has been fixed ns the date for the convening of the new Parlia ment of t’iie Dominion of Canada. The third session of the sixteenth legislature of the Province of Quebec is scheduled to assemble today . The President and Mrs. Coolidge will hold a reception at the White House this evening in honor of the members of the judiciary. Twenty thousand branches of the national IV. C. T. U. will observe to day as n day of prayer for "law ob- I servance and law enforcement.” A notable wedding in New York today will be ttiat of Miss Consueio Vanderbilt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. IV. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., nnd Earl E. T. Smith. Although Russian Ims officially adopted the new calendar, the peas ants nnd most of the religious people will observe today ns Christmas, in accordance with the old calendar. Formation of a national shippers advisory board to deal with car serv ice problems, will be considered at a joint conference of officials of all the 12 regional advisory boards, and railroad officials nnd executives of the American Railway Association to be held in Chicago today. Looking at North Carolina From 1812. Dr. Hugh Williamson, of the Hol land Society of after a care ful survey of the rivers rising jn the mountains of western North Carolina, wrote a history of the state in 1812. Portitons of his remarkable predic tions and forecasts concerning the fu ture of North Carolina are contained in the following extracts: “Navjgable rivers are so numer ous. . . .that vessels are tempted to load in a hundred places and. . . (this). . .hns prevented the com merce of the state from being drawn to a particular point. . . hence no large city has ever risen nor is ever likely to obtain celebrity in the state: a eirmustance that is balanced by some advantages. It retards the in crease qf luxury and the rivalship in folly. . . . There is not, as we conceive, a state in the I/nion better calculated. . . .as North Carolina for increasing their wealth by exten sive manufacturers; ... all the necessary materials for manufacture are found in the state and provisions are remarkably cheap—people who live in the middle and upper pact of the state have a plentiful supply of small streams, fit for mills and for machinery of every kind. These people can support their laborers at a small expense. . ,” Not contest with taking part in the big championship meets, Olas Thumberg, the great Finnish skater, has mapped out a program which will carry his flying feet through a large part of the Eastern United States and Canada during the next two months. Children Play Where Soldiers Trained o Children of the Near Eaet Relief Orphanage at Alexandropol, Armenia, play gamea where the crack regb nanta of the Czarie Army onoa drilled. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy applies to the Near Bast Orphans as well as to young Ameri cans. Former barracks ere now orphanagep! Former drill grounds are now playgrounds. Instead of the of fleers’ sharp commands and tramp, tramp, tramp of soldiers, the glad voices of romping children are heard Food la a recurring ueed. Three times eadh day Near East Relief must feed 35,000 little mouths or nrovidf 106,000 meals dally. - i- ■ M THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ***********s«*** TWO BEING HELD FOR ' TRANSYLVANIA KILLING Wife of Will Norris. Who W T as Mur dered. and Lawrence Tritt Are in Jail. Asheville, Jan. o.—Thin, gaunt and sullen, a one-armed man. some 32 years old. sits brooding in his cell in the Transylvania county jail, while across the hall in another cell n lank woman/in her late thirties, with a faded face, topped by a blendish bob. moves restlessly about —such are the principal two figures in the investi gation of the murder which occurred in Nort’h Brevard early last Sunday when Lawrence Tritt shot Will Nor ris to death. ( Tritt. who voluntarily surrendered and confessed to the authorities im mediately after his act, refuses to talk about the matter or give a reason for his act. ‘“l've got nothing to say now, only you can get my side of the story in the trial when the truth comes out." was his only reply to repeated efforts to draw from him '.lis version. Both Tritt and Mrs. Norris, the widow of the slain man. who is charged with conspiracy in the crime, are being held without bond. It lias been indicated that Tritt’s atorneys, William Breeze and Cole man Galloway, of Brevard, will base their defense on a plea of hereditary insanity for his aunt is said to be an inmate of the state insane asylum at Morginton, and other members of his family have suffered from mental breakdowns. The father of the slain man has employed Ralph Fisher, of Brevard, to assist Solicitor Bless, of Marion, in the prosecution. Sirs. Norris with Jier two attractive little daughters clinging to her dur ing their brief visit to her cell, talked freely but evasively about the affair. She declared that Lawrence Tritt and her husband were the best of friends and disclaimed knowledge of any un pleasant feeling having existed be tween them prior to the hour of the shooting. “I only know that Lawrence and Elzie Burns were fussing over a little money matter and my husband tried to quiet them down and took them out into the other room,” Mrs, Morris said. “This was about midnight and they soon left. We went to bed and my daughter and I were sleeping in Lawrence's bed, thinking he would not be back. About 3 o'clock in the morning we heard him call from out side the door and my husband told him to come in and go to bed. “Lawrence entered and asked him if he was still mad,” to which he said “no.” I told Lawrence to light the lamp and then told my daughter that we must get up and give him his bed. I got up and was fiixing a fire when my husband came in and stoop ed down by the fireplace. Then I heard a gunshot nnd my husband fell over dead.” “That is all I know about it. I did not see lawrenee do it and did not see him after it was done. I had nothing to do with it.” The 12-year-old’ daughter of the: slain man, who was in Tritt’s bed 1 " **« «*********** with her mother at the time of his return to the house, testified in the preliminary trial that she was sitting up in bed nnd saw Tritt, who had <•< ncealed himself behind a curtain which covered the entrance to the kitchen before her father entered the room. Then she saw Tritt aim from behind Hie curtain and fire the shot which ended her father’s life, she said. The load entered his head back of the ear and resulted in immediate death . When, members of tlie sheriff's force arrived an hour or so later, they found the younger children of the slain man cold and crying while they wandered about the house. Elzie Burns testified that Norris had asked him to spend the night with him pn the eve of the tragedy, saying that Tritt nnd his wife “had it in for him” (Norris) and were “plotting to do something awful” to him that night. Burns left, however, fearing trouble. After shooting Nor ris, Tritt visited the home of Burns, according to Burns’ testimony, but Burns’ father, fearing trouble, told him that-his son was not at home. A Brevard attorney who obtained Tritt's release from the Henderson county jail, where he was committed about two months ago on a charge of larceny, said he advised him at that time to move away from Norris” house, pointing out to him that there would eventually be trouble between him nnd Norris if he continued to live there. Tritt refused, however. Community gossip long has linked the name of Mrs. Morris with that of Tritt, it was learned today. Mrs. Norris is a daughter of Elford Orr. frho lives near Brevard, and has lived n Transylvania county practically all of his life. Salisbury Will Have Hard Cage Contest. Salisbury, Jan. O.—A double head er cage game will be played here Friday night when the girls’ basket ball team from the local high school meets the lassies from Concord high nnd the boys clash with the quintet from Kannapolis high. Both games are expected to be splendid exhibitions of basketball will doubtless be close and hard ' fought affairs. The teams are rivals of long standing and a spirited con test always result when they dash. The double bill will mark the open ing of the cage season for the local high school. The Salisbury Y. M. O. A. quintet, 1 winners of the five clashes tftis sea son and losers of none; will tackle 1 the Concord “Y” again Friday night ; in Concord. The local have been going like a streak this season and took an early game from the Con -1 cord cagers by a lopsided score. The passing game, shooting and general floorwork of the fast local quintet has improved greatly in the past few ' games nnd Concord is expected to have a tough affair on hand Friday ' night. Teddy Unblock, who is hailed as the coming British flyweight cham ■ j pion. is only 17. yet be has had 120 fights, all of which he has woo. FIRST LOVE AFFAIRS 1 of prince “Dawv” m Prince of Wales Has Lost His Heart | to Two Women. But Has No Wife. 1 London, January 7.—The visit of | Princess Astrid, of Sweden, to Lon- | don has renewed speculation as to 9 the matrimonial intentions of the jjj Prince of Wales who. although now fl many years older -than either his m father or his grandfather when they H married, shows no inclination to take M a mate and settle down to t'ae serious I job of being heir to the British throne. Many time during the past decade Duine Rumor has chosen a bride for the Prince, only to see her plans fade awny into thin air. The persistence of his Royal Highness in clinging to bachelorhood has led many to believe thnt he never has had a love affair, while others cherish the idea thnt a disappointment in love has caused him to fight shy of the altar. Intimate friends of the Prince scoff fl at both of these theories. Few man- fl age to pass through early manhood M without falling in love, and the Prince 1 of Wales is no exception to the rule, n but there is no evidence to support a the belief thnt he is suffering from | a broken heart. Before he had reached his 19th | birthday, the Prince had already lost f his heart to two women. One was A old enough to be his mother, and, j moreover, was already married, while I the other was so far below him in | social status that there could be no question of a match. In the first case the Prince’s family ridiculed all the romance out of the attachments; ■ in the second King George and the f Prince's tutor rushed him away from | the young girl who had charmed him. Although many years have passed, the Prince’s first affair of the heart is still the subject of some jesting among his relatives, much to his annoyance. It happened in 1912, when the Prince in his eighteenth year. At that time It was customary for the royal children, when they were at Bucking ham Palace at the same time that their grandmother, Queen Alexandra, was in residence at Marlborough House, to pay her regular visits; but j it became noticeable that the Prince of Wales went to Marlborough House almost every day, and that his Royal Highness usually elected to go by him self. Now Queen Alexandra was very fond of her grandchildren and they of her, but Her Majesty knew the world, and her knowledge told her that the frequent visits of her grandson were prompted by some reason other than a special desire for her company. For a little while Queen Alexandra was puzzled to know what the reason could be. She discussed the problem with Miss Knollys, her private secre tary, but neither of them could ar-! rive at a satisfactory answer. Then one afternoon both ladies made a dis covery which greatly diverted them —a photograph of "Lady Dalkeith was found to be missing from Queen Alex andra’s writing table. Miss Knollys declared that she had seen the Prince | with it in his hand, and then the E Queen and her old friend looked at j each other in amazed silence for some | seconds. j “Why, it must be ‘lizz’ that Ed- m ward comes to see —poor-dear boy; I | never would have’ guessed it,” sud- i denly exclaimed her Majesty. Lady Dalkeith was old enough to be the Prince of Wales’ mother, but she was still one of the most beautiful women in England, and it was by no means remarkable that a boy of eighteen ] should fall in love with her. The at- | tachment of the Prince, it is unneces- ' sary to state, was wholly unknown to ] the object of his affections. i Much abashed over the discovery of his romance, the young Prince hied himself to Balmoral, the royal resi dence in Scotland, and it was there that his second “romance” developed. I Returning one day from the hunt he 1 met the pretty young daughter of a 'squire and immediately lost his heart, i This time the romance was nipped in the bud by King George, who imme- J diately sent for his eldest son and i read him a severe lecture on his duty ] to the state. The island of Yap, which has suf fertd from a severe storm, is by far the most important cable station in thS Pacific. It has a branch of the ! American Pacific cable to the Philippines, and has branch lines radiating to Japan, to Shanghai and 8 to the Dutch East Indies. In the early days the French , sometimes began the year with Christmas, Dectmber 25th, and some times with Easter, which, being a X movable feast, led to much confusion. Q Jn 1564, King Charles IX. decreed fi ttat the year should begin January jX j Atwater Kent XC)T A RADIO BUT I THE RADIO I mST M Let Us Give You .a 3 Demonstration Bf j Yorke & Wadsworth Co. THE OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE STORE Get It At ■ F f | Ritchie Hardware Co. YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeaoooootxx)ooooooooo6c i SktecC THE UNIVERSAL CAR The All Steel Body Cars All vibration has been eliminated by an added im ! provement to the new improved Ford. | Ride in one and feel the difference. Buy a FORD and SAVE the difference. Let one of our salesmen show you. REID MOTOR CO. CONCORD’S FORD DEALER Corbin and Church Streets Phone 280 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOC PAGE THREE