pjSaturday, March 20, 102$ Crrok” in New Orleans Is Not “One, of Colored Blood.” New Orleans, La., March 10— OP) —The ire of many a “Creole” has heen provoked because the innocent tourist thinks the word means “of colored Wood.” "Creole,” the native Orleanian will _telljou, means “of French and Span ish." The Creole is one who is born away from his country—whatever that country may be. The New Orleans OX You buy final results lx 'V£) y- yf T\\ Almost any varnish will look well J a^ter * s rst applied. ! j ijllillllUl [|j II J The real story of quality shows up s St, j f a little later, when the floor has been llllllll 818 11 I subjected to use —that’s the real test. 11 iJwtfXZjSrai ! I All that you have to know about a ■ floor varnish is that it bears the Pee Gee label—you can’t buy better anywhere and final results will prove it. Please take our word for this. Ritchie Hardware Co. Today-last day ~vMm Rr — T.imd Tank Heaters +22 7S > installed . . Jy 75c down 52.00 a month W // , If you have no boiler, we wiH install a Ruud Tank Heater with 30 gallon boiler complete with 50 feet of gas and water pipe and two hot-water faucets at special terms. $59.75 installed. $1.75 down—s4.oo a month. \TOUwaut hot water when the many advantages of , 1 you'want it—everybody these RUUD Tank Heaters does. And an instant supply —their efficency, economy of hot wafer isn't a luxury. and dependability. So come It's an economy of time, in and let us show you how labor and patience. An econ- one would operate in your omy of money, too, if you home. priced® ?“thU C ° me be H e the «" d *“• special sale. . sale-and if you decide to * buy, as we thmk you will, We’d like to tell you about you’ll buy at a saving. corporation Concord Sc Kannapolis Gas Co. Concord, N. C. l -r;/ : ! Creolp is oonsidrml the city’s finest product. The women are lovely. The nu|n arc brnvc. have charm ing manners. They are exclusive. They, are clannish. They *‘iave their own language, their own society, and their own customs. The New Orleans Creole siieaks a pure French. The reason '“t'reole” has been misunderstood is because their slaves a Oeo'e dialect, bearing about the same relation to pure French as 4*'ie southern negro talk does to English purely spokey. Then, there was the Acadian French,' or "Fajean” French, as spoken in the outlying districts of Louisiana. And "Gumbo” French—that means tsimply French incorrectly spoken. ■Since remote time's the surgeons of India have used the innndihies of. of ante as suture for closing the | edgee of wounds. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Famous Cooks Os Yesterday Aik! Today ALTHOUGH the culinary depart ment of the home has been gen erally regarded as “woman's sphere,’ some of the most famous cooks in history have been men. The experiments in cookery of Conde, Grandi, Cardinal Richelieu and Alex andre Dumas won international fame. Conde spent a lifetime in perfect ing bean soup, that being his specialty. Ferdinand Grandi was the originator of 700 soups before he found one that suited him. He devoted his entire life to studying flavor and trying to find out how it could best be con served by new and improved methods. The eminent churchman and states man, Armand de Richelieu, cultivated the art of cookery as a hobby, when ever he could escape from the affairs of state. It was no less a personage than he, who originated the mayon NO DIVIDED ALLEGIANCE. Theodore Roosevelt. There are plenty of persons who have already made the assertion that they believe the American people have a short memory ahd that they intend to revive all the foreign associations which most directly interfere with the complete Americanization of our people. Our principle in this matter should | be absolutely simple. In the first \ place .we should insist that if the im migrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed op birthplace or origin. But fhis is predicted upon the man’s bectaqing ’ n very fact an American and Slothing but an American. If he tries to keep segregated with men of his own origin and separated from the rest of America, then he isn’t doing his part as an American. There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, is not an American at all. We have room for hut one flag, the American flag, and this excludes the red flag, which symbolizes all wars against lib erty and civilization, juifi as much as it excludes any foreign flag of a na tion to which wo arc hostile, We have room for but one language here, and that is the English lan guage. for we intend to see that the crucible turns our people out as Am ericans, of American nationality, and not as dwellers in a golyglot boarding house: and we have room' for but one soul loyalty, and this is a loyalty to the American people. John Wesley Did Not Know Women. N. C. Christian Advocate. John Wesley is unquestionably en titled to a place in the very front ranks of the great religious leaders of the Christian centuries. The found er of Methodism who kindled afresh the flame of evangelism throughout the English speaking world was by every token a specially chosen vessel of the Almighty. Yet this jnight.v mail of God seemed to be utterly larking in his knowledge of women. All the evidence confirms that John Wesley should have lived a celibate. Charles Wesley had just prevented his marrying the widow of a sailor when the message came to Charles that John was about to marry an other widow, a Mrs. Vazielle. Why such partiality to widows we are not able to explain. Charles Wesley says that he was thunderstruck to hear that John has to wed Mrs. Vazielle, but he went ahead and married her and it. is general knowledge that henceforth John Wesley’s home was like the throne of Home of the ancient gods, the dwelling place of thunder and lightning. The blame for the terrible state of affairs that existed in that household-has been placed pri marily upon Mrs. Wesley and justly so. But not entirely. John Wesley in a tract on marriage described the duties of a wife to be two-fold: First, she must recognize hersejf as the: in ferior of her husband and second, she must behave as such. Think of a married man advocating such a doc trine as that. Mr. Wesley must for the time have forgotten his own mother, Susanna Wesley, but even greater than her illustrious sous, John and Charles' Furthermore," John Wesley on one occasion dared to write his wife, that tornado of a wife in whose breast burned the fires of jealousy even like the fires of Ge henna, as follows: “Be content to be a private, insignificant person knoyvn and loved by God and me. Leave me to be governed by God and my Own conscience. Then shall I govern you even with gentle sway, and Show that I do indeed love you, even as Chris! the church.” All of which goes to show that John Wesley was utterly ignorant of the “female of the spe cies” and that he should have lived as did Francis Asbury, the founder of American Methodism. USB PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS naise salad-dressing we know so well And Dumas, that great literary light achieved considerable fame for the appetizing dishes’ he invented in hi. leisure moments. Many others, particularly in France and Italy, became famous for special dishes or for their expert cookery m general. In New York and othei large American cities, there are noted chefs, today, who attract patrons to the hotels or restaurants where they officiate. But the n-.astcr-cook of today is the canner, who prepares for all the world nutritious, and appetizing foods. Os the convenience of these the chefs who must daily cook for hundreds of people gladly avail themselves. And to millions of busy housewives these foods, sanitarily and hygienically pre pared, are an incalculable blessing. Growth of prohibition sentiment in Cumberland, Maryland, lias caused that city to change ’the name of Wine street to Glenivnod. Residents of the thoroughfare complained that the for mer name was obsolete, and further more was the butt of much ridicule. It cost the Federal and state gov ernments one and a half million dol lars to wipe out the 102-1 and 1025 | outbreaks of the foot and mouth di !sense among Texas livestock. The 1 di rect loss is estimated to have been fourteen million dollars. Jor Economical Transportation ' 'll I Neu, Lou. Price, Carefully check the quality and equip- finish,one-piece W windshield,Alemite Touring . *5lO ment offered m die Improved Chevrolet lubrication and other essentials to mod- Roadster - 510 Check it against any crn motoring? Coupe - - 645 B er closed car in the world! Know what , , , V Coach . . 645 its new low price really means! note these many quahty fea = . -or tures—get a demonstration—experience Landau " 765 Where else can you get for $645 a five- luL C^ B an ?.f zio f.P e^ orm ance—and V> Ton Truck 395 passenger closed car with balloon tires, it riv^ speedometer, fine Fisher body, Duco Ask for a Demonstration! I m WHITE AUTO CO. on aB purrhasfs of East Corbin Street Phone 298 QUALITY AT LOW COSTI *1 i. . JH9 What Mean Our Cheers? r i i"—" 7 v i 1 | jsryiaa *Though we cheer them with the tongues of men and angels, if we have not bought Con* j federate Memorial Half-Dollars, our cheers become as sounding brass and tinkliitg cym* ’ hala” PAGE THREE