PAGE SIX How April Greeted Chicago Hrl|gp v ;; , Hi' plp*’*** I. *** % « M Bh Ur As» *S i R W®* IL, 1 i * iur ~ & aMMiIMK- ■ BpWMp M, - wr j2;^'WfjHKg^Q|HHBH When the first day of April reached Chicago the Windy City folks thought 'February had returned by mistake. This photo shows how the snow was heaped up in front of a bui ldirg on Michigan avenue. New Pictures of Rail Leaders H jy* :kingk\ “o 4 l*. Tax swi-iuilo-KX t Here are two recent pictures of the famous Van Sweringen brothers W Cleveland, leaders in the big Nickel Plate merger. These are the first new pictures of the Van Severngens to be published in several years, as both men are highly averse to posing for phtographers. w Select the color J ! . -t— 1 - . The Pee Gee label on a can of Mastic ‘ { ? Paint is all you need look for after you ' »iiiiiiiiiiii||i|iii||||| l m )l .[|.||.»mll.li.Dlllg have selected the color. I j jk You want color that won’t go dead— I®*" | jpigjjmjjui jj I "7/ on ß life —protection to surface and pSL ! )) covering capacity in the paint you 'nl| I liu&u^k^..—/ use on your home—Pee Gee Mastic I pUg jfk B I V I V j Paint: will give you all this and more. |9 1 M Come in and let us help you select llliflimii ~~PAIN 1 „ the color. iv HMlffi 3IN G e 18 67, I j Ritchie Hardware Co. — r ■M" NATURE’S SKY SIGNS. Recent Display of the Aurora Borealis at Fine Exhibition of Hhis Phenom enon. New York. April 24. —The recent display of the Aurora Borealis, or Northern Lights, visible throughout large sections of the United States and Canada, as well as in Northern Europe, was one of the finest exhibi tions of this beautiful phenomenon Seen in many years. At some points the red glow of the Aurora was so brilliant that many persons imagined that a great tire was in progress, aful for a time fire and i>olice sta tions were kept busy answering tele phone inquiries from those who wanted to know where the conflagra tion was. j The Aurora is more frequent in printer than in summer. December hnd January usually give the most brilliant displays, but the lights have been seen in every month of the fear. The usu«nl colors oi the danc ing streams are white and red. Green lis sometimes seen in the sky, but I violet is very unusual, i Usually the many-colored stream ers of the Northern Lights are in timately connected, with 'magnetic storms," and scientists now believe that both may be caused by dis turbances in the sun. There is evidence to support the belief that a connection exists be tween the Aurora and the sun The years of high solar activity are alsa years of magnetic storms and bril liant Northern Lights displays. Fre quently. too, when a large sun-spot passes across the centre of the sun’s disc there is a magnetic storm, or an Aurora, or both, two days after wards. No large sun-spot preceded the recent display, but scientists think that the Aurora may have been caus ed by an invisible disturbance, prob ably situated deep in the interior of the sun. For some- reason that scientists have been unable to explain the Aurora is seen more frequently in Northern Europe than in the north? ern part of the American continent. In the latitude of London the Aurora is seldom seen, but in the North of Ireland in Scotland the! phenomenon is visible on thirty l nights in the year; while in the Shet land Islands it is seen very frequent ly. The fartherst southern point at which the Aurora is ever visible in Europe is Southern Spain, where there is a display ‘about once in ten years; while the line of its greatest frequency and brilliance run be tween the Shetlands and Iceland. In the very far North, however, it is quite rare. There seems to be a ring of Aurora around both Poles, but at a cons : tlerable distance away from them. One of the biggest air raids that the Germans made on England dur ing the war was carried out by the lid of the Aurora Borealis or North ern Lights. On that night the whole >f the North Sea’ was a white glow mder this strange radiance. It seem 'd to observers that the great naval >ase at Sheerness was in flames, and •©ports to that effect were actually ent to the British military head uarters. Nearly five million dollars in loney orders, checks and drafts is ouud annually in the dead letter of ice. Even if you know her face well don’t get too familiar with it THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Bank Robbers Bank robberies In many stnttherr titles are laid to Sylvester Walters /above) and Pinkston Caliicutt. Wa| lers is held at Wetherford, Tex., an< rallicutt at Jackson, Miss. Caliicutt is said to have led a gang that held ] Up an entire Alabama town last (rionth. Several states are contend ing for the right to try him. MILL MAN OPPOSES NIGHT WORK IN MILLS Roltert I-assiter Calls Working Wom en and Children at Night Econom ic Crime. Charlotte, April 22.—“ The employ ment of women and children for night work in the cotton manufacturing plants of the State is more than a mere social mistake, it is an econom ic crime, and the State ought to pre vent it," declared Robert Lassiter, one of the outstanding manufacturers of the South, prominent business man and member of the directorate of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, long a resident and citizen of Char lotte. "I am writing to Governor McLean today." Mr. Lassiter said Wednesday, "congratulating him upon his decis ion to have a sweeping investigation made of conditions abounding in the manufacturing plants of the State as they affect the employment of Wom en and children. "I am confident that the survey will reveal that there are few, if any notable fractures of the law govern ing the working of children, insofar as their age is concerned, but that is not what ails the industry in this State and in the South, primarily. "Whatever faults the cotton manu facturing business may have and whatever defects may abound origi nate chiefly from one source, and that s the policy of working women and children at night steadily and as a fixer! program. "I take no exceptions to their em ployment under nbnormal conditions which occasionally arise. Some times situations must be met in the cotton manufacturing industry which makes the running of mills at night more or less imperative, but it is the fixed pol icy to which I refer of some manu facturers. in running their plants, both day and night. The result of [Praises Women M.;. HAwrr coward freund CHICAGO Caesar and Napo leon didn't have a thing: oh modern American wives in the matter of doing: many different things at once, according to Harry Edward Freund, director of the American Research Foundation. “Rome marvelled at Caesar’s abil ity to dictata love letters, memoirs, 'poetry, and business notes simul taneously," said Mr. Freund. “Bonaparte’s rapid fire dictation exhausted six aides-de-camp at once. But it is not an uncom mon thing for a mother to be cook ing, ironing, amusing baby, ar ranging a party in her mind, giv ing advice to her older children, considering the family budget, and 'at the same time inventing a new pudding, perhaps made from evap leratedmuk, the helpful little can (ft which, dainty, germ free, and '(fnah, stands at bar eUmw." for Economical Transportation feuetybwty says- it certainly is . god looking'^ would expect to find in a car with body by Fisher. Swung low, gracefully proportioned, finished in Touring *5lO attractive Arizona-gray Duco, with smart Landau- Roadster 510 bows, this coupe—despite its low price—is at home Coach - MS in any company, on any occasion, business or social. Landau 765 In addition, it provides Chevrolet’s characteristic y 2 Ton Truck 395 economy and the superbly smooth operation of the •>. 1 Von Truck 550 Improved Chevrolet valve-in-head motor. r.^t’nZ.MUh. WHITE AUTO CO. East Corbin Street Phone 298 QUALITY AT LOW COST such, employment of women and of children, even though of legal age to be occupied in the mill*, cannot be justified in common sense, in morals or in religion. "I am speaking of the matter pure ly from the standpoint of a business man. and on a bread-and-butter bas is. I say. as such, that the fixed pol cy of running the mills at night nnd using women and children in them for such work can not have but one eventual result nnd that will be harm ful, vitiating and destructive to the industry itself. "The moralist," Mr. Lassiter con tinued, “finds such a policy to be nauaeating to an enlightened public' sentiment in North Carolina and the , rel'gious fanatic might properly claim ; that it deserves the very wrath of God to be visited upon it. but I have formed my conclusions from neither of these angles. "It is the economic blunder and crime of the thing, the anti-business phase of it, that has impressed me, 1 nnd I am unalterably opposed to it ; and will be personally delighted to have the cover torn off the situation as now exists in the State and through out the whole South. It will be the salvation of the cotton manufactur ing industry itself, if the elimination of this primal cause of all its evila can be brought about.” i Mr. Lassiter is an employer of two groups of cotton mill operatives in Fayetteville and in WiUiamston, S. where he has textile mills, and in neither of these plants, Mr. Lassiter j said, is night work, as a fixed policy, j tolerated or would be allowed. Host and Flagg’s Cotton Letter. ' New York. April 28. —While not active by comparison with past per formances the market seems grad ually thawing and is rather more re sponsive to influences as they trise. Offerings of May have been some what more liberal recently opinions as to the amount of cotton likely to reach the market for de livery vary rather widely. Interest seems shifting In large measure to new crops with a grad-1 ual increase in the disposition to buy those months for a pull of the] ground that present prices an reasonable and would prove cheap if the crop meets any serious set back. The start is late even by comparison with last year which makes the crop more vulnerable to later unfavorable weather and attacks by insects. The reduction in the federal dis count rate also had a favorable in j 1 ■' Dreiser’s Niece Goes on the Stage A,. I I B^B Miss Jane Rodgers ‘■JS % fli'v'j R 5, Lou «la a niece of Theo ,)\ U dore Dreiser, famous nov ■vj 4 '.J I ?'.. ,if ellst and on her Kradua ■yH B ‘‘Jy '• ■ Ron from the University ■, ‘ , ‘ I§| Xgg|B Os Missouri she expected ffc, ‘V Ito teach Latin But she ,«K- IgSSB Btarred ln amateur dra sS&’l&Bß H matics at the university BBHB ' B 199 and now she has a nice vaudeville contract. And W Bhe doesn’t need her / Latln any jyp b» fluence on sentiment as was perhaps intended and weekly figure* show that cotton :'ia atill flowing freely in to trade channels. POST AND FLAGG. i In a Belfast court the other day a law 280 yean old was invoked to prevent golfers playing over' -the- Boyal Portrush Club course oh Sun days. Saturday, April 24, 1926 at at at A WORD TO OUR ADVER- at at tisers. at at at at Our good friends, otir adver- at at Users, are asked to help us give at at all better service b" observing at at strictly our rule that copy for at at all advertisements requiring ex- at at tra space or a change in form of at at the ad. be in the office the after- at at noon before the day the ad. is to at at be inserted. Copy for ads. oc- at at cupying the regular space will at at always be changed if received in at at the office by 10 A. M. on the at at day of publication. at * at ♦ atatatatatatatatatatatat* • I- i I V MADAM KNOWS R E GOOD MILK 9 E Pasteurized milk d 3 carries its own argu- £2 ■ ment of goodness ■ E sealed in every bot- 3 M tie. It makes its ap- K m peal to your sense K Jy and to your appetite. W uj Order it. ' B •ill/ tliHfmatt L