PAGE TEN pirl of Fourteen Kidnaps Boy Os Sixteen, Giving Custom Jolt iX; phelby, May 8. — For once a staid: ,M) custom of society has received A trick has been turned on conventional way of doing things , Hgthat is getting married. JrjElopemen ts and kidnappings regu- J*rly tell of how the man entices his Sjftde to the altar with various ineth- WlciSs of persuasion, but Kings Moun- 1 ?tain offers something new. :|r«Thie time a girl, just 14 years of a£e, admits tfiat she was the one who .persuaded her man to run away | with her. ■W'f "But it’s all settled now. They're Tharried. Probate Judge Lake Stroup Stfcd the knot at Gaffney Thursday, ■iafternoon and the 14-year-old girl now has a 16-year-old husband. \y , jic?i is the end of the story before the story itself—or the cart before the horse. £»Last week, as the Kings Mountain •Herald tells it. a new boy in the town by the name of Cole left town With Carolyn Terry, daughter of Joe Jjfcrry, and said to be only 13 years of age. They headed south and offi-1 eers of tfoe law and the parents of the girl pursued them. The chase ! Jed through South Carolina and 1 Georgia, but the young couple made* jgood their escape, although thejir pursuers, it is said, were within 15) •tnimites of them at times. j . However, the young girl came back _into Kings Mountain on the train -Monday and the boy came in some other way. The girl's parents wore |f»till away searching for her and '’Chief Wells, of Kings Mountain, rounded up the couple. There was Ho charge against the girl, but she 1 agairast going home because 1 t‘- Cycle of Women’s Dress. Toledo Blade. t In 1886 the silk dress of the aver age woman contained 22 yards of material. This was the time when a line drawn from the back of the neck downward described mid-way a sudden and imposing outward curve. It was nlso the time when, thanks -to fashion, municipalities could dispense with a good deal of the hired labor for street cleaning. About twenty years earlier, the pe rmd of the hoopskirt. tlie yardage was lb. Eight years earlier it was four and a half. The disturbances and embargoes of the Napoleonic wars Room to have had something to do with this style. In 1883 it took throe yards to make a sleeve ami six yards to go around the bottom of the skirt. There ie « tradition that in 1883. a time of in dustrial depression. unemployment and enforced economies, enterprising young women went to parties and came home with such souvenirs in their sleeves as sides of bacon. SPEEDWAY TICKETS FREE HERE’S HOW jy __ To Every Boy and Girl Boys and Girls -- g # To every boy and girl who secures five new Oon t MISS This! six months subscriptions to The Daily Trib une on five new yearly subscriptions to The Here’s the chance of your life to witness the World’s Semi-Weekly Times we will give free one B. wonder race Classics where you will see the greatest au- . . ... tomobile racing of all times on the most modern speed v ice . The subscriber must be . bowl in the United States. This will be free of cost to from families that are not now taking either you! Read just how easy it is for you to see these races free I Get busy and attend these races at the expense of ! The Concord Daily Tribune and Times ACT QUICKLY AS THE TIME IS LIMITED she was afraid of a beating. So they were both brought to he jail in Shel by. Comes Into Court. I Thursday morning the case came ; up before Recorder John Mull, who settles everything from matrimonial disputes to boundary lines for moon ! shiners. There was no charge against * the girl, but Cole, who is said to be around 16 or 17. was charged with kidnapping her. j Then when the evidence started in The jolt came. The young girl told the court that the boy did not kidnap her. but that, instead, she persuaded , him to go off with her. According to the judge she furthermore said she tried to take another boy and when he wouldn't go she took Cole. That left the jurist with nothing to do but turn the boy free. He hadn't kidnapped anyone and so the ; judge ruled. But, as the girl was said to be only 13 years of age. he j referred her to J. B. Smith, county j welfare officer. | Thereupon the revenues of South ] I Carolina were added unto. After a I conference with the welfare officer the I young couple together with her par ents set out for Gaffney. S. C., where j they were married about 2 o'clock in the afternoon by I’robate Judge Stroup. In a long distance telephone, mes sage Judge Stroup fcaid that the par ents gave their consent to the girlV marriage and stated that she was 14 years of age. ! Marriage under that age is im ■ possible in South Carolina, the judge j • said, and only at 14 with the consent j 1 of the parents. I The silk dress of 1026, that is, the i average one. gets along with three, j yards of goods. The evolution of dress, as indicat- j j ed by the stuff which has gone into! i it. brings up the question as to wheth- j er the cycle will oscillate, in the way of a pendulum, backward toward bulk and the bustle or go on until the skirt of a woman is reduced to a whisper and corresponds to the vermi form appendix as a more or less in convenient relic. It would appear today that any one is entitled to guess either way. The mascot of Mile. Suzanne | Lenglen, the French tennis star, is j her color scheme—a yellow, green or ■ red bandeau, with silk sweater to match. She selects these rollers ac cording tii the class of player slie is | going to meet. Yellow stands for a j player of little account; green for an! opponent worthy of some attention; and red signifies the danger signal, j when all her strokes and skill are to be put forth. “NEW WORLD SYMPHONY” IS TRIBUTE TO AMERICA Regardless of Bygone Contro versies, Dvorak’s Composi tion Holds Favor. DARKENED theatre . . , a drama ot lonely, wind mn swept prairie unfolding on ■Jgggg the silver screen . . . the pleading, tearful voices of violins lending deeper pathos to the tragedy that is unfolding . . . a symphonic breath of emotion which makes the cinema panto mime really live. . . . What is this haunting fabric of aound which sweeps almost every Hs t r i n g of the emotion, and which can ex press with equal swinging rhythm of charging red skins, the rush of city traffic, or cabin? And why do theatre audi *• ■ "'“ "'■i ences through out America, listening to it through the years, often without being able to identify it, continue to be swayed by its magic? It is the Symphony No. 5, “Prom the New World," by Antonin Dvorak. The subject of many a heated controversy among musi cians, as to whether it does or does not express the authentic spirit of America, it has, never theless, endured in the affections of Americans, and can now be said to have attained a fixed place in the musical life ot the United States. Antonin Dvorak was born on September 8, 1841, in Mulhausen, Bohemia. Music, rather than the hereditary occupation of inn keeper, claimed him in early boy hood, and at the age of thirty-two he scored his first triumph as a composer with a patriotic cantata which brought him both fame and money. In 1892 Dr. Dvorak accepted the invitation of the National Conser vatory of New York, to become its director. The idea of an American symphony must have taken almost Instantaneous root in the mind of the composer. Toward the end of THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE mr s Isgtyj^ ANTONIN DVORAK 1892, in what was apparently a period of homesickness, he went to Spillville, la., where he could have contact with his own people, a little colony ot Bohemians. It was in this familiar environment that music’s greatest tribute to America was begun, late in 1892, and'' completed early in the follow ing year. Critics have pointed out in the thematic material of the composi tion influences of the songs of the Southern Negro, ot the weird cadences of the American Indian, and of melodies which breathe of the mingling, in the New World, of the myriad races of the globe. Whether the symphony is Amer ica’s contribution to music, or whether it can only be cited as music's greatest tribute to Amer (J A troversy that P l neve>r be settled. o Jmf l Its nationwide acceptance ca n WEri well be argued I A m e r i c a n ln “ *“ 3i 3 '' 1 spiration, how ever. One of its most recent tri urnphs was the recording of the complete composition, on five talk ing machine records, as rendered by the Philadelphia Orchestra, un der the direction of Leopold Sto kowski, one of the greatest living masters of the symphony orchestra. GAS A Safe Investment C AFETY for share holders has always been the outstanding feature of Public Utility Stocks. Money invested in the Southern Gas & Power Corporation is working for you day and in homes and factories all around you. t Safety, stability and good returns are reasons why you should invest in our offering of 7 % Preferred Stock. Become a Customer-Part ner in this Public Utility and receive a dividend check every three months. Ask us about the MONTHLY SAVINGS PLAN Price: SIOO a share v Southern Gas & Power Corporation Concord & Kannapolis Co. TELL THE PEDDLERS TO MOVE ON. Monroe Enquirer. Every once in a while n peddler offering wares of one kind of another hits town and gathers in some loose cash from folks who imagine they are getting wonderful bargains. It may be hand-made lace, women's silk lingerie, some novel Household appli ance or a dozen or so other things which peddlers are wont to offer. But in practically every instance these itinerant merchants find a suf ficient number of Customers to war rant them plying their trade and ev ery so often these folks who have purchased articles from these peddlers find that the home merchant has a superior article at a much lower price. Recently a merchant told a repre sentative of this paper a little hap pening which may serve as a warn ing to some folks who allow them j selves to be victimized b.v these trav elling merchants. I This merchant had a can for lace by a stranger. The stock was shown the customer who finally purchased a quantity of shopworn laces of old patterns which had been unsalable b.v the merchant for some months. He was very anxious to get rid of this stock and let the lot go at a very low figure. When this merchant went to luneh his wife all smiles laid before him a quantity of. what she said, was im ported hand-made lace which she had picked up from a peddler who called at the house during the morning. The merchant asked his wife wbat she paid for the lace. She told him. j Then the merchant smiled. “Why, Mary,” he said, “that is some of that old stock I have had at the store for months. I sold it this morning to a stranger who asked to see the stock of laces. I sold it for a song almost, and there isn’t n piece of hand-made or imported lace in the whole lot.” The wife was slow to believe her husband until he produced a few rem nants of the same pattern still in the lot at the store. Doubtless there are other similar stories which could be related by folks here. Probably a little more advertising on the part of the merchants and a little more closer reading of the ads. on the part of the buying public would help both parties affected and serve to rid the town of the itiner ant merchants. Obis’ Club to Give Demonstration. Newton, N. C„ May 4.—The girls' club at Balls Creek, In Catawba coun ty will give demonstrations in the preparation and serving of foods at their local school commencement, re ports the home agent. Miss Anna C. Bowe. Eighth grade members will give demonstrations in salad making, while those from the ninth grade will pre pare and serve a breakfast to the teachers. A luncheon will be prepar ed and served the school committee by students in the tenth grade, and a dinner will be served the bifih school teachers by eleventh grade pupils. There are 75 members of this club, and these are divided into ssx groups according to age and grade, so that effective work may be done, explains the home agent. USE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS STEEL CONSTRUCTION TO CUT HIGH COST OF HOME BUILDING Use of Standardized Shapes Promises Solution of Vital Problem. HHE application of the prin ciples of skyscraper con struction to the erection of small residences is ad vanced as a solution of the high-cost-of-houslng problem following an investigation, spon sored by the American Institute of Steel Construction, of the housing situation in towns and cities throughout the United States. The mounting costs of building construction have threatened the very existence of the small, mod erately-priced dwelling during the last few years. To meet the situa tion various expedients have been proposed, the latest of which are embodied in the housing bill of the New York State Legislature, and a home financing project undertaken by the labor banks to reduce the cost of home ownership to work ers. Such moves are of unquestioned value, but It Is held that the use of standardized steel construction for the frames of small residences cuts at the root of the problem and promises a measure of permanent relief. All-steel construction for small dwellings, it Is said, can con tribute still further towards bring ing an attractive and substantial ly built house more within the realm of possibility for ths man of small means. Bteal In ths Homs In discussing the use of steel In residence construction, Henry R. Brigham, Chairman of the Housing Committee of the National Asso ciation of Real Estate Boards, said: “As this country grows the de crease In timber reserves will make tt increasingly more difficult and expensive to use lumber In such construction to the extent that It ts now used, and the Increasing congestion of our cities demands The only woman who is included in the list of awards of grants in aid of research, just given out by the American Council of Learned So cieties, is Miss Bertha I’utnam, pro fessor of history at Mount Holyoke College. Miss Putnam is one of 21 American scholars who have received A typical home of steel frame and steel wall construction. The roof J to of metal tile. construction offering greater re sistance to fire. “It to up to the steel Industry to arrange tor the fabrication of steel for such purposes In designs that can be more easily and quickly handled and erected than wooden beams and girders, and at leas cost; and to arrange for its distribution In smaller unit shipments. It to pos sible to extend the use of steel even further by using sheet steel fqr the walls." The more to make steel avail able for residence construction is already well uhder way In this country. A considerable number of houses with steel frames, and others of all-steel construction have already been built In erect ing a home of the new type at Tar rytown, New York, steel frames formed of bars riveted In the shop were brought to the site and bolt ed together. The shapes were so arranged mat each would register with the holes la the ones adjoining. Substantial Economies Not enough small houses of steel frame or all-steel construction have as yet been erected In the United States to allow an accurate estimate of average costs, lfr. Thursday, .May 6, 1926 grants thus year to aid them in carry ing on definite projects of research in the social and humanistic sciences. She intends to use he.’ grant for transcripts and rotograps for study of the actual practice of justices of the i>eace in the later Middle Ages in England. Brigham, however, In citing an in stance In which metal frame and lath were used, stated that the cost of the metal was about 14 per cent less than would have been the cost of wood joists, rafters, studs, and lath for exterior and interior walls. All-steel dwell ings In England have been built at approximately half the cost of houses of a like nature built of more conventional materials. Familiarity with the use of the monkey wrench, the plumb line and the carpenter’s square to all that to necessary for the erec tion of the metal frame. Fac tory production with the advan tages of efficient material handling and labor saving devices have been substituted for expensive hand labor on the job. A small house In which fabricated steel shapes were used was recently erected In the ballroom of a large New York hotel by four workmen In M minutes. Both through cutting the cost of materials, and , through a redac tion of labop-'' costs bn the job, steel to provide a real solution tor one of the most vital problems of the day.