PAGE SIX paKingGood Wi " : 1 I Brtekell. speediest trad ever to represent Wiehitn (K is. Hlcl> school, is playing his first year Bb professional hasofejl Moreover Bib’s making good A* a momls-v ..t Bbe 'Wichita team of the Western Bttgue. Brtckell is hftting the hall ,n great clip and fielding superhlv Bk sbort. tire youngster looks like < HpkT Wntl ftTOSWU*! ■ •‘Nj: are’s Masicrjiect" «K. Sptc.il a::*-..non to tourists. Write ■Children HRjSlade over to your likinjr. w.tli | rosy cheeks, hearty appetites. i digestion and robust ] this delicious digestant with I | Shivar Ale ; KPure Digestive Aromatics With Shivar Mineral Water & (linger B all grocc rs and druggists— t or your money ! or. first dozen. K HOTEL ■WALTON I PHILADELPHIA Broad St. at Locust | K to Sesqui-Centennial i || Best located hotel |Bi*SO single S.OO double maOME COMFORTS WITH MiODERN HOTEL SERVICE ImkjMxcellent Prices Hlp * Johnson, Directing Manage* MRS DANGER SIGNAL I •WhjHl ft passenger train was speed- I typag In th e night, unaware of a ■Ween bridge ahead, a boy climbed - i,sl MSL*i? e bri<i ? e > waved a lantern Wy^thetrainfrom wreck. Over The Traffic Problem PEDESTRIAN MUST SLOW DOWN TO A RUN RULE TWO PEDESTRIAN CROSSING STREET IN MIDDLE. OF THE BLOCK IS ALLOWED THREE DOWNS OF MANEATING TRAFFIC „ PROBLEM REFORM AMERICA I « FIRST. SAYS PASTOR ! i World Grows Resentful of Our | Evangelizing Abroad. .Assert* the 1 Rev. J. AY. Van /antin. New York ,World. What message are the churchee | bringing to the people of New York? To answer this question The World for the la*t four years has . published reports of pastors’ sermons : Monday mornings. ! A aw of life which will help im- ; measurably in carrying forward the i program of world betterment accord ing to Rev. John W. Van Zanteu, is found in a passage from the song of Solomon, 1 :(J—“They have made me i the keeper of the vineyards and mine I I own vineyard have I not kept.’* This 1 1 j verse was the text chosen for the i < [sermon by Mr. Van knnten yesterday I morning in Old First Reformed < Church. Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street, Brooklyn. "One of the striking characteristics of our age is the remarkable expan sion of our views upon life,” said the minister. "The whole world i* beckoning us to look out and see al most tfie whole of the civilized world passing before us every day in the press. This continual looking out in tothe far away distance has had an effecton our lives. The present, our own life circumstances, shrinks into insignificance. "Much of our heated discussions today are over matters which are but remotely related to the facts and realities of every day life. Men are [ready to fly at one another's throats over the problem of human origins j antedating recorded history—while , the real living issues of daily life j are overlooked. Men forget that | while the boundaries of the known j are ever being expanded the essen-i tial problems of life remain the: same and that the vital issues of; life have not alered. World in Disorder. "The most obvious and evident i consequence of this expansion of i view has been to reveal the dead t weight of the world’s disorder and pain. Especially is this true in America. With all the freshness and exuberance of youth, America labors under a great enthusiasm to set a wrong world right- America during the past century has seen in the foreign missionary movement of the Christian churches one of the strong- New York to Argentina by Air . ■- -«.<>* ft Bernardo Lhifuaa, Captain Eduardo Olivtere and Km. Campanelli, Argentina aviator*, inspected their plane befon cst attempts in recorded history to set the world right according to its own accepted ideas of what is right. It has set out to evangelize the world. Now where i* there more evangelizing zeal than in America, i Great problems face the world and I with enthusiasm and confidence America tackles them. There is no denying the fact that America is looked upon by the out side world as a great evauge izer, and i f we are going to be honest about it there is no denying the fact that much of it is refuted by the rest of the world. And. furthermore, that many of America’s program of world betterment are limpiug most j I woefully. The foreign missionary | program itself, launched a genera- I tion ago. has slowed up. and in I China and India as well as in Japan !is meeting a definite and increasing opposition. The world seemingly does not want to be corrected as America thinks it ought to be corrected. Solution at Home. ‘‘One of the first things we must learn as a nation and as individuals is that the solution of our greatest problems is right here at home. It is amazing how clearly Jesus saw this and how His whole life-work was built on the clear comprehension of thus principle. Never in all record ed history did one look out upon the whole race of men with stronger de sire to redeem all life and yet never did one more sternly concentrate Himself on His own small patch of! garden than did Jesus Christ. He is I supremely the Savrour of the world! because he met supremely and per- i fectly the demands of life in His own personal life and in His owu little j country*. j "The path to world mastery is | thrown self-mastery. The hardest j lesson we hare to learn ois to hae our j own garden first before we attempt I to assume direction of the garden of | the world. Apply this law to our own problems today. As a nation we I stand face to face with menacing I evils and we travel hither and you 1 trying to set the world in oraer. But all the time we forget that it’s the state of our own garden which inter feres most seriously with out zeal ous attempts. "Every great problem wait* upon this solution. We long to Christian ize the world- We long to bring about disarmament of the world. We long for the day when the kingdom THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE the i s lake lure w * **4! s pittw ♦ r v~ - ,«*; * §/ " -SNaC zens of North and Sooth Carolina are I investors in Lake Lure. ; They have ■■■■" -■■■■■ ■ put in more than A million dollars. curities. Now these same investors AKE Lure is the “Big Hit” of 1926 in The Land of the Sky, the ) “!n b 7he g pieHminlr5 o rie sit o e f s Lure. great Summer Playground of the -South. Lake Lure becomes Opening d£? ju« of its lai ’£ es t and most central attraction. The South is rapidly buying U P Luremont - its first lakeside residential park. But only the van for instance, so that there will be a guard of the visitors has arrived. The big rush will come after June shores before another year hr 1. The opening Day at Luremont is set for June 15. This gives our i 1 passed ’ near neighbors—residents of Carolinas —only 21 days more of ad -1 vantage in choice of locations at the original prices. The average cost of a homesite at Luremont is low—too low, ' compared with what is being paid in resort areas far less attrac tive, because Luremont has so many non-duplicatable advantages —lake frontage—lakeview—frontage on State Highway N. C. 20— > „ all city utilities—plus central situation in a $6,000,000 development. —. There can be no question as to prices I - and values going up. The thing to do « is to “cinch” one or more of the choice sites befo J e all _, are gone-Only 1000 - < acres can be made ready this year. U *• Consult district office and arrange _ ff lT ea^ y tr^ P uremont v^a Lake I Qiii^pßyk lAI/ C .vhX, K. A. Dnrnbnrt Sldn.y A. Gayle C. R. Hcdic. A. J. Coleman John Dollar L A l\ L IJH Nil Vi't/ District Mnnagrr Dlatrict Manager District Manager District Manager District Manager Ummm M p,, t r i| /—J '~T . Phone 3232 Phone 3«50 Phone 23 Phone &104-5102 Phone 5846 ] TIDT. “ \pjrvi*-* -r o' Sir Waller Hotel lullford Hotel ttldg.. 80S N Main Street Johnaton Bldg. 48 Haywood Street L/ I\L> l .... v Kaletgh. N. C. Oreenaboro. N. C. Hendersonville. N. C Charlotte. N. C. Asheville. N. C. of this world shall become the king doms of our God and His Christ. Hut the path to that fervent hope lies straight through our owu garden. “The world is not looking for a universal censor and schoolmaster to set it in the ways of correction. It | is looking for a nation that knows i how to be a good neighbor, who I keeps his own dooryard clean and keeps his own bouse clean and in order. “Let us stop looking over the j fence and hoe our own garden. Let j us magnify our own calling; 1 t ua make the most of every opportunity that comes in our daily life to dis play a genuine Christian attitude to all those about ue. Let us keep our own vineyard in order first.” Look Out For Borah. ‘ The Pathfinder. “Senator Borah has presidential ambitions," says a newspaper article. It is all right for anybody to have “presidenfiial ambitions.” this is a free country. But of course Senator Borah has no chance for the presi dency. Over two years ago he declared 1 that the United States would give| recognization to the Russian soviet outfit within a year. The Pathfind er said at the time that such a thing would not eventuate — which proves that we knew more about it than he did. There are so many able, aane and | patriotic men in this country that. there will never be any necessity to. go so far as to pick for president any man—irrespective of party—w h o would make such a blunder as to prophesy the recognition of Russia aa Senator Borah did, and'who would work for it aa he has. Senator Borah ia given credit by everyone—followers and opponents alike—for being "sincere”—but we must remember that untold barm is often done in tfcta world by people who are “sincere” but who are liable in their ardor, to be misled into paths of danger and to mislead others. We have no grievance against Senator Borah, or any other public man; we and meaning well—but we have been on the scene long enough to know something about what is going to hap pen and what is not. If the Republicans should be so foolish as to nominate Borah for president—whieb is unthinkable—it would cause a coalition of conserva tive Democrats and Republicans which would defeat him. In other words j the tail can't wag the dog—however ' much it may want to. j Anyone wishing to paste this up ' on his mirror and wait for time to determine whether it is true or not may do so, and if we prove wrong we will roll a peanut from Eastport, Me., to San Diego, Cal. [Confederate Money. The _Pat il tinder. j Quest ion: I sometimes see Confed erate money for sale and most of the bills are new and crisp. Are they reprints from the original platea or are they printed from newly engraved plated counterfeits of the old bills? Is there any law against reprinting I Confederate money or making copies ! of it ? I Answer: The treasury department i says it is unlawful to print Confed erate money either from the old plates ' or from bogus plates. B. A L. Ides Gaining Ground. Charlotte Observer. According to a compilation just ! made and announced by fbe State i insurance department at Raleigh, ! more than 10,000 individuals bechme share-holders in the building and loan associations during the past year, 1 these 10,000 persons representing aa increase of approximately 12 per cent. There are today in North Carolina more than 92,000 persons holding shares in building sad loan associa tions. The assets of the building and loan associations of the state increased during the year about <11.000,000 and pra«trf«t ”£.? SSEtaYJh mark of $3,592,675. loan idea in North Carolina ia a mat* who han h real appreciation of the building and loan idea recognizes it not only as an economic but as a so cial force. The building and loan plan is enabling thousands of persons) to iHirchase and pay for homes who would otherwise not be able to do no and when an individual becomes a home owner 'he becomes a better and j more useful citizen, a better husband ! and father, and a more independent and dependable unit of society gen erally. TODAY’S EVENTS Wednesday, May 2d, 1926 Greetings to Queen Mary of Great Britain, who today enters upon her OOth year. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, today rounds out its first score of years as an incorporated city. Philadelphia is to be the meeting place today of the general synod of the Reformed Church in the United States. A New England foreign trade con ference baa been called to meet in Boston today for a session that will continue over tomorrow. The re-election of James M. Lynch, of Syracuse, N. Y., as president of the International Typographical Un ion is expected to result from the general election to be held by that organization today. ' Says House Betrayed Wilson. Not only did Col. House "betray” President ' Wilson but House and Lansing were responsible for the fail ure of Wilson’s policies, Dr. Stanton Colt, of London, told the Ethical Cul ture Society* at Philadelphia. "When : the president returned to America,” she said, "House and Lansing got to gether with Clemenceau nnd Balfour, and this little group undid all. the I brtllinat work of the previous session I *nd framed the Versailles treaty.” t Ninety women .in the United States i»vs been killed by mdba without trial I sine* 1886. Thirty-fire hundred per* . «Mb.r, been lynched in the saps If GRAND MAY | CELEBRATION SALISBURY, N. C. I MONDAY, MAY 31, 1926 FOUR TRAINS VIA | Southern Railway System Don’t Miss This Big Day! A Big Time For Everybody! ; Special Train From Blacksburg, Kings Mountain, Gas tonia and Charlotte, May 31 Charlotte -.8:35 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1:50 Newell • _8:48 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1.50 Harrisburg Tt \ 8:57 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1.50 ? Concord __ -—9.07 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, SI.OO 9 Kannapolis 9:20 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ .50 . Landis _*.■ 9:27 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ .50 China Grove -.9:35 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ .50 5 1 ARRIVE SALISBURY, 9:50 A. M. RETURNING, LEAVE SALISBURY 7:10 P. M. g SAME DAY r] 8 Baseball Games, Horse Racing, Big Barbecue, Dancink U Fire Works Display. O Tickets on Sale May 31 and Good For 'Hus Date Only | irrT-TTw-r^rrTTtrgtrr^^ fli Silt IDS. MIS GET BESTS ’Wednesday, May 26, 1926

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