m i
■Wednesday, June 9, 1926
[Hatty
Am
fcrffer
Wpsip ofStaffCcrreepmddts
I atmrUCa&n*
' I TV,„., T , I'— i
■ rvputtuwn
■ By H. K. REYNOLDS,
•national News Service Staff
■, Correspondent
Bnrion. June i).—Communism will
Hie guiding principle of the new
Hr College at Easton Lodge, Er-
Bnccording to a statement issued
H b.v Lady Warwick, the donor
Hie property.
■ have given my home." said Lady
■wick, “to labor for socialism. I
■ people to learn b.v education
■ J>ur social system is based upon
■rong conception; and-that it is
■Rile for human society to build
■{.upon a better system."
idfiders of the labor movement who
■Ppsisting Lady Warwick in get-'
■ the new college started, plan to
■ together at Easton I.odgc tile
■nts of bolb the London Labor
■ge and Ruskin College at Ox-
this effort at cousolida-
Lady Warwick said. "1 see no
Hon wiiy students of all degrees of
should not be ah’e to study
have access to the fullest thought
Hi knowledge ill one institution,
was why I gave Easton Lodge to
■bor.”
that the new- college was
be planned to make higher educa
■>n available to the masses and not
■erely' to train trade Union leaders,
■ady Warwick continued: “I 'have
B*er been a nil I remain an ardent
■vacate" of iiidepcftdent working-
Bass education, and shall be thc'last
9' agree that Easton Lodge should
Brer .become anything than a mere in
stitution for the training of prospec
■sve ‘officials,' towards pnly the pal
pation and perpetuation of the abom
inable and life-destroying economic
■toil social system of today.
"I distinctly wish to’enlphufsixc here
tnd now and for all. time that toe
me predominant object of this college
s to give every facility to develop
rue socialists or communists, other
rise I should not (lave dreamed of
naking the great sacrifice of my home.'
t is because wy must make ‘out-and
lit’ socialists that such a college is
leaded."
l’rof. Kennet liell. most learned and {
nost popular of Oxford I niverrity,
irofessors. Ims been giving good mi-
the National Stmffnts' nßon,’
agfi" particularly for those with am
ittbfis.
"A spice of hale -s necessary for
successful career," said Hell. “It
ives the aspirant a chance of react- j
ng against his environment. Carlyle
ad it, and was a more successful his
nrian thun Macaulay, who was only
n ideal unde."
"Buy your own experience,” con,
nued Bell. "l’ay for it in cash if
ou can, bnt do not be afraid of gat
ing it on credit.
I "There is a place in the world for}
jplfishness. One of the arts of life is :
■> know when and how to be selfish.
£ “The only eareer worth having is j
I career of adventure. The right j
■ ing is to regard life as an adven-!
■re, uml a tremendously loifg one at
■at.
■ "One of the curses of success in
Be must .be the effect it has on one’s
■uracter. Great man cannot help
Being, and learning the tricks of how j
B respond to adoration poured !
Bon them."
■"And,” said Bell, “it is a good tiling j
B have some revolutionaries in our I
Bdst; it takes the captain and some j
B the crew| out of their self-compiae-1
Bey- Therefore be revolutionary if I
Bu like."
■Professor Pell added a series of
Bont's” to those starting.
■“Potl't become engaged to be mar-
Brd" iii your last year.
W "Don’t' get married at 24.
Mjjpon’t have six children. (I’ro-
Mktr Bell has six children).
■ "Don’t get'into an old established
■inlly business.
B "Don’t ask advice if you have made
B your mind.
■ "Above all,” concluded the profes
■r> “remember that unless you hate
■omethlng fairly strongly it is very
■ificult to get a Start in life. Chris
lianity, if not wholly, ip partly u re
ligion of hHte.” i
I Men may be born with fortupes
|ready made, but character they have
to achieve.
POLLY AND HER PALS , ' AN EXAGGERATION! * ~ ~
pinner Stories
Full Pr gram.
The a&pirant to fame awheel heavi
ly-
“ Tomorrow I must go out and
build a few better mouse tr 11416,“ he
said.
“Next week, if time permit*, • I
must deliver the message to Garcia,
if I can find out where the bozo lives
and what the note should contain.
“In a few more weeks, when the
Weather permits, I must discover a
formula for the ounce of prevention,
so often desired, but never to be had
ih drug stores.
“Meanwhile, I’ll just get out my
) lines and do a little fishing?’
I Dangerous Ground.
I Mr. Rook w-as reading statistics
I in the newspaper.
! "In New; York a child is born
j every two minutes,’’ he announced.
“Good Heavens!” exclaimed his
wife in horror. “And we’re planning
to stay there two weeks!”
A Friend in Neel.
“Waal,” drawled Jake, keeping up
his share of the conversation in the
village grocery store, “I never lost
anything but once. It was a dollar
and a quarter. I found it nil but
thirty-fivo cents, and,l’d ’a’ found
that, too, if Shorty, here, hadn't ’a’
helped me look for it ”
O. K. in Practice.
"So you haven't proposed to your
girl yet, eh?” asked a friend. “The
trouble with you i« you’re self-coii
sc’ous."
“Nonsense!" retorted the bashful
suitor. “J’m coimcious of her. You
ought to hear my line when I’m
alone!" n,
Honors. ,
"I understand your son js one of
the leaders in his class nr Annapo
lis."
He sure is! Why, he got me five
tickets to the Army-Navy game!”
Half Pint For 75 Cants.
(By International News Service)
Macon, Ga., June B.—Moonshine
whiskey has been selling for 75 eents
a half-pint in the Central City Park
here since flic opening of the Salley
League baseball season, it was reveal
ed by police officials here.
H. N. Maddox was bound over to a
higher court on SSOO bond on a
charge of selliug coni whiskey ip half
pint bottles to 80 fans attending
baseball games here when he was ar
raigned, in I’ouice Court.
Mnddbx was caught, the arresting
officer testified, in the act of dealing 1
out half-pint bottles of liquor to cus-1
tomera behind the stand. |
This practice, police officials said, j
has’ been going on since the baseball ,
season opened.
"Cincinnati baseball sane are in- *
dined to hand Manager Jack Hen
dricks the full limit of credit for
hiKisting the Reds to t he top of the ,
heap. I
r IITTLE JULTWTWEfZEIT —- • -
Sble Ui — ' ' ‘- a.
ft - I O orlUon Flsl “ r ;
mt -but ose.*.*, “J . ■-- / r Cj }
-Sfj
[EmlittUTagsmif Moments
New York Dally Mirrw.
>—
A' Goad WitMss.
Havjng warr’ed a second tiule I told
1 my little boy Bot to tell anyone that
t my seeoml husband was not his real
father, fine day a lady came to the
i house, and during tjie'. conversation
, asked m p how Jong I was married. I
< told her seven years, when my little
son jumped up and said, "Ofi, mama
e is not married so very long, I remeiu
» her the day we were at tlie Judge’s
. bouse when she got married and he
1 said, “Honor and obey.”
r Travelling Comfort.
J rushed into the subd-gy the other'
morning and flopped dodn on a seat
Hgbt aside the door. Suddenly I j
* realised that I wa» sitting on some
thing which was softer than the or
-1 dinary seat, and looking up found
that I had sat on another passenger’s
* who had moved over on the sent
? before I bad a chance to sit down.
Heaven is not won by- a single
bound, but by taking one step at a
[ time. I
-c
Mg——i
- ■ -'**■ V.l, ■
tHE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
JACK JOHNSON’S COME-BACK |
r BARRED BY CALIFORNIA t
. Octavd Heavy we jgb.[ Not to Be Given ,
Chance to Fight in That SUte. •
. By THOMAS ti. CX RHAN. ,
International News Service Staff \
Correspondent (
Los Angeles, Cal., June S.—Jack (
Johnson. the only negro world's' i
heavyweight champion, will have to i
stage his incipient ring “come-back” <
somewhere outside of California.
7 lmt was definitely decided by the <
Califtr.nia State Boxing* Commission i
at its last monthly meeting here. t
Following a 15-rotind decision over <
Pat Lester, Ariona heivyweight, in the /
Nogales Arizona bull pen, Johnson 1
t fhund b.mself on the verge of physi
cal, pugilistic, and incidentally, finan- t
£lfil rehabilitation. In the fight whh (
Lester, Johnson showed, enough of his i
old time skill and ctinjping to raise i
the. hue and cry. He n«Ms, only endur
ed fifteen rounds, but he also took the «
decision, which is extremely commend- t
able under a passionate Mexican sun
at the intriguing age of 48. {
' And just to make the yodel more t
resonant, Lester, shortly thereafter, a
showed he wasn't the worst fighter in' t
Tucson, Ariz., by scoring a 5-round j
tsehiuc.il knockout over Tony Fuente,
the Mexican heavyweighf.
lasnged ately after (he Nogales inci
dent, Sourpcrn CMiTornia
promotel-, uiade applications for* per
mits to have Johnson demonstrate his
venerable wares in, Isis Angeles. Forc
ed to face the issue by these appli
cants. tlie State B6xing -Commi issiou I
auuoaim i that JolinooD was persona
non grata or even worse than that in
California.
“The action of the commission."
Captain Seth P. Strelinger, the clia:r
inau, explained, “was ]>rompted by
tjie conviction that Johnson has never
done _ the boxing game any lasting
good and lie’s too old now to learn
hOw.”
While he didn’t say so out loud,
the captain left a palpitating infer
ence that Johnson’s effect on the box
ing game, in fact, had been just the i
opposite. 1
“He’s 48 now,” Strelinger added,
“so we thought we’d let him come
back some place else.’’
Johnson has been an important
character in the history of California
boting. He nearly won his heavy
weight title in California. Tex Rick
ard and .Tack Gleason, the promoters,
planned to stage the Jeffries-J^nson
(jffbt in Ul t Praßeiseo or its environs.
Jeffries had already established a
nearby training camp when the State
interfered. The fight was then trans
ferred to Reno, just across the State
line.
One of Johnson's greatest fights,
and one of the tights that has helped
make r'ug tradition, was staged at
Colmo, near San Francisco. This
fight was the classic encounter be
tween Stanley Ketchel, "the Michigan
Assassin," and the brunet hero. John
son won on a knockout in the twelfth
round. Another stirring battle fought
by Johnson in this State was his ten
round no-decision affair with A1 Kauff
man at San Francisco. Johnson was
generally conceded to have had the
edge.
The veteran colored boxer is now
training for a tight in Tia Juana the
j Fourth of July against an opponent
whose nflme will soon be announced.
The matinee contest will dedicate the
New Tia Juana arena, which is now
(Aider construction. Twenty thous
and holiday patrons will be accommo
dated.
Artificial fogs arc being used in
Norway to prevent the freezing of
crops.
( state automobile
LICENSE PLATES
| Through courtesy of the Carolina Motor Club, we are
able to offer to automobile owners in Concord and vicin
ity the new
1926 Automobile license Plates
We are doing this as a convenience for our citizeffe,
i an “ make no charge for our services. '‘J T
See MR. McBRIDE at
REID MOTOR CO.
Concord’s FORD Dealer
Phone 220
0000oooo °OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOC^6ooOtiOOOOOOOOOOOObC
30 °°oooooooooooooooooaooooooacxxNXxioadooooooaDOfl
LEONARD CLEANABLE
REFRIGERATORS
,! , f ta nd for highest efficiency in retaining the purity of
, i foods and preserving their freshness. By actual test it
( ias been found that its system of refrigeration maintains
C a lower temperature than any other and the system of
1 circulation keeps the air always dry and sweet.
The improved draining system will not cleg and the !
! reniar , J ly sma ll quantity of ice consumed makes the 1
| P nce lower than they first seem. j
. A £? od refrigerator in itself means a big saving—sav- i
[mg in ice a saving in .fpqd—a saving in‘ health *
| 1 ' .* : ‘T 11 ‘ if !
' t he amount of food and ige wasted by a poor refriger- I
1 ator w, HsP a y f° r a good one in two seasons. Our refriger- !
ators are efficient. Why not have the best? Come in and 1
low them over before making your purchase. j
j BELL HARRIS FURNITURE CO.
aooooooooooooooo °oot>ooooooooocK»ofX^
| Big Shipment of Shoes!
Our Burlington Store Has Been
! Closed and Entire Stock Shipped
to Concord
i
i
j Included in this shipment are some of the most Beautiful I
Patterns of the Season, White Kids, Parchment Kids 8
intent and Satin Pumps and Straps x
$1.95 $2.95 $3.95 N 0,,,i ”s °™r $4 95 1
Big Lot of Ladies’ Slippers at jqq
Children’s Sandals at
Come Share in These Bargains
MARKSON SHOE STORE
FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAR 1
OPPOSITE NEW HOTEL I
PAGE SEVEN