Newspapers / The Albemarle Press (Albemarle, … / Nov. 8, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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f ACE 2 THE ALBEMARLE PRESS Thursday. November 8, 190. DECREES OF FASHION Scientists Explain Big Earthquakes Washington, Nov. 5. There is I with broad brim and oot't crown, about these November days in twisted rope fashion, with a tas- . It is natural that the calamity rri on ti a is.nii i - 11 lf 3 ! C1 ruin ,?.,., f in Japan should turn our T-ii" n now cnncfm wti h it j f ,.m. m.i i. . x , thoughts to the cause of earth " .,v-. ...... .-iiuiuuKii Miiau nais are ae- , ,. . in ti f.,., wnv mine members disn avmr fowns i f.;,i.w!K- ; fluakis ana to ine leusons wnj ;n;. ,f l,; m.,L-n i; ."Y .2" . "l " they are especially frequent in everv woman one meets like the V "j" V 7. '.7" certain parts of the world. maid sung of in the ".Mikado," a changes little from vcar ' r'arthmiakes are the result of rharminy Hsrht to see. U, ..k ....... if ! siaiden displacements or shifts For clothes do make a differ- in proportions and materials j !" tlie larth; ' 1,at C1'l.lst, for al ence. and Hie smart clothes of I suited to the moment. Mrs. Cool-1 li. ,';,Ial.'s to be s- 11 J., the season are distinctly new in id-e wears this shape almost ex-j m. comparison with the line and colorinjr and of a rich-IcUisivelv, while amomr its otlier : n,as,s r,t t,u a thm shell, ness and beaut v we have not sponsors arc Mrs. William k. easily ruptured or foldetl It is Castle, Jr.. who wears it in ! wieyiM inat me paciuai con purple velvet with a close dec-1 traction of the hot interior of oration of velvet and metal llow-,llie 1S responsd.le for ers in match in color, and Mrs. reost (,f hf. P'vaK su',s4'd Charles II. Drake, who has it in and displacements of the black with trimmimr of velvet j surtace. oi w ucn earinquako against the crown at one side, AMERICAN WOMAN BECOMING UGLY seen since pre-war days. No woman need be unbecom ingly dressed, for so varied are the models approved by the highest authority that no One style predominates, thus giving the plum)) and the slender; the young, the near-young, and even the quite mature equal rights before the law of fashion. Only on one point has Dame Fashion spoken with an em phasis that admits of no argu ment, and that is that sleeves Ostrich Has High Place. Ostrich plumes are back, some persons never altogether aban doned them, but in the coming are the results, .as tne core shrinks, the covering of rock and soil on which we live is con tinually wrinkling or slipping here and there. Generally the process is gradual and imper winter they will be restored to ajptible, but at times there are high place for all afternoon cracks or shiftings that are vio toilets. It is to be feared they iIf.nt. pn,rh in shake a consider- must be long. They may be wide may appear even in the morning lohip nnrt nf the crust and if or narrow, raglan or coat shape ;( as a surprising number of wcvtne conditions are right, to de they may even follow the mut-j men disregard the well-known 1 strov whatever of man's work is ton leg suggestion of twenty fact that ostrich-trimmed hatsjuilt thereon. Sometimes the years ago, or the more modern1 and velvet gowns should never : shock seems to be caused by a bell shape, but they must be be worn before mid-day. One 'c,ange in the weight or pressure long, which means to cover the of the most correct matrons of i0'f w different parts of the wrist, and if milady is so in-j the diplomatic corps says never ! crust, owing to the soil's having clined half the hand. j before 1 o'clock in the after-! cen Vemoved from the conti- With the long sleeve there is noon, unless at a wedding break-; ,H,nts an deposited in heavy a revival of the short glove, fast. 'sedimentary layers at the bot- which to women of limited dress! Mrs. William Phillips, wife of torn of certain deep, trough-like allowance is one of the things to the under-Secretary of State, is, areas in the sea. Some times too be thankful for. ! wearing one of the latest models carthqualies are volcanic in Skirts Varv in Inth. ii'1 a small hat trimmed in os- their origin and seem to follow The fashionable noonday wed-i tricli, the latter m three, pos-; violent internal explosions, caus dings, the afternoon visiting atibly four or five separate 'ed perhaps by water's reaching the White House and the one or I plumes of smoke gray. One: the hot interior of the earth, two afternoon receptions that j nods gracefully from the front' Whenever the crust of the have brought societv together i of the hat which fits the head ; t..irt, yields to the pressure that thus earlv show that the skirt 'closely with a narrow coronet 0ie m: anoti,el. 0f those forces may come to the instep or stop brim. A second small out urn eight inches higher up, all ac-j plume is poised at the right cording to the taste of the wear-j side against the crown and sev- er. Even Worth, who is first erai lau on uie oni.i in me uaeu choice Tojeka, Kans. The American woman is rapidly becoming ugly, Albert Edward Wiggan, biolog ist and publicist of New York, declared in an address prepared for delivery here before Kansas teachers. "Our beautiful women soon will cease to exist except in pic tures and statuary," Mr. Wig gam asserted. He based his conclusion on disparity between the birth rate among American women of the highest type and that among the low class im migrants. "On an average one child is born to every three of the grad uates of our leading colleges, said Mr. Wiggam, "but one low class broad-backed, flat chested, high necked, stupid, ugly immi grant woman, will in the same time produce three. By this process the American woman is rapidly becoming ugly. With a decline in beauty there always comes a decline in intelligence. Kvery decline in intelligence brings a decline in morals. The crime wave is no mystery to biologists. "There is only one way out. The old family ideals must be restored. The old American homestead with its good sized family of well born children must be rebuilt." Hi ) SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM everts it viekls along a "fault line"; that is, a line where the crust is thin or weak and where earlier cracks have still further the instability of the with those Washington I That hat is a claret colored vel- increased leaders who are considered the j vet matching a very clue trocK surface. Those fault lines are best gowned, is making evening! of the same tone. generally found along the shores frocks with skirts eight inches or more off the ground. Street gowns, either for morn ing or afternoon, are still short, according to the recently return ed travelers from Paris who purchased their winter ward robes abroad and propose dress ing according to French stand ards quite regardless of any po litical atmosphere which may develop from the exchange of notes between Lord Courzen and Secretary Hughes, or the visit of Lloyd George and Dame Margaret, ! of ocean or amomr islanir trroups THIS AUTO TAG STIRS j that is to sav, where the slope IT HOT HORNET NEST j of the foldings in the surface of the earth is the steepest and ! the influences that make for fur ther alterations are most active, e on the edges isin. One is Indian islands, Jefferson, Nov. 5. A comedy of errors, with governments as j tt'lJ f'T " principals, took place here ,e,at" J of the Pacific bl troversy to determine which is the most potent in these parts. Prohibition Officer Grant M. llarless was passing through the i Even nff. e-owns ariJ?H-f-feU! cent for verv vounV rirls. the Ford touring car, minus a Rcense latter still dancing in frocks seven or eight inches off the floor. The beaded gown for after roon or evening is handsomer than ever and in a whole range of new colors, as well as the al ways correct black, white or black and white TiT il. - 4-.. C U tie erson, i e county oi .imic, , , - . jrr. j 4i. j it ' i e ii ' another is in Japan and the and the government of the , .,, Af 0wuna I nited States entered into a con- , . , ,,i, j ; ilUI Ml W ell U lUVWUU .TYKIO lcl, OIIU o third is along the coast of Cali fornia. Mexico, Central and tag, when Town Constable Vance Woodie accosted him and arrest ed him for driving a car without a license tag. llarless replied that he had been arrested for the same thing in Winston-Salem and that he had showed the authorities of that city where they got off when they interfer- Miss Mabel Boardman, of Red ' red with a United States officer, ross fame, and Washington's! he tod Constable Woodie to most foremost maiden hostess. consider nimseii unuer ai i esi ioi is wearing a dinner gown of interfering with a prohibition black chifi'on, with its back al-S officer m the discharge ot his most solid in close patterned j duties. white bead embroidery, the; Woodie attempted to take beads being translucent and I'arless before Mayor Tucker, of s-trung on white thread. This West Jefferson, while llarless same embellishment crosses the Was insisting on his right to shoulders to form two shaped take Woodie before I'nited bands all the way to the hem in States- Commissioner W. II. front, with the line broken at, Dauguess, of Jefferson. In the the waist by a rosette of c!i if- measure of strength, the town fon, with a center of jet. The : of West Jefferson came out sec decolletage is square and the; end best. The United States eown has sleeves, lovely long Won. shawl-like sleeves of the chif-' Then, llarless drove hack South America. The fourth re gion is in the Mediterranean SfaTTfaly-" "anT Tnparticft1af Sicily are at the centre' of it. All the great earthquakes occur in one or another of those areas or else at the bottom of the sea, so far from land that we cannot observe them. Slight shocks may occur elsewhere, for there are other places where fault lines are to be found ; but those are the regions of the greatest danger. They are the countries where the slope from high mountains along the shore to very deep sea bottoms is rapid. Off the coast of Japan, of example, lies the Tuscarora Deep, the bottom of which is seven miles below the summit of Fujiyama. Along that steep folding the earth's surface the reeky slope has often cracked and "slipped, and it will often crack and slip in the future. There is little reason to appre hend serious earthquakes in the greater part of this country, or in France. Great Britain or fon, which fall to the floor, with , through Jefferson and the coun-j f.uaie z'one 0f p0me importance their pointed edges finished in ; ty of Ashe made the controversy j j'n California but the only other whiteheads ltween governments a triangle. 01ie 'in the United States lies Beaded Like a Bag. I Sheriff J. . Hampton, seeing al()n a verv 0jd fauit line called Mrs. William L. Crounse is 1 the car without a license tag, ac- ui,a f im'uni'nn fault ill at hfiTlfl wearing a ueaoen gown oi one costea iiaiiess ann aswea mm Make some brush dams in the gullies this fall and keep the fertile soil at home. Better still, prevent the gullies from forming by planting winter cover crops and by terracing, say extension workers of the State College. That dangerous cough stop it I before you have to talte more costly measures. Dr. Bell's combines just those medicines that up-to-date doc tors prescribe with thegood old-time remedy pine-tar honey. It speedily checks the cough, soothes the inflam mation, restores normal breathing. The taste is pleasant, tool -AII irujISistvge m&cy h- ' the genuine. DR. BELL'S Pine-Tar Honcv of the new red tones, a medium shade of fuschia, mounted on chiffon of the same tone, but so closely covered as to leave only a V-shaped piece of chiffon show ing between the surplice lines of the bodice. The front of the skirt shows a pattern of small flowers in harmonizing shades all of very fine beads. This gown, as one admiring friend remarked, as just like a beauti ful bead bag, with work enough on it for a hundred bags. Plain silk hosiery and slippers of gold brocade are details of this ultra smart dinner toilet. An afternoon gown showing the high art bead of embroidery of this season was worn last veek by Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh. This shows also the Paris edict of fur for every occasion. The gown is the straight line suited to the slender, graceful figure of its wearer and of very dark green cloth. The fur is a ten inch band of black fox, giving a slight flare to the hem, and above this is the bead embroid ery, a conventonalized design of green leaves and buds, the lat ter showing faint touches of pink and white. The twig on which the leaves grew also ap pear in natural coloring. I he design extends from the fur band to the hips, but in irregu lar line. The sleeves are long and close, with narrow finish of fur at the hand. Mrs. Walsh wore a round hat of black velvet, where his tag was. llarless seemed to respect the county more than he did the town of West Jefferson, so he politely re plied that he had a tag but did not display it when lie was on duty, under instructions from his sujierior officers. Winston Salem Journal. UNIVERSITY SWAMPS S. C. ON GRIDIRON Columbia, S. C, Nov. 5. One of the fastest struggles ever seen on a local gridiron the Uni versity of North Carolina fought their way to a clean cut victory of 13 to 0 over the University of South Carolina here Saturday The scoring was done in the second period. North Carolina made 20 first downs to none for the Gamecocks. South Carolina fought against overwhelming odds throughout the game. Early in the opening period the invaders ripped jag ged holes in the Gamecock line making three first downs in rapid succession. The Tar Heels threatened often to score but was not until they sprung a sur prise in the form of a fast line up after scrimmage that they scored, Bonner carrying the oval G7 yards for a touchdown but Devin missed the goal. about like a shepherd's crook from Massachusetts to Canada, northern New York, the Appa lachian region and the Carolinas. The Charleston earthquake of 1886 occurred at the lower end of that fault line. Youth's Companion. Service Station Draws Attention PLUS-VALUE RUGS You may not be able to fool all the people all the time, but a lot of people seem able to feel themselves all the time. Lipe and Lowder Pleased With Growing Patronage. . Much attention has been at tracted to Albemarle's new ser vice station, known as the Stanly Service Station, located in the point made by the inter section of the Concord and Oak boro roads on West Main street. The new business is owned and operated by Messrs. Ralph Lipe and J. E. Lowder, enter piising young men who are well and favorably known through' this section. The buildinjr is one of the most convenient and veil situated structures of its kind in town and is of a very attractive design. Messrs. Lipe and Lowder express themselves as much pleased with the re-1 pair and sales business that has been extended to them in their new venture and feel confident of a constantly growing patronage. Satisfactory Rugs must be pleasing in appearance and give long service. You may choose the design and color to meet your require ments from the many we are show ing, and we guaran tee you satisfaction with the service you receive from your purchase. Both domestic and foreign weaves from which to select, and sizes to fit 'most every room. We carry an aver age of 100 Rugs in stock to select from. 150 Rugs now in stock give a hand some variety for your inspection. P. J. Huneycutt & Company p A modern engine terminal, Southern Railway System. Making Good During this year of record-breaking railroad traffic, the Southern Rail way System has performed its service to the South without once issuing an embargo against any part of the system. The sixty thousand men and women who make up the organization are working night and day to keep the traffic moving. Operated by Southern men, under standing the transportation needs of the South, the Southern has the confidence of the people it serves. Its prosperity is inseparably bound up with that of the communities along its 8,300 miles of lines. It can prosper only as the South prospers. When the Southern meets the test of traffic congestion, it is because the men who operate this great railway system know that they are backed by the confidence and co operation of the millions of patrons they serve. Southern Railway System last year spent in the South $20,000,000 more than it received from the South. I Mil k to ihe SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH PRINTING THAT PLEASES-WE DO IT Four-Door Sedan $685 tw. fully equipped. Inside and out, the new Ford Four- soft brwn shades of the silk door Sedan shows improvements window curtains and the deep of far more than usual importance, broadcloth upholstery. It is lower and sturdier in appear- Dome light, door locks, window ance. New cowl, hood, radiator and regulators and handles, all finished apron add size and finish to the in nickel, complete a refinement front. Sun visor, and wide, well- you would expect only at a far finished aluminum doors with bar higher price handles perfect the design of the ... . jjoj Convenience, utility and economy have established Ford supremacy. The lasting lustre of the exterior The Four Door Sedan adds to finish is equalled in richness by the these factors greater Ford prestige. Thu car eon be obtained through the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan STANLY AUTO COMPANY Albemarle, N. C NORWOOD MOTOR COMPANY Norwood, N. C. CARS - TRUCKS - TRACTORS
The Albemarle Press (Albemarle, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1923, edition 1
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