]. sHERRILL, Editor and Publisher. \ :.!. ME XLVIII. m mm L101J! PUBLIC x Mi'e of Citizens Bank iu<{ Company Open \ hiic.—Hundreds In i-.ii Srtueiiire. DETAIL. OF 'OME IS COMPLETE ir re First Modern Bank hiriiHitg ir City, and It TRank With the Best ia the State r.sin :i! 1 parts of Cabarrus , -!k.»sii'.ii the Ik»r«er came to , ~ ‘telling to ho present at . :. iiitm of the now build < ’iti/.ons I‘a.nk and Trust ,x • • i,>iia-y of e/ijovable gath t 'oiiourd the opening of :i iiv. i sf tin* < 'iiizens Rank ! -ft < it y will always liavo' , |,j, • . :.t- |il;;cO. i.iany tlionsands of penph* r* m:u !i t lit* doors from tho until tho watchman T tho lights is a matter of During The early part ofj ; _ Wagoner at- 1 v ; " register and 1 n a record those from / v ■ i..un ( iy borders, hut owing . u tho hank on its handsome air! lho success it had nt i:s* I snking world. !. ■. liimihers of well wjshers ■ ,:!1 parts of the county came of 11 1 > lank, patrons of the . lil“ of the institution. It - , hcii.ig of home folks and . ... e meetings of friends who i I s. cn cadi other for many a ; o\emplitied as nothing else . : ■ day-in-and-day-out spirit ados the Citizens Rank and < . i. ll -aiiy’s hanking rooms—the Li; ■ ;! icnd'iness. Wagoner, the President. Mr. the Cashier, other officials ' and the entire staff .of s greeted the bank's hosts of : ;> nd were eager to show rheir . *• ' ’ ■ new home.” L u the evening a musical pro i V; 1 .*•» '•• -ieij.- ! ii* i il- were profusely decorated od -'ts of flowers. Tin* National i' j. . of New York, the Merch . i i.al Rank of Riehmond. the i; Rank and Trust Ctiiupany r,. the American Trust Com < ; aiiotte. * and many other . he-tiuutions and friends re i mo placing a large l»asket of s on the table in the directors' Tl ' . . ens Rank and Trust Com- F' s organized in the spring of ('has. R. Wagoner, who was ’> !'>• < ashier. and during these - i >cars it Las rendered most " ''L ati ! constructive service in k 'u-i tilding of Cabarrus County LL.ejis. Heading the list of * - v.' tit* late A.-Jones Yorke, - • - one «>f tin- leading forces in k ;:a. Remberton. P. F. !’■ - L. rtnbcrger. A. F. (lood-i \. Rattersoii, and Chas. B.' Betiding Siie. I'd upon which' the bank’s mi- been built was pur that purjjose by the officers ! n ; in ItHi'.l, and the splendid o'-afes the foresight, which l"tirtci n years ago in the • '*- 1 t the site; Bank Building. building is twenty-seven dth and one hundred and, in depth. It is,constructed ! limestone, concrete and general architectural ef hubding's front is unique , tlie most modern type, of, - nd trust buildings’so popular | r cities. W. H. Peeps, of ,l ;| ,. t F' , uas the architect who pro-j ( b sig n and general arrange- 1 ! 'be. building. The entire '(dimted on Page Five). THE CONCORD TIMES, j MAGNTF2CENT NEW BANKING HOUSE FOR ( OXFORD FORMALLY' OPENED LAST NIGHT V I New Home of The Citizens Rank and Trust Fompany S. S. BUTTONWOOD BURNING AT SEA ! All Norfolk Tugs With Fire i Fighting Apparatus Asked to Aid Her. Norfolk, |Ya., Feb. I.—Wll tubs hav ing lire lighting-equipment are being asked by naval authorities to go to the assistance of the Steamer Buttonwood, a lire in Lynnhaven Bonds since mid night last" night, and apparently des tined to heroine a total loss. The „ coast guard cutter Manning, which went to the assistance of the Buttonwood nr •’! a. in. today, reported at N o'clock that IlieLre theil was not under control and help was needed. The-steamer's crew, the Manning re pi >ried to tin* coast, guard division headquarters, had taken to the small boats several hours previously. There whereabouts of the Uo mem bers of the crew of the Buttonwood was not known this morning hut coast guards and naval officials here said they may have landed at some point along the shore from where they could nor communicate with their employers, j EXITED MINE WORKERS ASK FOR INJUNCTION To Keep Sheriff and Food Operators From Assaulting or Interfering With Men. (Mmrleston. W. Ya.. Feb. 1. —An in junction to prevent Slier iff Ih»u t'baf in of Logan t'ouufy and tlie coal op - era tors in that country from assault ing. or interfering with members ol the Failed Mine Workers of America was, asked cf tlie Failed States District Court here today. Counsel for the defendants immedi ately moved to dismiss the equity bill in which the injunction was requested on the ground that, the court had no jurisdiction and argument on this mo tion was set for February 1-tli. NO COAL SHIPMENTS FROM Rl HR DISTRICT People in l noccupied Territory of Ger many Can Get No Foal Now. Dusseldorf, Feb. I. Ip. m. — (By the Associated Press). —The order projiib it'iig tin* expfut of coal and coke from tire Ruhr to | unoccupied Germany li.*s heeii in force since, midnight. There, had b(*en no reaction from the Germans up t : ll early this afternoon. The French announced that, should Germany fail to come to terms the. in terdiction upon exports will be ex tended to steel, iron and other manu -1 factored articles now permitted to en ter Germany. Teachers of Mathematics to Meet. (’hapel Hill, X. trade commission was directed by the Senate today' to make a sweeping in vestig ititon inio all hrnnohes of the 'cotton industry, including productiton. marketing and mill operations. Tin*, inquiry, was provided for in a resolution by Senator Smith, demo crat, South Carolina, which tin* Sen ate adopted without debate. The Federal trade commission under the resolution would investigate the facts relating to “alleged corporate vio lations of the anti-trust laws with re spect to operations in cotton, includ ing conduct of cotton exchanges and operations upon such exchanges hv corporations, partnerships and indi viduals : tin* effect, of any, of such operations in future contract upon the price of spot cotton sold in interstate or foreign commerce, and the relation of such anti-trust law violations of the dew ind for cotton and tin* supply and methods of marketing it, in interstate and foreign commerce.” The inquiry was declared to be for the purpose of providing Congress with information to serve as a for such legislation as might be found nec essary to regulate the cotton industry. ONE SOLDIER KILLED. ANOTHER BADLY HI RT John Wise Dies From Injuries Re reived When Auto and Wagon Col lided. Florence, S. <\, Feb. 1. —John Wise, a soldier from Fort Bragg, X. was killed, and John Mitchell, another sol dier, was critically injured near here today in a collision between a wagon and an automobile in which they were riding. Three other soldiers from Camp j Bragg were in the car, but none were I seriously injured. j "Wise’s home address could not he ; obtained. The tongue of the wagon penetrated the right breast of Mitchell, I whose home is in Washington, X. (’. Physicians said lie may recover. New Furniture Factory for Lenoir. Lenoir, X. (\, Feb. 1. —The Star Fur j niture Company, capitalized at S2OO.- j (KM), of which $75,000 is paid in, lias! been granted a charter of incorpora- j ; tion by 4he secretary of staff*. The i j concern will manufacture furniture. | ! A. G. Jonas, C. L. Robbins and It. (’.I i Robbins, of Lenoir, are the principal incorporators. Dtttfch of David 11. Anderson. ; Charlotte, Feb. I.—David H. Ander ; son, for many years a leader in the j i business and religious life in Char-; ik.tte, d:*sd at his home here today.ofj pneumonia at tlie age of 6L. Mr. An-! derson who was born in Statesville, is ! i survived by his widow and two daugh i ters. , - Several Injured in A. F. L. Wreck Sumter, S. C., Feb. 1. —Several pas |si ngers were injured this morning j when the AP.qntic Coast Line passen- > i ger train No. 35, southbound, col ided j head-.;n with a freight tram at Pri- 1 vateer, nin: miles south of here. G. C. Hines*, of Florence, S. C., a : mail clerk was the most seriously in jured. Most of the other injured were negroes who sustained only bruises. I Presold thisilontp ! Resale at Public'Auction of the Carolina and Yadkin River Road Ordered hy Judge Stack. SALE TO BE HELD ON FEBRUARY 19TH An Upset Price of SIOO,OOO Was Set and the Road Will Be Discontinued Until the Date of Sale. Greensboro. N. Feb. I.—Resale at public auction of the Carolina & Yadkin River Railroad operating be tween High Point and High Rock, a i distance of 12 miles, on Monday, Feb Jruary Ibtli. was ordered here today b.\ •Jmlge A. M. Stack in Superior Court. I An upset price of $100,(NM) was ;;e: (and the Judge further ordered tha? t< I save creditors of the line a loss of S2OU ! per d;iy now being sustained by oper jating the road. Unit service he discon j tinned over it until after the sale. ! The hearing, attended h.w attorney,** .| representing unseeureter of the Abbey have tlie final and deei ■ sive voice in this matter. They could, if they desired, even prevent-any royal weddingN from taking place there, so absolute in their pojver and control of the famous shrine. But, on the other hand, there are certain people whom neither Dearn or 'Chapter would ove.r oppose if they de sired to he married at Westminster. The first of these is any member of the royal family. But only very sel dom indeed have 4he.se demanded the right of marriage there. The last notable case, as will he remembered, was that of Princess Mary and Ijord Lascelles. And in 1010 Westmin ster was the scene of the marriage of Princess Patricia of Connaught to Com mander Ramsay, R. N. Before that wedding hundreds of years, had elapsed since a royalty was married in the Ab bey. x It may he said with fair truth that any clergyman connected with the Ab bey would h ave the right to dt mand thiil his .wedding should he celebrated there, and that this claim would bo admitted to the Abbey authorities. One notable cleric whose* wedding took place whilst In 1 , was a member of the Chapter was the present Bishop -of Durham, then Canon Hensley Henson, j His marriage was celebrated at the j High Altar of the Abbey, as the Duke j of York’s will be.. The next class of persons who have probably good claim to be wedded at Westminster belong to families who have certain prescriptive rights, of ex tremely ancient standing, with the Ab bey, as regards marriage, christening and burial. The families of the Dukes of Northumberland and the Marquises of Salisbury, together with a few other old peerages, come in here. This is the reason why a few years ago Lady Beatrice Gore, who was a daughter of Lord Salisbury, asked leave to be in the Abbey, and her desire was granted. f Lastly, there is another section of the community which lias the right to claim tin' use of the Abbey for a wed ding, if this is celebrated within a certain period. These are the "King’s Scholars” of Westminster School. Os course, nowadays no. l/oy would be allowed to retain his scholarship there if lie marries during his term at the school, which ends, roughly, when lie. is nineteen years of age. But in past centuries the married scholar was not entirely unknown in the great FrMglsh schools. \ The Westminster "Scholars” are, by royal enactment, actully members of the Chapter of the Abbey, and are duly admitted as such at ail annual service held by the Dean after each new ele/*- titon. Owing to this fact, they are believed by certain legal authorities j to be able to demand successfully the right of being married in the Abbey, just as. should they die whilst Schol ars, they would have sofiie claim to he. buried in its precincts. • Jr is noteworthy that, though no ac tual scholar ever could marry nowa days, nevertheless, when "old boys” do | ask to be allowed the privilege, it is j seldom denied them, especially if they have resided within the Abbey pre cincts, apart from their actual resi- J deuce in college. •A notable case in point was that of tlie son of a former headmaster of Westminster School, and formerly a Scholar, who was wedded in the Ab bey a few years back in King Henry Yll’s Chapel. ( Program for City Union of Epworth Leaguers. The monthly meeting of Epworth Leaguers' will be held sit Mt. Olivet Church on the Kannapolis road tomor row (Friday) .night at 7:45 o'clock. The following is the program in out line: Music—ML Olivet choir. Song by congregation: Psalm 15, led by ltev. R. F. Mock,'of Haihnony. l’rayer led by Rev. W. A. Rollins, of Mt. Olivet. Music —West ford clioir. Song by congregation. Music —Solo by Mr. Archie Earn hardt, of Forest Hill. Devotional Topic: "How to Win Oth ers to Christ.” (a) Miss Pearl Coch rane, Harmony. (b) Miss Myrtle Fink. Epworth. Music Epworth Quartet. (c) President of chapter, Kannapolis. (d) Mrs. W. L. Linker, Forest Hill. -Music —Mt. Olivet choir. Song by congregation. Prayer—Rev. J. C. Umberger, West !ford. J. FRANK ARMSTRONG, Chairman^ $11,000,000 Spent For Celer-* in *22. j Chicago, Jan. 31. —About 10 cents; apiece for celery for every person ml , the United States, adult and inrdnt, was spent in 1922, at wholesale prices. These wholesale figures for the iy22 celery crop, $14,000,000, were «n --nounced today by the burrau of agri-. cu.tural economics of the United States department of agriculture. The ‘report said the popularity of. I celery has increased steadily of recent j ; years. The southern celery movement, for j the next year is increasing this week, i She Rose From News Girl to Assist- 1 ant City Attorneyship. I San Francisco, Jan. 31. —Mrs. Misery ; ! Rantz Schwab, who 30 years ajgo i visualized America as* “the promised j land,” upon her arrival here from I Russia as an immigrant, was sworn in as the “first woman,to serve in the j city attorney’s office” today. From ! news girl, sales girl, factory worker and stenographer, to lawyer, 13 The road which has Mrs. Schwab to the assistant attorneyship. WORK OF THE STATE' - —.MURE TODAY i {Bowie Bill, Calling for Rail road Survey in ' Lost Prov inces,” Introduced in the House Today. BROUGHTON BILL ALSO PRESENTED The Ship Line Bill Will Be Taken Up Next Wednes day in the Senate, Under Agreement Made. Raleigh. Fob. 1 (By the Associated Press). —The Bowie bill to- provide a trunk line railroad through Watauga, Aslie and Alleghany Counties after investigation by a special commission, find carrying an appropriation for en gineering surveys, was introduced in j the House today and the Brought j years old was introduced in .the Sen i ate by Senator L. R. Yarser, and two j measures sponsored by the American ' Legion to "prevent the commerciali zation of the emblem” of the Legion, and the wearing of it by non-members and to provide for the burial of indi gent veterans of the World War, were ! introduced by Senator Emmett Bel lamy, of New Hanover, i Senator A. F. Sams, of Forsyth, to day ipwodneod a bill to amend the -e, [state constitution limiting the amount * of indebtedness of cities, towns, coun ties, school districts and other politi cal sulKlivisionh of the state. . The measure provides for the submission of the proposed amendment to the peo } pie at the next general election. Good Reads Bill Passed. Raleigh, Feb. L—The general road law carrying provisions for $15,000,- 000 Ijp ponds for continuation of the state highway const met iton program, and increasing the tax on motor fuel from one cent, to three cents a gallon, | passed its third rending in ths Senate j today and becomes a law when signed jby the Lieutenant Governor and the I Speaker of the House. Col. Watts Enters Hospital Suffering of Nervofus Shock. Statesville, Jan. 31. —Colonel A. D. Watts, who resigned as commissioner of revenue late yesterday after a warrant had been issued by Raleigh police charging him with a statutory offense, arrived in Statesville yester day afternoon and is now a patient at a local sanitarium. His physician j stated that Colonel W(atts is suffer ing from nervous shock and a physi cal ailment of long standing. Just a Little Jog. New York, Jan. 2N. —Another anec dote. was added to the "Me and Al” se ries last night by Charles M. Schwab, the steel mail. He was speaking be fore. Haley Fiske, president of the Methoropiitnn Life Insurance Com- • pany: 200 of his district managers and Herbert Hoover, secretary of com merce. Governor Alfred E. Smith also was there. "Al and J used to work at No. 25 Broadway, where all the. great‘men work,” said the narrator. "One day —not too Jimmy years ago—l said, ‘Gov., how would you like to walk dovfn to m.v house and have a little drink ?’ / " ‘Why walk Charley?’ he said. "Let’s run.* ” Schwabs’ home was five miles away —up in the section bordering River-, side Driye, known to the wealthy in habitants thereof as "Charley Schwab's back yard.” ' New Ice Cream, Company at Durham. Durham, N. C., Feb. i.—The Dur ham lee Cream Company, of this city, has been granted a charter of incor poration by the secretary of state. The concern lias a capital, stock of SIOO,- 000.— It will manufacture ice cream. The incorporators are James H. Baer/ J. G. Baldwin and 11. L. Baer. Mr. John Simpson will conduct ser ; 5 ices at Center Methodist Church In I No. 11 township next Sunday after -1 noon at three o’clock. Mr. Simpson / ( will be accompanied by the memtiers of the Westford choir who will conduct , the singing at the service. The condition of Miss Mary Parnell, | who has been ill for several days at j her home on East Depot street, is re ported today as unchanged. ! The basketball team of the local Y will on Thursday night play the var sity quintet from Davidson College. This promises to he an extra good game. NO. 60.