fel. wl Os Contestants In H Subscription Campaign I Soon To Be Published lf«r! in Enter This j, Necessary Hv,>m '•aim* He ■dec In- H\tME WANTS 1 ■be IN THE list ■ fj| f Tribune and ■ the First An ■...nu'iit <>!' the Can- Date. H itii- list H * BBSs . r Trib T might |B ; while to BB uh T not H|| v, aimportant WM .. ■ ing I>af i p!«‘ of SB. their SB . will ap |H with .. |h‘(p|>i<> <>f HR .-ry inimo r.-! tain fav ■l :i he there H support . |B '.owing from ■ the slow R^Rwhich |B ; .- auto of a few BH , ieed ;'.ie re- H fact that iHici ' n-swi :■•!• any live ; • or a 89.. ■ f dollars in i-t Torts. It !ui< little es- .v- exists, and : H until many! H ... *iavt* had in h ark and .. i and from i\ thi' part of the state Br.r they wiM not allow any ~ to 1-" Legging for B!•• ••laitu them. There are j n this cam !u>‘d!;* rliar the ones hefnre the campaign any hionuntum. will lie Hi p >'i ti < m in Haim their t prize*. Remember ■' ail tin- way from a few a week to l>e earned B : ii:t > :hi' great offer ■ carry .-partment offices at B 1 Savings liank ■ ""Vi! trun P a. in. until H 'W'vire To candidates ■ • 'vorkers. There is H l ' rre-i in acipiainting ■ ho- iletai;- of tliir. offer ■": Jn- on t'.ic fence as to B"- ' tap eainpaign, do ■ at h-ast finding ■ 1 1 and Times for ■ men* nf the names ■tsdrlat'-. re that date. ■nt Privemion Campaign. B 17.- i/P)—X stahe ■ prevent i.,n campaign. Monday hy the t'aro- B’‘ '‘"l'- >o '•"ipinue through- B,' a> co-operation of ■* A ‘o'-rn civic, ciimmercial HR M organizations, tinder ■' n lit- rannicipa! recrea- B I! 1 !-'r‘; f,|I h'i ' oinmission. f k here ir> the first se- B ain "'l -°ff.-rt in North Caro- B, ’ lb ' vn ’he accident toll ■ o. —.titiii ,ii America last 1 ■ ’*• Matthews. ■ a ' '-Ment prevention of the H t“livered a number of ■ - 'inoted I'iiited States H :irs disclosing t’aat Bt"* : '« nf ‘ Xt ’Mnington 1 H rwi id-nt per 1.000 By J[ r - -dtt’tlie.\ys said, there Bjs. ’ a utoinohiles in the Boft-' V ’ !U ‘" ,!i ‘ s y ( ' ar there B; t t !iU!l T7.olker, Jr., chair- Bfe-n . ,!' U . 1 " 11 Ul ‘d playground 1 d’ Wood, execu- B s'..',,"'• al ' a f**Ty week H ; literature was H W( re billed, taks B at,,] ; ti'iimrm 1 plants, the H "'"ti Hubs, safety H ‘ : "d- am! the police B* Main " f 1,1 Jay walking” ■ N 1 street. Bh't- I .' *“ ’""l ia red and fur- B J f club. B kri Bi:. s. M . laut Tomorrow. B s h .„j ! ■ ( /P) —The an- BN,;;""" 1 ’he state pris- Bjo: i'_ ,! " lin g June 30 will B». ifJv a ■ ma,l “ Rtiblie before BS‘ri J! i l, " unW(l by State B Ur hain today. B fa; uoiis museums in B Several ' bu-Re mounted H centuries old. THE CONCORD TIMES $2.00 a Year, Strictly in Advance. Poisons’ Snakes T- j .i? jßßsj Julius Jermy. of San Antonio, Tex., is deadly poison to the most, poisonous snakes. lie has been bit;- ! ten by 52 poisonous snakes in the 1 last 20 years and every one of them has died in agony as a result. Jw--' : believes that his nas become so poisoned from 20 years work with snakes that it now quickly poisons any reptile that bites him. Despite this, he always has been in perfect o health. - . 1 -.. V.. 1 I COMMUNITY ADVERTISING * A New Type About to Be Undertaken By Jacksonville. Jacksonville, Sept. 17. —A new type of community advertising is about to j be undertaken by the city of Jackson- J ville, Fla., according to announcement just made. The campaign is to cover a period j of tfiree years and is to cost $300.- 000. This fund was raised early | this year by a group of citizens and i business men who more than a year ago formed themselves into an organi- | zation known as the “Believers in Jacksonville.” The Jacksonville campaign marks the beginning of a new era in Flori da advertising, in that it is the first of the type designed to stimulate very phase of Florida community . life. Earlier advertising campaigns by Florida cities and towns have been directed chiefly at the further develop ment of the resorts and playgrounds of Florida. Jacksonville's campaign is to attract not only the pleasure seeker and the real estate investor, but also to draw new manufacturing plants, to stimulate and further de velop the foreign and coastwise com merce of the i>ort of Jacksonville to develop to the fullest the agricul- ; tural advantages of Duval county. The campaign is the outgrowth of a local advertising project carried out by the "Believers in _ Jacksonville” last year. This latter project told to the populace of Jacksonville and sur rounding territory, through a series of advertisements in the Jacksonville newspapers and later in pamphlet form, the first complete etory of the advantages and facilities of Jackson ville for industrial, commercial and playground development and for new homeseekers. The conclusion of this campaign brought a demand from the people of Jacksonville that thte whole story be told to the outside world through the medium of a national ad vertising campaign. Smothers to Death in a Pile of Cot ton. Monroe, Sept. 16— Borraine Rich ardson. four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.* J. C. Richardson, of Buford township, was smothered to death in a pile of cotton last Satin day morning. She had said that she was sleepy and had lain down acioss the bed. but she deckled that she didn’t like it there so. she walked over into the cotton room and lay down oiii the pile of cotton. No at tention was paid to the child. M hen dinner was ready and ehe was callet she aid not come. This alarmed the parents and they began* looking tor her. The lifeless body was found in the cotton with her face buried in a hole that had been made in the cotton by the other children while playing. Agree on New Ambassa Lancaster and are guaranteed. Don’t put your valuable papers in a pigeon-hole. Go to the Cabarrus Saviqgs Bank and put them where they will be absolutely safe. was standing open, and across the hall, and was found lying in the open door of another room. Milk vessels in the dining room, which adjoined the room in which Mrs. Broauaway was sleeping, were broken and possibly more than half the dishes wore broken by the jar. Not only was a large hole blown through the floor under Airs. Broadaway’s bed. but the overhead ceiling was blown full of holes by flying particles. The con tents of the bed mattress were strewn all over the loom, with particles sticking to the overhead ceiling. The. surprise of all was that either Mrs. Broadaway or the four-weeks, infant sleeping with her when the explosion occurred escaped alive. Os course, they were both badly shock ed and it was inecessary to bandage the head of the baby to save it from permanent injury from the effect of the severe jar. Remembers Nothing. Airs. Broadaway said that she was thoroughly satisfied -that her son was the man who dynamited her home. She said he was mad at her because she would not deed the home to him and that he had made threats that he would either dynamite or burn the house. She said she knew nothing about the shock until her son-in-law, James AlcLester, s eeping in the house at the time, and a boarder, P. L. Alaberry, aroused her some time after the explosion occurred. She said she did not know when the ex plosion went off. Sleeping in the house at the time were also the wives of AlcLester and Alaberry. Mr. Alaberry said that the force of the explosion threw him out of bed and into the middle of the room on the floor. AlcLester would also have been blown out of bed but for the fact that he struck the wall. All those in the house were more or less addled by the force of the jar. Hundreds of people visited the scene during the morning hours to day. and all who *nw the wreck were horrified at the evident deliberate at tempt to kill Air". Broadaway. The man who is in jail charged with the crime, it is said, knew just where the head of the bed .was located, and Afrs. Broadaway believes that that accounts for the explosion having occurred just at the point where it did. J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher Fate Os Unification Will Be Kn~d.S° on Jail? Honeymoon ' nr ’ : ? ***■>'■' Mlmmlm ■ ■ : JggggfiraH ■MB mmm 189 H i i) } HFC ijj ■Fb 5 h 51: —-w The Iron bars of prison couldn'i stop the romance of Mr and Mrs) CSiarles Fann. While in jail at Potosi, Mo., awaiting trial on liquo/ charges, they tell in love and werd married. The judge sent them to thd state penitentiary at Jefferson City to spend their honeymoon in separate cellst They will see each other foi» the first time since their sentenced during Christmas week. SAKLATVALA NOT TO ENTER THE STATES Sec. Kellogg Decides Not to Admit the Communist Members of the British House of Commons. Washington, Sept. 17. — (A) —The American government has thrown up the bars against Shahurji Saklatvala. communist member of the British House of Commons, who sought to visit the United States as a British delegate to the inter-parliamentary union to convene here next month. Because of Saklatvala’s informatory and revolutionary speeches in parlia ment and elsewhere. Secretary Kel logg has ordered revoked the immigra tion law, the passport vise which has already been granted him at London. “I do not believe in curbing free speech, nor do I believe in making this country the stamping ground for ev ery revolutionary agitator of other countries,” Secretary Kellogg declared in announcing the decision to bar the member from American shores. Seaboard Will Move Offices to Savan nah. Norfolk, Va., Sept. 16.—Tempor ary removal of the operating depart ment of the general office of the Sea board Air Line railway company from Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va.. to Savannah. Ga., was announced here this afternoon by M. H. Cahill, vice < p r(ls >fi ent i’ l charge of opera tions. Mr. Cahill will head the first con tingent to move next week, and other sub-departments will go to | their ew headquarters just as soon as it can be arranged. Discharged for Noel’s Escape. Newark. N. J., Sept. 17. — UP) —Dr. John M. Thompson, senior resident physician at Overbrook Hospital, was dieetoarged today by the Essex county board of freeholders, who had held him responsible for the escape of Har rison Noel, confessed double murder and kidnapper. Dr. Thompson had refused to resign and had threatened suit in connection with (he board's findings. At Conference of itteniu . dist Episcopal Church, South, Fate of Proposal May Be Decided. VOTING IS CLOSE AT THE PRESENT Various Conferences in the South Already Have Taken Action on the Pro posed Merger. Nashville, Tenn.. Sept. 17. — (A) — The fifteenth conference of tlie Meth odist Episcopal Church. South, which meets in October with the Ilolston and Louisville conference which con vene September 30th, will largely de termine the success or failure of the ' pending plan of Methodist unification. With the adjournment of the Mis souri conference September 14th the vote on unification stood 211 in favor. 370 against the measure, the Missouri conference polled the largest vote of any conference which has met to date, voting 196 to 14-in favor of unifica tion. The Holston and Louisville con ferences are as large if not larger than the Missouri, but the issues in these conferences are more sharply drawn. The Holston is the first of Bishop Edwin Mouzon's conferences to con vene. The result in the Tennessee and Memphis, the other two confer ences over which the'unification lead er had jurisdiction, is said to be ex tremely doubtful. In the Kentucky conference which met recently the merger plan was lost by one vote, the poll being 87 for. and 88 against. Bishop V. W. Darlington, one of the 5 minority j bishops opposed the plan, is president of the two conferences in Kentucky. The Western North Carolina con ference convenes at Statesville Octo ber 14th. Approves Unification. Flint, Mich., Sept. 17.—OP)—The Detroit conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church today voted 229 to two for. unification with t’he Metho dist Spiscopal Church, South. Ad mission of laymen to the future ses sions also was approved. COWPUNSHER BECOMES PEER Earl es Portsmouth and Family Only - Living 95m£b£>.& ftT Sh- rtaac Newton. London, Sept. 17. —The death ol the Earl of Portsmouth and the succession to the title of his younger brother, Oliver Henry Wallop, who for many years has resided in Wyoming, have arou/sed ca-aderab'.e discussion in England, as the family is one of the most ancient in the kingdom, having settled in- Hamp shire long before the Norman con quest. Also of interest is the fact that th e new Earl and his family are the only living descendants of Sir Isaac Newton, whose niece was mar ried to a son of the first Earl of Portsmouth. j The reports that the new Earl, ! soon after taking up his residence in ! Cody, Wyo., back in 1906, has taken the oath of allegiance to the States and at the same time renounced his I rights to the earldom of Portsmouth, ; are more interesting than important. The fact that the Hon. Oliver is leaving Wyoming and coming over to take pos-ession of the title and estates of his deceased brother snows I that lie is wise to the law covering such cases. While he may have be come a citizen of the United States, as stated, he could not under any circumstances renounce lik* rights to the earldom. Under the English law ,he has no legal power to make such renunciation of his inheritance of a peerage, so that with the death of his brother he becomes Earl of Ports mouth, Viscount Lymiington and Lord Wallop, whether he likes it or not. But as an American citizen he will not be permitted to take his seat in the House of Lords until he has taken steps to recover his Eng lish citizenship. With his new titles the one-time Wyoming cowboy will come into possession of a large fortune. The late Earl was an exceedingly able business man. His own income amounted to a half million dollars or so a year and in addition his wife poH-csxsed a person fortune of some $15,000,000. PRESIDENT’S AIRCRAFT BOARD ORGANIZED Dwight W. Morrow ,of New Ycrk, Is Named Chairman of Board. AVashington. Sept. 17. — UP) —The special board appointed by President Coolidge to inquire into the aircraft situation organized today with the se lection of Dwight W. Morrow, New York, financier, as chairman. Holding its first meeting at the White House, all nine members of t'.ie board conferred with the President, who presented briefly his views. Af ter nearly two hours of discussion be hind do«ed doors, the board recessed for a luncheon engagement with the President and arranged to meet later in the day. In a statement issued after the morning conference Mr. Morrow said further announcement would be made after the board had an opportunity to discuss file s*»ope of its work and had adopted definite plans for conducting the investigation. The pre-ent year is of wpecial. in terest to printers and booklovers, hs it marks the four hundredth anni versary of the first book printed in the English language. PLANS EOR FUNDING FRANCE'S DEBT TO BE OUTLINED SOON Conferences Will Be Start ed in Capital One Week From Today After the French Officials Arrive. ~ . - MEET 'FRENCHMEN IN NEW YORK CITY Plans for Meeting Thurs day Will Give the French One Eentire Day After Arrival to Perfect Plans. Washington. Sept. 17. —( A ) —Nego» tiations for the funding of France’* $4,000,000,000 debt to , the United States will begin here one week from today. Acting Secretary Winston of the Treasury, the Secretary of the Amer ican debt commission, issued a call to day for a meeting of the American commission at 10 o'clock next Thurs day morning, by which time the French mission headed by Finance Minister Caillaux will have arrived j in Washington. The President has asked Mr. Win ston and Myron T. Herrick, Ameri can Ambassador to France, to meet the French mission in New York. French Ambassador Daeschner also will be there. Plans contemplate an immediate trip from New York to Washington and this will permit the French dele gation to haxe next Wednesday to prepare for the formal meeting the next day, Meantime Treasury expertH and members of the American commis sion are gathering all data having a bearing on the French economic and physical position. The Treasury now has 10 volumes representing individual and unofficial studies bearing on the French capacity to pay. CATAWBA COLLEGE OPENS UNDER BRIGHT AUSPICES College Moved FYom Newton to Salis bury After Having Established a Name For Itself. Salisbury. Sept. 16.—With a prac tical and inspirational address by Su perintendent Arch Allen, of Raleigh, and words -ffrnn locaT o?^ ganizations, Catawba College reopened in the new buildings here last night wirti mos promising proepects. Some thing like 125 students were enrolled during Monday and Tuesday, more than a hundred in the freshman class, and President Elmer R. Hoke is de lighted with prospects. The college is down to work today with a full i faculty. Catawba moved here from New i ton. where it had a long and helpful career and established a name for itself. Coming to the new site, it ie appealing for larger support, and with modern buildings and an endowment, it is to be a college of the Reformed Church. Dr. Allen gave a wonderful vi«io nos what a college can do for the student. Big Piano and Piano-Player Sale at Kidd-Frix Co. The Kidd-Frix Co. is going to make extensive alterations in their store, and in order to move their stock of new’ and exchanged pianos, players, grands and phonographs, will cut the price to them quick. Many famous makes of pianos and players are in cluded in this sale. You can get iu this sale a brand new guaranteed 88- note played piano for $287. A de posit of $lO gets any piano, with $2 weekly payments. Read the big ad. in today’s paper for full particulars. School at China Grove Officially Dedicated. Salisbury, Sept. 16. —The new school building at China Grove was dedicated yesterday with appropriate exercises. Dr. George Howard made an address and the building was formally accepted for the county beard by Chairman J. M. Something like 400 pupils were present. With the high school stu dents at Farm Life school Tuesday was a red letter day educatioaially in Rowan county. Report of Accident Discounted. Asheville, Sept. 17. — UP)—lnvesti gating authorities here discounted re ports circulated early today that a I mountain highway motor bus en route from Asheville to Johnson City, Tenn., had overturned and killed seven : passengers. Newspaper men rushed i to the reported scene, returned an i able to find trace cf any accident. November 13th will be the fiftieth anniversary of the first Yale-Harvard I football game, which was played at ! New Haven on that date m 1875. SAT’S BEAR SAYS: Fair tonight and Friday, not mueh change in temperature. Gentle to moderate north winds. NO. 21