Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Dec. 22, 1927, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX I__;— ■ iP^prangmgmnqnnmnnnnaaannnnaannnE2aaGaßS2aaEg3ai3E2gs3ngnnnagnaaßgaganaE2Ennßßgßßo^t iFINAL REDUCTIONS ON ALL WINTER APPARREL ypCifTO COATS «*» DRESSES MN^FpjF IyWLJIyUY' GREATLY REDUCED Lll !\JLI<.I \ * —' Our l ar £ e complete line of winter coats Lor needs. Each coat and dress is of the new- / '■ ■ \\ m%r\ f 8.4 Si and dresses is to go on sale at greatly reduced est styles, newest colors. See Belk s large dis- Mqjk ,pr j\ \\\ 1 'Tiilpli prices. Just in time for Christmas wear comes play of coats and dresses before you buy. °PP °f saving money on your win- Coats and dresses reduced to j| T $2 95 $3 ' 95 $4 ' 95 $6,95 88,95 $14 ‘ 95 $19 ’ 95 bl °° m ® s - ted ® | VEST^ 5 Concord's Largest Department Store Concord’s Largest Department Sinn Hnnnng^nnnnnnnpiFgiryinnfEinETinrinpmnngiringiEggnnnaK^namngHaosiagaagQaQaeapnnaßgaannnnE3nnnnnEH3aߣ^ao?^ostS3 STEEL TOMB THAT HOLDS SUBMARINE CREW DEATH PRISONERS _ __ . - Br-S 1 1 * '' " '-vt I ' Ji”t»oocbo~I ' ORP£d .° <3»om ; \ 'Damaseo I'AttEA / 1 Engine Moron* I IT<TUBE°1 T< TUBE° ij WHERE SIX MEM SATTEftYV / OOOM ROOM Roo, l' fpr —"‘1 ARE impi«isonep «*?« - N :! l y • .1 his photograph of the' S-4 and diagrammed phantom view their gallant fight for life while rescue** fliif i>fiS 9p ofrts interior shows not only the damaged area but the tor- whipped seas and lost. it? room, neat the bow, where six members <4 the erejK wM «rtw« * —<*-- ■- r : TOWING PONTOONS TO RAISE SUNKEN S-4 :i ,n r ■ ■ »• Ilil'l^S'^fi^ill 11 'l' This photo show* the typ® of pontoons used by the • is to winy pontoons through Caps Cod to pcenel Navy in Its attempts to haul ths ill-fated submarine I of S-4 from th® muddy depths off Cape Cod. Nawy heat • a. . —.an-ji - •■■ * STATE HAS INCREASED REQUIREMENTS FOR BAR Professor Albert Coates Calls Atten tion to Resolutions Requesting Re vised Requirements. Chapel Hill. N. C„ Dee. 22. —How * f North Carolina lias raised its en trance requirements for the bar in the past and claims of higher stand -1 ards for the future, are told in in teresting fashion in an article by Prof. Albert Coates in the current •number of the North Carolina Law Review, which is just off the press and which, incidentally, is the big gest and best number yet put out, i comprising 120 pages. Professor Coates takes for his theme the resolution adopted by the North Carolina Bar Association at its last annual convention, which resolution requested the Supreme Court “to review and revise the re quirements for study for admission to the bar in accordance with the stand ards prevailing in other advancing states, and in accordance with edu cational standards prevailing in oth er professions and occupations, ad mission to which is regulated by stat utory provision.” Tracing the evolution of the move ment toward higher standards, Pro fessor Coates says that “between the ! publication of Locke’s Constitution for the Carolinas in 1069. denying to lawyers the right to make a living i out of the practice of law, and the publication of a list of 182 appli i cants for admission to the North Carolina Bar at the August term in 1927, there is to be found the story of North Carolina’s legal tradition. “That story,” lie points out, “chart .the stages in the growth of the legal profession from a day when lawyers were prohibited to a day when law- The concord times concord, n c i yers are required—from a day of solated practitioners to a day of an organized bar—-from a day when there were no requisites for admis sion to the legal profession except the arbitrary will of a royal gover nor, to a day when the applicant must prove lus character and h;s-com letenev to the satisfaetion of a dem ocrats* judge. Throughout flic storj runs the ever rising murmur of the bar against practices bringing the profession into disreputi—a murmur finding expression in increasingly in ■dstent calls for higher standards of fitness for tin* practice of the law. “First, in 17”»;i the .lawyers are found protesting to his “Majesty’s Honorable Counsel" against the ad mission to the bar of “persons not properly qualified for that business, on no other recommendation, capacity or ability than that of being obse quious tools of a bad administration’; and in the laws of 17<>0 is found the answer to the protest. “Again in INS!) there is a growing sentiment among the lawyers that the prevailing requirements are insuffi cient to equip an applicant for the proper practice of the law; and in the same year in the Rules of the Supreme Court is found the answer to the sentiment : each applicant must have read law for twelve months at least. Again in 1900 this sentiment comes to a head in a two day discussion on the floor of the newly organized North Carolina Bar Association, in a call to the Supreme Court to raise the standards of the bar; and in 1901 in the Rules of the Supreme Court is found the! ans wer: ‘Each applicant must have read law for two years at leastJ "In 1927 the same spirit that for a century and three-quarters[ had stirred the leaders of the bar to press on for higher standards, found ex pression in th® resolutions adopted in a regular meeting of the North Carolina Bur association at Pine- Heroic Rescuer* f: •• - ; g Gs * $ iMpf ■ | ( ' Thomas Eadie (upper), who firs* reached the sunken S-4, and W. J. Carr (lower), who determined that some of the crew still lived, ar% putting every ounce of effort int<# «*cJsing the S-4. ftrterrmtfonsl Ntwar«el) hurst. And now the attention shifts again to the Supreme Court of North Carolina while the profession and the public wait to hear the answer it will make. “Thus, these recent resolutions of the North Carolina Bar association arc lifted out of their local seeting and revealed against a historic back ground as the high peak in a 175- yeur struggle of the bar for standards justifying a lawyer’s pride and de serving a people's confidence.” LEADS IN NUMBER ACTIVE SPINDLE HOURS State Had G. 034.882 During Nov.; S. C. Seeond, Mass. Third. Washington, Dec. 20.—North Car olina led the nation in the number of active spindle hours for its cot ton mills during November, accord ing to figures compiled by the De partment of Commerce South Caro lina was second and Massachusetts was third in active spindle hours. Although Massachusetts with 10,- Inside of 111-Fated Submarine S-4 Interesting picture of the inside of the S-4 taken by one of the crew sh nrtly h. mam part of submarine and how cr amped the survivors, if. any. must be. -288.522 spindles in place leads the States in number, there were active only 7.771.714 as compared 1 with 6.- 024. NG2 for North Carolina, which was practically the entire capacity for the Old North State. Matssachu settes averaged 14(5 hours per spindle as compared with 821 hours per spin d’.e for North Carolina. ■ South Carolina -with 5,384,604 I active spindles averaged 240 Ipmrs per spindle, the highest for any state, making a total of 1,002.860.71 H ac tive spind’e hours as compared with 1.008.871.850 active spind.e hours for North Carol.nn. Massachusetts was third with 1,400.065,267 active spin die hours. These three State** were the only ones in the country to get in the bil lion class in spindle hours, the total for North and South Carolina being practically two billions each while that of Massichuttes was a billion and a half. The total Spindle hours for the en tire country for the month of No vember was 8,680.217,207. From this it will he seen that nearly one-half of the total number of hours was in North and South Carolina. In the cotton growing States there were 18,381.204 spindles in place as compared with 16,508,994 in New England.-but the spindle hours for the cotton growing states was more than double that of New England, the figures being 5,824,476.7333 aud 2,- 555.695.562. The average number of hours per spindle in the South was 317 as compared with 155- for New England Paris Elea Market Abolished to Make Room For Playfield. (By International News Service t Paris. Dec. 22. —The Marche jux Puces, Paris* famous Flea Market. | must disappear in the near future. It is the old ease of the good oid things g ving way to the modern. The Flea Market, a Parisian ver sion of the Oriental souks and the sidewalk market of Sicily, has been the delight of many a rummage hunt er for six hundred and fifty years, if one can believe the old papers which give tlie date of its oi* : gin as I*J7B. on the Quay of Old Iron during the rule of Philippe the Bold. Now. the municipal authorities say they must have the ground for a large play ground. The announcement has caused a great stir among the ruddy-faced rag pickers. exposed all day long on the fortifications of Clignuaneourt. They have banded together and appointed a representative to plead with the perfect of the Seine who is in favor of the change although he will miss the old Flea Market as much as any one else. - Second-hand toothbrushes, rusty i nails and locks, old stoves and bed- j steads and bric-a-brac of every de- j scription are to be found in little heaps all the way from the Porte de i Mountreuil to the Porte de Vincennes, j Here and there are great piles of j underwear, overalls and khaki blous- i es which seem to have been left over j 1 non iv; - i ’ i?> from the war-- hard-lo'tkim: '. (j bright ly-pa, d r,r . # coiffm * s 11i N•* i 1 with old and wriM wti vs fiii i‘ll an , jt Tim nia: ' .-?< always • ■ n■’ban a> he • an tal •• »k<- 1 loitws JjvhNr* . Thursday. P'"* This is lie* - year. jiMi-masO'" (’onsidirins fl mas. i h ajiply fi!.ai.e;ahy. . King A ■ day for a r<- - tilJMar h 2" Opie Ih a'. lifie <d I ;, -rn his 75f li i- ‘ The An.'-I ' • ‘ v , ' - Histur.i i: reaehes lim its iipenimi. Ten ynr* - ! . govermae:;*: ti<ui ■).> ' mea-ur*. , On P. ’ . *'&*'«* 1 horn V T sia w!i<; ' \ ; the iiv ' ' parte. - Will Claus V.d: - today disirn- - (il : >y ■*•• in Christina^ of the hia
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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Dec. 22, 1927, edition 1
6
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