PAGE FOUR The Concord Q&fly Tribune. J. B. BHERBILL, Editor and Publisher | W. M. httwpvttt. Associate Editor THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the ute tor republlcatlon of all news credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the lo ir cal news published herein, f All rights of republlcatlon of special 1; dispatches herein are also .reserved. Special Representative r FROST. LANDIS % KOHN < 225 Fifth Avenue. New York 1 Peoples' Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mall matter at the postofflce at Concord, N. C., un der the Act of March 8, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier One Year - $6.00' Six Months 3.00, Three Months 1-30 Outside of the' State, the Subscription 1 Is the Same as In the City Out of the city and by'mall in North Carolina the following prices wil pre vall: ' '■ >i. „„ One Year Six Months r 2.50 Three Months -=—,l—s Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid In Advance ” RAILROAD SCHEDULE •* la Effect April 29, 1929. , - ■* Northbound. No. 13# To Washington 6:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:25 A. M. No. 46 To DAnvllle 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To Washington 8:28 P. M. Nth 08 To Washington 9:30 P. M. , Southbound. _ „ , No. -45 To Ctterlotte 4:23 P. M. No. 85 To Atlanta 10-06 P. M. No. r 29 oT Atlanta :2:45 A. M. , ‘ No. 31 To Augusta 6:07 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8:27 A. M. V 6. 11 To Charlotte 9:05 A. M. I No. 13# To Atlanta 9:15 P. M. ■?!■ ’ f A 1 -p-FQR TODAY—| . li HOW TO GAIN ALL: —Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteous neps: and all these things shall be add- BpiNjhf tfoujo you.—Matt. 6:33. ' • r v U. ~W ■■ ■. —r? —, THE WEEVIL GETS fN JKIS WORK. —— ' t it!', •-i Cotton experts at the beginning of (lie present cotton season gave warning that unless the farmers of North Carolina took difestic steps to block its progress, the boll weevil was going to cause great \ damage in this Ntate this year. The | warning has been fulfilled. Cotton ex perts now tell ns that the eotton crop in this State has suffered its greatest setback in history during the past sev eral weeks, and the weevil is given cred it for most of the damage. The North Carolina cotton crop hud a wonderful start. In this county as in other eotton counties of the State a big crop was predicted. It is now known that the crop will not be more than 75 per cent, and that much only in certain spots. The crop this year has been spotted in this county as it bus been throughout the belt. Some sections of this country have not had the weevil in great abund ance. Other seetions report the heavi est damage from the weevil in history. That's the story throughout the whole belt, and thV result is a crop of not more than 10,500.000 bales. The short crop, together with the fact that there was little if any carry-over, has sent cotton above the 30-eent level on the New York exchange. The farm ers. it is true, will get as much for their cotton as they would have gotten for a full crop, perhaps. The boll weevil is not wholly respon sible for the good prices, however. The co-operative associations in the various Southern States have kept hundreds of bales from the market, and their action has had a tendency to increase the price for the staple. NVitli 30-cent cotton the farmers can make money, counting even what they lost through the efforts of the weevil and bad weather. If a full crop had been produced the price might have dropped to the ten or tifteeu cent level, and the country would have been worse off than it # will be with the short crop and 30-cent prices. ® ADMITS ITS MISTAKE BUT— The Glenn Eagle Sentinel, published in the Stare of Kansas, made a mistake in one of its recent issues. The editor acknowledged the mistake, but he added: ‘•A good subscribed told us about it (the mistake). The same day there was a letter in our postofiiee box that did not belong to us. We called for ninety eight over the telephone and got 198. We asked for a spool of No. 50 thread and when we IP 1 home we found it was I No. 90. The train was reported thirty minutes late. We arrived at the depot >: twenty miuutes after train time and the train wus gone. We got our milk bill and there was a mistake of 10 cents in our favor. We felt sick and the doctor I said we were eating too much meat. We hadn't tasted meat for two months. The garage man said the jitney was missing because it needed a new timer. We cleaned a spark plug and it's run fine ever since. Yes, wc made a mistake in last tveek's issue of the paper." Eg Governors seem to be having a hard . time in getting their rights before the ! people. Governor Walton has taken Ok labour! in his grnsp, or rather he has V v attempted to do so, and when the legis- had a right to investigate prison eondi . tious over which he has control. That is r causing a tumult in that State. ' •j ‘ 1 MILITARY RI LE HELD BY JUDGE TO BE SUPREME > ■ Oklahoma Court Dismisses Habeas Cor pus PeitioriSi—Prisoners Are Heid. Tulas.' Okln., Sept. ’2o.—Military pow er is supreme in Oklahoma. Judge A. C. Ilpht ruled today in district court, in dismissing petitions for habeas corpus tiled in behalf of three men held hy mil itary officers here for participation in Tulsa county floggings. Notice of exception to the ruling was t i tiled by State Senator Wash Hudson, I counsel for the petitioners. The issue probably will go to the Supreme four). General .Markham, the state's military I commander under martial law. appeared I ! iu Judge Hunt's court iu answer to sum j mens from a civil officer, but he was , permitted to retain custody of the three ( confessed and sentenced floggers, Grover and Ben Sikes and Earl Sack, in whose , behalf the petitions were .filed. Judge Hunt said there was nothing “illegal or unauthorized in the action of 1 Adjutant General It. H. Markham in 1 holding the men for testimonies before I the Wagoner county grand jury in con- I nection with the flogging investigation I there." The judge prefaced his decision with a lengthy explanation of his views re garding the right of the civil courts un der martial law, in which he declared that "this court has functioned in the full exercise of its lawful power since the governor's proclamation and will rec ognize no interference by the military.” He believed the state-wide martial law unjist’l'ed. The decision was acclaimed a victory by all parties. Within a few hours of the decision, word was received from Wagoner county that seven men against whom the de tained trio were expected to testify had been indicted by the grand jury, thus opening the way for the release’ of the convicted men to the civil authorities. It was expected that the transfer would , ho made within 24 hours. Those named in the Wagorner county return are: A. M. Calloway, William Bills. Avery Barbour, T. V. Venator. Hal Beaman. . I>mk Fisher and Harvey Eacrs. Yankees Again Clinch Pennant in , American. New Y'ork, Sept. 20—The New York Yankees today clinched the 1923 Ameri , Van championship, their third successive jpennaut victory, by defeating St. Louis 1 tat the stadium. 4 to 3. The Yankees, "'ho have made a run away of this season's race, now can lose all of their remaining 13 games and. still finish at the top. even if Cleveland, in second j place, wins all of its remaining 19 games. Should the Yankees lose and Cleve land win all of heir remaining games, the final standing would be: New York: woti 93. lost 91. percent age .904; Cleveland: won 92. lost 92. percentage .597. By clinching the pennant today, two and a half weeks before the scheduled end of the season, the Yankees have scored one of the most decisive victories in the history of the league. They now hold a margin of 17 games over the second place Indians. The Yankees have set the pace prac tically from the start and have not been seriously threatened since midseason. Challenged first by Connie Mack's Athletics, who spurted sensationally in the spring, and later by Cleveland’s rally, the Y'ankees stood off these threats and maintained a championship stride while their rivals fell 'by the wayside. * Five Buildings Burn in City td/Vnion Union. 8. C.. Sept. 19—Five building, were destroyed and for a time the entire business district of this city today was threatened by a fire of undetermined or igin that broke out at 3 o'clock this morning. The Itasor building, negre Odd Fellows hall, two residences and a vulcanizing shop op l’inicuey Street were destroyed. A large number of automo biles stored in the Rasor building, a three storv structure, were burned. No es timate of the damage or insurance could be obtained. Cabarrus Savings Bank I Bringing Up Bill. ; . c^o ; -~ - ; - A TaakJ~ ' wimp's* a / ■3'ure vaeg - f BUHB-OV - Youtee.. 1S ( BE*r YPon't EVew % / w,&S* f YET 2. CI2AZY— -jp? \ ONE o: "the B«3obtt- \ \ Know YEe HlSknov/& I .THE 7T JY , V" K —n_ J A*-r' Vr/I \~7 Kp \ POHB-OKK- tu *WJ \. Lesson - WHO X- always* CDUP - \ \ ‘ HAT WUZ . Sa»-*|S«gpsfe i- , What {he World Is (Doing, E CMS SEEN BY c MECHANICS (^MAGAZINE Thrills Made to Order in the Movies HANGING by the keels on a 6-inch ledge with the stseet cavern yawning (3 stories below is no trick at all—-in the tarries. Missing a foothold on the edge tt a tall bnilding and being caught by the hands of a clock 10 floors above the earth, however, contains almost as many thrills for the actor as it does for the spectators. For these are the days of realign in pic tures, the result of a ceaseless demand on, the part of a public long accustomed to see ing speeding automobiles plunge over steep stiffs, death-defying leaps into a raging turf, and airplane crashes, for more thrills. In some eases “doubles” are employed to take the place of the star far the more hazardous undertakings. Dressed and made up to resemble the actor, they brave death in leaps from speeding trains to air planes, jump over cliffs, and ride motor gjrctes into locomotives with no chance of pinning either fame or glory. Many risks, however, are taken by the | ■fears. In one instance, daring the filming leaping from a Balcony into the Rear Seat of an Automobile la Just One of the "Stunts" De manded from High-Salaried Movie Stare of a western melodrama, the heroine was Onlled upon to plunge into an icy mountain torrent and float downstream toward a tataract. i It had been found by experiment that the current would carry floating objects tea sand bar iust above the falls, and a EXPLOSION KILLS THREE , < AND INJURES SIX OTHERS Bureau of Standards at Washington the Scene of a Terrific Explosion. Washington. Sept. 20.—An explosion of gas at the bureau of standards here today resulted in the death of three men. the injury to six others, and the com- 1 plete wrecking of the fuel-testing lab oratory. It was the most serious accident in j he history of the bureau, whose exports daily are confronted with the task of testing every conceivable product of • American industry. \ L. L. of Lower Salem,- Ohio, - was killed almost instantly, and U. J. * Cook, of Washington, P. ('., and Stephen ( M. Lee, of New London. Conn., died to night from their injuries. [ James E. Kindig. of Salunga, I’a., was*' critically injured. Roger Birdsall, of Washington: Clarence W. Eliott, of Lynn, Hlass., and F. E. Richardson, of Washington, are seriously hurt. Her bert W. Cuniming. of Warren. Mass., and Curtis M. Smith, of Washington, re ceived less serious injuries. All of the victims were engaged in scientific work at the bureau. An internal combustion engine was be ing tested at the time of the explosion. Officials said they believed gasoline was the sole cause of the accident, although the presence, of exhaust gas from the mo tor and a spark from some source would have given a similar result. Most of the victims were employes standing out side the building or near the doorway. The detonation rocked the vicinity of the laboratory for a distance of 500 yards, and a large automobile and sev eral airplane motors were hurled through the air. , CHARLOTTE MAN HELD ON FEDERAL CHARGE Accused of Impersonating United States Officer in Richmond—Descendant of Justice Marshall. Charlotte. Sept. 20.—Perry Marshall Johnston, said to be a descendant of John YJarshall, first chief justice of the United States, and district agent here of the National I.ife Insurance Company, formerly connected with the United States department of justice, is in Meck lenburg jail, ill default of a bond of .'520,090 which a United States commis sioner required when he was arraigned on charge of impersonating a federal of ficer iu Richmond July 2nd of this year *nd obtaining thereby $175 from Homer rHfi concord roam twwjnb Cover the Upper Cameraman a**d the Lower P*rt of this Picture Under the Clock at Left, and It Will Shew How It Appcan on the Screen ; watcher was stationed there to pull her from the water as ehe swept past. But, in-i stead, the current swept her to the other side of the stream and she would have been dashed over the falls to certain death had not her secretary rescued her. In making a picture of a man climbing the side of a budding and doing apparently perilous stunts many floors above the street, a real building was selected and a circa# performer employed to double for the actor in the “long shots.” Then a fake building was built on top of the real one. The “set” was built in far enough so that the roof would break any fall and also would provide a platform for the camera By “ shooting ’ ’ at a proper affile, however, the drop to the street looked straight down. • * • Use Iron to Float Logs of Heavy Wood to Sea In logging timber tracts in South America and the West Indian islands, the heavier wood, which is not sufficiently light to float, has always proved difficult to move. One firm recently solved this problem by using “floaters," made of rust resisting iron, by means of which the heavy' timber was rafted down a river to the sea. . 1 1.. Cummings. It is said there are 19 other charges of the same kind to be preferred against him. An order of removal from the juilis diction of the United States Court here to the jurisdiction of the United‘States Court iu Richmond, * was signed this morning by Frank C. Paiton, assistant I niteil States district attorney here, and forwarded to Judge E. Y. Webb at Shel by. The order is expected to be signed by Judge Webb at once and sent bark here b.v Saturday when a federal officer from Richmond will take Johuston there for trial. ililliiiiiliiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BULBS The Finest White Roman Hyacinths and Narcissus Ever Show in Concord Pearl Drug Co. Keyless Auto Lock Acts When *Car is Stopped Besides automatically blocking the ig nition when the car » stopped, a keyless automobile lock positively holds the steer ing gem*. There ara tio keys to forget, a# the device is fitted ■- to the steering t post and operates NK /jfo* with i 0 buttons. gvwtaZß- It may be set with any number up to ID, and the com bination may be changed as often as desired. When a button is touched to shut off the ignition, the ear is automatically locked and cannul be operated again until the combination is worked. i» • • ’ Preventing Stream Erosion Along many streams it is necessary to hold the bank back in some efficient and cheap inanner, otherwise* the ground will be washed away. An excellent method of preventing this is shown in the drawing. A woven-wire fence is erected where the new water edge is to be made, the, fesee posts being driven into the bed of the stream. Brush and saplings are then de posited as indicated, the branches pointing away from the water, and the butts in serted into the fencing. Earth is thrown on the brush to make the wall solid, and in a short time the new bank is knit together by marsh grasses and rushes. Memorial Fountain Unveiled at Louis burg. Louisburg, N. C„ Sept. 19.—A memo rial fountain erected by the North Car olina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy to Capt. Orcn Ran dolph Smith, the writer of the “Stars and Bars.” the flag of the Confederacy, was unveiled here today. A. W. Mr Lein, of Luinberton. delivered the dedicatory address relating the history of the Con federate flag and its designer aud review-' ed the activities of North Carolinians iu various wars. [ it'll cost less than] YOU THINK v -—I - TO GET A /L\ NEW KITCHEN * T ’ HE C.OST OF* I * PLUMB!NG- a ' Now looking at it from your wife’s point of view, don't you think it would be i a good idea to put in a good I kitchen sink? Outside of | the added cleanly conven- i ience of the thing, look at it j from a health standpoint. ' Talk it over with your wife ! and then talk it over with us E.B,GttADY Plumbing and Heating Contractors 41 CtrMn St. Office Phone 334* ' - THE RIGHT BANK is an institution like the CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY that places its duty a to its customers ahead of every other censidera | tion. . [ We understand thoroughly the requirements of the people of Concord and Cabarrus County E and our years of experience and friendly eo -8 operation make our service the kind that proves I a real asset to our customers. I We invite your patronage. CITIZENS il l f^QOQOQnnne * vvvvw « v * OT ~v~mftmimmnmioocwwoonoo()oorc^ IFOR YOUR LIVING ROOM jj The present exhibit affords wondrous opportunities to ' see the Most Exacting that has ever* been made for partic- ' ! 1 ular homefurnishers. ] | Os course, Moderate Prices especially | | called to your attention, as they are really Remarkable, 11 when the choiceness of Quality in the exhibit is considered. ! Suite shown consists of Three Pieces, have Loose ! Cushions in Queen Anne, Modernized Colonial and Re- ] naissance Style. Coverings ip wide ranges of Velours, Mohair, Hair- I ! cloth and Tapestry. COME AND SEE BEXL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. ii “THE STORE THAT SATISFIES" <^>OOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOontataConnnonptaanonnnnntyxWKKWWOOpD i| To Make Your Home More Beautiful I A Ten Piece Queen Amy* Walnut Dining Room Spite Furnished with long Buffet, six foot table (round corners, 0 legs), En- I I closed Server, Beautiful Glass Front China Closet, and live Chairs with | , s one arm Chair to match. Upholstered in blue lfather. A very beauti- I j fill suite of Furniture with features that no other suite has. Drop iu | j i aud have u look at this suite. The price is very reasonable. H. B. Wilkinson | C«ta#rfl PtMta 144 Kannapolis Plmm I | • | OUT OF I\HE HIGH RENT'DISTRICT H. B. WILKINSON UNDERTAKING CO., j pfcone •. Calls Answered Day or Night. j It Pays to Put afi Ad. in The Tribune Friday, September 21, 1923.