PAGE TEN . . ~.. I , ■■•ifc.i r.i-iAii • T*~ "'""". ~ ~ * 1 . "" ' "* 1 JSj isl RIP^ 6 ■ '*■’ ~ —1 ■ -; ■-■ ' * | i * .G • * jf ■“' * ' • * ‘ " ' ' -AV. ' ' Bgßl ♦ : . tS ■•s - * ' T .v/--3 ’ ' ~ s Is. * _ i/ J Jfc - - ' f*y V » f'^~^X- / J / CONCORD CAN DO WHAT OTHER NORTH CAROLINA CITIES ARE DOING—BUILD * A NtW MODBBN Horn I '■'■'■’> T % .;*t.K%: > ■■ ■'.•••' - .aJ ■ •.-• «*pl*j&raj THE FINANCIAL CAMPAIGN * ORGANIZATION * HOTEL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. -~- _.. t ' > fl Congratulations on Success General Sales Manager. «■ C. AV. SWINK, - Secretary and Treasurer. » ff® • ■ EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ■ H. \V. BLANKS. Secretary Chamber of Commerce ■ General Secretary Y. M. C. A. • v M ~ SiF : s k The Big 1924 Cab arms County Fair Director Cabarrus Savings Bank gp ;IH| Capitalist , SH|s I/. D. COLTRANE, Cashier Concord National Bank A. E. HARRIS. •Manager Etird’s Dept. Store * A. V. Hartsell, . e “'* V SRB||9 President Rotary Club ' Real Estate and Insurance ' * L. T. HARTSELB. - ' .. Bgagjfcy Hartsell & Hartsell, Corp. Lawyers. A * ' Director Concord National Bank. A. H. HOWARD. - - mm w Now let us provide modern and adequate President Bell & Harris Furniture Co. , x | 'tSsia..,. Hotel accomodations for visitors to future President Country Club M VMA ww"" F. C. NIBLOCK. ‘ # • - • s. President F. C. Niblook Lumber Co. M La' *m. vxwnty rairs Sec. Kerr Bleachery and Finishing ~ x is ‘. ftg AVorks. ) * : HGfl »G. L. PATTERSON, - • , . . f * G. AY. Patterson Wholesale Grocery —■■—,... . ■: S. K. PATTERSON, A V; ; Real Estate and Insurance. x BBS A. B. POUNDS, . - K, * A. B. Pounds, Coal aud Wood. • v , DR. S. AY. RANKIN, - * _■' ‘ • f I c„. HELP BOOST —BUY STOCK c. f. ritchie, Ritchie Hardware Co. I BH J. B. SHERRILL. • . j^y Editor and Publisher Concord Times m 1 r and Tribune v 1 ■ CONCORD’S NEW HOTEL Pres. Cabarrus Co. Fuir Association. ‘ • C. AV. fWINK. l’resideut Kiwa%is Club K" 1 fflß feV: Cashier Cabarrus Savings Bank. DU. AV. H. WADSWORTH, , >"■ - - ;Bapg % ■ Physiemu A BHn •c. b. wagoner. , . . v jfcf President Citizens Bank umi Trust Co. ■’■'*■ ~ - : V . v • - 7 t : i B T. H. AVEBB, % ' Sec. and Trciis. Liskc Cotton Mills. * , ! ' ", '.V > CITIZENS ORGANIZATION - ' 1 i A. G. ODELL. _ tlcneral Sales Manager. f ALEX R. HOAVARD, • A m ‘ Dll. AV. i UANKIN^ iVlfcl ° n A Community Enterprise I Division Alonager Division “B”. .*«• • ;■ y y/.'WSIB L. M. RICHMOND, Division Manager Division “C”. • N ' ' j i *' cxtß C. S. SMART, * X. tBWR Division Manager Division “D”« » ',.NL • ' - - . .. - •*•• • *— A _ . . ~ •/ PAV OF LEGISLATORS OliurlQttc Observer. The politieal campaign and the atten tion attracted by the more dominant p question of the ports measure, import ant is that is. should not overshadow en tirely the question of cOnapenaation for ■ the members of the North Carolina Legis lature. which is to be voted on in the ccming election. The eotistttutionul amendment to inyvlde for increased pay for ourT State Senators »«><* members of the House of. Representatives should be 3 a&Ute«rby;a dert«v% majority. >1 than will today. At present the m *„brr? of the Legislature to^give .. WtttT there id no real compensationd free, because it takes what they get toj pay their expense# in Raleigh, provided for the members of the State's | law-making body, there art nutny good men who might render the State splendid service who cannot afford and whose families cannot afford the whtribntkm of two months time to the State. Were* fore, the Legislature must be madeup largely of men who are really able nßhfc, cially to give the twjl time; Aiv mem who »e sacrifice tottlmit own hurt and to-'the hurt of their'families, unless we-are to have men in the legislative hafm who profit by exchange of their influence for cash. From the latter «tnaa during I nidderu times we have been slnghrafiy free in legislative effeiea, so far as we know or have reason tb believe. But we jatJsa.V. it.^ doubtless have had many men in the | legislature who were not able to mahe I the sacrifice necessary and many others I who would, have been of real service to the State i» that capacity bat who could not make the sacrifice demanded ip or der to offer their services. The fact that the present rafis of pay were .sufficient 20 and 30 and 50 years •igo Is no argument for continuing the present compensation. 'has' just entered upon the practice of her profession in Tohio. I : ■■ *T Ayotncn smsfiters in London are in dulging in little cigars and Saiatt aipds in the privacy of their clubs, but the habit is not generally on the increase. f . THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE WALTER R CMRVSL£R^ ! rHAFFK/® 1 TALKS'®! ——^ tVafch Your ttsadlights. There arc anti glare. laws' to, prevent , UMKt, i Make sur'e -ypa- are i^e>!inff 7 .thj»| | The number of aCridclrt* due to g)ar< meat communities today have adequate laws regulating the use of'lights. It' aSust not he forgotten that the parpen* • of a light « to sec where you a* going, ' not to confuse the marirlat apprdncbhtg 1 ■ ■" , J- MAN OIKHOHKH ON STREET AS mo CROWD rOU^WS nrimwt Wraps Him in BUnktt and Pdfide Send Him to B look ley. ' Philadelphia Record. , A* u crowd of nearly 100 persons walked behind him. Abrubuui Uesant. (tboilt 40 yearn old, no borne. geve South Philadelphia a shock early yesterday at he jmdjnemidea .Seuopd Street,, uiHoard ond and Moore street* and, with an underhand awing, shot tt ito the other aide of the afreet HaUntering 'iiia- "'j** pest nod con tin tied the -trip down the street.. His striped s«Wt caa* artt and lie opened a door add stuck that ih a hallway. Neat tame hts shoes, socks and the rest of Bis attire. When he reached Stroud and Queen streets, Abrntnnt wai'yaaked inkide*Tiy a fireman of Engine Company No. 3. A blanket was throwu around him. and fie w*« turited over to Jerry RaUivan. eure faker of the did Second district station '/A t fifepian ,was sent back on Abra-1 ham’s trail and collected' the clothing. After be waa dne/frd. b 4 w*n taken to the Seventh and Carpenter street police station. when' Dr. Goodman examined 1 mi and sent him to Philadelphia Gen-1 erai 1 USE TftE f > Ef»NV COLUMN—It p*»U . ■gm p • • ** . f Thursday October®; 1624 | WHY , HRIYTIANITY BREIIDY Literary Digest. ' , ' A virtue of Christianity is its intoler- ! anee, the same intolerance, we are told 1 which truth bears toward falsehood; for if it were not, and had not been Intoler ant, we might still be bending the knee to a bit of stone, ow be crowding Olympus with new god*. And'naturally enough, as Don* Marquis points Out in his col . atan in the New York Herald Tribune. the intolerance of Christianity has serv f ed as a check to its spread and as an lu , vi tat ion to persecution. Man embraces the ceremonies and mysticism of Cbris i tianlty; but the-practical precepts of its Founder, we are told, haye never been po litically applied. Where it has been at« tempted persecution has followed. Whether the columnist was drawn to make thesy observations by what Haywood Broun had to say in the New York World does not appear, but) previous to the pnblicathm of Mr. Mar quis’ musings on the subject, Mt. Broun . had written in hs own column 1 “Ai far as 1 know, there has been ub readable book on theology Written for the last \ hundred years. I would rather hear from Don Marquis about religion than listen to aby of the ordained, - ’ and added: ‘J hnv * « notion that the religion of Don Marqv. ;) night he a shade more warm than that of Shaw." As we say, it does not appear that Mr. Broun - * tribute act- x ed as a challenge to the Herald Tribune humorist; but. nevertheless, as be has done before,xjfr. Marquis drops Captain Fitsure, Arohy the CoChropoh, and Abut Prudence, HecklebUry to reflect awhile on religion. Concerning the necessary intol erance of Christianity, he recalls that imperial Rome accepted it for a time as merely another faith, and was content to let it aloue, along with the pagan faiths, until it was recognised that its principles were subversive of an imperial state. The governors of the Roman Em pire could have tolerated what they con sidered the religious superstition Os the Christians, for they thought themselves intellectually superior to it; “but the thing the* eould nol tolerate was the flaming doctrine aimed directly at all forms of injustice, oppression and slavery on earth and at all systems which per mit them.” The rul*s pretended to be shocked at the Christians’ denial of tile 1 old gods; but what impelled the .rtpefs to persecution “was not really their bo ror of atheism so mm* is ttieir 'dread of anarchy.” reflects: “Jesus wpuld Undoubtedly be consider ed an aitfrrchist today if He were alive; and any person who attempts to apply His principles in a thoroughgoing, un compromising manner to a political sit uation in ,any modern state is supprest. There Is still precisely the same doubt, nud fenr of the practical application of the teachings of Jesus as there was 1900' years ago. The fact that the Christian religion became, under Constantine, the official religion of the Empire means nothing in this relation; for this was not a triumph for the doctrines of Jesus, but a compromise on the part of His fol lowers, which resulted in centering the essential struggle within the churches themselves. “There never has been, cm any large, extended scale, a real test of the politi cal opinions of Jesus; they liave never been applied current governments arc ! still of the opinion of the aneient Rom ans; the mystical and supernatural sym bolism of Christianity is firmly estab lished in the world, but the application of its spiritual content to he general affairs of men has never been tried. . “The fe*rs of the modern'world ure ns „ well justified, no doubt, as tfie fears of the ancient world; the; uncompromising prac tise of the doctrines of Jesus would un doubtedly, blow qll tlie established sys tems to flinders. But people who- Call themselves Christians will be able to pre vent this catastrophe for a good many years, we dare say,” Real Chriatianity. Mr. Marquis goes on, is necessarily Intolerant of fraud, in-, justice and oppression; and while its* aim is to bring peace to the world, it is obvious that it can not bring peace un til it has achieved ultimate triumph, t'or “The moment- it abates, by one whisper, its intolerant idealism, it Ceases to ex ist; it becotnes something else; it is ab solute, or its is nothing; it can not make terms, or it defeats itself ; It can pardon, all sinners, but never any sin: its most mild-seeming precepts are really explos ive paradoxes: it is nothing to be trifled with: eventually the human race, as it finds itself on this planet, must either extirpate it completely or practise it sin cerely if it wants any xhst; it is impossi ble to HVe near it without taking some attitude toward it. Most of the troubles of the world, since it appeared, have been stirred up in one dray qj another by the action of this idealism, on the hu mnna spirit; people Who ure touched with it may and do compromise, but. the thing itsefi’ does not compromise. “We Wonder what We would have I done if we had been a Roman emperor 1 TOO - years ago. and reports Mod been Brought to us of the spread Os the new sect, We would probably -hdve said to ourselves: ‘Shall We order another perse cution-/ Or wiU it dp any good? It is a pity that the calm temper of the phiioso- \ libers can not gradually spread ov*r all the Roman . world, fostering toleration and gradually banishing all these super stitions, unchallenged by any new sect of fanatics and absolutists wno iusist on a superhuman conduct. If I wete to tol erate them, still their doctrines will not tolerate me—»os how can I afford to tol qyate them/ No; there can he no peace until they are wiped out.’ V'BOe conceivably", we might order the persecution to begjn. Perhaps you wou)d not. You spy you wouldn’t. But let’s; see what you do the next time one 6f the, genuine ones—who are the samp now a* they Were tlien—takes a stand subver sive of the social order from which you dc- . MW ynur wealth,.your eemfort, your ipt parfgiiee or your safety. For the real fitfig doesn't change: it Is still iB the world, struggling, active, practical, un compromising, dangerous, spiritual.’’ The legislative council of Assam toeently discussed a. resolution urging that women be alowed, to v6te and to ( S^lflSSS; S re., r eleCti ° U 7 the : I yoking over the telephone If one talk* with the lips six Inches froth* the ' transptitter.it is equivalent to inserttna ,another two hundred miles of line be 'ttvewi tbs speaker' and the listener. ' L-waSri