Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / March 23, 1925, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TEN A _ i ' FOB MAYOR I hereby announce myself a candidate for Mayor of the City of Concord, sub ject to the action of the Democratic nominating convention. _ JOHN L. MILHER. FOR MAYOR r I hereby announce myself as a candi date for the Democratic nomination for Mayor of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic primary. J R. WOMBLE. FOR MAYOR I hereby announce myself as a candi date for the Democratic nomination for- Mayor of Concord subject to the action of the forthcoming Democratic primary to select candidates for City offices. C. H. BARRIER. " FOR ALDERMAN I’ hereby announce myself as a candi date for Alderman from Ward 1 in the city of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries. AIjEX R. HOWARD. FOR ALDERMAN. I hereby announce myself a candidate for Alderman from Ward Three in the City of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries. C. M. IVEY. FOR ALDERMAN. I hereby announce myself a candidate for Alderman from Ward Five in the City of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries. B. E. CROUCH. FOR ALDERMAN ! I hereby announce myself as a candi date for Alderman from Ward Three in the City of Concord, subject to the ac tion of the Democratic primaries. H. CLIFFORD HAHN. FOR ALDERMAN I hereby announce myself as a candi date for Alderman-at-large in the City of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic primaries. J. T. SAPP. FOR ALDERMAN I hereby announce myself as a candi date for Alderman from Ward Five in the City of Concord, subject to the ae 'tion of the Democratic primaries. R. A. HULLENDER. FOR ALDERMAN I hereby announce myself a6 a candi date for re-election as Alderman from Ward 4 in the City of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic pri maries. JAMES G. MoEAOHERN. * FOR ALDERMAN I hereby announce myself as a candi date for re-election as Alderman from Ward 2 in the City of Concord, subject to the action of the Democratic pri maries. W. A. WILKINSON. BUTTER i Fresh Creamery Butter at all Times. Made from Cream produced in Cabar rus county: 1 Pound Prints 1-4 Pound Prints Wholesale and Retail CABARRUS CREAMERY CO. Phone 292 98 S. Union St | Next Battery I I Use Only the 1 Visiting Card*, For Gotew or Ladka or children, printed front a beautiful uew type, InritationTejrt, BO for SI.OO, or 100 for SI.BO. Work done on a few Mm aotfcau. Times Tribune Office. SO, $3.70. Timea-Tribune office. nermittad to marry soon—which they want to do.. PULLMAN HARD HIT BY CIRCUIT COURT Parlor Car People Decided Liable For Serious Accident to Woman Passenger Philadelphia Record. One of the most important decisions in recent years in railroad matters was handed down by the United States Cir cuit Court of Appeals in au opinions by Judge Buffington, holding that the Pull man Company isi responsible for the safety of its parlor car passengers at all times and is liable for damages for ac cidents that occur on any part if its cars. The ruling was made in sustaining a verdict awarding $22,607 damages to Mr. and Mrs- Jacob S. Wain, of Hnve ford. for injuries sustained by Mrs. Wain. The decision is of farreaching im portance to both travelers and railroad companies throughout the United States having contracts with the Pullman Com pany, for the carriage of passengers in parlor cars, for the reason that the Pull man Company has maintained that its responsibility for the snfrty of its riders did not extend beyond the interior of the parlor cars. Judge Buffington holds that both the Pullman Company and' the railroad companies are charged by law to safe- guard passengers and the fact that par- ■ lor car tickets are purchased from the i railroad, and that its engines draw the < Pullman cars, does not lessen the responsibility of the Pullman Company to exercise full care to protect its riders inside the cars and on the platforms and steps, aganist accidents. While making a trip to Washington with her husband Mrs. Walm was tween two parlor cars and thrown onto the tracks in the tunnel outside of Baltimore. The door had been left open and when Mr. and Mrs. Fain sued for damages the Pullman Company put in the defense that the v negligence of -leav ing the door open was that of the rail road’s employees, and that its only duty to the passengers was to safekuard them while they were riding within the parlor cars. * c District judge McKeehan decided this point again:* the Pullman Company, and .a jpry gave Mr. Wain $11,697 dam ages and his wife SII,OOO. In’dis-: KIDNEY TROUBLES ABE DANGEROUS How to Tell When Your Kidneys Need Treating and What jo Do For Them.. Neglect of the kidneys and bladder cause more suffering and fatalities than does most any other disease, many peo ple 'think they have liver or stomach trouble when its their kidneys ’clogged with'uric acid that make you feel weak, tired and nervous and have a dull .head ache, pain in the back, frequent Tridney action, sediment, and sometimes swollen ankles. How to Get Relief. Recently a very eminent chemist and M. D. found a combination of medicines that in every case so far treated has pro duced wonderful results and brought al most instant relief. This preparation has been trade marked under the name of (KIDNEEZE) and your druggist, the Gibson Drug Store, now has it in stock, try one 75 cent bottle on a positive guar antee and yon will be surprised to see how bonyant, vivacious and full of life one bottle will make you feel. Don’t put this important matter off but get a bottle today; its pleasant to take and is harmless to young or old. UMtuxot at our rttk. run drug covrm -- “On u» 9mmr I . missing the appeal of the Pullman Com pany and sustaining Judge McKeehan, Judge Buffiington declares that both the railroad and the Pullman Company are responsible for the safety of passengers in parlor cars, and that if the employee of one fails to perform some net for the protection of a rider and an accident oc curs as a result on a Pullman car it can be held for damages. CLEAN PICTURES AND SENSIBLE CENSORSHIP. Christian Science Monitor. In a recent speech made in Hollywood to a group of motion picture directors. Will H. Hays, president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. Inc., put the matter of clean pictures before his audience with a clarity that must have come startlingly to many ears. He told these leaders of film destiny that he understood and sym pathized with the many intricate prob lems that lay before, them, and he assur ed them that he had no intention of lay -1 ing down formulas for what they should ' do. “I simply lay before you one formu ? In.” he said, ’’and that of what you must , not do. You must not offend common ■ decency. That’s all.” There can be no doubt that Mr. Hays struck the vital spot of the 1925 picture situation when he summed up the whole question of censorship and film policy in this one forceful dictum. At a time when books and plays are becoming more and more emboldened in the presentation of salacious subject matter, it is an amazing thing to consider that the “movies" are almost automatically and voluntarily, straightening up. Such a pronounce ment as Mr. Hayes argues a state of af fairs that is practically witHout prece dent. This cause of clean pictures is not be ing figured on from a purely moral basis either. The picture world is recognizing that it is as much a matter of good busi ness as sound morals to have a dean screen spread before the publie. As if in answer to the general thought summed up in Mr. Hays’ pronouncement comes the credo from one company to the ef fect that this concern is out to make On ly clean pictures. He realizes the value of such a policy from a sound, business standpoint, and is pushing his slogan of “Studios where clean pictures are being •made.” This may seem to be the “straight and narrow path" for this company, when on the neighboring lots the pursuit of the easy boxoffiee dollar through sensational films is going on apace. Yet the cry of clean pictures is in the air and the support of the public is assured. ' ? The only explanation of the curious protection that has guarded the moral tone of the screen almost from the be ginning lies in the fact that it is the first art to have ever been dependent on the voice of the majority, for its existence. There can be no pandering to the tastes of the few in this picture game, because tbe production and distribution aspects are so closely interdependent. It is also the first art form that must be strictly businesslike to succeed. If there is more ! business than art involved in the motion ! picture today, it is no harm to art in the long run. perhaps the older arts . have something to learn, after all, from . this upstart of the present century, > which is able at twenty to conduct its affairs with a decorum more or less for ! gotten by its elders. There need be no i fear that in observing the requirements of common decency all originality and ■ appeal will be driven from the screen. Rather will abstention from the object ionable lead screen talent into lines of greater beauty and invention. Mr. Hays , is deserving of universal support ia bis i campaign for clean pictures and sensible * censorship. Sings With Beggar. Mrs. A. S. Holcomb, of Washington, Ga., wife of a railroad president, was walking in Atlanta when ehe observed that Peter Van Dever, blind violinist, was having difficulty in collecting alms. Taking her place at bis side; she sang “The Rosary” and Suwanee River” for tbe benefit of the shoppers and Van Dev er‘s enp was soon filled. > None Gets 9100.000. Miss Mary Devinnie.a nurse who cared for Dr. Charles Penrose, of Philadelphia, in the years of his illness, was left SIOO,- 000 in will. Dr. Penrose, a widow £J a ?..!>r ther 01 *• lat « B ™ tor notes t enrose. R O. SELF NAMED * > ' AS BUS DIRECTOR Chief Clerk Corporation Commission to Ban Bos laws With His Other Du ties. „ . „ Raleigh News and Observer. Official designation by the Corporation Commission of R. O. Self, chief e’.erk of the com mission, to have charge of the administration of the new. motor bus leg islation ; failure of any competing bus lines to agree on schedules; a last min ute rush of many applications for fran chise by hue lines; and the perfection of a mutual; insurance company to under write the,required insurance which must be carried on the buses, were features of the last day before tne new bus .laws go into’effect. Mr. Selfs designation as administra tor of the hue regulations carries with it no emancipation from bis other duties .as chief cleric of the commssion, but he has been allowed an assistnat, J. A. Bland, who has been freight inspector for the commission. Whether Mr. Self will have the au thority to arrange schedules or whether | the Corporation Commission will have to j sit as a body on each complaint of a ; bus line is a matter which has not yet • been determined and it is thought that | a ruling from Attorney General Dennis | G. Brummit will be asked. That some such action must be taken immediately seems certain for none of the bus lines operating in competition have been able to reach an agreement among themselves as to schedules. The schedule controversy between the Safety Coach Line and the United Stage Line oi>erating between Raleigh and Greens boro. was the subject of a meeting yes terday. They were unable to agree on the privilege of leaving on the half hour. The matter will be decided by the Corpora, tion Commission. At least a dozen other lines have sub mitted schedules which will .have to_ be the subject of action by the commission. They operat in the main between Greens boro and Charlotte and between Char lotte and Asheville. Face “Peeling” Brings Death. Mrs. Jeswie Gilchrist died during a face . ‘“peeling" operation at a Hollywood, Calif., beauty parlor. An autopsy show -5 ed traees of a poison commonly used in j face peeling operations. This was the 3 second operation of its kind that Mrs. p Gilchrist had undergone. The beauty e doctor who treated her the first time fled , the country after one of her patient died, t —— ■- ■ . ■ i Hr* \ jK| ! |jl ij ) | JgTJ VYTW \ i. M. Cohan ’ Ay/ Jmf J' ' Actor, Producer, Playwright, " y -.- .andCompo&x - v v. ‘ Such popularity must be deserved TN one great success after an- > To be chosen by millions, even a I JL other, George M. Cohan has cigarette must have “made good.” won nation-wide distinction as Chesterfield’s record gains, actor, playwright and producer. for example, are no accident, None may challenge his record but rather the result of sheer > for dean hits. merit greater fragrance and a I ( Such success must be deserved. more pleasing taste. Chesterfield — -todays events j Monday. March 2S, 1925 ' Forty yeans ago today saw the raenewnent of the Riol rebellion in the! Canadian Northwest. The second trial of Dr. George T. | Edwards, Fairfie'd, Alabama, physician charged with wife murder, is set to be gin today at Bessemer, a Henry M. Robinson, of Los Angeles.. who was a member of the Gerinan Rep- i arations Committee, is tp deliver th'e Charter Day address at the University of California today. Tbe trial of sixteen-year-old Dorothy ( Ellington, confessed slayer of her moth- j er, is scheduled to begin today in the ( Superior Court in San Francisco. The marriage of Mrs. Peadoby Saveli, j cf lindianapolie, dnd Basil Miles, for-; inerly prominent in the United States diplomatic service, is announced to take j place today in Paris. . A subcommittee qf the judiciary com-; mittee of the United States House of Represenatives is to begin bearing at ,St. Louis today in an investigation of charg ! es which have been made against Federal ] Judge English, cf the Eastern Illinois I district. He Looked Like the Man. | Two Negroes were working in a coal bin in a Mississippi town, one down in the bin throwing out the coal and the other wielding a shovel. The one in side picked up a large lump and heaving it carelessly into the air, struck the other a resounding blow on the head. As soon as the victim had recovered from his'momentary daze lie walked over to the edge of ,the bin and, peering down at his maty, said: v Nigger. how come you don’t wtftch where you throws dat coal? Von done hit me smack on the haid.” ) The other looked surprised. “Did I hit yon, nigger?” “You sho’ did." came the answer. “And .1 jes want to tell you. I'se been promising the debil a man a long tiifie, and you certainty does resemble my prom ise.’” Says Germany Is Arming. Germany is persisting in her effort to maintain a complete staff of officers for an army such as she had in 1914. ac cording to the report of 4he allied war eonknittee headed Jay Marshal Foeh. 11- - licitly manufactured guns and other war Thaterial wbre found, as well as secret aiul walled shops in steel mills ready to I turn out cannon at a moment’s notice. ■ German pacifists gave the tips that led There WereTwoSides to This " ' ' Story—and Both Are Tcid ■ &OTH mreesue?, j THE WtPB Sow would yon like “be wtfe t> tell the world whet the thinks of pool And. wifey, bow would you like Mind husband tc broadcast bis opinions of you T One of the nations! magazine* baa evidently gone a long way to ward explaining the psychology M matrimonial troubles by thus get* aHb two intelligent persons in tbe M the same experiment tc fnvdUy «no tn .detail, the bow end the why of it aIL j Neither it is said, knew that tbe othei'was also writing their Story for publication hi the warns mage* | J sine ’ to the discovery, wit was said. The am bassadors' council, evidently impressed by itlie evidence furnished, asked Marshal Foeh for suggestions as to how the Ger mans can be forced to comply with the . disarmament provision of the Versailles ! treaty. . Monday, March 23, 1925 ... ■ ' ■ . ' ' f. if < HH| L ' THE HUSBAND , The courtship and marriage had been the talk of Ureenwfcb Village end New York’s literary dijdee. Milton Raison, a yoong poet, lion ■zed by New York society, bed; married Ruth Waterbary, also * writer. Friends considered it <U! ideal match but, after two yean of married life, they separated. Their stories constitute two very human documents appearing ill the April issue of H caret's In Ur na tional Cosmopolitan. Friends ere now wondering whether the simul taneous publication of their sidei of the story will bring the young couple together again, or merely widev the rtft Sixty-Mile Speed Limit. A speed limit of sixty miles an hour is fixed for the Kansas prairie counties in a bill recently passed by the State senate. This speed is permitted in tbe counties having a population of 5,000 or lesa. \
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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March 23, 1925, edition 1
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