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PAGE FOUR a#lpSlll of »peelal J?g£ h LT k( i 3 ■nXwul *» mbohil Plana mail matter BA»ggyaarra.g- * - '' " Jro)BßCKtF*riOKr RATES <& yZJ*--! Concord by Carrier^ On* Month TI .** Outside of the St*te, the Subscription is the asm* *» in th* city Out of the oitymtid ht mall ta Worth Osrollns the folloiTfn* prices will pre tu: .... Six Months >?• Thr§6 Month a „.. , n 1.2# Uss Thun Three Months, SO Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid In AdVanc* RAILROAD SCHRDUI.K In Effect June 28, 1924. NerthbouaA No. 18« To Washington S:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:15 A. M. No. *« To Danville S’ if No. 12 To Richmond 7.26 P. M- No. 82 To Washington 8.38 P. M. No. *0 To Washington »:S0 P. M. No, 80 To Washington l.tO A. M. No. 4S To CJmSntta *}** *■ “ »ssasr-/ Hlls ft 88*W8S— ■ -{StS No. 11 To Charlotte p" m NO. 188 To Atlanta 8il« M. If I' SSfraoSSi |"J®T-for today—l *|[ The W v ay to Peace: Acquaint now thy self with him, and be at peace: thereby good shall come “nto, thee.—Job 22:21. Prayer!:—<i) I»rd, keep us in perfect peace, for oilr .wind is stayed on thee. ' , ADVICE TO FARMERS. The new Secretary of Agriculture does uot talk like a politician. = Rather, he talks like a very sane and sertsible man who realize that every pet scheme offered in Congress and elsewhere will not cure the evils which have beset the farmers for , several years. Secretary Jardine in his statement. 1 which was a very brief one, warned “that confusion results from discussion of too many ways of helping the fanner,” and he outlined “a few simple principles that we can all talk about.” That's a little different from the talk that has been going out from Washing ton, the customary statement promising many remedies that would bring higher prices for the farmers' products. Frankly Secretary Jardine said "I have no panacea for agricultural relief,” and he added that he believes “no one else 1 has.” That is about right. Congress has wrestled with this problem for years; all kinds of relief measures were proposed and some of them were adopted, yet the plight of the fanner remains about the same. Politicians got behind the wheat market just after the Republican nation al convention and managed to carry the price to new high levels, but that was , just a pretense, for the prices have drop- , ped now to about the customary level. Business generally in the United States and Europe seems to be somewhat stabil- 1 ized now and that is going to help the fanner more than anything else. If Eu rope can get on her feet again and stay there business will be better with the , farmer. So long as everything is uncer tain in Europe business here will be in much the same plight. Secretary Jardine tells the farmers that “the most painful period of readjustment is now over and prospects look much brighter for the farmer. There ■is real encouragement in the progress that has been made during the past two or three years. We can look to the future with confidence, but we must recognize that there are many phases of the agricultural situation that still challenge the best thought of the nation." The Secretary of Agriculture thinks co-operative marketing and standardiza tion are necessary to eliminate waste, which lie regards as partly responsible for the spread of prices between produc ers and consumers. Balanced production is also essential, he pointed out, and he advised farmers in the northwestern States to devote some acreage now used for growing wheat to producing flax. This country will need about 10.000.000 bush els more of flux seed this yeear than it produced last year, he explained. MAKING PLANS FOR ARMS CON KERENCK. Secretary Kellogg, at the suggestion of President Coolidge.. is going ahead with all preliminary plans for a naval limita tions conference which the President ex pects to cull ome time before Congress meets in December. The President and his Secretary of State have been “sound ing out” some of the other nations re garding the conference and they are con- Vi Sej»t hC BkT h "r f ° r SU< ‘ 1 * a tbe ■ Bj HARRY B HUNT NBA Service Writer Washington—Hiram Bingham, the lanky new. senator from Connecticut, as an explorer has knocked around among a lot of the little known corners of the earth. His experience in strange places has taught him that thiqge' are not always what th«*y seem: that only by getting under the surface of thing! can the real reason for a given' situation be deter mined. I.! ' '' After two months of exploring sena torial catacombs and consciences, Bing ham has concluded that the Senate is no exception to this general rule. Many situations in the Senate, Bingham says, are reminiscent of the meeting on a lo cal train in his state of a couple of con servative Connecticut Yankees. • • * “One of these Yankees,” says Bing-! ham, “like most of his kind, was ex ceedingly reticent. But the second *ne. Wfto, got. on, and sat down in the same seat with the first, was a curious, in quisitive ' customer. This fellow noticed the' first had a basket on the floor in I front of him in, which something kept | moving. i ; “ ‘What you got in the basket Y he, asked, trying to penetrate the other's] reserve. Great Britain and Japan are certain to welcome the conference while the at titude of the French is uncertain. It is believed that while the French may not come in at first an agenda can be worked out to which she ultimately may consent. The United States at the first arms conference had much to offer. This time she has; little but a threat. When the Harfiing conference was called the Unit ed States was building the greatest navy in the' world: At present, under the terms of that conference, she is building but little, and perhaps she will have to hold over the conference her. Ability to build again to get the results desired. President Coolidge is expected, to get the endorsement of practically every par ty and faction in his efforts to make the conference a success. Agreements likely to be drawn up and accepted tend to lift somewhat the burden of prepara tion for war if they do no more. And of course, there is the even greater possibil ity that such agreements will lessen the chances for war. Anything that smacks of preparedness against war should be given full trial at least. Georgia Is Yet Too Hot to Listen to Reason. Charity and Children. Governor McLean wisely declines to become head of the commission to restore Borglum to his place as sculptor of the! Stone Mountai memorial. Georgia is j too hot yet to listen to reason. We. hope nobody will go crazy over Borg-: luni though lie is undoubtedly a great i artist, and the only man who can com- • pletc the job as it was originally de signed. But Borglum is a small man with mighty poor judgment. Mr. Borglum's heart bleeds, hut his ] pocketbook bulges. The artist has an | insatiable appetite for money. We arc beginning to doubt that he will be em ployed to finish the work he has so slow ly prosecuted up to this time. .Sunday, Ham and the Flapper. Charity and Children. The bobbed haired flapper in this sec tion, ii liable to catch it coming and go ing next month with Billy Sunday on one side and Ham on the other. Billy Sunday in Winston-Salem and Ham-Ramsey in Burlington, will give the devil and all his works a warm time during the month wf April. Prohibition Officers Go Too Far. Charity and Children. Prohibition officers who go too far and insult innocent people in their search for bootleg liquor are doing more to make the prohibition law odious than all the outspoken enemies of the law. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO /Null ——— wmmm „ mmmmmmmmm ——— SP<S>NCc?R / I <2/4N'T TH/4T UfcYT<=:R VOO S4l£> <4<4S» ON 'rboft V&Stci COMO HOKXS 4NI> m You W 1 Ml NUTAQvO / &■& 1 ~ ; Ys-S, it most rae. ~i«e YOU VIA <SoT IN THfc WIDE tajOF?<_T> «... - .... . •WWW _____ InE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNII r- ington •Z 1 “‘None of your business,’ was the brief Angwer. a ’ 5 “‘l* it a dog7’ the curious one per i sisted. i “‘Not ’taint a dog; its against the : rule* to take dogs on trains,’ , ' j “‘ls it a cat?’ i “ ‘No, I don’t like cats'.’ ,• 1 “i. BWan < well—what is it, anyhow f [ “ ‘Ef you got to know,’ said the owu l er of the basket, lit’* « mongoose.’ “‘A mongoose! What do you do with a mongocee?’ “ ‘Mongoose is g<*>d for snakes. That’s ail a mongoose is good for—to chase 1 snakes. I don’t like to disclose family secrets, but I got a brother as drinks , more than is good for him. He some ■ times gets the D. T.’s. I’m taking the mongoose to him.’ “ ‘Humph !” snorted the inquisitive one. ‘Why. those ain’t real snakes.’ j “ ‘No!’ said the owner of the basket. ‘No, I suppose they ain’t. But then this ain't a real mongoose, either’.” ' - j • * * | That, opines Bingham, is like a lot of situations in the Senate. _ Neither the snakes that are chased nor the ‘mori- I gooses’ that chase them are real . i And the mirest proof of this, he thinks, | is the touchiness of senators when sug ! ] gestion i$ made that their reasons are | not what they seem. TODAY’S EVENTS Saturday, March 28, 1925 Greetings to Mary Piekford and Doug las Fairbanks, on their fifth wedding an niversary. Milledgevilie. Ga„ today Cclebrates the centennial of the visit of Lafayette to the city, then the capital of Georgia. Today, for the last time. Madison Square Garden will announce tbe coming of Spring with the opening of the circus season. The .Prince of Wales and a numerous suite will embark on the cruiser Re pulse today to begin the trip to -South Africa and the Argentine, i A party of six members of the’United House of representatives, including mem bers of the Insular Committee, sails from New York today to review the uavul ' maneuvers at Hawaii.’ Sunday, March 29th. Today marks ■ the beginning of the . Jewish Passover. Centenary of the birth of Isaac Wil liam Wiley, a bishop of the Methodist Church. w Henry White, former United States Ambassador to France, is seventy-five years old today. The Southern Interstate Conference of Jewish Women begins its annual meet ing today at Birmingham. Germany today holds its presidential election, at which a successor to the late President Ebert will be chosen. When the Note Falls Due. ! Charity and Children. ] When a man buys a fine new car .on credit he goes joy riding and has 1 the best time in the world until the • note falls due. Then he drops his head ! and begins to figure as to where that money ran be found. North Carolina has had its joy ride and has gone to | figuring. | Failure of the Baltimore Methodist conference to endorse unification of the two branches of the Methodist Church will not discourage the friends of unifi cation. Already fourteen conferences of the Northern Methodist Church have en dorsed unification and the fight has just started in the Southern Church. Bishop Candler, who is presiding over the Haiti-; more conference, is opposed to u intuit ion, but a majority of the bishops of th* Southern Church favor it. ■ Greensboro has accepted plans for a new passenger station proposed by Vice 1 “resident Henry W. Miller, of the Southern Railway. It begins to faint ly indicate that Greensboro will get a suitable station sometime in tbe future. “Gap” Leidy, who was head umpire in the Texas league, last year, is to serve as a pop bottle target in the Western league this season. j W tDUND YORK ■ Stolen Good* Estimated to Re' Worth t arrested toniffct. charged with being robbers and bootleggers whose cache of - stolen goods estimated to be worth as j much as $1,000,000 was discovered to- V day in eu> old two story building on South street. 1 . ' The suspect* said they were Patrick Mitchell, a foborer, and Max Price, • ’ salesman, both’ of New York. They nap ■ charged with stealing today, irom tne warehouse dr Piucus, Sachs and com* > pany, $30,000- worth of woolens waich were found In the warehouse. They * denied the charges. ‘ Police also are questioning two men who said they were employed as watch-, * men at the building and were ignorant ' of the fact that it housed stolen goods. In their -raid on the warenouse the police found groat stores of fabrics of ■ nil kinds, leather, dyes, canned goods, cigarettes nd cigars, between 75 and 100 barrels of Alcohol and liquor arid in the 1 basement two large stills which ap parently had been in recent operation. They found a fleet of 22 trucks, some of which have been identified an recently stolen. They found desks, telephones, filing cabinets. typewriters, eorirvqxmflenee nnd other indications that this was the headquarters of an extensive mail order business conducted by a highly organiz ed bandit and bootlegger band. They found secret doors and stair ways, with an ingenuous buzzer signal a'arm system; a trick safe concealed in a wall and.a trap door operated by ■ electricity; a store of six-shooters, al together a fantastic combination of a modern big business office and dime novel bandits' lair. Shortly after police hud broken into tbe place a mail carrier delivered a batch of le’ters. which were turned over to postal inspectors. It is hoped through these aud the mass of correspondence found to trace mail order purchasers and get on the trail of the bandits them selves. , “BOILERLESS BOILER” IS GERMAN INVENTION Device Is New Departure in Generation of Steam. Washington, March 27.—Having given the maritime world the so ill css sailing ship, Germany is now threatening to fur nish the boiierless boiler for . use “ In dustry generally. Tbe German' press, tfecording to official reports here, is crediting Bernard Beck er, of Norha, with the invention of a new type boiler that furnishes steam without boiling the water. The invention is de scribed as an entirely new departure in heating technique. Consisting of a pipe system 12100th the size of a normal boiler, and requiring a small flue, the device is declared to be capable of generating as much steam as an ordinary boiler 200 times its size. Woman's -Kindness to Woman. Mrs. Albertson —And what do you think .of my baby? Mrs. Smith —Why. she's a perfect image'jof you.’ poor little thing . l>r. Foteat says ; it is not the magnifi cence of the schoolhouse or its superb equipment 1 haft measures the success of a school, but the character of the boys and girls that it turns out. ~ USE GLYCA-PYNA The Creosote Throat and Bron chial Preparation For throat, croup, whooping cough, catarrhal bronchitis, bron chial, asthma and especially coughs of long standing and deep seated colds, there is nothing bet ter. If you are debilitated and in a rundown condition, are suscepti ble to colds or have weak lungs, use GLYCA-PYNA as a tonic. Put Up in Three Sizes, sl.lO, 60c, and 36c a Bottle SOLD BY Cabarrus Drug Co. may we Take your or der? for complete sani- E. B. GRADY 1 Show Rom t 4 e! Corbin St. ! “I *»r* ydhm piece «t pie feat week, It end you’re been sending your friend# lO here ever since.’? X i Tramp: “You’re mistaken, lady. Them |H was my eneiniee.” was unconscious for about three]* bpur# today.” “What was the trouble, accident ?’’ 10 • “No, I took a nap.” 8 A physician boasted at dinner that he 8 cured his own hams, when one of his S own guests remarked: “Doctor, I would 8 sooner be your ham than your- (ptfent. O When Frank Hayman buried fcfe wife, x a friend asked him 'why ho expended so A much on her funeral. “(A, M?(r," re- V plied he,- “she would have done a# much or more for me with pleasure.” Mary wan-eeven and she didn’t want to tike her music lesson.* '‘Why, Mary, idon’t you like your music?” asked her mother anxiously. “No,” sobbed the little girl; “‘I hare these little black things sittin’ on the fence!” Contributor: “I hope you are carry; \ ing out those ideas I wrote you about.” < Editor: “Did you meet the office i boy j with the wastepaper basket?” > , Contributor: “Yes.” j i Editor: “Well, he was carrying out j your ideas.” , E Newed—What’s wrong with the pie 9 crust? It doesn't half cover the pia X Mrs. Newed—Why, dearest, 1 isked, X your mother bow to make them to suit © you and she said to make the crust very x short. O “Now,” began the scenario writer, O timidy, “I’d like actors in my picture. X who can behave like ladies and gentle- B men.” : 8 “l)*o, sirl” snorted the director. “It K would never get by th ecensors!”' * • 0 Maid —I hope, ma’am, that you're not S superstitous? . ft Mistress—not*a bit; Mary. - ‘Why? 0 Maid (with a sigh of relief) —Because X I’ve broken the large mirror in the hall. 8 She had kepf the' salesman bhsy for 0 nearly two hours and had not bought a X thing. Filially she said pompously, B “Well, I must go now. I nse my car 0 at the curb.” -• v - * ft “Just a minute, madam,” said the 6 salesman, “and I'll unroll a strip of car- 8 pet across the-sidewalk.” Prospective Employer—But 'can you 8 get up in the morning? Maid Applicant—Can I? Why, in my 8 last place, I used to be up and have V all the beds made before any one else X was up. B First Reporter—You say you are from V Brooklyn?, That would make you a X Brooklynite, wouldn’t it? By the way, 5 may I have another of those cigars? 8 Second Reporter—Certainly, and you K say you arc from Paris? j k CXPEftT | I WORKMAN* I 1 In all of our work we II X II exercise the greatest of j X I care, the utmost consul- II 5 M r ration of detail and the U ft If most skillful of erafts 8| uianship. We are de- H U Electrical Satisfaction Herd U S W. J. HETHCOX I I Electrical Futures B ’ ■ W. Depot St. Phone 668 || II Place Your Order for 1 HOT ROLLS With Your Grocer by I three o’clock ords RED SEAL RECORDS. » P # No- Biss . v, * r ■ 0497 12 Romfe accompaniment) • Sonata in E and' AU«*ro~'(o. F. BsW) 1 ”* 8485 12 wane \ Dearest Name ( Verdi) In* 1075 JO Bimba, no t’avicinar (LUO* Qirt, Do Not Come Near) (0. Corteai—BettioeUD Italian Miguel Ffeta ’ 1069 10 Symphony No. 6, In 0 Minor—lat Movement, Part 1 ((Beethoven) Mengelberg and New York Philharmonic Or, Symphony No. 5, in C Minor—lat Movement, Pert 2 (Beethoven). Mengerberg and New York Philharmonic Or. 6406 12 La Gioeonda—Suicldio! (Suicide Remain*) (Ponchieili) In Italian Rosa PonseUe L’Africans —In grembo a me (Lulled in My Arms) (Meyerbeer) In Italian —— Rosa Ponselle 1071 10 Avc Maria (Hail Mary!) (Vittoria) In Latib —-—Slstine Chapel Choir O Salutaris Hostia (Oh Saving Victim) (Peros 1 ) in Imtin , Sistine Chapel Choir 1072 10 Sun aud Moon (Uretchen Dick-Arthui A. Penn.) 9 ——— L- ——i- Reinafd Werrenrath 8 , Drumadoon (C. A Rensbaw-Wilfrid Sanderson) i — — Reinald Werrenrath. 8 RECORDS FOR EASTER ft 35752 12 Tlic Cricufixhm —Could Ye Not Watch With Me with • 8 organ •- Trinity Quartet S The Cricifixion—The Appeal of the Crucified—with ■ -v—: Trinity Choir 8 19587 10 Jesus Christ Is Risen Today—Pipe Organ Solo.-Mark An- 8 drew*. f» When I Survey the Wondrous Cross—Pipe Orran 8 l Solo Mark Andrtws 8 MELODIOt’S INSTRUMENTAL g 10504 10 The Flattered (Chaminade) Hans Barth 8 ' Scarf Daw*'(C*aminnde) Hans Barth 8 19524 10 The Toreador, andrh* ASdSfusian Maid (Rubinstein) / X • ■_ . Victor Symphony Orchestra 6 Feramore—Wedding Procession (Rubinstein ( 0 r* H•H£u.£ /Victor Symphony Orchestra 8 19572 10 Old Pal (Kahn-Vau Atstyne) (Played on the Muriitxer Or- 1 ( gan) Organ) —_* Jesse Crawford I Dreants-Never Come True (Gillespie-Crawford-Kanter) I (Played,on tbe Wurlitier Organ) Solo Jesse Orawferd | 19550 10 Kiss Me Again (Victor Herbert) (Piano accompaniment) [ Saxophone Solo Rudy Wiedoeft 1 ( Vfi)D* Mauanetta (R. Wiedoeft) (Piano accompaniment) S' Saxophone Solo Rudy Wiedoeft » LIGHT VOCAL SELECTIONS. B 45842 10 At the Theatre (Humorous Monokmge) Marie Cahill X Neighbors (Humorous Monologue) Marie Cahill 8 10565 10 Oh Mabell Billy Murray 8 I Couldn’t Get to It in Time (with Ukelele and B Guitar) .* —— —l. Wendell Hall 8 , 19566 IQ Gypsy Love Song (from “The Fortune Teller)..Ralph Crane 8 Forgotten Ralph Crane 8 19582 10 Why Conldn't It Be Poor Lfetle Me (with guitar) J Cross-word Mamma You l’usile Me (with guutar) j ————- frank Crumit | 19582 10 Come Back to Eriu Shannon Quartet 8 Killarney P Shannon Quartet 0 19585 10 When My Sugar Walks Down the Street-. Aileen Stanley ' i I Ain’t Got Nobody to Love Aileen Stanley | 19588 10 When You and I \J'ere Seveenteen.Helen Clark-Lewis James Keep Smiling at Tronble (from “Big Boy”) Bbannon Quartet [ 19597 10 Honest and Trply (with Piano) Saxophone obbligato Wiedoeft Henry Burr J DELL-DARNS FURNITURE CO. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooSo IX 1,11 Just Received 8 Solid Car 0 mJ- ~- J Loads of Simmon’s Beds 0 n'v' ili' -• > 'll' I h For R ea l Values, See Us 0 j j I j fi First or Last —You’ll 8 Also a Car Load of Wardrobes, Chis- ' WfflflF 1 j ferobes, Dressrobes, etc. v 8 | You’ll be delighted with the attractive "’Tul"I 8 i appearance of these and other new ar- x ! rivals in Wonderful Bed Room Suites. * I o H. B. Wilkinson I out OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT 1 Concord Kannapolis M coresville China Grove 9 SEEDS AND FERTILIZER lespEdeza AND CLOVER SEED . . S LISTER FERTILIZER AND SOYBEANS Yorke & Wadsworth Co. The Old Reliable Hardware Store Phone 30 Phone 30 jvM»S»««BPQ«aBQO«S«008«090«»«0»Bn(l*nO««9oa»W*»n)HSof i ■mm March 28, 1025
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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March 28, 1925, edition 1
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