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Friday. May 29, 1925 [" Tl 1 ' ' '' • - ■ - . ... CROSSWORD PUZZLE i The only word you may find difficult in thus puzzle is 38 vertical. But you’ll be surprised to learn that it sounds al most like its definition, and’in fact is spelled almost similarly. HORIZONTAL 1 Prairies. 8 The man who borrows your money 11 Edge. —‘ 12, Eagle's nest. 14. Meadow. 15 Paid publicity. 10 Daubed. 18 Musical note. 19 - Eggs of fishes. 20 Noise. , ' 22 To move through water (as a boat). 24 Fashion (like balloon trousers). 26 To the greatest extent. 28 Hen fruit. 21) Stories. 31 Small eye boil. 32 What the customer always is. 38 Great artery. 84 Supplied with nourishment. 35 Titles. 37 To tear a seam. 39 To depend upon. 41 Upright shaft. 42 To make harmonious. 43 Affirmative. 45 Ecbentric wheel. 46 Myself. 48 Later. 51 Half an em. 52 hfeasure of cloth. 54 Peak of a cap. 55 Since. 56 Glided on special ice shoes. =— TriiTPaimiP-' ~ 1 TODAY’S EVENTS Friday, May 29, 1925. Centenary of the birth of Gen. David R. Uirney, who commanded a Union corpidat Gettysburg. I '.Tefftrsbn Medical College, of Phila delphia. one.of the oldest in America, today begins a celebration of its cen tennial. At a special election today Yonkers, N. Y.. will vote on a proposal to adopt the city manager form of government. Hundreds of music lovers will gather at Bethlehem, l>a.. today to attend the annual Bach Festival, given under the auspices of Lehigh University. Officials of all 'the prominent tobacco co-operative associations are to meet at Lexington, Ky„ today tp consider im portant problems relating to the conduct if their business. A national conference of the Superin tendents of Women's Reformatories and Girls’ Training Schools will be opened today at -the Minnesota Women's Re formatory, at Shakopee, Minn. A wilt-resisting flax which liberates 'an enzyme to attack the outrages of the fungus is saving the flax industry of the Northwest. MOWN POP f f NO ANN I VW-L NOT 6*2BI<SCCH I"'.| | ( A REPORT CAR© ASTHI6 DNTtU 7 VOUR FATHER HA6 LOOKED AT IT- Jj ; f ' 'v £ -v ;• . ; : l ESPECfJuAV IN HISTORY- FOR TH£ }, 7 LAST THREE MONTHS yoOR HISTORY i-gj l GRADES HAWeMO*R V BEEN OVER eo .—-11 U — r f V«CU-€BB ' (no vionoEß-) * JjUbf- Jpsj k wll 3 J jmEbmMmml hhH ww* i 57 Actively swimming organisms on the surface of the sea. VERTICAL ' 1 What every one loves to hear about himself. 2 Cover. 3 Part of .verb to be. 4 Cognomen. 5 To observe. 6 Pine tree. 7 Weed. « 8 Hebrew name for Deity. 9 Fish bag. 10 Delicate. 13 Amount at which a person is rated with reference to assessment. - 16 Sun. 17 Obscure. 19 Stiffly; 2l A pOf remedy for some political evil. 23 To promise. 2j Deadly. 25 Distributed (as cards). 27 Blot. 29 Definite article. 36 Cry for help at sea. 34 Bodily structures. 36 Forays. 38 Opinion. 40 Nevertheless. 42 Sailor. 44 To rescue. „ 45 Swollen area at base of bird's bill. 47 largest deer. 40 To remove. 1 50 Electrified particle. 51 Self. 53 Melancholy note. J 55 Preposition of place. I Clem Shaver VVIU Not Resgln. New York, May 27.—Clem Shaver, [ chairman of the Democratic national committee. «ai<l here today that he has j no intention of resigning bis post at this I time. Reports from Washington indi j c'ated that Mr. Shaver was expected to ■ step out to make way for the election of Represenative William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. Mr. Shaver made it clear ’ that so far as he' is concerned the pro posal lias no existence. The Midday Nap. Little children are ail the better for a good rest in the middle of the day. If the blind is drawn down they will soon fall asleep for at least half aii hour, especially if the habit has never been broken since they were tiny babies and slept the morning through in their car riages on the porch or in the garden. A rich ruler from Himalayan India, after being feted and shown all the glories of England, was asked what most impressed him- “The green grass,” he said. Sales of Christmas seals for tuber culosis eradication last year exceeded ¥4.500.000. , \ BY TAYLOR rr vqons lady yso dsn't seek ~\ ) to 8£ Getting along very , vmellVjith Youe qsniPtEE - r" V YOUR GRADES ARE ,_XoZ7 - X VERY LOAN BuTCc 1 I POP IC/ | I v 55DOY ■' Ji 1 \THE T\t j ■' ■ 7 ■ * £•' _ . . J f i '' V -'*s > -THINGS THAT HAPPENED )|.j • l BEFORE l WAS Born /M I■ ■ ■ - €k. MBf \ _... , , J UNITED STATES SHOULD BE | \ liKnIEJIT TO WAR DLBTORS The United! States should demand a strict acknowledgment of war debts of foreign nations but should be lenient re garding the terms ’of payment, according -to the majority of opinions in a sympos ium upon the problems of war debt set tlement by some two huddred leaders in business, labor, finance, politics, and edu cation which appears in the current issue of.The Literary Digrest. All are unanimous that whatever plan Is finally adopted should be applied to each nation alike. “Offr government,” Elbert 11. Gary stat ed in response to the magazine’s ques tionnaire, “in a polite and friendly way shohld strictly insist that all debtor na tittbs pay to this country the full amount of claims, at the same time offering lib erhl terms as to time of payment and rate of interest’” C, According to Col. Edward J*f. House, Yiffio was one of President Wilsotfs inti mates during the peace-settlement days* the adjustment has been postponed too long. «■ “These debts,” Colonel House says, “should have been settled jointly and not Severally immediately after the Armistice bad been signed. Even now theta should be a general clearance and and equitable adjustment' of all war debts and in this adjustment consideration should’ be giv en to the nature of the obligation’s, and to a comprehensive Of the general international welfare rather than the re stricted view of merriy money.”, r Roland W. Boyden, formerly unofficial delegate of the United States off the Rep arations Commision, states that Ameri ca should af>piy the principle of the Dawes plan to the debts making the de mand for payment proportional to the country’s ability. Charles W. Eliot, President emeritus of Harvard, believes that America should collect from the solvent nations an easy [ terms, and remit the debts of the insolv ent nations. “For Vich and prosperous America.” states President J. A. Angell of Yale, “to take any but a lenient and generous at , titude toward our late allies who may be in our debt financially would place an ineradicable station on tlie fair name of the nation.” President Butler of Columbia Univer sity, thinks that it 's not a sound policy to attempt to deal with the debts sepa rately or otherwise than as part of a general scheme of Internationa) financial and economic reconstruction. “The problem,” Dr. Butler states, “ap pears to be similar to that presented to the receivers of a great railway system temporarily unable to meet its obliga tions. In the huge mass of internarionsl indebtedness the United States holds what are really debenture bonds. “The shortest and safest way to a so lution of these problems, in my judgment, would be to treat the whole question as a receivership, to ask all creditors to par . tl<-, J»te in a plan of reorganization and' reconstruction, and to take in exchange for their existing obligations an equitable share of new' and properly secured evi dences of indebtedness. “The reparations to be paid by the German Republic are an essential elc tTk- °J r X ole I>robl ™' l ana can not, i think, be either judiciously or fairlv eliminated from it.” ' President E. E. Millimari, of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Wav Em ployees, suggests that everv American traveler m those countries owing us war debts should pay his way in part with * Wsittag. Ury ° f " ,C CoUntry he Thought numerous livestock fatalities ‘ “ *° ~ ) 0t,,t0 Poisoning, have been re ported. human loss of life from this cause is very rare, two members of a \aqda.ia, Illinois, family having reeent ji'otatoes. h<nVl ‘ Vel '’ fr ° m eatin * ‘ The overland journey to India from Bikiang, China, is n feat that has onlv been performed three times. At a depth of 1.200 kilometem the ' toStt '*" l ' “ j THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE -- - -- ■> - - .. . L C - .9.1 ■ I ■ m —————— BY CHARGES P. STEWART NBA Service Writer WASHINGTON —The efficiency expert was a city dweller. The country was new to film. It shocked him, too—lts Ineffi ciency did The cows, in particu lar! There was a pastureful of them They roved about aimleksly. They’d eat grass for awhile on a sdnny slope in the early mom. As noon drew on, they’d walk clear td the other end of the pasture and cat in the shade of some trees. No sytsem about it at all! “If those cows, said the effi ciency expert, “would line up in a queue, and eat right along, the way a lawn mower runs, and then . eat back, a parallel, adjoining swath, they’d get a heap more food** r for a lot less exercise, and natur ally they’d givq more milk." The efficiency expert undertook to make the cows do this. But hb worried the cows so, and had ’em eating grass on the boiling . hot hillside jU noon, and In the chilly shade of the trees, at dewy eve, and' they gave LESS milk. <t<J rfvHIS * parable,” said a har- X raised government em ploye, “shows how the fed eral bureau of efficiency worksr It works in conjunction with the procrastination board. "1 mean to say the classification board. The procrastination board is what we call it in government slang. "I mlssiioke. The efficiency bu reau's mission is to keep the gov ernment employes sope arid dis couraged at! the time. The pro crastination board's is to see that corresponding positions in all the different departments are equally poorly paid. j “Say you're, recommended for promotion. The efficiency bureau proves you’re no good even where you are. If you’re ptomoted never theless, the procrastination board delays any advance in your salary. When finally you do get It, the comptroller general decides you’re not entitled to it and must pay It back. In case you refuse, he holds . lip your semi-monthly check, OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS _ The Af?fS-focrati j 9 ; —1 EVERETT TRUE * fit CONDO j bv;*sy gse. e % v&o eeSM It ' Mu AjOMf KJO: JPcbA MVJT 3. A<SAI K4 J.v 'TTHrS sllxbo I*OiDN-iai ; s<iAXTCiTala-| A«o«otKID l TpC-OOf?-/ I > M ” T' . , A j 1 * ffly * . T" «!■*>**»—— | NO,— inn it+e agfc , _—c ' v/ —^—• *v 4X4 iur SEiji j 2’jgaamiLJfH tog tI s a ■*'» - 'lf- r■ ■ f Ti Ptli COLUMN GETS 'EH EVERT TIE | • \ ... - - x 1 ■ - - . : - dsm 1 RECENTLY." continued i l\ government empic I (£ “when Secretary of Ct 1 merce Hoover had a ssooo vacar. 1 in hi* department and was ask ■ whom he was going to put in ; he said he was still looking f the right candidate—a $20,000 m; who was fool enough to take SOOOO job. “When the government does flm such a man, ft doesn't set ver: well with him to have the effl clency bureau picking holes in the $20,000 way be does his ssooo work, | the procrastination board putting the brakes on any little increase ' I he earns and the comptroller gen- 1 eral ordering him to return what he’s already received. s “However, it suits the efficiency I bureau, which really runs the whole system. If everybody were ' J efficient there- wouldn’t be any I reason for such a board. “It has to create inefficiency to j provide an excuse for itself, and in cooperation 'with the procrasti- 1 nation board and the -Comptroller general, it does it wonderfully | well.” ** • I SENATOR WATSON’S “Every body knows prohibition isn’t f being enforced," wasn’t a charge, such as the out-and-out wets make, but an admission * which riilght about as well -have f come from the White House, since 1 WatsOn virtually skid hes was fl speaking for the president. | But the nub of the senator’s re- if marks was his announcement that | a tremendous enforcement effort jl is about to be made, with the I clause that if; after that, “the peo- j pie will not stand for it, It is for them to say so and the law can be I modified.” This is the first time, anybody but the above-board Wets has sug gested modification. Is the admin lstration making a final grand J demonstration, in evidence of good | faith?—preparatory to telling the | country, “The government’s done 1 its best and failed,, so far as prohi- - bltion’s concerned. Now it's up to • you.” That’s the meaning most of Washington reads into what the I . senator said. : THINK OF IT! s > A Standard Electric K Gleaner for Only Jlk > $39175 VSSfk hy Pa v More? You buy them to the happy refrain of only $39.75. You save the big selling commisions. You get real value. When some canvassed or factory resale man, at your door m a o . sto . re ’ sa T s “You can’t get a quality cleaner Under to S7O, just make up yoUr mind to try the BEE-VAC. Call 164 for free demonstration. H. B. Wilkinson OUT OP THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT I Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville, China Grove § Skates Skates I 150 Pair | UNION SKATES-THE BEST MADE ONLY $1.69 1 • While They Last '***' Yorke & Wadsworth Co. J Union and Church Street j Phone 30 Phone 30 Studebaker Sales and Service { CALL 328 FOR DEMONSTRATION I M e carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, and Tubes, Richmond Electric “*ly hammered oiKetls, and (Quality piston rings, Hassle* Shock Absorb- ’ s, Gabriel Snubbers, Milwaukee connecting rod bearings, Dnminum shims. Aleimte greases, guns, hose, cubs, thermoid and RusCo brake lin ing generator and starter brushes, ignition parts, horns and bumpers and anything else that you might need for your car GENUINE FORD PARTS AUTO SUPPLY k REPAIR CO. QUALITY FEEDS AT J CASH TEED STORE I CHURCH I Let your next feed be the Checkerboard Feed—Layinir il I ™ sl ‘' Lromilg Mash and Baby Ebix and Starfina wifi dd 8 i the work. It is all guaranteed feed. g STRAW HATS Your Straw is ready. The Cor rect Shape is here, with plain bands I or nobby stripes. I Hot days are coming, so come in* 1 and make your seleefck>i& RICHMOND - FLOWS CO. ] mmmiEmMm pyEptisapßaj PAGE NINE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1925, edition 1
9
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