Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 30, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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Saturday, May 30, 1025 ■p - ~ jHp* - — ~jBBB This crossword puzzle is devoted especially to the memory of our loved ones' for whom the day itself has been set aside. It is u tribute to the /ieroes of past i wars. | ■ HORIZONTAL. 1 Former soldier. 7 Courage (of soldieifs). 12 Priest belonging to Lamaism. 13 Collection of facts. 14 Fondness( of country.) 15 Wavy. 17 Firmly implanted as iu the heart. 20 Joint in tbe middle of the leg. 22 Strap of a bridle. 24 Printer’s measure. 20 Where a soldier is buried. 27 Fourth note in scale. 28 Swamps. 31 Country. 33 Indian tribe. 34 Enemy. * 35 To decay. 30 Spikelet on barley or oats. 37 Enraged. 39 Heron. 41 lake. 42 National emblems. 45 Second note in scale. 40 Father. 48 Chickens. 51 Race horses. 53 Disclose. 55 Maple tree family. 50 Epoch. 57 Sea eagle, y 58 Name of our country. 59 Marches iu review to commemorate ' this day. CATAWBA COLLEGE TO LAY DORMITORY CORNERSTONE Exercise Jana «th at" New lluHdbig, Known as Elizabeth Conrad Zartman Hall. Charlotte Observer. Rev. Shuford Prefer lias returned from Dayton. Ohio, where he went to address the eabinet of the Woman’s Missionary Society of the general synod of the Re formed Church in the I'nitcd States in the interest of the new Catawba College. This cabinet is undertaking the erec tion of the girls’ dormitory at (he new Catawba College at Salisbury, which wilt cost about $50.00. It is proposed to erect this dormitory with money con tributed by each woman in the thank offering boxes from year to year. Ills. C. C. Host, of Hickory, is a member of this cabinet and attended the meeting at Dayton. -s^ Yesterday Mr. Peeler 'received a tele gram from Mrs. Host, at Dayton, stat ing that 810.000 of* this money will be paid during next week, $3,100 to follow a little later. Tbe eabinet voted unani mously ,to name this dormitory th/ Eliz abeth Conrud Znrtinan Hall. It will henceforth be known as the Zartman MOM’N POP BY TAYLOR nT NOO'RE HOM 6 6ARO# V VOO B6TCHA- "Y ? AMY-DIDYOOHAUC h GEE - HAD iI u>tlac/Se?iJ Pe hoo didn't \ —r— ** in zx n 7 YOOR MANNERS \ 'll ■ lljOlS* • , > • •- - . • - - VERTICAL 2 A sprite. 3 To deliver a speech, i Improves. v ' 5 People. / (1 No. 7 To obstruct. 8 Plant which yields bitter drug. 0 Consecrated by a vow. 10. Level. % 11 Carmine. 16 Smalt cask. | 18 Rock containing metal. lO v The name of this day. 21 Mother. 23 Mourned. 25 Feudal estates. 27 Garden plant. 29 Polynesian' chestnut. 30 Abode. 31 Solemn ceremony. 32 A great distance. 38 A person who searches for missing . i articles or people. 40 Classes. 42 Opposite of near. 43 Variant of "a.” 44 Feminine pronoun. 46 Step. 47 Fairy. 49 Always. 50 Small grains of earth. 51 Engine’ of war. 52 The ocean. 53 To knock. 54 Sheltered. Hall and a beautiful brinze tablet will be erected tlierin. The Salisbury Marble Company., is cutting a cornerstone and donating it to the college. It will bear this inscription: “Elizabeth Conrad Zurt mhn Stali, 1923.” The cornerstom; will be laid Satur day afternoon, June (itb, at 3 o’clock and a picnic supper will follow. Invi tations have been sent to all the members Os the Reformed churches'throughout the state to be present. The citizens of Salisbury and Rowan county are espe cially .urged to be present to enjoy the program and the picnic. A1 lthe peo ple are invited to bring well filled bas kets and spend an enjoyable afternoon. Students continue to enroll for next year and the prospect now is for a good school. Ail plans are, being made to open tlie school September 14th of this year. MINING IN CUMNOCK FIELD HAS ITS DANGERS Report Made to Bureau of Mines in 1922 Describes Some of Difficulties. Washington. May 28.—At the bureau of mines (he Duily News was told today that not n great deal of information was I at band relative to tbe coal mines in the Cumnock section of North Carolina. I Many years ago there were two mine disaster* in the state, but this was be fore the bureau of mines) here was or ganized. Os late years some investi gating has been done, and some dangers, it was felt, would have to be encounter ed in the mining operations in the state; but this is more or Jess true of mining everyfhere. In April, 1922, -T. J. Forbes, a mining engineer from the bureau of mines, made a thorough investigation at one of the Cumnock Kites for the purpose of de termining whether oh not the slate, peat j and Otl>er foreign substnnees could be separated front the coal there so as tot make the mining oMt profitable. His re port is on file at the bureau and it de scribes some of the difficulties of opera tion in tbe mine; but it was said at the bureau that part of the report was con fidential, or for use by the bureau ex clusively. From the' report the following state ment was given out; “The Cumnock mine is operated by a shaft which cuts the coal seam ap proximately 360 feet from the surface. The coal pitches about 20 degrees. Main level entry is driven on the face of the coal and the slopes are turned at right angles on the butt of the coal. The rooms are turned off the slopes at right angles on the face of the coal and will extend upwards 700 feet in length. Very little explosive is neefessary when mining is done on the face. At that time the out j look was 75 to 100 tons per day, and ■ about 90 men were employed.” It was also said that Dr. need, a representative of the bureau, who is uow at’ the unine superintending the rescue and relief work, would make u thorough investigation of the enttse of the disaster and give out a statement to the press. R. C. Ague, staff assistant to the vice chairman Os the American Red Cross, left here at noon today to direct relief operations at the Carolina Coni com pany mine. TODAY’S EVENTS. Saturday, May 30. 1925. Observance of National Memorial Day throughout the United States. The Rt. Rev. William Lawrence. Epis copal bishop of Massachusetts.-*who re cently announced his retirement, 75 years old today.. The Most Rev. Edward .T. Hanna, arch bishop of San Francisco, today celebrates liis fortieth anniversary in the priesthood. After 48 years of continuous service Julius Kruttschnitt today retires as the bead of the executive committee of the Southern Pacific system. Many special trains will reach Los An geles today with delegations to the fifty first imperial conclave of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. Notable ceremonies will accompany the unveiling of a memorial in Hoboken to day to tbe 1.500,000 soldiers of the Am erican Expeditionary Force .who sailed from that place to the war across the Seas. The one hundredth anniversary of the arrival in Spain of Washington Irving is to be marked today with the dedication of a memorial tablet at tbe house in Se ville where the great American historian, essayist and novelist lived. Fifty Per Cent. Reduction. To reduce the upper part of the body practice the following exercise : Lie down on a covered iioor and place a pillow un der your head. Stretch your arms well, above your head and have in your hands some object weighing about nine pounds (use a medicine ball if you have one.) Throw the weight forward (but retain ing it in the hands), rising to a sitting position hs you do so. Keep feet on floor as you rise. Repeat up to fifty times, as you grow accustomed to the exercise. A good exercise for reducing the hips is us follows; Lying iu same positio lias before, place your hands tin der your head and bring your knees up until they reach your chest. Now kick hard am imaginary object thrown at your feet. Repeat up to fifty times. Japan, being the land of cherry bloe soms. celebrates each April with the Geisha cherry dance. IRE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE SS-E 'M'l. .M l -11 LILMILJL™ ■■ ■ \ I j BY CHABLBB P. STEW A L,’ NRA Service VVrM or , ’tyTA&HINUTON—Not oven'the, YY biggest issues of International „ politics bother the State De partment as It is bothered period ically by controversies over the | “presentation* of American vcomen at the royal court of St. James i Matters Ih dispute between gov ernments can ,be argued, ad justed, compromised. Trained men talk them over rationally.. There are ruled and precedents to go by. Reason rules—sat least some of the time. 1 \• • • REASON has nothing to do with being “presented" at court. - The American woman who Wants to be “presented" just wants to be "presented"—"because.'’ The average American can’t possibly imagine how a certain type DOES want to be "presented.” >' With a woman of that type’it’s an obsession, a longing like tbe longing of the confirmed dope fiend for hip favorite drug. ' “Presented,” that woman has "arrived’’ socially. She can quit. For her death has no sting. She’s accomplished all things. , . I "Unpresented,” her life has fhlled—lgnominlously. * i Other than American women may be this way, too. I don’t know. The Americans are the ones I observed, as a correspond ent in London, where the “presen tation" fight always Is on at the United States embassy whenever a "court" la ahead. •see •*> A N eligible - candidate for /V must possess three qualifications. 1. Respectability. Most of them have that. 3. Money enough to pay tor tbe OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS • /whoa hact 1 DOKfrN /dout nmorrwX , • / 00-THflCn IF ME | f •Cu.Gif’lM \ '*-*¥•' '•! JfL- - er/xM-s sttu. few \ I first cracyC . A VNHUi AT BEE U. 1 ) (FMEGnSOoT iMi come oar hisself . ] hels uSui-cT' . Jmm, SpPf— \ IP wA HIT WARE HE / \ <S\iMCr SOWIEBUPC H. tfMAbu \ AINT, GOOD BEND OJEF? j\W§T ” ’ __<cT.ssw.Umm*> LIBE-TTV OR DEATH-? , l EVERETT TRUE BY C6KT>O Psui times i in as csca-o to acoohmoDatb BVT OHghuil Document Found. i The first clergyman ito he regularly pr- Baihetl ’ill.'America ; was Uejv. t Jusjtix FalcKuei!. ; tie nan' ordained! i»' 4*hfra <le'.|>&i*. la 1793. A c-Opy of the or iginal papers was nmdc and filed away iu the archives of the old Lutheran Church in Amsterdam, Holland. Then the original papers disappeared. Ail liy(ieti of ever finding them were given up. A,, special trip was made to Hol land iu 1603 to get a gllotograpkic copy r .outm All nave that or ir,-\v wiintaii c be candidates. S'. An udequate "‘pull" tS get them a "command’* to attend court. That's where they (all down. You -can count on your Angers the American women drith "mill” enough of their very own tofeet the necessary. "command." They Include the diplomatic group, those who bavi married into the Engllall peerage, a few who have spent decades and fortunes In England building themselves up socially and two or three of the super-elect [ here at home. • • • TIB rest must depend on the recommendation of the Amer ican ambassador hi London. His recommendation invariably does the work, but ursry tlmd there’s a "court" he has of applications and only a dozen or twenty. recommendations to dig* pense. * j. Who gets 'em? * You'd better believe that decid ing that is what makes the am- ] bassador’s hair turn gray. . The applicants mostly are big people, mind, with lots pf Influence In the home laqd. It doesn't do to offend them and yet it has to bo done. ] After pounding the ambassador on the back until he’s half dedfl — for he can make his limited num ber of ’’commands" go only Just' so far—they begin bombarding the State Department. . “Favoritism!" they -yell. * There were two "courts” in suc cession In London recently. The State-Department officials are wild eyed 1 yet: But probably they’re not \ a circumstance to the way Am bassadoy Houghton lobks. cf I lie copy tlici-e. This was the roly record church historians had of the first AjmMi-can ordination until the original papers ' were found"'recently tu a l eap of rubbish in St. .Tames Lutheran t'hurrh, New York. Besides this iifiiiortsnt doc ument. other important church patters, sought for years by' church historians, were found, .covered with dust, in a drawer Ailed with aucieut Christmas tree ornaments in St. James Chureh. IJj® ' THINK OF IT! 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CALL 228 FOB DEMONSTRATION §j | r carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, and Tubes, Richmond Electric- fl | ally hammered oilless, and quality piston rings, Hassler Shock Absorb- 8 J ers, Gabriel Snubbers, Milwaukee connecting rod bearings, Laminum Pj | shims, Alemite greases, guns, hose, cubs, thermoid and Rusco brake lin- H | ing. generator and starter brushes, ignition parts, horns and bumpers fl jn anything else that you might need for your car. - - I GENUINE FORD j AUTO SUPPLY & REPAIR CO. | I QUALITY FEEDS AT I CASH FEED STORE j| CHURCH STREET—PHONE 122 yLet your next feed he the Checkerboard Feed—Laying ' ' Mash, Growing Mash and Baby Chix and Startina will do ! ! the work. It is all guaranteed feed. ! STRAW HATS I |f I Your Straw is ready. The Cor- 1 rect Shape is here, with plain bands or nobby stripes. I Hot days are coming, so come in and make your selection. 5 j RICHMOND - FLOWE CO. I | / ■ Vf-' 1| J V 1 \ i a3B3N TTTTTTIf 1111 l IIMBft 'l PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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May 30, 1925, edition 1
5
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