Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 30, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Tuesday, June 30, 1035 WHAT IS A MASTER CLEANER? A Master Cleaner is one who is specially chosen for his integrity, knowledge of the busihess, courtesy and the ability to make good any damage, shortage or inexpertness within his control. The National Association of Dyers & Cleaners of the United States and Canada selects the member, and when once he displays the “Master” emblem you may rest assured he is gilt-edged in working calibre and a very fit individual with whom to entrust cleaning work. SUSPENDED SENTENCE IS GIVEN MBS. GIBSON Conditioned On Leaving Iredell County. —Another Charge In Charlotte. Statesville, June 2!).—Mrs. F l . 13. Oib son, also knowu in the past as Ruby Kun kie and Lola V\ oodtvard. charged with breaking into the home of her foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Kunkle. two weeks ago, was giveu the anticipated sus pended sentence today in Iredell jounty recorder's courst, Judge Starr making tbe young woman’s freedom conditioned on remaining out of Iredell oounty for two years. I.a t e this afternoon she "/as turned over to M. L. Gray, superinten dent of welfare in Charlotte, who rook her to the Queen City for a hearing on other charges. It is understood here that the defendant's husband. F. 13. Gib son, business man, who was here today, OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS , t *-T ,r /WHN iD 6I&ND UP AkT\ /WV-W SuRB.-ITS [ TfeU. AI.LtW'TDoaMEST 1 jSANVE. REASOM Vslt-W I \ \ H HOMBRES INI This ROLL. \ VdOULDNIT TELL ARSf \ StAm HON UTTIEIThcT] TOUGH ROMBRE ROW \ ' • M fjm. c> them . Bur i'm plumb little. i ThcT of him 111 Ilf 1) IHIPy scA\qrr-roErtm Yitu. Bur i could tell all . mmjm /?p vamce how much The miss vamces \m \ 3 T TRiHK o' HER, HlKl *TH‘ COURTS HOW MUCH , . LVObIB AMD l— ,11823 «v ittAmmx. me. MOM’N POP 03P l HAD SEVERAL. ST \ S SENT OUT ON APPROVAL \ VY- This is THE most -Z >ENSIVE ONE SllT I ~ ~T\ KE IT BEST- , S( Do,^T LIKE ] S LOOKSOOD J r / You'Re SURE YOU \ S* f UliE THIS ONE BETTER ) - l THAN THE ONE T. . —Z \ ( SHOWED YOU AT / f WHY SURE-L V ' ? will put up whatever cash bond is re quired in Charlotte, and take his wife with him to Columbia. Just before leaving for Charlotte late this evening. Mrs. Gibson was permitted to see her two little boys. Harold Wood ward, aged 10, and Paul Woodward, about nine, sons of her first marriage at 10. The farewell meeting was held by agreement in the private office of W. IV. Holland, Iredell’s welfare officer. Her foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kuntkle, who prosecuted their adopted daughter in mayor’s' and recorder's court, bade her good-bye and showed u charitable ond forgiving spirit to the one who had for years been a constant source of anxiety to them. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union held its first world convention in Boston in 1889. BY TAYIX)R f f Then perhaps 1 _—■ — > You LIKE THIS -/tB V ONE SETTER / LLI SAY LDO • K N \ That hat has M l V SOMEOAS© I| 7 Au-fftEHT then [ BUT L SHOWED YOU THE SAMe HAT \ 6<STVt TIMES-AT FIRST THE ( -feather was in front then t turned it around Drop Murder Charge Against C. C. F*i man. Chicago. June 21).—The eliarge of murder against C. 0. Faiman, indicted with William Darling Shepherd, (fl'io was acquitted last week of causing the death of William N. McClintock by ad ministering typhoid germs, was dismissed today. Judge Thomas .1. Lynch ordered the charge stricken off - the docket on recommendation of State's Attorney Crowe. Faiman, head of an unrecognized school known as the National Univer sity of Sciences, told a story that he had taught Shepherd how to administer ty phoid baceilli, hut State's Attorney Crowe refused to vouch for the witness and asked the court to call Faiman as a state's witness. Faiman had been held in a hotel by the state's attorney since early in March. TBB <SfTCORD fc&ILY TRIBUNE oman s^(kttero NBA Service Writer. Washington—Washington’s all excited over Doheny and Sinclair oil deci sions. The capital feels a proprietary interest in these cases. Here they started in the Senate. Here they’ll wind up, in the Supreme Court. In the meantime Washington's watch ing developments, as they break out, here and there. It's no exaggeration to say they've got her guessing—the shape they've been tak ing in the last few weeks. * * * First. Federal Judge Paul .T. McCor mick, of Los Angeles, fooled Washington by deciding the Doheny ease in the gov ernment’s favor. Washington expected a decision the other day. However. Doheny having lost “Sin clair surely will IhßUgli Washington, for all the dope indicated that the gov ernment’s evidence against the Sinclair lease a good deal stronger than againet the Doheny interests. And then Federal Judge T. Rlake Ken nedy. of Cheyenne, decided in favor of Sinclair. * * * Judge McCormick found evidences of fraud in ex-Secretary of the Interior. Fall's oil deal with Doheny. Judge Ken nedy found no such evidence in Fall’s deal with Sinclair. There’s nothing inconsistent in That. They were different transactions. There ' may have been fraud .in one and not i in tbe other. Still. Washington was surprised. Os the two. she had been a little less \ suspicious of the Doheny than of the j Sinclair lease. Fall and Doheny had been old pals. Doheny was the type of man to help i out a friend who was in hard financial luck. That, lie sai<T was all there was to that IfIOO.OOO loan lie made to Fall. It sounded a bit fishy, but AVasliington rec ognized there was a chance it might be true. Sinclair, on the other hand, wasn't sized up as the kind of individual to let food money go for nothing. MONKEY CASE IS CALLED ! MOCKERY UPON RELIGION Nashville Man Says It lis Burlesque of Science. Travesty On Law. | New York. Julie 29.—Wie forthcoming evolution trial in Dayton. Tenp.. is re garded by John Edgerton, of Nashville.' Tenn.. president cf the National Asso ciation of Manufacturers as “a travesty on law. a mockery of religion and bur lesque of science.” He gave his views in a statement here yesterday. I “Such a spectacle as the turning of an American court into an advertising arena for publicity seekers with warped mentalities and a parade ground for freaks, fanatics and fools (ought to be impossible in the country which gave John Marshall to immortal fame.” he said. "The walking delegutWi of agnosticism.' atheism, communism anil bolshevism, will be there. Everything will be represent-1 ed except science and religion." The Rev. Dr. Charles F. McKoy. pas-1 tor of the Green Avenue Baptist Church, j Brooklyn, in a sermon last night attacked evolution as a "lie of hell." “If Mr. Scopes wishes to act as an ambassador of the devi) in teaching the doctrine of evolution." Dr. McKoy eon-1 tinned, “let him seek a position in some of our universities where atheism, panthe ism and agnosticism are openly taught. "Thank God that the people of Ten nesssee have grit enough to fight this dogma of animalism." Wealth in Old and' Rare Stamps. Stamp collecting, or philately, is not what the uninitiated might imagine. It -is more than a mere fad or hobby. In fact, it lias grown to be a real science with its technical libraries, experts, coun terfeiters. historians and national and in ternational societies. There are foul great steamp collecting centers in the world—London and Paris in Europe and New York and Philadelphia in this coun EVERETT TRUE B1 CONDO ] * •- ' pgTRS^. e KUHKt r*c Vet Judge McCormick refused to swal low the explanations of Fall and Doheny, while Judge Kennedy readily accepted those of Fall and Sinclair. « • * Nevertheless, both judges may—theo retically—be right as to the matter of fraud. They can't both be right concerning the question of the late President Hard ing's power to transfer Control of the government’s oil lauds from the navy to the interior department. Judge McCormick says Harding ex ceeded his authority when he made this transfer, that the laud remained the navy’s in spite' of him, and that Fall’s lease to Doheny was void because he was disposing of what belonged to another department. According to McCormick, it was void regardless of the question of any crooked deal between Fall and Doheny—though McCormick added. Incidentally, that the deal was crooked, too. Judge Kennedy holds that President Harding did act within his rights, so the Sinclair deal is okeh. Kennedy agrees that it wouldn’t have been okeh if Fall and Sinclair had fram ed it crookedly, but he finds on evidence that they did. * * * The nub of the dispute to be settled on appeal, is whether President Harding did. what the law entitled him to do, or went too far. Ts he went too far the leases to Do heny and Sinclair are no good, and it's unnecesaary. so far as the civil suits are concerned, to discuss the fraud issue. If not. the leases stand, unices fraud proved, * * * The criminal <a*es still hang fire. Do heny probably will want to stave his off, hoping for a reversal of Judge McCor micks’ decision. * Sinclair i.s apt to seek rapid action, before any higher court has time to spoil Judge Keunnedy’s vindica tion of him. The civil and criminal actions are dif ferent. of course, but courts have con siderable influence with one another, back and forth. try. Millions of dollars are invested in stamp collections. The most distinguished collector in the world is the King of England. His collection is said to be • priceless. There is one collection in Philadelphia with an estimated value of SIOO,OOO. The only open-air stamp market is in Paris. There hundreds of men and women gather on Sunday to buy. sell or trade ; stamps. Stamp exhibitions are held in , various countries with collectors from all over the world in attendance. Counter feiting rare stamps is more profitable and less dangerous than counterfeiting mon ey. Put most stamp collectors are able , to spot a counterfeit the moment they see it. Stanip collecting is costly if a complete assemblage of special issues is made. A perfect general collection, | comprising stamps of all issues, dates, : colors, occasions, etc. is claimed to be the rarest and* costliest of all. Although it is not generally known England sends thousands of tons of waste paper to th : s country annually. !Tt is converted into paper stock in Amer ican mills. Recently a man in Phila delphia received a small bag full of old envelopes, torn into halves and quarters, faded and crumpled, some dirty, others indecipherable. All these envelop had been through the mails some time—some of them over fifty years ago. They were fished out es hales of waste paper ship ped to the United States from England. This apparently worthless bag of waste which weighed only a few pounds proved to be a real ’’‘gold mine.” When its contents were carefully sorted, selected, cleaned and passed under a microscope it was found to contain $2,000 worth of canceled, old and rare stamps. The Paris dub of the East Tejcas base ball league has a nifty batsman in Out fielder Clabaugh. who has been hitting for an average well over .400. and with something like 20 home runs chalked up to his credit so far this season. TRUNKS AND BAGS— f Vacation Time Is Here — We are prepared to take care of your wants in Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Hat Boxes. ? m We are showing a very- complete line of luggage and will take pleas ure in showing you what you may (need. RICHMOND -FIOWE CO. Ic ? l's- e , c ' ia ' rs are a f ew of the many neld VV indsor types which we are showing. Come in and look them over. H. B. Wilkinson OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT Buying For Four Large Stores Makes It Possible Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville, China Grove I Texaco Gasoline and Oils, Alemite I Greasing, Crank Case Service, Car I Washing and Polishing. Tires, Tubes, I Accessories. Quick Tire Changing Free Air and Water-Water For Your Battery CENTRAL FILLING STATION | = Phone 700 QUALITY FEEDS AT j CASH FEED STORE CHURCH STREET—PHONE 122 | Let your next feed be the Checkerboard Feed—Laying ! Mash, Growing Mash and Baby Chix and Startina will do i the work. It is all guaranteed feed. iiiMS if f’ I .nCT-rtrrT-rr^rCTiri GAS AND OIL Did You Know? Th*4 we arp giving Free Water, Free Air and Free Service and Selling the Best Gas and Oil on the market at our Church Street Store. Drive Aroupd and Gas With Us Yorke & Wadsworth Co. Union and Church Street Phone 30 .Phone 30 PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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June 30, 1925, edition 1
7
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