Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 3, 1925, edition 1 / Page 11
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Friday, July 3, 1#25 -- ■ '*•■, ■' MASTER CLEANERS Are They Responsible? Any “Matter” Cleaner is indead respottrib*.) He must be so in ctfdet to get credentials from The Natibiial Association of Dyers A Gleaners df the United States and Canada, the organization back of all “Masters.” Co-operative knowledge, financial ability, ownership of his own plant, arid Spotless re pute—fell these are necessary td open Association portals to a deader. An exacting organization to join, but decidedly well worth joining. me&fo Phone 787 I*. jvumummmr, PHONES FROM SHIP TO SHIP PessenccT on Incoming Gemss Liner Converses With One on Another Ger man Ship 150 Miles Distant. New York, July 2.—Successful opera tion of ship-to ship wireless telephone was announced toddy with the arrival of the North German Lloyd liner Columbus. Seated in a booth on the Columbus, a passenger talked to another on a Ham burg-Ameripan liner, plowing through the Atlantic 150 miles off. . The process has been simplified so that the charge of ten marks, about $2.50, covdfs the expense. Carl Get stung, chief operator of the Columbus, said upon his arrival. A duplex receiving and transmitting apparatus permits two way conversation, he explained, on wave lengths of either 1.800 'or 1,450 meters. The charges are expected to he reduced OtJT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS ' /someone Turned ourV/au. iVa\ f situ.- nao\N -Jh\ .|K / HORSES LOOSE. AMD \/ A ASKIM \ aA I HAimT OiU WBt «( -TOO* AWL QUR CLOfatMCr \J HUH STt£N- \ HE AH WWSELF -A Wf W VNHILE VdE WERE "TAv<\MCr \ ASA FRIEND, A- vNELL. WA\S, I Pvg If A BATM «T HERO SPRINGS.! HON - BUT >SjF |T€> BEEH TERRIBLE* THE ] HAS VNEL.L. - 1 REA\_C* JjjjfF HOT SOM, CACTUS AN SANO I Bte>l SEITIsl t HAiNf PAIO NO BURRS, A VERffABLE HADES]/ 'TENEHOH. nice I , . ' THE KJEOTRAI_ .‘ , j iittM’N POP fit TAtlaOll /” ** " "'( uTOEQirJiS r '' ' «g>- art * >^** r3fe *lZ rj:- \youft MtflHßg HOME? mti* materially as the use of the system be- ‘ comes-more genera!. Perfected by an organisation of Ger man radio concerns, the marine wireless i telephonic system alivaily ims Deen in- 1 stalled on the Meunchen, Stuttgart and Columbus, of the North German line, and on the Deutchlahd and Albert Bal-1 lin of the Hftmsburg-American fleet. | Similar experiments were made three years ago by the United States lines in co-operation with the Radio Corporation of America and the AmitriSan Telephone and Telegraph Company. Tests were limited, however, to one way conversa tion, a new set-up of the apparatus be ing required to change it from trans mitting to receiving. Connections on this basis were established over a dis tance of 1.200 miles. * Rapid development of the system was foreseen by Mr. Gerstung in view of the “highly efficient American telephone serv ice.” * , Officials of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company who boarded the Columbus today to obtain a fir t hand report, announced they would offer the services of their station at Deal Reach N. J., to the German organization as a | land station on this side. Connections with the Interior might be made if ade quate service was guaranteed, they said Two negro men came up to the out skirts of a crowd where Senator Bailej was making a •campaign speech. Aftei listening to the speech for dhotit ted thin utes, one of them turned to his coihpan ion and asked: “Who am dat man, Satnbo?” “Ah don’ know what his name dm,' Sambo replied, "but he certainly do ret ■ ommen* hiseelf mos’ highly.” THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE m mm m mi m i 11 ... iSiSSiE?: BY CHARLES P. STEWART NBA service Writer Washington—From our office to the place where most of us eat lunch is about two blocks. In that distance we pasls these signs: No Parking Keep to the right ....Keep Off the Grass....Do Not Touch a Leaf or Flower... .One Way Street Go Slow. . . .Trespassers Will Be Prosecluted Post No Bills No Bicycles... .Do Not Loiter... .Spit ting Forbidden Under Penalty Keep Out..i. .This Space Reserved for Hotel Taxis. • * a Three of us deft the office together: 1. Phil Simms, the war correspondent, when theAe’s a war, and expert on foreign affairs the rest of the time.... 2.’ Lowell Mellett. who manages a big news service... .8. Myself.. We were bound for lunch. • * • A car was parked in front of the no parking sign. As we crossed the street, an auto, swerving to the left to get thead of another machine, nearly hit , Simms. Walking across the little pork in the ■ grass, we paused while Mellet picked a bud to put in his button-hole. Maneuver ! ihg around two flivvers phich had col s tided head on in the one way street, we 1 Waited for a bus to hurtle past the go ’ slow sign at 45 miles an hour. • A man was carving his initials on 1 the trespassing sign. An advertisement 9 partly obscured the post no bills sign. • Their wheels Stacked in the shadow ] • of the “flo. bicycles" sign, several mes- 1 senger boys loafed under the no loitering sign and expectorated in the direction r of the no spitting sign. r A pedestria glanced at the keep out sigh and went Ih. '■ The doorman at the hotel of which Otlr restaurant is an adjunct was trying „ to dear a place for a tdxl Bht cohfcin’t —too many private cars. • * * Well, we had lunch Scratching match r es on a no smokirig sign, tve proceeded to TtiDAV'S KVEfttfß. ' frHifay. .Inly 8. 11125. Greetings to the State of tdnlio. .85 * years old today. Centenary of the birth of Erskine | Nirol, famous British genre painter. : Centenary of the birth of Emile Ollivier. who was premier of France at 1 the outbreak of the Franro-I’russlan war. Centenary of the birth, of George L. Fox. whom the grandfathers of today will remember as “Htimpty Duthpty” in the famous pantomine of that name. DC. Hilbert Work. Secretary of the Intertof in the CoolidgC Cabinet and former BcstranSttcr General, celebrates his sixty-fifth birthday anniversary, to day. : In commemoration of the 650 an niversary of its ‘•founding the city of Amsterdam, in Hollahd, today will opeh a notable, art Historical exhibition. With President Ooolidge as the guest of honor and, chief speaker. Cambridge. Mass., today will hold an elaborate com memoration of the 150th anniversary of George Washington’s assuming com mand of the Continental Army. - —— Post, and Flag’s Cotton Letter. New York, July 2.—The report proved a bearish document in all its particulars by comparison with current expecta tion based on private reports and prices were sharply lower when trading was resumed. The extent to which accounts had been evened tip prior to the report, however, prevented any sensational de velopments. 130' .condition showed a slight loss for the month but was above the 10-year average while the acreage was far above private estimates or any thing that had been foreshadowed by previous official advices on that sub ject. The result was indicated crop hot far from a million bales ih excess of the average of private estimates on that sub ject. Attempts to explain a divergency so wide in the results secured by dif ferent groups of investigators would be EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO fUSTeN, 3X>N*T Kll> ME ABOUT tn Y BALLOON TIVOUSSR3 ' LOOK. AT Your ■V- ■ '•-•- a- • --••• a -i-rinai-ii.fe» Hag*' HA«'. HAft'. =j|_ S At ' HAR " HARM! LAU<»H ANb a littie reading room in the rear— the injunction ‘‘Silence” appears over the door—when usually we chat for a few minutes before we leave. • *1 * Simms was speaking of Sir Philip Gibbs. Britain’s most celebrated corre spondent at the West Front during the world conflict, noyv famed for his pessim istic fiction and predictions in Eiglish and American magazines and newspapers. “Gloom,” said Simms, "is Gibbs’ mid dle name. To illustrate: “The pair of us were autoing toward the front one day in the war’s thin! year. 1 Coming to a canal, we found the bridge I open to let a string of barges pass, so had to wait.. “Along came the barges. Those Euro pean canal "boats generally are kept pret ty nifty. These were unusually so— clean and bright with new paint. “Atop of the last one was a pretty little dog house—quite artistic. “ ‘See that cute little dog house,’ I I said. “Lugubriously from Gibbs, “It looks like a child’s coffin to me.’ ” * % • “And the way that boy can sense fu ture wars,” continued Simms. “You chaps think I’m the champion way proph et myself, but I’m nothing to Phil Gibbs. Every teapot has a war- simmering in it for him. “To hear him forecast the future's enough to make your flesh ereep.” “Well, he looks farther ahead than you do,” observed Mellett. | Sitams looked hurt. International ex perts don't like to have such things said to them. “Oh, I don't mean you don’t foresee plenty of wars,” apologized Melett. “But Gibbs previsions the horrors that stalk after them, too. “Glancing at the world's horoscope. ‘I predict war,’ you exclaim. “Then, in a supplementary croak from Gibbs, ‘Aye, war!—then famine! —and afterward—pestilence 1” without profit- The figures will fie ac- j eepted by the world ns offleinl and as the j Best indication to date of the probable supply with, however, revisions to be etc- ' peeted, dependent on the character of ' Inter developments. Ttie report says thitt averngge indications of June 25 for the past 10 years have been 0 per cent above the final ginnings, but durrngg the pas six year* only one and two-tenths per cent above. It remains to be seen what the progress of the crop will be in the next three ifiotlths and in the mean time it will be wiser not to draw afiy hard and fast conclusions as to the sup ply based on the. figures today. Even a crop of the suggested siae would hardly prove superabundant or weigh heavily enough on the market to mean any im portant recession from existing levels with requirements as large as they promise to be. . Taking and Betaking a Ship. The iVoridaS "Graphic in a reminiscent article concerning the war tells of a British collier that was going to Ham burg when war was imminent. The Ger mans were counting on her coming in with coal for one of their men-of-war. The captain Pas averse to sailing, but the owner, who was to get a high prices for the coal, urged him to go. So he sailed, and at- the river mouth a German pilot came on board. On taking charge of the ship he said: ; “Mow this is German property; war be | gan yesterday.” “Did it?” exclaimed the captain. “Then 1 take that.” And he downed the pilot with a fearful bang on the head with [ his telescope. Then he turned the ship round and : with his German prisoner on board steamed off for England as hard as he [ could steam. 1 It is only by labor that thought can ■ be made healthy, and only by thought ' that labor can be made happy r . , It‘s a wrong road that has no turhing i back. FIND BODY IN RIVER AND TALA OF MURDER Marks of Violence on Body off Ren : James, Found fat French Broad River Near Asheville. Asheville, July 2.—The body of a man identified as Ross James Little, 28, of Claremont, who has been engaged in work at Royal Pines, near Arden, was found this afternoon about 2 o’clock by fishermen in the French Bread River be low Glenbridge, about fifteen miles from Asheville. , Marks of violence were found on the man, according to Sheriff E. M. Mitchell, Who stated that a scar w*s found across the back of the man’s head and his neck had the appearance of having been chok ed. We W3l Be Closed July 6th Celebrating July 4th There are only about 8760 hours in a Year.. We only require our salesmen to work about 2,258 hours. Besides this we are closed for at least 5 holidays. We give each salesman one week’s vacation with full pay. We have nev er failed to let a salesman off for a day at a half day with pay when he Wanted off. We Carry life insurance from $1,000.00 to $2,000.00 for each salesman Free Gratis. We carry Accident Insurance on each salesman. Our salesmen are satisfied. Why close up? Yorke & Wadsworth Co. Union and Church Street * Phone 30 Phone 30 TRUNKS AND BAGS— : ? t ,-/• t’f T-r- [ ' Vacation Time Is Here— We are prepared to take care of your wants in Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Hat Boxes. We are showing a very complete line of luggage and will take pleas ure in showing you what you may need. RICHMOND -FLOWE CO. These chaits are a tew of the many Heywood-Wake fietd Windsor types which we are showing. Come in and Iqok them over. H. B. Wilkinson OUT 09 THtt HIGH RENT DISTRICT Buying Pdt FdUr Large Stores Makes If Possible Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville, China Grove Texaco Gasoline and Oils, Alemite Greasing, Crank Case Service, Car Washing and Polishing. Tires, Tubes, Accessories. Quick Tire Changing Free Aif and Water-Wa^fWAdun j S' Battery CENTRAL FILLING STATION 1 Phone 700 PAGE ELEVEN Identification wag established by Id low workers. From appearances the body was in the river about tws lays. An inquest will be held here tomorrow morning. j.. r'V«foJtfs^S All tin smelting works in the United States are pew closed down, aa the high cost of fuel and labor has made it im possible f<* the Americana to compete successfully with the English smeftbrs. Investigation by the bureau of labor of Porto Rico 19 said' to have disclosed the fact that 20 cents a day is the av erage .yyage received by the 40,000 women and children employed in industry In the ielaud. Many a, poor fish gets caught in a hair net. _ ; • * ‘ ♦'
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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July 3, 1925, edition 1
11
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