Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 11, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Saturday, July 11, 1025 Things You Never* thought of May Be Successfully ; Cleaned By a “Master” Cleaner We clean all Men’s, Women’s, and CRildren’§ Wearing apparel; carpels; rugs; draperies; portieres; upholstered furniture; lamp shades; blanketsiand pillows; automobile upholstery; seat covers; laprobes—and—Oh, well— there are a thousand and one other things we COULD clean if you would give us a chance to. clean ’em. PHONE 787. ' &e£fh Phone 787 1® Post and Flagg's Cotton Letter. Xew York, July early cot ton market was firm on covering by those who sold yesterday in the hope that good rains would be shown in the southwest by the may today but were disappointed- Private advices, < however, reported showers at various 'scattered points in Texas, and hope revived that these might spread and increase. Only one or two of the showers fell in the drouthy area. Some advices asserted i that they were hardly enough for the most part to lay the dust. Those who had covered, however, put out their con tracts again on the chance of the rains spreading to sections where they ore badly needed, and, as buyers are cau tious and not disposed to give much sup port on rallies, prices turned easier agiiil, .giving the market an unsettled OUT OWt WAY BT VfLUUtCfc? MOSTN POP "" ~ __ BY TAYLOR - - \or CHIEF! Hescs * y»TA.'su»vn - . \ ) I -rfeynMONiAC jusr ' 5W mm 9 Jju*. c*. mt JuAib: • H CAMC * ’‘ rrS * BlgD?i c < /nt ;sAto cvnt,C db <U*turdU | *~* -y gg —- .V; AT. '/TJcaoA. _" i > i r 3>vc -OutjdL Ustng lArty io fft*p Sul outffL t Tltur r»u/'urtj*, go io fto AjUutUo. & JbutmcL ML&frUitiut, t&at urmUt tiu. cute. ofjD&t, TWsnWvuo D fijunet. Vocal TrLctt JxtMuutd- Hvl votce. ' JitcaMAn. $/n%ov, sCo pvJuipo jt utouJUt, J*ddLfe. my 1 fieL V a ' *&• *«*fi*<Mf* ■tht' *6cajc ynutua and SjtruuCj* * Jmj> /OcddW. pfundtyutph +JUbdi*. Va^gg^^^BT' a^jsLyCfljija^g!iELi r ± r t u vj, appearance. Advices from goods markets generally nre somewhat more cheerful, both as to prices hnd the volume of business, though the situation in both respects is as yet hardly such as to compel or enable mills to follow advances in the price of cotton and still retain any margin of profit. Sentiment is rather mixed and hesitating with the professional element inclined to sell, but held in cheek by un certainity as to the progress of the crop during the critical period which has just started. Buyers for the most part restrict their operations to easy mar kets, and are not disposed to crowd on advances or neglect moderate profits when in sight. The statistical position continues very strong and the local stock is stead ily losing, with she prospect that furth er large amounts will he shipped out in the comparatively near future. However, the market is less strong, as specuiaive shorts have covered rather freely and in' some instances have,.it is. believed, taken the long side. Developments to date in connection with either trade or the crop have not served to worry the trade short interest enough to bring in any broad urgent demand from that quarter. POST AND FLAGG. Homes of 2,000 Are Wrecked By Typhoon. Manila, July 10—More than 2,000 persons have been made homeless by a typhoon which wrecked hundreds of' small houses in Camarjpes province. On the strength of reports received here toe Bed Cross today, sent assistance to 1 the stricken area. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Stwart Washington, Jaly 11,—It's a little urn fortunate that-Johu Van A. MacMurrhy, America's new minister to Peking, who has just arrived in the Orient, is so pro- Japanese in his views. ' It’s a little qnfoytunate, also, that Secretary of State' Kellogg’s slant to ward Far Eastern questions undoubted ly ifs pro-British. IPs , unfortunate, in both cases, not because there’s anything the matter, per ae,’ with pro-British or Pro-Japanese leanings, but because of the nature of the Chinese crisis which still imimnds. »• • V It probably is evident to most Ameri cans jaow thnt Britain and Japan are mainly to blame for recent trouble in Chinn. It isn’t over yet. and it won’t be over, permanently, until it’s settled fairly to the Chinese. Concerning this settlement the United States, unavoidably, is going to have a lot to say. \ Now, Americans talk h good deal of their nltrulsm and international affairs. Sometimes this may .be justified, some times not quite so much. But it’s a fact that the American rec ord in China has been good—almost un- TWO CHILDREN DROWN IN DAM’S BACKWATER Littlq Boils Brothers, Sons of George^ BbUc, iof Granite Falls—Child Tod Scared tor TeN. ■* Granite • Falls. July 10.—Gwyn and Glettn Bolic, six and eiaiit years old, sons of George Bolic, of this place, were drowned about noon while playing in backwater from the Southern Power .Company dam. Ano that child, agoieev efc, became frightened riarhen his 'play mates stepped' into deep water and ran home, but did not report the accident, said he was afraid,' 'tjlen asked about John Cook, a farmer, living near the scene of the accident, found the chil dren’s clothing on the bank and hurried into town to report it.- The clothing were identified by the father of the dead children, and a party went to the river to search for the bodies. Both were found almost together in less than a half hour. Their lives eonld have possibly been saved if their small playmate-had not been too frightened to tell. * -rjnr Good Roads ho aw.Mouutaiu.s. Charity and Children. Some North Carolinians have already gotten back in co-id. liard cash, more money than they are iftely to pay out in gasoline tax and automobile Jh-euse tags for the rest of their lives, and they owe their profits to tire roads built by aid of the gasoline tax’and license fees. Economists insist that most of us have already gotten our money back, in one way or 'another, but the-' people to whom we refer can actually count theirs. They are the fortunate peradns who lrad de sirable building- sites hw- western North Carolina along the line-of-the new reads. The man with any sort-.of motor vehicle now can locate his summer home on a mountain top, ten, fifteen or twnty miles back in the hilis and. by aid of the new roads, can live comfortably there. He can go to the fast nesses and still have ice. fresh milk, and baker’s bread every day. Consequently, the mountains are becoming immensely more popular than . they ever were before. Lots in summer i colonies that went begging at $l5O six or I eight years ago have already passed SSOO i and nre steadily climbing ip value. One '■ can stand beside' the new highways al ; most anywhere any dtiv 'Mhl observe au . touiobUes bearing license tags from ev • ery south&n state and a great raan.v nofthern and western ones. The North Carolina mountains threaten to become as ccsmopolitian as fire streets of a great city. This has its drawbacks, bus it unquestionably does mean money to our people.' To the west, at least, the state roads are already a wonder fully profitable investment. Sympathy without help is like, must-. ard without meat. EVERETT TRUE B¥ CONDO Not*). -DON'T S-eT BST* \<L.' _ #**?■ ■ TteesD. for -aits, ev&mBM > A^ZToSs,'" oir^one^Tt^^ ; p eH ? I HA\t6> TW?3 ED * , Tm% AT preeedentedly so m history, for a whole people—due largely to the influence, still felt long after his death, of John Hay, as Secretary of Btate. Now's the time to cash in on this. At such a juncture, is it too much to saj that a pro-Japanese minister at Peking— a |pro-Japanese ambassador at Tokyo would be a different thing, but a pro- Japanese minister at Peking?—and a' pro-British Secretary of State at Wash ington, are on -unfortunate combination? Os course it may turn out nil right, but are those two the ideal pick V * *' • An anchor to the windward ‘ for, the United States in'.a rather stormy state of affairs is the chairman of the Senate committee on foreign relations, William E. Borah. v Nothing’s so bad hut it .wight have been worse. If we hadn’t had Borah : He’s expressed himself concerning Cbi T na already, and with what he said no pa triotic Chinese—or American—can find a word of fault. Pro-Britons and pro-Japanese will he careful, at least, with Borah on the joh. And does anybody recall that Borah all along has urged recognition of Russia, too? It would be mighty handy—if it had been done—right now. The Big Trial. Charity and Children. By the time this issue of Charity ami Children comes to its readers the up roar in Tennesssee wiU be fairly on its day. Many people p-ill be saying fbol ish. and some, it is to be feared, wiU he saying vicious things ; and. in so far as real science and real religion are con cerned it will all amount to exactly noth ing /jt; all. Real science is the searqh for truth about the material universe, and that search wfli continue regardless of what twelve men in a jury-box in Tennessee may say about it. Real re ligion. the search for spiritual truth, is not, and cannot be, affected in the least, by the bawling of lawyers in a court house, or the verdict of any earthly jury. Nevertheless, the Scopes trial will not be without effect. It is likely to cause thousands of people to abandon real science and real religion alike, and in the uaiqe of pseudo-science and pseudo religion fall to belaboring and villifyigg each other, indulging in a erase of hate, which is as foreign to the spirit of calm, clear headed science as to that of the religion of the gent’.e Nazarenc. The Scopes trial, in short, is a rowdy sid?-' show that merely distracts attention, from things t’aat really matter. Wise men. wg are convinced, will find in its exhibitions merely another appalling dem onstration of the effects of the heat. We think it was Bert Riston Taylor who ■n rote the right prescription for such times as thege. It applies now. although it was in the midst of a political cam paign that lie wrote (we quote from,' memory) : “When people all around are making faces And all dlie world's a-jangle and ajar, I meditate on interstellar mpaces And smoke a mild seegar.” Legion Bans Wet Solon. The Pathfinder. Representative Howard (I)ein.) of Nebraska, invited Representative Hfil,, (Rep.) of Maryland, to make the main' address at the convention of the Ne braska department of the American Lqg-I ion. Mr. Hill wired that he would |>e; glad to “talk against the Hawes plan fto: throttle the senate and attempts to do away with the old constitution." Fearing that the Maryland solon would make one of his famous “wot" talks, the Iregion's state executive committee, by a one-vote margin, withdrew their invita-' tion. au action which led Mr. Hill to remark that "apparently the Nebraska Region does not believe in state right*.”; Mr. Hill is a member of the Iregion. He won the croix de guerre with silver star for bravery in the Workl War. Here are a few similes and compari sons that Brother Wilstaek seems to have overlooked: H. C. AOCOCK KJRRB 1 SERF AT BROTHER’S I‘rtmunetri Qnuntle Mam Had Beta in 111 H frith Far Some Tine- Oxford, July 10.—K. 0. Adcock, aged 43, prominent farmer living near Tar river, was found dead this morning in the yard of pui brother’s home, J. C. Ad cock, with whom he lived. He had been in ill health for some time, which caused him to shoot himself. Mr. Adcock was never married, but of a prominent Gran ville family. No inquest was necessary, . Sleeping Sickness Invasion. The Pathfinder. i ; ! • l' ■ , The shelter of a magnificent home on an isolated isle ofl Rongjsland, X. ,Y.. with, day and night guard? to protect her from Value-Service ~ Courtesy Value— For every dollar you spend you get a dollar in Value. Service—— We put our very hearts into trying to give you a ser vice that will make it a pleasure for you to do business with us. Courtesy— A courtesy that rings sincere,46 the true spirit of this good old Southland of 6ur§. KIDD-FRIX Music & Stationery Co. Phone 76 Concord, N. C. TRUNKS AND Vacation Time Is Here^- We are prepared to take care of your wants hi Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Hat Boxes. ; -I- * t\ • ' U } u v . We are showing a very complete line oHuggage and will take pleas ure in showing you what you may need. RICHMOND -FLOWE CO. 20% OFF 20% For a few days only we are offering for cash our entire stock of OLD HIKORY PORCH FURNITURE, at a *0 per.cent, discount. ■ You will surely find just the Rocker, Chair, Table, or Settee for that vacant place on your porch and at this ■* slashed price you can well afford any piece you desire. H. B. Wilkinson OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT Concord, Kannapolis MoorepviUe, China Grove Texaco Gasoline and Oils, ALemite Greasing, Crank Case Service, Car Washing and Polishing. Tires, Tubes, Accessories. Quick Tire Battery 'J CENTRACFILUNG STATION PAGE SEVEN outride annoyances did not prevent, Mrs. John P. Morgan, wife of the financier, from contacting sleeping sickness. She met few persons and kept in seclusion. The belief is that the wwfcve*rried the germ from offshoot- It is traced to an rid man ill with sleeping sickness in a small house near Glen Gove. N. Y. The disease is a cousin of The drafut African sleep ing sickness and the same one which caused - the death recently of Viscount Milner of England. However, a blood transfusion has placed Mrs. Morgan on . the road to recovery , Judge Charles Woods, judge of the U, 8. Circuit court of appeals at Richmond, Va%» recently died of this same disease. It visited him after a mild attack of in fluenza,, supporting , science’s claim that the two^ailments pre related.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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July 11, 1925, edition 1
7
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