PAGE FOUR Trßwuife» Ths Associated Press ta exclusively | entitled to tke uee for repabllcstion of Oil news credited to It, or not otherwise | credited la this paper and also the to-, sal news published herein. i All rights of re publication of special tlspatohee herein are also reserved. H , apeolal Bepyesentatlve FROST. LANDIS * KOHN HA Ma BTfth Avenue, New York People# das Building, Chicago lfoTcnaOMßl Bu»tovg. Atlanta [ ..'srasurs'cCwjf “*£ dor the Act of March I* I*7l. L ' ' 1 gPBSCRIPTION RATES 4J* Si the City of Concord by Carrier: One Tear . *{-®° S* Out Os the city and by mail h} North Carolina the, following prices will pre -o*2 Tear l *5 «® Sfx Months -- 2es e ThM , TtaerMoSthsr"s#'cfento‘ a Month _ ail Bubscrlptlons Must Bo Paid IB Advance _ WATT ROAD SCHEDULE In Bffeot June 28, 1925. Northbound. r No. 40 To New York ?’ No. 136 to Washington 1 506A. M. No. 36 To New York W-aa v'M No. 34 To New York 4.43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3.15 P. M- No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P-M. No. 32 To Wash, and beyond 9j03 P.M. No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound. Nb. 45 To Charlotte 3:M-P~M. No. 35; To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8:25 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:05 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. No. 39 To New Orleans 9:55 A. -M. Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Washington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to discharge passengers coming from beyond Wash ington. *•>, j. All of other trains except No. 39 make regular stops in Concert'd. IikBIBIJE~ THOUGHT! FOR TODAY—I Bible Thoughts memorised. vfD prose Priceless heritage ka after years. jnj THE BEAUTY OF HOLINESS Give unto the Lord thcr glory due unto His name: bring an offering, and come before him: worships the Lord in the beauty of holiness. —1 Chronicles 16:29. “SELLING” THE SOUTH TO SOUTH ERN PEOPLE. The newspapers, naturally, are doing more to ‘"sell'' the South to the nation than any other agency and one of the best plans adopted by them for this work is the co-operative advertising campaign which was started last year and renewed this year. Under this plan the advant ages and assets of one State are concur rently advertised in newspapers in other States, the idea being that Southern peo ple themselves have much trouble to learn of their own land. The committee of the publishers who had this plan in hand made its report at the meeting of the Southern Newspaper Publishers’ Association meeting in Ashe ville last week and one paragraph of the report, setting forth live figures of the South’s growth we believe deserves spec ial mention. That paragraph reads: They stand today far richer than when the first gun was fired at Sumter. In 1860 the South had ten million popula tion ; today, it is nearly forty million. Its property values were slightly iu ex cess of $6,000,000,000; today they are $74,000,000,000. The farm products of the South in 1860 were about $650,000,- 000: today their aunual value is nearly $7,000,000,000. In 1860 the South had only $175,000,000 invested in manufac tures ; a Federal bulletin issued a few weeks since shows that it is now in ex cess of $9,000,000,000. In 1860 there were less thah 10,000 miles of railroad iu the sixteen States from the Atlantic to the Mississippi and from the lakes to the Mexican border. Today there are 90,000 miles, and if the railroads of these South etnj States were formed into trunk lines, there would be thirty-four stretching from Suvannah to Los Angeles. In 1880 the whole United States spent for the canoe of popular education $78.000.(>«0: last year the people of the Southern States alone expended for this purpose $400.- 000,000. Fifty years ago the South an nually spent $12,000,000 for public high ways and the whole United States $60.- 000.000; last year the States, cities and counties of the South silent over SBOO.- 000,000 for this purpose. In 1873 at the close of the period of reconstruction the individual deposits of ail the banks of the South amounted hi only $160,000,- 000000: today they are in excess of $6,- 000,000.000, an amount which is three times as much as the deposits in all of the banks of the United States in 1880. The exports through Southern ports last year exceeded $1,600.0001000, a sum $233,600,600 in excess of all the exports of the United States in 1900. The ex ports from a single Southern point. Gal veston, in 1024 exceeded by $135,000,000 the entire export trade from the Pacific Const. ONE REASON IT SEEMS A FARCE. Wiliam Bryan is not wining lading hi the case are [These lawyers have been told that the ■ State contends but one thing—that a [law has been violated and that Scopes is [guilty of violating that law. That seems [to be the only issue in the trial at Day ton. The Supreme Court will have to pass on the validity of the law, but the I jury at Dayton has nothing, to do with | that. The matter has already reached the stage where one Dayton minister had to resign; friends of years’ standing are said to have quarreled over the case; con troversies of all kind have arisen, with I the fate of Scopes having nothing to do with the question. Evolution is causing the trouble, when as a matter of fact the Dayton trial has only to do with the guilt of Scopes relative to the Tennessee law. The juv.v WiU not be asked to de cide whether the law is right or wrong. It will be asked to determine whether Scopes violated the law or not. ~ If Bryan and the others at the trial will quit talking so much everything wilt be better. A system should be worked out here whereby the street sweeper could dump its trash off the streets of the city. At present the intersection of Spring and Barbrick streets is used as a dumping ground and some days the trash remains at the intersection for many hours. That means autos have to be driven over it, despite the fact that nails, glass and oth er rubbish that ruin tires is in the trash. The- Changing President. Asheville Tiroes. Mr. Coolidge is growing in power and in prestige.. This must be obvious to nil who have .watched the change which has taken place in him .'since he as sumed the Presidency of the United States in his own name and by virtue of a direct mandate from the voters. The Coolidge of today is a vastly more positive mnn than the Coolidge of tweiye months ago. He is taking a firmer grasp on the problems that beset him. He is more disposed to assert, his leadership and to accept for himself the responsibility that go with the Presi dency of the United States and the head ship of a mnjority party. He leans more upon himself and less upon an aggrgn tion of so-called Rest Minds. He has less tolerance for factious differences of opinions and is more inclined to bring discipline to bear upon those of his own party who are temptrd to be ructions. :;-i County Commissioners Win Loan State Monty for Rood. Albemarle Press. Y ; Stanly county has a progressive set of county and road commmissioners. They believe in economy, but not the sort of economy that is to. keep the county in the background. The need fur a good road from Albemarle to Salisbury Ims been apparent since the need of any sort of road between the capitals of Rowan and Stanly has been felt. A recent de cision confirms the right of a county to loan money to the state, and very soon, j it is expected that arrangements will have been fully completed for placing the necessary funds in the bands of the state highway commission for executing a hard surface road between the two points. Our county commissioners favor the pro ject, and it is to be said in their favor that they are iproceeding under legal steps to bring it to pass. First Doctor: "Tell, me Doc, have you ever made a serious mistake in diag nosis?” Second Ditto: ’’Yes. once. I told a man he had a touch of indigestion. Af terwards I found he was r(gli enough to have had appendicitis.” Hi. Make Your Summer Free From Ice Worry Install Kelvinator electric refrigeration in your refrigerator and you can forget all about ice deliv ery this summer. Kelvinator will keep Jour refrigerator muck colder arid your foods much ketter and longer. Wken you go visiting it will stay cold while you are gone. II mlrmnlll ■mi a-ia -- - ■ a/J P— II IVCiVtUUUUI ItJvJUircb f«n i iiiif* Oa aItCUUOZI Mylfl II ftmitsl* W It URiinlW j.uuu 1_ *+-*„** tt-Urf. I uuuuw ucc. u u&Lumy ewis rw w operate Mvr If nator than to buy ice. Phone or call ior detail* H to <■ fr ■ r ‘ ' JJ ■ 4 -.rSit -Jkg H w-A, . . W II II ■’ 1 DINNER STORIES Physician (to rich patient: “You’re all run down. I suggest that yon lay off golf for a while and get a good rest at your oficet 1 ’ Theatrical Manager: “Your last act was magnificent. Mtas De Fleur! Your suffering was almost real.” Leading Lady: “It was real. I’ve got a. large nail in my shoe.” Theatrical Manager: “Well, for heav en’s sake leave it in until the end of the season!” ' ’’How kind of you,” said the girl, “to bring me these lovely flowers. They are so beautiful and fresh. I believe there is some dew on them yet.” “Yes,” stammered the young man in great embarrassment, "but I am going to pay it off tomorrow.” “Tell me. you who sell them, do you favor prohibiting the sale of revolvers?” "Yes, every time there is agitation of the subject, yfe Sell all we have in the store.” ' f ■ *■ Sam, impaneled for jVry service at a murder trial, had seemed a little too anxious to serve. "Do you know the accused ?”_he was asked. “Yassnli—dat is, nossub,” he replied, rraliwng that if he made an affirmative answer he would be disbarred from serv ing. "Have you made up your mind as to his guilt or innocence?” "Oil, no sith.” "Yon. think, then, that you could give his case a fair hearing?” "Y’assuh." replied Sam. "Leastways, ez fair ez de old scamp deserves.” Little Mabel: "Mother, who was Mike Huntry? We were singing about him in school today./'. Mother; "Mike Huntry? I don’t know of anv snob man. How did the song go?” . < Little Mabel; “It went this way : ’Mike Huntry. ’tia of thee ’ ” Bank Not Liable For Bonis Stolen From Safe Deposit Box. Eight United States bonds of SSO denomination were stolen from a safe deposit box in a bank and the owner sued the bank fort their value with ac crued interest. The bank did not claim that the sale deposits boxes were burglar proof; no night watchman was employed, there was no burglar alarm, and the building was usually lighted only until about 11 o'clock p. m. Funds of the were kept in a screw door steel safe. The Supreme Court of Tennessee, in Yolmg v. First National Hank of Oneida. 265 Southwestern Reporter, 681, held that the proof foiled to show a lack of ordinary care on the part of the bank. In tlwySeourse i>f the opinion Mr. Justice Haff'said at discussing the case* “We do not think the failure of de fendant to warn complainant not to put his bonds in such box renders it liable. Defendant did not advertise or claim its vault to be burglar proof. The vault was I not steel-lined, which fact complainant knew, or could have known by casual observation. “Defendant’s officers testified that it was generally known in the community, or should have been known, that said building, vault, and boxes were not burglar proof. Complainant had every opportunity to inquire nsto whether said agencies were burglar proof, or to make a personal examination thereof. The proof show*, and the average man well knows, that in this day and time, few, if any. building and vaults, and com paratively speaking, few safes are burglar proof,” REMEMBER PENNY ADS ABB CASH THE CONOORB BOLT TRIBUNE PubUahed by arranaement with Firat National Pttturaa, Inc, ;■ j t 'f, ~ and Wattcraon R. Rothackar. * ..... CHAPTER XVI (Continued) i “Tke entrance of tbo four heroes J of the occasion was the signal tor , a remarkable demonstration of ( welcome, the whole audience ris- t lng and cheering for some min- 1 utes. Ad ‘acute observer might, ] however, have detected some signs j of dissent amid the applause, and i gathered that the proceedings were likely to become more lively j than harmonious. It may safely ( be prophesied, however, that no , one could have foreseen the ex- , traordlnary turn which they were j actually to lake. “Os the appearance of the todr . wanderers little need be said, since | their photographs have for some i time been appearing in all the pa- , pers. They bear few traces of the , hardships which they are said .to | \ have undergone. Professor Chal- . , Icnger’s beard may be more shag- , \ty. Professor Summerlee’s fea tures more ascetic. Lord John ; ftoxton’s figure more gaunt, and all ; three may be burned to a darker : tint than when they left our thores, but each appeared to be hi most excellent health. As to our own • representative, the woll anown athlete aud International Rugby football player, S. D. Ma lone, he looks trained to a hair, ‘and as he surveyed- the crowd a (mile of good-humored content ment pervaded bis honest but homely face.” (All right, Mac/wait till I get fen alone?) "When quiet had been restored and the hndience resumed their seats aftfcr*the ovation which they had given to the travelers, the chairman, the Duke of Durham, addressed'the meeting. ‘He would not,’ he said, ’stand for more than a moment between that vast as sembly and the treat which lay be fore them. It was sot for him to anticipate what Professor Summer lee, who iftgs the spokesman of the committee, had to say to them, but tt waa cosgmoc rumor that their expedition had been crowned by extraordinary success.’ (Applause.) ■AppaTepßjpthe age of romance was not dead, and there was com mon ground upon which the wild est imaginings of the novelist could meoi the actual scientific investigations of the searcher for truth. He Would only add, before he sat down; that lie rejoiced—and all of them would rejoice—that these gentlemen had returned safe and sound from their dlGcult and dangerous task, tor it cannot be denied that any disaster to such an expedition would have inflicted a well-nigh’ Irreparable loss to the cause of Zoological science/ (Great applause, in which Profes sor Challenger wus observed to join.) "Professor Summetlee’s rising was the signal for another extraor dinary outbreak of enthusiasm, which broke out again at intervals throughout his address. That ad dress will not be given In extenso in these colnmbs, for the reason KW f'" • xm f "Profitsor •wTMMriee’h rising was the signal for anothar outbreak of enthusiasm." that « fall account of the whole nivontaros of the expedition la bo tog published as a supplement from the pan of our own special - mrraipondent. Some general indi cations will therefore oofitoe. Hav ing described the genesis of their Journey, and paid a handsome trib ute to his friend Professor Chal £*£; mcSltrwluTwwS^ * imriioM, lit fully Ytodicated, tori hem reftrived.^hejrorothejc . f aftempt to locate fpirilremarkable countered by the expedition In their repeated attempts to moitat them, and finally described how they succeeded in their desperate endeavors, which cost the lives of their two devoted halt-breed ser vants.” (This amazing reading at the affair was the result ot Sum merlee’s endeavor to avoid rais ing any questionable matter at the meeting.) "Having conducted his audience In fancy to the" summit, and ma rooned them there by reason of the fall of their bridge, the Professor proceeded to describe both the hor-' rors and the attractions of that re markable land. Os personal ad-, ventures he said little, but laid stress upon the rich harvest reaped, by Science in the obsecrations of the wonderful beast, bird,' insect,] and plant lltq of the plateau. Po-I culiarly rich In the coleoptera and in the lopidoptera, forty-six new; species of the one and ninety-four of the other had been secured In 1 the course of a tew weeks. It was, however, in the larger animals,- and especially in the larger ani mals supposed to have been long ex-; tinct, that the interest ot the pub-' lie was naturally centered. Of] these he was able to give a goodly, list, but bad little doubt that It; woud be largely extended when the place had been more thorough-] ly investigated. He and his com panions had seen at least a dosenj creatures, most of them at a die-, tance, which Corresponded with] nothing at present known to, Science. These would in tiide : be duly classified and examined. He' instanced a shake, the cast skin of which, deep purple in color, wns fifty-one feet in length, and mentioned a white crea ture, supposed to be mantma-j Man, which gave forth well marked pbosphorescene in the 1 darkness; also a large black moth,] the bite ot which was supposed by! the Indians to be highly poisonous-] Setting aside these entirely neat’ forms of life, the plateau was very! rich in known prehistoric forms,; dating back in some cases to early! Jurassic times. Among these he] mentioned the gigantic find giro-' tesque stegosaurus, seen once by Mr. Malone at a drinking-place by the lake, and drawn in the sketch book ot that adventurous American who had first penetrated this un known world. He described also the iguanodon and the pterodactyl; —two of the first of the wonders which they had encountered. He then thrilled the assembly by Borne 1 account of the terrible carnivorous dinosaurs, which had on more than one occasion pursued members ot the party, and which were the most formidable of all the crea tures which they had encountered. Thence he passed on to the huge and ferocious bird, the phororach uS, and to the great elk which still roams upon this upland. It was not, however, until he sketched the mysteries ot the central lake that the full interest and enthusi asm of the audience were aroused. One had to pinch himself to he sure that one was awake ah one _ heard this - nscribing the monstrous three-eyed flsh-Usards and the htagd wator snakes which ifihtthtt ffehl'itfEihfe ed sheet of water. Next he touch ed npon the Indiana, and-upon ths extraordinary colony of MHuropold - apes, which might bs looked npon es an advance upon the plthecen i thro pus of Java, and as coming , therefore nearer than any known ■ form to that hypothetftofr.|frsnttan, the mluring link. Finally Just Out New Victor Records For RED SEAL RECORDS Number Sise : »• 1060 10—Banchito VUjo (Out on My Little Old Ham* (A Mau rage) In Spanish—Annand Crabbe. . ~ .•*. < La Oancion del Otvido—June* al pjuehte de la Pena (The Song of For^ftfblnagA—At -the Bridge Crossing) (Ser rano) In ; Spanish—Artnsnd Crabbe. 1082 10—Nocturne (Boulanger) (Piano accompaniment) Violin Solo—Jascha Heists. The Gentle Maiden (Scott) 2. Cortege (Boulanger) (Pi ano accompaniment) Violin Solo—Jascha Heifetz. 3035 10—Miniature Viennese March (Marche Miniature Visnnoisf) (F. Kreislcr) (with piano) Violin and ’Cello—Frit* Kreisler-Hugo Kreisler. ' J ' “* ” Syncopation (F. Kreisler) (with piano) Violin and TTdlo , . —Frit* Kreisler-Hugo Kreisler. _ 1060 10—La Qolondrina (The Swallow) (Mexican Folk Song) In Spanish—Margarette Matzenauer. • > ,t >, f*. .y Preguntales a las Estrellas (Go Ask the ’ High Stars > Gleaming) (Mexican Folk Song) In 3pah{Bfr?-Margar«te Matzenauer. T' ' 1092 10—Moonlight atad /Roses (Biack-Moret)—John McCormack. The Sweetest Call (Trooa-Mprrowj-’-John McCormack. C 504 12—Polonaise in E Major, Pag 1 (Lhfct) Piano Solo—Setfei Rachmaninoff. - * . Polonaise in E Major, Pari-.2 Piano Solo—Sergei Rach -1 maninoff. > V ] 0490 12—Lohengrin—Prelrffo Part 1 (Wagner)—Stokowski and i Philadelphia Orchestra. | • Lohengrin—Prelude, Part 2 (Wagner)—Stokowski and ] Philadelphia Orchestra. _ i 6505 12—Danse Macabre, Part 1 (Dance of Death) (Saint-Saens) —Stokowski and Philadelphia Orchestra. , Danse Macabre, Part 2 (Dance of Death) (Saint-Saens) [ —Stokowski and Philadelphia Orchestrd. CONCERT SONGS AND INSTRUMENTAL RECORDS l 45493 10—Dreams (La Mont-Van Aistyne)—Lambert Murphy. » One Little Dream of Love (Simpeon-Gordon) Lam bert Murphy. I 19657 10—Over the Hills (Logan)—Victor Salon Orchestra. The Mystery of Night (Nenni-G. Denni)—Victor Salon Or. \ 19670 10—Polonaise (Polonaise-Elegiaqne) (Noskowski) Polish l National Orchestra. The Postilion—Maiurka (S. Nawyslowski)—Polish Nat ional Orchestra. 19669 10—The Emblem of Freedom—March. (Goldmaan)Goldman Band. f < Military Spirit—March (Lindemann)—Goldmin Batid LIGHT VOCAL RECORDS , 35757 12—Gems from “The Student Prince in Heidelberg"—Victor , Light Opera Company. c 1 “Student’s Marching 8ong”. 2 “Golden Days” 3 “Ser i enade”. 4 “Deep in My Heart”. 5 “Drinking Song”. ] Gems from “The Love Song”—Victor Light Opera Co.— 1 “V» or No.’ 2 “Only a Dream”. 3 “He Writes a I Song”. 4 “Love Song (Remember Me.)” ] 19604 10—Swanee Butterfly—Georgie Price. 1 IT"’ 1 Shc the Sweetst Thing?—Georgie Price. I 19056 10—Everything is Hotsy Totsy Now, Ukulele and Jasz effects i by Billy (“Uke”) Carpenter—Gene (Austin, i Tes Bir, That’s My Baby, Ukulele and Waza effects by Bil ly (“Uke”) Carpenter—Gene Austin. , ? 19667 10—He Sure Can Play the Harmonica, with Violin, Guitar and Ukulele—Vernon Halhart. ‘ Ain ’* You Coming Out Tonight?—Vernon Dalhart. 19608 10 Rock-a-Bye Baby (Jrom “The Muaic Box Revue”) —Grace i Moore. „ If Love Were All—Lewis James. V 10677 !o—Let it Railn, with Ukulele and Piano—Gene Austin. What a Life, with Ukg’ele,—Gone Austin • . ] 10560 10-Nobody Knows de Trouble Ke ( n"iro spirltunl)- Marian Anderson. My Lord, What a Morniu’ (negro spiritual—Marian An i derson. BELL-HARKIS FURNITURE CO. WPINSTAU ANYTHING r«g,vw« t "WfaCTPKAI CEVCe employ an staff of electricians whoEflU are capable of wiring otgW re-wiring your entlreHH jiouse. We can inatailMVM Boor sockets in any room MB at the least expense and ; trouble to Uvcryßfl kndwn electrical aeces- ||l sory is kept in stock here. Ki| “Fixtures of Character” Kl W. 3. HETIICOX 19 W. Depot St. Phons Ml 0 1 The | Personal I Touch Every detail of the funeral ar rangements is given our personal attention. We endeavor to Impress upon our patrons our desire to Serve them in the eapacity of friends. In doing this, we hope to miti gate to some small degree their burden of sorrow. fSmSL I II I , *•; * , tfpnfay, July 13, 1925 T We have the follow* ing used cars for said Or exchange: $ 1 Buick Six Touring 1 Buick Six Roadster 1 Liberty Six Tour* lug 1 Ford Sedan. * 1 Hupp Touring 1 Anderson Sport Roadster. STANDARD BUICK CO. ] Opposite City Fire Dept ] i NATIV| SPRING LAMB ||r • ’| P• jf \x 1 fy A EVE T* V MM q N

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