Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 14, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Tfetfay, July 14, 1925 Uttm-Sftnuckwl-PSm to»di-.*lilU FUiro*— SEND THEM TO A 4w»R* ,We are especially equipped for doing this class of work,'and con give you ONE DAY SERVICE on all cleaning at no extra cost. - * ?' : *»n : -,, :*l{ In fact, a “MASTER” must be so equipped for real ‘ SERVICE” before he can be come a ‘Master Try BOB’S next time. V Phone 7ir^p) ■=' ' ..--v; . frrfL fnTm'rrH .i" i. < . DIXON TREATS SCOPUS > TRIAD IN LIGHT VEIN If Taken Seriously It Would Be Dte snwe to United States. He Declares. Ualeigh. July 13.—Thomas Dixon's statement today that evolution has noth ing to do with religion to, local observers of religious phenomena the radical differences between the North Carolina playwright and novelist and his senior brother. Amai / Clarence Dixon. ($ prince of the fundamentalists. , Clarenee Dixon died 4 few days ago. The Baltimore Sun, in the city where the big North Qarolinian preacher, paid tribute to the senior Dixon as a great fighter and a faithful believer in what he professed. Only a few days before Clarence Dixon died. Frank Dixon: sud denly. passed, iThe two tragic events ( /oTbEVI BOVX/S T /eCNS.THIsN /how . BEWVKIO TV4ET PENCE, \s -Tbo *1 / wnYki 'IKA \ Good Goes,4 J an lu-&rr Cooks/ To otwrLt a!\wnß a Piece an'MEO GOT -tL i nnno \NM£w X HINT. VNUTV O* Pit T 56? | KSfeE-R OmTH « BuT-Wtuul! ' fe * -TRVIKi' TO GET a RAISE, .OOUGR. >, /vsagstint jfa'rtk • •~ ■a; > X Cs V*. ■ y-.».w -jr* - - .• .*?■ ~ ~ Jp^S ' J LET -*■*» = ] ♦ sed rr Jm Wm f !Ufa. |JB Jr - .Ad jj <gga I WaMllll f | [Wf mt couidM&j*>ip*out ynu wnCL yjAvnk 0$ mb' io /dStufm. 1 SJUaAcL es grun. Vbea&,7ilud (f 1 \ /gsa m'k ' 5S5 b9 = -, * |H > VOTii v a »?*; rai aoB rrs Somethin' VwS YmAxi gP™ KidtiS £ ™ SiO I ■ \ni I iNjLyJ '3swp . brought the old Shelby boys back to 1 I fJorth Carolina. t I; Tom Dixon today talked to the Rjl- i . leigh Times reporter and got out befeye y the morning papers found that he was 1 here. Everybody knew that he woftld : he amused; at the Dayton business. He said bo and The Times quotes -hlmj “The attempt on Mr. Bryan’s part to fix a standard for ignorance for opr country is, to Bay the least, anuudiig,” said Mri Dixon. “If the situation.were, taken seriously,” he added, “it would be a disgrace to the United States. “My personal view is that evolution has nothing whatever to do with religion, , any more than astronomy or geology. If we stop teaching evolution, then let’s stop'teaching astronomy and geology. “Evolution is nothing more nor less ; than a scientific hypothesis as to how ] MacJten i^jU, w QUat Mum ut&vo ago ?iui Uatfoi J im&iiAagtd, tk. oRL JhnuaitcuL cvruL,avnt ynu toTsuM>pa,fieifaJb $ vnLjtfik fi&uUi umdvv Hul J**b i , > ■, r 'V&nxr got a, pvfaiL jotr <k» q,. ineU*i. owMUMon, qmxL a#*, p*t **?£, - 11:. "St’ '■ " h'-rr ' .1-gawnn THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNI God created man in' hie own image. It make no difference whether it took him ton million years or whether he took gome mud and .a. trowell and made man and then set him up by a fence to dry in the sun.” -, ' . ;T M ' i *i . Hundred Injured in at Gfauwow. Glasgow, Scotland, July 12.—More than a hundred persons were injured and-fifty arrerfts were made in four riots late last night, the disturbances growing out of a demonstration in .commemoration of the battle of the Boyne. Fifty thousand Orangemen t>anticipated in a parade Which;,near.mid-night rw»s attacked by opposing fact ions. .But ties and missles of al) kinds were tlwown in disbriminately. the riots Continuing until Urge forces of-police separated and d:s persed the combatants. - * v ..... . * g I /TOT i lys D tive “Alfalfa Bill Murray of Okliihoma is disbusted. He writes <eom' South Ameri ca to friends here that the spirit of the old-time pioneers is dead in North Am erican'breasts. . •!* ■ Sam* time ago Bill got a land conces sion in Bolivia—a tract the siie of a doz en Texas comities at least. His plan,was to colonise it with a lot of hard-fisted, tough-flhered frontiersmen from the .“Statw;—,men-.of the type of the by-gone, “covered ,wagon” .days. •, ;... A “Wild West,” in ,ehoit. was what Bill was trying to cneate. , , . He lpv«d the “wild west” in this coun try while it stayed wild, and pined for it as' it began .40 growl more and more domesticated. Finally his yen became so acute that hb decided to see If he Couldn’t scare up a sub stitute for -the real old thing to sat isfy it. Somebody told him about the only unconquered wilderness, which nev ertheless is a nice place to live in. was to be found in central Bouth America. •r*v*, j Accordingly, away Bill journeyed to South America and hied himself, as near | jy ai he could; to the center of it. There, indeed, be found a firstclass wil -1 derness. wholly nnconqtiered, just the raw material for the old “wild west - ’ he re membered so well—a little hotter, per haps, but all the better, from an agri -1 cultural standpoint, for .twelve months a year of crop-growing Weather. .« • * . ..“Now," thought Bill, “to get some wild westerners to locate' here.” t.. For a (‘wild west” has to be something besides mere landscape. _ To conquer na ture conquerors are necessary, and con 1 ■■ . , : Women’s Shoes of IJxard Skin Become Popular In London. : Ijondon, July 14.—LRard fanning, in England has been greatly stimulated within the last few months since the skins for women’s shoes have become fashionable. Lizard shoes for street wear have become very popular in Lon don this summer and lizard slippers for evening wear have been quite the fad for some weeks. Dealers say lizard skin shoes are here VI I ■ 11 "■■■' ’ EVERETT TRUE §r~ BY COND<] 7 N f THIS MR. ' MR. truiE/ name i fvyOvjl-O LIKE TD MA-KE AN APPOINTMENT WITH YOU fbR an interview. I am handung a very ATTRACTIVE propo- SITION.- .BEG PARTIN? - WELL,- Ir- NO* 1 IVOULT) RATHER STATE THE NATURE* OH THE ■BUSIKESS TO v fOu I N PERSON. .? US THAT VAtAY, YOU S&e:, THE Mpb ©ce death, n«3. Buzzer/ TP HAVE A PERSONAL INTERVIEW, AN© Zfp SEE TO IT THAT You IVEPE, TOO ‘U PERSONAL . CONTACT IN THI S CASIE wou L*t> ©e "Best il Bloiv out here •some evening- to m House anx>, peUEVE ME, IP THE, WHOLE THINO LAI© OUT EEpqRE Me, THen OFFICER OF SALVATION ARMYINDORSESKARNAK “I Ahi • Certainly Feeling mi ßeßt> WAS ALLRUN DOWN AND GETTING WORSE He, Is Second In Command jOf Charlotte Corps And Is Also Well Known in Dur ham and Spartanburg. ’ “i just wtffit 'to tell everybody ; about this-new medicine. Karnak, and 'how it lm ;nve*e,>me 'twmbtes from which ; I saf ferefl the pant, eleven 'yvtfrs,'’ declare* Egvpj -yearge K. Best, ItoX 82. Ohar *tte,- N t . G. !>• Mr. 4 llvst dU»gbsjktant to he <sttitn*idiiig offloer dl -the Gharibtte dwifih of frientFs in Durham and Spar tanburg \yhere he has st+Vetl dtiring the ■ b**»re ■ t fekA*)M fa/ '.^kaX' nwi d'jialH ni WJii jiryj* kavi ' 4fi*Hr7 S t;V ‘V r V » *~r \mttWcmtngton quest is what “Alfalfa Bill” Murray lives 1 for. , It Isn't the raildernes*- in itself that he likes. The job of taming it jg what he gets his fun out of. Haring done so, lie’s repdy to move on to a new one. just as he moved on from Oklahoma to Bolivia, when the former got too civilized for him. “Jfowhere 'else in the world,” said Bill to him self, "aite there such pioneers as back an the 'states,' where I came from. Gosh'! I remember 'em in the old. days! How they'll jump at a chance to getiback to ’em!” . j Hd propagandized accordingly. He of, sered extremely favorable terms tO the land-hungry, for it was recruits he want ed rather than their money. ” He made pioneering sound blamed rot mautie. He described the country as * cross between a garden of paradise and f storehouse of riches, which was true enough, but Bill rather slighted the detail that settlers would have to start from scratch on the task of developing the re sources he was bragging about. Probably he took it for granted that as experienced frontiersmen, they’d hav* sense enough to know that without hav ing it diagramed. '„ * . * \ What Bill forgot was that the old-tin* ers he had in mind were either dead of mostly too old to make fresh starts in i new country. He just happened to be an exception. . He got colonists all right, but they were the old hard-Bhells’ sons and grand sons—two entirely different and progres sively softer generations. A look at Bill’s wilderness scared 'em. " " ' ' ' t to. stay as the material is serviceable and comfortable and not nearly so ex pensive as is ushal when a new idea fe introduced. Lizard skin Shoes retail here at from sls up. Never seem to be more clever than your neighbor. He will set you down ojs a conceited ass. But discover his ta lents and he will praise your discrimina tion: ♦ then most everything hurt uie. “My stomach had gotten into such an awful ulcerated condition t’.iat it pained me terribly in the low.er part of my bow-els. I had been under many dif ferent treatments,, hut still my trouble continued and grew' worse until I had to live on such things as sweet milk, toast and soft boiled eggs, aud <; ven tlien I suffered afterwartj. , “I was hungry all the. time but my stomach was in such a weak condition I didn't dare eat. . . d “I will always thank the day I- started taking Karnak, and money couldn’t buy the good six bottles of this remarkable medicine ba* done we. I am now eat ing cheese and other much foods that I couldn't eat at all before, and am not having a bit of-trouble afterward. It that doesn’t speak for Karnak I would like.to know what does. :£ “And' I have so much new strength aad energy it just makes me feel like a «kfw man at my , work/ ..Yes sir. I, am sMre tasting flue.mHi’? taking Karnak, ami if my statement win 'lead jitst one I person to take Karnak and get the relief I have* why,! wtH-be paid many I Hue* j ' • karnak is SOW, in OAwid -dxlltfwW 1 I bv'thg Pearl Drlff Wh yln Kannapolis | by (he JE fr Smith Drug Co. J and by the 1 leading ' druggist'in evefy" town. r • J ' tKCftJRE' Te« Morrison They Will Welcome Duke Extension.—Ex-Governor Also at Lex ington. Salisbury, July 13,—A member of bus iin ess men of Salisbury were gathered hurriedly at the court bouse this after noon to hear Ex-Governor Morrison pre sent the matter of the extension of the internrban eleetric railroad from Ohar lotte through Salisbury to Winston-HalerS. Mr Morrison presented the matter in a few minutes and passed oh;to liex/ngfoh. where he was to apeak op the same, sub ject . The 6«lUbury bltkeW heard Mr. Morrison gladly and gave him assusrance that the coming of; the line' would be welcomed by the. city. OIL GAS You Will Find the Best ¥i v , GAS AND OIL . I ... „ in Town at Yorke & Wadsworth Co. Church Street Store Free Tl'itfar BteeService Phone 30 - ■ Phone 30. TRUNKSANDBAiSS— Vacation Time Is Here— 1 ' ■' j We are prepared to take care of your wants* hi TKihks, Sags, Suit Cases and Hat Boxes. i . *. i '• ..... We are showing a very complete line of luggage and will take pleas ure in showing jfatii what you may need. RICHMOND- FLO WE CO. 20% 0»|§20% I f For a few days only we are offering for cash our entire I stock of OLD HIKORY PORCH FURNITURE, at a2O 1 • per cent, discount. 5 You will surely find just the Rocker, Chair, Table, of j for that vacant place on your pqrch ; tad, at this ! slashed price you can well afford any piece you desire. H. B. Wilkinson out OF THE Htdli RENT bISTRXCT Concord, Kannapolis Sooresviile, China Grove I Gasoline aha Oils, | Free C Ah arid Water-WrifeP ! I STATIC | PAGE SEVEN 1 IMw. fffagt Inmdn . Every indication points toward Wag ner Bros, extending their theatre buttl ing activities to foreign countries, ac cording to an announcement from the Warner New York office this Week. ~j Albert. Warner has sailed for Europe for a survey of theatrical properties In foreign cities, and from what he TepdMa after a four months' trip through Efi|- land and continental ritie*, Warner Bros, will decide whether to enter the foreign tbfatre flekj at the same time they are gettiflj# under way their first,ran theatres In this’ country. Fifty-six days have been alloted for the Fall racing season in Kentucky, opea -1 ing at Latonla'September 12th and clos ing at Lexington November. 21*t. ' ‘ r:
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 14, 1925, edition 1
7
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