Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Aug. 1, 1925, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX Many New Ideas in Better Buicks Greater Power, More Protec tion to Working Parts In cluded; Prices Lower Buick again demonstrated the marvelous resources and abilities of the automotive industry when it in troduced the present Better Buick. Embraced in this latest Buick offer ing are additional power and strength, the newest engineering achievements designed to give even longer motor car life, the maximum in comfort and safety, besides new beauty and refinements of design and *inish representing the latest skik in body craftsmanship. And in face of these material and costly improvements lower prices are an nounced throughout the entire line of Standard and Master Sixes. The announcement and the show ing of the better Buicks silenced the rumors that Buick would abandon the valve-in-head for another type engine which would permit of cheap er construction. The same principles that were inaugurated by Buick 21 vears ago and which have made it TODAY’S EVENTS. Saturday. August 1, 1925. Today i* the Swiss national inde pendence day- Colorado today celebrates the begin ning of her 50th year of Statehood. Eleven years ago today the great war began in earnest with the German iu vaeion of France. The General Conference of Christian Workers, founded by the late Dwight L. Moody, will begin its annual session to day at East Xorthfield. Mass. The eighteenth annual meeting of the American Home Economics Association will open in San Francisco today and continue in session through the coming week. Democratic primaries will be held in Kentucky today for the nomination of State, legislative and other candidates to be voted for at the Autumn election. The United States and Mexico today The woman who entertains well™ .1. i \ THERE’S something indescribably fine about the woman i who entertains well. From the cheery appearance of her home to the service she so deftly affords—everything is so natural—yet so charmingly different. Such splendid hostesses ,once very rare and belonging only to the idle classes, are now to be found everywhere. They grace homes in every walk of life—making them happier through the l ?.•’•. many friends they attract. • ; \ i Newspaper advertisements keep these women ahead of the commonplace. Newspaper advertisements tell of the newest and most delightful things. Newspaper advertisements announce new customs and practices. They tell what the world approves as cor rect. The woman who entertains well must read the newspaper ad vertisements. Not only to keep pace with progress—but to learn how to do so on a limited purse. For newspaper advertisements are more than harbingers of style—they are announcements of economies that may be practiced safely. ••• Read the newspaper advertisements—to know what is new, what is correct—and what is economical I the leader in the industry have been adhered to throughout. mechanical improvements in troduced would have been consid ered impossibilities only a year ago. . They represent the work of Buick r research and engineering staffs con ' stantly striving for betterments. The new prices likewise represent achievements of the engineering, L phodudtion and business depart ments of the Buick organization, and are in no small measure due to the i phenomenal approval of Buicks by the public. This latter factor has resulted in continuously increasing sales with the attendant possibili : ties of economies in purchasing and production. The complete line includes 16 mod -1 els. six in the Standard Six and ten in the Master Six class. In all cases the distinctive Buick lines have been continued, with refinements such as the rounding of radiator lines and the addition of streamline mouldings. All are finished in new ; and beautiful tones of durable Duco. Some of the models have Duo-tone Duco finish in distinctive corabina- will put into operation the first inter-! national postal convention providing for collect-on-delivery service. Mnj. Geu. Samuel D. Sturgis, U- S. A., late in command of the Third Corps Area . with headquarters in. Baltimore, will be placed o u the retired list today for age. A new parcel post ruling of the United States Post Office Department ef fective today will require all insured parcel and C\ O. D. shipments to carry a guarantee by the sender that return imstage will be paid in ea*e the parcel cannot be delivered. Qne hundred and ten years of peace between the United States and Canada, since the ratification of the treaty end ing the War of 1812, will be celebrated at Belleville. Ontario, with a gala week of sports and festivities scheduled to begjn today. i jtions. t All closed bodies are by Fish er and are upholstered in quality plush. Buick has always been noted for its sealed chassis, which prevents dirt or water entering any of the moving parts. Now it has added an air cleaner, oil filter and gasoline strainer. These, combined with the standard Buick construction, prac ’ tically eliminate the possibility of any foreign substance entering the ; engine or moving parts of the chassis and. consequently, minimize service requirements and add to the . life of the car. Because these three new units have no moving parts, there Is noth ing to get out of adjustment. They require no power—in fact are thor oughly automatic, and require only occasional cleaning to remove the dirt and grime gathered from the air. fuel and oil. The above illustration shows the Standard Six five-passenger, two door sedan. The price of this model. $1,195, is representative of the in creased values included in the en tire line of Better Buicks. No Quake in Turniei. When the earthquake occurred at Santa Barbara. Cal., workmeu were busy on the Montecito water tunnel 2000 feet horizontally in the depths of tile mountains near the city. They were about 3000 feet below the sunlit of the range. These workmeu testify that they did not feel the big earthquake at all: in fact they were not conscious ot it at the time and knew nothing about it un til they came out. This .upsets, to some exteut at least, many of the theories of quake*; for many scientists in explain ing the shocks say they were due to displacement deep down in the earth. This notion seems to be contradicted by the fact , that the workmen did not feel the quake s —s The good die young, so you never ► know whether they would have remained good. THE CONCORD DAILY, TRIBUNE j CROSSWORD PUZZLE || i"" ig~ i* H~pnMf r T —I —‘MBF""FT !o m —— —— """~~ 15 mm if w I|S * HeM ~ ■ * I S 3 6S W jvS6 « * Mill sass f¥l I In \ Just because America’s dry,-, don’t think that beer, 03 horizontal, means soda pop. It doesn't ! HORIZONTAL - 1 Leather strip. 0 Almost a donkey. 8 To sew temporarily. i 13 Exchanges. 15 Bad of cotton used to arrest hem orrhage. 10 To equip. 17 Keturued (as money for a deposit.) 20 Skill. 21 Always. 22 Resinous substance. 23 Article used by smokers. 24 Married. ‘ -■* 2."> To secure spotted effect of paint. 27 N cither's partner. 28 Exclamation of surprise. 2)1 Strong alkaline solution. 30 I‘oint of compass. 33 Gaiters. • - 33 Amount at which a person is rated for assessment. 30 Hinders. 40 Compares. 41 Positive electrical terminal. 43 Stepped. * 4."> Point of compass. 40 Constellation. 48 Printer's measure. 50 Resinous substance used in lacquer. 52 Recoils. ; 55 Sorrowful. 57 Poems. 58 To repulse. 50 Ado. 60 Opposite of even. 1926 f f 1926. improvements ' improvements J. m m WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, .11 f BUICK. WILL BUILD THEM 7 % LmJtk' Horse mhm 'Twer m i 0 -s il \gain i C. T rWheel Brakes if Buick . % ha i& at & ■ : a better ■ J** Automobile p LATEST oW MOST J\tP BEAUTIFUL DaSJGMS _ * *l*. * darner oSee it today at the . \ AMD "Buick showroom MtnwmvT * MANY OTHEfc distinctive ******* lumis ♦ * ’ v 4* % til Patterned. 03 Beer. (14 Smoothed. Oft Ttitled persons. 08 Asiatic goat antelopes. 1 (lO To question. ?0 Long grasses. • VERTICAL. 1 To scatter. 2 Tripod. 3 Stormed. 4 Paid publicity. 5 By. 7 Full of life. 8 Evil. 0 Part of verb to be. . 10 Country famous for bull fighters. 11 Lethargy. T 2 To come in. 14 Believers in the same creed. 15 To relate. 18 Small inflamed toumors. 10 Small candle. 25 Shades. 20 Lures. 28 L' nfolds. 31 To be aroused from sleep. 32 Edge. 33 Mineral spring. 34 To scatter bay. 36 Winged part of a seed. .17 Guided. 38 To employ. 42 Anriculate. 43 Wainscot. 44 Scat on a horse. 47 Matures. 40 Went bankrupt. 50 Circles of ropes. [sl Three whose wood Is* a moth pre • rentive. 153 To poke. 1 54 Valley. 55 Vapid. 56 Garment. 01 Cry of a eat. 02 Drone bee. 05 Negative. 67 To subsist. HI’GE CROWD PAYS TRIBI’TE TO BRYAN R»li» Falls In Torrents As Cortege Goes tt» Arlington National Cemetery. ■Washington. July 31.—The very heavens wept ns funeral services were conducted this afternoon over alt that is mortal of William Jennings Bryan. The elements themselves appeared to be in sorrow for these who grieved that the Commoner had been called hence, but despite the rain, the New York Avenue Presbyterian cliureh, right in the center of business commercial life of Washing ton, was filled to its capacity, every sent oeenpied and many standing back , of the pews in the bodSr t>f the Church and in the gallery. 1 At the conclusion of the services, jiist ns the funeral cortege took up the route to Arlington Nntioriffl ' Cemetery* the rain. \vtii(* begun during the inight. poured down in a torrent, but thin did not interfere one whit with the tribute of the people to the lender -whom hey loved in life, and whom they honored in death. Beneath umbrellas in open store fronts, in the windows, great numbers of people were to be seen as the hearse and the following automobiles passed on. to the city of the dead. It was the funeral cortege of a beloved leader until > it reached the very gates of Arlington, .when it became military, but military softeped to the uttermost. Military Escort. Vuder military escort by desire of the widow of Mr. Brynn even less than' would oAlinarily be accorded a colonel of the army, for William Jennings Bryan was a colonel, holding that posi tion at th#> head of a regiment he had organized in the Spanish-Ameriean War, the funeral procession | Missed to the knoll on which stands the Admiral Dewey mausoleum, and there the last words of the officiating minister at the I church services were said. "Tails" was j sounded by military bugler and the I body of the beloved dead consigned to Mother Earth. There in pence lies the | man whose life had been stormy in i many ways, aboilt his resting plnoe | banked huge stauds of floral re membrances that came from great num bers of his countless hosts of friends. ’ At a late hour last night there were changes made in the list of honorary pall-bearers because of the arrival nere of so many friends und intimates of Mr. Mrynn who came unexpectedly. Former Secretary of the Navy Daniels, first an nounced as to have been one of the honorary imll-benrens. was made one of the active pall bearers, this group of men closely associated with Mr. Bryan I in his long career, two from Illinois, the Saturday, August 1, 1925 state of Mr. Bryan’s birth; one from Florida, the home of the last days of Mr. Brynn; one from Lincoln, the Nebraska city where he had so long lived; one from Kentucky, who repre sented close friendship; one from North Carolina who for over 30 years had been a close friend both' personally and poli tically, and who held place with him in the Wilson cabinet. Attend Services. Mrs. Grace Bryan Hargreaves, ac companied by her brother. William .T. Bryan. Jr., reached the city this morn ing after the 1 long trip from isis Angeles to be present at the last sad ob sequies of their father. Mrs. Hargreaves spent some time with her mother and sister, and went with the family to the church after it was closed to the public to take the last sad look at the still face of their loved one. During the morning Mrs. Hargreaves recalled in conversation with the News and Ob server correspondent the time she had made Raleigh her home, said she had a deep love for the city, and that her present purpose was when the time ar rived to send her oldest daughter to Rn’eigh to onthr St. Mary's school, that it is an institution which appeals ,to her ns a place ih which to have her daughter educated. Need of a Home For Wayward Girls. High Point Enterprise. No worthier undertaking could be started in High Ij’oint than plans for the erection and maintenance of a detention home for wayward girls. That such; a place is needed here there is no doubt, and it will not he many years before the mistake in not providing ffer such a place will be bitterly realized. Recently a 14-j-ear-old girl was kept in the local jail for an entire week. She js-as. locked up as a hardened eriminul. .wish the same environment as is the lot if the bootlegger and thief. ' That this girl was wayward there was no doubt, but in her fofniulive years there; is still n eliauee of; guidipg her into the better paths of lift*. But with no other place but the jail to keep her there" is slight chance tljnt she;could he given a more wholesome outlook on life. Boys and girls in their teens, even though they have done wrong, cannot be regarded as human wreckage. Proper environment, supervision, nnd correctkin will do what the cold, bare walls of ( a cell can never do. Society is now mbre complex than ever before, nnd each Unit of society has an influence on tile others. It is worth while to salvage misguided young lives in the beginning and thereby avoid tile nlmosf inqwssible task of re elainrng adults who have drifted in lives of crime and vice. ... i i Employment Endurance Bill Passed. London. July 31.—The employment en durance bill was passed by the House of Commons today after a labor motion to reject it_ was defeated by a vole of 203 to 1)8. The measure was one of the ihost im portunt projects announced in the recent 1 budget presented to Parliament by Chan ■ cellar Churchill.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 1, 1925, edition 1
6
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