Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Aug. 5, 1925, edition 1 / Page 9
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Wednesday, August 5,1625 r- 1 T, 'I r HI)l 'HI I . 3? - • ■ Two things you should pbserve iri the care of your much-prized dresses and gowns First-—Send tWem to a reliable cleanser. Second Send them regularly—or as of Jen as they show the slightest soil or mussing. ' Our reliability as cleaners is known to niost people in this community. .j v not know it we shall gladly give the names of customers of high stan ! ding and rest our case on their tetimony. \ tennis us 5* 1 . ow y9 u how our service adds to the joy you get from your clothes, as well as lengthens their period of useful service. Phone and our representative will call , Phone 787"1® , , ■< "" ■ -re ■in. * L —a IMIS STATE HAS 484 KOSEWVALD SCHOOLS Are Abo Fourteen Teachers’ Homee, the Total Outlay Being *2,- 81 B,os3.—Leads South. Koleigh, Aug. 4.—-North Carolina, lead- Wg all other southern states, has 494 Bosenwald Hclioels and fourteen teach er’s homes, representing a total expendi ture of $2,,119,053, it was announced here today by A. L, Smith, of Nashville, Tenn.. general field agent for the Julius Ronsewald fund. These schools, said Mr. Smith, employ 1,331 teachers and care for 39,896 pupils. North Carolina is Bie only state that-has passed the |2*000,000 «ui rk. V The State’s nearest competitor in the wijj- of Ronsewald schools, which are op eratedj for the negro race, is Mississippi, : OUT OUR WAY BY^WILLIAMS 11 Mill wosw'voo GtIPLS "Wtftip v W 1 m ' TPwr pRANK ' E ¥ wamos le^ E \ K' If M AT | v<ouß TvE i|H PARTtf, AMO vNPHtrt | woo uTTIe Gar } 11 VL *'**&&* MAMMERSj eKnP-i<S ' r' Xv ’’°PV MV*S FACE. \ I W lllff EMBWWTwUM6.J that -Too / lU. <=>MACV< 1 OIRTi BEFORE ' \ . |LJl l / /^T - FI 6t-vT ? 7 AMD J WJE'PE EvjEW j * . Nil iF Mik \ STARTER. \ l , % j**' Awo A WAS HAD BY ALL - BuT ONE. y .; J——lV hi i . .. tt ' ohm »up ssmucxuiie../' mom-npop ——;bytatia»r === ! PoWoffice CRookS IS To RELEASE VJriEN'D you r- 5 # WON'T HAVE robber *rb>'Kwnz-Me’s a sood ideai* n. get our? J nothin on me j vwius member of it and fZJc. ' —-—niarrt v SELLING kNoWS WHERE \ NFS ONLV ARRfcStED Mil (30- VJHER& „505TAQe TV^y^ ARE- ZIMr 0,4 sospiaoN ___ Litp* L youse Soin' ? - -l, agggt jg- aft f yisßtsasE-M i&agfeiga ma*: i sgteus; s^-5, as to the number of schools, with 327, and South Carolina, as to total expendi tures, with 81,612,116. The tota| in vested in the entire south is $12,361i1U1. This represents 2,831 school buildings, 100, teachers' homes, 7,404 teadiers em ployed and 333,180 pupils cared for. Os this total, Mr. Smith anhonneed, $2,- 663.010 was contributed by negroes. $590,219 by wlpte peojUpf $6,878,t)79 by the public school authorities and $2,219,- 98:1 from the- Julius Ronsewald fund. North Carolina-negroes have contrib uted a total of $434,471 toward the erec tion of Rnsemvald schools, the white peo ple $65,137, the public school authorities $1,428,589, and $390,836 lias come from the Julius Ronsewald fund. Mr. Smith was unstinted in his prise of, what North Carolina has done toward negro education. “North Cajplina, of , course, leads • the, rest of. thaJSoutli,” he - said. “This state has a fine program, ■ which is being carried out 1 in an infelli ■ gent, sympathetic and telling'manner.” ; Record Wheat Crop Predicted For Can / ad a. Winnipeg, Man., A(<g. I.—CrCatest ’ wheat crop in the history of Cannda, possiMe exceeding 500.000,000 bushels if present prospects are realized”—this is the opinion of James Stewart, regarded hs one of the leading grain authorities of the Dominion. - “Rain has fallen recently in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and conditions called ‘Heal’ have prevailed for several weeks inr Alberta,” Stewart said- “With mod erately? warm weather from now on pi ogress of the grain should be rapid.” THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BY CHABI.ES i>. STEWART NBA Service Writer s Washington —wpat the next r war will be £ like nobody • knows . * ft..-3g MJUticry men say they * do— —doubtless think so. t Hut they 6be*w*s ->• Ms i' Different schools of experts pre •diot half a dozen or more entirely different kinds of fighting. .Their predictions conflict, too. There’s no way of adding them up, dividing by the total number of predictions and striking an average. "N**"- -K- » • • ACCORDING to military funda mentalists the next war will i be about the same old thing. Armies, with infantry as their backbones, will fight on land. Na ' vies with battleships as their backbones .. will fight at sea. Air-» craft will figure more than ever before but only-as army and navy auxiliaries, after all. Warfare's principles haven't changed a bit. V ' , ‘ * • • According to the' aviation school the next war will be fought in the air. Aircraft will wipe out armies and navies in Jig time.. The country with the strongest flying force will have the enemy, at its mercy before he real izes a sight’s started. His surface defenses and defend- RAT bites gird in bed Pretty Artist’ Model Awakens to Find Rodent Big as a Puppy on Her Face. New York Mirror. Awakened in dead of night to find a hflge rat' feeding ~n her face, Leslie Godseau, 20, pretty artists’ model, suf fered' such a severe shock; that she has since been under tin- care of a physician in her apartment. No. 127 W. 79th Street. ' ’ Her lip is still greatly swollen Where the rodent sank its teeth into it, Miss Godseau yesterday told a Daily Mirror reporter she had been so affected by the horror of her experience, which occurred early last Wednesday, that she has (dept and eaten littiff since. Mjss Godßeau, who shares the apart ment bn the lift It floor with two (Other young women, Martini Millerin, also an artist’s model, and Elms Hickman, clerf in a downtown office, said she was awak ened by a weight pressing on her face early Wednesday morning. ”1 was partially awakened at first,” she said, “and 'thought the girl I slept with, had movel, and her hand had fallen on my face. But 1 soon learned this was not the case, when I tried to brush the object off my face. 1 felt a. sudden intense pain in my lip. and as I screamed and sat up, the rat jumped to the floor and ran off. Os course my fright prob ably exaggerated my impression of its size, but it seemed to me as large as a puppy as it rahjhovn the bed and jumped to the floor. E "I nearly lest my sense. I was so shaken. A called in Dr. Milton .T. Wil son, No. 157 W. 79th St., and he treated my lip. He said there was no doubt j a rat had bitten trie, and advised me' to go at once to the board of health and j have serum treatment to prevent the pos sibility of tetanus. "Os course, I don't know what legal recourse I have, but if I have any, I in tend Jo take advantage of it.” Mascnic Workers Stop Wave tof Juvenile Thefts. Chicago, Aitg. 4.—The way to keep youths on the straight and narrow path 1 'is to Begiu influencing them for gopd at school .and in the neighborhood, not in the refbrm .schools. With this idea uppermost, the Order j of Builders, sponsored by the Masonic order, has grown in four years from thirty-three to more than 60,000 mem bers living in twelve states. Since the order began to function, spreading the idea of cleanliness of mind and nobility of purpose, crime eases in the juvenile courts have been on the decrease. USB PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO f YOU JUST MISSC=E> A PI CKI|C | UP THS. STReer i toWSN "THE O&GAM <2,<Sj\lOeX.b MOMKSY HeUD Out HIS PAW FDR MONEY X Put A i TeMNY IN IT THAT I WITH A MAT"<?tf <J , ' iIL.- HARi ' 1 (MAY M!’3S<£.7> THS PICNIC., BUT 1 cn. .. . : S§s " era ‘ destroyed.' cities will be - bombed, bis countryside berried and he’ll have to yield without having bad a chance to strike s blow. ' -tg-i*- 1 * According to * the chemical school, gas will decide the ' * next war. It may be out-' lawed but l\ Will be used. - - Whole armies will be gassed In their trenches Crews will be gassed on sjjips at sea. The populations of entire cities will perish simi larly. Airplanes will be convenient v for raining down death thus but their ammunition will be chemical. • • • TIESE aren’t all the schools— only some of the principal ones. With so much disagree ment. among them, what's a na tion. dependent on their advice, to do? j v .‘ •’V •» W Bu«d up an all-’round military establishment,. to suit the whole , outfit? That's a large ordef. A navy, for instance. Is expen sive. If It’s to be destroyed, first > shot out of the bottle, by aircraft. It would be better to scrap It and concentrate on ailreraft. Yet ‘suppose the country docs that, and then the aviation school turns out to be mistaken. .That would be bad business, too. Well, it’s up to the experts to fight It out the best- they can. DINNER STORIES “It’s no *00(1 mincing matters,” said the doctor, “you are -very bad. Is there anybody you would specially like to see?” “Yes,” replied the patient faintly, / "Who is it?” queried tile doctor. “Another doctor, please,” whispered the invalid. I Son: “Dad, one of the boys in school said I looked like you.” Dud: “What did you say to him?” Son: “Nothin’. Hes a lot bigger'n me.” “Schulz always was lucky.” “Why so?”, '. 1 “He underwent an operation because lie swallowed a pearl in an oyster, and the pearl proved to be valuable enough to cover the cost of the operation—and the funeral.” "You are run down,” said the doctor. “You need an ocean voyage. Will your business permit it?” “Oil, yes," replied the patient. “I'm second mate of the Anna Maria, just in frcfu Hong Kong.” • 4sker: "Do yoH thiaik that Jim De- I Smythe's death was accidental, or was it suicide?” . Teller: “Oh, it was purely accidental. Didn’t you bear ttic circumstances? He got ail tangied up iu a new style of union suit he didn't know the combina tion to and it straugled him to death.” ' i First Cannibal, running into camp: j | "Is I late fo' dinner?" j Second Cannibal: “You i«. everybody's j eaten.” “Are you a chess player?” a land- ! lord asked a prospective tenant. "No, I am not a chess player,” was | the reply, "I prefer chess players as tenants,” the landlord said, "because they move so sel- j dom and rarely without great delibera tion.” She: “Harold is developing into a i regular lady-killer.” He (absently) : “I wish you’d intro- ! duce him to your mother!” “Have an accident?” asked the fel low who arrived at the scene of an au tomobile wreck too late to be of any ■ hel p. “N<f. thanks,” replied the victim, as he piAed him,set? up. “I’ve just tiad j one.” | I DELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries . Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- 2 Dating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- 8 eating turrent. 9 R.H. OWEN, Agent | Hum* Ml Concord, N. C. a I LAMES! SAVE $1.65 Johnson Floor Polishing Outfit For $5.60 ' OUTFIT INCLUDES: — ; 1 Quart Johnson’s Liquid Wax • $1.40 For polishing linoleums, floors and furniture 1 Johnson’s Wax Mop (Lambs W<Jol) $1.50 For applying Johnson’s Liquid'Wax 1 Johnson Weighted Polishing Brush $3.50 ! | For polishing Wax on Floor and Linoleum j 1 Johnson Book on Home Beaytifying - m # 25 FOR SS.OO—A SAVING OF $1.65 1 ' Ritchie Hardware Co I \ YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 • '1 '■ J I THE NEW FALL STETSON VANITY AND NO NAME HATS ' . We are showing a full line in all the New Colors and latest shapes for Fall. , Come in and look them over, you will be pleased with the Smart Styles and New Colors. The leading Colors are Willow, Pearl, Cinder and Zinc. H. B. Wilkinson OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT 9 Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville, China Grove Texaco Gasoline and Oils, Alemite Greasing, Crank Case Service, Car 1 Washing and Polishing. Tires, Tubes* ft Accessories. Quick Tire ChangingH ft Free Air and Water-Water;ForTouK 1 Battery ■ ft STATION J PAGE NINE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Aug. 5, 1925, edition 1
9
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