Irs'day, August 20, 1925
Some Things
“Won’t Wash”
There are many fine fabrics which
\ TLf T I will not stand the ordeal of the wash-
Q / tub. gotne of the most desirable goods
/J P 1 / I cannot be made shrink-prbof nor can
I / /\mJ A sonie of the most attractive colors be
* n t^C s ° as to com^at t * le
i These fabrics should be sent to us for
cleaning by our modern, scientific
Dry Cleaning Co.
rstame Laying of Junior Order
Orphans Home.
ington, Aug. 19. (A>)—Hundreds
nors from all sections of North
na are expected here today to
the exercises of the corner
laying of tlie branch orphans’
of the Junior Order United
ran Mechanics at South Lex
, three miles west of this city,
program for Che exercises in
jacklresses by officials prolninent
HT 0 3 al an<l K,a,e councils of
W\ ana others. Several bands,
mg' the thirty-eight piece band
National Orphans’ home at Tif
>hio.
?phus Daniels, former secretary
navy, of Raleigh, is one of the
trs on the program. The ex
i will be ip charge of Lexington
it .No. 21, Jfc O. U; A. M.
way |
WiE.'D LIVCE.'TO Uv/E OMER
MOM’N" POP BY TATLOR
LUC/ HERE’S A FEW \ f VIELt WHERE L VJKV ARE YOU TAKIN6 N/' ufmßv-t'm
THiNQS MINE I K you QoiNS Tt> .M SO MANY DRESSES VIHEnX -tq
UP y f PUT 'TWEM?- ( L YOU CAN BORROW FROM i^yfrv^kE
FoR THE TRIP f ( THE SUITCASE ) | MRS GUNN lE NECESSARY-/
\ IS FILLED NOW f I JOST, RENIEMBEP IHAVE / YNJR BEST SUITS
(i-o nutu novy ITo GET MY THINGS IN A AIONQ-XTWILL
fee but i ought to ) srr :—^>-111sissa
IKE/J LEASrpNe \ HERe'S > [/' NOT GOING TONI Wa NNORN OUT*
If VOUR OLD PLAID I ifAiCE THAT RAG 4V W .NOTHtNfi!
\l Suit I found in ME -CANT*) \ >HN THE POCKETS
,HoTETANDru>UWF 1 > THE Amc- IT'S . H YOU SEE 'T'SgV* | <T_OOK UKENEN
*•' ' 1
Ui :X.\ *. -'v - ■ - ' f .' XX."' X
The administration building, in the
corner of which the cornerstone is to
be laid, is 393 feet long and will cost,
when about $250,000.
The branch Rome, according to the
present plans, will be patterned after
'the National Home at Tiffin, Ohio.
When complete, the new branch will
accommodate about 1,000 children,
and when the entire plant is iinished
it will represent an investment of
approximately $1,000,000.
May and December.
Editor New York Mirror: X won
der whether anything can.be done to
prevent young gir’s from getting mar
ried to aged men. In almost every
magaline or newspaper I see com
plaints from yonng girl? Who 1 mar
rid aged men because they hiW nit
better sensei,. <jr .because manats with
social aims and father losing money
forced their weeping Madelines to
wed the antique beau. Could not a
Jaw be passed that would do awny
with such marriages? The lawmakers
have passed laws upon almost every
thing, possible—(|own to the Ten
nessee monkey law. It would be of
far more ■ imanceropt sapotshrshr
far* more importance to pass shch a
! marj-inge law than to measure the
length of the girls' skirts. I once met
a young girl aboht 18 years old with
her bowle-gged husband, who was
about SO. ’We run well imagigne
what effective offspring will ; cotnc
from such marriages.
. JOHN KijIENE.
It is easier to run up a hjlKthan
' to- run down to your ertgjitbr ahiTsct
r-r- i V I
THfi Concord daily tribune
!| -![
DINNER STORIES
i
Man. (standing-on the corner)
Could you give a poor cripple
\ enough for a cup of coffee and a
’aandwiteh?
Good Qld Lady—Why, my |>oor
feilow, how are you crippled?
Man —Financially.
Employer (to applicant for a posi
tion, \yh<> has handed in tesimonials
from two minister-') —We don’t work
oai Sundays. Haven’t you a reference
from someone who sees you on week
days?
Wealthy Judge (lecturing a priso
ner)—A clear consicince, my man, is
more to be desired than riches.
Prisoner—All right, sir, I’ll swap
with you.
“Your honor,” said me burglar
“I was foodless, friendless and home
less.”
“My man,” said the jtnlge. “you
move me deeply! Food, shelter and
companionship shall be yours for the
ne-xt nine months.”
Judge —Your face seems taniiliar.
Prisoner—We were boys together.
J udge—Nonesense.
Prisoner—Yes, we were, because
you’re about 52 and so am I.
An elderly man of ultra-eonvival
habits but withal learned and book
ish. was haled before a bar of justice -
in a country town. “Youre charged
with bein’ drunk and disorderly”
snapped the magistrate. “Have ye
anything to say-why sentence should
not be pronounced?”
“Man’s inhumanity to mail makes
countless thousands mourn,” began 1
the prisoner in a fligght o^, oratory.
“I am not so debased as Poe, so pro- 1
fligate as Bryon, so ungrateful as 1
Keats, so intemperate as Burns, so j
timid as Tennyso-n, so vulgar as '
Shakespeare, so—”
“That’ll slo, that’ll do,” interrupt
ted the maggistrate . “Ninety days.
And. office, tajee down that list of
names he mentioned and round them
up. I think had as he is.”
Miss Tate Is Not to Blame.
t High Point, Aug. 18—No blame
for the, death of John I,eo Harbinson.
nine-year-obi boy who died last night
in a local hospital following nil auto
mobile accident, will be placed against
Miss Issabel Tate, daughter of. A. E.
Tate, wealthy High Point furniture
manufacturer, and a talented and at
tractive sroiety girl. . * 1
According towitnesses, the little
fellow darted Out from behind a
parked on West Broad street, and ran
directly in front of t’ue Packard sedan
which Miss Tate was operating.
Several hundred fathers living in
Yonkers, N. Y., have formed an or
ganisation having as its purpose the
keeping of girls less than 21 years
old at home at nights. The organi
autiop was formed after the court
rulwk that fathers may boss their
children until the latter are 21 years
old. Nowithe fathers, it is reported,
have put a ban on “petting” parties,
all-night dances, late supper parties,
long automobile rides and beaus who
do not go home before midnight. The
authorities have promised to aid t’he
fathers to be the bosses of their own
homes.
Tp||||i
Our New Mechanically Refrig
erated
Autopolar Foun
tain
keeps ice cream in the most ■
perfect condition. ■ With this
new automatic refrigerating
device, it is possible to hold the
temperature to the zero mark
if desired, and this insures all
ice cream and drinks in the
best of condition, v
Pearl Drug Co.
On the Square Phone 22
00*000000000000000000000
I Let Your
Next Battery
Be An
EXIDE |l
Use Only the
1 Best
Stewart's washington
letter.
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
NBA Service Writer ”> ,
.WTASnrNGTON When Pi4si-
W' dent Coolidge succeeded him
self last March everybody
thought he waa going to make
Iris official family all over, to suit
ills, own ideas of what a cabinet
ought to be. Up to that time he
avowedly had been running things,
us nemly as h 9 could, the way
President Harding had started
them.
On his own election to the presi
dency, however, it generally was
taken for granted he’d want ad
visors chosen by himself. Then
Bascom Slemp retired in Everett
Sanders’ favor, as presidential pri-,
vate secretary, and it was assumed
the shakeup had begun.
* » . >
■XjTET a glance down the list of
1 cabinet members shows thus
far not a single change the
president could have avoided mak
ing. He didn’t want to retire At
torney General Daugherty or Sec
retary of the Navy Denby. Their
resignations were forced on him as
much as they were forced on the
two officials themselves, by pres
sure of public opinion.
Secretary of’ Agriculture Wal-
CHRISTIAN RELIGION
IS FUNDAMENTAL
(Continued from Page One)
“We find therefore, that the title
of the act, the evil of which was in
tended to be remedied, the cjrcum
stSnces surrounding the appeal to
Congres-, the reports of the commit
tee of each house, all concur in affirm
ing that the intent of Congress was
simpl} to stay the influx of this cheap
unskilled labor (referring to the act
in question).
“Bdt beyond all these matters no
purpose of action against religion can
be- imputed to any legislation, state or
national, because this is a religious
people. This is historically true.
Ffom the discovery o>f this continent
to. the present hour there is a single
voice making this affirmation.”
The opinion pointed to Christopher
Columbus, prior to his sailing west-
obtaining a commission frdhi
“Ferdinand and Isabella, by the Grace
of God. King and Queen of Castile,”
and Meriting that “it is hoped by
God’s assistance some of the conti
nents and islands in the ocean will
be discovered, etc.”
Justice Brewer 'went further and
traced other “by the Grace of God”
documents, beginning with the first
Colonial Land Grant.
Articles 2 and 8 of the eonstitu- 1
tion of Massachusetts were quoted as*
follows in the opinion:
“Tp bear out tlie decision wlqch ’
recognized the Christian religion in |
this country it is the right as well ks I
he dirty 'of all m>n in society.* l pub- j
icly and at stated seasons, to wor
ship the Supreme Being, the great
Creator and Preserver of the In
verse. x x x x As the happiness of
a people and the good order and pres
ervation of civil government essontial
\v depend upon piety, religion and
morality, and as these cannot be gen
erally diffused through a community
hut by the institution of the public
worship of God and of the public in
structions in piety, religion and mor
ality : Therefore to promote their hap
piness and to secure the good order
and preservation of their government,
'he people of this commonwealth have
a right to invest their legislature with
power to authorize and require the
several towns, parishes, precincts and
other bodies—politic or religious so
cieties to make suitable provision at
their own expense, for the institu
tion of Phe public worship of God and
for the support and maintenance of
public Protestant teachers of piety,
religion and morality in all eases
"’here such provision shall not be
made voluntarily.”
Section 4 and 14 of article 7 of the
constitution of Mississippi followed:
EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO'
/- —:■ —■ ■ - -
/MR3. T£?<J(Sy THIS- CONC3-&R. Ybu Ksep)
-House THE Less ordcr you «e £f , t>
tOHCMevetS ! COMe -TO THIS **
Voe. - f-
THING. 1 F/NO IT PACViex? I zr
IMTH A THOUSAND XhINSS
IN CONFUSION HI Nines Tines :
L | ! ||||| i
LYou'vi Sot SAuSERa mth 4 ewa
Oic This that, and bottuss^
jjjjj iCc. 1• 11 - / * - I
Cl "..'-".icf- IV- -„•. . I
lace died. Secretary «r Bute
Hughes quit, much against the
chief executive's wishes, to make
some money practicing law The
other six department heads are
the ones President Harding picked
originally
SECRETARY MELLON, for one.
is absolute boss of the treas
ury He asks nobody’s advice.
He dictates and his dictation is
gratefully received. President
Coolidge’s utterances on money
matters are much admired in
financial circles. Mellon's their
author, so gossips say
• • •
NOBODY tells Secretary Hoover
anything about the com
merce department. He tells
others. For instance, in the midst
of all that talk about the presi
dent’s "firm policy” In the row be
tween the coal operators and
miners, this bit of information
leaked out—rirt reality the presi
dent had no such thing as a “coal
policy”—he didn’t know what
he'd do in the event of a strike—
he’d do whatever Hoover told him
to do. "More business in govern?
mer.t and less government in bus.
lness" is of Hooveresque origin,
too.
“No person who denied the being
of God. or a future state of rewards
and punishments, shall hold any of
fice in the civil departments of this
states, x x x x
“Religion, morality and knowledge
being necessary to good government,
the preservation of liberty, and the
happiness of mankind, school and the
means of education, shall forever be
encouraged in this state.”
The opinion continued :
“Even the constitution of the Unit
ed States, which is supposed to have
little touch! upon the private ’Me
of individual, contains in the first
amendment a declaration common to
tlie constitution of all the states, as
follows: ‘Congress shall make no law
respecting the establishments of re
ligion, or prohibiting the exercise
thereof, etc.’ And also provides in
Article 1, Section 7 (a provision com
mon to many constitutions) that the
executive shall have ten days (Sun
days excepted) Within which to‘ de
termine whether he will approve or
veto a bill.
“There, is no dissonance in theje
declarations. There is an universal
language prevnding them all. having
one meaning: they are organic utter
ances; they speak the voice of the en
tire pl'bple.”
After quoting further along these
( lines the opinion concluded :
j “These, and many other matters
j which might be noticed, add a volume
' of unofficial declarations to the mass
! <>f organic utterances that this is a
; Christian nation. In the fact of
‘all these, »shall it be that a Congress,
of the United Slates intended to make
a misdemeanor for a church of .this
country to contract for the services of
a Christian minister residing in an
other nation?*'
Buried With Her Dog.
When Myrtle Ross did a circus
high wire act years ago she had for
let' team-mate Snowball, a French
poodle. The two retired together and
spenl many happy years near Al
hambra. Calif.
But there came a day when death
took the woman. Fearful that strang
ers would not treat her aged pet
kindly, Mrs. Ross left a will stipulat
ing that Snowball was to he chloro
formed. The two bodies were then i
cremated together and their ashes ]
mixed in an urn that was sent to !
Syracuse, N. Y., Mrs. Ross’ girlhood i
home.
Gaelic football has been played by
the youth of Ireland for centuries, and
is still one of the most popular sports
in Ireland. The regular Gaelic team
is composed of fifteen ; players.' j
s' f -' 11 ' r —; ——- i : i, i tmi jum— -
You pay no more for a Hood—So why buy a lighter !
weight tire ? Very few tires have as many ply of cord as
the Hood.
y ■ ' - ■■ 1 .• * j?\ i
Let us show you, 5 ’
H ‘ p
r !
| Ritchie Hardware Cl I
YOUR HARDWARE STORE
\ !
PHONE 117
11 | •
MOOOOOOCQOOOOOOOOGCXXJOGOOGSOaQQOOQOOOOQOOQOOOOOCK
I o
1 I t- ; j|te
DELCO LIGHT
Light Plants and Batteries
Deep and Shallow Well Pumps' for Direct or Altdr- >
finatiog current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- ! ! ’
dating current.
R. H. OWEN, Agent ' ;
Phone 66J Concord, N. C- ,
SCOOOCXXXJOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOCeiOOOClOOOOCJOOOOOOOpOOOCSOa;
\
THENEW FAIXSTEIfoN*
I VANITY AND NO NAME HATS
II V e are showinga full, line in all the New Colors and I *
g latest shapes for-Fall.
ffl Come in and look them over, you will be pleased with
U the Smart Styles and New Colors'. -
The leading colors are Willow, Pearl, Cinder and Zinc, j
I RICHMOND - FLOWE CO.
188 I HI CBEsSEaSSigH!TTII 7.21 SgSgEgg g , ..m iujiß
- ’ .. u
jThe Most Useful Piece of Furniture in
the Home—A HOOSIER BEAUTY
PUSH
.And in I! | , ~,
H. B. WILKINSON
I VACATION TIME
Let us get your car in first class condition to go to ■
the seashore or (mountains. We specialize in rciining fil
brakes with Rusco brake lining, using a Cady counter- |j ~
sinking and riveting machine. We also carry a full line ftp
of Goodtich Silvertovvn cord tires and tubes, piston, rings,'E
spark plugs, bearings, shims, bumpers,: Sparton hdrns:-iat>d<.w*
all kinds Y>t accessories. *'h *’ >’ r’T 1 • Tv
Genuine Ford Parts PresGO-Lite Batteries «
i’ree Air aud Water and Water Foe 1 Your Battery Bl
Auto Supply & Repair Co. | i
PHONE 228
PAGE SEVEN