Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Aug. 21, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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pay, 'August 1025 S Some Things “Won’t Wash” 111 There are,many fine fabrics which will not stand the ordeal of the wash tub. Some of the most desirable goods cannot be .made shrink-proof nor can some of the most attractive colors be fixed in the fabric so as to combat the These fabrics should be sent to us for by our modern, scientific Dry Cleaning Co. TODAY’S EVENTS tlday, August 21. 1925 ‘nary of the Birth of Robert *t, eminent New Jersey lawyer ■andidate for United States sen- Hlpawieh. one of the historical B>f New Hampshire, today will He the 175th anniversary of its Gerald David Lascelles, son flHsa Mary and youngest of all of Queen Victoria, is Hkn old today. Bhers of the Washington State ■Association will gatfter in Spo ■otlay for their annual conven ■he sessions of which will eon- I over tomorrow. ■ of the largest educational ex- * OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS T CAkTX /huvA 6tcrr vT* EM I_EFT MiT. V-feE. A GrOOO COW \ PELV-tf? WIvSTER- IM WO \ Like ham ACTORS * \ *STAGE hAKio. tMW ACT *SO\RQiU -r - DEATH N N EWe -. RSAOV " \ OOMT COME Oj ’Ti U. cajs&tHew vnowt Foß ' Th' faLl kcumouP. ap-Tef? ~iU scemecw PIAV NCfalM Bor MuH CAM HEP TH BCMS V=> Act SET Ffcß A \ ’SHAKESPEARE / ME\M \ ROC&S- vmERE-ABoilDuo OAM COvmPukjOAEP .MI’ST&Y?./ ■*?;>■ ' A VAH'SHiMCj APISTOCRACW. .... MOSTN POP By"TAYLOR ’ The VJIEE AND L HAVE A (T x NEVER LIKE"!© X f YOO’RE RIOHT- Seen talking cner oor \ ithou6WT she t \ spend a lot op >( a fellow can have wand she's pleased ) >nouldbe-it ) ( monev on a vacation A mIKT PACH R^os E pw lT wds 'quite^ 4 ) 7 because vou Seldom ) without being f 7 P^ AbF I?reH PBt N6i hibits of eoins ever' displayed in Amer eia will fenture the annual convention of the American Numismatic Associa tion, which opens today in Detroit. Parents Warned Young Onnond. Rocky Mount, Aug. 20.—Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Ormond, parents of W. W, Ormond, who was shot, and in stantly killed by W. B. Cole, promi nent Rockingham citizen, at that place Saturday afternoon, saw their son in Raleigh Friday and. apprehensive of his safety, asked him not to go by Rockingham, it was learned from friends of the family here today. Rev. Mr. Ormond, fattier of the young man. is pastor of the Nashville Methodist Church and widely known throughout this section, whore the news of the shooting dame as a" de- cided shock. Friends here carried the sad tiding to Nashville late Sat urday. While grief-stricken, the fath er is declared to have borne up re markably well, but Mrs. Ormond is well nigh prostrate. From, these 1 friends it was learned that tfec parents saw their fwp sbns in Raleigh * Friday. ' ft seems they knew of the feeling existing between the older son and Cole and asked the former not to go by Rockingham on his trip to Myrtle Beach, as they feared for his safety in the event he should see the textile manufacturer there. About MnOOO Korean workers in Osaka .and suburbs have formed the Osaka union of the Korean Labor Federation in Japan. fHE C6Mokb £>AILY tftifctM r if DINNER STORIES Trick of Fate. Two years ago Gordon IngaiK j Chicago oil promoter, was sentenced ! to the federal penitentiary at Leaven- j worth for using the mails, to defraud. 1 He sold stoek in a "hopeless” Arkan sas well. Now he iA a free man again. Whine Ingalls was behind bars fate took a hand. The oil property de veloped gushers and has since become one of the most valuable in the El dorado district. The corporation or ganized by Ingalls has been released from receivership and is now boom ing. But Ingalls has been ousted. Obviously Bright. Hubby: "Miss Judson is n very bright woman, judging by my conver sation with her.” Wifey: “What did she say?” Hubby: “Not much, but she ap prover! of everything I said.” Os Course. The new guest at the not too ex clusive house was being shown to his room. “I presume—ah—every one heah dresses for dinner?” he inquired of the maid who was taking him up. “Oh, _jer, sir,” replied the little woman, seriously. “Any meals in bed are extra!” . “A gentleman wlsnes to see yau, Mr- Grabcoin.” “What does he want?” asked that successful captain of indnstry. "He says he’s an old college friend of yours who is. now on the ragged edge of a misspent life.” “Ah! He wants to negotiate a loan. Just go back and tell him it’s painful for me to meet old college chums, as he will doubtless recall that I was expelled in my sopho more year.” “A woman's work Is l never done,” she said, as dinner oftme on the table an hour late. “So I observe.” he answered, gloomily, as he pushed away the potatoes.” Good Advice. C. M. Sturkey in (’hail-town News. I just hehrd a rich one. A man told me that upon close investigation he had found that a man who squeezed his money was never known to squeeze his wife. In looking over our sub scription books I have come to the conclusion that there arc. a lot of Wives here hbouts -Kiat Would be sur rtri^ed 1 if, Atlelr husbands should squeeze them. You know h lot of follows think that they should stop making love to their wives after they are married. Why. a man told me the other day that he thought it was fool ish for a man to kiss his wife. That fellow will be surprised some day to come home unexpectedly and find some other man kissing her. Love is part of the makeup off women and when it dies in her, it is like part of her body withering away. Surprise your wife, give her u squeeze, and then you in ay surprise me by paying your subscription. Miss Helen Wills, the United States women's tennis champion, will be 20 years old October (Ith next. She was only 17 when she first won the title. 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. Pearl Drug Co. On the Square Phone 22 000000000000000000000000 I Let Your Next Battery j Be An EXIDE Use Only the | Best Stewart BT CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON.— The amount of bunk that has come out of Swampscott about President Coolidge this summer is something old Washington correspondents say they never saw equalled about any previous president in all Hjelr combined recollections. There's been more real news about previous presidents—oh, plenty more—but never so mnch pure guff, in the same length of time. ... THE “presidential spokesman’’ has been a great help to the > Swampscott correspondents all Aumrner. Almost everybody knows about the “presidential spokes man.” He was born of the fact .that the president mustn’t be .quoted in the newspapers. That’s A tradition —a silly one, too. Nev ertheless it exists. So, when the president says anything the pa pers want to print, which is every .thing he does say, inasmuch as the press has to have some kind of an authority for it, the correspond ents got to putting it into the mouth of a ’’presidential spokes man,” • • • r\ due season the public got onto this —comprehended that the > spokesman*’ in reality was the president himselt talking. Consequently the “spokes man’s” utterances soon began to fr# accepted as coming right from LOVE AND POLITICS f ' IN WILSON REGIME Mrs. Josephus Daniels Tells of a Courtship That Overshadowed His Candidacy. . * Raleigh Xhvh and Observer. \ The inside story of a oversea flawed a j)i-e^rdedtial eaiHjidacy ■ is fold for the first’ time in this v£eskV; Liberty by Mrs Josephus Darnels,, wife oi the secretary of the navy'dur ing President Wilson's administra tion. "When Mrs. Woodrow Wil sonijpcaioe an and ,>?ot a Lia bility” reveals liow the" Democratic party leaders all but succumbed to fright before December 18. 1015, when Edith Bolling Galt and Woodrow Wil son were married. “The election in 101 G was admit tedly in doubt.” Mrs. Daniels writes. L was a foregone conclusion that 1\ ilson would be renominated by ac clamation. It was almost a panic. Theyjwere almost all—l mean those particularly in official positions in and wound Washington—of the opin ion fmrt if Phe President remarried hefone November. 1016, be would de stroy*'all chances of re-election. Look ing back from this distance, it is not easy m understand why they were so convinced; but it became an obsession with them. Many informal confer ences were held. What could be done? Could anything he done? ‘’The wives of the politicians and other women had decided views. The first Mrs. Wilson had been dead only a little less than a year. They didn’t like tlie idea of his remarrying so soon. ‘Let ,him wait until after the presi dential election if lie must marry again. That was the opinion on Hill. While that was the opinion as to the aspect in politics, few believed President Wilson would permit political considerations to out weight an affair of the heart, if his heart were really involved. . ‘‘A cabinet member called on m\ husband in The early fall of 1015 anil told of how scores, yes, hundreds, of prominent Democrats nil over the country had been coming to see him or writing him letters. He said they all believed that victory the next year EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO iillillii Yo v n I tVOUL'P "Wl<& fgijffii . 0 TH/4T -N<SUJ.S - hi; A i Ai4KC-S PApeft To -e.e. jj||feA&L> TK/imk <so £ <32.U\TCS- a Tmn_ the fountain head—what he waa quoted aa aaying carried heaps of weight. , • • •) rIEN one day one of the cor respondents nobody knows just who started it—thought Up a yarn all by himself that he was anxious to put across with all the "presidential spokesman’s” authority. Well, why shouldn’t he? he cogitated. “Presidential spokesman” was a vague term, after all —like a “prominent mem ber of the lower house,” a "lead ing senator” or a “well known statesman." Lots of politicians consider themselves “presidential spokesmen.” So the correspond ent attributed this figment of his own imagination to a “presidential spokesman,” and lo and behold! it worked. Now all the correspond ents do the same .thing more or less—though of course nobody ad mits it. * • • TTTELL, the “p reside n t lal W spokesman” has been work ing overtime at Swampscott. They say the president himself doesn’t like it—that he’s bawled the correspondents out on account of a lot of the things they were wishing onto him. But there isn’t much he can do about it. Sup pose he denies some story concern ing him. The correspondents are sorry they were misinformed but they got it from a “presidential spokesman”—at least that’s what he said he was. The "spokes man’s” pants are too intangible to be kicked, so they get away with li. .■ - * • ' : -I was impossible if the President irf i married before the. eJecttiott,.' Sena tors, members of the ijoqse of*Keprf sentatives. natjonal oomiUifteeaieil, chairmen pf sjWe committees, Inflifeif tidl .edjtars/a%o#4 sitmiort was esseij tla 1 -t.victory quotW.! "He told of a dohf?iS)f|totv‘br.rwa|i<(- .cratic party, deader* 'quit hail just bee 1 held, ■T’hen bidm, the- shock .pf fct , husband's l*fe, ' -Jit the' corimijjjer l tve alt (tehlded that ybn were the ni4(i to go to see ; ihe .President,” the cftbfr jieC member said to Mr. f>aniels; ‘ac ijuaini; kjm with situation, and urge .hifcj to tt/ifck of the party's %u<*- cess and not to jeopardize history for next year. “ ‘We discussed at some length the questj.on of who was the best man to go to see t'jc President, and de [cided upon you because we know his i relations with you are those of warm friendship and you have the taet to do it in the best way.’ “It is not necessary to quote the words Mr. Daniels employed in de clining the distinction of being Min ister Plenipotentiary and Ambassa dor Extraordinary to tiie President of the United States. “Asked by a friend why lie liad been so firm in bis refusal to try to persuade Woodrow Wilson to de lay his marriage, Mr. Daniels after ward said: “ ‘As a matter of fact, if I had felt as deeply about the matter as my colleague, and my acquaintance with Mrs. Edith Galt: had justified such action, my mission would have been to her and not to the prospective bridegroom. If she could have been persuaded to postpone the day, be cause delay was essential to the re election of Mr. Wilson, success might have been possible. Hut no man af ter pressing his suit, could ever draw back with honor. My colleague, in tent only on carrying the next elec tion. had failed to take that into con sideration’.” “So she refuses to give you back your ring. Well, you can’t make her.” “Perhaps not, but the installment man can.” TSf a You pay no more for a Hood—So why buy a lighter H " J weight tire? Very few tires have as many ply of cord as V the Hood. j j Let us show you. -j j Ritchie Hardware Ct U j YOUR HARDWARE STORE ! PHONE 117 Moooooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooom DELCO LIGHT ; Light Plants and Batteries i _ Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or AltMr nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- Rw ioating current. •, : | ! R. H. OWEN, Agent I Phant Ml Concord, N. C. 5 ioooooooooooooooo-i«vxxvic<xx>cooooc»3oooooooooooooe ; VANITY AND NO NAME HATS ij We are showing a full line in all the New Colors and i latest shapes for Fall. Come in and look them over, you will be pleased with 9<4 t-lie Smart Styles and New Colors. | The.leading colors are Willow, Pearl, Cinder and Zinc, f j RICHMOND-FLOWE CO. The Most Useful Piece of Furniture in the Home—A HOOSIER BEAUTY . A " orkil| R center! Thai’s the t first thing every kitchen needs. rm, ■ ,x. And in tlio Hoosicr Beauty you i , H. B. WILKINSON ; I VACATION/TIME T Let us get your car in first class' condition to go to the seashore or mountains. Wc specialize in relining % brakes with Kusco brake lining, using a Cady counter- -1 sinking and riveting machine. We also carry a full line of Goodrich Silvertown cord tires and tubes, piston rings, spark plugs* hearings, shims bumpef|J horns: and , all kinds of accessories. •■ y : J’-t a 1 Genuine Ford Pam Piew-O-Lite Batteries* $ Free Air and Witter ;\nd W&tnr For Your Battery |■ ; Auto Supply & Repair Co. PHONE 228 . :J j PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 21, 1925, edition 1
7
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