Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 5, 1925, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR - CHURCH NEWS Calvary Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Chief service at 11 a. m. Light Brigade at 6p. m. Luther League at 7p. m. The public is most cordially invited to all services. „ St. Andrews Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Light Brigade at 10:45 a. m. Luther League at 6:30 p. m. Vespers at 7 :•'«» The public is most cordially invited to ail services. v. First Baptist. Sunday school 1) :45 a. m., A. E. Harris superintendent. Preaching at 11 b'clock. Subject: "The Authority of Jesus.” Evening services at 8:00 o'clock. Regular mid-week prayer ser vices Wednesday at 8 o'clock—con tinuance of talks on Mark. All are invited to attend. A. E. TIBBS. Second Presbyterian. 4 Rev. M. E. Hauseil. Pastor) Sunday school at 0:45 a. in. Preaching at 11 a. m. by the pastor. At .7:30 p. m. Mr. J. T. R’ddervalt. a student of Union Seminary, will preach. Come and worship with us. Bayiess Memorial Presbyterian. (IV. H. Matlieson. Pas:ori Sunday school 9 :30 a. ni. Pleach ing 11 a. in. Subject: “The Reward of Living and Dying.” Conic and worship with us. All welcome. Brown Mill Presbyterian. (W. H. Matlieson. Pastor) •Sunday school 10 a. m. Preaching! at 7:30. Subject "The Reward etj Living and Dying.” Come and xvor- 1 ship with us. EpvvCrtli Methodist. " Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Wordtip' ufad-sermon by pastor at 11 a. ni. The j Junior League at .'! p. m. Senior] League at 0:15 p. in. The Woman's j Missionary Society will render a pro gram at 7 :30 p. ni. A series of re vival services will begin next Wednes day at 7:30 p. m. J. M. VARNER, Pastor. McGill Street Baptist. Sunday school 9:30 i. m: Ui gular morning service at 11 o'clock. The Voting 'Peoples' Union will rend"!' a, special program at 7 :30 p. ni. 1). V.! I’. U. at 0 :30. You are welcome, | Forest llill Methodist. Sunday school at 9:45. A. <!. Odell superintendent, Stonewall J. Sherrill assistant superintendent. Merging • worship and sermon at 11 o'clock. Sub- ; ject of sermon: “The Girl and Her Problems.' Evening sermon at 7 :-”>0. Subject: "The Boy and His lrib-, lems.” Epworth League meeting at 6:30. Prayer meeting Wednesday eveHuig at. 7:30. You are welcome . to all our services. THUS. E. HIGGINS, Paper. Finest Presbyterian - Sunday school 9:45 a. m. ('. F.l Ritchie, superintendent. Mt-iV Bible Class 10. W. (1. Caswell teacher. Ladies’ Bible Class at 10, Mrs T. F. Cannon, teacher. Morning -tv ice at 11 o'clock. Special service for those! going away to college. Vesper service | at 5. A cordial invitation is extend-1 ed to the public to worshli at tiiis i church. Methodist Protestant. (P, E. Lindley, Pastor) Sunday school at 9:45 and preach ing by Rev. Mr. Bethea at 11 o'clock, v There will be a men's service at three •in the afternoon and the regular preaching at night. Revival i~ in progress here. All are welcome. Trinity Reformed. The Sunday school and the men's class meet at 9:45 o'clock. .1. O. THE ART OF DRIVING * By Ralph De Palma of TEN © 1923 BY KELLY SPRINGFIELD TIRE CO. LESSONS —- - - ■. mmsSS* .'la-a Eiffi*" —Propet Eandlrng of Erokei WHEN it is necessary to slow down or stop, my advice is to iet the engine do as much of the braking as possible, thereby saving the mechanical brakes. To steady a car, that is when it is necessary to slow down appreciably but not necessarily stop, the foot nrake should be applied gently, with the clutch in. This insures even and sffective braking. When driving on tlippery roads the foot brake should be used as little as possible. An idea that most people have is *«t when the rear wheels of a car tie locked the driver cannot get a greater braking effect. But this is wrong. By easing the power just as the wheels are about to lock, and then reapplying it, ia; better grfp of the road surface is imtintained. Another. ipoint which may seem un important, but which really is im aortant,:' is the method of handling ihe brake lever. The usual way is to jSm >'(or push as the com sway‘be)'this lieror with the ratchet catch engaged, gut tills only tends to wear out botl} Moose is superintendent. Services at 11 a. ni. and 7:30 p. in. Ser mons by the pastor Members are urged to attend all services. Visitors are welcome. These services are held in' the East Corbin Street School. N 1 St. James Lutheran. Sunday school 9:45, F. R. Shep herp superintendent. Chief service at 11 a. m. An Ideal of Life's Practice, a sermon by the pastor to the college boys and girls. Luther League at 7 p. in. Vespers at H. Sermon by pas tor. This church welcomes you. Central Methodist. Sunday school 9:45, J. E. Davis, superintendent. Morning worship 11 o'clock Evening worship 7:30. l’rayer meeting Wednesday 7 :30 p. m. Stew ards meeting Monday at 7:30 p. m. All arj. welcome. Win. A. JENKINS. Pastor. Revival in Progress a. Methodist Prot estant Church. For the past week the people of the First Methodist Protestant Church have been enjoying a series of reviv al services. The pastor. Rev. I’. E. LimHey. opened the services last Sun day and continued the work until Rev. N. G. Bethea, of Lexington, came to do t lie preaching. Attendance lias been good and the interest increases. The hot Weather is not keeping the folks from the house of'worship these evenings. List night tlie interest reaihed the highest point amid spirited singing ami effective preaching. Tomorrow's progranr will depart from the usual services. There will be a special service for the aged per sons of the community at 1 o’clock. Effort will be made to have as many of tlie older people as possible. Res ervation will he made for them and Cars will be sent for any who are without away of conveyance. Then at three o'clock .in the after noon there will be a program by and for the nten and boys. At 7 :30 in the evening -Mr. Bethea will deliver his third message of,the day to the regu lar large congregation. The meeting continues into next week oil the regular schedule of ser vices at 7:30 each eveuiug. What's the Matter With Marriage? Durham County Progress. When Judge Henry A, Grady comes to Durham next month to preside ov er a term of superior court, he will find a total of 50 divorce cases await ing disposal and in each case the in terested parties will say that they have tried married life out to their heart's content and found it a tail lire'.' What’s wrong with married life- to day, anyway? Years ago a divorce ease was ns rare as a pearl io an oyster and when oue did eonie up in the courts it was tlie talk of tlie countryside. But today not a term of superior court in Dur ham or auy other, county in tlie state but that has one or more such actions aud the divorce record in the state is growing by leaps and bounds. Away hack in the years agonc men and women doubtless had just as many family spats as they do today. How ever. there was probably not as much infidelity as is found today and tin' latter probably makes up the basis for tlie majority of the eases brought up these days. And there is a cause for the latter. Men and women do not take tlie mar riage vows as seriously now as they riages are for convenience alone and' such a ty;ion cannot long and success fully exist and. as a re-nit. tile courts step ill and severs the marital knot. lint whatever tlie cause, the sad fact remains that marriage now ; S n .,t the institution that it once was and at present rate of increase the time will come when whole terms of court.- will have to be devoted to the sever ing of that most sacred tie. USE PENNY COLL MX—IT PAYS ratchet and lever, and nothing ft more, annoying than a hand brake that cannot be left on because the lever it constantly jumping back. It is just as easy to press down the catch, apply the lever and then let the catch drop back into position as it is to use the other method. The correct way gives far better control for the brakes can then be felt and the pres sure varied instantly according to the requirements. On descending long and steep hills one should shift into second or first speed rather than let the brakes tako all the burden of holding the car back. This is a safer method of hold ing down vour speed and it is much more economical, saving brake bands and tires. , Do not wait until it is necessary to put some operation into effect, whetb er it is braking, steering, changing speeds or signalling, but be prepared. If you are always ready to maka any change, the right moment for this change can be more easily deters wineH «nd taken advantage at, ffl&lmßUtßm Th e movies move! Better pictures than you ever saw B before are here! i j7. Paramount Week celebrates one glorious round of Paramount | «*fa * 'f ■<* * I produced by Pictures—a review of the ones you missed—a pre-view of the new! I / Famous Playiss-Lasicy Core I i 2 N ■ adolph zukor- president I V. “if it’s a Paramount Picture itrs the best show in t own! -Jr f NEW YORK CITY I Jf V— - V Concord joins in the Paramount Week Celebration '' * * - J STAR THEATRE - * ' . ' ' ' SEPT. 7TH AND BTH SEPT. 9TH AND 10TH ‘ SEPT. 11TH AND 12TH “New Live, For Old" Betty P.,,d W'-JOyn^ Compson Griffit h and Betty Compson Beery MAGEE WARNED OF TROI RLE. SON SAYS | Leahy Ilad Threatened to Kill. Young ;Mage<» Declares. Carl C. Magee, militant New Mexi co editor, who shot and killed .T. R j Cabsater and wounded Judge ])_ J. | Leahy in a light in a Las Vegas ho telfi had been threatened with vio-1 lence and was expecting trouble at j any time. Sm h are Jho facts disclosed by C. ( . Magee. Jr., the editor’s son. Ma goe will be arrainged Wednesday, Sep tember -ml. on a charge of murder! returned against him at the cproner’6 j hearing. Magee had been confined t<» bed in a hotel room with three broken ribs ami numerous body bruises received in bin encounter with the judge. The shooting took place in the Meadows hotsl. Magee was on a lounge talking to a newspaper woman vlmn Leahy entered. The judge t urned and struck the editor, knocking him to the door. Lassatei stepped for* ward to pull tlie judge away when the editor drew a gun arid fired, one bul let striking Leahy in tlie arm and another fatally wounding Lassater. Leahy and Magee have had a long standing political feud. On two oc casions the judge sentenced Magee to jail, blit each time he was pardoned by tlie governor. The present trouble, however, is said by the editor’s son t«» have been the ousting of Judge Leahy us a member of tlie board of managers of the state insane asylum. Magee took Leahy’s place on t*iis board. “About six weeks ago father had to visit Las Vegas on business con nected with tlie asylum. While there a friend told father that Leahy was threatening to kill him,” young Ma- “When father planned his present trip Leahy sent word that he intended to carry out ( iiis threat.” Magee, editor of the Albuquerque St a t e-Tribune, a feeripps-Howard newspaper, gained considerable atten tion in his testimony before the Sen ate committee investigating Teapot Dune, having been the first to men tion thf* little “black bag” alleged to have been carried by Secretary Fall. In Which Editor R. F. Beasley Sets I p an Alibi. Monroe Journal. The Charlotte News says in Hie po lice court in Charlotte, “It. F. Beas ley paid a fine of SSO and costs for operating an automobile while under the influence of liquor.” Notwithstanding the well known definition which Juck Williams gave of an alibi, we feel moved to set up oue. Jack defined an abili as “Lutin for a durn lie.’ We do not regard an abili so lightly, especially since we feed called upon to make use of one. Aud what shall our alibi be? When Chief Justice Flow called our atten tion to this publication and said Hint we should set up some excuse, ex planation. or what not, and intimated that there must be some other citizen by that name, we asked the chief justtice if he bad not noticed a simi larly between us as a theoretical THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE anti practical prohibitionists, and the reputation of , Caesar's wife as n lady. But tiie chief justice, hoary with' knowledge on all other subjects, seemed ignorant of the reputation of Caesar's wife, and we had to explain that she was the lady who was above suspicion. • But ,the judge shook his head in that dubious and apologetic way pe* euliar to hint when about to atnun nee a grievous judgment aud said that :bis plea was not sufficient. Then it was explained to the judge that on the very day in which the mysterious it. F. Beasley, of Char lotte, got into his trouble, wo were m company with Raymon Griffin and Frank Williams at the Williams re union in Wingate until 2 o'clock. At which time we ate So much of the Williams’ family rations that we wore incapable of further locomoation for that day, and lienee could not have' been in Ghnrlotte. The chief j..-ii el had some doubts about, the Value of these witnesses, but finally agreed that] the testimony was Worth considera tion. Then we sprung our last and most consiusive testimony. "Now, judge,” we said, “you ce that the man arrested in. Chariot to wns. driving an automobile, whereas you know that we have no automobile, but nse at all time one of Henry's' rattlers. Hence we could not have been arrested for driving an automo bile either drunk or sober.” “The point is well made,” remark ed Ihe chief justice, “and the alibi is established.” One Veteran YVlhj Hadn’t Passed Ox er the River. Monroe Journal. Years ago when Bob Glenn was making a big speech in Monroe be began to caß the roll of the oid Lon-] federate soldiers who had "passed over I the river.”' After calling the name of j enA well known soldier Mr. Glenn j would wind up by saying, “he too,! has passed on.” Somebody had given him the name of I'ncle Ali Tcberlin as an old soldier who had also passed on, but that was a great mistake as the speaker found when he called I'ncle All's name and said, “he. too. Is gone.” Air. Glenn was nearly sxvej.i off Ills feet by hearing Lucie AH'* voice in the audience-call out. "No, sir. I'll be ilurned of Ali Totnberlin has gone anywhere,” Yesterday Frank Biair. xvho ft as been visiting here a day or so. and Tom Dillon were stand ing in front of the store talking about old times. They had called over dozens of names that were once fa miliar to them, bub all of whom have "passed over the river.” Mr. Blair had gotten the idea that Col. Bob May' was in the list of tjtose w'uo had "passed over , the rjver;s Jj,uw tfyeu Boh hove? in sight apd Vtuuk was dutch surprrsedfuk Mr. Glenn had been on the day thut Lqcle Ali shouted to him that he bad not gone unywhere yet. The earliest weather forecasting service watt established in France ns ; a direct result of a destructive storm that raged over the Black £ea m VIRGINIA JUSTICE. Wilmington ’Star. . The ancient rivalry between North Carolina and Virginia has in more re cent years assumed a different as pect. The land of the longleaf pine is no longy the valley of humiliation between two bumps of conceit. But While North Carolina has outstripped her northern neighbor in many re spects. there still lingers in the Oid Dominion one of tlie greatest attrib utes transplanted in the fair colony by the early English settlers, namely a respect for the law. In Virginia today as-irt yesteryears a murder is a murder, and the punishment for muyder is death. fit the fearless and impartial administration of jus tice, unhampered by maudlin senti ment and unfettered by social re straint. Virginia still points the way to North Carolina and scores of sis ' ter commomvealtlis from the Atlantic j to the Pacific. | in evidence of this there is tlie I conviction of Rudolph Ilisse, the Richmond youth who killed his para mbrs and his rival, and added a po liceman to his list of victims when his escape seemed doubtful. Not withstanding the pleas that lie was insane, that lie was a drug addict, ands a victim of other weaknesses. Dissc lias been sentenced to pay with his own life for one of the three he I took to assuage his' bestial passions, jit is noteworthy t hut Disse was not j tried by a jury of Richmond people • The courts of Virginia gave him every opportunity to obtain the maximum benefits. A jury from another coun ty wa- impaunelled to hear the evi dence, and this jury has reclarcd him guiltv. Thus does Virginia justice wreak vengeance upou those who wantonly slay her sons. Disse was not- hot lably prominent socially, or in, a busi j ness way, but be was afforded an j able array of counsel to represent ! him. Even had he been the scion of ! the oldest of the F. F, Vs., the result would have been tiie same. The records of Virginia courts show that money, affluence and social prestige are not sufficient to hoodwink the la xv. Offhand xve do not knoxx what the! homicides in 1921 js a serious indict - j show. In the two larger cities of the stare they will probably reveal u fairly high average, hilt taking tlie! stale as a whole, we believe Virginia's 1 record far less sanguinary than oxir ov.n. Txyo hundred aud niuety-ntue homicides in 1924 is a serious ndiet- i ment of North Carolina. It bints j at a laxity somewhere Ibat cries to] high Heaven for remedial measures.! Rarely a day passes that some new hoinicidul situation is not spread uefoxs the front pages of the daily t ’ i ... ' j- “The traffic officer says'you were going 40 miles, an hour,” the judge told the fair prisoner. * "Yea, r sir," she admitted, “but. you see, I xvas to meet my husband in five minutes, and I didn't want to keep him waiting.” Aud the judge, being u married uaa. 'discharged her. to Protect '—'A s Well as to Beautify 1 MWHEN you get ready to paint and are talking it .over, debating this color and that, don’t overlook the most vital point— protection. The big gest job paint has to do is to save the surface. It is a well known fact that Pee Gee Mastic Paint has never been surpassed in protecting any surface to which applied. Its beauty is an incident to its real value —adding long years of life to your home, barn, out buildings—wherever used. It stays “put” and retains its high gloss for years. ___ Ritchie Hardware' j) Phone 177 S. Union St. TK ANO TRIBUNE PENNY IDS. WS GET RESULTS ' Saturday, 5ept."5,1925 I
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Sept. 5, 1925, edition 1
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