Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 5, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Saturday, Sept. 5, 1925 Big Free Premium Offer 1 Next Week Only Mm Great Majestic H f ‘ r<l is the new model Great Majestic, the finest Range ever /nttd a. "n i i . Imilt. Uses less fuel .ret bakes perfectly. All copiier reservoir UUK StOre Will be the HlOSt interesting nlace in town npvt Tklvm abundant hot water all the time without extra fuel. b H - luw “ ncxl Burnished blue polished top requires little work. 'BeauGfui Week. YOU Will meet man Vof t/oiit- fVJorvdo J ■, , throughout wil'.i neav.v Nickeled Trimmings—doors and splash- lUU WUI mCCI many Ot yOUr IndlClS and neighbors pi- baek paneled In White, Gfa.vor nine Enameled if desired. ' t,. j ». . . ',- Has rustless floor rest; large warming closets; open end ash Here, We <3Oll t Want anybody tO miSS Seeing this heailtifnl ' anti oven door that will support any weight placed on it. 5 Lllla UCctULIIUI new model Majestic Radge and the exquisite polished solid cop — per set and sqt of special Majestic ware, either of which, at the buyer s choice, is to be given away free to every purchaser of a Majestic range next week. An experienced expert from the Majestic factory will be in the stbre all next week. He will gladly show you ithe many new features of the Majestic range. Wether you buy or not you will be welcome. Don’t fail to come! Economy in the Long Run Any housewife ought to consider well the cooking and wearing out cost a set of POLISHED SOLLQ COPPER WARE of ex- r.. . .. quisite design. Every woman falls In love with it on sight. . qualities, tne tuei economy and the appearance of the range she buvs Re Whether you buy or jiot, don't fall to come ifi and see this 7 *“ beautiful set. illustrated above; : .— _ member that it is a lasting purchase— you are buying for a long time. No *' 6 purchase for tHe home is,more important than the kitchen range. Y6O cook iCHRIi ' on it three titmes a day, every day in the year. Your peace of mind and the health, energy and contentment of your whole household depend on the £ better cooking that a New Majestic Range will enable you to do every meal. It is false economy to buy a cheap kitchen range that wears out quickly in the long run. Therein lies the economy of the Majestic. It cuts down r fuel and repair bills and its long life of never-failing efficiency makes it ® e sure t° come in. It will cost you nothing to look. Vnrto-Warlcufnrth Pn Or. if will give to of a Ms- ■ 111 H I ■ Hi 111 111 ■ B I I jestic next week set of SPECIAL MAJESTIC WARE. ■ IB I Im II ■■ 11111 l II I ' This wonderfully serviceable ware, illustrated above, is well known “ • W MMH ■■ | || | | to thousands of Majestic Range owners. It is the highly prized, , extra heavy, old time Majestic set, the same as furnished before * ' the war. v . Roster of the Prominent in U. S. List Some of the largest income tax r eturns revealed In the lists made' public Tuesday : J. 1). Rockefeller, Jr. $0,277,669.00 Henry Eord 2,008,806.00 Kdsel Ford 2,158,055.00 Andrew W. Mellon 1,1882,600.25 I’aync Whitney 1,676,559.00 R. B. Mellon 1,180,699.64 F. IV. Vnuderlip 702,986.00 (J. F. Baker, Jr. 783,406.00 Vincdnt* Astor 642,600.00 J. P. Morgan 574,379.0(0 T. W. Lam out 480,747.00 C. W. Nash 450,776.00 Morrtimer, L. Schiff 450,410.00 James A. Patton 425,348.00 Elbert H. Gary 322.680.00 Clarence Mackay 320449.00 A. S. Cochran ' 271,542.00 E. T. Belford 235,390.00 William B. Ward 208,586.00 Max D. Steuer 108.445 Sebastian Kresegc 188,608.00 Douglas Fairbanks . 182,190.00 T. Colemin duPortt 181464.49 Frank J. Goulld \ 156,818.00 George L. Bourne 136,897.00 J. D. Rockefeller 128,420.00 John E. Andrus ' • 124,985.00 F. A. Juilliard 120,012.00 Some of the corporation payments: Ford Motor Co. 16,493,160.00 V. S. Steel Corp. 11,005,219.00 General Electric C«. 7,245,900.00 Consolidated Gns Co. , 3,681,818.00 ITnlorf Pacific R. R. 3,580,501.00 , i!, .... pays ===as 1 • • M- .A • F. W. Woolwprth Co. 2,639,943.00 Allied Chern. & Dye Co. 2,340,575.00 Std. Oil Co. of N. Y. 2436,436.00 1 Fisher Body Co. 2,240,000.00 Baltimore & Ohio R. R. 1,057,181.89 Illinois Central R. R. 1,704.201.00 Marshall Field & Co. 1,105,769.00 i Other interesting ones: President Coolidge 14,081.80 yiee President Dawes 24,984.73 Charlie Chapin 345.00 Mary Pickfotd , i 34,075.00 Gloria Swanson 57,075,90 Harold Lloyd . 28,151.00 Jesse L. Lasky 48,502.06 Richard Barthelmess 24.803.00 Bill Hart 15,785.00 Pola Negri 15,108.00. Rudolplh Valentina 1,995.00 | Pauli Whiteman p- 4.504.00 1 James J: Walker 205.00 Frank D. .Waterman 7,885.00 Chkrles F. Murphy Est. 1,554:00 John W. Davis 49,533.00 William H. Taft 1,723.001 Gerard M. Dahl 2,430.001 Mrs. Woodrow Wijßon 349.001 William Randolph Heirst • 42,239.00! William G. McAdoo 1,512.00 William Wrigley, Jr.,., 2,644.00 Clarence Darrow ,-A ' 3,900.00 Waldorf Aator * 70,201.00 James A. Stilllman 62,45806 Amellta- Galli Curci 24,58865 Dr. William Mayo 75,668.52 Dr. Charles llayo 609,255.00 George H. (Babe) Ruth 8,432.00 Work Stock Shortage May Come. 1 Tait Butler, in The Progressive Far mer. About five years from now there 1 may be an acute shortage of work [ animals unless larger colt crops are; raised from now on. We know this to ; be a fact, because a large per cent of the work animals on the farms of j tlje country are past the agge of I greatest usefulness. Os all horses, ! only 11.4 per cent are under four years of age, 456 per cent are from four to nine years, and 43 per cent are over 10 years. The average age is 9.8 yers. Os all mules, 16.5 per cent are under four years, 519 per cent are from four to nine years, and 31.6 per cent are over 10 yeans of ugeg. The averagge age of mules is 8.4 years. These figures show that a I mule shortage is not as close at hand as a shortage of horses. Fve years from now, for animals of the most useful age, four to nine years, there will be only 191 head of horses for every 450 head now on the farms, and only 278 mules for every 519 at ’ j present. ** , -• Indications point to a greater in ; terest in horse and mule breeding, and in planning breeding operations, the United States Department of < Agriculture says :—“Farmers should study the present situation to deter- I mine regions where the shortagge will probably be felt soonest and 1 where the substitution of other forms of power wsl be the least practicable. Types of animals suited to those areas probably will be in greatest de mand. Btood mares should be careful selected and should be mated with " r THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE The Story of Cinderella-1925 Version The Pathfinder. (Chapter 1) i Once upon a time there was a little girl who was very, very poor. Her; name was Mary Spas. She was the daughter of Bohemian parents who came to this country as immigrants. One day she heard that a rich Xew York man—Edward Browning by name—wanted to adopt & poor child as a companion for another adopted daughter. Mary walked five miles to his office and was chosen on the spot. It was a lucky day for Mary, but 12,- 000 other girl applicants wept salty tears. After papers had been duly signed the rich benefactor • gave the thrilled Mary a Holls-Royce and thousands of dollars worth of clothes and jewelry, Mary admitted hating to leave- her parents but thought her now station in life would make them happier. She /was looking forward to “going to col lege, taking long walks nittl learning too-daneing.” ■lt looked ns if Mary would like happily ever aftej. It was all "duck gogod stallions and jacks of the types best suited to produce high quality dolts. —Y * Asks Issuing of Call For Prayer For Rain. Charlotte, Sept. 4.—Rev. J. Frank Armstrong, pastor of Belmont ' Park Methodist church here, suggests that ■Soup" as tho slangy would say. (Chapter 2) Hut disappointed applicants and other envious persons set ugly rumors afloat. These were digested and elab orated on with relish by the yellow journals. An investigation followed. First came a cable from Mary's na tive town in Kuro|>e saying she was 21 j years old instead of 10. This was verified by her school records in this country. Men were found who ad mitted that they had been engaged to the supposed child of the blue eyes and flaxen curls. New York officials got gfter Browning for making a money settlement on Mary’s parents in. vio lation of a state law. And gloat : ng reporters published articles to the ef fect that the “poor” Spas family own ed a big apartment house and an au to* | During all this Mary wept copious ly. Browning at first sided with the girl but alter spurned her as an “ad venturess" and had the adoption an nulled. Mary has returned home min us the rich gifts. Governor McLean follow-, the prec edent of Govern McLeod, of Soath .Carolina, and issue a proclamation calling upon the people of the state to pray for rain. It is much easier to be critical than to be correct. T 1 ■* MISS COLE WILL TAKE STAND IN FATHER’S TRIAL Will Make Fight For His life ami Her Own Good Name. Charlotte Observer. Mi--s Elizabeth Cole, Rockingham heiress, fresh from .the ordeal of having her lover shot to death and Her wealthy father thrown in jail charged with murder, is preparing to take the witness stand to fight for her father’s life- a*nd her good name. While she steels herself for the ef fort. her father’s lawyers are laying careful plans for the 10-dny trial which they seem confident will re store him to liberty. They will rely on a self-defense plea with possibly an emotional in sanity plea ns n second line of de fense, it ils said. They smile at the suggestion that the self-defense plea will be abandoned. Bold Defense. From sources which are considered reliable, however, the information was available to The Observer that, the Cole defense has bridged its dilemma of which to defend, the young lady’s reputation or her fath er’s life, by a bold, offensive stroke, which will expose every ghastly fact of the case, in the expectation that such a course will faring both father and daughter from the ordeal fully vindicated. The defense lawyer are understood to feel that their fight to preserve Miss Cole’s reputation fully equals in importance their effort to clear her father. Miss Cole and her father, since the shooting of W. W. Ormond, are the two remaining principals in the case. Both will he witnesses and their testimony is expected to feature the trial. w. W. Ormond, who was killed oti the streets of Rockingham hy W. B. Cole following a love affair Ire tween Ormond and Miss Cole, was armed with a revolver, the defense will contend, it is said. It is also said that the Cole lawyers will seek to rstnbljsh as a fact that the re volver was taken from the car in which Ormond died and secreted, by a girl friend in lier trunk. Had Love Died? The defense ’ will a’so introduce evidence, possibly by Miss Cole, her self. that what affection she once had for the slain young man died months before the ’ncident of the shooting, it is understood. Mr. Cole’s provocation, according to a self-defense line of attack, would b that his understanding, after ex change of letters with. Ormond. was that blood would be sheet at their next meeting and that the one quick est on the draw would be victor. An emotional insanity plea would in volve an attempt of the defense, to establish that Mr. mind be came so inflamed at. defamatory re marks said to have been made by (Or mond that he momentarily lost his power of reason and shot while in sane. It is pretty well established that the defense will make an effort to show that Ormond, defeated in his hope of marrying Mies Cole, made re marks damaging to her reputation. While public interest has remained eemrred on the imprisoned million aire and his daughter, the forces of the prosecution have continued their plans for the trial. Strong legal talent has been secured to assist Solicitor F. Don Phillips. “Up top” UPON the hill-top your vision grows. For miles and miles you see the work of man and nature. Down in the valley your view is limited by the hills, by your neighbor’s home—by the store across the way. This newspaper—properly used —will guide you to the hill-top. Read it and your vision is enlarged. You get a bird’s-eye view of world events. You glimpse all the doing of the days. Fail to use it, and yohr view is limited to the things around home. You remain in ignorance, not only of events here and abroad, but of much that concerns you even more vitally—news of the very things that have to do with your personal, every-day life. Someone might be selling a new, better and more economical food; or a utensil that would add immeasurably to your comfort and well-being; or some better material for shoesor clothing—but you would never know, because of your restricted view. You may read every line of the news, but if you overlook the advertising, you are still living in the valley. You remain unin formed about many things you ought to know in order to live a happy, useful, profitable life in this age of progress. Read the newspape advertisements—and know everything that goes on in the market-place. • • j' : v \ . ; vv :^ Newspaper advertisements bring the wares of the world to your doorstep for your inspection 1 % (VAT/OT7-WFDP ■ls IV . /NSTfTUTION JUpnneytQ W DEPARTMENT STORES .10-54 South I’nlcm Street. Concord, X. C, Gever New Silk Frocks In Autumn’s Finest Fashions ___ The time is now! The _ -J place is this Store! And j j y° u are girl or wo- YiT man who will appreciate m our lovely Fall silk frocks. | MmMl They have arrived in FSffJjyj a, 1 JF All the Smart Jfllll i V M SgSSI Style Features (sIS r Everything that’s new is |s /-*’[' ; included in these dresses— frT Ts SEppGujpj, the flippant flares, the satin jfl 1 1 . ; iM ISsjajojs||jfi materials, the Autumn col- tfl/f B ors. And the price is a reg- j -jj 1 J ■BWr ular J. C. Penney f»lue-giv- j It n 9 zs The state. it is understood, will fight evidence*-that Ormond lmd a re volver with him at his death. Tho prosecution will also contend, it is said, that the relation between Mins Cole and Ormond remained one of affection and harmony and that it was their intention to wed when he Should have e-tabliehed himself. The state lawyers will alsu resist any insanity plea, it is said confidently, and will seek to eonvinee the jury that the shooting was premeditated murder and that no provocation existed. Weekly Cotton Review. N'tMv York. Sept. 4.—The selling movement Which started in the eot ton market rere shortly after the pub lication of the government's mid- Attgust ere.p report continued until the price of December touched 22.10 larit Monday. This represented a decline of ITS points from the high price of last bureau day find of 300 points from the high price touched on the advance of late July. Evidently the decline had left the market in a firmer position and t’hcre were rallies later in the week on trade buying and covering in preparation for the adjuornment over Labor Day ami the government crop report Tues day. December sold tip to 22.05 during PAGE SEVEN today's trading making a reeory of S 5 points from the lowest, but consid erable hedge selling was reported oti tlie advance and the demand tapere^ - off toward tlie end as if the scattering short interest had been pretty well I evened up. j Possibly the expectation of verjj. heavy ginning figures to September; Ist, tended to offset uncertainty as whether tlie official crop indication would show tlie previously anticipated* increase and accounted for the ap parent failure of fresh buying to de velop in volume on the advance. A large number of private crop reports were_ issued /during tlie week pointing on the average of a condition of about 55.4 and crop of about 14,082,000 bales. According to a canvass made this morning, members of the New York cotton exchange on the average expect a September Ist condition of about 58,0 and some local authorities-’ are estimating ginning to September | Ist al 1,750,000 bales. Fun With the Lawyers. I* Client—Didn’t you make a mis take in going into law instead of the - army? j Lawyer—Why? Client—-Bv the way vou charge, 1 there would lie little 'left of the enemy.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1925, edition 1
7
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