Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Sept. 21, 1925, edition 1 / Page 5
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Monday, Sept. 21, 1925 JSOCIF.TVn For Sport I v*^v This Is supposed to be a hunting Jacket, and to be taken seriously aa such, but for those to whom hunting means nothing, it may be con. ' sidered more generally as a sporl [ coat. It is of brown suede, banded ! Meeting of tlie Women’s County Fed eration. The regular meeting for the third quarter of the year of the Women's Federation of Cabarrus will be field Jtnturday. Sepetmber 25th, at 2:30, the Concord Y. An interesting program of enter tninrneut has been prepared by the j committee on that feature. ' Miss 'Ailna Edwards, Home Demon strator of Rowan, will speak on Clothing. A new feature at tlie Coun ty Fair on Cabarrus Day, October 15, will be stageir a show of county designed and made dresses. Tins promises to he Very popular and Miss Edwards’ talk will helpful. It.is hoped and urged that all the women oY the county, , even, if .not a club member . be present Saturday, September 25th, at 2:3u. MRS. D. 15. CASTOR, President. MRS. J- M. MeCCRDAY. Secretary and Treasurer. Entertains at Party. , Little Miss Helen Mae Plough cel- t (rated his htjvwitb birl kdpy .gpniver* iry Saturday by diitcrtaftiing a num ber of’ young friends. After a number of games were played refreshments were served. Those present were: Ruth Rowland, Esther. Mary and Margaret. llullen der, Leroy Cato. James Lyerly. Mar garet Lyerly, Louise Brown, Bernice Craven, Ruth Whitley, Smoot Ilur ]Poker. Alice and Lloyd Fundcrburg, Helen, Johnnie and J. C. Flough. r. Forsytli Farmer Doses Life By Asphyxiation. ' IVinston-Salem. Sept. I!).—Charles C. Hanes, aged 07. resident of South Fork township, was accidently killed today at his home. He was engaged in clearing a well on his property and had been blasting some rook from the j bottom. Shortly after a load had j been discharged the etrttered the well, and the gas remaining resulted in i asphyxiation. r On the third day after marriage the: ' San Bias Indian groom of Panama : lifts the veil of his bride and sees j her fare for the first time. CORETHROAT A J tonsilitis or hoarseness, j gargle with warm salt | water. Rub Vicks over j throat and cover with a hot flannel doth. Swal low slowly small pieces. VICKS w Vapoßub <W 17 Million Jan Vnd Ytarly > r Bold By , , , • ; 4 Lie • ’ jl fj ! BELL-HARRIB FUN ERAL PARLOR t v Day Pbooe 840 Night PhoflM S6O-158L ! A \ ■ ¥iVr*-' ” V r.- Miss Alberta Shino, teacher in the public schools of Norwood, spent the week-end here with home folks. C. W. Byrd has returned from New York City, where he spent several days on business. W. D. Pemberton, of Monroe, spent Sunday here at ahe home of his par ents,,Dr. and Mrs. W. D. Pemberton. He was accompanied home by Mrs. Pemberton, who had been visiting here since Friday. • • • Miss Zana Stroupe has returned to the city after spending two weeks in the state on her vacation. • • • Tom Brown, son of Mrs. W. G. Brown, spent the week-end in the city at the home of his parents. He was accompanied by a friend, Harvey' Goodwin, of Danville. Osburn Miller, Leonard Slither, O’Neal Cook and Miss Jaunita Smith | left toddy for Duke University, where j they will be in school this year. Mr. j Miller and Mr. Suther will be se niors. • • « j Mrs. A. M. Sappenfield, Miss Annie Grace Sappenfield, Mr. and' Mrs. Clif , ford Kluttz, Mr. and Mrs. E. I). Sherrill and Dewey Sapentield spent yesterday in Charlotte wit'a Nevin! Sappenfield at the Charlotte Sana torium. • * * Mr. and Mrs. C. 1). Smitbdeal. of Winston-Salem, spent the week-end in Mt. Pleasant visiting at the home of Mrs. Smithdeal’s mother, Mrs. Sarah Misenheimer. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Price, of Charlotte, visited in Concord Sunday at the home-of'Mrs. Frank Winecoff who is Mr. Price’s sister. V • • J. L. Thrower 'nas returned to Bar tow. Fla., where he has been employed for some time. • • • Mrs. G. Ed Coie and Miss Pauline Cole, of Durham, are the guests of Mrs. R. M. Cook. • • « Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wadsworth will leave Tuesday from Charlotte for Atlanta where Mr. Wadsworth will resume his studies in dentistry. , Martin Crawford, of Charlotte, and Franklin Cannon were the week-end •guests of Charles Ritchie at the home of his, parents here. All three are students at Davidson College. - O Miss Louise Paof, of Rock Hill, lias returned to her home after spend ing some time here as the guest of Miss Evelyn Goodman and Miss Helen Goodman. . • • * Miss Mary Matthews, a member of the fertility in the high school, spent the week-end in tier home at Ashe ville. She was accompanied to Con cord by her mother, Mrs. L. F. Mat thews, who will return to Asheville Tuesday. • * • Ray Morris left this morning for Philadelphia, where he will enter school at Jefferson Medical School. He was accompanied on the trip by | John Adams, of Statesville, wtio will ] also be in school at Jefferson. Kerr Street Baptist Revival. j There was a large congregation to j greet tlie preacher Saturday night and J at both services Sunday at the Kerr : Street Baptist Church, and the reviv !al spirit was high. The booster choir is improving at every service. The evangelist preached two fine sermons Sunday, and Sunday night. His sub ject Sunday morning was, “The Su preme Gift to God.” Sunday night. “The Consequences of Sin.” He used j for a text Proverbs 11:19, “As the righteous teiuleth to life so he that pursucth evjl pursueth it to his own death.” He said in part: I The common conviction of human | ity will not lot a preacher preach a | bad man in Heaven when lie dies, nor will it let him preach a good man in hell. First, sin is just as deadly to the soul as leprosy is to the tody. As leprosy eats the vitals of the body, So sin eats the vitals of the soul. Second, sin is just as contag ious as leprosy. It is also inherited. You can’t expect a drunken father to rear sober children. Third, sin is like the bite of a serpent. It will coil its deadly influence around you and after awhile will sting you to death. The ; wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Service tonight at 7 :30. Come and i bring your friends. There were uine 1 added to the church Sunday. Many are being saved. A. T. CAIN, Pastor. . After again dos’rg the season with the big figures on the wrong side of the ledger, it is considered improbable that the Micbigan-On tario league will try it another year. , unless after a complete reorganiza | tion. I USE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS Melrose Flour Liberty Self Rising Flour We have had much trouble recent ly to set these most popular brands of flonr. Why? Because their high quality hag made such aa immense demand that the mills are continually behind on orders. Moral —Buy Fresh Melrose Now. It’s always the best.. , Liberty . Self-Rising has grown .in {tostlph^Skt^and^^mSd in just the exact - Cooks with little experience make good bread with Self Rising Flour. > We have both Brands Fresh. Qivo us your order now. . Its cheaper. I Cline & Moose V ■.V .. .j* , .... - \_. . WAR CAN BE AVOIDED SAYS AMERICAN LEGION But It Knows Full Well That There Can Be No Peace Without Justice. Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 21.— OP) — “The Legion believes that war can be | avoided. But it knows full well that there can be no peace without jus tice. It gknows further that there . | can be no justice without an organiz- I ed and properly functioning means of | enforcing justice. That involves the I creation of some competent form of ; | world court.” ThUs did National Comander James 'A. Drain, of the American Legion, . , pronounce the Legion's attitude on ; the world court idea in his address prepared for delivery here today be fore the annual convention of the Ten- I nessee Department of the ex-service 1 men in Nashville. The Commander declared that at the same time the Legion looks the facts squarely in the face and in view of the present international situation, it favors preparedness in keeping with its responsibilities in the world and with world conditions. “Much has been done in the brief life of the American Legion to make ! good the supreme purpose which brought it into being,” Commander Drain said. “To make good to Ameriea and the world so far as lies within its power the tragic losses which were inflicted by the War AVar has been the one controlling purpose of the Legion. From the gtirst caucus in Paris in | March, 1919, where the Legion was conceived, to the present day we have dedicated ourselves unfalteringly to the ideal of service which we learned in the clays of the war. i “In the clays of T7 and ’IS we learned to the full the horrors of mod ern warfare. No veteran of that ter rible conflict can soon foj-get them.! It is no wonder then that nowhere is , there to be found a more resolute and determined advocate of peace among, nations than is the veteran of thej great war. “The American Legion knows what | disaster would be wreaked upon the} world if another such universal con flict should sweep it. Tlie Legion l.as resolved that the uttermost of its: power there shall be no more such i conflicts, if is humanely possible" I to prevent themfl Urging enactment of the universal | draft bill, favored by the Legion, the Commander asserted that this is a measure both for {r ace ami pre paredness. "The Universal Draft,” lie said, “will give the government au thority to call to its uses in tine of war man power to fight lugn .power to work, factory power to produce, and money (tower to finance, all on equal terms. To put the burden of I war equally upon all is to lessen by j so much, the Legion feels, the like-! lihood of war. At the same time, ill I case there should be a war, the aa- j tion would find itself so much the bet-1 ter prepared to wage it.” ;]j mi.m is being Coated al Lake Lanier! // HE romantic, enthralling story U of new wealth created in Cali -f] fornia and Florida is now being duplicated right at your own door in western North Carolina. Just at the present it’s Lake t Lanier, at Tryon, that’s in the limelight. Twelve hundred Caro | lina men and women have invested here. Already they have a I large potential profit. Prices have advanced —they will advance again. Lake front and lake view property is scarce in the “Land of the Sky”—-will always be scarce .The time to get in on this particular development is now—before the develop ment is completed. Get the benefit of the advance in values certain to come. Send coupon for picture book of Lake La nier, and ask at our office in*your city about how you may see this mountain-lake estate without cost or obligation, y j Depe. B, TW N- °* Tryon Development Co., Inc . i W. M. Hester, Treas, I | Name „.,w wm • «•» •*** BHartsell Realty Company | Concord Office 41 Union Street, [ Addreae THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE In reviewing the accomplishments i of the Legion during the past year, Commander Drain referred to the de -5 centralization of the Veterans Bureau; the setting of a guardianship service -for the victims of “shell shock,” etc., - establishment of diagnosis centers t where baffling cases of disabled veter - ans are studied; and the working out ? of a new rating chart for rating disa - bliities and reform in hospitalizati m t of disabled veterans. - After summing up these advances, P »» the work for the disabled, the Commander took up the activities of i the National Americanism Commission . for a better citizenship and a better i preparation for it. 5 QUIET SUNDAY AT BUNCOMBE JAIL Night of Excitement Followed by Complete Thanquiiity Yesterday. Asheville. Sept. 20.—The Buncombe county jail was loday the scene of tranquility following a night of ex- I citement in which a mob of between 500 and 1,000 stormed the jail in an , effort, to take Alvin Mansel, negro, ; w * lo T* s alleged to have criminally as saulted a white woman on Sunset . Mountain near this city Saturday morning. , A survey this morning showed that . mob damaged the building to a , considerable extent, having broken locks. They also liberated a num ber of prisoners but all, except one, returned to their cells. Every effort to communicate with Sheriff Mitchell, who left with negro thirty minutes before tlie mob, formed, and who was reported to have ! . returned to the city this afternoon has been futile. At his home it was! I said he was sleeping and would not | | be disturbed until later in the i J Membenr of his family would furnish i no information wrth respect to where | the negro had been taken and depu-! J ties who accompanied the sheriff on i the trip said thitt, any . information | concerning the journey would have ; to j be obtained from the sheriff, j At 3 o’clock this morning a crowd, j disappointed at failure of finding the I negro, went to Hendersonville where , it was reported he was being held.; ; At tlie Henderson county jail they del - nianded admittance but upon the pleading of the jailor they went away I after the officer had permitted a com* | inittec to visit' each cell. The mob in the city did not finally 4 disperse until neaf daylight. It \vas said that i two negroes who attempted to inter-j fere'p* it h-some lumbers of the mob; were taken out and whipped but this 1 could not be confirmed. ' . " 1 1 - - f , Patrons of the Yale-Harvard fi*yt ball game are hopeful that good j weather will prevail in November I 21, when this year’s clash will take i j place in the Harvard stadium. During ; the past two years the gridiron bat tle between the Blue and Crimson | I has taken place in a downpour of j i rain. THE SCREEN KISS CONQUERS JAPAN Bussing in Public and Private the Rule, Upsetting Old Nippon Tradi tion. San Francipeo, Sept. 19.—Japan has capitulated to kissing. Adoption of the subtle art as a “pleasing pas time” of the Nipponese Kingdom dur ing the present generation is report ed by Bishop John MeKim, head of the Portestant Episcopal Church in Japan since 1893. Bishop McKim arrived here today en route to New Orleans, where he will cast his ballot next month at a convening of his ('lurch in favor of striking from the Episcopal marriage ceremony the word “obey." Japan’s infection by the kissing bug, the bishop said, is epidemic. No long er. the seventy-three-year-old churrfi official declared, is a “kiss in the dark’’ necessary. Public osculation has now reached the point of general acceptance as a thing both proper and nice. The Japanese girls love it, the bishop admitted, and their “sheiks” —well—they don’t mind it. Lingering kisses in American mo tion picture films were field by Bishop ■ MeKim as responsible for the advent of the Japanese era of osculation. At first deleted by the Nipponese censors, these kisses finally “won” the "blue pencilers” and they crept onto the screen. From that time it has been a "grand public invasion of kissing.” The Japanese preference for kiss ing, lie held, was responsible for the quick dropping of the boycott on the American films following enactment of ] tlie Japanese exclusion law. The j "kissless variety” of Japan “did not j take,” he said. Camera “Composing.” I f jLordon, Sept. 19.^A machine has lust been evolved by two London | mechanics that may revolutionize the I whole principles of priiit|ng which have held'sway' since, the;' time . of Uaxton. Tlie main feature ofthis new invention is the total abolition of metal type and the substitution of a photographic film. The machine strongly resembles, a ! typewriter, by aid of which letters, ■figures, o.to are * photographed in j rapid succession. The, typesetting is dono by tapping keyfc very much irt the same way as linotype is now set up. This operation projects the let ters from a master-film on to a sen sitized film .base. • > j AVhen the,exposed film : fc developed lit corresponds Yo the set-up line of an j ordinary- composing machine. The advantages of tbisc method. it is claimed; are sHipehdOus. Type be comesc.aWje, rand caa . adjusted • ’1” any *i«Tiii% ’ seconds. Tlie master-film is wound on a spool only , two inches in diameter and three I inches wide, but it contains the i equivalent of 2.700 fonts of ordinary type. The addition to the setting | machine of a sort of mechanical calculator makes the use of any kind i of type immediately possible. The machine has already been in spected by many prominent men in the printing world, as well as by ■ mechanical experts and scientists, all of whom are of the opinion that it may prove to be the invention of the century. Atlanta-Franklin-AsheviUe Highway I Franklin, N. C., Sept. 19.— UP) — Early completion of the Atlanta- Franklin-Asheville highway is fore cast, as a result of a tentative or ganisation formed here to push the completion of the road. This road, when completed, will shorten the distance between Atlanta and Asheville by approximately 50 miles, it is stated, and will provide a tourist route through wha' is de- 1 dared to be one of the most beatiti- ! ful regions in Eastern America. The tentative organization was 1 formed here, when delegations from 1 Asheville, Atlanta, Franklin, Clarks- I ville, Ga., Cornelia, Ga., Claytoim and 1 other Georgia towns, as well as j other Western North Carolina towns, 1 met around the banquet table here to ] determine what could be done toward | furthering the project. The principal 1 speaker of the occasion was James A. Hollomon, of Atlanta. The meet- I ing was held under the auspices of i tto Macon County Progressive Club. ] Habersham county, it has been | learned, has called an election to ] vote bonds to build its share of the ] road, and other North Georgia coun- l ties are expected to follow suit. 1 Steps were taken, at the banquet, j to form a permanent organization to I hasten completion of the road. Another Scotch Joke. A Scotchman and his wife attend- ] cd a church sale of work. They left | hungry, and speculated as to the cost l of a meal. The husband noticed a ! card hanging from a door bearing i the Words, "Lunches from 1 to 3, 1-6.” ■ “Look, Maggie,” he said, “we’ll j hae awa - in >,here. Two oors of eating j for eighteenpenee is nae bad.” The annual meet of the Virginia j Fox Hunters’ Association will be | held at Suffolk, Va., beginning No- j vember 3. | BULBS . BULBS j * . Hyacinths.; 1 i J I Narcissus Jonquils T ulips Crocus -v • -Fusjafe- ■ ‘ * ’i 1 Gibson Drug Store I The Rexall Store BULBS BULBS lllili:il!llll!lll!lll!llllll!lllllllllllllil|| ! LET’S MAKE IT A § I ] ; DOUBLE HEADER! ._, ■ 9 1 |l| Your head hasn’t had a vaca- I I 1 ! No matter where you took it - w J j this summer you made it work I 1 ! NOW—a new KNOX Hat and 8 I j a new cap—both bought the #1 JH J !■ same day—will show your jK 1 ;» head you have a heart and will & M T** 8 I '!' show your mirror two views h J 5 I j of the timeliest looking man 8 I ]i' you ever peered at! » J ,i, Come and let us introduce your profile to something a lit-; 91 j| tie newer—something a bit different than you can find* i ij in any other shop in Concord. j Hats $5.00 up ;!' Suits $25.00 up !j Caps $2.00 up. j| WHERE YOU GET YOUR MONEY’S WORTH 'j I ! Browns-Cannon Co. I t Where You Get Your Money’s Worth ;!| CANNON BUILDING Mail or Send This Coupon f.r Information j INFORMATION COUPON | THE TRIBUNE TIMES CAMPAIGN i! 11 Box 431 1 | ,r-i, 1 -f- 1 9 ■ , u . Concord, N. C. I Gentlemen: Please send me detailed information. I ans ' ! |j| ested in your Gift Distribution. » § Name - - .ULiJ 1 g ~“||| ~ * II It’s Time to Think of Fall Cleani^ I To fully appreciate our Cleaning and Correct press- 0 ing is to give others the once over. A phone call will bring our truck. 2 Telephone 420 I M. R. POUNDS Dry Cleaning Department OOOOOQQGOOOOQOOQOOGGOGGOOGOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOO K.L. CRAVEN & SONS! PHONE 74 ICOA T I M U A Plaster Mortar Colors | agooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooqgq^ I Wanted By Friday Noon— -300 FAT HENS Will pay 18 cents per pound cash. 1 Bring us your Cream. We pay 40 cents per pound for' | butter fat. 11 C. H. BARRIER & CO. 1 Black Velvet | Step-in Pump Today’s express brings to us I II ( Ibis wanted style. Its H I plain, just as pictured and bids ■ I J \ _ fair to be the most popular style I I lj jJJ f°r the season: ![| I ' Same style in patent--. I "'S7.ss|| IVEY’S 1 “THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” 1 ] PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1925, edition 1
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