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PAGE FOUR Fhe-Goncord Daily Tribune F" J. B. SHERRILL Hjf Editor and Publisher | ,>W. M. BHEBEILL, Associate Editor MEMBER OE 11 i- ASSOCIATED PRESS 2 The Associated Press is exclusively ’entitled to the use for republication of *lll news credited to it or not otherwise ' credited in this paper and also the 10, , Jcal news* published herein. ’ J All rights of republication of spec ial dispatches herein are also reserved. Special Representative FROST, LANDIS & KOHN 225 Fifth Aventle, New York ' Peoples’ Oas Building, Chicago » ■ 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta K? ■■ * . Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Concord. N. C., un der the Act of March 3, 1870. P ’ SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' In the City of Concord by Carrier: 5' fOne Tear SO.OO ?ix Months 3.00 hgee Months 1.50 One Month .50 Outside of the State the Subscription sj l.i Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre vail: One Tear $5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a I Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect June 28, 1925 Northbound No. 40 To New York 9:2S P. M. No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M. No. 36 To New- York 10 :25 A. M. No. 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:55 P. M. No. 35 To New Orleans 9 :56 P. M. No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8:25 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:05 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. No. 39 To New Orleans 9:55 A. M. i Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. , Train No. 37 will stop here to dis charge passengers coming from be yond Washington. IXhibS^oughtl I^— FOR TODAY—I IS Bible Thought* memorised, will prove a i| ■ mj priceless heritage in after year* Si i Fear Destroyed:—Fear thou not; for lam with thee; he not dismayed; for I am thy god: I will strengthen thee. year. I will help thee, yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.— Isaiah 41:10. NO PLACE FOR MOB LAW. There is no place in North Carolina life today for inob rule. While it seems at times that our courts fail, they are handing out justice never theless, and they do it without unnec pasary delays in most instances. Cer tainly in capital cases there has been no unjust delay in court action in this State in a number of years, and there is no reason to believe there will be. 1 The leaders and members of one mob have been tried and convict . i fcd ill*this State in recent months and it is essential that the Asheville mob members be given the same treatment. In his charge to the Buncombe Coun ty Grand Jury Judge John M. Ogles by ordered that members of the mob which tried to take a negro from the jail there be indicted and Solicitor Swain stated that he would make ev ery effort to carry out Judge Ogles by's 01 dery. Buncombe court is in session now and the cases could be disposed of at cuee. It would be a tine thing for North Carolina justice if the negro which the mob tried to seize and mem bers of the mob could he tried ami con ‘ victed at the same term of court. The fact that the inob members did not get what they went for does not iesseu their guilt. They stormed the jail, tore down part of the gate lead ing to the jail and searched the jail. They violated the law just as much as if they had taken the negro. Os course, if they had found him they would have been guilty of a still more serious crime, but they are just as guilty, insofar as storming the jail is concerued. as they would have been had the found the negro. ;; Judge Oglesby is right in ordering immediate action ill the case and So licitor Swain can gain further recog nition for himself if he can find the moh members and take them into I- (court. There was uo evidence in re tports of the mob's uotion indicating H that any member of the mob was uiask ,*d. ' Certainly the members of the I’ {committee which visited the jail to : jsee that tile negro was gone can be identified for they must have been | Keen by jail uttuehes. I The action of tbe mob. in fact its o very formation. ! s a black spot against the record of Buncombe county and every law-abiding citizen in the coun : ty should lend his influence in bring i ing the members of the mob to trial. HIGHER PRICES FOR COTTON GOODS. I|n During the past several weeks there t has been an increased and more gen ? eral demand for cotton goods. This {net, along with the prospects for a short .cotton crop,.*.lead many to be- im provement ia the-cotton goods market, ti f'WktMe men are moving cautiously s 'and conservatively and apparently : /they expect an improvement in raw j I cotton prices os well as to increase IgP*' the price of manufactured goods, jf, but without runaway markets* Tbit apparently, is the view of the Dry Goods Economist, which says: “The intensely bearish tone recent ly prevalent has been modified to a noticeable extent. But there is at the present writing no sign of a bull move ment. The trade .is more or less on the fence regarding tbe price of cot ton and in view of the heavy move ment of the crop there is not likely to be any pronounced rise in prices for a time, unless some unexpected event, such as a bad tropical storm, should arise to scare the wits out of the shorts. Eventually, however, we take the liberty of repeating, cotton seems bound to go Considerably higher. “The government report estimated the crop at 13,740.000 bales, which is about 250,000 bales lower than the August 10 estimate and at least that much lower than what the trade re quires. The trade has been estimat ing tile crop at between 14,000.000 and 15,000,000 bales and it is not yet quite ready to revise its ideas so radi cally downward as to anticipate a crop of 13,500,000 hales or less.” Os iiartieular significance is the following further comment: “Cotton goods business in the meantime lias shown decided im provement. This Improvement start ed some weeks ago has practically nothing to do with the raw cotton sit uation. The rise in cotton following the government report did, of course, stimulate some large users to cover tlieir requirements more freely. But the chief impetus to more active trad ing has come, as it should, from the consuming end. Better retail demand, drainuig the relatively low stocks in wholesale houses, has been reflected back to the primary market, with the result that there has been a better movement of finished goods than the market has witnessed for many months.” TODAY’S EVENTS Tuesday, September 22, 1925 Festival of St. 1 Maurice, the patron saint of Austria. One year ago today the American globe-girdling aviators completed tlieir flight with the reurn to Sail Diego. The Canadian Good Roads Associa tion will meet in the city of Quebec today for its twelfth annual conven tion. British army maneuvers, the first to be held since before the great war. will begin today in tilt Salisbury Plain region. Tile Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, a new institution organized for tbe puropse of teaching sowalled fundamentalist doctrines, will be op posed today in Philadelphia. lire ease *’f .1 a gups O'.Mahoney, of New York, whose confessed killing of Beatrice Donnelly near Bridgeport last April is still shrouded in mys tery. will be called for trial today at Bridgeport. With the purpose in view of sta bilizing tile building industry and stopping tie-ups due to disputes be tween labor unions a conference lias been called in Washington today of the National Board for Jurisdictional Awards with presidents of building trades unions ami organizations of architects and contractors. Read Your Bible. Charity and Children. Why not read your Bible instead of quarreling over it? The above sententious. statement is from au editorial in Colliers Weekly, and contains a lot of common sense. The more the Bible is read the less the disposition to quarrel over it. Most of the noise over Biblical questions and the trouble ami confusion that it brings comes from people who know mighty little about what the Bible really tealfiies. Bible students are usually reverent and thoughtful. They study the Word not to provide themselves with ammunition for a fight, but for their owu enlightenment and uplift. When a man approaches the ICble in tins way lie loses the belligerent spirit and develops the Christian graces of honesty, parity, beauty and brotherly kindness. From the same editorial referred to above we quote again : "We may differ as to how we interpret such details as Jonah anil the whale or Joshua and the sun, but no one who is capable of getting pleasure or comfort from reading can fail to profit by an- ac quaintance with the Bible.” Religious controversy in other days was confined to religious people: now tiie scene has been shifted and outsiders including politicians are the most vociferous champions of what is taught in the Scriptures. In both cases a better knowledge of what the Book contains would have ended many a silly" quar rel and prevented uo pttle bitterness and prejudices that rent the peaece of communities and brought discord and unhappiness to the innocent ignorant. Suppose we take Collier's advice and quit quarreling gwhile and go to reading the Worn in a humble and reverent Spirit 1 Straw Hat Hoodlums. Editor New York Mirror: I wish to call attention to a public nui-anec which is being practiced by young roughs and street hoodlums. On the evening of September 14 this mob of boys formed themselves into u vigil ance committee and their mission wa to destroy every straw hat in sight. Persoully I saw no less than a hundred straw bats taken from the heads of the wearers, and with a well-directed blow of the foot was rendered worthless, aud al this tak ing place right in the shadow of Police headquarters. We sent in three distinct calls to the police depart ment. telling them of what was tak ing place. A fiivver with two <*op« drove around the block, and that is as far us "the peoples rights” were protected. AN OBSERVER. A commercial traveler, visiting a large insurance office, boasted to the manager that he could pick out all the married, men, among the employees. Ay'.'uniiq&y '<{ie f rtafU-qotd fat the door, Itp they returned'from ilifi ner, ami mentioned all those'.he be lieved to be married. in almost ev . ery instance he was right, i “How do you do it?” asked the man ager, “T'-ie married men wipe their feet on the mat; the single ones don't.” CLAY DEPOSITS IN THREE NORTH CAROLINA COUNTIES Great aad Hitherto Unguessed Possi bilities Lie in Them. Raleigh, Sept. 21.—G4>)—Great and i hitherto unguessed commercial poosi . bilities lie in clay deposits in Moore. Chatham and Buncombe counties, re > cent research has disclosed. A survey of the state, made dur , ing the past eight months by ,Pro ! fessor A. F. Greaves-Walker, of the . department of ceramic engineering at . State College, under the direction of ; file engineering experiment station, re veals the fact, says Tal H. Stafford, alumni secretary V>f State College, that the 75 per cent waste fro mthe so-called “rale" deposits in jMoore and Chatham counties, which have been mined for tile past fifty years, is very valuable for refractories man uacture. Tbe clay deposit in Buncombe chan-! ty. recently discovered and examined, white not suitable for fire brick, says Mr. Stafford, for buff and grey face brik. building terracotta, artistic pot tery and other products. Tbe _Bpn cornbe county deposit, says Mr. Staf ford. is tile only one of its kind iq the state, sq far as is known. , “The imporaance of developing and refractories industry in North Caro lina." said Mr. Stafford today, in dis cussing tiig; survey.- and. the possibili ties of such' an industry,' "may be judged by, the fact at thf bqse of every large ehiamejt or sflyoke sW,ck in the state some thousands of fire brick are used.' Refractories >Tn the technical term used to cover all thoge ceramic'-.products used, to resist lioat. These include fire .clay brick or fife brick, silica brick, e( ironic brick,. aud magnesite brick. It is principally with the fire elak br.iek that we a.re interested in .this state at this time, j the other -types being used only in metallurgy." ", North Carolina, lir. Staffer*] esti mated. imports from 5.090.1 K> so (t.- o*o.ooo of these fire hick evT'i'y year, j at a ec,st of approximately $200,000 a year. " ; >* The State Nurvey by Professor Qreaves'-Walker. Mr said. \Vas undertaken in connection with the development of rhe ceramic re sources of the state, in an effort locate the fire days necessary tp de velop a refractories industry in Ntirth (,1a polina. Since tViere was up ap preciable information available in buV Ictnis already it was neces sary to examine shone districts which had the most promising topography and geology. ■ - “in order to be of use for refrac tory purposes,” Mr. Stafford explain ed. "a clay must have a softening or fusion point of at least 2.750 de grees Fahrenheit and preferably 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The clays and shales of tile state used for the man ufacture of structural products fuse at from I,Stitt to 2.20 degrees Fahren heit. Fusion point or resisaance to heat is the most imiiortant quality of a refractory material. "After examining a number of fire clay prospects and carrying out pre liminary tests it was found tiiat the large prnphillite deposits of Chatham and Moore counties offered promis ing possibilities. This mineral lias been known as ‘talc* and has been mined and used for tiac products for over fifty years. Genuine tale is a hydrous silicate of magnesium, where as the prophillites of Chatham and Moore are a hydrfms sillicate of alum inum. The physical properties of the, two are almost identical. This similarity has led to the belief that their commercial uses were identical. “From this prophilltte iias been manufactured crayons, pencils, fillers for roofing, textiles, cordage, asphalt, rubber, soap and bleaching compounds, Pimply Skin and Impure Blood Due to a Torpid Liver Blood carries body's poisons, which quickly disfigure the complexion The liver is the body’s wonderful purifier. All of our blood passes through the liver every IS miputes for purification. Everyone’s blood is constantly poi soned by body toxins formed in food j waste. When the liver becomes j weak, or torpid, our systems are at once tainted by blood toxins. These are poisons that, if not de stroyed by the liver, are carried di rect to the skin and cause sallowness, blotches, redness, eruptions and pim ples. Doctors know that a good com plexion comes only from within the body. Blood impurities cannot be , rubbed away with creams or oint- I ments. Science also knows that the liver— the body’s complexion maker—can not be regulated by drugs, but a safe Nature substance has been dis- j covered which will act directly on i the liver. The discovery is purified ox gall. Get from your druggist a package' of Dioxol. Each tablet contains ten drops of purified ox gall. In 24 hours the poison toxins will be re moved. Your liver will be regulated. Blood purification will begin. Sal low Jcin will clear. Pimples will pass away, leaving the complexion clear and soft. Dioxol tablets are harmless, tasteless and cost less than two cents each. These genuine ox gall tablets are PT ei Mrtd only under the name DiexoL If any tablet is offered you under another name, refuse it. Accept only Dioxol in the original, genuine package. Test Dioxol free. Mail this coupon now. f,Uit».n c* *4 I 'll * fuaifcv at*. . rree ****&*?■*h Wt 1 5* want t» try Dioxol. tnM l~- ■ ' j p9vian*?&." ‘Dioxol is especially recommended by I THE CONCORb DAILY TRIBUTE but strangely enough the possibilities I for refractories manufacture have nev er been investigated.” The deposits have been traced for i a distance of eight miles, Mr. Staf-i I ford said, and they will average ap ■ proximateiy 100 feet in width, and. . he says, “as the formation dips fromj ■ 60 to 70 degrees and has been worked to a depth of 130 feet in one local ity, there is undoubtedly a tremend ■ ous reserve available.” The outcrop i is paralleled by a railroad and lies : from a mile to a mile and quarter ! from it for its entire length, Mr. Staf ford explains. “The composition of the mineral,” . Mr. Stafford said, “is very similar to - fire clay. It contains from 25 to : 30 per cent aluminum oxide and from ■ 60 to 64 per cent silica. -;■ It in, as a rule, very low in those fluxing im purities which cause clays to -fuse at low temperatures and thereby makes them useless for refractories purposes. “One of the principal reasons why these deposits have not been largely developed is that the manufacture of talc products require that the mineral ber pure white and free from grit. Possibly 25 per cent of the material in these deposits coftfdrm : to these specifications, the balance being con sidered waste. Tests have also shown that for at leawt 100 feet below the surface t.he entire deposit is discolored to such an extent that it is Hot suit able for high grqde aalc purposes. “It is this tremendous tonnage of waste material that is available -for* the manufacture of refractories. To use,it for such purposes wqukl solve one of the great problems of tW'man ufactures of talc products and place ahe industry in fiiatfiam and Moore in a Dhotjtabtt- :aud eqmuuWiding .-po sition.” - - . . Tests and theorpticqi ratculatiyix show that the fusion point of this lauieral. .would ;make ,thc products suitable for at least 85 per cent of the tire brick requirements of the sttatepMri Stafford *aid.*yl •J. “Another infescstinfe <irvel6phh>nt.” continued Mr. Stafford, “in connec tion, with this mint-fai resullefl Jitmi the experimental work curried on by Dr. E. E. Randolph, of the depart ment of iclMqqicai o^fmewing, also mVler" tlic directfcfn iqf': rhe enghnflto ihg station, to' determine tre value of 'NdrtlQt'arbiihar minerals ' ItfccMrabic fiuir.uikh ’ ProphtUjt« ■ nto fouhd' t{».be rnje nf tbe very' Best i clarifying agents obtainable and com- ; payed favorably with the v standard ■ EqHer's earth used for years past for ; t'jfs purpose. “As North Carolina Is rapidly de- j velcping a large fish oil industry, this discovery Will be of great import ance.” -: Further detailed research, Mr. Staf ford said, will be carried on in the new laboratory of the department of ceramic engineering at State College and in the field, the department of conservation and development eo-oper ating. The Buncombe county deposit is de scribed by Mr. Stafford as “another and very valuable fire clay deposit.” It is a few miles south of Asheville, on tlic railway, lie says. “This deposit covers a large area but its fusion point is too low for the manufacture of fire brick. It will, however, prove of great value in the development of those ceramic industries requiring a clay which burns to a buff or grey color. This clay burns to a dense body at ap proximately 2.200 degrees Fahrtnheit and tests made show it will produce buff and grey face brick, building terracotta, artistic pottery and other products. So far as is known at present this is [fie only deposit of large size of its kind in the state. As not only North Carolina but the entire South is demanding buff and grey building products aud jurge quan tities are being shipped in from the ' north, it should not be long before a development takes place that will give the state a commanding position j in the above lines.” Man Who Almost HU ITeskknt Fined. Washington, Sept. 21.—OP) —After | having forfeited collateral bond of 8-'*s, Nathan I>. Sm:fh. of Balsimnrc. i whose automobile yesterday narrowly i missed hitting President Coo lid gr. j today had the forfeiture set aside, stood trial, aud was fined *35. Smith appeared in court personally a short time after his case had been called, and the bond was ordered for feitied because of his tardiness. jI SE PENNY COLUMN—IT I’AYS Fresh Shipment Pwnic Hams and Small Regu ’ i J lar Hain i at Reasonable Prices ' • • Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company PHONE 571 W South Church Street |*ljl i I 'jMPwllSF™ WHAM RkMEDtE! I /I T P >) (Hunt’* Salve and Soap), (ail It I I AJ ft »»*« treatment of Itch. Bcieiua V S') Kngworm,Tetter or other Itch I lac akin dlaeeeee. Try thi- I treatment -t pur risk. i i . UtttmeqttttSSPrirtJ" *** ‘Jj FKARL DRUG COACftWY >| i! ENROLLMENT AT DI RE •j LIKELY TO EXCEED 1,300 i Freshman Class WiH Number More , Than 300.—Many Students Are Ah ready There. Duke University, Durham, Sept. 19. , —Duke University will open its doors to students for the JTI2S-26 session here with an enrollment which will probably exceed 1,300. Hundreds of students are already on the campus, the dormitories and buildings having been opened Saturday. Every vail able room, all possible dormitory space, has been filled and scores of rooms in private homes near the campus. More than 200 young wom en were turned away, due to lack of dormitory space. Many freshmen began to arrive as early as Tuesday and Friday. / The university officials have been busily engaged in aiding the new students ih completing all necessary arrange ments for entering upon the year's work. The freshman class will num ber more than 500. Following the registration of new students on Monday and Tuesday, matriculation of freshmen will be held, and on Wednesday the first semester will officially begin. Matric ulated students will then be regis tered. and on the following day reci tations will start for Kie first time. Registration of students entering the graduate school will not begin until Saturday, September 2tsth. LJAPPINESS * JL depends on how you feel! If you do not feel good, full of pep and the joy of living —nine times out of ten it’s your liver. CHAMBERLAIN’S TABLETS Act without making you sick. Taka ! two tonight. Feel good in the morn ing. Get a package of 50 for 26 cts. I Sold everywhere Gil-sbn Drug Store. | P H rj ?. * in* *'■ y J, ' te :• i 1 New Supply Golf Balls Spalding Dimple* Mesh, n Kro-Flite, and Baby Dimple I | Ritchie Hardware Cc j YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 |LjH| HOW’S YOUR BATH- ' r yW ROOM? Is it up to date and sani mJcL \ tary? Are you proud of \ v- ~ it? Or is it old fashioned | ■ ' and unsanitary? It does , --e.-, not pay to economize ) | when it comes to your bathtub, wash basin, lav- J f 7 atory, etc. You ought to ! have the best. Let us in- ] * stall them for you. E.B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E, Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W HutgssgOTaamT-ttffUMiyfTTF"ri-iaaas3,B3sm mra ,ts tamaa t INSURE When You Start To Build' r' * i The rignt time to take out insurance is when you start buildiug. Then if through any cause your building snould bum, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your toss. Letzer & Yorke Insurance Agency jj | Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. P. B. FETZKB A. JONES YORKE I OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO e § HAVOUNE (ML Is More Than OiL It is POWER I I We Are Now Ready to Supply Youll J WWi HAVOUNE I ! Mutual Oil Company | PHONE 476 R. g j WmiWHKKtiHHKHKKHKHHHHHKrCHKMKHJWKKIOOOOOOOOOOOGOOO 0 Complete Text of Proposals. 11 i Aboard Steamship Paris, Sept. 21. —(4*)—Finance Minister Ciillanx and ' i his colleagues on the French mission to the United States today completed the text es the proposals which the; will lay before the American debt i funding commission. BILIOUSNESS Retired Minister TeQs How He Keeps ia Good F«m With the Assistance of BI&ck-Draafht. West Graham, Va.—The Rsv. \ Lewis Evans, a well-known retired minister, now past 80, living here, has a high opinion of Black- Draught, which he says ha has taken whsn needed, for 25 years. “For years I had been suffering with my liver,” he says. “Some times the pain would bt very In tense and my back would hurt all the time. Black-Draught was the first thing I found that would give me any relief. “My liver has always been slug gish. Sometimes it gives me a lot of trouble. I have suffered a lot with It —pains in my side and back, and bad headache, caused from ex- \ treme biliousness. “After I found Black-Draught, I would begin to take It as soon as I felt a spell coming on and it re* < lieved the cause at once. I can 1 recommend It to anybody suffer- £ ing from liver trouble. A dose or two now and then keeps me in good form.” Made from selected medicinal roots and herbs, and containing no dangerous mineral drugs, Black- Draught is nature’s own remedy for a tired, lazy liver. NC-166 OOOOOOOOOOCXMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BELL-KARRIS FURNITURE CO. 1 Your Vision of Something Beauti- i ful May Be Realized Here I QUALITY FURNITURE AND RUGS ; ; The kind that make for cozy homes, j i that’s what we are ready to supply j you with. Here are three floors overflowing i; I with sensible new ideas in home fur-: i nishings and our prices as well as style and quality of our goods will | found most agreeable. Good furniture is sound through and ; j through, joined expertly to stay I; tight and built up, not thrown to-! i gethed and made to look sound until | disposed of to an unsuspecting buy- | er. May we not show you. \i ; . J BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. 7 | \ Office y/Zummatm jK Improved working con- LflH ditions increase the pos- sgl "Jfl sibilities of turning your >J)| energies into cash. Equip -2 your office with light- PJjE ing fixtures that aid your j| JjS eyes. We can help you JBj mdo this. Xnjpect our fix- gj Lu| “Fixtures 'of Character” W. J. HETFICOX 3 jkjj W. Depot St. Phone 188 i OOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXJOOOOOOOO Wilkinson’s Funeral Home Funeral Directors j and 1 Embalmers 1 Phone No. 9 I Open Day and night Ambidance Service 1 an f Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1925 We have the fol lowing used cars for sale or ex change: r One Ford Touring One Buick Touring One Buick Roadster One Liberty Touring Chevrolet Sedan Body STANDARD BUICK CO. Add the Comforts of '• PLUMBING , to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do as much or more than any oth er one thing toward making your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost estimate. ; r H* j* vL j Concord Plumbing • Company North Kerr St. Phone 57G
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1925, edition 1
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