Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1925
THE COLE TRIAL
fenliemen From Union County Sum
mons'd to Appear Wednesday Morn
in?.
Jonathan Daniels in Raleigh News
a nutl Observer.
Rockingham. N. September 2S.
—Trial of Cole will begin earnest
Wednesday morning when the venire j
is summoned to appear, but the selee
* tion r.f a jury of twelve out of the
200 men is expected to consume all
of Wednesday and perhaps part of
Thursday. James H. Don, of the de
fense counsel, stated in court today
that he expects the trial to last from
ten days to two weeks. Both State
and defense declared their readiness
for trial today.
Spectators watched through the
court room windows ns Cole came
from the door of the' county jail,
which sits apart from the court house,
accompanied by Jailer George A. Sea
well. He stepped from the shadow
of the jail door into the wired pen
around the jail. Seawell stopped to j
lock file outer door of the jail and
Cole stood alone. He clasped his
hands behind him and looked up at :
the sky which gleamed blue and white
and clear above him. He was very;
quiet and very calm.
He was joined at the door of the'
jail yard by one or two members of
his counsel, who accompanied him
into the courtroom. He was neatly j
\l dressed in a gray suit of ordinary i
material; he wore a striped Shirt and ]
a peat polka-dot blue tie.
dSot a Soft Line in His Fire. I
He was calm and silent. His.fnoe
1 war. almost Oriental in its immnbil
/ ity. I.ater in the day when he was
arraigned he spoke clearly, almost]
boldly. There is not a soft lino in'
If* face. His mouth is a stiff, hard !
lfety. His nose is a tremendous hook, j
His eyes are large and watery blue.!
He wore his grey curly hair parted |
in the middle, with the back of his
neck shaved high and clean. As he]
sat with his attorneys, his hands end I
feet moved continually, showing n •
nervousness that did not appear in
his face.
Daughter Wears Ring.
Miss Elizabeth Cole, one-lime
sweetheart of the man her father
killed, wore a gay frock to court and
a gay hat and striking light brown
silk stockings. She wore a diamond
1 solitaire ring on her 'engagement
linger. She is almost pretty. Site
is only 24, but she looks much older
j than her years. There was nor a
sign of either sadness or fear in her
fare. She looked like the ordinary
\ well-dressed and mature young woman
\ upon an important occasion.
,1 Beside Elizabeth Sole sot her nioth-
I er. r tall, angular woman, dressed in
I immaculate white . There was fear
j in tier face, but she was as calm as
her daughter.
Minister Shows Tragedy
Tragedy stood on the face of Rev.
A. L. Ormond, of Nashville. He
tame into court with his son. Allison,
a college student. No other face
in the court room showed so much
of pain and sorrow. He was quiet
as he ** wftWtt sonrffort
Don Phillips. His son sat slumped
in his chair. Misses Ophelia and
Myra Ormond caine to Rockingham
for (he trial, but they were not in
the court room today. Mrs. Ormond
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Gra n nd S Sa'rStg tons' DistCHTC© of
All transportation- i J
sJotdwa? at efsst. 1 Times Square
motor objective
tn the world **7“—
is prostrate with grief at her home j
in Nashville with her daughter. |
The State won every move in the
preliminaries to the trial here to
day.
W. B. Tele Not a Millionaire.
T’ae Rockingham Post-Dispatch,
published at Pole’s home town, has j
•the following:
At first, much notoriety was spread
over the fact that Pole is a million* j
aire. and the man killed was a poor,
gassed ex-service man. It was freely
talked then that the wealth of the
(’ole family would l>e able to employ
big lawyers, whereas the poor state
of the Ormond family would be un
able to get 'help for the solicitor and
that the State would therefore belab
oring under a big disadvantage. How
ever, all that talk was soon dissipated
by reason of the fact that the Ormond
kindred of Greene county, who are
wealthy, and Legion men and friends
of Goldsboro. Maxton and other
places rallied around the Ormond side
! and have employed as many lawyers,
and just as able, as has Mr. Pole.
It is true that Ormond served in
! France, and volunteered at. the otit
-1 break of America’s entry into the
; world conflict, and was gassed w’liile
j overseas, but in justice to Mr. Pole
1 it must be stated that lie is by no
means considered a millionaire. Ilis
total property listed for taxation on
j the books of Richmond county amount
I to around $40,000, though no doubt
j the larger part of his worldly means
is invested in mill stocks, bonds, ice
I cream factory and other industries.
A conservative estimate might place
the value of his holdings at $300.-
000, though it is said his wife and
: children are worth perhaps as much
!in their own name. But money or
‘ the lack of it, other than the ability
to engage able attorneys (which each
! side has done) should not figure in
I this trial, which in the final analysis
should resolve itself upon basis facts
and merits.
i
VENIREMEN ORDERED
FROM UNION COUNTY
Four Monroe lawyers Retained By
the State and Defense.
Monroe, Sept. 2S.—Sheriff Clif
ford Fowler, of Union county, re
ceived an order this afternoon from
Judge Finley to summons a venire
of 200 men, from which a jury will
be drawn to sit on the Cole-Ormond
ease in Rockingham next Wednes
day. Latp tonight the sheriff and T.
0. Collins, chairman of the county
board of commissioners, were be
hind closed doors, carrying out the
orders of Judge Fin’.ey.
The two hundred citizens of the
county whose names are drawn will
be summoned tomorrow by officers to
report at 10 o'clock in Rockingham
on next Wednesday morning.
The defense in the Cole-Ormond
case has retained John C. Sikes, of
Monroe, and is in negotiation with
the law firm of Vann ami MUliken.
Mr. Sikes has been a member of
the Monroe bar for more than 20
years and has appeared in many im
port ant eases.
r Milliken is a compara
tively young law firm and is re
garded here ns one of Ihe very
strongest in the state as defense law
yers.
For the prosecution in the Cole-
Ormond cage, W. B. Love, of the
Monroe bar, has been retained. Mr.
Love has been a member of the Mon
roe bar for 15 years, and has ap
peared in every important murder
case in Union county during that
time. Mr. Love is one of the leading
laymen in the Western North Caro
lina conference, and is well known
throughout the state.
A berry box that will prevent all
the best berries from staying at the
top.
A telephone ring that will tell us
who is on Ihe other end of the wire
before we answer it.
A golf ball with gramophone at
tachment that will sing out ‘'Here I
am !”
An adjustable ring that will fit the
usual number of girls you become en
gaged to during the summer.
Alt angler's scales that will corrob
orate the fisherman’s story.
A piano that will sound the same
to the girl playing as it does to the
neighbors.
The tramp paused outside of the
house.
“Clear out 1” shouted the lady of
the house. “I ain’t got no wood to
chop. There ain’t nothing you could
do around here.”
“But, madam, there is,” retorted
the wayfarer with dignity. “I could
give you a few lessons in grammar.”
i “Hawaiian Ukes” Mad^nOhio
Stm I v s J[ vA *>._*£• pf
I M. j*. <
Someone is always taking the romance out of life. Most youfig flappers
•nd balloon-trousered sheiks probably think tfiat the ukelele, with its tan
talizing melody, comes direct from the moonlit beach of Wallcikl. But
■here’s proof that it doesn't. One of the largest ukelele factories Is in
the little unromantic town of East Sparta, O. And here are real Amer
jcam&irls. not dusky Hawaiian belles wearing leis and short grass skirts!
turning out 200 ukelolcs a day. Business has been rushing since
collcKe started-
NEW JERSEY BROTHERS
GET FILL OF FLORIDA ’
Say There Are Thousands There Who 1
Are Sorry That They Went.
Norfolk, Sept. 27.—Leyland C. I
Rircher and hi* brother. Waller
Bircher, left Palmyra. N. J., six
months ago to go to Florida. They
had .S7OO between them. They ar-1
rived in Norfolk yesterday on their j
way back home with less than S2OO, j
The so-called “land of sunshine” did
not bring prosperity to the Bircher
brothers, and they say there are thou
sands of others down there who are
sorry they ever left their homes and
would gladly come back if they could
get sufficient money to pay their
transportation.
“Florida is booming, all right, but
the boom is only helping a few peo
ple," Leyland told a reporter. “There
are more people in Florida today than
were ever there before or will ever
he there again.
"The Florida boom is unhealthy.
Real estate speculators are making
money, but the vast majority of peo
ple who went there looking for riches
are sadly disappointed. I saw more
than 300 automobiles parked along
the roads out of Miami. St. Peters
burg and Tampa. Many people are
living in these ears. They cannot get
a house to live in unless they are able
to pay exorbitant rentals.
“A man earning only SIOO a month
can hardly support himself in Flor
ida. It will cost from S2O a week
up for room and board. My brother
and myself spent two months with
out work, and when we got a job we
only received SIOO a month. We were
simply working for our boarding
house mistress. It cost us S2O a
week to live, and we had only about
S2O of our monthly salary to spend
for clothes and other things.”
Doings in the Schools.
The Pathfinder.
Intellectual pursuits rather than
frivolities is the rule for women fresh
men at the University of California.
A committee of the fair sex has
banned these things for the students:
rolled hose, too much rouge, immodest
dress and conduct, cigarettes, petting
parties and intoxicants. Violators
will be haled before a committee of
women.
President Maurer, of Beloit Col
lege, lias sent a circular letter to
parents of students warning that
autos may be forbidden as an adjunct
to college life. “Why any parents
should send children to college
equipped with an automobile is more
than I can sec,” he mentions in the
letter.
A questionnaire returned by nearly
1,000 women graduates of the Univer
sity of Southern California tends to
show that higher education does not
*Leacli Cross Returns
>. ’’ '" '’ '
Leach Cross, one the cleverest lightweights In the business 20 years age
has put his fighting toga on again. But only to Instruct his nephew
Harry Wallach, In the fine points of the game. Leach, now a prosperous
tooth extractor, la ahown on the left In the above photograph "explainlm
thtflp. ’’ kUS Wall—S *—a Hamm, ghaj-Ir at lha right.
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
| lead women away from marriage.
The (abultion Showed that more than
| one-third of the graduates are mar
j ried.
The Michigan supreme court has
I upheld the right of a state normal
school to expel a woman student who
smoked cigarettes in public. The
: court quoted the declaration required
I of all students to the effect that their
i sole object in enrolling in file normal
j school is to "better prepare ourselves
for the business of teaching.” “In
herently the managing officers have
the power to maintain such discipline
as will effectuate the purposes of the
institution." rules the court.
Tlte Heeker Creek, Va.. board of
education warns that men or women
who smoke cigarettes need not apply
for local positions as teachers.
With the return of his son, John,
to Amherst, President Coolidge has
reiterated his opposition to hazing.
He believes students have enough to
do without indulging in monkeyshines.
He lakes the position that a boy is
sent, to school for a definite purpose
which cannot be aided by rough horse
play.
USE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS
RESOLUTIONS.
Whereas, the Great Reaper, who
takes no note of distinction or class
among men. has visited the Iviwanis
Club of Concord, and plucked from
our midst and the community TOLA
I). MAXESS. now, therefore bn it
RESOLVED, by this Kiwanis Club;
1. We bow in humble and trustful
submission to this Providential dispen
sation in the sudden transplanting of
our friend and associate from this
scene to the great beyond, and, though
we keenly feel his absence and sorrow
at his departure, we say with those
who trust in the goodness aud the un
erring wisdom of the Lord of earth
and heaven, Thy will be done;
2. We recognize, along with the
public among whom our associate
member lived and wrought, a man
both prominent and outstanding, a
lawyer of pronounced energy and
faithfulness to his clients, a citizen
j that sought to better the community
in which he lived, and a real hero in
his activities and manifestations of
love and service to his church;
3. That this expression of sorrow
at his passing be communicated by our
secretary to his wife, to whonj the
Kiwaninns extend sincerest sympathy
in her great bereavement, and that the
same be published in The Concord
Tribune.
JAMES P. COOK
CALEB W. SWINK,
JOHN B. SHERRILL,
Committee.
September 25, 1925.
Star at 12
Henrietta Saoltzer is only 12 years
old but she’s already displayed real
ability as a mermaid. In her initial
■wimming meet, she placed second
tn the diving event, competing
against a r~' ,~tars. • Henri
etta’s v Calif.
j
THOUSANDS CAN’T EVEN BUY
TICKETS FOR WORM) SERIES
Flood of Requests From North i
Carolinians For Tickets to the
Games.
Washington, Sept. 20.—That there
will be North Carolinians in great
numbers here to attend the World
Series guinns between the Washing
ton and Pittsburgh ball teams is cer-j
taiii, just as it i* certain that there
will be many who want ro see the
games who will not be able to do so.
The troub’e arises from the fact of
the rush for the reservations for the
games, the demand for them far out
numbering the tickets which will be
available. Some requests for tickets
were made nearly a year ago, while
they have poured in all during the
pennant race.
The News and Observer corre
spondent has been deluged with let
ter-; and telegrams within the past
week asking that he secure tickets
for the games for the writers, and
he would be glad to do it in every
cage if he were able, but there- are
no more tickets to be had from the
Washington baseball club nutiiori
tien, according to the hat staate
ment both from Clark Griffith, presi
dent of the club, and Edward B.
Ey.non, the secretary of the club. It
was stated some weeks ago by Secre
tary Eyrion, in an interview in
Washington newspapers, that the re
servations had - all been exhausted,
that there was no need to further ap
ply for tickets, that all had been
pledged some time ago, aud that
thousands of requests could not be
filled.
Can’t Get Them.
Not alone will there be disap
pointment to parties cutsido of
Washington who desire to secure
tickets, but there is disappointment
among the people of Washington
who expected to get number*; of
tickets. President Griffith announced
in a statement yesterday that mere
would be but two tickets for the
series allotted to Washington fans
who had written for tickets, except
as to season box holders and that these
latter would be given preference in
the allotments of the boxes. This
notice came as a sockdologer to many
Washington fans who had asked for
four, six or eight tickets.
The price of tickets from the base
ball club will be the same as the
prices last year. Box seats are $0.60
for each game, or $19.80 for the
, series; grandstand tickets are $5.50
for each game or $10.50; other seats
in the open section are $5.30 each,
or $9.90 for the series. None of these
tickets are sold for a single game,
as tickets come in sets of three and
the three have to be bought, all be
ing on one strip. There will be
general admission tickets sold on the
morning of each day for the game
that day, the tickets to be sold to the
first comers. East year there were
hundreds of people who stood, or re
clined, or slept in line all night in
order to be able to get tickets when
the ticket booths opened in the rnoru
iug.
People who have “money to burn,”
however, will be able to get tickets
from the speculators, otherwise the
“scalpers,” who are already on the
job of buying and selling tickets.
Two places on Pennsylvania Ave
nue for the “Scalpers'* sale of tickets
are already open with big signs giv
ing notice that tickets to the world
series are bought, sold or exchanged.
This correspondent was informed by
one of these “scalpers” that he could
get grandstand tickets at from SSO
to SOO for each block of tickets if
they were bought early after the
tickets were put on sale. He stated
that he would have to pay advanced
prices for the tickets he secured aud
that, of course, he wanted to make a
profit for himself. It is a case akin to
highway robbery to pay such prices
for tickets, but there are people who
will pay these top-heavy prices, as
was shown by the sale of tickets by
“scalpers” last year.
Impossible Now.
“Look here, I'll have no petticoat
government iu this house.”
“Don’t be absurb. Jack, your
ideas are absolutely obsolete.'*
Masks which are supposed to indi
cate the character of the wearer are
the latest fashion fad of society wom
en in London. The masks are donned
at special midnight super parties.
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“Has Meyer changed much in the
years he has been away?”
“No, but he thinks he has.”
“How so?”
“Why, he is always talking about
what a fool he used to be.”
“ACHEDACHED”
Lady Says Her Back “Hurt Night
and Day”—Least Noise Up
set Her. Better After
Taking Cardui.
Winfield, Texas.—“My back hurt
night and day,” says Mrs. C. L.
Eason, of R. F. D. 1, this place. “I
ached and ached until I could hard
ly go. I felt weak and did not feel
like doing anything. My work was
a great burden to me. I just hated
to do up the dishes, even. I was
no-account and extremely nervous.
“My mother had taken Cardui
and she thought it would do me
good, so she told me to take it.
My husband got me a bottle and I
began on it. I began to improve at
once. It was such a help that I
continued it until after the baby’s
birth.
“I took eight bottles and I can
certainly say that it helped me.
It Is a fine tonic. It built me up
and seemed to strengthen me. I
grew less nervous and began to
sleep better.
“I can certainly recommend
Cardui to expectant mothers, for to
me it was a wonderful help. ... In
every way I felt better after taking
It and I think it is a splendid medi
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Cardui Is purely vegetable, and
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For sale everywhere. NC-162
New Pullman
Sleeing Car Serv
ice Between New
Orleans and Bos
ton
Announced by
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
SYSTEM
Effective October 5, 1925
This service will be afforded on Pied
mont Limited trains 33 and 34 in
connection with the Colonial Express
between Washington and Boston.
This new service affords opportun
ity of traveling to and from Boston
without change of cars.
For further information and reserva
tion and reservations call on any
Southern Railway Agent or adress:
R. H. GRAHAM,
Division Passenger Agent,
Charlotte. N. C,
j Liver Trouble Now a Known
j Cause of Premature Old Age
Medical science knows that poison
ous waste in our bodies would actually
cause death in a few days if not
eliminated by Nature's processes. Be
cause it destroys these deadly poisons,
the liver is our most important or
gan—the body’s wonderful purifier.
The liver prevents the formation of
body poisons that cause diseases of
the heart, kidneys, blood vessels and
are chiefly responsible for premature
old age.
When the liver becomes weak, the
poisons are sucked up by the blood
and health is broken down. Physi
cians know that the liver cannot be
regulated by drugs, but a safe Na
ture substance has been discovered
which will at once increase the vita!
bile supply. The discovery is puri
fied 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
‘Dioxol is especially recommended by
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PAGE THREE
moved. Your liver will be regulated. ■
Blood purification will begin. Sal
low skin will clear. You will feel
so much better you will know you ■
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health. Dioxol tablets are harmless,
tasteless and cost less than two cents a
each. I
These genuine ox gall tablets are 1
prepared only under the name “Diox- <• v:l
ol.” If any tablet is offered you
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cept only Dioxol in the original, genu- I
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