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■, w |hurs4ay,Octobei l Would J Never Guess It Had a Stain* i • TW* is the frequent comment of the delighted women who . discovered whet perfect ' work our new process turns out. WE USE VQN-Q-LIN Holds the Color as it Cleans jPave you a frock or blouse, too Soiled to we V , yus too delicate to entrust to the or dinary cleaner? Sepd it to us Iw»d you,, tom wilt say taken, I it returns, *You would never n guess it had had a stator |] PHONE 787 . The Last, Lauglt | “What a peculiar looking carpet in under the elephant." remarked a visitor to the cricus. f “That's no carpet,” corrected the lelpliant'H keeper. “That's the man :hat gave the elephant a chew of to )acco.” ■ OUT OUR WAY ' BY WJLUAMS f r ~ -I . ~ an.igin-™* ■ V 1 ~ '■ tsc*W\ WASH ? MAKiKI / * tJO V GiVr ' 1 ARe RAMGEMEwT A CO ' M! 1U " I _so WO Kits! err V j IKI WO WIMTERS < W COAL LA " VtR * J HOo’lV. FIKIO MOTHIKIO - J.E?w IL<am> 1M VsfAfeH fOMKS METHODS. •ii M sir MCA smvicc. me. “MdBTN POP _____ BY.TAYLOR — r ' HELLO AW 6UWW-HOW ''if T BLAST IT 1 - I HATE’ To LOM6’U. il" BE BEFORE ( /■'" ~~ —. .. ? WALK HOME - THE PAVEMENT J nWljli YOU LEAVE FOR iORRY ,rTlffW xfsisspvl s«ra»st h \ S' ( BETTER NOT fS f, \ / GOSH T HERE'S AN OLDVi MRS. EDITH VANDERBILT ", TO WED .SENATOR GERRY. Wedding to (toise'Two I ✓EkwAl Ifßmilk*. . | Asheville. Oct. 21:—Annotmeement wan received in this city today of the marriage tomorrow in London, England, of Mrs. Etiith VantJerWlt, of Biltmpre. to Senator Godot G«tv. of Rhode island, • -The cerepioqy Will take place at thf Princess Street reg- j jiatrar's office, and ouly «Jew inti-' mate friends of file couple have been invited. This information arrived through press dispatches today: in substantiation of word received here by friends of Mr*. Vanderbilt recent ly. Two of America's most prominent famHiea and portions pf two of Amer ica's fortunes will be united in the marriage of Mrs. Vanderbilt and Sen. i Gerry, which will - take place today ( in London, according to a dispatch from New York, although the bulk of the estate of George W. s Vanderbilt, Who died in lillA, went to bis daugh ter, Cornelia, now the wife of'Hon Francis Amherst Cecil, former agnetary of the British embassy at Washington, Sirs. Vanderbilt received $250,000 in cash, life interest in a SLOOO,OOO trust fund, homes in Wash j I nylon and ifar Harbor. Maine, and/ 80.000 acres in the Pisgah forest of. North Carolina, together with con-1 tract* for the sale of timber estimated to produce about $50,000 a year. | The vast estate. BUtinore, N C„ was left to t,he executors, Mrs. Van derbilt and William j K. Vanderbilt, ' to hold in truit for the daughter until her twenty-fifth year. 'ln UlUi. (Mrs. Vanderbilt sold 50.000 acres of her Carolina holdings to the United States government for forest reserve at a price reported to be $5 an acre. Tn 1020, she sold portions of the 1 Biltmore estate,, including the vil’uge of Hi It more, for, approximately sl,- 000,000. j G(hy Very Wealthy. 1 ' Senator Gerry hsa a one-fourth in-' ' terest in property valued at $14,800- 000 left by his mother;' and. with his brother, and two sister, will divide , riie Gerry millions uixrtT—Hie death of . their father, Cdminodore Elhridge T. I Gerry. < . ■ ! | Mrs. Vanderbilt, was Miss Edith S. I Dresser, of New and New Port, daughter of an army officer," a de scendant of Peter St\iy vesaut. She is a sister of Mrs. John Nidbolas Brown, Mrs. Greenville, Merry and : Viscountess Homa D'Osmoy. who llvgs ,in France. In 1808 she was uiarrigd i in the American Church of the Trin- i ! ity, Paris, to George IV. Vanderbilt. The bridegroom was 37. the bride 22.1 Alter Hie death of her hi|shand in j 1014, Mrs. Vanderbilt virtually re tired to her heme oji Biltmore estate, ami devoted herself to managing its i affairs. A few yeaps later, rumors j that she would‘marry again became j current. . All such rumors were repeatedly denied by Mrs. Vanderbilt. Upon . her return from Europe in 1024, she affirmed : “I have no interest in sdfiety. I would much rather live on a farm. I have been operating a dairy upon our estate since m.v huLband died. son-in-law, Mr. Cbcil, will now aid me in the.. management. It seems to me that the next develop ment in social life in America will be country family life like that in England." "* I Sons ql; Clergymen. Dearborn Independent. I Who's Who in America contains 25.357 biographies. Os those, whose importance in the life of the, country entitled them to admission to its pgge.s. 25.!) per cent were borni on farms; 24.5 per cent in towns of less than 8.000: 24.8 per cent in small cities: 20.il per cent in cities of over 50,000; 4:1 per cept iu suburbs of large cities. Sons of clergymen made up 11.1 per cent of the total, which means that, in proportion to popula tion, they composer} 28 times the average number of notables. ' Forests can on exist where there is a summer temperature of 50 de grees and an annual rainfall of 30 inches. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE WORD OBEY STRICKEN FROM WEDDING VOWS Episcopal Church Eliminates the Word by Close Votes,—Uphold \WWen’s Rights. I New Orleans, Oct. 21. —Rights of I women and enforcement of laws were prominently before the general eon- i vdntion of the Protestant Episcopal Church here today. • Both subjects i claimed conspicuous places in the two •douses. | Women taking marriage vows un j der the Episcopal marriage ceremony were definitely relieved from promis ing to “obey'' their husbands' when the bishops concurred with the repu- • tie* in eliminating the word from the ; service. The elimination was/not ac complished without a contest, how ever, and the victory was won wit'jput a vote to spare. The test ballot > showed tlti to 27, 66 being the neces sary contitutional majority. With "obey" went the bridegroom's an nouncement to the bride "with ail my worldly goods, I thee endow." The deputies refused to declare* women eligible for membership iu the general convention, and almost at tlic same time the bishops refused to ain’aorize bishops to license women as lay lemlers. The deputies had passed such a resolution. Law and order was suggested in . two resolutions. In the house of l bishops the Right Rev. John C. Wsrdr bishop of' Erie, offered a resolution j unanimously adopted providing; | "That facing the danger of the! j spirit of lawlessness in American life. I we welcome tlm renewed efforts. the I ! government of Cue United States Jo enforce strictly and impartially the . prohibition law and the anti-narcotic ; laxvs^ which are so widely apd cynical-j , ly disregarded, and we call upon the . , people of our church to set a good . ample of obedience to law without. , which no democracy can endflre.” I A resolution, sponsored by the Rev. G. F. Dudley’, D. Ik, Washington, and adopted by the deputies on coiigress 1 for tlie enactment "of such suitable laws for the District of Columbia an 1 shall protect the civil institutions of the Lord's day from unnecessary la-1 , bor and business.” Possibility -that the Episcopal Church may become' more actively connected with the Federal Council: of Churches, provided by the action' if the house of bishops in voting to 1 continue the status cpio. appeared when tlie deputies passed a resolu ion, offered by George# W. Wicker • sham, of New York. This resolu tion, if it finds concurrence in the, house of bishops, authorizes the na tional council of the church to con- i stltute an agency between the two bodies embracing social service, race, relations, international justice re search and education, editorial coun cil, finance and army and navy chap lains. It •wim Thomas llnxlcy who said that an acre <if good fishing ground will yield more food in a .veek than at acre of the best land will year in a year. COLDS THAT Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can slop them now with Creomuision, 'an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creo mulsioß is a new medical discovery with two-fold action: it soothes and Ifcah the idfiamad membranes and in hibits germ growth. ■, Os aIT known drugs, creosote is rec ognized by high medical authorities as one of too"greatest healing agencies for persistent Coughs and celds and otheg forms of threat troubles. Creomuision Contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to thovtomach, is ab sorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the, germ£ . Creomuision is guaranteed satisfac tory to the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respira tory diseases, and is excellent fpr build ing up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded, if any cough or cold is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Creo -ulsion Company, Atlanta, Ga. (ad’ 009000Q00000000000009Q00 I Let Your Next Battery Be An EXIDE Use Only the Best Stewart BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer - TMTASHINOTON—If a device to ever perfected for effective V. wireless control of air planes, the way will be opened for U tfst of many-of aviation’s now disputed possibilities In war. » • • * ~Wr HKN Admiral William S. jjflf ( Sims, testifying before Pres ident Coolldge’s air Inquiry board, remarked that "war condi tions cannot be .Imitated satisfac torily in peace-time airplane ex periments, which consequently lead -to wrong conclusions." he , put his finger on tt«t real cause 01, the inability of army and navy -meg to agree on the dependability of planes, and planes alone, as weapons of national defense, u, • • • T> land and sea fighters, in dis agreement in peace time con cerning the potentialities of spmo new piece of war machinery. WHY MANY WOMEN PREFER I AUTOS TO MODERN HOME W-srt. Escape Frrm tlie Monotony 'of ' Housewife’s Lot. ! New \ork, Oct. 21.—(A s ) —Escape from, the monotony rather than the (Iruugeiy of the housewife's lot has eaused tier to choose luxuries instead iof conveniences, concludes the Gen eral Federation of Women's (Tubs af ' ter a canvass on "What women want I ill thfir liomcs." Xhe average American housewife prefers an automobile and a telephone rather than have 'modern plumbing arrangements in her home, because ■’these offer relief from a monotony that has driven many of 'der predeces sors into insane asylums..” I w fudui ation’s findings were writ-! ten by Mrs. Mary Shernian, national president, in the Woman’s Home Com panion. • “The housewife does not minjk > washing of dishes under, the glow of nn ejeiVle globe, hut the task doubles or trebles if she must do it by tlie smoky dim light from a kero sene lamp." said Mrg. Sherman. "She does nofMiiind sweeping the low jer floor of Hie house if she knows that at (lie end of her task she can I sit ,<Jpwn and chat via the telephone with a neighbor five miles away, and she Yyill Iw-at rugs for an hour—if the j evening brings the relaxation of an automobile drive.” ' While 65 per cent of a large num ber of homes investigated were found to have inside sanitary arrangements Sternal Searcf / x /v\ f or^eaut y 1 \ /\ ] Rewarded \ IV %S>ncc the day 1 ' ' 'Mother Eve left I the Qardcn,per sistent search has been made for feminine beauty—a perfect com- | plexion. blo more searching! bln more tan! No more’ /recUis? No more saltouncss! Science lias discovered NADINOLA Weacning Cream j the one sure, bate, convenient icniover- I of tan, freckles and other blemishes. i NadinoU never fails. Leaves the skin j healthy—radiant. Moncv-back guarantee and directions in each package, 50c, Extra large slzc,sl. j cAsk your dealer for oVddfnola c ßleashing Croon The Sure, Safe Complexion ■Beautifier EVERETT TRUE B* CONDO f ->jw IF eveRETT, You 1 JOIS«S§ IPON'T MAPE INI TAK-e A T H<S IAK vs -that XHe soßjecT - ZXRVKp I*i *e - I •• ’k.. ui ... . . . It * •; •- .-'.T . v : . \f§rSwashingtbn ag£&o(etler* j the simple expedient of trying It ' \on a target always Is available. 1 ■lt’s conclusive, too. In t|»e air it's different. That a plane, opposed say to a battleship, can do all its friends i claim for it disputes—pro- j vlded it can get near enough to ] the ship to drop Its bombs where i they will do the most good. “But," add -t-he surface warriors. i “we’d shoot down the plane If it 1 got as near as that.’’ "You couldn't hit It.'' th j 1 tors insist. * * * AND as Admiral Sims says, , there's no way of sealing this i argument without letting anti I j aircraft gunners shoot real bullets ( at live aviators.' killing them if I possible. In war-time it could be tried on i enemy airmen, which would be all ' right, but- in peace-time it won't \ do. A wirelessly controlled plane, however, would just fill the bllL and 50 per cent of them had bath- ' tubs. 70 psi- cent of these families ’< had automobiles and (IS per cent of them were equipped with telephones. The research made by' the federa- < tion covered 445,087 ’lames scattered 1 through 237 emuiiiunities. In 40 per cent of tlie homes it was found that there were no stationary washbowls, J and water had to be carried in and i out. and 25 perf cent of them were ! not even equipped with kitchen sinks, i Blit S7 per cent had electric light. I and 73 per cent were equipped with 1 electric irons. Radios weri found in 17.0 per i cent of t’iie homes, pianos in 40 per ; cent, plionpgraphs in 50 per cent. i In discussing the high percentage 1 of homes equipped with automobiles ! and telephones but not with plumbing, : I Mrs. Sherman declared: I "Sentimentalists will say that the ! I fault lies with the men. But we j | club women who study conditions ! from the inside of the home under- i stand the situation better. Women no longer undervalue their services iu j flic home. . They run their homes on ! the budget plan and have personal al- j lowa lives to spend as thty like. i "Then, why do they choose luxuries , instead of conveniences? Why dees the automobile take precedence over the stationary tub. llie telephone over the vacuum cleaner qml the radio over the power-run sewing miutiiiut? Captain John Bennett, who was iu Charge of an Kngli-h tMlamiei steam er for many years, crossed from Dover to Calais over 30.000 times. gg|g| New York's newest and most beautifully furnished hotel Accommodating 1034 guests Equal Distance from Pennsylvania and Grand Centra/ Stations. j ...Broadway at 63rd St.. . c^n H a^*>iL et ROOM VITH PRIVATE BATH $350 All outside rooms jOOOOOOOOOOOpOOOOOOOOdOOOOOOOOOOCXJOGOOOOOOOOOOOOO w Beautiful New ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS ALL COLORS. OF THE RAINBOW '!; Japanese Cherry Blossoms, Peach Blossom, Poppies, 1 iji Coxcomb', Tube Roses. Carnations, Sweet Peas and many ! !■ ]j[ See our window display and buy now. Our supply is j! 1 ij! limited and they are going fast. Kidd-Frix Music & Stationery Co | 5 Phone 76 'SB S. Union St., Concord, N. C. [! QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC j YORKE & WADSWORTH 00. j XSQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGCOOOOOOOOOOOOQOaooOOOOOOOOOOOOQi IDELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter nating current R. H. OWEN, Agent ■Ulan* tn ' Concord, N X ' Built Mritk jflHpi hjachman The secret of its beawty and comfort is inside. I Large shipment of OvcrstutTed Living Room Suites just received. For Beauty and Comfort, they are unsur passed. Come and sec Them. H. B. WILKINSON Igain-aa 1 im. hmxm Car Washing! Alemite Greasing! 1 Crank Case Service Let us wash your car and grease it with Alemite High Pressure lubricating system for everybody knows tliqj ■al proper lubrication is the life of any car. j| Texaco gasoline and oils—Goodrich tires and tubes. m Tire changing, Accessories, Free Air and Water ’ Kgjj CENTRAL FILLING STATION | phone roo ! I PAGE SEVEN