Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Oct. 27, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Tuesday, October 27, 1925 fGar tnWit Too' Fancy i SCHir Clean ’:w7 I I J 1 Use VON-O-LIN I ‘fftolds the Color as it Cleans t I Delicate laces, ribbon sashes, t elaborate embroidery it I matters not what the dress or I f its adornment, our improved ' 1 process with VON-O-LIN brings your clothes back just 1 I Hke new. * J Kngland is acknowledged to have! he best girl hockey players in the I’otW, blit it is likely tlrat formidable j ivals soon will be found in fhej nited States. \vlmre hockey figs be-1 ome a popular sport at fnany of the rominent schools and colleges for i iris. .i OUT OUR WAY S BY WILLIAMS , /POhAtO? MO w'VmAPO IT/©OYS.VOtf BOTH \ . j LOOK HE.AH CORIY. \ VWI-V-l, VOIT ] V.OOK LIWE-UWfc. — \/_ Oomt tKPtcr me ux>k like. 1 'we11, 1 *Hm GOT4H iwet A p AKI 0 ' | maskepaoe tP 11 ;I' MA€>QO£PAOE WITH MEAST" PuhvW j VWACTYOUi iTS j LooV< j! | MOD iMTiHETGriToP. L OVUM ! Jll HAIMT! M SES GO'U' j! (I . Them might have ~—-S boc?r\eo J1 "1 • j! ~T H CT *■ 1 *- V^ W l 1 J ■ • <51925 BVNEA StWVICt, »WC ~ MOM’N POP BY TAYLOR Wf U1 THE YiIORDS Of'THE EMINENT SPURGEON- )1 C /-YOU COULD WEAR A SHIRT SEVERAL DAYS I*IT IS NOT SO HARD 76 BARN MONEY AS IT IS / ( BY TURNING THE CISFFS - COT DOWN J §N 1b SPEND IT IAM CONWDENT J b YOUR OOThBS PRESSINGS BILLS BY ( ffl VOU COULD-6AVB AUSTIN SMALL t-' V POTTING YOUR TROUSERS UNDER \ iHV WAYSJF YOU 7721 ED [ THE MATTRESS ATNiCJHT AND NEVER / 1 V 111,1 f celluloid collars cut dcnvin laundry, \ V“ —■*/ sav-Gimme a i BIUIS AMD RUBBER BAWDS MARE CHEAP ( DOLLAR G GAR. /TM'f €>) ( GARTERS-YOUCAN POT (JACpBOARO ) //IpW VVND MAKE IT rrT / l INSItjE VOUR SHOES WHEN SOLES J - fWJk SNAPPY' I/ \aRE WORN TftßOUfiH And I u T North Carolina Lutherans Meet at Hickory Nov. 9-12 / Charlotte Observer. The annual convention of l he North Carolina Lutheran Synod will Be field November 0-12 at Holy Trinity Luth eran Church. Hickory, of which Itev. i Dr. P. K. Monroe ia pantor. v J Four members of the general boards will be - present and speak' at the second evening sesajpp. TWy are ltev. Dr. A. U. U. Hutieher. of.ltlcb mond. Va.: superintendent ome missions in the south: Itev* i>y. C P. Wiles, of PhiladelpSiiß* editpr of Sunday school literature aiid pubiica tionb; Itev. Dr. E. G. Miller, ot Phila delphia, of the pastors’ peir sicn fund, and itev. William' Freas, of New York, secretary of inter-mihm sions. - . ! - Tile opening session will be beld at 7:80 o'clock the evening of Mon day, November 9th, with a service, in ■ charge cf the officers of tbe..tlynod. i who will administer the Lord's Sup per. Dr. J. L. Morgan, of Sa-inbgtry, t'.ie president will preach: Kev. J. C. Deitz, of Claremont, the secretary, will direct the confession and absolu-. tion-: r>r. E. H. Kohn, of Mt. Holly, I the statistical secrefltry, will have; dharge of the service. '• Tuesday* morning's meeting will be-! gin at K:45 o'clock. The program to j hoi;n will consist of roll call, appoint-j rnent of special committees, reports I of the president, committee on the 1 president's report, treasurer, auditing 1 eommittee. executive committee and the executive com mittee's repori : reception of delegates and visitwfs, ministerial session and ; | meeting of lay delegates. 'That af | telnoon unfinished business will be! I takeii up, tile recording secretary, sta- 1 I tiStieal secretary, archivist and miniN- I terium will be beard and the foljow- j [ ing committees will reportTfoinei bulletin brotherhoods. Itev. I W. G. Cobb: necrology. Itev. Dr. C. I HJCox : Sunday school work, Rev, H. j P. Wyrick; beys’ work, Itev. S. W. Jlbyne; young people’s wobk. HeT. E. C. ( ’(s)|kt» women’s smrk, Itev. Dr. E. C. Cooper; women's work. Itev. Dr. E. H. KShnsummer school. I Itev. L. A. Tiioma*; imuisterial edit-1 egfini. bulletin of the church. Ijpv. G. H. Cooper ; Lutheran litera thre. Rev. E. F., K. Roof: imier miSsions. Rev. Dr. K. R. \^|ati!ey; congregational constitution. Rev. M. L. Pence; assymli'y grotimls, Is. M., Swink. Representatives from other synods will extend greetings. pr. Keever will conduct vespers at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday night and the delegated representatives of the gen eral boards will speak. The order of business for Wednes day morning will be roll call, read ing cf minutes, unfinished business, election of officers, election of dele gates to the 1926 conventions of the United Lutheran Church in America and the United Synod in* the South, report of the hoard of Litypan home by bulletin, report of the Board of | the orphan home by bulletin, report 1 jof the board of the theological semi- I nary by bulletin, report of the board lof educational institutions by bulle ! tin, import of the committee on church I institutions by ’ Dr. Crigler. ; At the afternoon meeting reports ; tff ecminittees on Utters and petitions i cn nominations, on group insurance by Rev. C. It. Miller, on publicity by Itev. It. A. Barringer; reports of the board of ministerial relief by Rev. j C. A. Brawn, rctmrt by Dr. Morgan j as fraternal delegate to the South t'ar | o'ina Lutheran Synod, report of Rev. ; Jj L. Yost as fraternal delegate to the j Virginia Synod, report of the com- I nuttce to nominate delegates to other i bodies, will be presented! That evening at 71:39 o'clock the ] brotherhood meeting will be.held, j Thursday morning’s program will fHF CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE j colnprise unfinished buskfeas, ap- j pointmeut of standing committees, se lection cf time and place of meeting next year, reports of committees on minutes and unfinished business,, err resolutions and on absentees and ex- 1 uise dml as the steering eommittee. | Pest and Flagg's Cotton Letter. | New York, Oct. 26.—While tew | can explain to their own satisfaction 1 how the crop can have gained ap proximately half a million in the. period under review and many feed that tho rcjrort is merely another -step toward correction of possible curlier errors the figures are there and will stand until disproved by further evidence. It is felt that what ever damage was done by frost must Still be allowed for as that came too late to affect, the reports .on which the figures were bused and in the report it was stated that a good deal of cotton in the southwest was open to damage by frost. With another freeze expected . tonight in that section the opinion is expressed that the crop there will be pretty well .finished. Ginning was about in line with expectation and those figures will be closely watched hereafter for their bearing on the probable size of the crop. There was fairly extensive trade buying on the break, though it is not improbable that demand from that source will continue to wait for declines pending some decided change in the supply outlook. There was also more' or less profit taking on hort cotton and plica, regained part of the loss but in local trading circles the expectation; is that prices will work lower before any decided turn for the better occurs. At any rate there is little in the situation as it stands at present to cause any anxiety on the part of shorts and for the most part the market will have to depend for sup port on trade buying. Unless de mand for goods is severely cheeked, such buying is likely to be on a fairly sen'e at t^e-c or lower prices which afford a very satis factory margin of profit but once ipore the whole situation may have beer, disturbed bv the report. * ROST AND FLAGG. The CoNege Boy on the Farm. Charlotte Observer. Mr. J. B. Kit ire- lias licen fanning in Steel (Vcck township. Mecklen burg, for 20 years. Thera was au apple orchard on the farm when lie took it, and it had been growing-old er and more no-account nil the tunc —until several years ago. when his son cume home from college. There the boy learned something, and lie took tile old orchard in h,an<l. He pruned and sprayed, and now Faires is taking samples of the finest sort of apples aroajd to show what a col lege boy can do. The orchard had produced indifferently when the Season was ,j;ood, and Oiot at all when seasons were bad. But the boy has brought it out. It is now a re liable producer of Beit Davis, Stamen Wiiiesaps Arkansas Blacks and plain Arkansaws, and possibly one or other varieties that Far mer Faires lias not elnssifiMl. For the first time he has a supply of Winter apples ir storage, and some to market.- when he begins to fra! sprightly enough for that exeaeise. From ope phi tree, he gathewf as mart! ns K 5 bushels,and from another* five bushels, and, as everybody kppw this was not a very good season for apples. Indictment Invalid. Stulesville Daily. A ease under the bad cheek law. appealed to the Supreme court, went off on a technicality, the court holding the indictment invalid. There is a I] itesuioil of law, . some lawyers hold, whetheg, onite who gives a worthless- cheek is legally guilty of fraud,, nr is liable to criminal prosecution. That issue is yet to be determined. Bur there i>- no question in the eenbji of common sense.-light and justice getting a look-in,i (hut one who gives for a consideration a, paper calling for a certain amount of money, under the guarantee, expressed or implied, that tile paper is good for the sum named, the same as money, is guilty of the rankest deception and fraud. for which lie should be held criminally liuble, if the paper fulls to produce. If tlie law holds otherwise, the law is what. Dickens’ beadle said it whs. because, in such case, It protects dis honesty mid faud- That is so clear that it-is not a for argument. Mess Jessie Doll, the new member of the United States Civil Bervice Commission, began htr career in the public service 25 years ago as a ■clerk of the war department. / ' ■«.' goeooooooooooooooooooooo Let Yo# 1 I Next Battefy 1 Be An I EXIDE j; Use Only the | Best —> ... Stewart cmakLES P- STEWART I NBA Survive Writer WASHINGTON King Rama I VI tt Slain, who -has )uat , depoved iiU queon for not being Oisnifted enough, wasn’t al- Ways su dignified himself, as cc-r --i-sln rnur.ty old report* in the Vnited s;>fc'.*r atcret service files enow- Chaialongkorn ruled In Siam and Ramu was only crown prtnc* when the letter tourol America nearly 25 yco.-s ago. Just out of Oxford, he was cn his way homo by the western route. As a royal visitor, two u-crct service rnen met him '.rho-i he landed in New York to guard him’ until he sailed from San Fran- T cisco. _ die II WE prince's secret service A guards found they had a hard - , job. The prince was on vaca tion. ' Bis school days were over. Hte rulershlp hadn’t begun. He wanted a good time —to cut up, In fact. Tr Steve Wright, camera man for the now defunct Inter-Ocean, brad been trying to get the prince’s picture during the whole length of his stay in tile Windy City. An evening arrived when, as Stephen knew, his highness was to at a *b»rt»Jr> haur at tho Chi- New Bom Babe Is Placed on an Electric Heating Pad; and Dies Carolina Jcfferyoifian, Kaleigh. One of the most shocking: affairs that occurred in Nortii Carolina in a decade took place at Hex llos- i pltaly tiicity, last Sunday when a [ riewinprn babe, infant of Mr. and Mrs. . (). J. Smith, residents of this city, a- literally allowed to roast to cl eat H owing to the alleged negligence t\yo nurses took the babe im mediately after birth and laid it in a basket, on u blanket, btneath wliicli was au electric pad going full blast. Tho little-body was literally cooked alive and when an examination was made after the child's condition had been (discovered, it was found that lie htating pad was so hot that it almost blistered one’s naked hand. • The infant was born at the hos-! lital about. (> o’clock that afternoon, i After birth it was placed in fhc cus tody of the two and laid in a basket on a blanket. After being ex- 1 •a-i or* ===== $100,6011 BEACH, HOTEL I FOR WILMINGTON RESORT'| Carolina lleach Cuiniiany Lets Con-' tract far llundred-Kortn Structure, j Starling at Once. J AVilmiuotuu. 2fe-arXbfc.luuq4l of Caroling Reach as one'of the mostl aStractive niainlaml resorts off (tbcj Smith. ■ located fourteen miles smith f Wilmington, was assured tliiV, as-1 term mi, when t’ijf Carolina Beach j ’ !!0.. Inc., -Stigned a contract with W. - A. Simon, general Contractor of this city, fort the erection of a three-story uodm n. betel stniclarc, the •osi of whicli. together with furnieh- HM-. will probably exceed $100,099. Work- on the new hotel will be starti-.! immediately so that every thing will lx- in readiness early in 1926 for the summer season. The hotel will ho located on jhe west bank of a fresh water lake which it? only 200 yards west of the ocean. There is already a modern brick ho tel ul Wilmington Beach, two' miles from Carolina Beach. Ku Klux Klan l’ararte. Reck Hill. S. ('.. Get. 25.—A ■ crowd estimated at several thousand j persons lined the principal streets of the city last night to witness the pa rade of hie Reck Hill unit of the Ku Klux Klan. TRIBUNE PENNY ADS. TRY IT. EVEREIT TRUE B1 CONDO THERE, 1 I'VtS riNISHE-15 THIS NOVetT*’ You MUST R&rtVU* YT, Too. it's A i Xcjli'T ' ! TO WASTE MY TIMS •REA'DlsiCi. | I MoverOSil t Is/AMT STUSS “CHAT'S I to jl To to -- - * sioub. o. -m • iII I = \ ,■ Sis££° (etier* | cago Club. His suite at the Audi torium Annex was so situated that there was but one .elevator h» could descend to the lobby by Steve set ujj his camera in an In consjiicuous corner commanding this elevator and waited. Obviously nothin* would do but a llashliglft. / tteve ’ was unsparing with his powder In fullest evening dreas, a rib bon across his 'shirt front spark ling with decorations, the princs appeared. - * c • • • • A BLINDING flash! A strong concussion! •" A smoke-filled hotel lobby! Steve had pulled the trigger. With a yelp, the prince tumbled backward into the elevator and was at the top of the the twinkling of an eye. The se cret service men pulled guns. At tendants ran and screamed. Sev eral women fainted. In the cloud of smoke Steve had disappeared, with a unique picture of a crown - prince in the act of being assas slnated—or so ha thought. Early next morning the prince left for the west and caught the first boat for the Orient. No rec ord shows that Steve was officially thanked by the government but his naper raised his pay. umim-d at intervals without detecting anything wrong, the child was found about !I o'clock to be suffering from I burns about its chest and sight leg. I Examination of the blanket on which the ehikl lay revealed an electric heat ing pad. Testimony before the coroner's jury by hospital nurses was to the effect that it, had been the custom to place all newly-born babies in a basket. It was pointed out that it is a rule that no infant shall be handled while in the basket and this prevented arty one noticing the presence of the heat ing pad between the blankets. It is understood that fie cortTner has not as yet rendered a verdict, peuding further inquiry into the mat i ter. 'rite board of trustees of the i institution made an investigation of I the- affair inwhediately following the death of the child and these facts were placed in the hands of the cor • oner. The recent football game between |the University of Chicago and llni j versify of Pennsylvania at Philadel phia was the first gridiron clash be tween these two institutions in 11.~i I years. f ftoufG Africa was the first cami- Hry in the world to have rt*gistnition : for women nurses. , , STRENGTH-SAVING Nowadays nearly every one is impressed with the health-building and strength saving merit of Scott’s Emulsion of invigorating cod-liver oil. Millions of bottles are sold every year. A very little used } regularly -daily builds |W\ health and helps keep the body in strength. Scott &Bo otic, Bloomfield. N. J. 25-21 HALLOWE’EN SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31st I - For Hallowe’en Parties — I Dinners, Celebrations | We have a full line of Hallowe’en jj; | Novelties, Decorations, Masks, Tal- ij: | lies, Cats, Pumpkins, Witches, iji § etc. Prices right. Large stock. \ Kidd-Frix Music & Stationery Co : 1 8 Phone 58 S. Union St., Concord, N. C. I # 90000<x3c>000000000000ci00000000r>0000000000000000000 f 1/ KAYSERS HOSIERY i ■■ B n • i All the New Season’s Colors T* ; A Pure Thread Silk Stocking that V Will Wear ! \ at.- ; Light Weight, Medium Weight and I f Heavy Weight J\ ‘ \ Kaysers Slipper Heel Stockings Are the First in Fashion i , | RICHMOND-FLQWE 00. IDELCO LIGHT 8 Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- fi ’ nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- 8 nating current. 8 R. H. OWEN, Agent f Rhone 881 - Concord, N. C 8 xyioooooooo OOOOOOOCiOOOOOe50CCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO» If HAVE YOU SEEN THE SIMMONS' NEW GRACEEINE - AEE-STEEE BEDS? . In White, Copper Oxidized and Beautiful Wood Finishes? Embracing the new'shape post and tiller made exclusively By Simmons. Come and see Them Today H. B. WILKINSON Out of the High Rent District Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville China Grove .'i-• thruTTr? ..n. »nw.. ' 8 CYUNDER REBORING I p We have installed a Kottler Keboring machine ho tliai we ran re- H fej bore the cylinders of ears and fit new piteous, rings ami Wrist a S wiihuui removing the motor from the frame, thereby saving a t H labor charge, .lust give us a trial ami convince yourself. M ffi We carry a full line of (loo(Uicii Tires, Tubes. Piston Kings and B 8 Pins, Husco brake lining. Spurt on Horns., Prest-O r Lrite Batteries, B v n Whiz Auto Soup and Polish and Oentline Ford Parts. || | HTI DEBAKER SAL.KK AND SKHVICfe __ I Auto Supply & Repair Co. r t’HAita ass i i m rTT’imi-riniiiJ , PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 27, 1925, edition 1
7
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