Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 6, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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frricUy, bWvSer a, i£s -•••- - JU "- i •• • Jl • Ll u - 1 a. ~»■ ."BSS IM~M Proper Cleansing ■ I \\t/ | IM B aknosf~ in- Igal *9 finite details. I There is the necessity for un ■ derstanding the changes in | MfIHV » fabrics constantly coming out, HHI the late shades and modes in colors; the new styles and j r. d / ways of draping. ;•* l j /.. Attention to these details gives » ||l c ® our cleansing the up-to-date-' Jlj Jiess that makes it distinctive. V ; {/ f B I Phone 787 OUT'OUR WAY- BY WILMAMS ✓ /wesson • hes\ RW fiani \ gome am shot. / <aAO» \ niSStV-F cocmT l Its SmoUEN ! j O'TUET MISS ua " ’ >■ \ - / TViETS VNHOT.vV » X*. y yOQES FEP wi) '• " — : :I= 7 ::: —- MOM’N PQP ) ' l BY TAYLOR |V / ' \ * WWv-WHILE EM HERE 'll/ <SOCONI6Hr! BURNED 11 (Z— THE P'ACE 1 > I WAfjr; >00175 take rr Ji maehes and pipe iL forjT s J x" "'n 1 waaarJ sgaaMk | Ifiyy j (q^Q PfSSUSTJNG T& SEE llßfTsi j X' 1 „ < * l ' .\ * : \[ <- ' * ' : { t lIM Going' To GWE SOMEBODY S 'I f OHYOU POOR &3Y- \ - ) , 1 DtPMT MEAN lb ) - vjhkStaeN .. IDEA CSr SOCKIN' M E !N THE ) fJA.I\ CW S TTDOWTHWRT NO LAW REQUIRED Raleigh Tildes. i Heading her remarks “Charitable Just let." ' Commwjiiaucr of Welfare r Kate Burr Johnson in the current * issue of Welfare progress presents a brief for less publicity and mere daeorey in ceunectipn wit* the trial of u-saiilt eases. Sayu Mrs. John , son: Criminal assaults by negroes upon white women have recently been of frequent occurrence in the State. In many eases When the are committed, the name of the ’ inno cent victim is broadcast to the pub lic. The case of the student* nurse at Wiljnw*f9M a,K ' the two cases at . .Asheville are notable exceptions. In none of the newspapers accounts huve-we seen the names or the vic tims mentioned. l It would seem that pub!ashing the name of a woman under these cir i cumstances is adding an unnecessary I humiliation to one already suffering from what must be the height of humiliation and despair. It Is the policy of the Associated Press* to Withhold the name. A number of stated have laws prohibiting such publications and the coups have ’ held that this does not interfere with . the freedom of the press. We are wondering if such a law is necessary in North Carolina even though advisable. It would seem that if this matter were laid before the Press Association for action, that the newspaper folk of the State would agree without force of law not to publish the name of the woman who is the victim of a criminal as sault. However, there is one law that we would like placed on the statute books, which would make it manda tory that trials of such Oaees snould not be held publicly: but we' are told by the Attorney-General that such a law would be unconstitution al. Everybody, it seems, is entitled to a public trial, though the judge has the fight to clegr the court room of juvenile^ fKB CONCORD faBLY TRiBtINS BRt there comes to mind a pic ture of a trial as it was given by a friend who serves as court steno grapher in the western part of the State. Ar °ld mountain woman had been the victim of an escaped negro coigvict. When the time came for the trial, the stenographer., and this timid, oM woman of the hills were the only women in the court room , which was packed to over-flowing I With men and boys who had gathered j from miles around. They-jvere filled j with a morbid and vulgiif curiosity ' and were eager to hear the sordid testimony arid see a woman's soul lgid bare. Ap outlet for abnormal emotion was\ furnished an isolated rural community at the expense of the woman's most ■ intimate and personal affairs. We cannot but fdel that a trial' conducted in suen a , manner is demoralizing, rather than dignified and impressive ass all trials should be. Cannot fnd« of jus tice be served in some better and more charitable way? Dead Letter Menace: People thought it a good joke on the post office department when a postcard mailed sixteen >cars ago just recently reached its destination. To add humor to the case the card ad vised that the sender had reached home safely on the night of August 15. lflop. The sender and addressee have since married. The truth of the matter is that the postal authorities should take credit for delivering the card at all. The- card was incorrectly addressed and there was no return address to identify the sender. It was only by a trick of fate that it did not be come a “dead" piece of mail. Nearly 30,000 pieces of mail go to the dead letter office each year because of the failure of senders to place a return address on them. This, care lessness costs the taxpayers nearly $2,000,000 not to mention loss of property and inconvenience. If the public doesn’t awake to its responsibilities in the matter, it is possible that Congress will again be asked to charge one cent for each letter requiring directory service. Pos tal employees now must fake extra time and trouble to look up addresses not given or correct* misdirected mat t?i\ this in spite of the assumption that every person knows his corre spondent. \ Too many people believe Apat tjie Postal service can do the impossible. They think that a postmaster or mail carrier should know everybody in towny' The post office is also troubled by persons w'.m think it a joke to di rect mail in picture form, code, etc., expecting .that the authorities can puzzle them out. Many parcels fail to reach their destination because they are prtorly wrapped. "Use strong string ami Paper.' the postal authori ties advise, .“Nixies ’ are a menace in tlicm siflves. -A "Nixie" is post office par lame for a letter or package addressed to a person who can’t be found. In ati effort to trace tlip addresses, di rectories are consulted, inquiries arc made of local residents ami, at last tlie piece of mail goes * Avoid THlsf ’ * Last year £l,0(H),000 letters and H 03.000 parcels went to the dead let ter office. " Over 100,000 letters are mailed yearly in perfectly blank envelopes It costs Uncle Sam $2,000,000 an nually to bother with 200,000,000 pieeps of misdirected mail. Tito government collects, nearly SIOO,OOO a year for return of mail t'aat lands in the bead letter office. Last year the dead letter office had no clue to the Ownership of $55,000 in cash and $12,000 in postage stamps la., letters. Incidentally. $3.- 000,000 in checks, drdits and money orders failed to reach those to whom sent, Einstein Theory Tested. Tlie Pathfinder. I'rof. Dayton Miller is doing some work at the Jit. Wilson observatory near Isis Angeles- which may shake the foundations of tlie Einstein the ory. The results indicate that tlie earth travels ’ through the ether. Einstein himself admits that if these results are confirmed the theory will' be Untenable, because corroding to it such motion would never be detected from the eurth. The experiments were first made from an underground chadiber. Prof. Michelson, of Chi cago 1 niversity, made similar experi ments. At first |he results sub stantiated the Einstein But Prof. Miller then made similar ex periments at Mt. Wilson, which is about a mile in height. This time he found that the results varied with the altitude. OOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOPQOOOOOO Let Your | Next Battery | Be An EXIDE Use Only /the Best Stewart BY CHARLES P. STEWART - NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON Note well Ralph Beaver Strassburgor | of Penneylvanla. That man WJII be nationally very prominent 'yet. ■ t i Outside his own state, who knew fnything about him prior to the spring of 1924? Nobody‘but his personal friends. At that point he jtopk a notion to get his name on , (the Republican ticket .for the No vember presidential election. He could see that President Cpolidge was going .to get first place but the vice presidential jnominatiqn seemed to be available. • [Strassburger put In his bid for it ps nonchalantly as If it were something of no particular Im portance he was asking for. » * * WELL, he didn’t get it He wasn’t even a strong con tender. Nevertheless he made art im pression. Starting from absolute ly nowhere, he got himself men tioned as one of the candidates He came out of the convention, not exactly known to everybody, like, Douglas Fairbanks, but heard of by politicians and newspaper men throughout the country any way ijor had his campaign been al together ridiculous • One thins, if . Their Married Life Ideal. Naomi Joyce and Malcolm Fitz simmons lived near each other in New Jersey and were childhood sweet hearts. Tlie romance continued as they grew older until at last Malcolm propose! man-iage. Nadmi did ffot refuse tin* offer but asked him to wait. T|ien Malcolm \fcll sick with typhoid fever. Ihe attack was not severe or dangerous but Malcolm was some what uneasy. “If you will go through a formal betrothal with me 1 will feel much bettor and so will you,” he said to Naomi. She admitted that he spoke truly so the young man arose from his sick bed an,] the ebiiply repaired to the home of a nearby qmiister where a ■ceremony which they thought to be a formal betrothal was performed. Malcolm recovered from the illness and for ten years the eortplc have lived near each other as neighbors. Rej-ently the girl discovered that the ceremony supposed to have been merely a betrothal was in reality a marriage ceremony and that for ten years she had been the legal wife of Malcolm. Strange to say, how ever. the childish love had faded and died out of her life; she applied to the court for an annulment which wps granted without any opposition f >'<?■# Malcolm who evidently had also ,fot®tten the love of his youth. ? Let the Wrong Man Go. The term of convict 271 in an *«"frn penitentiary had expired ami the warden sent for him to call at his office. Soon afterward a man appeared there. The warden who could not be expected to remember the faces of all his prisoners, gave him some good advice, then set 'him free, The next day tlie warden received a complaint from convict 271 that he had,not yet been set free, although his term had expired. The warden was diunfouiided. he had freed the wrong man the day before. Now the he could do was lo free the right mail. In tile meomvhile the first prisoner, who li ad pa line,] him self off as convict 271, hadvput many miles between himself and the prison. Just how long he will be able to get oway .with his unearned free dom remains to be seen. Let us hope (flat at least he will profit by the goed advice tlie warden gave him. , Kentucky now has two women eotmjy sheri^s. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO ’--Wls I'M A | [veRY IKjTeRSSTIMCJ, KX> PE-R CCSNT. j C-RASfi, But AFRICAN, ‘•fc 1 ’ AC.so veKY ' what bo you rteAH/ 'iNPepiNiTe.'*' ' ... ONe-OF TH£ CIPHERS Yo U A l -, , ; — - „—a .p.y V au c S £&&Jkt(er* \ ' ncthmg else, redeemed it from 1 that Strassburger was opposed j by Governor Pinchot as Pennsyl- <1 vania delegate-at-large to the ! j Cleveland convention. He beat the i| governor soundly, which wasn't a , < feat to be sneezed at, though only !j of state-wide proportions. ■’ • • * SOME TIME ago Mr. \nd Mrs. Strasaburger. visiting the French seaside resort of Deau ville, met Countess Karolyi of Hungary and invited her to visit them in this country. Later the countess arranged to come, but ! when she applied for a passport vise Secretary of State Kellogg refused, saying she was barred by law, as a communist, from the , United States. s • • • This "nettled Strassburger, who called on Secretary Kellogg to pro test but got no satisfaction. So the best way for him to do some thing about it appears to be for him to break into the "Senate There ; he can talk and maybe act. Penn sylvania elects a senator next year. * j Strassburger wouldn’t confirm 'the j report while in Washington, but I" they say he intends to chuck his ! { hat into the ring, with Senator r Pepper's, Congressman Vare's and C Gov Pinchot's If he does he'll be a factor to b 9 $ reckoned with, as Pinchot. at any 2 rate can testify * € Pouring Music From Tumblers. ] The Pathfinder. , A good stunt for a party is a selec- < ■ tion of tumbler music. This can be j » given with five or mow thin glass i tumblers. The 'tumblers must. be ’ arranged* in a row umm a oloth-cov- \ ered table. They can up tuned with 1 the piano by filling them with water!« | ■ The low-pitch glasses do not require i much water. As the pitch increases! more water should be added. A suit- ] able lip miner can be made from a j piece of wire and a rubber cork. ( Play the tumblers by tapping them “ lightly on the edge with the rubber ~ • hammer. Simple and pretty tunes ■ can be played. | enamel | h Try O-Cedar on your A jl soiled white enamel. It W! will make the marks van- \ I § ish instantly. It will bring 11 w up the original beauty A P Vl just as it does on wood W“j YJ finishes of darker shades. A > /■ Excellent for automo ■7 Biles, and Tor floors, doors, j 3 woodwork and furniture. M IT You pour it on, then rub T with a damp cloth. Sold everywhere in various ’A m sizes from 30c to $3. M < 0-(Sda| 1 "C/eans as il Polishes” $27.50 $27.50 Saves one-third on suel —burns the gasses and smoke, most of which us ually goes up the chimney. Ash pans .to catch the ashes. Shake the grate : without opening the ash pit door. I.oths Hot Blasf” Special Sale at Yorke & Wadsworth Co. 2-6-t2c. |paNCVDRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAttJ jjlF 133333^^ j: Satisfaction for j i j a Little Money | I A Whole Lot of j Here is an oxford that is exactly right, search the world over, you 3 won’t find a more comfortable and likable shoe foe daily wear. They il ' are soft and pliable and snug fitting through the heel and arch be- I » cause they are specially lasted. We are showing these in both black 1 ■ s " $4.0 0 ° $5.50 IVEY’S “THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” ' J I Feed Cow Chow For More Milk | ; Checkerboard Laying Mash with Hen Chow will pro- ' | duce more eggs. 1 We guarantee all our Feeds to do just what we claim. ! PHONE 122 A CASH FEED STORE WHERE QUALITY COUNTS 0000000000^°00000000c>000000000000000000000000000 ANNOUNCEMENT -P SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10th |- . Swift & Compan y .one of the largest meat and produce packers in the United States, will have a Counter In our store on which fhey -Will display a full line Os their products at attractive prices. One of their representatives will have charge of the sale of these products, but we have arranged with them to make deliveries and carry accounts for our customers. Don’t fail to take advantage of this BIG ADVERTIS ING OFFER OF THEIRS. C. H. BARRIER & CO. 1 !> DELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shatlbw Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- ’• !'mating current and Washing Machines for Direct or Al- I ternating Current. . R. H. OWEN, Agent | „-Phone 669 Concord, N. C. >OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCX>OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOI Above x Floor Furnace A , At last a furnace has been designed to be placed above the floor. This is the solu tion of the heating problem for small home owners. Xn longer is it necessary to wur- ' Whh Liu may have 3 furnace without the ex- ALLEN’S PARLOR FURNACE fySpßfeSslgfo No room heater can compare with this (P wonderful new Furnace above the floor, which heats by moist air circulation. Come by and see it. This invention is the latest development in the stove indus try. Come by and see it even il you do not intend to buy. Let" ; us explain how it works. H. B. WILKINSON Out of the High Rent District Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville China Grove ti I i.LUtlgiLinli>lXTrrr:tt?:T , rr" , ."'ri'*r" , ;"i:"rrm ry ‘y War:;'if l 'riryyiyry ,| : CYLINDER REBORING J J We have installed a Itottler Reboring machine so that we can re- j'i ■f bore the cylinders of cars and fit. new pistons, rings and wrist pins I i ;} without removing the motor from the frame, thereby saving u largo • j labor charge. Just give ns a trial and convince yourself, i We carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, Tubes, Piston Kings and I .L jjj I’ins, Itusco brake lining, Sparton Horns, PrestrQ-Lite Batteries, ;S Whiz Auto Soap and Polish and Genuifie Ford . Part if- ; y X ! STLDEBAKEK SALKS AND SERVICE .. ||| | Auto Supply & Repair Co. ' I’HONE 238 PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 6, 1925, edition 1
7
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