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Thursday, Nov. 12, 1925 A •>" - 1 ' ~ >' '» ' ."" . I ,1! ■ ‘ # Wken the second act has come to an end—-and the curtain is rung down amidst •whirling applause—•when you jmingle outside •with the exdted throngs in the lobby —have a Camel! Ini* the making of this one cigarette goes ail of the ability of tfe world’s largest organization of expert tobacco men. Nothing is too good for Camels. The choicest Turkish and domestic tobaccos. The most skilful blenders. The' most scientific package. No other cigarette made is like Camels.- No finer cigarette can be made. Camels Ore the overwhelming choice of experienced smokers. . ■ y 1 % ’ V* Winter Comfort / at Low Cost H To drive in comfort this winter tt you should have complete protec tt ticm against rain, sleet, snow and II wind. Only the finest closed car II oonstrnctksn«an give you that. II Coach body “ nsner-ouilt—die same construe* tion used on theworid’s finest cars. 1 Doors and windows fit stay 1 tight to keep out wind and water. 1 ft th L°F sow cannot penetrate \ Y V oa wind \ w ¥ ch M vea ycm Perfect % and ventilation Loftgfiffpj. FI t The (W. 5695 r . Touring Car *525 ; Roadster - -525 > ‘ -ijb Coupe - - - 675 I Sedan - - -775 sss r* . .425 .550 au prices f o. a ‘ : • * BUNT,MICH. WHITE AUTO CO. v . / LiL A_t I Tx„ A T IO W jp OS T - "7 V • _. • elliptic springs and balloon tires j take the jars out of frozen roads. j Add to bodily comfort the safety of semi-revgfsibie steering and 1 equalized brakes and the assur- , j anefc of a motor that always starts ea®dy, and you can realize why Chevrolet spells winter comfort. j.. Yet you get all this in the world's I lowest-priced Fisher Body Coach. J Let us show ybu the quality fca hires of this fine closed car and explain how easy it is for you to / own one this winter. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE WHEN the thrilling second act of the best show of the year has just come to an end. And the stars have taken their curtain calls in answer to round after round of applause. When you join the crowds outside just as pleased and thrilled as yourself —have a Camel! For no other friend is so cheerful, so resting between acts as Camel. Camel adds its own romantic glamour, to the brightness of mem orable occasions. No other cigarette ever made **—and kept —so many friends. Camels never tire your^taste no matter how literally or zest fully you smoke them. Camels never leave a cigaretty after-taste. All the desire to please, all the skill to serve of the largest tobacco organi zation in the world, goes into this one cigarette. So when you leave the theatre pleased and inspired for greater things, when you see life’s problems and their solutions clearer-—lift the flame and taste the metfowe&t smoke that ever came from a cigarette. Have a Camel! y /x /\ ——jg sj, e Blowing Soap Bubbles? ' IvV j/i(4[s jpociEL /) w 1 “Hreakdowi*.” (letting To* Common W a terbwry 1 I.emocra t. _ “Nervous. breakdowns,” Sir Wil liam Dennett announces in Engl.imi, ere iijcreasijig greatly.. Thirty y. aiw ago, lift says, there was no such tniu* recognised by the' medical prefix ion or the publU*. Now the uuiuber of eases is astonishing. There is the same sifttation in ihi* country, If anything, it is n ore worse here. Oho hears talk nowadays of frjeuds and acquaintances , .-of fering from ‘nervous bi-enkdov as*’ just 'as commonly as one, heard of appendicitis eases when that,: <li- oae was in its Wyda.v, The terms us. d ‘is' sometimes a euphemfsiH to. cover a downright uttnek of insanity. |Vital ly 't signifies a ease of combined physical weakness and disnrd. red nerves, mating the >v ictim • unable to work effectively and a Uunhoi to himself and others. ; What is thr ciiiseV- Apparently IflßlllE rXf j r giBSfHK IBHilh m Hyle fiHP' *mJ\ mHI n|fi mMm Our highest wish, if you do not yet know Camel quality, is that you try them. We invite you to compare Camels witly any cigarette made at any price . R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. <», . \ , the high speed of living. Too much activity of body and mind. Covering too nmfli ground. Not necessarily too much exertion —too much exhaustion of energy. And no doubt physical causes play a big part, particularly diet. Possibly half the breakdown eases could be traced to digestive dis orders. If there i« one remedy, it is sim pler living. This does not mean necessarily retiring from the world or ceasing to do what the world does. It is not so much a (piesHoii of more poise. The top .is mok steady when whirling most ruitidly,'That is it good ejtnibple bf pblse. ' People live too emotionally, living in their feelings, letting' themselves be hatded this way and that, when Un-y might keep calm minds fn tlie tnidst of artio»i. . like the steady driver tit the wheel of a speeding .car. The man iu “calm control of hia' i! own mils! “ and spirit dovsh't break ; down. Aiml ftiinpfc, plain, nourishing ► food, aduptcxl to the eater's f real i needs, helps immeistit'ly by freeing him from 4hc internal toxins which destroy mental poise and power. So(ne years ago an old- fellbw was appointed pest master of ths mnall village of Kola Chuck v. A number of woekd imssed, and the Nola Chuck inns a lift rttelr friends began to cmn plain about the mails. Apd no won der. The |Htat master, il seemed, had out no mail since his entrance into office. V \ | An inspector, iuveatigaking the mht ter. to the hundred or more dusty letters that the postmaster had kept by hint, ami said strtnly, *‘Wiiy on earth, sir, didn'L you let these gtfT’ *T avu» wailing," said the old man, ' "till tlie bag got full. .4 * Results Fully Justify the Adoption of Prohibiting! r Washington, Oct. 30. — UP)—“Pro hibition has already yielded results - which fully justify its adoption.” This is the flat, statement of the administrative committee of the Fed eral Council of Churches after con sidering its policy on the subject in j the light of the recent report on the prohibition situation proposed by its ’ research department. There is nothing in the report, the administrative eomrilittee says, “to justify modification of the stand of tlie churches for prohibition.” The council renews <tn the state ment its pledge of unequivocal sup port of national prohibition. Prohi bition is tlie deliberately and perma nently established policy of tbe coun try. it declares, adding, “the liquor traffic and the saloon must not come back again.” ‘‘The churches must set themselves with new purpose to see'that prohibi tion is enforced by law and sustained by the national conscience,” it says. The statement urges the friends of prohibition in other countries not to be deceived by various attempts to interpret the research report as a confession of failure or even discour agement, and calls the churches to undertake a new moral crusade to strengthen the hands of those who are responsible for prohibition en forcement. It asks “voluntairy com pliance with tbe law in the interests of orderly government.” At apjieals for a "new measure of fairmhutedness and goodwill on the part of all in connection with this vitally import ant issue, in order that the outcome of the great moral effort may be de termined by reason rather than by prejudice and self-interest-’ In concluding it expresses hope) confidence that the report, “culling attention as it does to the real dang- j ers with Which we, are confronted, I will stir tlie churches to a renewed sense of their responsibility not only for tlie enforcement of tbe prohibition law but ako for rallying the con science of the nation to its support.” The statement in full follows: “In view of the widespread inter est attracted by tlie report of the re search department of die Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America and the prohibition situation, and of the serious misunderstandings which have arisen in connection with that report, die administrative- Com mittee of the Federal Coudoil. com posed of representatives of the church bodies which are members of the council has authorized the following statement of its conviction as to prin ciple and policy. “First of all, tho committee would emphasize its unequivocal support of national prohibition, as expressed in many public utterances and reaffirmed by the quadrennial session of die whole council in Atlanta last Decem ber. We declare our strong convic tion that the policy of prohibition is tin- deliberately and permanently es tablished policy of this nation, that this-policy has not failed, but oh the contrary has already yielded results' which fully justify its adoption, diat the liquor traffic and the saloon must not corn's back again, and that the churches must set themselves with new purpose to see that prohibition is enforced by law and sustained by tbe national conscience. “The statement adopted by the Fed eral Council in December, 1924. a stbe authoritative expression of its atti tude* toward the prohibition amend ment, declares that ‘the effect upon tiie physical, economic, social and moral life of the nation of the extra ordinary . effort of society to protect itself from the liquor traffic has been so beneficial that it. is now generally agreed dial the law wilt stand, based as it is upon flic unassailable pur pose to promote the general welfare.’ - Tlie present-day duty of tlie moral citizenship of the nation we believe to be: "'l. To magnify the value of the principles of total abstimince and the obligation upon tlie law-abiding citi zens to practice the same; “ ’2. To make unmistakably clear so both the lawless sellers and the lawless buyers of intoxicants that the liquor traffic has been permanently outlawed in tlie United States as the enemy of soeioty; “ '8- To urge local, state and fed eral governments to co-operate with increased vigor- against the present organized resistance to the prohibition • law until as adequate enforcement of that law Ims been secured as of any other social legislation.’ “Tin- administrative committee has seen nothing in the report, of the re search department to justify any mod ification whatever of tho position thus taken by tlie council on the prohibi tion issue. The policy of national prohibition, as the report shows, was adopted by the American people by the overwhelming votes of their elect ed legislative assemblies. This pol icy lias been reaffirmed by increasing majorities wherever it has been chal lenged. ALU RECORDS OF SALE BROKEN AT NEW YORK Stock Market Does Greatest Business in History for Single Day. New York. Nnv. 10.—Tlie bottom apparently dropped out. of the stock market today and prices collapsed five to 2i points in tlie_birgcst day's trad ing in tin- history of the New York stock exchange. Total sales were calculated by As sociated I’ress tnbirlnturs at 3.340,00(1 shares, or 539,000 above the previous 1925 record established on November 4th. Today’s total also eomimres with 3.072,000 on December 21, 191(1, following the “leak” on President Wilson's peace note to Germany and with the previous record for ail time of 3.270.000 shaves on April '3O/' 101(1, just before the "Northern Pacific pan ic.” Today's decline came with dramatic suddenness after a succession of twen ty “2,000,000 share days” of almost steadily rising priced. . It' was started by professional short speculators who PAGE NINE “We would remind those othe'rwifrfj good citizens, who by their peraogaH example and public utterances artN] lending countenance to those who tJo2] late their country’s laws, of the re%>'J| sons which led to the adoption of that'] 18th amendment. It rests upon three] fundamental considerations : first, the A belief that in dealing with gigantic social evils like disease or crime in-|l dividual liberty must be surrendmflH in the interest of effective social con- 1 frol; second, the belief that the li- « quor traffic is such an evil—a conviek'3 •tiou which is gaining strength all over I the world and which has recently,] found official -expression in the re- j port of the special commission on J drink of the Universal Christian con-j ference on life and work at Stocfcnfl holm: third, the experience gained qrifl sfltutes which has led the advocates 1 of temperance to conclude that only J a generation of experiment wihch sub-] drastic federal action could briSKS about the eradication of the evils they! were fighting. Prohibition was not J a policy adopted hastily or without due consideration and -it is not to"! be set aside merely because great dis- 4 Acuity or even temporary reverses are 1 encountered in carrying it out. I "The report makes clear the re- I markable social gains which followed ! upon the adoption of a lowering of the death rate from al-1 eoliolie disease, a remarkable lessen*;! ing of dependency due to alcoholism, ] a great reduction in drunkenness, and 1 other results of a socially desirable! sort. It also calls attention to the ! part undoubtedly played by prohibit! timi in improving busincs and econ- j omic conditions, and, above all, points J out the indisputable advantage gained | by the abolition of tlie saloon. At J j tin- same time, the report reminds us 1 j that national prohibition has not yet I been given a fair opportunity to vin-.l I dicate it sfull value to the physie*fcl| economic, social and moral life of the j nation, and calls attention to serioujyl dangers to which it is at present ex- 1 posed. I “Tlie Federal Council gratefully I recognizes the splendid service which 1 lias been rendered by the agencies! especially authorized by the chure&eS 1 which for many decades have labored! persistently and effective to seepfe! the adoption and tlie maintenance of I prohibition. The council I active co-operation with all aggraHH which are ready to make a sustaittfeeb! and constructive effort to uphold the ] prohibition regime in order may tie a conclusive demonstration of I its merit as a national policy. It I urges the friends of prohibition in J other countries not to be deceived by 1 the attempts which have been made] by opponents of profiibition to terpret the report as a confession of J failure or even of discouragement on! tlie part of the federal council, or of I ■ its constituent church bodies. - I * ’llie Federal Council calls upon the ! ■ churches to undertake a renewed moral I crusade to,. tsrengthen the (lands -of:! those who are responsible for pro-1 - liibition enforcement and in partfoiM lar to give a greater measure of moral | support to the newly reorganized ac-1 tivities of tb(o federal government. I It urges upon all citizens wftq be-i iieve in prohibition the necessity of I supporting tlie law by an irresistible I volume of public opinion. Os those I "ho may be out of sympathy with J prohibition as a social measure or I who question the wisdom of tlie pupa titular method by which it was adopt-a ed. it asks voluntary compliance with I tlie law in the interest of orderly gov- J eminent and in order that the poliell ii represents may he adequately tried- I Ii appeals for a new measure of fair-9 mindcdnes.s and goodwill on the parti of all ip connection with this vitally ! important issue in order that the out- I come of the great moral effort may | he determined by reason rather than I by prejudice and self-interest. I “Especially does the Federal Coun- 1 cil urge upon the churches the ueces-l sity for a more adequate program of I education on the moral issues involved] iu I he. liquor traffic. We strongly I emphasize lb e need for a far greater I attention to this problem in tba! church's program of religious eduea*! tion. 11l the last analysis, law de-1 pends for its support upon the pub-1 lie opinion which sustains it and the ] conscience of those who live under! it. There can be no greater mistake I th an to supis.se tiiat legislation can! relieve us of tlie necessity of train- | -ing our youth in habits of temperate] living, self-control and the practice of | Christian citizenship. To foster such I habits and to cultivate such prac- I tice is the special and iieculiar re-9 spossibility of the church, (o be ig- ] nornl only at the peril of the nation. 1 “It; is our hope and confidence that. | (lie report of the research department] on the prohibition situation, calling I attention as it does to the real dang- J ers with which we are confronted,'] will stir (ho churches to a n-ne werp] sense of (heir responsibility, not ouly l for the enforcement of the prohibition 1 law. hut for rallying the conscience* I of the nation to its support,” jw] apparently acted on the theory that] i the raising of the Boston federal re- I sem- rediscount rate forecast an early ] > increase by the New York institution! and signalled tlie approaching end of J i "Hie bull market” which has con-] : tilpied, with few interruptions for 1 -about two years. In many quarters, ] however, the drastic shakeout was re- 1 garded as mi overdue correslion of I a weakened technical condition arm*'! ing out of recent speculative excesses'] 1 in a number of mol or and high priced 1 i industrial stocks. I j Saving. I , -finks had succeeded In gettingbilU-] I self into a peck of trouble, and hlttij | friends gathered arciuud to con-! > sole utid counsel. SBSiM I “But why on eurth did you do such J . a tiling?” usktd one. I “Well.” replied .leaks, f‘ l had MM • alibi that needed using.” ! J Eight hundred tons'of otie-dolJatj!i3 [ hills were put into ciaulatfou ,**3S i year by the gortnuneu*. " J
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1925, edition 1
9
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