Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Jan. 23, 1926, edition 1 / Page 3
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Saturday, January 2i, 1926 Is Now' Running in yv The Concord Daily jg Klm | W )f course you are reading % $ _ r Free Free Free ONE 35c BOTTLE OF GLYCA PYNA To each of the first 72 persons who present this coupon at our Store Monday Morning, January 25th. \ This Remedy is the famous Creosote Cough 'Preparation for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Bronchitis, etc. , , f ' , BRING THIS COUPON—PAY Np MONEY Cabarrus Drug Company j ***<***«***********«***««ololololMto***«**jMolo«M*o«|M(Mfl*M* Exactly Like Cut —Beautiful 10-Piece Dining Suits at a Price You Can Afford ... • Tomlinson Quality. Genuine Walnut. Duco Finish. See this Suit in our Window, rice Reasonable. Terms Easy. ' Concord Furniture Co. The Reliable Furniture Store IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO —SPRING— . ' New Felts and Velours in Pastel I I Ws4 shades are the last word of Spring’s newest note— ors. all the smart new Gig- Fisher’s | lOOOOOOOOOOOOOQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOr 1 JIBS W TRIBUNE nr not W GET RESITS THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Two-Sport Star ■^l Presenting Charlie Rogers, star luarter and half-mile runner of the University of Pennsylvania. He’s expected to bring In many points foi the Red and Blue during the coming track season. Rogers Is also a stay football player, being one of the best backs Peaa baa bad in a long while The China Grove Mill. Salisbury Post. It did not take tho China Grove Mill long to get successfully under way. As we recall the mill has been in operation only a year or two. yet the directors Tuesday voted to double the capacity of the plant. The stockholders of this mill are mostly local people, many from the county contributing to the sum total of the rapital. The success which has come to the mills ought, to en courage others of like nature. It shows how a community may co operate to the common good. The success of the China mill is running along with the Ro wan. a manufacturing plant financed and built in like manner by local capital in the large, yet all under the eye of a well established and eminently successful textile manu facturer, Mr. A. O. I.ineberger. In the Rowan mill the local man agement has developed a very suc cessful leadership in Mr . Davis, while the China Grove mills find a similar leadership under Mr. Rut ledge. a capable man of ouusiderable experience under the Cannons, of Concord nnd Kannapolis. Delighted with the splendid suc cesses of these two mills, each of " 'Which Th comparatively new, ought to encourage the people of the conn- ■ ty to stffl further pool their invest ments in local industries that will not only make money for them, but build up pay rolls for the community and thus further enrich our good county industrially. There are quite enough dollars in the county to build manufacturing plants which should prove equally as successful as these two here discuss ed. If we may be excused for suylng it here, we have looked too much to some failures made and not enough to our local successes and the pos sibilities of further successes. Forget the failures and establish other suc cesses. EMBARRASSING MOMENTS. New York Mirror. Saturday afternoon I went into the barber’s shop to get a trim. When the barber was through I looked to see the back and noticed that it did not look as neat as usual. I said, “You didn’t clip it close enough, it looks kind of dark.” The barber re plied jestingly, “Certainly, I’ll fix ■ that for you, but it will cost you an other quarter.” He got a towel and I soap and washed my neck. I tried to explain that it was the dark of my ’ coat but the other customers enjoy ed my embarrassment. Being very interested in my work I didn’t notice who walked into the office. When I finished adding the columns, I looked up to see one of the salesmen standing beside my desk. Becoming conscious of an odor of cheap perfume, I asked if he had re cently entered a cheap store. To my embarrassment I saw my boss standing behind me, and he informed me icily that he had come from the barber. Simmons and the Tax Bill. Charlotte Observer. The Observer has been keeping Seen ator Simmons’ activities in the mat ter of tax reduction in mind, pending final fate of the measure at the hands of Secretary Mellon, for. the ulti mate sharp in which the bill ie enacted into law depends to a large extent upon his dictation. It is neverthe less true, as editorially suggested by The Raleigh Times, that the busi ness of felicitating Senator Sim mons “on his success in making the National Administration split the dif ference with him on the tax bill,” may be regarded the order of the day. 1 Simmons “sat tight, and forced the j Administration’s tax leaders to come Ito him,” and against that there can jbe entered ho denial. It is a further J characteristic of Senator Simmons, as I claimed by The Times, that “few men in the history of the country have lever able to sit tighter than he .jean.” He is as cool as Coolidge and hia patience Is marvelous. But Sec retary £|ellon‘ balks at the size of the cut that jhas been agreed upon in the non-partisan bill, and is holding that point under advisement. If Senator Simmons can,handle Mellon with the ease he handled. the Administration leaders In the Senate, the people may ultimately receive approximately the degree of relief that has been indi cated for them. INTRODUCING THE SENATE’S MOST “SURGING” INSURGENT : (BY GEORGE BRITT) NEA Service Writer Washington, Junu 28.—The insur gent of insurgents here is no farmer labor radical from the middle west, but a son of the conservative old South. Senator Coleman 1,. Hlease, of South Carolina. For nearly forty years he has been mostly "agin the government,” play ing a lone wolf game, capitalizing dis contents. Probably no other member of the Senate has been subjected to such slashing and voluminous criticism as was Blease during his two terms as governor, from 1911 to 1915. Yet for every South Carolinian who thiiaks him'the fteelzebub of demagogues there is another who phrases his confidence by saying, "I’d vote for Coley if I saw him steal a sheep.” Typical of the man is the state ment in his recent maiden speech in the Senate: “I am proud of the fact that I am the only man from a southern state who is against this league court. I wish every senator would vote for it and let me be the only man to vote against it.” Cole Blease in the Senate, howev er, has been so far a man of differ ent technique from Cole Blease in the Governor’s chair. In the old days when he was scandalizing the nation by his qualified defense of lynchicgs and by his wholesale pardoning of convicts, he was an epitome of vio lence. He stamped and bellowed, call* ed his enemies “guttersnipes” and of fered to “shoot out” controversies with them. • )' | His campaign for the Senate a year ago was something new. His 1 two opponents in the Democratic pri mary were having a hammer and ' tongs fight. Blease campaigned mild ‘ ly and stepped in. ' Blease already is one of the “main 1 attractions” of the present Senate, but i Auto Rudely Break ß Baby's Sleep j m \ - \ ] 9k I j c t |H . jrga mW is # 9 V’v. / 1 , ■ 1— 1 C I It wan a rather rude awakening for George M. Peck Jr., aged S. of San ] Diego, when hi* father’s automobile plunged Into the Peck home. The |, » car’s drive shaft broke as Mr. and Mrs. Peck Teached the top of a hill . i » nearbjr. The machine, after tearing Out a corner timber of the house, j II stopped astraddle of the baby’s tied. But George Jr. was unhurt. j l —" 1 j 1 •01 PEHIT K ILK GET RESULTS v , ' ;c when visitors asit to have the fire-eat- jj er pointed out to them, they usually l are surprised. They behold a slender, j alert, quiet figure, usually wearing S gray clothes which hang with a "neat j as a pin” stiffness. His once flowing mustache is I trimmed close, his gray hair is ] brushed to an upstanding pompadour | nnd his face is extremely ruddy. His I ecentricity is an enormous black felt hat. Few of the new senators have been less obtrusive than he, but his recent vitriolic attack on foreign dip- j iomats indicates that this is the “quiet J before the storm” and that he may ! soon resume his dramatic swash-buck- § ling methods.' ’His platform is definite and for the i most part “anti." He was an anti- “2 Wilson, anti-war. anti-league Demo crat. He is anti-Volstead, although i? he announces he will vote for yrohi- C > bition as his constituents desire. He S] is anti-Mellon on tax reduction. t. Wants Big Army. > 1 On the other hand he .is for an ? | army and navy that can lick the 2 world. He is for farm relief and for > a requirement that industrial em- f, ployes must have 00 days notice or C 1 pay before they can be laid off from ]ll work. He is for a national Jim Crow tj i law. Blease is considered one of the ab- ,1 1 lest criminal lawyers in the south j i and one of the readiest stump speak- 1 1 1 ers. i ] i He knows more cotton mill workers 1 , personally than any living man, and , the masses of the people in South Carolina believe that they have in him at last no aristocrat but one of ] themselves in power. He is the | chaiqpion “jiner” and lodge member of the Senate. j One' accomplishment which seems 1 curious in this Jeffersonian individ- , ualist was putting through an act i abolishing the sale of cigarette and | cigarette papers ,in South Carolina. < | EXTRA VOTES 1 j For California Tours Contestants on 8 THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY | ! WE WILE RUN AS OUR SPECIAL Easel Photograph Frames $1.15 Special [ IN ALL SIZES TO FIT ANY PHOTOGRAPH | | Regular Prices $1.50 to $2.25 i 500 Votes will be given instead of the regular 100 votes iji | for .each SI.OO purchase of these frames. ! r j WATCH FOR OUR SPECIALS EACH WEEK / \ KIDD-FRIX | Music and Stationery Co. Inc* H I Phone 76 58 S. Union St. Concord, N. C. uoeoooocoooooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo BaaxEgEßCKmagai Htgqazg,ss=3sssagß^^ 5 Tickets For 1 During SPECIAL ALUMINUM SALE Three Days Only For Every SI.OO Purchase of Aluminum Ware We Will Give r 500 Tickets 11 Ritchie Hardware Co. I YOUR HARDWARE STORE PIJONE 117 ■■ ■j,!* «■!■■■ h! jjita.a.inSS TU. * —— ■'■■HkP THE UNIVERSAL CAR The All Steel Body Cars i All vibration has been eliminated by an added im- 8 ]! provement to the new improved Ford. | Ride in one and feel the difference. j Buy a FORD and SAVE the difference. Let one of our salesmen show you. REID MOTOR CO. CONCORD’S FORD DEALER i Corbin and Church Streets Phone 220 8 B Ruth-Kesler Shoe Store 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 i eNHorEL |- EXTRA VOTES PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Jan. 23, 1926, edition 1
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