PAGE FOUR 4 Ilie Concord Daily Tribune Hr - X B. SHERRILL Editor and Publisher s I W. M. SHERRILL, Aaeociat* Editor MEMBER OF THE I1 ASSOCTAOTED PRESS 2, The Aawdbted FYes* is exclusively . SB titled to the use for republication of £ 00 news credited to it or not otherwise 5 credited in this paper and also the lo | sal news published herein. I All rights of republication of spee are. alas reserved. ? . Special Representative jj t FROST. LAND 18 k KOHN 225 Fifth Avenue. New York i Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago I 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta 11 ■ »'" '■ —- 1 Entered as second class mail matter ” i at the postnffiee at Concord, N. C., un ■ der the Act of March 3, 1879. |, SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City ol'Concord by Carrier: *ilo s Three Months 150 -!One Month . .50 £ Outside of the Stair the. Subscription ■5 5 Is the Same as in the City IT Opt of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre- One Year > }5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months , 1.25 Leas Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month | All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance j ; RAILROAD SCHKDI'IJJ S ; In Effect Jan. 30, 1926. Northbound I No. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M. 1 No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M. s No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. M. No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. No. SO To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:45 P. M No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. Nol 29 To Birmingham 2:35 A. M. N«. .31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. ; No.' 33 To New Orleans 8:15 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:00 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 8:37 P. M Jfo. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M. ' No; 87 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. 1 ( Train No. 84 trill stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. me ; Train No. 37 will stop here to dis ehirgepassengers coming from be yond Washington. I All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound. H Bible Thoaitbta memorised, will pror« e 111 firimlnA heritage in after yean jgj NEED OF DAILY PRAYER:— Keep back thy servant also from pre- I Humpfious sins: let them not have dominion over me; then shall I be up right, and I shall be innocent from the great transgression. DfP PRESIDENT USE THE GAG V r RULE? President Coolidge often has been painted as a man of too much indif ference to adopt usually usenate| committee forced its publication. ; . (5) That « twWei'fu: sugar :<>bby, •betted by Senutor Smoot of l’tab, sought hi every- way to force Com- \ missioners Culbettsou, Smoot or Cos tJgau to alter their recommendations fop- attai ertng Use .s»ga rt a riff, ami tby |W'fl : te Hoiisd up tJommis- Siouer Gfassie iu keeping the rommis siou deadlocked nu* delaying the sug ar report. Not until Congress passed U special act. could Mr. (.lassie, whose family was ttuauciall.v interested iu cane sugar, be stopped fNiu voting on the sugar case and prevent ,' CONCORD HAS NO RECREATION PROGRAM. ! Our attention has just beep called [ I to statistics carried in The Salisbury Post showing the amount of money I appropriated in some North Carolina [i cities for parks and recreation. We j 1 regretted we did not see the name of . Concord in the list. The Post explains that “Salisbury ‘ has had a Parks and Recreation Com mission for one yjrnr. An appropria tion of $4,000.00 was made for the work and it has yielded results, which have already been reported to the public." Other cities are doing the same sort of thing. The expenditure for this purpose is shown by the following list of cities: City Annually Asheville City Recreation —512,000 Burlington City Recreation 2,000 Durham City Recreation 7.500 Fayetteville City Recreation 3,600 Hamlet City Recreation 2.500 Gastoiffa City Recreation 5.000 Greensboro City Recreation— 13.500 Goldsboro City Recreation 4.000 Winston-Salem City Rec 5,50(1 Lexington City Recreation 3,000 The programs in Winston-Salem and Greensboro are in co-operation with the school system. Practically the only recreation pro gram offered in Concord is furnished by the Y. M. C. A., which is support- j ed by public subscriptions. The City of Concord gives uothiug to this im portant work among the young peo ple. For several years members of local Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs as well as other interested individuals have made an effort to secure a city play ground. but the movement has devel oped nothing, primarily, the public understands, because the city has no appropriation to give to this work. We should make a park and play ground the next big community proj ect iu Concord. We can put it over if we try. WISE CRACKS They say tbe clothing of the fash ionable girl this season will weight 15 ounces. Yes—apothecary's weights. —Fayetteville Observer. Ararat broadcasting—The good ship Ark landed here today. All hands safe.”—Arkansas Democrat. Strangely enough, a “sugar papa" is not always a “sweetie."—Durham Sun. Don't worry. Go ahead and drive. Anything you do will be a violation of some traffic rule.—Nashville Ban ner. Accepting the Earl Carroll version, we'll have- to change t'.ie old combina tion to wine, women and tub.—Tam pa Tribune. A curious contemporary wants to know how a woman a con cealed weapon. easy. She keeps her ,lips closed,* with some dif ficulty, perhaps-—Greensboro Record. £ Fish Flappers. (By International News Service) Morehead City, N. C., dune 4.—Last summer's flappers are held responsible for an unruly generation of fish in the local harbor this year by More head City boatmen. Their craving for paint is some thing terrible, the boatmen say. but their way of going about getting it is the thing that is proving most ob jectionable. Since the spring's finny debutantes have appeared, there : s no leaving a bucket of paint or a freshly painted deck unguarded without some uncon volitional fish flapper utiliaing them as make-up material, say the old timers. who attribute-it all to the fish seeing too much of the 15125 flappers. M. Doumergue is first Fro tPMant Frecddent of the present French Republic. His Latest Talk' jL v* ii ■ ? Here is o) "j Sesqui Opens ■i ■ H c 1 I < ■ n * . ' > Mrs. W. Freedland Kendrick. , wife of Mayor Kendrick of Philadelphia, threw the switch that illuminated the giant Liberty Bell that marked tha opening of the Sesqui-Cea tennial Exposition. DI KE COMMENCEMENT IS TO START SUNDAY Rev. Clia.s. L (bedell to Deliver Ser mon.—Address by Senutor Robin sun. Durham. June 2.—Duke university its making elaborate preparations, for its 74th annual commencement, to be gin on Sunday evening. itli the*bac ealaurente address by Rev. Charles L. Gnodell, secretary of commission on evangelism- and life service for the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America. New York city, and to continue through Wednesday with the commencement address by United States Senator Joseph Taylor Robin son. of Arkansas. Well over 1,000 alumni are. return ing for the commencement exorcises ' and to partake in the annual alumni dinner and parade. Twelve classes are to hold reunions with promise of large representat'on from each. Ow ing to the increased interest in their alma mater at this time arising from Duke’s gigantic development program and with an unusually attractive pro gram. alumni graduates and former students are planning to return iu un precedented numbers. Diplomas will be presented to 100 seniors who have completed work leading to bachelor of arts degrees. Additional degrees will Is* awarded to 30 or more graduate students. No little interest is centered around commencement this year at Duke jyii versity in that some description of plans for the erection of a unit of 40 stone buildings on the University’s new 5,000-acre campus near Durham will b" made known. The new unit to cost over $20,000,000 will be lo cal ed rn a ridge a u» ; le from the present campus and will be a master pieo of architectural creation, and construction genius, those who have gone over the plans declare. Uoiymencement visitors at Duke will also see in the process of con struction 11 new buildings which are to form a part of the new quadrangle for the future co-ordinate college for women. These buildings are be ing rapddy rushed to completion for occupancy next fall and winter. THINK LAST CHAPTER Ifc WRITTEN IN ALLEN CASE | Inscription on Tonili of Floyd ami Claude Changed. (By International News Service) Danville. Va., June s.—Probably tlie final chapter has been written in tile blood-smeared history of tile fam ous Carroll clan, and the 'lealiiig in fluence of time has ended forever the intermittent spurts of hatred which have flared up in years gone by to turn the eyes of a nation on Carroll county’s feudists. Reports drifting in from the moun tainous parts of Carroll county tell that the feud is all over. They tell, these stories, also of the j advent of a stranger into the hills > a few days ago. Tbia stranger, who !told no one his name —and no one asked—made his way to Ward's Gap. There, among the lonesome pines that • stand silhouetted against the sky and I forbidding craigs, lie found an unpre- I teutious little bnriul ground where stood one of the strangest monuments in the world. The stone marker stood over * all that was mortal of Floyd and Claude Alien, who went to their death iu the electric chair in expiation of their part in the old court house shooting of thirteen years ago. Carved on ' the monument were the words: "Sacred to the memory of Claude Allen and his father, who were ju dicially mtudored in the Virginia pen itentiary March 28, 1913. by order of 1 Iln> Governor-of Virginia over, the I protest of, 160,000 i citizens of the Sidle of Virginia. Erected by a friend und a citizen of Virginia." '■ For a long time the mysterious stranger Stood looking at the sinister inscription. Then, turning, away.’iie ■ hpav >' hag from acr.wK his ■ sNauidrip. and took out a hammer arid; p h|M- Carefully he chipped »**y Ilf bolts with which the metal fHE CONCOftfc DAILY TRIBUNE ® BROKEN HEARTS of hollywoodTX s BY EDWARD CLARK Copyrighted by Warner Bros. Plctnrca, Inc. “BROKEN HEARTS OF HOLLYWOOD” with Louise Dresser la • Warner picturlntion of thla novel. S7KOPSIS Traveling alone on the Los An geles Limited is Betsy Ann Ter williger. a girl of surpassing beauty. Hal Chutney, a handsome young man, boards the train in towa. Seatmates, and mutually of. traded, each learns that the other is on the same mission —hound for Hollywood, as prize winner of a newspaper contest, to get a movie tryout. Greatly thrilled, they ar rive in Los Angeles and are met by a chauffeur from the Amalgamated Studios. CHAPTER lll—(Continued) The exaggerated and stereotyped emotional reactions that are useful In the registration of screen pan tomime, bye the bye, become a very real part in the lives of the great milling fringe of studio satellites; the reality of their struggle for existence becomes governed by the artificiality of the standardized dramatic situations they read, eat, see. breathe. And that was why this chauffeur suddenly unbent a little now, In a superior way, to ward Hal and Betsy, who Immedi ately proceeded to mistake the change in his attitude for deference to Hal’s commanding importance. Thereafter, Betsy edged closer to Hal, while he mellowed like a to mato on a windowsill in the sun. “■Well.” the chaufTeur ex gained as though he were a King address ing a beggar, "it’s too late for you to go to the Studio today, so I was instructed to help you find a board ing place convenient to the studio.” “We made up to live at the same boarding house,” said Hal Inno cently, "so, will you take us to 1 one where both actors and actress ns live?" The chauffeur’s chuckle and smirk at this was genuine, and did •4 i e. > M frtr “ It’s funny, girht, but you remind me of someone—l can't place.” not need the Inspiration of his favorite actor. He leered at Hal: “You’re a fast worker, kid—put In your time on the train to good advantage, didn’t you?” Which did not mean a thing to either Betsy or Hal, who began to look out the window now, realizing with a thrilling start that they were swimming -filong in the stream of traffic through the heart of Los Angeles. Things seemed all right again. The crusty arrival had been br9ken through and cour age was beginning to seep back Into their minds, although there was no stopping the fast beating of their hearts or the nervous mois ture la the palms of their hands. It was all so like a fairy tale! Los Angeles! W’ide streets and attrac tive shops. Bright crowds and white sunlight. Trolleys like the Russian cannon at Balaklava—to the right, left, in front and behind! Over all the leisurely spirit of the enervating semi-tropics that even Booster Clubs cannot harangue out of the 11mos and veins of white meu. “Keep your eyes on the street aldowalks and see It we can recog nize anyone of the screen* actors In the crowds,” Betsy whispered to HaL But the chaufTeur overheard, and retorted slightingly: “Actors whose mugs era well known enough for yos to recognlz® ain’t got no time to be taking the air downtown here. Besides, who ever heard of a actor walkin’ when he could stand still and be rub bered at just as well?" “Do—do you think—we might see Mary Plckford along here?” waked Betsy timidly. •Say, dldja ever see or bear of the Pope window-shopping on Main street In Rome?” “But—but —can’t one ever see Mary Plckford here, in real life?" “Well, If you’re dead anxious to pimple marker of tile suiue size from tlie bug anil placed it on the rnouu- • meet where the other hud been. The new marker read: "In memory of Floyd and Claude Allen. Born 1857. ifotu 1889. Died . Mutch 28., 1913. Asleep] -i«v Jhsdii.'>‘' After his mission. ISc i silent stranger departed, as quittly . and mysteriously as be had appeared. No one knew where —nor bothered to ask. ’>■' Fof the understanding is among tlie. mountain folk that it was the work of Sidaa Allen and Wesley Edwards, I lamp her, you might try gottin’ a - job In a mob at the United Artists. - Only, out there none of the sglrAs 1 as much as turn their heads to : look when she passes, unless i they’re facing her. Now you take ■ me f’r Instance,” —the chauftadr - was warming Into positive loqua ■ ciousness because of the wgy these l two youngsters hung on his werds; t to them he had suddenly, appeared - In the light of all-knowing lmpor i tance. Therefore he maintained I his beet John Barrymore expres sion as he enlarged, “Why should I want to give Mary a tumble? Why, I knew her ’way back in the old days at the I. M. P. studios in 1 New York"—he had never been I east of the Sierras, this chauffeur, . but this Is what he had heard many . old actors say—"when she only got twenty-five dollars a week and had to sweep the floor besides. Yes sir, she was shure pretty in those ■ days, with her curls. When I seen , her playing with King Baggot 1 used to say to myself, ‘There’s a girl who’s prettier on the screen than off’n It and I advised the boss to tie her up.” They were bowling along broad residential boulevards now. "There’s where Monte Blue lives." With each new house the chauffeur pointed out; and connect ed with a familiar and famous name, Hal and Betsy sat a little closer, breathed a little faster. The lovely section known as Beverly Hills, explained the chauffeur, was the home of mogt of the elite of filmriom. Hal and Betsy, what with staring and gaping and marveling and dreaming hardly noticed the grad ual transition -from the flashy sweep of bizarre and palatial resi dents to more modest outskirts. Hut the chauffeur’s crisp explana tion brought them out of the trance into which their kaleido scopic experiences had plunged them. “Along here," he declared, slow ing dowij before a line of neat but unprctentlbus homes, “are sorao pretty good boarding hbuses for thb film people. And iGe kj-hda near the studio, where you’fh'bb^—ffr the next two months, at' Jeait, unless you’re more terrlblfl ‘than most of the hicks!” , They selected « .Souse, whldh they found to ha conducted Sjf a kindly Irish woman; yes. ahq h£d two single roqijis, Hal deperfded upon Betafs Inspection and lodg ment. and, on Jber word they en gaged. tlt o- rooms—thus, bringing thelr.imarters hunting search to an end gt its beginning. -Before the chauffeur drove away he warned them! - “Yotfr orders Is to report at the studio at nine sharp tomorrow morning," ■“We’ll' be there!” promised Hal loftily. “Have they picked out good parts tor us to play?” inquired Betsy earnestly. “Knockouts!” grinned the chauf feur. winking at the landlady. " .“Tell the manager that we will be on hand," said Hal importanlty, "and that we had a nice trip and are all ready for hard work. He’ll be glad to know.” "Oh, no doubt about It, 1 ' said th« chauffeur. “He’s only had about two hundred others Hhe you drift ing tu and out the. past six months since they started this fool pub licity stunt ofc' Personality and Popularity contests.” With that the chauffeur betook himself off lit a cloud of sarcastic dust. leaving two puzzled youngsters staring iyl each other and then Into the genia! landlady's tired eyes. "Pafcjio attention to bis likes; he’s one of those hardboiled studio fellows who thinks that being chauffeur to Chester Conklin puts 'em on a social footing with the Prince of Wales’ secretary." The woman’s tired eyes burned with an unwonted alertness as shs looked at Betsy closely, when they were walking Blowly Into tha bouse. "It's funny, girlie, but you re mind me of someone—l can't place. Someone very familiar—yet forth» life of me, I can’t remember who ’tis. Like some face I used to sea a lot—back a while. Any of your kin in pictures?" “No. I have no relatives. Mother died when I was a baby; father several years ago. I’ve been board ing since then, and working as a stenographer until I won this trip.” In the short hour remaining be fore supper. Betsy and Hal found Ulenty to occupy them In getting settled in their respective rooms. Then came that recurrent ordeal of the denizens of boarding houses; running, as newcomers, the gaunt let of introduction! and the store* of the othef boarders at tha first meal houh Mrs.' Pruem, the landlady, pre sented them to as motley ah array of porsonages aa they had ever seen, each one of whotn they war* to come to know better me the day* wont by. Perhaps a dozen mem and women of: nondescript 4td* but of distinctive types clattered to places around :the t*o tables in the broad, low-cellinpod dining rootou (To be continued.) - . -s.. trill,i* i«ii_aUuezmf who were, released ’ recently from the Slate lieiiitentinry, where they hail Heaved a,Jong sentence (pr their part in tile 1911! courthouse slaglitfr. Over there in the bills it is be >isv|d that the ! ;silent nigthml es (-banging t'-ie. iini-riiitiui|i' ;op‘‘ the Al len tdilib wag th* tworursotiefs' y»>4jr to thunk Governor ; Ifytri uud the State for their released r .. StribUng Rea* l«j»'Hfr Matylu (jßy-1 ntermitional ?iews Heryteq)• Hendersonville,; Jufie a.—Ytofng Strafing--Ibe Georgia-bozer, fHWeave, -Vv ■ ' ■ • • OVER SUNDAY TOURISTS “ .'" ' ~ r T sT y N fIS TVWS AS wsr\ 1 r V . AS SHE’LL GO. | x J , V- '£-* >c * " ]'"\ : 'V.' f f : 'V /: U.-., ; jj ..fe:&., Our Promises Do Not Flash in the Pan When we sell you anything that doesn’t stand up—that isn’t satisfactory—we’re the big losers. We have enough good business sense to know that we must live up to our promises. When we tell you that a Goodyear Tire at our price is the best buy on the market today, we mean it, and what’s more we can prove it. Just take a look up and down the streets at the cars in Concord or any other town—you will see more Goodyear Tires than any other kind. We are the biggest Tire dealers in the county. Drop in or phone us for our price on a Goodyear in your size. i| Yorke & Wadsworth Co. The Old Reliable Hardware Store Phone 30 siaaafi ~—■—at B * bin mountain (mining rginp today for New York, whom oh dun. 10th. in (Jl. Yankee studiuin, the will fight Paul Kerientach for the light-heavy weight championship of the world. . StribHhg'x departure will mar* the etose of two week* training in the chmp recently established by. Jack Dempsey, world’s heavyweight/ chafii- Itioii. jrt’- an) elevation of feet Above mea l level. \\> V*' The young Georgia fighter will have none