PAGE FOUR I THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Hlk?- J- B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher BP , f W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor ? MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the if 1 tree for republication of all news credited to it or not BPn'Wtperwise credited in this paper and also the local news B|H published herein. ' ' ’ i “ iSf ■ ri ehts of republication of special dispatches bere are also reserved. ' Special Representative ~ FROST, LANDIS & KOHN HBP* 225 Fifth Avenue, New York ] | " Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago p- 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta J Entered as second class mail matter at the |s>stoffice at Concord, N. C., under the Act of March 3, 1870. j 7*7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES the City of Concord by Carrier: jp Oflp Year SO.OO IpSgl, Months ______ , 3.00 m Three Months !_4 1.50 *SIP Month .50 k Outside of the State the Subscription is the same as in I the City I Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the 1 following prices will prevail: ; $5.00 IfwKat. Months' 2.50 Three Months' v, 1.25 I Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month £ All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBKRS v Look at the printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription exp'res Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address on their paper changed, please state in their communication both the old and new address. Communications must be accompanied by the true , MWfi and address of the writer in order to receive at ■' Jhutson. ~ The Tribune, besides receiving the Associated Press reports, receives also service of the International News Service, as weH as a number of other important special tortures. NO ARMS CONFERENCE POSSIBLE * . NOW. Great Britain has halted plans of the Cool | idge administration for an arms conference to affect only Japan, Great Britain and the Unit . ed States. The Geneva has been able to do pqtthing; and President Coolidge and Secretary Kellogg thought the time ripe for a sequel to the Harding-Hughes naval treaties. Japan was willing to attend and So was Great Britain for a time, hut conditions during the past sev eral months have changed so that the confer ence seems impossible at present. The Coolidge administration planned for a conference that would extend the 5-5-3 ratio to all naval categories. Great Britain wanted certain clauses that would have given Japan a larger navv than the United States, at the same time leaving Great Britain with the greatest water power in the world, g And then another new condition arose. Pre mier Mussolini stated that Italy was going to start a great naval program with an elaborate fleet of submarines. France also decided on more submarines. On top of this came the decision of Spain to spend $200,000,000 on a naval construction program. Japan wants the conference. At present the United States has not completed her part of tjie 5-5-3 program and the Japanese fear that sSGreat Britain continues to halt the conference, fesathe United States will complete the program Shaking it imperative for them to build craft they can't afford now. DR. POTEAT TO RESIGN. Dr. Poteat is going to resign in June as president of Wake Forest College—that is un less someone in the meantime starts another attack on him and leaves the impression that he is quitting under fire. Some time ago Dr. Poteat said when he reached the age of seventy he wanted to step out and let a younger and more vigorous man take up the active duties as president of Wake ... forest. He was ready to quit last year, many of his friends contended, but about that time some of the people who do not like his evolu tion views decided to get rid of him. They t. launched a campaign to oust, him, hoping to bring the thing to a head at the State Baptist Convention in Charlotte. Dr. Poteat then let it be known that he would not resign. He was tired, felt that . had given 'Wake Forest the better part of a capable and active life, yet he was not ' to step out so lohg as his actions were being k questioned. We predicted then and we repeat | the prediction that he will stay at Wake For i est just as long as he wants to. He has served | the college long, and well and the Baptists are A Dr. Poteat should be allowed to resign in peace. He has proved his strength time and jf time again and can do it again, but he doesn’t i want to. He wants to live the rest of his life | close to Wake Forest, to bp svire, but not as its active president. Hts cdntributions to the § college and the in State ett . title him to whatever he wants. K SOUTH WILL DECIDE. What is done at the next Democratic con- ! port Governor A1 Smith may determine the ■ fate of the movement at the next convention, If the Southern delegates go to the convention ■ determined to defeat Governor Smith there , probably will be no change in the law for un ; der the present system they feel that they can 1 prevent his nominations whereas with the ma jority rule they might not be so successful. If Governor Smith is not a candidate the rule may be changed but we doubt it. Promi nent men in the party are advocating the J change and the new system has its advantages, still the South likes to know that it holds some power, even though under the present system it cannot put over its candidate without help from some other section of the country. MIGHT TRY THE NEW" JERSEY WAY. i , In a single day recently 44 auto drivers in < New Jersey were deprived of license to drive an automobile because they were convicted of driving at the wheel while under the influence of liquor. We do not know how many were sentenced to jail in addition to having their license re voked, but we hope the total was 44. How ever, taking the license from a man is one way of helping a bad situation. The man who cares too little for human life to stay sober while driving an automobile has no business driving one. North Carolina could at least try the New Jersey system. Certainly .conditions could be no worse under it than they are at present when many persons seem to have no fear what ever for the law and its consequences. New Jersey officials who investigated the Hall-Mills murder case four years ago are up in arms as a result of charges by present of ficials that the first investigation was more or less of a farce. Persons questioned at the first inquiry were believed without much corrob oration, it is charged, and this manner of do ing things led to no solution to the mystery. There’s lots of mony in the family of Mrs. Hall who is now charged with the murder of her husband and his choir singer. Her coun sel and its mighty hard to get people to talk much when such a vast sum of money is avail able. Mrs. Hall and her kinspeople practical ly control business in the town where they live and people are afraid to talk, it is said. They had rather keep their jobs. WISE CRACKS. Two youngsters in an Arkansas town were fined for : throwing a can of pepper into the ventilating fan of a movie theater. At that, however, a lot of movies would I be better off for more pepper.-—Banner. Nashville, Tenn. ■ The trouble with most people who stop to make up i their minds is that they use concrete in the construction. —Times, Gadsden. Ala. 1 fn many homes no radio is needed. Either the hus band or the wife is in the air most of the time.—The Bee, Danville, Va. * Well, if you should even attempt to fly across the crossings the engine of the airship might go "dead” on you.—Constitution. Atlanta. Ga. Borrowing money is dangerous. You may have to l>ay it back—The Ledger, Lakeland. Fla. It appears that in moments of tension, women arc much more cool than men. Ip America before a woman ( shoots her husband she usually says, "One lump or . two?”—The Bee, Danville, Ya. OUTLAW THE {ASH. , Winston-Salem Journal. The best thing to do with the ehaingang sv stent-kin, ( North Carolina is to cut its head off, was the opinion of i Governor Bickett. lie did not think it ever would be ! possible to develop the system to the point where pris- i Oners Would bo treated decently. i The trial of the "whipping boss'' in Stanly County has i only served to attract aente attention to an evil that has been a blot upon the fair name of North Carolina i for years. And whether the. Stanly official on trial is | convicted or not of the specific charges preferred | against him, there is no question but that prisoners have I been cruelly treated. They have been whipped with a lash. , But until we do succeed in developing better pris- I ons than the ehaingaugs Judges could, if they would, i do much to safeguard prisoners against cruel treatment i at the hands of chaingnug su|>erjntendenta or guards. i If all Superior Court Judges in North Carolina would i do what Judge Oglesby did in Winston-Salem yester day, they would just about succeed in banishing cruelty ' from all of our ehaingangs. "The time has passed in North Carolina when cruel ty to convicts will be tolerated.” said Judge Oglesby in . Ids public charge to the Grand Jury. "Whipping con- | victs is an insult to the decent citizenship of North i Carolina.” he added, ami then served this notice on the i trail djury and all the assembled host of witnesses: 1 ! “I don't intend to sentence any man to any ehaingang t where he is beaten with a lash or anything else. If the superintendent or guard can't get service ont of his men without whipping them, then he is incompetent to be in charge of convic|%” That's the sort of doctrine that ought to be promul gated from every bench id North Carolina. It las the unqualified approval of the best public in the Commonwealth, jtfo Jbufct about that. Sfand by your guns, Judge. Good people everywhere are with you. The lash h as 1,0 P lace in modern prisons. , THINKS COTTON 18 BOUND TO GO UP. Gastonia Gazette. “Shut your eyes and believe in cotton; it is going higbee.” says J. S. Oliver, of New York, who was a re cent visitor in Gastonia. This man has been saying all along that cotton would be higher by Semtember than it is now. We io not know whether he knows much nbout it orj not. but at any rate b's observations are interesting to a community. Cotton is' America's chief money crop. Some may doubt its intrinsic value but the out side worid never, wiH. Jt is gold, he says, not silver, and gbld will never he denied. " The price of cotton is at times jammed too low. but the value remains intact. ' Continuing, Mr. Oliver says, ‘This country is richer than the rosearo droitms of an oriental potentate. Our calm, wise leaders say confidentially that we ire on the eye of another great commercial and industrial boom. H •» true, shall cotton, onr greatest single nat ional asset, lag behind'.' WeW-‘lt certainly won't !' “Allowing .Tor natural setbacks occasionally, we be lieyy cptlqntVwjll'inoro, np> ajeund ,20 ces>ts about the middle of AWSWSt. If the Stl pittite" Dta>legend/' hojtfc true, we are m tor 40 days, ram. Souffierfi thills should exercise the same foresight as foreign and New Eng land manufacturers; they are stocking up -with cheap American cottom Most everyone Is, convinced that cot- JtoK is Vntoetess; this is hut yne of the reasons (t is go .J . •• ; "V. IBE CONCdfeb DAILY fftIBUNE - GOVERNOR M LEAN NOW ON HIS VACATtop, Is \Visconsin^\Vo«ls.-_, wl j| ltaieigh, Aug. I.—Vacation tSjpr'foj the Governor does not- mean vacation time for newspaper men in jfjStfeh and they are having to work harder than ever to find news while Governor McLean is today travelling north ward to the big woods and lake coun try if northeastern Wisconsin, for a three weeks’ vacation. . He smiled broadly in keen anticipation whri( he told newspaper men good-bye at their last conference with him Saturday They all would have liked to accom pany him to the <"ool of the northern nights under the glow of the northern lights. “ tfbe camp to which he is going, near Lan-O-Lakes. almost on the Michi gan line, in the north-easterh corner of Wisconsin, is visited yearly by those who enjoy strenuous physical exercise, and Governor McLean said that fie is eagerly looking forward to the six hours a day spent in felling trees, rolling logs and clearing a road through the dense forest, which comprises part of the camp program. He hopes to reduce his waist line gey, eral inches and to part with ~ts or 20 pounds of excess weight as a result of the physical culture program. Af ter the hours ofJi envy-work recreation, the time will be slant in swimming, fishing and boating on the many beau tiful lakes in that district. The lakes country of Wisconsin Is not now to the Governor, who has vis ited it several times before, and each time he finds new enjoyment in the change of climate and the dry vigor ous atmosphere. He states that he finds it necessary to go this far away from home in order to relax and get •W. entirely, from public care*, . H& ehndteti. Angus W-. Mr., 4nd Margaret, accompany him. It will be their first trip to the big woods and lakes of the North Lake couutry. Mrs. McLean and Hector will spend their vacation some plqee nearer* home, just where not having yet been docid ed- , , . Gov. McLean has made arrange ments to keep in daily touch with his office here, so that when necessary, and matters are important enough to war rant it, he can give them hie personal attention. He is hoping, however, that this will not be necessary, as he Impes to F‘t away from official duties as much as possible. CHARLESTON GETS O.K. Krottt Dwciug Mastery ..Whjai ft's a Bit Ridiculous. (By International News Service.) New York. Aug. 4.—“ The Charles ton is an expression of animal spirits.” t«ys Adolph Newberger. 64- yegr-old dean of dancing teachers. "The young folks of this generation are high-spirited and want to hop. It is excellent exercise and city folk need it-” The Charleston was psycho-an alyzed by Newberger as follows: “It is innieent as a . newborn babe. "Wholesome Us the antics of a kitten. "Childish as skipping the rope. "Joyous as a dance around the Christmas tree. "Has less sex in it than a game of Isnidon Bridge. "It a bit ridiculous but makes the dancer look gay and happy.”. Census Takers Have Their Troubles. (By Interrffitional News Service) Asheville, Aug. 4.—R. B. Sizemore, city school census taker, has had his patience tried once too often. Sizemore had tried in vain on two occasions to obtain facts for his school report from the home of Sam King.' King evidently held a small opinion of the value of census takers. He and his wife refused to let Sizemore enter their home. The census taker had a warrant made out for King’s arrest. Magis trate T. F. Hunter heard the com paint and suspended judgment upon the payment of costs. But Sizemore declared he failed, even then to get the desired informa tion from King. It was from one of the witnesses at the hearing, he said, that he found out King's step daughter is of school age, and is to be included in the school population. To Jail Six Months For Contempt of Court. Chicago, Aug. 4.—td s )—County Judge Jarecki today sentenced four precinct judges and clerks of election to jail for six months for contempt of court. The charges were founded on false returns certified by the election officials at the April primary. Already 15l persons, clvefly judges and clerks have been indicted by a special grand jury as W result' of frauds in the primary in Cook coun ty. sss ' Prifiraide in rtailcfl th arjy ice-box you se you can b «y frigid , • F r i n mplete with cabinet at very low cost. v standard buick ca jffijjjg j 'I 3 ■ j| S.mthTcli Jy "| imi’L ■lP■■■■nil"! I '‘ v m * \ 2'*') i * NORTH CABOIJ-NA oysters Inspection ft the Beds Beinf Made ' by the State Board of Health. * Tribune Hnreau Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh, Aug. I.—ln order that North Carolina oysters may be safe for gastronomy, bacteriological in spection of all the oyster and clam beds in the state is being begun by the State board of health, assisted by J. Ij. Robertson, sanitary engi neer of the United States public health service, shellfish division, who is in Raleigh today on bis way to Morehead City and ’Wrightsville Reach, where a survey of the waters will be made. This is the second year the survey has been made, and it is hoped by the board othealth that ns good a showing will be made this year as last, whem the United States public health service pronounced the shellfish sitnation in North Carolina the best in the entire United States. The latter part of the week Mr. Robertson will join T. R. McCrea, permanent inspector of the State board of health and the State fish eries commission, on the patrol boat “Pnmliro”, which has a complete lab oratory fitted up in it, and they will make a number of bacteriological tests of both the upper and lower waters of IVrightsvillw' Sound, where there are more clamJ and oysters. They will then cruise north to Bogue Sound at Morehead City, and to Pam lico Sound, where the largest oyster beds are located, just off Hyde coun ty. and at the mouth of the Ncuse River. Mr. Robertson expects to i spend some thirty days with Mr. Mc- Crea and at the end of that time he expects again to be able to pro nounce the North Carolina oyster beds the best in the United States. Although North Carolina oysters are the best and .purest ou the mar ket. virtually nothing has been done to advertise them, with the result •i tint most of the 310,01)5 bushels of oysters dredged annually In the state are shipped out of the state, sold un der some other label, and then shipped back in under an out-of-thc-state label and sold at much higher prices. A Sordid Story of the Slums. (By International News Service) 1 . New York, Aug. 4.—Bennett Fer- I rara. 73-year-old Brooklyn man. has ' added the unusual touch to a sordid ! story of the slums. Like the movies, , it came out all right in the end. Four years ago the white-haired old man was sentenced to prison for .en dangering the morals of Rosalia Gjar rupte, then eleven. The other day he married her. - , . The marriage was Ferrara's own doings. After he came ont of prison with a two-year term behind him, he showered gifts upon the girl. He gave her SI,OOO in cash, a diamond studded wrist watch, and then a hand some engagement ring. Still, he was not satisfied, and finally came the con viction that ohly marriage “eould right an old wrong.” The marriage almost didn’t occur. The bride was waiting in her marital hour came and went. Finally her brother went in search of the missing bridegroom. He found Femra sleeping soundly in his home. Frantically, shook him. “Don't you know this is your wed wedding day?” he demanded. Ferrara yawned. “Well, what about it?” he said. Tlieu he rose and donned his marriage garb. Electric Storm Kills Two Cows. (By International News Service) Adams, Tenn.. Aug. 4.—A severe electric storm which swept this sec tion a few days ago killed two of Joe Elliott's cows, one which was being milked at the time by Mrs. Elliott, Shd the woman escaped uninjured. The cows were standing near one Another when the bolt shot out of the skyr Mrs. Elliott was milking one of the cows, hurrying through before the rain began to fall. Mrs. Elliott was pinned underneath one row’s head ns the two animals fell dead instantly. Her husband as sisted her to freedom. No other damage was reported from the storm in this section. Drive Against Rabid Dogs. (By International News Service) Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 4.—Showing progress in their drive against vicious “mad” dogs in the city local police have killed many canines in the streets of Atlanta during the past week. Several children have been bitten recntly by stray dogs on the streets which have attacked many pedes trians. Police have devised means of cop ing with the situation by the provis ion of a "dog squad.” armed with shot guns. 1 Operation of a “dog wagon” to pick up nil unmasked canines found on the streets is also helping in the drive. ” ' '■ L - THE PRESIDENTS ATTITUDE 1 fIELPS YOU ' 9 2 JUMP K B IJIJRDLES J W Cabarrus Creamery’s m K Pasteurized Milk p and Cream are the £ P two bottled health ■ E foods that belong in 3 M your kitchen and tip- n p on your table. They V E will help you take p r (Tai so your famil y' s Jr EftHHKaUMItT4mJ[ ummM \ II you want to sure that your summer time will be passed in comfort hang a sigh labeled 1 “Seashore” on yotir bathroom door."and sup ply this resort with the proper fixtures. Then scatter ■ some rock salt in tub And take a dap in the briny. 174 Kerr St. " Phone 876 Flaconettes are cut crystal, containing three and one-third times the quantity of the fa miliar one-dollar packages of standard imported brands es sreater mtio vXe " fV Fragrances: Chypre SEE US FOR OFFICE DESKS AND CHAIRS LARGE STOCK TO SELECT FROM H R WILKINSON Out of the High Rent District Where Parking Space Is Plentiful and Time Unlimited. - | CHRYSLER I Sales and Service ij I SYLRR MOTOR Cq. j B S. Chui'ch and Means St. Phone 400 ! [ t and Your Money Rflftnwram Certificate/ ’No i,, wr "ifp t t «about it , - ~ in *<\ w F Thursday, Aug. 5, 1§26 - - - - - ■