Thursday, MarcH 1, 1923. m CHECK f^COLDS »r « . • . ■ ■w»tfc t> niißiwy>H»«vywyy'y*'-y | "y»;;wy» | y»- y -tw , f»y»C"g M ' l tl >> ‘f**"P :•'"'••• -r- -jz ::: 1 ‘l' * ' * p_ -\ Tatting —made in two colors 35c MokiT' Large, each 10c; Small, each 5c SO Tided Patting --- j. 25c ’JTtted 'Beading in any width, narrow 30c; wide 40c I ’lain Single Tatting, per yard 15c; two yards for 25c it'Tiie Tatting 25c I’ka-c state colors to be used, and if coarse or fine. All ' v, iil be -cut C. O. D., if money is not sent with order. T' • ' Address MISS FLOY PETERSON, Route Three, Harrisburg, N. C. a a a w r'.m’jqrTTMrarrmi'J 'w rta team the truth about fertilizer < v ' Commercial fertilizer is not magic. It’s shortsighted economy to risk It is no substitute for work, or for all the time, labor and seed put into farming brains. It will not make a a cr °P i* l order to save $1 a ton on successful farmer out of a*shiftless, fertilizer. The most experienced . . r m .-i* farmers have decided that a fertilizer ignorant failure. Fertilizer varies m have somethlng beside prj j. e quality like corn or tobacco or cotton, tQ recomrn end it, and they recognize and some brands are worth more that the Royster trademark they than others. Good fertilizers, like v have a guarantee of highest quality Royster’s reliable ofd mixtures, are an d surest results. . ( a godsend to good farmers who learn Remember, it is necessary to use howto best use them to make money. sufficient fertilizer per acre to get , , ....... r . - worthwhile results. If you starve Each crop has its individual food the sam# re . requirements; different soils require ' ,t» a3 if you starve your stock . different treatment. Every Royster y . . fertilizer is a scientifically balanced Unless a farmer is going to yse food ration, compounded from the Roysters fertilizers properly, wed best materials obtainable in the pro- rather he d misuse and abuse some portions best calculated to supply other brand, We are proud of the the needs of the crop for which it Royster reputation for quality, and is intended. / wijl P re serve it in every way. To help our friends obtain the utmost Nearly 40 years experience enters in results we urge farmers to seek into the making of the Royster mix- from us information about the prop tures, and hundreds of thousands of cr use of fertilizer. Write freely for the country’s best farmers pin their advice to Farm Service Department, faith to this famous old brand. ■ F. S. Royster Guano Company. Norfolk Chirlotte * Columbia, Birmingham Richmond Washington Macon Montgomery) y Lynchburg Tarboro Atlanta ROVSTER Tield Tested Tertihzers ' " i | Promotion Cheated by the Death An^el. Washington, Feb. 27. —Promotion ! cnnfe too late today for Albert iW. | I’onitits. of Minnesota. Consul General I to Mukden, China. Dispatches from Peking yesterday ! announced the death of Mr. Pontius after a long illness, and the list of nominations sent to the Senate today by President Harding contained his name for promotion for consul general l of class four to consul general of ; class three, Mr. Pontius has been in the con ! sular service nearljiJiO years and the promotion was to have lieen given in recognition of his efficient work and long service. city gets permission to purchase railway Bill Giving Concord Aldermen Right to Purchase Street Railway Passes Senate. The J4ll Introduced in the State Legislature several days ago giving the Cityvof Concord authority to pur chase the street railway system here from thiAXorth Carolina . Public Ser vice Company, passed the Senate on Monday, according to reports from H'leigli, audr has been enrolled for ratification. The hill passed the House several days ago. > The hill does not mean that the City of Concord has decided definitely to purchase 4 the street railway system here, one city official stated this morning, but it does give the city that right, should it decide later to take over the control of the systum. The present owners of the system declare no money Ims been made lutiv on the system for some time, and they have intimated that they will cease opera tions unless some relief from the pres ent conditions is given. Filling tlmt the. owners might want to dispose of the property, or censj/ op erations, the city officials had the bill giving them, the right to purchase the property, passed in the Legislature, so that action could lie taken immediate ly should they want to take' over the property, if the hill had not been passed, they point out, the. city could not take over the property until the Legislature meets agttin in 1b25. ORGANIZER LAND OF AUTOMOBILE THIEVES? Four Men Arrested and Ten Cars Re covered by Police of Rocky Mount. Rocky Mount, Feh. 20. —With t lie arrest of four men and the recovery of ten automobiles local police an nounced today that they believe that they have discovered an organized ring in stolen cars. The alleged sales ring of the or ganization. according to the police, centers in Rinston and Lenoir coun ties although the machines recovered belonged to local citizens. Police be lieve stolen machines from other east ern North Carolina points have tieen sent to Kinston. "While staging emphatically that four arrests have been made the police gave out only the name of Frank An drews. a young man of this city, who. they say. gave them details of the op erations of the alleged ring. They declined to give out, any other infor mation at this time. Three of the ears recovered have been identified, by citizens here. Officers who have been working on the case for several .weeks state that they have visited the shop where em ery wheels were used to removed the motor numbers. / — : Irate Papa Breaks Into Arrangements. Wilson. Feb. 2ti. —On their return from Dillon. S. (’., where they were married last Friday evening, 18-year old Richard Kjf Tomlinson and Miss Edna, 13-year-old daughter of D. B. Eat man. of this county, were placed under arrest on a warrant sworn out by the girl's father, the father charg ing abduction. The young man gave a bond of 81.000 to answer to the charge here next Saturday. The father of t4ie girt will hpjiear Friday, next, in Superior Court at Nashville lie lore .Judge Kerr on habeas corpus, asking that his daughter be restored to him, claiming that she was married without his consent. THE CONCORD TIMES . INJURIES FATAL 10 LITTLE CHICD HEBE Ruby Coble Dies From the Wounds She is Alleged to Have Received When i Struck by An Auto. Ruby Coble, 8-year-okl child who is alleged to have been struck by an auto j driven by Maurice Howie, of Monroe, last Thursday,) died in thjt Concord Hospital Tuesday at '2 a. in. of injuries said to have been inflicted in the accident. The child did not regain consciousness after the accident, Tiud . her death had been expected for sev eral days. / i | Funeral services \Vere held at the home of her father. Mr. A. It. Coble, at the Ilartsell Mill, yesterday after noon at two o'clock. The services were conducted by RdV. Mr. ITuhe.rger, and interment was made in Union cemetery. A warrant Aiarginjf assault with a deadly weapon was served on Mr. Howie immediately after the accident, and In* gave bond in the sum of S.IOO for his ’appearance at court hero, on March Btli. Immediately after the of ficers were notified Tuesday that ’the child was dead they notified one. of Mr. Howie’B bondsmen here to ad vise him to come to Concord at once and it is probable that a manslaughter charge will be preferred against him. The accident occurred.near the Hart sell Mill on the National Highway. Both the child and Mr. Howie wore headed toward this city, when his car is alleged to have struck the child, crushing- her skull and inflicting the fatal injuries. BOYS’ DIVISION OF Y LAUNCH “WIN MV CHI M” CAMPAIGN Rtv. Mi*. Rowan Opens Campaign in Schools With Challenge for Right Thinking. Following' “Buek’J Perrin, attorney, of Spartanburg, S. <’.. who spoke at the Y. M. C. A. Sunday afternoon be ginning the "Win My ('hum" week. Rev. J. C. Rowan formally opened the campaign in the schools Monday morn ing speaking on "Bight Thinking.” Mr. Rowan spoke during the course of the day in the. High School, in the Cen •tial School, Number 2 School, and at the colored Graded School. Every where lu- was received with close nt tenth n and keeit interest. Mr. Rowan said tlmt in order for a hoy to win his chum to the right kind of living, and to all that is worth while, the hoy himself must lx* what he wants his clium to be or become, lie declared further that a hoy is what he thinks. ."As a man thinkoth in his heart, so is he.” The speaker then threw down -vlpf“wegv* u differ ent colored wig each .* '•• ... ¥'• " ' v * I* / / *». ia • < £I j * * '_, « ■ m * *• * V i * Four Reasons Why You Should Buy Your Ford Car This Month ' ■<4 ' 40& 1 1 1 - : .I.x , . ' ■ • The unprecedented demand for Ford cars throughout the winter months has taken the en tire output of the Ford plants working at c&pac- - it\*, indicating that the demand this Spring will be far in excess of the number of Ford cars that can possibly be builtk . . • H /■; January was the tenth consecutive month in ;i which retail deli> eries exceeded 100,000 Ford -Cars and Trucks. Requirements for February, the month when preparations are already under way for Spring business, called for 148,407 Cars and Trucks — more than 24,000 in_excess of the . number we can possibly produce. 111. Ford dealers in many parts of the country are al ready finding it necessary to specify future deliv ery dates on. Ford Products because there are no , reserve stocks to draw from. . ' : Your order placed now will protect you against delay or disappointment later on—-It is the only -way you can be assured of reasonably prompt de livery. . , s • * - •' . ' . . * We consider it important to give you these facts, so that if ( you are planning to purchase a Ford Car, Truck or Ford son Tractor for use this Spring or Summer you can list your order at once and take advantage of our dealer’s first opportunity to make delivery. CABARRUS MOTOR CO. ■ . s Authorized Concord Ford Dealer. ’ Phone 400 A Small Deposit and Easy Payments if Desired ; representatives of the United States Department of Agriculture including Dr. W. D. Hunter and completed, the campaign organization with Dr. Hut chison as supreme, generalissimo of the forces of the North and South lighting the “Mexican Invader." At the present tithe, according to Dr. Hutchison, waij will be waged on the weevil with all the known weapons at hand in order to save as much as is possible of the 1023 crop from de struction by the pest. This work will be carried on by means of a campaign of practical information and demon stration in all the cotton growing coun ties of the/ South. Demonstration farms in these counties, under the di rection of Experts, will give to the planters the best me.tliods of lighting the weevil In their particular area by use of known poisons, scientific use of fertilizers and intensive ‘cultivation. In addition to this work experiments already are underway to devise new and better means of exterminating or controlling the insect. At Dr. Hutchi son's request, experiments are now be ing carried on at Clemson College*, S. C\, with the idea of lighting the pest through sterilization of the eggs by means of X-rays stored in chemical salts. Another experiment, suggested by.Hudson Maxim at the Conference, will be conducted shortly with the idea o£ developing a sex-lure for the weevil whlcfli can be übed with a suitable poison and thus attract the in PAGE SEVEN sects to tluir doom. Provident Warren G. Ilardiug has pledged e\tery resource of the techni cal and scientific agencies of the Unit ed states to the war against the boll weevil. • $5 IS SMALL PRICE FOR WIFE, TREASURER SAYS Too Much Spent for Cesless Honey moons, Chicago Board RemoveSu "'Chicago, Feb. 27.—‘Ts $3 too much to pay for a wife?” The; county board wrangled today over this poser. County Treasurer Curr arguing the present marriage license fee. $1.50 —"the cheapest iu the world” —is too little, and said the county should increase its revenue at the ex 'pense of bridegrooms. Statistics were quoted to show $133,0dd now spent on "unnecessary honeymoons” would be diverted into the county coffers if Carr’s proposal was approved. “If a man can t pay $3 for a wife, he ought.not to get one.” was Com missioner Tom Murray's closing broad side. Chamber of Commerce Banquet.; Washington. Feb. 2(1-—The Wash ington chamber of commerce will huhl its annual banquet on the evening of March 5. according to arrangements copleted by a committee of the Or ganization. J. H. Cowan, mayor of Wilmington, will be the principal ispeaker. f