Tuesday, May 1, 1923. U IJ. mm - - Not a Ku Kllux Candidate. Charlotte Observer. IMv. J. W. Bailey has never y@t said he TV-ill be a candidate for Governor —and, for that matter, he has not said that he will not be a candidate. Rumor, however, sticks, and the papers handle him as a takeu-ror- HEALTH Drive oat the Waste and impurities of the body by taking mmmE Acts on liver, kidneys and blood*- $1 at most good drug stores. VITALITY i New Schedule 1 of - Southern Railway 1 Effective Sunday, April 29th, the following changes | will be made in the schedule of the Southern Railway Com- j * pany: NORTHBOUND ' SOUTHBOUND | No. 136 5:00 am. No. 11 , 0:05 am. il ?: No. 46 3:15 pm. No. 33 8:27 am. No.' 34 4:45 pm. No. 45 4:30 pm. | No. 38 0:30 pm. No. 20 2:52 am. | The schedules of trains not given above remain the “jj same. Train No. 136 takes the place of the present No. 44. Trains Nos. 33 and 34 take places of present Nos. 137 | l and 138. Southbound train No. 33 will stop in Concord, North- Ij , bound train No. 38 will stop in Concord. For further information apply to local Ticket Agent. ij SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY. OijSge CRUSH Lemon- CRUSH Lime-CRUSH f WHEN Mother doesn’t need to call twice—especially when there’s Orange-Crush on ice. Just whisper that magic word “Crush” and see them scamper hope, hot and *v er so thirsty. & See constituents it bubbles everycooUngswahow deUaaMje taf Motherslcnow when a flavor i* . naturally good and they know the “Crushes,” Orange, Lemon uraifrmtoiis of orange and Lime flavors, arc wholesome food products. <=* Here’s a [Z^hayfbeT^adld secret: Mothers and fethere Uke the “Crushes” too. pant cane sugar, \ * . Always ask for a Ward’s “Crush.” Girder a ease through your dealer. % * > ; * and carbonated water. Orange Crush Bottling Company grunted candidate. If such is the case, be bus made one fact clear-he is not going to be a Ku Klux candi date. Mr. Bailey has spoken un equivocally on that issue, having been brought out, perhaps, in mj sideratkm of the Robeson County ease in which two women were brutally maltreated by a hooded mob. Tuut one' incident has thrown the first era - barraiisment upon the Klan organna.- tiQn in this State. In North Carolina the judiciary is weii-establlshed, and has gained the respect of the people to such an extent as to discount any disposition on their -part to take the law into their own hands. Mr. Bailey takes the only correct vlpw and that is, that enforcement of the law is a matter that is enurely within the bands of the officers and iff any offic.er fails, he should be turned out It is unsurpution on part of the public to undertake disenarg ing a duty appointed for the officers. Some recent occurrences in this State were anything but 100 per cent Amer ican- They were exactly the contrary. Bailey does not only give deiionce to | tineats of any invisible power; he holds that a'.l other candidates mnst do the same. It is a fact that every public officer is a minister of the law and that he cannot properly function as such if he stands in fear and com- J promise. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE /■ * 11 ■ 'I - .. SMILING GLADYS SHORT tells how she was Cursd of Rheumatism and Restored to Health and Strength. * -■ ■ J To look at my rosy cheeks and sco how active and energetic I am, no one would think I was once a broken-down Rheumatic cripple. I am ‘so happy that I just want to tell the whple world how NEU TRONS PRESCRIPTION “90” has cured iffy RKeumatism. Last Winter, my work and social engagements overtaxed my strength and Rheumatism set in. My neck i became so stiff, I could hardly move my head and my shoulders and arms swelled up and ached like a boil. No one knows how I suffered. Rest, medicino and doctors did not help me, and I was almost desperate, when I read how Neutrone Prescrip tion “99” was curing so many others of their Rheumatism. I got a bottle of “99” in Ron dout, N. Y., and got relief at once. I could feci the Rheumatic pains leaving me, and the swellings began to go down by the time I had fin ished the first bottle. Six bottles completely cured me. Now I ani the picture of health and full of life and vigor. I never felt so good in my life. I am absolutely positive that any Rheumatic sufferer will get imme diate relief by using Neutrone Pre scription “99”. I cannot say too much in praise of Neutrone Prescription “99”. I I am sure that anybody who is suffer ing from Rheumatism cau got relief if they will but try this wonderful remedy. Neutrone Prescription “99” now comes in Tablet Form, as well as Liquid Form, whichever is preferred. Leading Druggists everywhere. Gibson Onie Store. Wedding Invitations Printed at The Tribune ami Times Office on a few hours’ notice, 60 for SO.OO, and $3.75 Tribune and Times Office. An instance of “STANDARD” service — not a definition R \ • % Gasoline prices reduced : I AT the opening of a new motoring season, WhichV from all trade indications, will eclipse all pre vious years in the amount of gasoline consumed, the tank wagon price of “Standard” Motor Gasoline has been reduced one cent a gallon, effective April 27. This lower price is made posisible by a reduction in the cost of our crude oil supply. There is, just i now, an unusually large surplus of petroleum over current requirements of the trade, which has brought about lower prices at the wells. “Standard” Motor Gasoline is at once the most essential and least expensive item in the operation ; of an automobile, whether you have a truck or a v -‘ > passenger car. “Standard” Motor Gasoline is always and uniformly good. There is a “Standard” pump or filling station . near you. / / STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NEW JERSEY) j . ' -ft* } ' BUSINESS AM) THE OH LOOK. Philadelphia Record. Retail trade responded well to me favorable/ weather of last week. That is a general statement, applicable to practically all sections o'.' t'tj couuuy. despite the backwardness of the present season. The slight recession in som6 lines of business activity con tinuc3, ami whether it is the tuning point in the piolorigcd trnvemeiv. of constant expansion or is merely a convenient breathing spell is a ques tion of opinion. Although the demand in some industries is not so urgent, the ralior ,sho~tage is accentuated, not only in the manufacturing plants, but in the agricultural districts, with imports from various points in the Sofiili that there is a movement among the * negvocs Northward, brought about v by the lure of nigh wages. Total Vank clearings in tin- week of mid-April, according to Brad street’s, show/d an increase of 5.4 per cent, over tlip same period last year mid 35 per cent, of an increase ia tjie coun try outside of New York. Pittsburgh was well above the average, mid it is estimated that the Smoky City’s showing for the whole month wil be over 30 ped cent. Due to the auto mobile expansion, Detroit led with an increase of nearly 45 per cent. According to Dun's Review, “var ious measures of business activity show that the best previous records have been surpassed in different in stances. yet there is more evidence now of a slackening of ttie industrial expansion. The change Hus not ap pearedl in any halting of work at leading manufacturing establish ments, but rathef in the abatement of new buying and in the check to l.he iise of prices. With declines outnum bering advances during the recent weeks, Dun's list lias reflected a de cisive reversal of tip* general price trend, and the easier conditions in some markets also are indicated by the diminsU-d efforts lo secure special %dvantafes on shipments.” Pittsburgh's iron and steel pro duction continue? toward the peak, with prices stationary and a shading of premiums. In the textil* markets, both primary and secondary, the movement lias been slow, with prices firm. The raw cotton market wps erratic, statements that several Fall River mills had adopted a shore time schedule, with resultant production curtailment, more than offsptUnj; the bearish .weather reports from the South. The raw wool markets of the East have continued slow, ip contrast with the strength shown in the west ern and London markets. Liquidation continued in the Chi cago grain markets on reports of ex cellent weather conditions in the West and Southwest, with good prospects in the Canadian Nortnwest. The closing prices for May ■were’: Wheat, $1.23 1-2: corn, 79 cents. K’ail money in New York ranged from 4 1-2 to 6 per cent., compar'd •with 4 to 6 per cot. the previous week. XAYUtt >VH<*KU AGAIN mOH b OF CHARLOTTE He's h'tuulualcd Over Join* Wilson— Honeycutt is TTaiHh? Hi» Opponent Wallace. - t ' CliarioUc. Apr ! 30,— iMayor James 0. Wajker aud commissioner of pub lic Works W. S. Staneill were eusilv renominated in the'city primary : .to-j dkftfover their opponents, tmaHMj A\TiS'on aud L. W. Wingate, ‘ :re»|iec tliely, the former'? majority being around 2,5()#' and Mr. Staactß lead ing by 3,500. Former Sheriff N. W. Wall me led Commissioner Hugejcutt by 200 votes, Maj. W. R. Rrlbertspn being t.hjrd. only 600 votes behind .Com tnls- Biojter ( Hua«ycutt Approximately 7,- , ! - . ;• -,f ‘. \ ♦ 500 votes were east. Tlie vote for Wal lace was 2.800; Honeycutt 2,600 and Robertson 2,000. In the election next Tuesday mil tests will be between Walker .■.nd Wilson for mayor: Slant-ill and Win gate for public works, and Wallace and Iluneycutt for public safety. Hood Company. One good talker and one good list ener make the most satisfactory chat —Bultolo Enquirer. “WORSETHAN PAIN’’ Louisiana Lady Says She Has “Ner j er Found Anything Better Than Cardui for a Run-Down . Condition.’* Morgan City, La.—"lt would be hard lor me to tell how much benefit I have derived from the use erf Cardui," said Mrs. I. G. Bowman, of 1319 Front Street, this city. “I was so run-down in health I could ! hardly go. I was thin. 1 had no i appetite. Could not rest or sleep well. ] I was so weak, and so very nervous, I , was no pleasure to myself. "I suffered some pain, but the worst ! of ray trouble wak from being so weak ; and easy to get tired and out of heart. "This nervous condition was worse than pain. “Some one told ran of Cardui, and 1 i decided to use it. “After using a few bottles, I regained my strength. I wasn't so nervous, and ' began to eat and sleep, and grew j stronger and was soon well. i “I have never found anything better | for a run-down condition." If you suffer as this Louisiana lady did, you, too, should find Cardui helpful for your troubles. Get a bottle of Cardui, today. NC-144 ! I COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAIR Darkens Beautifully and Restore* It* Natural Color and Lustre At Once Common garden sage brewed into a i heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol 1 added, will turn gray, streaked and j j faded hair beautifully dark and lux- ■ ] uriant. Mixing the Saga Tea and Sul- j phur recipe at home, though, is trouble some. An easier way is to get the ready-to-use preparation unproved by the addition of other ingredients a large bottle, at little cost, at drug stores, known as “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound,” thus avoiding a lot of muss. 'While gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful ap pearance and attractiveness. By dark- J ; , eking your hair with Wyeth’s Sag* and J ' 1 Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, be- | cause it does it so naturally, so evenly, i You just dampen a Sponge or soft 1 brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hair* have disappeared. After another application or two your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft sad luxuriant and you appear years yauager. THE CINCO YOU SMOKE next week will taste the same as the one you smoke today— they never vary. They’re fragrant, mild, mel low, always Quality First. 2 for 15c, everywhere. Jmr Smoke CINCO war—-'—-fi' v■» i p—.'i, iijn !n l| Do you know I That there are more than ||| Eighty Noble Peaks in the South- jj| ern Appalachian Mountains that tower 5,000 to 6,000 feet above the sea? That Mount Mitchell, which is 6,711 feet high, is the highest I , mountain in Eastern America? Appropriately called— “THE LAND of the SKY” j The Vacationist’s Play ground. All out-of-door sports. IMake your plans now. jjj Reduced Summer Fares, be- I; ginning May Fifteenth. SOUTHERN | RAILWAY ram muwroiftiK PAGE FIVE

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