PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN For Sale—96-Acre Farm in Jj°- 6 Town ship, five-room house, large barn, gran ary, etc. About 200.000 feet saw tim ber. 1.500 cords wood, 125 fruit trees. Will sell for cash or terms. Also one Deering bjnder in good running order. J. D. Beaver, Kanpiaimlis, N. C. 6-St-p. For Sale—Sweet Peas. Phone 365. 6-3 t-p. Children's Play Tgnts $3.48. Concord Army & Navy Store. 4-tit-p. Wanted—To Hire a Good Clerk for Meat Market aud Case. Call 04. Mt. Pleasaut. C. H. Graeber. 2-Ot-p. For Sale—Pony and Saddle. Buggy and harness. Bargain. IST South Union St. Phone 557. 1-ts-chg. Land Deeds, 5 Cents Each, at Times- Tribune Office. Wanted —The . New York. N. Y. 2-4-Sats-p. Wide Variety of Provisions Called for On the Fast Trans-Pacific Liners it r ,ik | # 9 | 9 ‘J i 'll- ■% 1 ■ it jM » SL > ssls W' 8 IkP % 'll'' JB B m wmEZ a irak jj »•*■*.. 405a.11 jiaL Xg. &, if ? jllij jlfigfi -jL $ Huge Soup Pots on S. S. President Wilson. San Francisco. .Tunc 5. —The provis ioning of a large passenger vessel is al ways a matter gs interest, and proves especially so when it becomes necessary, because of the particular trade the liner is engaged in. to carry a wide variety of foods. Vessels in the trans-Paeitie passenger set-vice, running to the Far East by virtue of the Tact that they car ry a large number of Orientals as well as Occidentals stock huge quantities of food stuffs to appeal to everyone on board. The fast mail and passenger liners of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, plying between this port and China, .la pan, the Philippines and Honolulu, are excellent examples in this respect. The quantity of food put on board the Presi dent Wilson and similar vessels of the line, and its variety and method of pre jmration for the table is unusual. The President Wilson for a round trip to the Orient \Vill carry provisions suffi cient to feed every passenger the liner can carry, as well as her crew, for sixty days. For the Occidental passengers, practically all the food is placed aboard at San Francisjo, and consists of as sorted meats, poultry, fresh fish, vegeta bles, fresh seasonal fruits aud dairy products. Tlie fruit supply is replenish ed at the various ports of call. A total of 55.000 pounds of -meat arc carried, of which 30.000 pounds is beef. More than 1.200 dozen of various types of poultry are stocked, including game and barnyard species. Frnsh tish. lob sters, shrimps, crabs and oysters to the number of about 14,100 pounds are car ried in the huge refrigerators of the Pres ident Wilson, assuring the most fastid ious of their favorite tinny food. Thirty thousand pounds of potatoes, 32.000 pounds of assorted green and sal ad vegetables and 1.000 pounds of sweet potatoes are placed in the comm odious bins of the culinary department prior to sailing. In addition there are used 3,- 000 dozen eggs. 2.100 pounds of fancy butter, 200 gallons of cream and 300 gal lons of milk. A quarter of a ton of cheese, 5 tons of Hour, two of cereals and Having Trouble With Your Roses. Kaleigh. N. C.. June ti.—Mildew on roses may be checked by dustiug flow ers of sulphur over the bushes and vines. The sulphur will not remove the mil dew but it will prevent further spread ing. suggests (?. W. Fant. extension plant pathologist for the State College and State Department of Agriculture. He advises that the sulphur -be dusted on the plants several times after blossoming this year, preferable wnile dew is on the plant, and then repeated next spring before blossoming. With this care the rose plants should be,free from mildew by the time begin blossoming next season. Mr. Fant says that Considerable com plaints have come in to the college this year about mildew and leaf blotch on roses. He recommends the dusting in early spring to prevept the mildew get ting a start. If one has a spray outfit, the use of commercial lime-sulphur spray will be foiuitl more effective than the flowers of sulphur. In that case the liquid should not bej allowed to strike the painted surface' of the hbuse at its acts on the paint. It will also remain as a stain on the foliage until washed off by the rain and for this reason should not be applied just before blossoming. . “Well established roses represent a considerable amount of trouble, are very beautiful and therefore should be given the proper -preservative care,” say Mr. Pdcket Book Bools, Cimmamon Buns and Sticky Buns fresh, every day. We deliver. Just call 21 and 421. Dove- Bost Co. 6-2 t-p. Fer Rent—House on Phoenix Street. Phone 200 or 277. (>-3t-p. Store Room For Rent—Room Now Oc cupied by A & I’ Tea Co. M. L. Marsh. (>-4t-p. For Sale—Small Office and Set of Wag on sealqjj. Phone 865. (>-2t-p. Lost—l-ast Saturday on Streets of Con cord 17-jewel Waltham watch. Eigh teen size in gold, open fare case. Libeiv a! reward if returned to Adam Lipe, 257 North Kerr St. 5-2 t-p. Ladies' and Children's Bathing Suits— -75c up. Concord Navy Store. 4-tit-p. r * History of First Presbyterian Church, of Concord, written in .1005 by Mrs. H. S. Harris, ten cents each at The Titnes-Tribuhe Office. 23-ts. Piano Tuning. Repairing and Revoicing. Sec A. Viola, 44 Loan St. 5-3 t-p. Automobile Luggage Carriers. $1.50 Con cord Army & Navy Store. 4-Gt-p. Boys and Girls Join the Winchester Jim ior Rifle Corps. Ritchie Hardware Co. , 4-bI -c. in half a toil of coffee, tea and cocoa com plete the stores for the Occidental menus. | This hi far from being the total amount lof food stuff taken aboard, however. At Honkong a special list of Oriental foods |is delivered aboard ship. These include various items of particular appeal to thjp Oriental diet, among them being 10.000 salted eggs, nut oil. pielded cabbage, Chi j lies*? sweet biscuits, dried Chinese tish. i I cuttle Hsh. pickled ginger, pickled and salted lemons, pickled melons. dried < mushrooms. Chinese Sausage, panoche < j sugar, soy sauce, dried shrimps, tish in, oil aud cured red and green beans. Three kinds of rice are provided— Carolina rice for the Occidental imisscu gers and Japanese and Chinese rice for the passengers of those races. The chefs on the Bacific-Mail liners j are skilled in the preparation of food in every style possible, and in the huge modern galleys perform culinary mira cles. Here with the aid of their oil ranges and electric ovens, big stock pots and double boilers, they prepare during o*e round voyage thousands of meals. During the average round trip from Sian Francisco, to the Orient and back 45,7118 first j;lass and 00.800 steerage meals are prepared and served to pas sengers. In addition there are about 14.200 lunches for the crew off and on watch and 10.000 special lunches, after noon teas aiid suppers for passengers which are not counted as regular meals. : In serving the passengers on the Pres ident Wilson 8000 pieces of China and crockery are in daily use. as well as 3.- OitO pieces of glassware and 4.000 pieces of silver-plated service. In the I cool, attractive dining salon of the fast | liner over five thousand pieces of linen. ; daily washed in the ship's own laundry, are utilized. ! The tourist, ordering from a menu pre jseating a wide variety of appetizing disli kes, little knows how much cure has been spent in selecting the material for ibis meals, how much skill enters into the making and serving. VETS TO DRAW UP REMEDIAL BILLS Omnibus Program Will Be Given to Congress. Washington. .June s.—An omnibus legislative program in behalf of disabled war veterans will be drawn up by representatives of the Veterans' Bureau and by national organizations of former service men for presentation at the next session of Congress, it was an nounced today by the Disabled Amer ican Veterans of the World War. After' a conference with Veterans' Bureau officials, decision was reached to have one United Spanish war veteran and two representatives eaeh of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans and Veterans' Bureau work out plans for remedial laws needed for' the dis abled soldiers. Four Big Stills in,Undertaking Parlor. New York. June 5. —Embalming fluid and freshly distilled liquor were fouud side by side* by prohibition agents today when they raided an up town undertaking establishment. The. agents gained entry by claiming they wished to arrange for the burial of a friend. Four large stills were said to hare been, found in a room adjoining the mortuary. ) Fifty thousand women are employed in th* mines In India. NORTH CAROLINA IS TRAVELING VERY FAST Commissioner of Education Tigert Speaks at Wolford.—Declares Equal Oppor tunity May Be Means of Saving Am erica. Spartanburg, S. C., June s.—“We have a fifty-fifty chance "to save Ameri ca,” declared Hon. John J. Tigert. Unit ed States Commissioned of Education, in his address before the graduating class at. Wofford college yesterday, “and we have two alternatives in dealing with the mass of ignorance. AVe can either dis franchise or enlighten the electorate. To disfranchise means the nullifying of our constitution ami the reversiug of govern ment theory. Therefore, there is really only one alternative—an equal oppor tunity as far as education is concerned." Dr. Tigert declared that education is the basis of social and national t*ower. Government is based on knowledge, he said. Bolshevism is increasing in the country every day. ‘Education is the greatest means of producing achievement and economic wealth," the speaker said, "and I do not mean to ridicule auy Am erican municipality or commonwealth when 1 speak in plain terms of the vast amount of ignorance. "I believe Ohio is the greatest state in the American tiuion. There arc other states that are first iu a great many re spects. but Ohio is second and third in many respects that I consider it first." "I have no money to invest in North Carolina, because, as you know, 1 am a school man. but North Carolina is leav ing all the Southern States so fast they do not realize it. The doctrine preach ed in North Carolina that has brought the present favorable state of affairs is that the mittd and its products is great er than the land and its products." Jake Newell Tunis Doctor. Charlotte News. Attorney Jake F. Newell. promThent Charlotte lawyer, has takeu* up another profession. Mr. Newell, well-known in tile legal profession, as a political leader and Sunday school teacher, has turned doctor. Monday morning in the Recorder’s Court. Mr. Newel! had a negro client who was charged with having Had liquor for sale. The woman. Mag John ston. frequent attendant at court ses sions. had brought three small children inside the bar with her with the claim that the two older ones lmVe just re covered from the measles and the baby is now taking it. She told the court that she had the liquor lor the sick children. As soon as tile announced that the B:iby was inking the measles Judge Wil liams asked Mr. Newell to verify the truth of her claim. ''Open your mouth." said the lawyer to tlie four-or-five months oil piekalnriniiy. When the end of the alimentary Value into view Mr. Newell bent over and made a careful examination. “It certainly is tlie measles, your honor.” lie- announced. The woman's alibi, however, seemed pretty weak to the judge and he gave her a suspended sentence of six months. Pastor’s Salaries. Gastonia Gazette. Charity and Children puts in a good word for tlie preachers of tlie country. Along With (lie teachers, they have en joyed a general raise in salaries, which they so richly deserve. The one handled dollar preacher is a thing of the past. The church no matter whether in the remote country district or not. that offers its pastor only one hundred dollars for one-fourth time, -is either just beginning as a feeble mission or is as dead as a door nail. A man of good equipment, who has thoroughly prepared himself for the ministry no longer waits in vain for a decent call. The churches are on the lookout for him. and usually lose no time in offering him a place. The time was when a thousand dol lars was looked upon as a good salary for a town church. Now two thousand is poor pay. and a man of ability com mands much more than that. There is this to be said, however: two thousand dollars now has hardly the purchasing power of one thousand twenty years ago. So after all pastors’ salaries have not increased as much as the dollars and cents involved would indicate. Pastors' homes are being built at a rapid rate. The Methodists have led all others in this respect, n parsonage being considered by them a necessary part of the equipment of a field—-almost as necessary as tlie church building itself. And so almost every charge in, the Methodist church in the state is equip cd with a comfortable parsonage. But the Baptists are coming along with rapid strides in this respect also, and it is a Vast, advantage to apastor not to be-at tile tender merries of n landlord, pay exorbitant rent, and be asked to vacate at the will of the owner. Our preachers are ‘Tinning into tbeir Own at last and we rejoice with them that, while they cannot live in luxury yet .they can at least par flieir grocery bills, and send their children to school. Matching VY'its. A Californian and a New Englander were matching stories. "Why.", said the Californian, “we grow oabbage so big that an army of soldiers can camp under one.” "That's nothing." said the New Eng lander. “we make copper kettles iu New Englnnd so big that a thousand men can be riveting one and yet be so far apart they can’t hear each other ham mer.” “Go on." said the Californian “whivt would any one use a kettle of that size for?" • "Why. to boil your California cabbage in" said the New Englander. Had no Opinion. It was during the impanelling of a juty: the following colloquy occurred: “You are a property holder?” “Yes, your honor.” “Mhrried-ror single?" “I have been married for five years, your honor.” “Have you formed or expressed any .opinion?” “Not for fiVe years, your honor.” ~i — r- Nothing oh Him, "Yeu know." said the woman whose motor car had run down a man; “you must have been walking very cnrefessly. I have beett driving a cat for years.” •' vs {•" . “Lady. you hive nothing on me. I have be*n walking for fifty-four years.” THF CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BUSINESS AND THE OUTLOOK. Philadelphia Record. Here we are beginning June with ideal weather for the roses, and the re tail stores feel the effect immediately. The lateness of the spring season nnd its retarding effect naturally, but merchants are offering special induce ments to their customers, and the wage increases in many industries have been reflected in larger mass buying cajiacity. The slowing down in the basic indus tries has been extremely gyaduul. The steel ingot production continues at the rate of 50.000.000 gross tons a year, a rate established in April and maintain ed throughout May, to the amazement of the more conservative, who didn’t believe such a thing possible. Thq oil industry continues ro break previous records with a total for the domestic fields in excess- of 2.000.000 barrels a day. Interviews with leaders in the motor car industry in Detroit indicate a general belief that no s:mnh is looked for in that quarter, notwith standing the high pressure that has been necessary to fill orders. Records in rail- Voad car loading arc at the figures of 'ast fall's peak, with me railroads bet ter prepared than before fur lieayy traffic by reason of equipment and re "air exiwnditure. According tt> the reports to Brad street's trade, crop and industrial condi tions are more irregular and ''spotted" than they were a week ago. There is a sharper distinction now in different branches of industry be! ween activity >n old orders and the development of now business, say Dun's Review. Pro duction at -hinny plants continues at a high rate to fill contracts previously olai-ed. but pressure of demand iu var ious quarters has reciOitly re’axed. This •ondition prevails in leading basic lines, vet the heavy purchasing of earlier months had covered many requirements wed ahead and some abatement ot buy ing was to be expected. It is a wlttile iome sign, after the rapid expansion cf he first quarter, that consq-vative 'cadencies predominate in most markets ind that over-extern-on of operations is 'wing avoided. The past week marked the e’imlnq ' ion of premiums for prompt delivery of steel and steel prodiiits in the Pitts burgh distriit. Buying runtimes ligatT. hut most prire.s bold firm, with relim-d prodhhtion bused upon old rather than new orders. At some of the n ills the id orders are sufficient to continue heavy prdnetion for several months, i'ig iron prices e,. w sagged somewhat, mil < '.mnellsville eok“ is easier. In the textile trades irregiilantf con tinues. There has ~oen further curtail n - lit of p-odueti- ii bf the inti's, Several >' *W England sac -: '-, were closed, and others were operated on a. folii"dnys' schedule. Nevertheless, there is consid erable optimism expressed, with the hope that present dullness will give way to a quiet buying movement. The raw cotton market strength in the early part of Mu,- week was dissipated by the tmb'icution of* tin* Govern incut estimate. The raw wool iipirket continued firm, with limited demand. Crop reports from winter wheat -e - ‘ions indicated a loss of 1.1.00fK000 bushels in Kansas, ifml there were other factors that might have induced buying in the Chicago grain market, but they were disregarded. Part of the bearish propaganda has been to the effect that if large operations were undertaken, the Government, under recent, legislation, might step inand interfere with their completion. But fears on this score were removed by the announcement from the supervisor of tlie Government Grain Futures act that there was no liriiit on trading iu grains for future de livery and that the aim of the Ad ministration isto build up and improve the marketing system rather than to hamper it. Call money in—New was 4'A and 5% per cent., tlie same as tlie pre vious week. , Cats a Source of Danger. Cats ore great carriers of disease germs, and scratches frqm their claws are sources of real danger, ns those claws are generally coated with a mass of germs whlchytnay cause Infection, and for these reasons alone should not be allowed tc associate too intimately with young children whether the latter are asleep or awake. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans i. -— Hot water Sure Relief DEU-ANS 25$ and 75$ Packages Everywtwr* CATARRH Catarrh is a Local diseaae greatly in* fluonced by Constitutional condition*. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con sists of an Ointment which gives Quick,- Relief by local application, and th€T internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood bn the Mucous. Sur faces and assists in ridding your System of Catarrh. Sold by druggists for over 40 Tears. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. O. •ner-Kw 5 Should immediately start taking IRegWeratoh THE CHEAT NERVE TONIC % AND BLOOD rUKinOL f /'Tonic that strengthens, U Cleanser Alt eradicates poisons. ) Tissue Bufldffthat replaces. (jCtfl Fool that nourishes. A dollar a battle at drugstores £/Wi;fH'/ MOfTHS * BU6S /FLEAS,MITES MOSQUITOES Sprat/ SKIERS l [positively no kerosene] UISO KILLS GERMSJ SULPHUR SOOTHES UGLY,ITCHING SKIN Th« First Application Makes Skin Cool and Comfortable If you are suffering from eczema or some other torturing, embarassing skin trouble you may quickly be rid of it by using Mentho-Sulphur, declares a noted skin specialist This sulphur preparation, because of its germ destroying properties, seldom fails'to quickly subdue itching, even of, fiery eczema. The first application makes the skin cool and comfortable. Rash and blotches are healed right up. Rowles Mentho-Sulphur is applied like any pleasant cold cream and is perfect ly harmless. You can obtain a small jar from any gqpd druggist We are in position to take care of any re pairs you may need on your Buick car, have a good Buick Mechanic, and com plete line of/parts. STANDARD BUICK COMPANY Opposite City Fire Dept. Batteries Recharged Cars Repaired Experienced Mechanics All Work ' Guaranteed Reasonable Charges Bollinger Motor Co. Forest Hill Special While They Last Genuine $6.00 Gold Gillette Safety Razor With 12 Blades, for only $3.00 Get Yours at the Half Price Sale Pearl Drug Co. $lO Ten Extra Coupons For Your Old Range Gas, CoaUQil or Wood Stove v in addition to regular Cash Coupons on the purchase of a NEW CABINET GAS RANGE THREE MODELS $63.00 $83.00 $95.00 Just a Small Part Now-Balance 18 Months THIS WEEK ONLY Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. Phone 142 Do you know That there are more than Eighty Noble Peaks in the South ern Appalachian Mountains that tower 5,000 to 6,000 feet above the sea? Thaft Mount Mitchell, which is 6,711 feet high, is the highest mountain in Eastern America? Appropriately called — “THE LAND of the SKY” V The Vacationist’s Play ground. All out-of-door sports. Make your plans now. . Reduced Summer Fares, be ginning May Fifteenth. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING OF ALL KIND * WELL EQUIPPED SHOP Fixall Motor Co. 139-141 Soutfi Main St., - . y Kannapolis, N. C. : | • Wednesday, June 6, 1923.