Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / July 18, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO PMPifW llli .1 mKHI^ I/1 * v/V/Uv/ITIJLT Wanted—A 4or 5 Room House in Kan napolis or suburbs. Coll No. 20, Kan napolis. Mrdj M. U Isenhour. For Sale—'Tomato amt Cabbage Plants '.for late planting. Moore's Track Farm. 18-lt-p. Free. AtWMMjr Flee. Something tor nothing. For ten days only, closing Saturday. July 28th, with each Clover Leaf awl Cord tire hade by the Paul , Rultoer Co. I will give one extra heavy 1 air guage red inner tube. Get busy • as this offer expires July 28th. C. G. Savage, Phone 337 L 18-lt-p. Strictly Fancy Selected RoseMoom Brand peaches. Crate, six baskets. $3.50 F. iO. B. Shipment (lay order received to • any address. Add express if desire •i prepaid. Rosebloom OrchArd Co., Ab * erdeen, N. C. 18-10 t-p. Auction Sale—Preparatory to Moving into a small home, Mrs. N. F. Yorke j • will sell at public auction, at her home j on N. Union street, n lot of house hold and kitchen furniture. Sale be gins at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, July 21st. 18-3 t-c. Get Yonfs While They Last. 360 Pair SI.OO and $1.25 bedroom slippers, slightly damaged by water, 58 cents a pair Wilkinson-lVidenhouse Co. 13-6 t-p. Lost—Airdale Female Dog. Notify W. B. Bruton, Phone 205. 17-2 t-p. For Sale—One Hundred Acres Good level farm laud on Cold Springs ioad. A. F. Lefler, Route 4, Concord. 17-4 t-p. “A Big Sacrifice—Store Fix tures For Sale. . Apply ' McLellan Stores Co. ( 7-ts-c. isasHS2sass£HsHsZsgsai^Sr!saSHSssHsssasgsgsasgsEsHSgsHsasasgsasHs2sags^ “I am a but I Favor Retaining the Things That Are Good” v By ALVA B. ADAMS, New U. S. Senator From Colorado. IT MAY be that government ownership and control is the solntioß of the transportation problem, but I believe a further test of private ownership of the railroads, with continued government supervision, should be made. x- I favor the repeal of the Esch-Cummins law creating the railroad labor board. It has not worked well. It has served as a source of irrita tion among railroad men rather than as a means of soothing them. Its mission is good, but the results are not good because neither side is committed to abide by the decisions of the board. I am in favor of law enforcement, and that applies to the Eighteenth amendment. I am in sympathy with post of the economic purposes of the farm bloc, but I do not think blocs should exert their influence to the detri ment of the whole, and I doubt their wisdom and propriety. I am in favor of an“adefluate and effective line of defense. We ought to be better prepared than we were in 1917. I am in sympathy with arms limitation in a general way, and in favor of anything that will make irar more improbable, but I think the arms limitations treaty is less effective than the league of nations plan for preventing conflict. The international policies of Senator LaFollette and those who agree with him do not meet my approval. I am a progressive and I believe in eliminating the bad things in our government, but I am in favor of retaining the things that are good. The government should stop child labor of the kind that stunts the child’s growtlu The government should prevent working conditions in sanitary or destructive of the moral or physical welfare of the worker. Especially among women a far greater hazard of eyil results from low wages rather than from long hours. The ■preservation of peace is of far greater importance than the success of political parties, and if the President and his party can promote world peace I shall be glad to support their efforts. I hope the senate will give its consent to membership in the International Court of Justice. “A Boy in Poland; Twenty Years at Sea, and the Remainder as a Writer” \ JOSEPH CONRAD, to New York Reporters. ' IHAD a touch of lumbago and an attack of gout in my left hand; I didn’t get up in the bridge as much as I should have liked. . . . This is the largest ship I was ever on (the displacement of the Tus cania is 16,892 tons). ... I left the sea in ’94. Ships hfcve changed since then. All life has changed. Captain Bone was kind enough to show me all the new contraptions which ships did not have when I was at sea. ... Yes, I still hold my master’s ticket; it’s in the family archives. Captain Bone insisted that hit men address me by my title. At first I didn’t know whom they meant when the officers said “Do this or that for the Captain.” It pleased me very much. A pretty compliment. ... Yes, Walter Hines Page was a great man. It is part of England’s tradi tional luck to have had Page in London during the war. He was killed by the war just as ntnch as if he had had a bullet in hir heart. America has always been good to me; magazines hav* serialized my Stories from the very first. . . . Americans have an enviable enthusiasm. Enthusiasm makes life interesting. . . . Ho, I’m not much up on modem American literature. Yon see, I don’t read much fiction and my mind ie not critical. I couldn’t say much about writers, because I haven’t got any general culture. Twenty yev* at aea when one is a youth do not fit oAe with a critical type of mind. Pm not *iitemy man. x Hehry James, who used to come to see-me, told m# fcbont John Burroughs, the fellow who was always charing nightingales. ... I , read Poe in French translations. Whitman, yes, but I can’t say about i Whitman, for I haven’t a critical mind. Yon see, I have lived three lives: , until seventeen a boy in Poland, twenty years at see and tha remainder ,as a writer. I thought of drifting back to sea, even;after I was married; but after “The Nigger of Qm lfamssufi?’ I made up my mind it the end of my sea life. ■k- .v.'WrjiMMMt ffi JSjSrik - iff liM5 A •a*nr laO Fresh Okra. Tomatoes, Corn. Beans, Cu- , Members, Squash, Potatoes. 'Peaches, ■ Apples, Carrots. Lippard & Barrier. 18-it-p. ; For Sale or Rei\t —5 Room House on ( Academy street. For rent 2 unfurnish- ‘ ed rooms in the Dusenbery bouse. Jno. K. Patterson, Agt. 13-st-p. J 1 For Rent—New 5-Room Bungalow, Con- ! veniently located. Light and water ' connections. Day phone 80, night ' 682 J. 13-ts. Barbecue and Square Dance, Kindley’s I Mill Thursday night. Dancing at 8.30. 1 Owe Dollar. 14-4 t-p. i Pay $5.00 in Advance For The Tribune) and we will send you the Progressive l Farmer one year absolutely free. The ( Progressive Farmer is the best farm | paper published. The price will be j $6.00 if you get your paper in the City i of Concord or outside the State of i ! North Carolina. Address Tribune, Con- ( cord, N. C. \ Land Deeds, 5 Cents Each, at Times- ! Tribune Office. For Sale—Several Damaged Enameled \ lavatories. All bargains. Take your picking choice. E. B. Grady. , 16-6 t-p. 1 1 — - 1,1 - ! Fresh Arrival Porcelain. White House and Occo-Nee-Ohee Flour. Lippard & Barrier. 18-lt-p. Engraved Visiting Cards! $2.35 to $4.50 for 100, including plate. Call and see, s beautiful sample line. Times anu Trib- * une office. History of First Presbyterian Church, of Concord, written in 1905 by Mrs. R. S. Harris, ten cents each tit The Times-Tribune Office. 23-ts. Adding Machine Paper. 20 Cents a Roll at Times and Tribune Office. LAWS ARK FUTILE GUIDES ' - - . WP GfWDUCT, PASTOR B£¥S Only Jesus Christ Can Save Man, ''the Rev. Dr. Martin Tells Moravian Con gregation. New York World. There are approximately 1.600 church es. missions, chapels and other places of worship ip the five boroughs of New York. Thefr : membership is estimated at 2,000.000. What message are these churches bringing to the city each week? To answer this question The World sends a reporter to a church each Sun day and prints a report of the sermon on Monday. The transfiguring jiower of love was the general theme selected by the Rev. l)r. Charles IX Martin for his fifteenth anniversary sermon yesterday morning at Beth-Tphillali. the Fourth Moravian Church, 124 West 126th Street l “Underlying the unsettled stipe of our times,’’ said Dr. Martin, "is a frantic! effort to get out of onr present condi tion and better and save ourselves—to get the best that we think life has for us or wrest from others what we think we should have—lienee the thousand and one voices. Yes, even attempts to con sult with the dead and other supersti tions are included in uor efforts to deal with present, living issties. “Jesus Christ is the only way out; not only His teachings, over which we tight, but .Jesus himself. A living Jes us, keenly alive and sympathetic in all matters where man is concerned: life, wages, racial relations, national suprem acy. Only JesHs Can Bave. "Jesus Christ only has the cai»u-ity and ability to save man. Every effort for the salvation of a people in body, soul and mind, physically, mentally, so iftigtly, spiritually, undertaken apart from IfesitsC must prove futile. "God is spirit, we know, and we also know -that since He is spirit He can manifest Himself, and He has done so in and through Jesus Christ, whom He presents to man as Divine. Authorita tive. Final, the Captain of our salva tion. tile Bishop and Shepherd of our souls who only hath immortality which ue alone can give and does give to as many as Trust Him “God'S idea was first of man. Man never created God nor the thought of God. -The first intimate knowledge we pos sess of God in the earliest dawn of his tory is when He spoke of His intention to create man. Man was born in the mind of God. Man's evolution was in the mind of God. Man as the thought of God was sent forth to learn and con quer the universe, to develop and estab lish a direct contact through prayer :uui intercession with his Maker. Short of Divine Contact. "\\"e know how far short of this per fect contact with tlie Divine we in the world are today. All the seductiveness if things material, the enjoyment of the visible and the physical, the pleasures of he senses, have gradually extended un til they have excluded and then denied until they have prevented the contem plation of tlie invisible, the only reality." Dr. Martin referred to bis text which lie had taken from tlie Gospel of Luke, ninth chapter and thirty-fifth verse, in which an account of Christ's Transfig uration on the mountain is given—the pnartirular words selected being: “And a voice came out of the cloudy? saying. This is My S6i>. my chosen; heed ye Him." X This passage Dr. Martin said shows the continual thought of God about man’s state. God's mind being always on man. He dwelt at length on conditions in Italy and Russia, where revolutions at tempted to govern, and emphasized tin fact that class hatred was productive of more murder and bloodshed than tlie rule of King and Czar. "Man's salvation." said Dr. Martin, "it so tremendously important that it takes the best men. weighed down with ill knowledge •£. the weakness of hu-, inanity, plus their own experience, cleans ed from selfishness and pride, to _enter into consultation with Christ as to the ictive redemption of man. "Binding laws, serve penalties and in effectual. catastrophic movements irt na ture. death in its most appalling form— these lead to extermination, not salva- Kon At the consultation of men and God on the Holy Mount. Christ brought Jis contribution —sacrifice of tile best for the salvation of the world. For ages }(k! had worked through nature and men. The life, deatli and resurrection ■,[ Christ brought it to the world at large. Christ offered Himself as the ransom for all miukind. "Love, not sentiment, is the secret of ■ailvation. Sentiment changes; love abides." Building and Loan Did It. Albemarle News-Herald. - A well known business man sjaowed, U s a bank deposit receipt for SSOO one day this week and explained at the same fime thut he made that deposit with money which he had saved by paying a small amount once u week on building and loan shares. He said he paid up for five shares making small payments each week, that lie never missed the small amount and that had he not used it in that way he would liave„ spent the money which he used in paying his week ly dues, and never have known where it went. "Building and loan." he said, "is a great investment.” He declared that the deposit of was "just vel vet." . This is an example of what thrift uieuna when virtuously practiced. Thrift is something on. which we should place more emphasis, and where bui'.ding and loan comes in is, that no institution docs more to foster regular and systematic habits of thrift. A boy at 14 years of age can subscribe for five shares, and by paying a,small assessment each week or each mouth' can have snoo paid up when he reaches the age of 21 years— enough to help a long way towards pay ing hie way thorough college. This fea ture of. building, and loan should be ern phasMd. us will as the home buildiug advantages which building and loan of-, sere, v-v,- g .■ se—— ffeuiotte Teachers Get Raise. \ I. Charlotte. July 17.—Teachers in'ibe public, schools of Charlotte have *b4gn given*-a substantial' raise and provision* for MRMofog their number from 267 to SOO, u-twira Janwiawed today,* making the total tot be (Wit for these salaries more then 4080100* for the coming year. The RtdarY 'if Superintendent Herding was vtgdMffjNsiau** r.sM thut of. Dr, R ***«•»». principal Os the high $444,44 a month. • a j ' •• IHE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE - - COUNTY \VlttE t iiniTs AGAINST " TYPHOUS-gpw UNDERWKAY AS the Leading Community Centers In Me County Will Be .Visited by Health Officer Daring the Drive. Following his usual custom of carry ing the eampaign^_ag*inst typhoid fever and diphtheria to every section of the county, Dr. S. E.-Buchanan, the county health officer, this ' week began his county-wide drive ’to give the typhoid and diphtheria serum to every man, wo man and child in the county. The diphtheria sernm is for children between the ages Os sit months and six years. The typhoid serum is for every one. Persons who have never taken the serum should by all means take it. Those who have not had -it during the past three years need it, and others who think they need it, or who want it, can get it. The following iij the complete sched ule : Mondays. July 9. 16. 23, 30. Rimer School, Ifb. -6, 8:30 to 9:30. Watts Cross Rdhds. No. 7, 9:45 to 10:15. St. Stephens Church, No. 7, II to 11:30. ; Beck School, No. 7, 12:30 to 1:00. St. John's SehooL No. 8. 2 :00 to 2 :30. Mt. Pleasant, Not 8. 3:00 to 4:00. Tuesdays. July to. 17, 24, 31. Cold Springs Church, No. 9, 8:45 to 0 :15. Piotts Store, No. 9, 9:30 to 9:45. Georgeville, No. 9, 10:15 to 10:45. Boat Mill, 11:00 to 11:15. Biggers Store, Hr*s to 12:15. Midland School, 1!00 to 1:30. Bethel School, No. 10. 2 :00 <to 2:30. Flowe’s Store, 3 8)0 to 3 :30. Wednesdays. July it. 18. 25, Aug. 1 Mt. Gilead School, No. 5, 8:80 to 9:00. Shinn School, 9 JUi _to 9 :45. County Health vrflft-e. 2:00 to 5)00. Thursdays. July $£..19, 25. August. 2. Rooky River School, No. 1-—9:00 to 9:30. Hickory Ridge School 10:00 to 10:30. Bellefoute School, 11:00 to 11:30. Harrisburg, N. G.; 12 :30 to 1:30. Roberta Store, 2:00 to 2:30. Kannapolis, Y. M. C. A., 7 :00 to 8:30. Fridays, July ljg, 20, 27, August S Pitts School, No. 2. 8:45 to 9:15, Poplar Tent School, 9:45 to 10:15. Gilwooil School, {{<>• 3, 10:45 to 11:15. Coddle School. 12 *OO to 12 :30. Bethpage School, 1:00 to 1:30. Winecoff Saturdays, July A3, 21. 28, August 4 County Health Office, 9 :00 to 0 3)0. THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER A WHOLE YEAR FREE Pay $5.00 and Get The Concord Tribune and Progressive Farmer Both For One Year. Until further notice we will give The Concord Tribune and the Progressive Farmer, both one year for only $5.00, the price of The Tribune, alone. The progres sive Farmer is the best farm paper pub lished and every farmer should have' it. (This applies to those who get their mail on tlie rural routes or to any point in North Carolina the City of Concord. To subscribers in Concord and outside North Carolina the price is $6.00). This offer ifi_>open to botji old and new subscribers. If you are already taking The Tribune all you. have to do is to pay "up to date and more for another year, and tlie Progressive Farmer will be sent you a whole year free. If you are already paid in advance to The Tribune, just pay $5.00 for another year: your subscription will be so mark ed and we will send you the Progressive farmer a full year also. Address. THE TRIBUNE, Concord, N. C. All Judges Are Holding Court in Home Dictricts. Raleigh, July 171—For the first time in five yenrs tlie 20 Superior Court judges of tlie state .are holding dourt in their home district Miss Mamie Tur ner. who as a secretary in Governor Mor rison's office keeps tub on tlie goings and coming of the judiciary, discovered to day. Through tlie rotation system, which is now under fire from the bar associa tion. the judges ur« out of their home districts for five years at a time. Be ginning with July 1. all have returned to their home district for the first time •in five years. The system of rotation is expected to be vigorously fought when the Legislature mete again. It was the cuetiqnAvith the Arabian physicians during the- highest era of Sar-, acen learning, to administer precious stones in tlie way "Fntedicine. The poet Byron Is said to have bean a firm believer in the Jll-luek of Frujay, and was seriously .msconcerted if any thing was to be dmfc'on that day. NO’fecE To Abutting Prop* |jy ( Osrurs on the South' Side of BdMo Street Between North Spring Str let and Kerr Street- Pursuant to a re oTutiou submitted to and passed by the Board of Aldermen of the City of North Carolina, on April 12th. 1923. ordering the sidewalk on the South Side of Buffalo Street be tween Sor'ag Street and Kerr Street to be paved with concrete. Npw. therefore, each of said property' owner* abutting on said street are here ; by notined to pave said side-- walk in front of their respective proper ties in accordance with plans and speci fications to be- furnished by the City En | glneer, within twenty days after the , service 'of this notice, and upon failure , to grade and . pave said sidewalk in ac cordance with plana and specifications as set out above, in front of their respect -1 ive properties, within twenty days after tbe service of this notice, the City of Con cord will have suid sidewalk graded and ’ paved with (Concrete, and one-half of the coat of sauU will tie entered upop tb«r tax' ; list of the City of Concord for the cur ' rent year against earir of said property owners abutting on said-sidewalk order ed to be paved, in proportion to the uum , ber of. feet .each property,' owner baa on s' said; strict iwgWMripiMt Mb* i} i of'arid*property abutting On paid- sidejj . walk. M *»•' *»*' ‘ k , ■- IN ■ Thin notice isi giveb under authority of i sec. 58. Qhapter Private Raws-. - Mi i North Carolina, SaosW IW. I .JU 1) BfeST WHEAT CROP - ; .. IN WR-WM«g» WWMB . Was Over a Million BnMs in Sx«M t as That at Lwafc Year. (By rtf' AmocUim Ppeaa.t Raleigh. Hrxl. iJafjr fl. —North Car olina made the best wheat crop this year the state has made for gome time, it being 1,077.000 bushels more tban last year’s crop. Trank Parker, Statis tician of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, announced tonight, ‘•Tim toml prodiAffca of a,SB!XfIGO bushels rtpresents an average of approx imately 10 bushels per acre.” Mr. Parker state. “The average condition for North Carolina is 1)0 per cent, as compared to 82 per cent, for the ten yeflr period and 78 per cent, a year ago. The price is $1.42 this year, or three cents per bushel more than a year ago. The per -cent, of last year's crop remaining on farms in this state is five peer cent, or two per cent. more than was estimated a year ago. "For the United States the winter wheat showed an average condition of 7(5.8 per cent, and spring wheat 82.4 per cent., or a combined condition of 78.3 per cent., forecasting on a four and one half per cent, reduced acreage 821,000,000 year's crop. The average price for the United States is 05.1 cents compared with SI.OB ii year ago. The national average of 14.1 bushels compares with North Carolina's 10 bushels to the acre. “Corn js North Carolina’s principal crop, since it occupies 37 per cent, of the cultivated acreage, while cotton oc cupies but 23 per cent. The one crop in this state that stays nearest the same acreage is corn. This year's acreage allows the usual 100 per cent, compared with last year and with the usual, with a condition og 87 ]ier cent, of a normal or full crop prospect. The eastern and southern counties have shown the great est increase, where it has replaced some cotton acreage. This information is. the result of Wer five hundred experienced reporters estimates from all counties of the state. The poorest condition is found from Sampson to Orange coun tit's. Another area of poor condition is found from I’olk county along the border to Anson. The crop is fairly gotal this year, especially in the mountain counties and from Iredell southeasterly to the southern const, also in the central coast al counties. According to the ofih'ial crop report from the Co-operative Crop Reporting Service of the State and Federal Depart ments of Agriculture, it is found that corn in the United States averages 85.2 tier cent, of normal with the acreage at about one per eent. increase. On this condition the national-erop for this year' ' will be about the same as for last year, or 2.877 bushels. This would give an average of 28 bushels to the acre, which is also the five year average. The av erage price ranges about 87 cents for the entire country, as com|»red with (52 cents a year ago. The forecast for North (.'arolina is 50,43rd)00 bushels which is the snme as last year's produc tion and 4.000,000 bushels less than the five-year average. Our farm price is $1.20 compared with 8!) cents a year ago. "Although North Carolina . is not a big oat producing state it is of economic importance in our crop productiou. With the condtion of !M> per cent, or a normal crop estimated by 405 growers we have the prospect of a good crop. Both wheat I ONE YEAR FREE I jg We Will Give The > 'n M 1 Progressive Farmer | js o 3 8 —anci— ] The Coacord Tribune | Both For One Year M 1 For Only $5 1 , H The Price of The Tribune Alone m 'SB ■ (This applies to those who get their, mail on the rural routes or to any point In —i. S North Caroltfaa outside the City of Concord. To subscribers in Concord and outside 555 Norffi-CaroUna the price is $64)0.) Sgg ; 3 The Progressive Farmer is the greatest farm |g paper published and every farmer should have it. ; s This offer will be good for 60 days only, from M | June Bth, 823. ' | 3 This offer is open to both new and old sub- 8 S seribers. If you are already taking The Tribune all you have to do is to pay up to date and $5:60 M !■ 8 more for anotßfer year and the Progressive Farm- 3 er will be sent you a whole year absolutely free* of M charge. If you are already paid in advance to The m 8 Tribune, just pay $5 for another year, your sub- §j§ ; v Sv' Siiription Wiirbe so marked and we will send you 3 \W the PTOgreseive Farmer a ftiil year. AdWreso 8 * Concord, N. G I m .... , . , , . N \ •; '± and oats have shown improvement dur iugtbepaat- three months.—Hu.-c-ruy showeff a alight decrease Tn aereager "Fofc'ty&r United Stat«rr|*a,-JiityVß cenditidu la 83.5 per the sftme as the ten year condition- Jffce National production of 1,283,717,000 bushels, having* an overage farm virtue of 42.6 cento which is five cents a' bhsfc el more tbkri a year ago. 'The recent favorable seasons in most parts of the State following the unusual ly dry June conditions have helped al most all crops considerably. There are still some dry areas which are suffering severelyq. These extend along through certain parts of the Eastern Piedmont. June was one of the driest months North Carolina has on record. “That the farmers are continuing to get a raw deal is evidenced by - the two per cent, decreased price during June of the principal crops. Ordinarily the de cline is less than one per cent. It is gratifying, however, to find that the in dex figure of prices is about 17 per cent, higher than a year ago and 31 per cent, higher than two years, but 17.6 per cent, lower than the average for the past ten years.” _ An old custom in parts of rural Eng land is that of 'the Bible and Key.” Many old people, when they have lost anything, and suspect it to be stolen, take the front door key of their dwelling, and in order to find out the thief, tie this key to the Bible, placing it very carefully on the eighteenth verse of the fiftieth Psalm. Two persons must then hold tlie book by the bov/ of the key, and first repeat the nume of the sus pected person, and then the verse from the Psalm. If the Bible moves, the suspected person is considered guilty; if it does not move, innocent. Sure Relief TOR INDIGESTION BeLL-ANS 25« and 75 1 Packages Everywhere I er- t.-j.i--"'a: 11 :! > | | | , in :j [park'avenue hotel 4th Avenue, from 32nd to 33rd Streets.'NewYarit * , (SvWkr Eatruc. at Dmt) ' t QNE of the beat known hotels in the matvapaßs Convenient la shopping, theatres, end in (he heart of the whaiarnia district. . Lear than 50c- tend fare (one or more peraons) fromaithar riilaay tarmfawL Surface care pasa door. * PRICES FOR ROOMS F 50 single rooms SI2S par day 100 tingle rooms S2SO pat dag 250 double rooms .... $4.00 per day and upwmrd Single rooms with bath . . $4.00 per day and upward Double rooms with bath • • $54)0 par dayand upward POPULAR PRICE CAFETERIA AND REGULAR RESTAURANT The SUNKEN PALM GARDEN Is surrounded by Dining Balconies and n fine Orchssta is rtatianaii ha—ovary evening. } GEORGE C BROWN, Proprietor ' ‘ -\w ■’’ - Wednesday, July 18, 1023. ' . 4 ■v'" 1 ‘ vs: '.S', mtoto.ytotoenawn.we ~i gw n > imwai ■ . m vigorous digestion an* Mix*t health. Give them a glads Os this * delicious digestant with • -meals. Shivar Ale Pare Dit«stive Aromatic* With Shivar Miami W»tw * Slat* Nothing like it for building rich blood and solid flesh. At all grocers and druggists—sat isfaction or your money back on x first dozen. If your regular dealer canaot anpply you, telephone G. W. Patterson WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR SULPHUR CLEARS BOUGH, RED SKIN Face, Neck and Arma Easily Made Smooth, Baya Specialist Any breaking ont of the skin, even fiery, itching eczema, can be quickly overcome by applying a little Mentho- I Sulphur, declares a noted skin special. | ist Because of its germ destroying j properties, this sulphur preparation he | gins at once to soothe irritated skin and I heal eruptions such as rash, pimple&and i ring worm. - It seldom fails to remove the torment and disfigurement, and you do not have to wait for relief from embarrassment. Improvement quickly shows. Sufferers from skin trouble should obtain a small jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur from any good druggist and use it like cold cream.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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July 18, 1923, edition 1
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