PAGE FOUR ... aaaßßßgßg...." ...I'l 11 . 1 , The Concord Daily Tribune. {•9, SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher w, M. HHJUtHaL A—opiate Editor s .rsKi? sraSSra cal news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are also reserved. Special Representative FROST, LANDIS A KOHN 225 Fifth Avenue, New York Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Building. Atlanta Sintered as second class mail matter at ihe postofflce at Concord. N. CX, un der the Act of March 3, 1872. SUBSCRIPTION BATES In the City of Concord by Carrier Oae Year - 36.00 Six Months , 8.00 Three Months 1.50 One Month .50 Outside of the State, the Subscription Is the Same as In the City Out of the city and by mall In North Carolina the following prices wil pre vail: ' One Year 35.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid In Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE la Effect April' 2S. IMA Northbound. No. 136 To Washington 6:00 A. M. No. 36 To Washington 10:25 A. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. s No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To Washington 8:28 P. M. No. 38 To Washington 8:30 P. U. Southbound. l i'6. 45 To Ctferlotte ..4:23 P. M. No. 35 To Atlanta 10.06 P. M. No. 29 oT Atlanta :2:45 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 6:07 A. M. No. S 3 To New Orleans 8:27 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 9:05 A. M. Na. 186 To Atlanta 9:15 P. M. I jT'bS^ raOUGHTI I M —FOR TODAY—I |g| Bible Tfiooghts memorized. wiH prove a Si §1 priceless heritage in after years. (| HUMILITY OF CHRIST:—Let this mind be in you, which was also iu Christ -I esits. 1 .i-t nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in low liness of mind let each esteem other bet-1 than themselves—Phil. 2:3. 3. THANK YOl’. The life of a publisher has many trou bles but there are occasions. Red Let fell days so to say. when our troubles a+i ftjgKpttbii, and we enjoy for a space 'at hffft. ithejl warm glow of satisfaction, as advertisers and readers voice their sat isfaction with our work. Today was one of these occasions, when a procession of business men visited this office and com plimented the management upon the Fair and Industrial edition which was ’ published last night. ’There is no doubt that Cabarrus and . Concord citizens are more than pleased with the sjiecial edition on which the en ergies of our organization have been bent for tile Vast month, and we are de lighted that our efforts to record in black and white how splendidly this county has seized the opportunity to ad vance. have been so well received. We feel more than repaid in having publish ed an edition which has been so gener ously received by tlie public. • our wonderful state. To be a North Carolinian is to be a na tive of one of the finest states in the federation. In order that a better real ization may be had of what a magnifi cent future lies ahead of us. some of the most significant records made by this state are submit ted : North Carolina lias the largest hosiery mill in the World. North Carolina lias the largest denim ' mill in the United States. North Carolina has the largest towel mill in the world and it is in Cabarrus County. North Carolina has the largest alumi num plant in file world. * North Carolina has the largest damask mills in tiie United States. North Carolina has the largest under wear factory in the United States. North Carolina consume!* annually 1.- 100.000 bales of raw cotton in our own textile mills. North Carolina has the largest pulp mill in the United States. . North Carolina has more mills that dye ami finish their own products than any other Southern State. ' North Carolina leads IhN.world in the manufacture of tobacco. ' North Carolina has a total of more than <>.200 factories which give employ ment to 158.000 workers whose total an nual wages amount Vo more than $127.- 000,000.00. North Carolina lias $000,000,000 in vested in manufacturing establishments. North Carolina leads every Southern State in the number of wage and salary eurners. North Carolina leads the Southern States r in values added to the raw ma terials iyfter process of manufacture with $417,000000 compared with Texas, $208,000,000; Virginia, $260,000,000. and Ueorgia $203,000,000. North Carolina has the sectmd largest hfrdro-eleejrie power development in the world. North Carolina consumes one-fourth ot all the tobaeo used in manufacture in the United States: pays one-third of the tobacco taxes of the United States: mun t ufactures more cigarettes than any other State in the Union* and one city in North Carolina manufactures more to bacco than any other city in the world. • North Carolina has more cotton mills than any other State in the Union and stands second in value of cotton manu- Nortb Carolina in 1922 stood eighth in the Union in federal taxes paid wit^j i North Carolina leads the South in the number of furniture factories: in the capital invested; In the number of »ni- ployes; in variety, of products, and the value of the antml output; only one other city in the United States manufactures more furniture than does oae of our North Carolina cities. North Carolina ranks fifth in the val ue of agricultural products of any state in the Union. In 1921 three l North Car olina counties—Johnston. Pitt and Robe-' son—were among the fifty rfehest agri culutral counties in the Union. North Carolina ranks third in the production of sorghum, peanuts and sweet potatoes: grows more corn per acre than any other State in the Union. North Carolina leads the Union in the number of debt free homes; more than ! four-fifths of tlie homes of North Caro- j lina have not one cent of debt against them. The South lias water power develop-1 men* of 9.000.000 horsepower. North 1 Carolina's share of this is 1.000.000. of _ which not quite half has been developed. ] The Soirth produces 30 per eent. of. the Nation's lumber and in North Car- | oilna hardwood and pine forests, is found . the largest and richest supplies of lum-; her iu the Eastern half of the United ! States. ' * North Carolina ranks first in the val ue and quantity of mica produced, niiii- 1 ' ing 75 per cent, of all the mica mined in the United States-. North Carolina ranks first iu the quan- j, tity of feldspar produced in the United , , States. . 1 1 North Carolina ranks first in the value I and quantity of mill stones produced in j! the United States. The talc mined iu North Carolina com- i mands the highest price per ton of any mined in the United States. Relic of. Civil War is Found Near | Kinston. Kingston. Oct. 11- —A Civil Alar pro jectile weighing nearly 13 pounds was - excavated by the State Highway workers near here recently. The "bullet' .was , seven inches long and four inches thick. f Authorities on such things said it was ; made for a 12-pouuder. a field gnu com j monly used iu the Confederate forces. : The projectile was traced for a rifle. | Heber Gray, who took the bullet iu charge, said it was located near the j wreck of tlie ram Neiise. lying in Neuse river just south of this city- The Neuse ] was a man-of-war that never went to j sea. The ship was built here. When she was launched there was not enough water in tlie stream to float her down to New Bern. She participated in one bat tle, being attacked by ° Federal troops. Several accounts have been given of her fate. May Have Stumbled on *25.000 Worth j of Booze. New York, Oct. 10.—Customs officials ! today stumbled main a discovery which j "may reveal a plot to smuggle French | liquor into the I'uited Jstates on a : wholesale scale. A longshoreman, rolling | a barrel of "hides" along a Hudson j river pier after a shipment of 9t> barrels j had been Unleaded from the t rench - liuer Chicago, which docked last Satur- ; dday. tripped, and' the barrel crashed ) into an iron girder. A customs in- i spector. standing nearby, expected to j See brine in which hides usually are ; packed, gusli from the broken staves- The epected How was not forthcoming- j Opening the barrel, he found inside j 48 bottles of scotch, behedictine and j apricot brandy'. He tapped five , more j barrels. In each was found 48 bottles of j contraband liquor. * I iTi[nir~i STILL m IIP: S" B. J. Wilson Says Dr. Thach er’s Liver and Blood Syrup Keeps Him Going. "Although I am ninety-one years old I hardly feel half my age. and it is Dr. j Thaeber’s Liver and Blood Syrup that j keeiis me going” said B. .1, Wilson, of t Humble. Ky. "I had been suffering for years from kidney trouble and constipation. My j back was weak and hurt me dowui about 1 my kidneys, and my liver was inactive, causing headaches and constipation. , “I got half a dozen bottles of Dr. , 1 Tha«4ier's Liver and Blood Syrup to take | and now 1 wouldn’t take a thousaud dol lars for.what those six bottle have done j for me. I feel almost like a young man i again and believe it has given me u new ‘ lease on life.” Dr. Thacker's Liver and Blood Syrup 1 - is sold by the I’earl Drug Company apd ! . the purchase price will be refunded if yon j arc not satisfied. Bringing t llP'Bin-’ - - .'v X\\ - " f 4 ( You kN©w*THt 7 THATOLO SayinG-- \ \ X \\ \ ' »\ Bur Poes* tth* GIANTS OUTPLAY YANKEES (-• IN THE FIRST GAME Count Was Three and Two' When Stengel Drove Out Home Run. New York, Oct- 10.—Swinging his bat in that fabled setting of the diamond —the ninth inning, with the score tied, two out and the count “two and three” ■ —Qasey Stengel blasted his way into baseball's hall of fame today , with a home run drive that gave the New York Giauts a spectacular victory over the Yankees. 5 to 4. iu ’ the ojiening clash of the 1923 world's series. Thgt mighty and heroic blow by Stengel, who came back lifter being re legated to baseball’s scrap heap uot ) long ago, ended a gripping, pulse-throb i bing drama, a thrilling battle in which I the wits, drives and punch auil brilliant I defense of the Giants triumphed over the courage, brawn and fighting spirit lof the Yunkees. Crashed to the ex -1 treme right eenterfield stretches of the vast Yankee stadium, that lierculcuu j smash broke tiie heart of Joe Bush. - baseball star, who had held the Giant iu I check after seeing his teammate. Waite Hoyt, battered from the mound, and i who, otherwise, might have stood out I tonight as the hero of a Yaukee triumph | instead of but a courngeus figure in de feat. It was a heart-breaking ending to Bush’s gallant stand, yet lie siielled his | own down-fall by his tactical error in ■ “grooving” the ball for Stengel's dra matic feat. i A vast throng of 55,000/ that shattered all records for world's scries attendance. I and gate receipts, and filled close to capacity, tlie far-tiuug reaches of base ball’s greatest monument, witnessed the /* * 1 ” *" j 11 " "y GUS. BARCLAY of Kingston, N. Y., who says ‘Neutrone Proscription 99’ cured him of his Rheumatism whan he had lost all hope ol ever being well again. The rapid recovery of Gus Bar , clay of 99 Clinton St,, Kingston, | N. Y., has again called attention to the remarkable curative effects of ! Neutrone Prescription "99.” 1 Here is the atory: , “For years I have been all erip ; pled up with rheumatism in my arms and legs. My feet would swell so that X could not eveA get my shoes on. My knees became so stiff that I could hardly bend them. Every step I took was agony. I could barely hobble around. “No one knows what I suffered - until I tried Neijtrone Prescription “99.” After the first week' I felt , better. What a relief! It seemed too good to be true. All my aches and pains have gone; no more swell i ingS, and my joints are all limbered j tip again. “I feel myself a lucky man to be 1 so well again after all these years., I can say that Neutrone Prescrip tion “99” will prove a blessing to anyone suffering from this dreaded disease. Every rheumatic should | take it, when relief is so sure.”* j Neutrone Prescription “99” now comes in tablet as well as liquid form, whichever is preferred. Lead ing Druggists everywhere. I Gibson Drug Store Cabarrus Savings Bank - . OjpKjTV • . wr THE CONCORD D7UCT TRIBUN! ■■■ llln imil - ■ R luuiiiiiiiiiimiiiinniiiMiiiiiiniiiiiin BULBS The Finest White \ Roman Hyacinths • < and Narcissus Ever Show in Concord Pearl Drag Co. llllHUmillHlHHlllllHllffiltiyttittllHHP Ff&S* NO CHANCER Si t a- r— •: i,* ■ i ■ U'-. 'S- DINNER STORIES * Dinner Stories. She: “Do you remember when you were first struck hy my beauty?” He: “I think so- Wasn’t it nt the masked hall?—Boll WeeTil. I I-ndy: “But dou’t you find that horse back riding given oue a headache?” Instructor: “Emphatically. uo, madam. Just the reverse.'-' —Black ami Blue Jay. A small boy called on the doctor one evening. "Say. Doc. I. guess I got measles,tl he said, "but 'I can keep it quiet.” , The doctor looked puzzled. “Aw. get wise. Doc. suggested tlie small boy. "What’ll you give me to go to school aud" scatter it among all the kids?” t ' f 1 j Ed—"i met the most ■ unusual girl last night:" Bill—" Oh. yes. they're all that way fyr the first time” - , Ed—“No, not this one. We wens to eat and she said she wasn’t hungry, and she really wnsn’t.” Rastas-—-Ah can't’ get dis spot off'ii yo' trousers. , Student—Have you tried gasoliue? • Rastus—Y’as. sub. • Student —Have bn tried ammonia? Ratus—Naw. sub. but I'm almost sure they'll fit.—Yellow Jacket. "X suppose that you sailors are very careful when you are at sea?” ! “Oh. not at all. In fact, we try to j lx*, as wreokless as possible." . < Adam (during the first .spat)—“Al ways keep in mind, lady, that you were made for me—not I for you. Get me?” Eve—“l got you, all right, but I had no choice.” j Motor Cop—" You were doing forty, ma’am." > Young Thiug: “Forty—oh /vas 1? Well you were doing ns much yourself - —so there!” "What' Was your occupation before i you joiued the army?” , J "l was an organist." "How come you to quit the proses- i sion? Lost your job. I guess?’ "No, the monkey died." i Down to the Depths. Mother —"Do j. Oll know what be- i fifties of naughty little boys?" Willie—" Well. 1 supisise they be come vice president? instead •of presi- - dents.” j * A TERRIBLE GOITRE Removed Without Operation—Mrs. Cox i Teiis How—Was Short of Breath.— j Eyes Bad.—Could Not Work. —In Beil Part of Time—Htanless Liniment Used. Mrs. Dat Cox says come to Troy. Ohio, and 1 will show you what Sorliol-Quail- < ruple has done for me. If you can't conic, write. Get more information at Gibson Dnig Store, drug .stores everywhere or write Soibol-Gompany. yipjfliywtiinr, '.yhsm;*; ij 'ThereTone TREAT) \ THAT CANT BE BEAT--) j > - AND THE R Car Lot(d Chairs | P Car Load Kitchen Cabinets . X Car Load Ranges X Car’ Load iptoves. Car Load Five-Piece Parloif Suites. ' ' Car Load Rockers. • * — X Come in and see the Most Wonderful Display of Fur- X i niture ever shown in Concord. Do not Buy anything for X | your home until you have seen our line. ’ 8 BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO I ; , “THE STORE THAT {SATISFIES The many 'people ! who responded to our i ad; last week, have by this time found out jßs l just what we can do for them in the way of 3 saving fuel. To those ; who did, not answer agg|gSgg|ggdfeS|yo|k our ad. we will t drop g this line to them. Here ~ tsSSj^SSSSEFm T I Furnace which will '||3 § save \ou the cost of i D installing a furnace 1 fl I and give you the max | inuim heat from the ' | smallest „ amount of ’Uga^S-Salßß 3 coal, The beauty |>art S r H of it is that you can 1 • burn either hard or u, | soft coal, and only one Ahi4saSyiffi3|j«fc l tire to.build each win- SUnll jj 'ter. Call at our store /~flre«3Pal j j ; and see this wonderful , heating plant. Concord Phone 164 I' 1 Kannapolis Phone 2 k j? Q .District ft W! i It Pays to Put an Ad. in The Tribune -- ' -:- A' T««*S- ■ a- .. 14 ■ wßfc , '; : --'tv- .j*- ■ ; ■* ./. * • ■ ' -:x -f • Thursday, October li; 1923