PAGE EIGHT iiy*n^Tr^ f ■] \ I* i “ ®jR r UPHwßii fcr~ •■-. -v -■-'^^jiSjwl!?'. ms Wml l Special For Ten Days— Buck’s All Cast Iron Range J Liberal allowance for your old stove or range as first payment. J Balance one to two dollars weekly. ’ jj Buck’s will save enough in fuel to meet your payments. Really j ■j cost you almost nothing to own a new Buck’s Range or stove. Hold l | on thirty days’ “free trial. Money back if not satisfied. More Buck’s * j in use in Cabarrus County than any other make. There’s a Reason, jj si Let us show you Why Buck’s are Best. j' CONCORD FURNITURE CO. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE QocttooooooooooocKoooooooooraocxxxxraooroooooooooor K. L. CRAVEN & SONS PHONE 74 COAT sssw. SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cr I ! OPPOSITE NEW HOTEL OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOGOOOOOOOOOOOGOOCOOOOOOOOOOC I BETTER TO BE SAFE THAN SORRY Better Equip Your Car With Those Famous All Weather Tread Good year Tires They Make You Safer in Any Kind of Weather-Rain, Snow m r or Sleet | Yorke & Wadsworth Co. | # THE OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE STORE Concord Daily Tribune I time dr closing mails The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffice U as follows: Northbound 136—J1:00 P. M. 36*4-10:00 A. M. 34 4 :10 P. M. - 38— 8:30 P. M. ' 30—11:00 P. M. Southbound 30— 9 :30 A. M. 45 3 :S0 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 20—11:00 P, M. , M " | | LOCAL MENTION [ fj Ed M. Cook entered the Concord 5 Hospital this morning for treatment. £ Mrs. Aleck Caton, who has gone to Southern Pines for her health, is l reported as being greatly improved. Don’t miss the picture at the Star “ Theatre January 14. 15 and IG. “The s Vanishing American,” by Zane Grey. s Marriage license has been issued jj by Register of Deeds Elliott to John t F. Hinson and Mrs. Mamie Shoe, both ii cf Concord. Mrs. Charles B. Wagoner will en * tertttin the member of the Study Club S tomorrow afternoon at 3 o’clock at % her home on West Depot Street, ji Ralph Penninger, who had an op ! oration Monday at the Charlotte San atorium for the removal of his appen “ dix. in reported as improving nicely. % Representatives from the Southern l Desk Co., at Hickory, are spending « several days in the county inspecting J desks from their company that are s being used in rural schools in the l county. The inspection is made once l each year. " The local volleyball team was de feated again Tuesday night by Kan napolis state champions in straight | sets.' According to members of the - team, the Concord six was badly off l\ and the game was not as clone as is customary between these two volley ;■ ball teams. E tion of Mrs. J. C. Fink, who has been ; - seriouly ill for some time at the Con- j cord Hospital, is not so favorable to-1 p. day. Improvement was noted in’her, 0 eondifion Tuesday but during the i k night she was not resting so comfort* C ably, it is reported. £ Marsh Miller, one cf the best known ] g colored men in the city, died this | C morning. Marsh for a number of * B years drove a bus from the station rj to the hotel. Later he worked at j C Brown Brothers* livery stable and for R the past several years ban been an C employe of A. B. Pounds. £ Snow which has accumulated in > g ditches ]n the business section of the | C city was hauled off Tuesday and to-1 E day by city wagons. Most of the r snow had been swept into the ditches C from the sidewalks in the business j % section and it had packed so hard it was not melting, so it was hauled ; i 3 Only one defendant is to be tried in recorder's court this afternoon. He f is charged with operating a car while £ intoxicated, transporting liquor and r having liquor in his possession and , t for sale. The case was originally j f called Monday but was continued un- < t* til today at the request of the de- C fendant. f, ’ The dirt roads in the county, as a 1 result of the recent snow, are for the most part in very poor condition, be -0 ing badly cut up and veryNmiddy. W. _ G. Brown, head of the county highway = commission, in speaking of the roads, I ■a said that his advice would be to stay off them as much as possible until work can be done on them. j A total of twenty-eight persons jj were examined at the county health department for tuberculosis on Mon day and Tuesday by Ur. S. E. I.ee. jj of Saatorium. Fourteen were ex : amined each day. A large number " of Concord people are expected to take j ii advantage of rile clinio which will be : conducted duding the remainder of | the week and at Kannapolis next J week. DAVIDSON STUDENTS SHOW RESENTMENT j Dissatisfied With Faculty's Refusal to Accept T. C. Barr as Editor of • Magazine. i Davidson, Jan. 12.—Diseatisfac i tion was apparent on the Davidson jj college campus today with students ■ expressing themselves as opjiosed to the action of the faculty in refusing j to accept T. C. Barr as editor of the " Davidson College Magazine, a stu? ■ dent periodical. j Barr was elected editor following a the ousting of C. F. Monk by the ; faculty recently because of the pub- J ncation of an article, “Dim Morn ling,” held undesirable by President Martin and his staff. The article, published under a nom de plume, was written by Barr. Shortly after the annoucement ysterday that Barr was not accept able, the board of editors of the magazine resigned en masse. “Dim Morning" was an article discussing what was termed “the necking or petting evil” and was passed unnoticed by President Mar tin and members of the faculty for some time before action was taken. Building Demolished By People For Fuel. H Spartanburg, S. C., Jan. 10.—A rj mute story of how cold weather has Pj driven local people to demolish a H house in order to obtain fuel was □ I told by M. W. Howard in a building la permit issued today. Mr. Howard § I owned a house on Brush street, rj which has practically disappeared. Li Investigation disclose that one by ■ one planks have been removed from raj the building, until recently the pj!house collapsed and must be rebuilt Mj before it is habitable. 11l The reconj for the running broad ej jump on skntes is 25 feet 2 inches, jjj made by Edmund Lamy at Saranac B t Lake, January 30, 1918. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE *j| The Old Woodpile ' '■ by HARRY LEE it Reprinted, by permtsston, from February'‘ Smart Set ” IN THE back yard under the maple tree. That’s where the woodpile used to be, The rickety saw-buck, the battered edge. The second-best ax, with tho blunted edge— You'd spit on your hands, and saw - and raw— When your clad was around! Ilia I word was law! - Dad, rr.aybc, drove for the mail to town; (] Then a window opened and Maw looked down— " j And you on the saw-buck, moppin’ e } your bead, s Gavin’ bv jininy, wisht you wan | dead! _ • And then Maw smiled ar.d told vou tales Oi young Abe Lincoln, a-splittin* rails, J But you reckoned you wouldn’t bn i President, * a If you chopped for a lifetime; Then Maw went— *v Hollerin’ back, ’fore you could ' begin: “ “I’m bakin’ a puddin’ with raisins 1 in!” Twas dusk and the crickets calling when Dad drove up the lane from town again; •. The big box back of the stove over 1 1 flowed t , With the wood you’d chopped! Th« ; ' Are glowed! i> And supper was ready! You tool % your place, , Between the two, and your dad said grace; You gulped your vittles, so yon could begin ■ Eatin’ the puddin’ with raisins in) . TF YOU could go back to thi f JL maple tree, ; Back where the woodpile used t» be, Wouldn’t you make the old chips fly? Wouldn’t you pile tho wood-boa i ; high?— j What would you do when your dal I said grace I And you saw the light on youi ■! Mother’s face— ■» If you were offered one golden day. | Out of your Boyhood—what would I you say ? I j r » ' j Mom County Alone Hr; Over 800,- 1 1 000 Pearl Trees. I More county bus 822,218 poach ■ tocos, representative of more than a i dozen leading varieties, it was an nounced Tuesday by the State De j partment of Agriculture, following a ■ census taken by the State Depart | meat, co-operating, the North Caro ilina State College of Agriculture and Engineering and the Sand Hill i Fruit Growers’ Association. 1 1 Elbertas were round to be leading, with 431,814 trees, while the Belle variety came next, with 197 .270 j trees. Other varieties were repre sented as follows : Early Wheeler. 4,- 015: Earlv Bose. 18,4.10; Carmen. 24.296: Hiley. 67.461; Greensboro. 796. 796; Yellow Valley, 1,058; other varieties, 07.461. .} The authorities of University Col lege. London, have decided to estab lish a new Danish lectureship ” in memory of the late Queen Alexandra. LACK OF PATIENCE CAUSES LOSS OF MANY MILLIONS By 8. W. STRAUS, President American Bociety for Thrift A GOOD lesson to learn Is that Into the scheme of all human progress and all personal upbuild-* lng there must ' ' " always be a i Jgg|i|£iph place reserved ; for patience. It Is one of the t essential quail- Mgjj|||||sL ties of succesß. I WppNSlSk No matter how right or how important j any plans may t wfifßAua **■ “ r t lulr “ patience to de velop them properly. Patience has been required In the development of everything worth while. If we look back over oor lives we can recall countless In itances where we have been helped and strengthened by the restrain ing hand of patience. It Is well to bear these thoughts In mind In connection with the development of thrift One reason inch vast sums of money are swept away each year in reckless schemes and unsound - Investments is because so many Investors lack patience. They do not want to wait over a period of years for their accumulations to grow. They want their profits quickly. They want to make money fast They want some one to rub the Lamp of Aladdin and then behold, aB If by magic, their small savings grown to great tort ones. i Things that are solid and sound to not attain their growth rapidly. U yon are. looking for quick lichee, for a fortune over night you will not find them through the patient processes of thrift. But -through thrift you may as sure your future. You may have at hand a comfortable sum of money, which, ben oppo -unity comes, may be means of build ing yon up to great personal sue oesSb Thrift is a manifestation of patience, and therein Uee one of lip LIVED ON MILK AND CRACKERS . FOR MONTHS Stomach Was In Such Bad Condition She Could Not Bat Any Solid Pood. —HERB JUICE Gave Better. “I had suffered so much from ner vous indigestion that X had reached the point when 1 was afraid to eat any solid food. I was forced to diet myself and I lived on milg and (pack ers for months, when as a last re sort I began using HEItl? JUICE which was recommended to me at (Jib son's I>rug Store by the HERB JUICE man for stomach trouble. Now I am thankful {or having heard about this wonderful medicine and I will always be ready at any time to speak a good word for it to any one.” said Mrs. J. T. I.ove, of .'lO2 North Church Street. Concord. N. C.. in a recent interview with the HERB JUICE man. She further remarked: “It was no simple case of indigestion from which I suffered. I could not eat anything and have it agree with me. My stomach was completely upset all the time. I was also very constipated and no laxative I took seemed to reg ulate me. I grew weaker every day and could scarcely do more than just drag myself about to do my house work. No rest, no food digested, nerves on edge and constipation had ru : ned my health. But HERB JUICE changed my condition entirely in a short time, and to say that it has righted every wrong would only make a long story short. Today I could not feel better if I had never had a day's sickness in my life. It took some time for me to realize that I could sit down to the table and eat a meal, se lecting whatever I chose, and feel per fectly sura that I would have no ter rific pains from indigestion immediate ly after I left the table, or if not then, to awake in the night to suffer for hours, gasping for breath on account of suffocating pains ns I had done for merly. I have been ( entirely relieved of all these conditions and now feel as well as when I was young. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that that there is not another medicine ob tainable today that can equal HERB JUICE for stomner trouble, indiges tion and constipation.” HERB Jl'lCE is sold in Concord and guaranteed to give satisfaction or m-noy refunded by Gibson Drug Store. Also F. L. Smith Drug Co., Kannap olis. Como Chricken Feed Como Hen Feed is made from n large variety of all sound grain, which has the fine trash screened out. Has more feed value. If there were a bet ter feed we would have it. Nutro Hen Feed is a well balanced feed at a cheap price. Corno Laying Mash makes hens lay —sold on a guarantee. It’s made from dried buttermilk, dried beef scraps, fish meal, pin head oat meal, fresh alfalfa meal, shorts, bran, etc. Make your hens lay by feeding Cotoe Feed. AVe deliver quick everywhere. Your charge account is good with us. Cline & Moose CONCORD COTTON MARKET WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1»26 Cotton ; .19 Cotton Seed .52 1-2 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOO v your diamonds. j | When did you have them dean- 1 1 Cied and inspected? The perma-l 1 S nent brilliance of diamond jewelry l j 1 j depends much upon the care that] i 2it receives. Neglected pieces lose! S [their charm rapidly. Regular pe- 1 J iriodical cleaning and inspection as-| I 5 sure lasting beauty and often savesi! Bthe loss of valuable jewels. This ! C its an established courtesy service 1 5 with us. ij j; S. W. Preslar l| j| JEWELER jij Beauty ij; Shops jjl [i| The very nature of j|[ j ] your work qualifies you to j! ; be a judge of charming |j [ i j appearance. Tomorrow, j! | 1 1 observe your patrons and ;!; note the number whose ! ! ij: apparel will be RE- ! ! 1 1 FRESHED like the day 1 ]! | it was first worn. Many |i of the fine dresses you j| will see were DRY 1 i CLEANED by BOB’S. 1 i Likely you are also a pa- ! ! ! tron here. PHONE 787 1 “MASTER" Cleaners-and Dyers Office *5-87 W. Depot St In * ' ' TCMfH SlMSns Alcohol waa distilled first in Ara -1 bia, so majrjw that's why Arabian ■ nights were so wonderful. Being a rugged character is all right, but you are liable to wear your ' teeth out snapping them together. Hunt the bright side. Seme prices are down. You can get 1925 calen . dars very cheaply now. Practically nil misunderstandings i are caused by people who don't under ■ stand they don't understand. Home people might as well (iave been preachers—they have such a hard time making any money. Cotton situation is bafl. Farmers received so little for their cotton they are raising cain now. (Copyright. 102(1, NEA Service, Inc.) Poet and Flagg's Cotton Letter. New York, Jan. 12.—Prices con tinue to mark time pending some In centive of enough importance to push the market over the dead cen ter on which it appears stuck at present. Trade advices are generally favorable and manufneturcro for the most part are hoiieful as to the future but determined it would seem to do no more than keep step with the demand for good as it develops. AA’hen the ultimate consumer is sufficiently in need of goods at once to be willing to pay more for them the mills will spend up again to meet that demand.but will as fat; as pos sible avoid any accumulation of goods in anticipation of such a de velopment. Meanwhile there appears to be enough business either already booked or in sight to keep mills working close to capacity with some margin of profit and distributors have only moderate stocks, implying frequent repea orders to build up the supplies necessary to meet the re quirements of their trade. The point is that such require ments seem expanding even if only gradually insuring in that way a steady demand for raw material. The basis for white cotton is firmly held according to present advices while that for the lower grades is in somd sections showing a sharp ad vance with as yet no sign of any quantity of the actual heading here for delivery. POST AND FLAGG, USE PENNY COLUMN— IT PAYS CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) Figures named represent price* paid for produce on the market: Eggs .00 Corn sl.lO Sweet potatoes SI.BO Turkeys _2g Onions SLSO Peas S2.QO Butter DO Country Ham ,3ft Country Shoulder _ .$0 Country Sides JSO Young Chickens JBO Hens .15 Irish Potatoes 2.00 9 & | 1 Money bock without quottlor \llf HUNTS GUARANTEKt —-VjS” 11 SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES /fff by/ (Hurt’* Salve an* Soap), fUI It ( U / / the treatment of Itch, Beaeoia. V //} RingVorm, Tetter or other itota in* ekin dteeeeeg Try thb treatment at our risk. ECZEMAS ts HO NT^S p QU aSa gsjg (Hunt’e Salve and SoapMUl la f the treatment ofltch, J Ringworm.Tetterorotheritcb-fJW / /1 InC ektn dleeeaea. Try this * AVI t J treatment at our risk. PEARL DRUG CO. The best sympathy IT is only human for a fu neral director to fed sym pathetic in the presence of bereaved patrons. But it in ■ real sympathy when he recog nises an obligation to see tort that the highest character of burial equipment is furnished at honest prices. Such a policy . has been responsible for the y -success of this concern. Typical of the burial equip ment furnished by us is the Clark Grave Vault,recopized as a leader in die vault indus try, because it gives positive mys permanent protection* WILKINSON’S FUN ERAL HOME | can P-Day or Night I __ . oooaoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooojy r„ [ Advice to a !W Young Man in love! I If he says “Yes” and she I Perhaps the only thing that is standing between you and 9 a wedding trip is a trip here! w Smart Apparel For Men Who Are Young ! in experience! I HOOVER’S,Inc. “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” 1 -1926- § SOMETHING TO REMEMBER § No Dealer in Concord Sells Coal for Less than I do. Best Furnace Coal SB.OO to $ll.OO. Best Grate and Stove Coal SB.OO to $9.00. Best Steam Coal $4.00 to $7.50. Best Gas House Coke—-Made in Concordsß.so. ’ Start the New Year Right by Purchasing Your Coal where you can get QUALITY and SERVICE. A. B. POUNDS OOOOOOOOOOOMOOOOOOOOOOOOO*aOQoaoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO «BBB3J’ jgg CSX' 2BBOBEI 8 Condensed Statement of \RRUS SAVINGS BANK •d, Kannapolis, Albemarle, Mt. Pleasant dose of business December 31, 1925. RESOURCES Discounts $2,509,923.01 Securities 34,650.92 use and Real Estate 197,874.73 ' ] nd Fixtures 48,143.16 ‘ Estate - ue From Banks 2t 690,038.6 f ' ia>ii tal - - $3,505,627.49 | liabilities d in $175,000.00 xned 225,000.00 400,000.00 1 Profits and Reserves 24,137.66 1 Unpaid 12,189.00 I —-ii. 2 t 969.300.83 1 ’tal 1 $3,505,627.49 1 ' ' . V‘W’->. .. • HOT WATER IN A JIFFY mmm, This B as water heater fTf is surely a friend in need and f a friend indeed of every cook 1 Irl match and in a few minutes 1 Bj II »—»—=,j steaming hot water will run 1 M from the faucet—enough for et us .‘ nsta " one tor you. EB. GRADY PLUMBING'AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 3* R. Corbin St Office Phone 3S4JV i . —« .«■ uyyvi’i'.'w *w», JANUARY CLEARANCE DRESS AND COAT SENSATION i 25 Per. Cent, to 50 Per Cent, OFF No Left Oven Here I ALL MILLINERY At Half and Leu I IT PAYS TO TRADE AT J |F I S H E R’Sj Wednesday, Jan. 13, 1926 1

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