PAGE SIX |How TVi^Quici^ly B: often surprising how quickly the method, j I Here is the method, based on the fam- Mp#*BDr.Kin|2’sNevvDiscoveryforCoughs: K You simply take one teaspoonful and B’ hold it in your throat for 15 or 20 sec ioads before swallowing it. The pre- S' acription has a double action. It not I, only soothes and heals irritation, but ' also loosens and removes the phlegm ■ and congestion which are the real cause S* the coughing. So the severest cough (oon disappears completely. • Dr. King’s New Discovery is for ? coughs, chest colds, bronchitis, spas modic croup, etc. Fine for children, too i —no harmful drugs. Very economical, as the dose is only one teaspoonful. At SI good druggists Ask for I What My Neighbor Says I Is of Interest to Concord Folks. When one has had the misfon I tune to suffer from backache, head- I aches, dizziness, urinary disorder* I and other kidney ills—and has I found relief from all this sickness t and suffering, that person’s advice i is of untold value to friends and | neighbors. The following case is | only one of many thousands, but P it is that of a Concord resident. I Who could ask for a better ex ample ? Mr 3. Lillian Mclntyre, 134 Frank » lin Ave., says: "I had a dull, heavy I ache in my back and sometimes l tUfe pains were ltnife-like when I • stooped. I had dizzy spells and l was all run down and felt tired. v My head ached and 1 was nervous. | My ankles bloated and my hands % puffed up. My kidneys were weak, s too. I used Dean’s Pills until I was cured of the attack.” I OVER THREE YEARS LATER, i; Mrs. Matntyre added: “Doan’s f Pills have never failed to help me : when my kidneys have troubled ’ me.” K. 60c. at all dealers. Foster-Mil- I?, burn Co., Mfvs., Buffalo, N. Y. HIST P; RHEUMATISM f “Heet” Relieves Instantly | With applicator attached to coTk, just brush “Heet” over the pain area, whether in elbows, arms, shoulders, feet, knees, legs, back, neck or body. In stantly, you feel this harmless, glori ous, penetrating heat draw the pain, I soreness and stiffness right out of the aching or swollen joint, muscle or nerve. Besides, “Heet” scatters the congestion and establishes a cure, jp- "Heet” contains two soothing, penc il trating ingredients, too expensive to p use in ordinary liniments or anal i gesies. “Heet” is a clean, pleasant illlMBid; doesn’t stain, blister or irri jj". tate the skin and costs only 60 cents ; at any drug store. f ; USE SULPHUR TO I HEAL TOUR SKIN p Broken Out Skin and Itching H Eczema Helped Over Night H' For unsightly skin eruptions, rash or f| Notches on face, neck, arms or body. ■; you do not have to wait for relief from torture or embarrassment, de- Ejdares a noted skin specialist Apply a little Mentho-Sulphur and improve- I- znent shows next day. L- Because of its germ destroying 1 properties, nothing has ever been Si’ found to take the place of this sulphur I;:, preparation. The moment you apply fc It healing begins. Only those who i have had unsightly skin troubles can p . ltnow the delight this Mentho-Sulphur I fbriags. Even fiery, itching eczema is p IG«* a stnal? jar of Rowles Mentho | good druggist and Frtt Sample Mail Thi, Advertiseuidti N^Y. pilSB TIUBUNE PENNY ADB. 11 Teach Girls to Cook , Says Expert; [ ■ Ignorance of Food Ruins Healtl jit 2 I J CHlCAGO—Teaching girls howl to cook and the value of good nutrition is just as important as | teaching them the “three R’s.” According to Miss Meta H. Given, borne economist of the Better Health Bureau and a research worker at the University of Chi cago. “Improper diet has ruined the health and lives of thousands of children,” said Miss Given. “The blame lies with parents. Every ehild ought to be taught that a well-balanced diet is absolutely es sential to health and happiness. “Mothers should begin early to teach the young idea how to shoot* as far as cooking and nutri tion are concerned. Then, when the time comes, her girl will have jt least two of the big qualifica tions for the job of wife. “It is the business of mothers to explain to thair -I- fha THE ONE-ROOM SCHOOLHOUSE. Providence Bulletin. There is no occasion for “viewing with alarm” all the instruction given American children in schools con ducted by only one teacher each. The fears of a professor of a teachers’ col lege in New York that the traditional “little red schoolhouse” is a menace to the nation merely indicate a combi nation of a lively imagination and lack of appreciation of the good work of the teachers in the country schools. It is better to have one-room school houses than no schools at all; the country children are fortunate in hav ing opportunities for learning the “three R's,” and the chances are that they are pretty well grounded in three most important branches. This is not saying that the,country schools are equal to those of the large cities; allowance must be made for the ina bility of the rural neighborhoods to raise the money for big buildings and high-salaried instructors. Where the English language is spoken the prob ability is that the pupils are fairly well taught in three or four essential studies, but this cannot be said of the western places in which aliens are in the majority and insist upon speak ing only some foreign language. The country need not worry about the one-room schools in which the boys and girls are drilled in a few studies by teachers who speak the English language and who emphasize the importance of standing by the American form of government. The children of immigrants should be re quired to attend such schools; instruc tion in foreign languages should not be tolerated anywhere in the United States. In cities it is comparatively easy to see that English is spoken in the schools, but in some remote lo calities it is represented that too much attention is given to things which are not in accord with Amer ican institutions. In fact, lists of such schools have been published by reputable educators. The assertions of the New York professor are too sweeping. The thou sands of American teachers in small communities are deserving of words of encouragement, for they undoubt edly make the best of limited facilities. Such teachers are among the assets of the nation. The rural problem is in getting rid of non-American teachers, not in the abolition of the one-room schoolhouse. Woman’s Sphere Widens. The Pathfinder. Sirs. Evelyn Snow, of ilt. Vernon, Ohio, is a candidate for the' Republi can gubernatorial nomination. As collector of internal revenue for Chicago, Mrs. Mabel Reinecke is boss of an office force of 500 and 200 field employees. Her salary is $6,000 a year. Sioux Falls, S. D.,' women recently edited a local paper. They banned crime news on the first page, cut down the market news, eliminated all comic strips but one. cut out all serial stories, and had clergymen write the features. , State Senator Florence Dohrer, of Illinois, the first woman to be eleeted to the upper bouse of that state, wants beauty parlors installed in hos pitals for insane women. She thinks ; it will help their mental condition. Dr. Ellen Potter has “made good” as bead of the department of public welfare in Pennsylvania, j Miss BUamarye Failor, assistant United States district attorney at New York, has been assigned topros- I scute Charles W. Morse for fraud. The red fen originated at Fen, tar a thousand years the Holy City of Morocco. Ifi 4 ' rM [ sons why they should eat fresi fruits and vegetables or why the) have a quart of milk included ii their daily menu. If children wen told that they acquired calcium and phosphorus for the building of teeth and bone by drinking milk it would be much easier to get them to drink the proper amount. Or, similarly, if It were explained to the child who is given evaporated milk, which is merely fresh cow’s milk with part of the water removed, that the slight caramel taste of the evaporated milk means that it is sterile and consequently germ-free, it would ! be cultivating an appreciation of ! foods. “Helping mother in the kitchen could be made a joy to little girls if mothers took the trouble to ex plain the mysteries of cooking anu the fundamentals of nutrition to ' them.” PROPOSE TO SURFACE ROAD TO RUTHERFORD : Highway Commissioner Wants Coun to to Put Up Money For 22-Mile Stretch of Road. Rutherfordton, Jan. 20,—Highway j No. 20 from Rutherfordton to the l Henderson county line, 22 miles, will 1 likely be hard surfaced, or a macadam ' road put down this year. A. M. •' Kistler, state highway commissioner ; of the eighth district, of Morganton, made the principal address to the 1 Rutherford county chib at the Isother- l nial hotel here today and made a proposition to Rutherford county that if it put up the money the road would be built as soon as possible. The officials are •nierested in the new project for the purpose of estab lishing through passenger hnul overj their lines from the playgrounds of j Florida to the playgrounds of western North Carolina. At the present time the Seaboard hauls a large part of the tourists to Florida. It has. however, no direct passenger service from Florida to western North Carolina. The com pletion of the projiosed road would give direct Pullman service from Flor ida towns to Kutherfordton in the mountains and thus connect the two sections of attraction. Evening Hours Are Reading Hours. Charlotte News. ' The paper of the people is the as- ‘ ternoon newspaper. 1 That is coining more and more to be irrefutable. The trend in the 1 growth and development of these ‘ newspapers is being constantly made 1 more emphatic. 1 The desire of the people for the " news on the day when it is news has 1 made it imperative for the afternoon 1 paper publishers to make more ex- * pansive arrangements for supplying 1 the demands of tlieir ever-growing 1 clientele. This clamor from the public, coupled witli this res|>onse from the publishers, has combined to give the afternoon newspaper a new power and i prestige in the rnugs of daily publica tions and to hold out for them the i confident belief that their future -growth will only be limited by their i determination to give the people what they are seeking and what they nre 1 demanding. '■ Realizing this trend, the afternoon newspapers of North Carolina have just effected and are now perfecting plans to improve and augment their news service to the end that it may , the better supply readers with what 1 ■ they desire. With fully 650,000 sub scribers in this state already, the as ■ ternocn press is preparing for a larg i er and rapid expansion of circulation by giving the public all important news of the world, the nation and the state the same day. It is also intelligently and promptly interpret - . i“« the news through the editorial columns and supplementing the news service with features which appeal to various groups and classes of people. More Payrolls. Stanly News-Herald. Thomasville and High Point are fine examples of what payrolls mean to city building. Both these towns are built upon the payrolls from their va rious furniture factories. Thomasville is hemmed in with Lexington only a few miles to the West, and High Point only a very short distance to ; the Northeast. And yet, through its ; gteat chair factories, and other local ■ industries, that town has grown in the past few years into a city of more than ten thousand people. Back country is a mighty good thing for a town, but the town which has within iits borders enough factories of raid- THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE i— —— ■ A I hope to tell , : I U • ■ •• PRINCE ALBERT is the greatest little you, once you give P. A. a work-out. trouble-shooter you could pal around Cool znd sweet and fragrant, P. A. with. It smoothes out your smoke- puts a padlock on pipe-worries and wrinkles toot-sweet. It’s got everything throws away the key. Can’t bite your p. a. u»m «wy »k*e tn iu y *4 you ever wished for in a real, honest-to- tongue or parch your throat. The tZ.ZZtZI Pete smoke ... and nothing else ex- Prince Albert process fixes that. Just ££ cept! Clamp on the ear-phones and get downright, deep-rooted contentment — * «*. m™ aip* this message of jimmy-pipe joy. morning till midnight. No matter what your previous experi- Quality without a doubt. P. A. is ence has been in trying to smoke a pipe, better, tobacco .. . naturally it makes forget it. Write it on the ice! You can a better smoke. You’ll say so. Get . • smoke a pipe if it’s packed with P. A. going! Steer straight for tke store where * - ■■■■■* Yes, Sir! For a fact, they’d have to sue they hand out such happiness in tidy red ” you to get that jimmy-pipe away from Bns. It’llbeP. A. for yours after that. ;• I Fringe albert H|L! —no other tobacco is like it! A flfj A MM. *. *. lastk Mw L ’ ■ ; Otmsmq, XMaMw, U.C. ' A 4 f '> ’V; •• f ' i; ■ _ r ;i - " . ' ; •• • ' •• , • • • , r " ous kinds, can grow entireley within itsellf. That's just wliat Thomasville and High Point have done. The thing which this town ought to commence thinking about is more in dustries and larger payrolls. If great chair factories can build up and grow rich in Thomasville. and if men can come rich manufacturing furniture in High Point, then why can’t some of these things be done right here? The future of our town will largely depend upon the coming of more and varied manufacturing industries. Doing Our Bit. Washington Post. Today the United States is pro ducing : 55 per cent, of the world’s iron ore. 51 per cent, of the world’s pig iron. 66 per rent, of the world's steel. 51 per cent, of the world’s copper. 62 per cent, of the world's pe troleum. 43 i>er cent, of the world's coni. 52 per cent, of the world's timber i output. , 65 per cent, of the world's naval stores. 42 per cent, of the world’s phos phate. «« per cent, of the world's sulphur. 63 per cent, of the world’s iniea. 62 per cent, of the world’s lend. 64 per cent, of the world’s zinc. 60 per cent, of the world's talc and soapstone. , 45 per cent, of the world's barytes. 55 per cent, of the world’s cotton. 05 per cent of the world’s ante mobiles. No other country in the world’s history can show such progress und such a large share in the production of leading commodities. ■ ■ ——i The Reverend H R. I> Sheppard, denounced f*Dcy dress balls and special festivities of Armistice Day as “not ao irreligious as Indecent.’’ To follow tk« solemn two minutes of silence and rededication with such festivity is compared with marching from a funeral to, the quick and cheerful strains of a inarch. —ittw The average wage in America is $5-60 a day in comparison with $2.28 i» tertWd: many; $1.24 i Franca; $1.84 in Bel glum, and It* 1 *- ONLY ONE WOOD FOR SPOOL USED IN ENTIRE WORLD Greatest Part Turned From White Birch Tree—Great North Wood Product. St. Nicholas. In almost the entire world, with its great variety of woods ro select, from, there is only one kind that is lined for spools—the ordinary spools on which sewing thread is wound. By far the greatest part of the world’s spools nre turned from the wood of the white birch tree. It grows in many sections of the United States, bat especially well in Maine. Many years ago, it was learn ed, that the wood of the white birch of Maine lends easily to this purpose, pd now virtually the whole world’s supply of spools and spool wood comes from the great North Woods. Some of the spools nre made in Maine, but a very large part of the wood is shipped elsewhere for spool making. after being seasoned where ib grows. Not The First. Statesville Daily. The Shelby story telling of a color ed man drawing a pension for service to the Confederacy isn’t news. The State auditor, who has the pension roll in charge, is alleged to have said that the Cleveland colored man is the first I negro to be placed on the Confederate pension roll. If Auditor Durham said that be has something to learn. A number of colored men have been plac ed on the pension roll in this State for service to the Confederacy. None of them served as regular soldiers, but there have been a number of cas es In which service was bo outstand ing that these faithful negroes were pensioned, probably all of them by special legislative act. At least one, ’ if not two, Iredell negroes are draw ing • pension for this service. These colored pensioners may not be listed as colored, but unless all of them have died there are some on the roll now. If they are not on the roll now they have been. Cleveland is first in many things but not first in getting • peneeion for i coloeed servitor of the Confederate ar i my. A number of these faithful ones have been so placed, and it is to the honor of North Carolina that their service was ao recognised. 'JhL-. -t *• ■ • V j|j|MHMmߣS£gmAj^^^ KmHL AMksL M !■ 'milk' HUDSON| htnyonofvalneleadetdiip, ; | Hudson Super-Six perform ance, quality and price advan- rr»l_ « SSdtoT M '^T 0 • oo '’ The Coach Jh» Coach ha* long been ao . $ : j£. : : EE* I I f \ eet Bay**, because of its utility, JL JL Vs \ performance and value. Now among luxurious cars, the beau- The Brougham - *1451 7 - p lJ** rivalled position among W urious cars. They have all the These can may be purchased distinction of finest custom built for a low first payment and cars, with a price advantage convenient terms on balance, baaed on the world’s largest , r production of 6-cyUnder cars. Concord Motor Co. i i __ - m ~ - '>V‘ , . ‘ - f- Thursday, January 21,1926