PAGE EIGHT Wz*r*"*~ : ' * — B : Many Added Vaises For Saturday j I In Our January Clearance Shoe Sale < I Hundreds of Thrifty Shoppers have taken advantage i | of the Substantial Savings offered during this Big Event. || j Wfc’re Offering Wonderful Selections at |j SI.OO $1.95 $2.95 $3.95 TO $5.95 ! You can’t afford to pass up this opportunity to save. !] MARKSON SHOE STORE PHONE 897 |l For the convenience of the people of Con- ]!; cord and Cabarrus County, we have opened j|j up at Forest Hill a Paint and Paper Store. !;! We solicit a reasonable amount of your pat- j|| ronage. Allow us to prove to you that we jlj are willing to serve by placing an order with |j| us for any kind of Wall Paper, Paint and Ac- j | cessories. ;!; Concord Paint and Paper Co. Phone 16L j;! oooooooooooooooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooooo QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOUOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCX~ooQCoooooooo THIS IS THRIFT WEEK j BE THRIFTY —Carry a few shares of Building and '|! Loan. ] 1 1 We can help you to Own Your Own Home. Citizens Building and Loan Association JUST IN ANOTHER CAR —of— -29 Gauge Galvanized Roofing GET YOURS NOW YORKE& WADSWORTH CO. I THE OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE STORE 1 i Concord Daily Tribune ;j TIME OF CLOSING MAILS >1 The time of the closing of mails at 1 the Concord postoffice -in as follows: Northbound i 136-41:00 P. M. ' A. M. 34 4:10 P. M. ■ 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11:00 f. M. Southbound 38— 9 :30 A. M. I 45 3 :80 P. M. I 135 8:00 P. M. j 29—11:00 P. M. I I 1 ■ '' ' ■ i.. | LOCAL MENTION | i The County Council -will meet Sat- I unlay afternoon at 2 o’clock. All i members are asked to attend. | Mrs. J. C. Fink, who has been ill i for several weeks at the Concord Hos- I I pital. is improving, according to rel i atives. i .7. H. Smith Ims resigned his posi -1 tian with the J. C. Penney Company and haw accepted a place with the Heid Motor Company. The condition of Mrs. J. C. Row an. who underwent an operation in n Charlotte hospital Thursday, is re ported as very satisfactory today. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bolinger have , moved from their home on Cemetery I street to North Spring street, where | they will make their future home. Continued improvement is reported i in the condition of Mrs. J. P. Alli i son. who has been confined to her , home on North Union street for some i time by illness. i K. 1.. Craven entered the Concord ' Hospital, Thursday afternoon for treatment. Mr. Craven's condition 1 has not been favorable for some time so he decided to enter the hospital to l undergo treatment. Work has been started again on the ' extension of Spring street which is to link the two ends of this street ' between Chestnut and Tribune streets. ■ Recent bad weather had stopped work 1 on it. Sunderland School and the Busi ness Girls of the city will play a game of basketball Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Y. M. C. A. Both teams play a fast game and a num ber of spectators are expected to be present. The red sunrise of Thursday morn ing brought rain, the precipitation beginning late in the evening and continuing until after midnight. While the rain fell intermittently ear ly in the evening it developed into a downpour about midnight. The Guernsey Bull Association will meet in Salisbury Saturday at which time Karl B. Musser. secretary of the i American Guernsey Cattle Club, and W. W. Fitzpatrick, well known to southern cattlemen, will speak. A I number of Cabarrus county fanners | are expected to attend. I Good progress has been made with [ the work of digging the ditch for the water line from Concord to the Jack son Training School. Pipe has been laid all along the route and the work of digging the ditch has progressed in ! such satisfactory fashion that a eom | pleted job is expected soon. [ Everything is in readiness for the j meeting of the county primary teaeh- I ers here tomorrow morning. The j meeting will begin at 10:30 o'clock j at the court house and an address by j Miss Grace Gladstone, of the Farm I Life School at China Grove, will be | one of the features of the program. Several cases are to be tried in re corder's court this afternoon, police officers report. Most of the cases , developed earlier in the week and were continued until today at the re i quest of the defendants. It is re ported by police officers that none of the cases are of an aggravated nature, i High winds, carrying colder tem j peratures, swept over Concord this [ morning. Forecasts of Thursday prom- I ised colder weather for today and ' the predictions have been fulfilled, i More seasonable weather is promised i for the immediate future although no ! severely low temperatures are ex i pected. I Local officers are bemoaning the 1 fact that a stolen car from Danville, , Va.. escaped them. Patrolman Rob i insoii saw the car here Wednesday " but no stolen notice had been receiv ed then. This morning he was noti : fied that a reward of SSO had been of l sered for the car and the arrest of the 4 boys in it. He set his pleasure ship a-sail in the streets of gay Paris. In reck less fashion be trampled ail underfoot in his quest of thrills. The one fine thing in his life was his affection for his young brother, and then, through his own fault, tragedy came to the boy. Read “Satan in Sables,’' the serial novel by Gregory Rogers, which started in The Tribune yesterday. Carolina alumni here will be inter ested in the report from Chapel Hill that James Baldwin, former coach at . Trinity College, is being considered as a successor to Coach Bill Fetzer at The Hill. Baldwin has beeu very successful both in the cast and south and his appointment to the job at Carolina would be met with approval, is is believed. The tuberculosis clinic which is be ing held at Kannapolis this week by I Dr. S. E. Lee, of Sanatorium, and 3 -Miss Margaret Ford. County tuber- I culosis nurse, is being tnken advant | age of by the people of that section of I the county. The number of appli -9 cants each day very latgely exceeds It the number that can be examined, as ■ many as ten hav : ng been refused ex ■ animation in a single day. I The fellow who works by the dock 8 Is not worth the price of a cheap | watch. J An ■ exaggeration is a lie that lias -j had an operation and broken into so | eiety. TOE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Elopes Margaret Shotwell of Omaha, Neb.« who was made independently wealthy a few years ago when an aged bachelor for whom she used to play the piano died and left her his fortune, has eloped with Captain James W Arnold. U. S. A., stationed at Fort Crook, Neb. She la It and ha (a ft. B AE LAW APPEAL HANDED COOUDGE Noah W. Cooper of Tennessee Pre sents “lToof” That Nation is Going to Perdition. Washington, Jan. 20.—Noah AY. Cooper. Tennessee leader of the Sun day observance movement, called oil President Coolidge today and pre sentedwritten arguments for Sunday blue laws. He filial with the Presi dent a formal appeal for a Sunday observance law for the District of Columbia. The petition brought by Mr. Coop er. ns Chairman of the Methodist Sabbath Crusade, asserts: "We insist hat our national sab bath is being fast destroyed. What the proof. "1. Nearly 10,000,000 people are working on Sunday in America tu the railroads. express companies, telegraphs, shipping. newspapers, stores and factories. "2. Our Intel-state Commerce, the biggest in the world, lias no Sabbath. Congress is its civic guardian. "3. About 20,000.000 Sunday newspapers are printed. shipped, sold, patronized and read every Sun day through interstate commerce. This traflie goes through every State, a Sabbath-polluting. Nation-destroy ing stream of evil. It pulses unre strained through the District of Columbia. “4. Our Capital City, once a Sab bath-keeper, now is an evil example of Sabbath-breaking that is polluting all our Nation." “A Sunday observance law. to close secular business and Sports on Sunday, in Washington, as we ask, would be a good step forward, not backward.” the appeal continues, cit ing the fact that public offices gen erally are closed and public activi ties now cease on Sunday. “So we ask nothing radical. Oniy a | step forward," the argument con- ( tinued. "Why liceuse Sabbath-break- j iug iu Interstate Commerce? . i "Despite all those good customs l and laws. Mammon is insidiously de stroying the Sabbath in our inter- i state commerce. "Trains and papers and the dike didn't run on Sunday iu the begin- i ing. This bad business largely began ' in the Civil War. Even now every , railroad schedule shows that many i trains run every day except Sunday. I Likewise with newspapers. "This reminds us of the rock i whence we were , hexvn, the land- 1 marks of safetyand righteousness.” , The President gave no intimation i of his attitude on the Blue Law 1 movement. He did not discuss it ( with Mr. Cooper. ✓ i DRINKING SHOWS STEADY ] DECLINE AT CHAPEL HILL i President Chase Says Prohibition is \ Making a Good Record. i Raleigh, Jan. 21.—Prohibition is j giving a good account of itself at i Chapel Hill. President Chase report- ' ed to the executive committee of the j University board of trustees today, i saying that drinking had been less ( in evidence this year than last, and ] that roditios were continually im- i proving. I The University head cited figures to show that federal and local pro hibition authorities had been active iu breaking up stills and apprehend ing bloekaders and bootlegers in that part of Orange county. In so far as the University student body is For a Bottle Isaac Wolfgang of San Francisco will know ahortly whether he la tfl hang or go (fee- He killed a police man who caught him Mealing a bot tie of mttk. and his case has gone M (ha V. 6; Supreme Court,, oonwnwd, he wild, there w» wary indication that Ms Volstead"* l law was gaining in increase*! reltort*. Dr. C. Macfie t’ampbell, of • Bos ton, Ims found that scolding women nnd irritable "flappers” are otten suffering from too much thyroid activity. Eighteen children can go riding j at the time ill a huge donkey-pmied j rart that was given to the babies of; the Witlesdon Guardians Home at i the Tark Koyal Hospital, England, j CSR FENNY COLUMN 1 — IT PATS _ j Thin Men Skinny Men Run Down Men Nervous Men You’re behind the times if you don't know that Cod Liver Oil is the great est flesh producer in the world. Because it contains more vitalising vitamines than any foool you can get. You'll be glad to know that Cod Liver Oil comes in sugar coated tab lets now, so if,you really want to put It) or 20 pounds of solid healthy flesh on your bones and feel will and strong—ask the IVarl Drug Co„ or any druggist for a box of McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets. Only 00 cents for 60 tablets and if you don't gain five pounds in 30 days your druggists is authorized to hand you back tfie money you paid for them. CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose) Figures named represent pricer paid for produce on the market: Eggs .50 Corn sl.lO Sweet potatoes $1.50 Turkeys .25 Onions $1.50 Peas $2.00 Butter .85 Country Ham .SO 1 Country Shoulder ~ .20 Country Sides MO ! Young Chickens .20 Hens .IS Irish Potatoes 2.00 —— ■- i A Banquet That Was Almost A Tragedy "Three years ago at a banquet 1 was stricken with acute indigestion. Two doctors worked over me for an hour before 1 came to. I had '.tad j severe colic uttakes before, but noth ing like that. Xo doctors or medi cine gave me permanent help until a j friend, who was at the banquet, ad-1 vised me to taken a course of Mayr’s j One Dose Will Convict, which I did | with wonderful results.’’ It is a simple, harmless preparation that re moves the catarrhal mucus from the Intestinal tract and allays the inflam mation \riiich causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ail ments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Gibson Drug Store and druggists ev- - erytvhere. 300000000000000000000000 ||| Doctors and jlj Druggists i \ Dry Cleaning is not a ]i[ ! 1 bottle of medicine that is j|| !]! recommended as a !]! ]!| CUREALL. But our Jif ;!; process does kill all con- ]!| '!> tagious germs. You know j 1 , !]! it is easier to KEEP |j! j ]i[ WELL than to GET ji t ; ; WEL. That is why we ] ; 1 8 UT ge you to suggest ’ ! S[ DRY CLEANING lofl.! i| | [ outer apparel regularly in \ [ j i your professional con- * 1 !j! tact. And particularly jj! ■ j ; for school children dur- |l| jj| ing winter months. 1 PHONE 787 “MASTER” Cleaners and Dyers Office 25-27 W. Depot St. !; YOUR OLD WEDDING * RING \ | Can be made as modern as the 1 j bride of today. It in no way ! I impairs the original ring, nor 1 1 \ does it mar the inside engrhving. - Why wait? Be the first in your 6 set to modernize the sweet X symbol of youth—the wedding I Q ring. | S. W. Preslar | JEWELER 300000000000000000000000 CONCORD COTTON MARKET FRIDAY. JANUARY 22, 19M Cotton ...... ;.i 19 1-2 Cotton Seed * .55 1-2 1 T - The height of something would be j driving through California with a ; Florida pennant on your car. Hunt tfie bright side. If you had I a few more friends 'maybe they | would borrow your money. The coal situation could be worse. ; It would be awful if 36 inches made : a coal yard. \ The auto helps people. With so | many autos you have to keep on clean ! underwear in case you go to the hoa-: j pita! I , Texas isn't the state she once was. ft took three men toAhoot one police man recently. Pittsburg jail has a radio set. Bet weather reports and time signals make, the prisoners mad. (Copyright. 1026, NEA Service, Inc.) ODD FELLOWS NOTICE. Meets every Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. M. L. ROSS, N. G. C. H. RITCHIE, Sec. /■I/Nme TO I I fviNGTOVS N. 0. BARBRICK STREET Big Dinner Plates SO cents a set. Hats for Mene, Boys and Little Boys. 50 cents tto $2.00. Sunday Shirts 50 cents each. Good old Ford parts half price. Lamp Globes all sorts and sizes. Buckets cheap. Bunch of ’em. We both lose if you don't buy some. SEE PAT COVINGTON P. S.—Matches, Pencils, Tablets, Candy, 5 c. Como Chicken Feed Como Hen Feed is made from a 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’a 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 Corno Feed. We deliver quick everywhere. Your charge account is good with us. Cline & Moose \ Money beck without Queetior X \l!f HUNT’S GUARANTIEE I SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES Wl f KW (mint's Salve mnm Soap), fall Ir I II ft the treatment of Itch, Bcsefoe V f/j Ringworm, Tetter or other Itch * - log chin diteeeee., -Try thia treatment at our risk. ECZEMA!? if HUNTS GUARANTEED 8 KIN DISEASE REMEDIES (Rant’s Solve end 2onp),fhlt in L g»e treatment ofltch, Besemn, NnT/ ) Rinaworm,Tetterarotheritch- {lf / / In* akin diseaeea. Try this a f\l / , treatment at our risk. PEARL DRUG CO. The best sympathy IT is only human for a fu neral director to feel sym pathetic in the presence of bereaved patrons. But it is real sympathy when he recog nizes an obligation to see toit that the highest character of burial equipment is furnished at honest prices. Such a policy has been responsible for the success of this concern. Typical of the burial equip ment furnished by us ia the Clark Grave Vault, recognized as a leader in the vault indus try, because it gives positive and permanent protection. WILKINSON’S FUN. v iarviviN^i ls»taMoeeooooooooooootMionoooootxiooocx»oooo«>oonortBkfla I- Are You This Man?- I • He awokfe yesterday with I 4(llers»SPt\ the rm > ntent ' on new J wN'// ill/ 1, underwear —at any cost. *9 Bv noon his thoughts ! 1 were on business and ov- : a , , Underwear slipped hislu I f/iun Tomorrow again he is go- 1 ,ers f° r shirts and drawers ■ { ill and again he will repeat je his promise over—unless he sees us today! || The Shifts and Drawers-—your kind. « The Union Suits—our kind. *8 SI.OO TO $6.00 I HOOVER’S,Inc. I “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” ft. I I Condensed Statement of CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Concord, Kannapolis, Albemarle, Mt. Pleasant At close of business December 31, 1925. iI RESOURCES Loans and Discounts $2,509,923.01 I Bonds and Securities 1 34,650.92 | j Banking House and Real Efetate 197,874.73 tj I Furniture and Fixtures 48,143.15 I Other Real Estate 20,000.00 Cash arid Due From Banks 695,035.68 H Total $3,505,627.49 | LIABILITIES | Capital: Paid in $175,000.00 | Earned 225,000.00 400,000.00 | Surplus 100,000.00 E Undivided Profits and Reserves 24,137.66 H Dividends Unpaid 12 189.00 S DEPOSITS a 2,969.300.83 i Total $3,505,627.49 | FEEtT™ FEEDI ! | We are in position to take care of your FEED wants 1 | at Low Prices for the Best Grain and Hay we can buy— j ; Uncle Sam Oats— j ! No. 2 White Corn— ' J No. 1 Timothy Hay— l | Happy Chicken and Horse' Feeds. i We buy all kinds of Feeds in car lots and can sell you ] J at Wholesale Prices. Our Depot Warehouse is near the hard surface street. Give us a chance before you purchase your require- ! ments. | RICHMOND-FLOWE CO. HOT WATER IN A JIFFY WHI match and in a few minutes steaming witter will rupa E. B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 89 E. Corbin St Office Phone 334 W BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL f ' , M 7-877 BROADWAY NEW YORK Accommodations For 1,000 Guests In the heart of the down-town business section. Connections to all parte of the City within a few minutes from our door - • , NEWLY FURNISHED AND RENOVATED High Class Service at Low Rates B Large Banquet and Convention Halls Friday, January 22, 1®261