PAGE EIGHT Kg*, Xx \ fe iwW^WWBW|HHWp|?%^ PS vMI i?H Pilßi!»[iiii«ffliiPrißßL-^MMS ♦•^v^jfeass 'Alaspgjglg,' -*a cxag- mTTTLL- — t —lg~T t _-, —, .—- — ■ vvuiv -h. ARABIAN WITH BEARS Something Entirely New Adds Beauty and Comfort to your home. Keep out sun, rain and heat. Does not obstruct the view. Cuts the sun and rain off a distance from your porch. Cost hut little more than porch shades, and will last three times as long. ■ New Materials guaranteed not to fade. Phone 347 tor sam ples and prices. No obligations. We are the awning people. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE gOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOt* COAL No Dealer in Concord Sells Coal for Less than I do. ] I ! Best Furnace Coal SB.OO to $ll.OO. | Best Grate and Stove Coal SB.OO to $9.00. i [ | Best Steam Coal $4.00 to $7.50. t Best Gas House Coke—Made in Concordsß.so. Purchase Your Coal where vou can get QUALITY | and SERVICE. ' !j A. B. POUNDS | • O QuouoooooooooooooooQOoooooAaoeoaooooooooooooocooe ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc | Come To Our Store Tomorrow 3 We have received by Express this week several new j ; O styles in the much wanted light colors. Also Black Satin | 8 Pumps in pleasing combinations of Silver Kid. We are i X better prepared now to supply your shoe wants than ev- ! ! x er before. j We have the styles you want —— _ $3.95 to SIO.OO IVEY’S THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES 111 CRAYEM&sons] PHONE 74 POAT e. Nk M I A Plaster Mortar Colors 8 DooooooooooooooriOoouooonoooooooooooooooooooQOOOOO ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocooooooc INew fashions—fashions you will see if you travel abroad—fashions worn by smart New 1 ork — are exhibited now at I » PcmriAtirty Wi'M m rmacTW ' - BnriiTT"i —■— ir--= A High Authority Spew. ■” “The Law now authorize* the to create, to ex *tuL, to consolidate, to lengthen, and I to shorten the (rnral free delivery) routes, and it . provides the payments which may be made for oerviee on different lengths of routes. M. “If I were the Fostmaster-Gen qtal—and I am not saying this in '•tlticism of the Ifoatmaater-General iQr Os anybody else—l would pro ■|Wd immediately to the extent of my ability, with the powers I had, £b conaolidate, lengthen, ahorten, and Everything else, and by so doing. I jgodld save an average of $1,809 on livery route that is consolidate!, »hd without cutting anybody's pay. f "Today the rnral carrier who has Ha automobile does bis work la two S' hours, and there is no reason why be should not be engaged all day in the service, because he gets $2,137 for doing what he does. “I could save many millions in the reorganisation of the rnral routes.” MARTIN B. MApDHN, Chairman, House Appropriations Committee. The firing ear. The teacher had been giving a les son on the reindeer—its haunts, a habits, and uaee. One little chap was’ not paying the slightest attention, so the teacher pounced on him. “Now, what is the use of the reindeer’” she ashed him. oStrtJTSMLS l"»W, it makes things grow.” THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS~ The time of the clewing of mails at tVe Concord postofflee hi an fallows: Northbound ISB—gl :00 P. M. 3B*-40:00 A. M. 34- 4!lfl P. M. 88 — 8:30 P. M. 30—11 :C0 P. M. |l 89— 9:30 A. M. 48— 3:30 P. M. | 135 8:00 P. M. 1 | 29—11:00 P. M. K • ... - ■ - 1 | LOCAL mention | « Miss Helen Brown, of the clerical ! force nt Wisher's, is confined to her home today by illness. Improvement is reported in the con dition of Victor Means, son of Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Heans. who has been ill with influenza for several days. Mrs. D. A. Dorton has returned to her home in No. 2 township after undergoing treatment at the Concord Hospital. The stewards of Central Methodist Church will have their regular monthly meeting at the church at 7:JO this evening. S. O. Eddleman, formerly with the Keid Motor Company, has accepted a position with the Concord Furniture Company. Mr. Eddleman began his new duties tliis morning. Marriage license wns issued Sat urday by Register of Deeds Elliott to Clyde Hopkins, of Concord Route No. (i. and Miss Varnie Shoe, of Concord Route No. 2. No improvement is reported in the condition of \V. N. Thompson wbc is reported to have been hurt while at work in a local textile plant several days ago. Dr. W. C. Houston is in Charlotte atteuding the district dental meeting. ■ The meeting will last two days and there"will be a number of prominent lecturers present. Excellent attendance in keen inter est in the work marked the meeting here Saturday of the grammar grade teachers of the county. On Saturday of this week primary teachers will meet at the court house at ISO a. m. In the names of persons giving me i morial windows for the new Trinity | Reformed Church, the name of Miss j Beulah Bost was inadvertently ornit | ted. She and Mrs. R. H. Patterson are giving one of the windows. The Methodist pastors of Cabar j rue county with their lay leaders are | meeting today at Central Methodist j Church. Dr. Z. Paris, presiding el- I der of the Salisbury district, is meet ing with them. ! On next Sunday night there will be a special music service (t Central Methodist Church in honor of the one hundred and sixth anniversary of the birth of Fannie Crosby, the noted 1 song writer. Hymns written by her , will be sung nt this service. That the open car is about to be i come a thing of the past is indicated | by the number of closed cars on the T roads now. Between Concord and Kannapolis Sunday a Concord man Counted 83 cars which he passed and 17 of them were closed models. The Golden Links Missionary socie ty of Forest Hill Methodist Church Will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 | o’clock at the home of Mrs. E. S. Ri | mer on Anfti Street, with Mrs. Rimer, ) Miss Vivian Mabery and Miss Grace Miller as hostesses. k Mayor f. H. Barrier aiul Chief of g Police L. jA. Talblrt left this morning R for Raleigh to attend a law enforce -5 ment conference called by various dry K agencies in the state. They made the R trip in Mayor Barrier'* car. Sheriff ■ R. V. Caldwell, Jr., was unable to go I on account of illness. X Rev. W. H. Willeford. formerly of I ibis city, is now in Hopewell, Va. K Bte writes friends here that he is R to conduct three meetings in the Vir -5 ginia town and plans to be there front B six weeks to two months. Mr. Wil li 'eford's address in Hopewell is 207 9 Petersburg Road. 6 Eight defendants are to be tried X in recorder’s court this afternoon. Q Four are charged with being intoxi -8 cated. two with having liquor, one _ with operating a car while intoxicat ed and another with larceny. . Thki c is the heaviest docket for the court a In more than a week. □ Parks M. l.afferty, local Buick I dealer, announce ' t» lay that he had a received a wire from the Buick factory Q authorizing the immediate application B of the 2 per cent, reduction in the B federal tgx to all Buick models. This Q action anticipates the new tax sched -5 die which will become effective March 8 28 th - H. X. Dove ban sold property in No. 11 township to fj. F. Barnhardt and Hawley Heglar. according to two deads filed Saturday. The purchase pripe of the Buruhurdt tract was 91,000 and of the Ileglar traht 92,310. li.T. Hartsell, Jr., commissioner, has soid to Ruth Furr for $1,500, proper ty in No. 11, according to another dead filed Saturday. BaCfcynrd Drinking All Right, Says Magistrate, Charlotte Observer. Magistrate J. W. Cobb ruled Sat urday that the great American citi-, sen has a perfect right to get drunW in. his home, or on his own premises, as long as the extent of the effenae is limited to.that degree. Hie ruling freed R. F. Stevens, mill employe, from charges of drnnkenpse on a public highway. . brought by Mrs. W. W. Fant, a neighbor of the defendant. Testimony , tended «o show that the defendant confined bis alleged carousal to bit own backyard. , Jf. 6 Wells, the English novelist, ■ i JUtENIUS DELINQUENT*;, The Pathfinder. "There," exclaimed a care worn mother ns she pushed an unwitting 1 five-year-old into the pr--eenc- of the principal of a certain Wa*h>n;- ton school. "I can't do a thing with him at home: see what you can an." Inquiry developed the fact that the child had "never been made to do what he did not want to do.” The result: a self-willed youngster. This is not extraordinary. School teachers can vouch for mnny simi lar cases. But the example^mention ed Ilurtrntrs a pertinent problem. Many educators and other authori , ties are convinced that the most im portant time in the molding of a character is in the years between the cradle and the kindergarten or fir-t grade. They are like the ancient philosopher who was once asked by a wealthy family to undertake the education of a child of six that had never been “crossed" in„ its desire-. "It istoo Inte.” said the old man . sadly as he declined to assume the charge. The responsibility of the home is held to be very important in con nection with the crime situation. Though authorities are split us to the -magnitude of the so-called “Crimea wave,” many feel that lax disciplith- in the home is contribut ing to n wide-spread disrespect for law. "Lawbreakers arc .almost uniform ly graduates of our common school and not infrequently of our colleges." remarks President Butler of Colum bia university. “They have not been disciplined, trained or educated nt home to those habits of self-control, self-mastery and self-direction which arc the only effective protection society has against Uwbreaking." On similar grounds Mrs. Mina Van Winkle, president qf the Inter national Association of Policewom en charges American parents with being “wholly responsible for the deplorable conditions that exist to day." "There must be more attrac tive homes life and there must be more attractive spiritual life for our children," she warns. The home and the church are the factors which can stem the growth of juvenile crime, believes Chief Ju tiee McAdoo of New York. Mr*. Mary Hamilton, former head of the women’s bureau of the New York police department, undertakes to answer the age-old question of "Why girls leave home." “Most ofthem are not bad." she finds. “The majority arc the unfortunate produc| of their environment or physical imperfec tions. Idleness and the need of money are the great causes which lead girls into trouble. These are more potent factors than desire for excitement, to which so many mis demeanors are attributed.” "Our crime rate is the crime rate of India, a non-Christian nation.” dedffres Bishop Cannon of the Meth odist church in urging youta to as sume more serious responsibilities. Tomorrow’s criminals can be spot ted among children entering school today, says Superintendent White of the government hospital for the insane at Washington. He adds; "Most of the crime now prevalent could be prevented by concentrating on the very young child. Instincts for future crimes can almost always be discovered in children just enter ing school. It is the duty to combat this by instilling good habits." Judge MacNcillc of Philadc'phia'-s . juvenile court is one of those who I think juvenile delinquency is diminish ing. “When I was a boy,” he re- I miniscences, "we were obliged to bar windows of stores with a com plicated system of bars and padlocks against the ravages of gangs of hoodlums. Today, when things are I closed at night, only a pane of ■ glass keeps out the world.” Miss Grace Abbott, chief of the “ children’s bureau of the department of labor, nlso finds less inclination . j toward criminality by youngsters , ! now than 15 years ago. She praises ' juvenile court legislation for keeping [ i many minors out of jail. J What He Needed. 1 j “Say. boss." cried a dark-skinned 1 customer, rushing much peturbtd I into a store, “a ho "count boy has f threatened mah life. Ah craves pro tection.” 5 "How about n bullet-proof vest!” . queried the man behind the counter. , “Wuthless. plumb wuthless Ain’t . yo’ got no razzer-proof collahs?" Mrs. A.—Will you take your conk' away with you next summer? • Mrs B —Ob, dear, no! We couldn’t • afford to go to the kind of place that - would satisfy hez. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Regular meeting of Concord Lodge No. 404 Loyal Older of Moose Mon day evening at 7 :38 o’clock. All mem i ben requested to be present, j W. J. HETBCOX. See. HHariO knHeislle M. Jbwwn as SnsksJi! i Minutes. Try it right now for Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Lumbago, sore stiff and swooien joints, pains in the head, back and limbs, coma, bunions, etc. After one application pain usually disap pears as if by magic. A new remedy used externally for Coughs, Colds. Spasmodic Croup, In fluenza, HoVe Throat and Tonsilitis. Tbia oil ia penetrating remedy known. It* prompt and immediate effect la relieving pain is due to the fact that it penetratha to the affected ports st once. As an illuatration, pour ten clroi* on the thickest piece of sole leather and lit will peMtilU* this subtaajp I through and. through in three mfn ! Astonishing how thousands o{ ’ Rheumatic sofferer* are being relieirjjg by use of this new oil treatusent. which contains Mpeluil oils Jig i Europe. IF* know! as “Enake OIL” I Refuse imitations. This great ol a 1 golden red color Mfg. only by Met* WHICH? /The • I The : Individual Corporate Executor Executor ,_one man judg- i—a complete or merit and capacity; ganization, espe the human limita- daily qualified by tions of a single training and ex- . person. perience. This institution serves for the same fee allowed an individual as executor or trustee. Citizens Bank and Trust Company CONCORD, N; C. A. F. GOODMAN, Trust Officer 'I ~ ';;a , SOPHER OPPOSES The Cost of Rats. INTERMARRIAGE Monroe Enquirer. Duke Professor Says Such Attitude is Tradition in His Family. Durham. March (s—Criticism amt fommentw of the prow on the sup l>oscd attitude of Dr. E. D. Soper, head of the school cf religion of Duke University, on relations of the white and colored races in the United States, has brought from Dr. Soper a statement that he is person ally and hereditarily against inter marriage of the races. Tlie address criticized was oeitv ered at n meeting of the young pee tile's conference of the Southern Methodist Church in Memphis, Trim., a few weoke ago. reports ofyj i which were published in church papers. The harshest criticism yet noted was in K. Don Daws' "Vri’.ow Jacket." which scathingly denounced i Dr. Soper for his alleged advocacy of -oi ini equality of the races. Copies of this paper, in addition to the claimed large mailing list, have been widely distributed by other than the publishers, numbers of copies having been received in Durham with stamp postage, rather', than by the pound, as sent out by the publishers. Other newspapers have commented on the re]R>rted ad dress. including the Christian Advo cate, Methodist church organ. Dr Soper issued the following brief typewritten statement: "I aim glad to say that I have always hefd, as I do now. a very strong opinion against the inter-marriage of the races. This is not only my opinion, but it is the tradition of the fam ily. My father, a missionary for 40 years in Japan, was strongly of the 1 ipinion that marriage ought not to :ake place between the different of aoea, whether those races were Vmerieans and Japanese or white \merieans and negroes. I have been brought up on this teaching, have never deviated from it. and belike it as wrongly today as 1 ever have.” I PASTIME THEATRE Wednesday, Thursday, March 10 and 11 Now Its a Knockout Bold as a Tigress Loving as a Dove Wild as a Child! % ♦ . Man, maid and beast—the strangest love story ever told. Straight from her jungle isle she came into the heart of stilted society, unashamed in her loves, urhfmid iu her hates, know ing no conventions, obeying no laws. You must not miss this startling daunting, of society's cow ardly customs. * EDWARD SEDGWICK PRODUCTION W HBnVH jflk I m ' i WriivWvrKsfti a■a \ H Jjfl i I Bpl[S j ftlcl rtifl Wu Ml B ■ B irraffiSl mt Wl* vfr m p v.Jw w Mfj mfg) mw ME If a farmer should feed one of his neighbors horses or cows throughout the winter and djd not receive any compensation therefor he would feel aggrieved and rightly so. Hut the average farmer will feed a colony of rats around his premises, which eat and destroy more than any live stock would do and never com plains. Rats are accepted as a mat ter of course, and while we may talk aborft the economic loss of the farm ers’ greatest i>est rarely is concerted actio?"'taken to destroye them. But one day last week Harvey Baucorn told of his neighbor, J. C. Braswell over in Goose Creek town i ship, who had made a rat trap that , works fine. Mr. Braswell consruet ed a lid pivoted on a barrel. U. O. Dent steps on the edge, in order to secure a dainty bid of bait, when he is precipitated into a barrel of cold water. Seven big rats were caught in one night. Luther Hugging, of Mnrsliville, who was present when Mr. Haucom was telling about hk neighbors trap, stated that one of the most effective I and simple rut traps is a hollow log placed iu a barn or crib. Os course a light log should be used, and al most, any day when the, ends are closed the petst may be exterminated at leisure. „ - ‘ Alike Rastus—Ah done hear yo’ stayed in de haunted house last night What happened? - Ka^bo —'Bout two o'clock Ah woke up an’ a ghost come frew de side wall jes - as if de wall wasn't dere. Rastus —An' what did yo' do? Sambo—Boy. Ah wen frew de other side wall de same way. Unusual floods and heavy frosts have marked large districts in Eng j land and France. I^^ss^oooooopobooooooogowxxxxwooooooooooo&ooooc^v Bflk tm Let it be fihe Jy x JyjpßßM A quality—or Good Spring Suit advice ' ' t ; r .. .Il to lie playing the Butler vcA'H i' l an all star cast than the leading man in a tent ■■l '’ \ WMW • If y°u cannot afford to ! Lfl pay $25 for a good Spring ' JJApA Suit—and that’s where j _ • they start —you can much 8 less afford to pay $W.75 for it will prove your investment’s 9 A poor quality will never use iht hinges on the Hoover’s 1 door for we think too much of what you think of us. [ Good Suits Made by Schloss Bros. & Co.*For HOOVER’S,Inc. \ t M the YOUNG MAN’S STORE | x>ocoooA>nopoooc>norr noriex u m » m ii ii h m * it * m wjlh m loauumjutj Avoid the Epidem- K • i Win HAVE SPRING FEVER? | It will not be long until spring and people will begin to complain about having a tired, laay feeling, weak and rundown, no appetite. This feeling is often called Spring Fever. There are several things that may cause this fuelling, the most common of those -k Constipation, Inactive Elver and Stomach. These Vital Organs can be greqtty assisted, and the system improved by taking SMI-LAX TONIC and LAX ATIVE Compound. This medicine helps nature to throw off the poiootaa from the system, and allows the ton ic {ftoperties of this medieine to have full power which makes it a wonder ful tonic. Why not try a few bottles ot this wonderful medicine and gvt yourself in condition to avoid the tfpring Fev- j et? ‘ ‘ This NEW and WONDERFUL' medicine is carefully and property made from the preparations and eom pounds of Roots, Basks and Mtamwls that have been used for generations as a Took and Laxative, blended with aromatic to Rake it pleasant to take. Recommenfled as ano aid in the treatment of the following complaints: Dose ot Appetite, Weak and Run down Condition of the System, Indi gestion, Constipation, Stomach and Liver. For tale by All Leading Drug Stoaea. Make Your Lay Make Your Chicks and Pullets Grow CORNO FEEDS Are Made For Bach . Special Use Made.of all sodnd clean grains.. and material. Sold on a guarantee. * Su little chicks with Corno Jlut- Feed. Follow with Corno Growing Ma»h. ■. V *v Uac Corno Laying Mash and Gordo Scratch Feed—tmy mike most efis. We have Corno ip all Cline St Moose ■ m If you want to .assist in keep l ing the desperate character known as “illness” off of health avenue, you can do so by pur chasing yottr ' remedies of us. Pin, the man who will see that you are treated politely and charged fairly. CAlifpmUt Tdurs Votes. PEARL DRUG \ CO. PM»* 22-722 CONOORD PBQPUCB MARKBT (CorreetodWeskly Ay Cltns A Mpoks) Figures named represent prices paid far produce-on the market: sEt £.» Country Btoin •ySpe . --- —y---——-.-jo —— l Irish Fotatou -—— Aw V.,, ' r ‘ ‘ : ’ -J Monday, March 8, 1926 ~ ' T" ' ' .. '-‘V ' = rniiiß Tiinire TUrfn l Ut'lLJ ii Your fear of fire is mostly j| 1 of a financial nature. You K j have planned 'how you i i will leave the burning | | building but without in- | | durance you know you | | cannot escape loss. 4j^fek PHON£: 2J/ fnziß tibsxL DclMnct - fl-jpV miittia /ts" n \ Mooty hick without qutitiot \Uf HUNTS OUARANTEBE L -|_ti3F 11 SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES /■f/M) (HuoVs Salve ana Soap), faltlr ■ U-.f/ the traatmant of Itch, Besema V'* tA Kts«wo»m.Tat>ar or other Kah PEARL DRl'O €O. CONCORD COTTON MARKET r MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1096 Cotton :... 18 Cotton seed . A .. .62 1-2 MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Clerks | IBank Clerks | * Surrounded by money— i on the inside looking out, I you know who the suc cessful men and women * are. Have you noticed of ; | late yeass how “success- ; | ful” most *of your cus- | tomers look in appear ance? They buy Woods ! !j «nd Dry Cleaning—both j pay dividends. f , j