PAGE EIGHT I ffi® E3 PjLi J ,-J BIhU y I •;> a |TBm JM IS3 Beauty, Combort and Convenience In these four Poster twin beds, metal or wood. Finished in Brown Walnut or. Brown Mahogany. Vanity dressers, Chifforohes, Chiffonires, Desk, night tables, chairs, rockers and benches all to match. Sold in complete suites or as odd pieces, prices reasonable, terms to suit purchaser. New Spring and Summer goods arriving daily. Come in and look them over before you buy. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FI'RMTL'RE STORE G@AL | No Dealer in Concord Sells Coal for Less than I do. ]! B Best Furnace Coal SB.OO to $ll.OO. i| 8 Best Grate and Stove Coal SB.OO to $9.00. ![ X Best Steam Coal $4.00 to $7.50. 9 Best Gas blouse Coke—Made in Concordsß.so. j! 8 Purchase Your Coal where you can get QUALITY i! 8 and SERVICE. ' |j I. A. B. POUNDS y oooooooooooooooo^ oooooo0 * 0 — OOOOOCXJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC \ FIVE NEW PUMPS These Five Winners received this week. They are 1 j the early Spring’s Newest Models. " | ; Patent One Stray Gold Trim, Gold Heel j j Satin One-Strap Gold Trim » j Light Gray Pump, two tone ![ y White Kid Pump stitched. ]i ]|j One Strap White Kid Pump j! These are Wonderful Shoes at a Wonderful price of $7.85 IVEY’S THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES K>ooooooooocxxx)oooooooooo«c^oooooogoooooooooooooo K.L. CRAVEN & SONS! PHONE 74 ji I / Am I J Plaster “ Mortar Colors •oooooooooooooo»ajooooooooooooooooocx50oooooooooooo No Not Enfluenza-But “Henfluenza” fi We’ve got “Henfluenza,” and we’ve got it bad. Our doctor gave I us a prescription which calls for 500 fat hens taken daily until 1 friers are obtainable in large numbers. We will pay 23e per pound I for Heavy Hens delivered to us by Friday noon of this week. Leg- I horns and light weight liens 20c per pound. Winter chickens 25 to 1 30 cents per i>otind. as to size. Friers 1 1-2 lb. size. 45c per pound. I Wc arc in the market six days in the week and 52 weeks in the year. § The Traveling Car Load Buyer works only when tile market is | favorable to himself. Why wait until there is no demand for Hens? I Sell Now! C. H. BARRIER & CO. TONIC and Laxative Compound 9 The new and wounderful Medicine for people who are ! 9 suffering with Weak and Rundown condition of the ■ CSystem, Loss of Appetite, Constipation, Indigestion, Sto x mach and Liver. 9 See your Dfuggist for it is only sold through Drue 1 Stores. . 6 s Our Penny ADS. Get Quick Results Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound 136—41 :00 P. M. A. M. 34 4:10 P. M. • 35 8:30 P. M. 36 :89 P. M. Southbound 30— 0:30 A. V. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29—11.00 P. 11. |f~LOCAL MENTION | 1 W. W. Flo we is able to bp out | again after b'*ing confined to his home by illness. One new case of measles and one new case of diphtheria were reported this mrrning to the county health de partment. The condition of Mrs. John Ritchie, I who has been ill for several days at her 'dome on South Spring street, is rported today as improved. W. A. Brown, who has been suffer ing with a leg ailment, has had the leg placed in a plaster cast. He is in Charlotte today undergoing treat ment. , The local Y volleyball team will go to Kannapolis tomorrow night for the ehampion.ship team of that town. The game will be played in the Cannon Y. The new road from Mt. Pleasant to the Stanly county line was opened to traffic Sunday. The road was completed about two weeks ago but » was closed t;> traffic until it had been j allowed to set for some time. (James in the City Basketball League will be resumed tomorrow night at the Y. The Wineooff and DeMolny teams will play. The sched ule was halted last Week on account of the influenza epidemic. A number of Concord persons mo tored to th<t Sandhills yesterday but they saw few peach blooms The! trees in the peach orchards there are j just beginning to turn and it will be’ nnrther week before they are in full blossom. Plans for a City Baseball League, similar to the one operated last year, will be made at the V. M. C. A. this week by Physical Director Denny and others interested in the proposition. It is planned to ’hold an organization meeting at the Y in the near future. Prof, and Mrs. Hinton McLeod, Prof. A. S Webb. Prof. J. B. Robert son and Miss Janie Klutz have re turned from Raleigh, where they at tended a meeting of the State Teat'a ♦ rs* Assembly.* The meeting was a most profitable one, they report. The physical exercise classes at the high school were resumed today by 4- W. Denny. The classes were can celled last week when many of the students were confined to their 'homes by influenza. The regular schedule willl be carried out in the future. Mr. Denny states. * Thomas A. Brantley has sold to John A. Brantley for $175 property in City View, this city, according to a deed filed Saturday. Another deed filed the same day records the sale; of property in the Yorke addition of Concord by Henry Mcl)anield to W. H. Giliis for $960. Three cases are to be tried in re corder’s court this afternoon, accord ing to the police blotter. One de fendant is charged with having li quor. another with assault with a deadly weapon and another with be ing intoxicated. The docket is one of the lightest in recent Mondays. The new hotel in Concord will not be opened to the public on Easter Monday night. Reports to this ef fect have been circulated in Concord and nearby cities, but it is known tat the building will not be ready for occupancy in that date. It will be May first at the earliest before the structure is completed, it is said. Britt (Rube) Wilson, Cabarrus southpaw, reported in Charlotte this morning for spring practice with the Charlotte baseball team. The pitch ers and catchers have reported a week earlier than the rest of the squad whicto will begin work next Monday. The first exhibition game of the year in Charlotte will be staged Friday when Detroit and Toronto meet at Wearn Field. Drink Delusions. A couple of old rounders were sit ting in a bar-room imbibing in cock tails. Presently one of them re marked, “Do you know. Bill, I think I'll buy this hotel.” “Wait till we’ve had a few more drinkß,” said Bill, “and I’ll sell it to you.” New street lights installed by the city of San Francisco in the Chinese quarter consist of a standard designed in imitation of a bamboo stalk which is surmounted by a lantern of pagida design glassed with amber panels. DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES The Democratic voters of Cabarrus County are hereby requested to m?et at their respective voting precincts ; on Saturday April 17th, 1926, for the i puipose of selecting five members of the Township Executive Committee and naming delegates to the County Convention on April 24th to be held in the county court house. At the County Convention dele gates will be named to represent the county at the State Convention to be held in the citj of Baleigfc on April 29th. The primaries will be held in the several townships and wards at 2|3C p. m. ROSA B. MUND, j Vice Chairman County Demo cratic Executive Committee. Concord, N. C. f March 22, 1926. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ' V iH k nea - A >V- • I'n- lent Calvin Coolidge (in silk hat? ptomro'T entering the Ply mouth, Vt., cemetery jitxt before tin body of his aged father. OoL • John Coolidge. was laid to rest alongside of the prexideuet’s son. Calvin. .!r. John Coolidge is shown standing in the sleigh: Diels Jarvis, head of the l\ S. Seeret Service. is pictured behind the sled wearing a l’ght cap. OTKKN HOSPITAL HOTLY CRITICISED Several Former Inmates Make Charges of Inhuman Treatmep.. Italeigh News and Observer. 1.. M lieilly, of 7 South Person street, this city, says that the criti cisms of Oteen Hospital as made in Wednesday’s Asheville Citizen by the publishers of the Oteen Skylight and George T. Word are not a bit exag gerated. Mr. Kelly says he has just been sent away from Oteen although he has tuberculosis. He says he was sent away after he had been there only two weeks. On being discharge! he was told, he states, that he had to leave to make room for those who needed treatment worse than he did Mr. Kelly said he could not follow this line of reasoning as there are ac commodations at Oteen for fifteen hundred men and there are only five or six hundred there. He contends that the number has been cut down by a general application of the treat ment winch was accorded him. The story in. tae Asheville Citigeu says in part: “Charging that 90 per cent, of the patients in Oteen hospital are bitter against the present administrat’on of the institution, and that this situation is having a pronounced ill effect upon their progress toward recovery, the publishers of The Oteen Skylight call ed ttt The Citizen office and made a statement of their side of the contro versy that has been raging slice the medical officer is alleged to have be come peeved at articles carried in the publication and seized the office fur niture of the paper which had been contributed toward ts maintenance ait a morale agent by a former adminis tration. “On the heels of this charge there came another from Georoge T. Word, who asserts that he was until recently a pat ent at the institution, and who alleges that the patients are treat.si in humanely and unfairly by the present administration of the hos.iital, “The Skylight publishers, John (x. Heller, Robert A. Bowen and C, li. Bullard admitted that th#y had receiv ed a letter from E. P. Odendhal. the medical officer in charge, in which he asked them to cancel his subscription to the publication. It is further stated that since that letter was published in “Skylight.’’ several hundred subscriptions have come in from those who are said to have protested against the alleged at tempt to suppress the publication of the paper and its circulation among the patients. The eommunicattion from Mr, Word in part is as follows: The Statement. “Man’s inhumanity to man makes' countless thousands mourn.” This trite and true expression has been brought vividly and forcibly to my attention the past three weeks while a patient at Oteen. Men suffering with the dread “white plague' contracted in line of duty,’ in the serviee of their country are being sent to I'nited States Veterans' Hospital No. .00 at' Oteen and recommended for treat ment. After being kept in an obser vation ward for from three to fifteen days where there is no doctor, nurse or attendant on duty at night, tliev are being discharged this way, "Not in need of hospitalization “despite the fact that their hospitalization admis sion order from the Veterans' Bureau evaminers specifically reads “Active tuberculosis—treatment recommended.” “The writer was discharged from the above named institution February 13. as “treatment completed case." after about one month’s observation In less than 24 hours I had a had hemorrhage of the lungs. Having spent practically five years in sixteen tuberculosis institutions and being transferred to Oteen for the express purpose of receding treatment afteg spending the past six months in a tuberculosis Hospital in Ohio and pay summarily given my ‘walking papers’ ing my own expenses en route. I was without transportation." When One’; Standing Its Lost. “Sedentary work,” said the college lecturer, tends to lesseu the endur ance.” “In other words.” butted in the smnrt student, “the more one sits, the less one can stand.” “Exactly,” retorted the lecturer; . “and if one lies a great deal, one’s , standing is lost completely.” LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE l Regular meeting of Concord Lodgs No. 404 Loyal Order of Moose Man day evening at 7 :30 o’clock. All mem bers requested tg be present. W. 5. HETHCOX, Sec. A. F. GOODMAN, Trust Officer TOMp» SIMSIP Two men who tried to pot into n chain store in Birmingham. Ala., got into the chain gang instead. Los Angeles man made a rope from hi* pajamas. and escaped from jail, which was the up and Adam spirit. Chi ego will have a hotel named Coolidge. it should be a real quiet Karl Carrcll says a minister wouldn't have been shocked at his party, but he doesn't say what min ister. In Augusta, (la., Ty Cobb, base l.-a’le player, caught a robber who must have thought lie was our. Our philosophy is that the world ends every night and starts out new again every morning. (Copyright, 1026, XKA Service. Inc.) IRISH POTATOES Early Indications Point to a Large Acreage in North Carolina. Raleigh, N. C., March 22.— UP) — Early indications point to an Irish potato aereage in North Carolina this year at least 2.1 per cent, in excess of the acreage last season, it was stated today by the North Carolina Crop Reporting Service, following a sur vey of the state. Early Irish i>otaro acreage in North Carolina shows a marked in crease over last year, says the Crop Reporting Service. This is on a basis of reports made by fa liners, .seed and fertilizer dealers, coopers and railroad officials. Only about 85 or 00 per cent, of the jiorato crop had been planted at the time the survey was made, it is point ed out. and it is remarked that ‘*it is to be borne in mind that some in fluencing factor might cause an in- SAYS IT’S GREAT SYSTEM BUILDER Another Kannapolis Mill Man Gives Herb Extract Known as IIKRB Jl ICE Credit for Restoring His Health. “I am most pleased that it was good fortune to learn t Herb Extract known as HERR JUICE in time to sare me from further Suffering. I never knew what it was to have a well day on account of constant gas pains which I suffered as a result of stom ach trouble ami indigestion. Such would be my condition today, were ot not for Herb Extract known as HERB JUICE,” said Mr. J. E. Lowder, well known cotton mill man connected with the Cabarrus Mill, Kannapolis,, N. C., and resides at 781 Juniper street. I when he called to see the HERB JUICE representative a few days ago. “In my opinion,” Mr. Louder con tinued, "Herb Extract known as HERB JI'ICE is the greatest medi cine on the market today and I am most eager for all to know what a truly wonderful remedy it is for in digestion and constipation. On ac count of gas pains and bloating after eating, I was almost afraid to eat any thing. Everything seemed to disagree with me. My liver was sluggist and I always had a tired, wornout feel dig, due, I believe, to being badly consti pated. I could not sleep well at night and would get up the next morning feeling worse than when I went to bed. My whale system was out of or der, for I needed something to purge me and clean my system. In Herb Extract known as HERB JUICE I found the very remedy I was looking for. * Ever since I began using this medicine I have gained in weight and strength until today i am feeling 100 per cent, improved. I have never found the equal of Herb Extract known as HERB JI'ICE for mjliges tion ami constipation. The gas pains and bloating have stopper, my liver acts regularly, also my bowels are in good shape and I am not bothered with constipation. Herb Extract dkirown as HERB JUICE is the best laxative and tonic I have used, and I know I owe my present improvement in health to this wonderful remedy. I will always praise it and reeom mened it to anyone suffering as I did, for I know from experience it will do the work and do it well. My whole family are taking Herb Extract known as HERB JUICE with wonder ful results. crease or a decrease in exi>eetcd plantings, thereby making it necessary to revise our preliminary estimate. 1 “resent indieattions are that we w'll have at least a twenty-five per cent. Increase in potatto aereage this year." | The potato ifnd trucking situation generally are reviewed in the state ment ttulay : | "While there is a small increase ov er the whole Trucking area c.f the State, the largest increases are in the following counties: Beaufort, Cartar et, ( raven ami l’amltco. There :s al so a decided increase in acreage around Bethel. These places have an increase of from .'lO to SO per cent,, while Elisabeth City, Mount Olive ami other sections will range from 10 to 20 per cent above last year. Th» west ern part of the State is rejiortisl to have no increase “but rather likely t> show a slight decrease. However, it is too early to get expected acreage, in the mountain section.” HauLngs of seed potatoes b.v rail roads appear to indicate an increased planting around Vandeme.e and Au rora, bur it must lie remembered, it is said, that a large number of Ibisb po tato seed was grown last year, as com pared with little 'his year. "Some seed potatoes have sold for as high as sl2 per barrel and have av eraged from Bs.ot> to $0.50 this year, which resulted it! decrease 1 acreage f«.r the small farmer, or one short of oi nrting capital. Increases arc due t ■ tire expansion of acreage with the wealthiest farmers and to investment*' made by contractors. In Beaufort c anity about .'ls per cent, of the total irt.p was plauteu by the contracting method. There are several options to this method all of i Inch center around Pile farmer being fieattced by others so- which he in ti nt gives a spi itied j quantity of potatoes or a given per iviti. ot the total crop at harvest Weather conditions, have be; i very mu',.vi,rattle to the potato griwer. In some seetions ;!)ree work nay . pci nee;.: was the maximum during most of the planting seaqon. Despite this fact planting was not delayed, due to the improved methods of farming ami the use of modern machinery, which has about taken the place of man lab or to a great extent on farms. While farm labor has been plentiful, it was tltc belief of some that there would be a shortage during harvest time. The State Commissioner of Labor and printing lias announced that he hop-i ed to be in position to supply a sufli-j eient amount of labor to meet the de mands of any emergency that might arise. “As yet we have not attempted to forecast the price of potatoes, but in-! d : catiens are that the early market I will be exceptionally good. The quail-1 tity of potatoes held by growers anil local dealers in the 35 late jiotato states on January 1. 102(1. and avail able for sale after that date is esti mated to have been 07.127,000 bush els. or 22.3 per cent, of the total crop, cimpared with 110.223,000 bushels on the same date last year, which was 30 tier cent, of the total crop. Stocks on hand January 1 arc estimated to be much lower than stocks on hand on the same date in any year since 1910, when holdings were estimated at 85,- 405.000 bushels. New Jersey spent about $325,000 last year in mosquito control work. I You should know how tj' convenient it is, at this tji shop, to find hats that are n perfect complements. yj Wi-mryu OOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC^OOO Golds By millions ended Hill* atop millions of colds every winter— and in 24 hours. They end headache and fever, open the bowels, tone the whole sys tem. Use nothing less reliable. Colds and Grippe call for prompt, efficient help. Be sure you get it. AH druggists Pries 30s cascaraJLquinine Gat Rod Bos wMumttn* CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrupted Weekly by Cline & Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for produce on the market: Eggs .28 corn sl.lO Sweet potatoes - $1.50 Turkeys .28 Onions $1.75 l“eae $2.00 Butter .85 Country Hun _ jm Country Shouldei .20 Country Sides j»o Young Chickens JJO | Hens .If) i Irish Potatoes g.OO fYour Easter Hat is here for you to see before everyone else does! Do you realize that you are the only person in the world who has to look in a mirror to see YOU?. If von will let this adver tisement influence you to gaze into a mirror at a stylish head and shoul ders—we will sec that everybody else looks at something worth while. You ought to own a Schohle hat for Easter—not only for your own sake but for. the good of the general land scape ! Schohle Hats $5.00 to SB.OO New Top Coats $20.00 to $-15.00 Easter Shirts $1.50 to $5.00 HOOVER’S,Inc. THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE Question of Interpretation. Mama—Where have you been, Johnnie? Small Boy—Playing ball. Mama (severely)—But I told you to beat the rug, didn't it? Small Boy—No, ma'am; you told me to hang the rug on the line and then beat it. Ambulance Service Any Hour, Day or Night WILKINSON’S FUNERAL HOME Phone 9 Concord, N. C. Country Cured Meats Kingan Meats Fresh Each Week When early spring time comes, we always stock our warehouses with the Very Beat Meats. Country Cured Hams, Sides and Shoulders. We sell you whole or Slice to Suit. Fresh each week: Kingau’s Reliable Hams Kingan's 1 Lb Breakfast Ham Kingan's Breakfast Strips. We also lmve Better Western Rib Side and Fat Back than you find in most stores. Our splendid Delivery men go quick everywhere. PHONE 839 * Cline & Moose WHO HAKES FRIENDS WITH THE (fgS^ggUPUBUC! By giving superior quality and extra ordinary values. This Week It’s PIPES PEARL DRUG CO. Phones 22—722 Monday, Maxell 22, 1926 Tfiiuu Tnnirc By r ETZER £k YoRKE lUllllnil'll J f/ 7kOV&Hr I An auto insurance pol- 1 icy that protects you : against loss from fire or • theft is easy to buy and 5 will prove your salvation | when the sad event oc- , curs. Talk to us. jj ffrzmYoßKflcAiifMcr OAttK aipc.f' 1 I.i r°HUN T-S GUAR A n't EKE —uSr \ I SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES /(■ / Ml (Hunt'. Salve.n.So.pl.faiWr fII 17 the treatment of Itch. Kcienm * i/l Ringworm,Tetter or other Itch * * Inc akin 4l.ea.aa. Try thk treatment at our risk. ECZENASP Money back without question A M'S if HURT’S GUARANTEE!) < SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES Sfl (Hunt*.Selva and Bpap),<«ll In I §/, ft) the treatment of Itch, Kctema, Tgfy f J Ri narworm.Tetter or other! teb- fV / / In* akin diaeakea. Try tbia 4 *** « * treatment at our rlak- PEARL DRUG CO. CONCORD COTTON MARKET MONDAY. MARCH 32, 1936 Cotton .if Cotton seed 52 1 -1' 000000000000000000000000 I Home | Managers You know by experi- ’ 1 ence in buying the neces- iji sities of home that only i| certain articles can safely || be bought on “price” ji ] alone. Dry Cleaning is' j [ ; ; one item of expense—an j!| ij'* economy in clothing cost jji | -rwhich cannot be satis- j! ; factory if cheapness in ] \ ! i price is the recommenda- ' ! tion. You get just what ! ! * ; | you pay for in Cleaning \ | 1 i and dyeing—and a rotten ; ! \ egg is not wanted at any ! ! | I price. | “MASTER” Cleaners and Dyer* Office 25-27 W. Depot St - A

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