Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 29, 1926, edition 2 / Page 4
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE FOUR p f HK Concord Dafly Tribune J. B. SHERRILL Editor and Publisher HEBRILL, Associate Editor MEMBER OF THE SBOCIATED PRESS asociated Press is exclusively x> the use for republication of credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and also the lo published herein. ;hts of republication of spec tcbee herein are ala* reserved. Ipecial Representative KST, LANDIS A KOHN Fifth Avenue, New York s’ Gas Building, Chicago Ccndler Building, Atlanta d as second class mail matter _ suffice at Concord, N. C., un :-f dee the Act of March 3, 1879. 1 , - SUBSCRIPTION RATES U -in the City of Concord by Carrier: One-Year $6.00 K Six Months . 3.00 ft Three Months 1.50 W One Month .50 1' Outside of the Statt the Subscription Is the Same as in the City Oat of the city and by mail in North , Carolina the following prices will pre ;< nail: m One Year $5.00 - Six Months 2.50 ’ Three Months 1.25 ' Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a a ~ Month a All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDI I.E | In Effect Jan. 30, 1926. Northbound 1 . ffo. 40 To New York 9:28 P. M. { No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M. B No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. M. » Vo. 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. j No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. I No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound I No. 45 To Charlotte 3:45 P. M No. 85 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. i No. 29 To Birmingham 2:35 A. M * No 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M H No„ 33 To New Orleans 8:15 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:00 A. M ', No. 135 To Atlanta 8:37 P. M j No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M. : No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to dis charge passengers conung from be ’ vond Washington. • All trains stop in Concord except No. 88 northbound. r IM. FOR TODAY— 1 r- «| Kbte Thoughts memorized, wfll prove • IjjJ jg| priceless heritage in after year* jg| Tin* Only Help:—For I the Lord I thy God will hold thy right hand. I saying unto thee. Fear not; I will help | thee.—lsaiah 41 :13. WILL COMPLETE SEWER SYS TEAL i The City of Coucord is now in po £'■ sition, it is believi*d. to complete its hf sewer system. Bonds in the sum of £ $t50,000 were sold several days ago to L secure funds for the work, which has > already been started in practically every part of the city not already r * ‘ served. I Surface closets are to be a thing of j the past in Concord in the near fu- I ture. Within the past several weeks sewer connections were made with 75 t bouses in a mill suburb and since then additional connections have been l made in the same locality. Each sew | er connection weans one less surface l closet. I I the plans of city officials no l _ jiaflt of the city is to be overlooked in k completing tlie system, aud that is as it should be. It may appear a bur s den to soim* people to have to install ► bathroom equipment but in the long I run they will bo benefit ted. I, . _ ace closets are a menace to the I y health of any city. They can be con-1 f trolled to a certain extent but at j |l| besT they are not satisfactory from 1 the standpoint of sanitation and pub ft. lie health. And most of them, as a | | ; matter of fact, are not run under the H best conditions. People become care- RMess about them, they become insani fary and thus are a menace to the IF, public health. p|., It is interesting to note that the g| sewer bonds. bearing five per cenet. in- I’ terest. brought a premium of $1,500. % In |D2o when $70,000 worth of the city's street bonds were sold the prem ium was only SOB 2. There were 13 bidders for the bonds and the faet i |g that the premium was so high speaks well for the city's credit. gTILL LIKE THE KAISER. | E; That many persons in Germany are | at ill fond of the former Kaiser is demonstrated by the fact that a de termined effort is being made to keep the government from confiscating his L.': property. lie ithe nationalist party seems to ro >s gard the former emperor as somewhat imi>osed upon. He would not have p left Germany, they contend, if he had Bbe was acting in the iii orld peace. He was not nd did not fear the Gey allies. aiser trusted the glib ’resident. Wilson," is the friend offered as a rea former ruler’s departure. 1 tich is bunk. When did Kaiser become so coucern rest of tlie world? He ■ been thinking of Ihese ig all the; years lie drill ' a aid .prepared beg nmu car. ’ it is! ridiculous •to iibelni doing anything in of the rest of the world, ii. arrogant ami heartless. *VjoUand Iwcaune he knew e safe He took ey to live the rv*t of bib , life in ease and comfort! There was only one time the kaiser heeded the words of Woodrow Wil son. That was when he gave approval to peace terms which the War Presi dent helped to draw up. LITTLE ENCOURAGEMENT FOR BEER MAKERS. The Schlitz Brewing Company is the latest beer company to write to the Attorney General of North Car olina relative to selling the so-called medical beer in North Carolina. The letter was similar to one received re cently from the Pabst company, each wanting to know whether beer man ufactured under a recent permit by the prohibition department could be sold in this State. Frank Nash, assistant attorney gen eral. doubts that the beer can be le gally sold in North Carolina and he has told the brewery companies just that. Thefce is a State law here against the sale of such beverages and State officials are of the opinion that this law prohibits the sale of such drinks in North Carolina regardless of anything the federal government may do. , If the breweries want to test the law all right. It is practically cer tain arrests will follow the sale of the new drink in Tar Heelia and the Supreme Court may have to decide the matter. So far as is known at the State capital none of the medi cal beer has been sold in this Stale, sso no test can be made until the sale is started. _______ SECI/RE ROBINSON TO DE LIVER ADDRESS AT DI KE Arkansas Senator Accepts Invita tion to Make Commencement Ad dress. Washington. April 28-—Senator Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Democratic leader of the Senate, will deliver the commencement address at Duke University on June 1), it was announced here today. Senator Lee S. Overman and I)r. R. L. Flowers, of Duke University, called on Senator Rob ! nson today and extended to him the invitation to make the address. The minority lead er accepted the invitation. “Duke University is indeed very fortunate,” Senator Overman de c’ared in statement issued utter Robinscn had accepted, "in securing Senator Robinson for this occasion. He is not only minority leader in the Senate and a very forceful speak er, but is one of the outstanding men in tin* Senate and county in tlie Democratic party and it goes with out saying that lie will receive a very warm welcome in North Caro lina.” Senator Robinson. according to reports here. i* tin* man being groom ed by the conservative Democrats in the Senate as the Democratic presi dential nominee in 1028 He is a handsome man and : s a clear, force ful speaker. Recently he has been particularly active in attacks on the policy of the Federal tariff com mission as dictated by President Coolidge. ACCIDENT TAKES LIFE OF YOUTH Eugene Barton Kills Bill Bolden in Friendly Scuffle at Thomasville. Thomasville. April 28—Last nighr at 8 o’clock Bill Bolden’s gun was aceidenta ly discharged while scuf fling across the <*ounter with Eu gene* Barton, the .25 automatic ball entering Barton’s breast and killing him almost instantly. The accident took place at W. 8. Ixmg’s store, in the east side of the city, he boys were nearly the same age, bOing 1!) years. It was said to have been a friendly scuffle bcfwi*en them. the pistol being in Bolden’s belt when it went off. Barton is said to have spoken after he wa.s shot, saying: “You hurt me, but you couldn’t, help it.” County Coroner Dr. F. L. Mock was called from his home at Reeds , | and arrived at 10 o'clock. The body j had been removed to the Russell fun j oral home. A jury of six men was called, but their report had not been I made tonight. ' Young Barton was n *on of George Barton, in the eastern part of the town. Arrangements have not been definitely made, but the funeral prob ably will be held at Unity Chapel at some hour Thursday. Post and FlaggN Cotton Letter. New York, April 28.—N0 further notices have been issued today and it is thoufc’.u that remaining tenders, whatever they amount to, will be in small and rather scattered lots. Those j who had cotton to ship have been ! finding it possible to dispose of it to j better advantage in other ways in | spite of the s’ack demand reported for spots at times. Trading has been at a minimum | j a* uotuing in tin* i*ews loomed large i enough to create fresh seutiiueut of 1 importance. The weekly weather | was a shade bullish but the feeling i persists that a week or two of really go'd weather would put everything right. Weather, however, continues ! too cool to warm up the wet soil to a point where the seed will germi nate successfully. There has been less rain lately and none is wanted for some time to come, j Soi»c figure the carryover at six million, the largest since 1021, but some fairly high prices were seen af ter that year and Would be seen again if rue crop gets any sharp set-btfek. Indifference to cotton and its pro : ducts is more pretcp.se than reality t and the sum total of is gaining instead of losing by compar ison with recent years or even pre war times. 'POST AND FLAGG, j Americans Killed in South America. Betinos Aires. April 28.—William Theisner aud Cprkrn fjettmun, Amer ican crtisfeipq ' were njfiirjlerod ..yester day by unknown persons in the iucc of Salta, near tlie Bolivian fro*-j tier. jforffi Ilildago, the chauffeur, Was also slain. t The bodies were discovered “today iu the .bullet-marked automobile by i the roadside. J FRED FORECASTS FAST RACE AT CHARLOTTE Wagner Thinks Benny Hill’s Culver , City Record Will Be Eclipsed May 10th. Charlotte Observer. “My prediction is Charlotte race will be fastest of season.” That is the cryptic telegram from Fred Wagner, veteran automobile race starter, received at headquar ters of the Charlotte speedway, and it refer* to the 250 rai’.e national championship classic which will be run at the local bow! on May 10th. Coming from “Wag,” as he is af fectionately known by racing driv ers, officials and fans, this statement carries great weight with followers of the roaring road. It was made after Benny Hill, one of the Charlotte entrants, had copped the Culver City meet by driving the 250 miles at an average of 131.29 miles an hour. This is a new record for the dis tance. topping the one *et a few weeks previous by Pete DePaolo —another local entrant —at the inaugural race at the Miami-Fulford bowl. The average speed of the Culver City grind was given out as 130.59 miles an hour at the time but after the customary re-check the contest board of the American Automobile Association which sponsors the event on' the eight big brick and board track in America, announced that the official average was 131.29. In the qualifying round* a few days previous Bob McDonough. Tom my Milton’s protege, turned the fast est mile ever recorded when his speed reached 145. Wagner’s wire accentuates inter est that is already manifest in chang ing piston displacement of racing ma chine* frmii 122, as at presept, to 91.5. Tlie Charlotte race will bo the last in which the large cars will run and many fans are of the opinion that the drivers will “cut loose” more than usual because tlieyf will not have to worry about using the ma chines again. Some racing followers are of the belief that it will be several months before the smaller cars are perfected to an extent that they will attain the *peed of the present machines: others believe that the 500 mile grind at Indianapolis which will inaugurate the 01.5 busses, will result in a pseed as great as that of the present cars. Speedway officials expect Mr. Wag ner to arrive next Tuesday or Wed nesday. He will officiate at the in augural race at the Atlantic City track Saturday. Baditi Policeman Stabbed iiy Drunk en Negro Woman. Stanly News-Herald. R Cline Miller, member of the Badin police force, is in t lie Bad in Hospital suffering from knife wounds received at the hands of a negro woman Saturday night. From the information to be obtained here, a “canned heat” party ended rather unpleasantly, with the negro woman cutting up a negro man who was a’.tso a member ot tin* party. Policeman Miller, who was on duty at that time, attempted to ar rest the woman. She met Miller with i nine inch knife and attempted to tab him. succeeding in making just a slight wound above hi* heart. Miller then resorted to the use of his club, probably knocking her down, but was not able to disarm her beforr s he had inflicted several painful cut* about hi* hip and ankle. Mr. Miller is well known in this county and i* a son of Mr. John S. Miller, formerly of this county. He i* cxpH-ted to be able to leave the hospital in a short tim*. but will probably not be abjc to re*ume hi* duties for some time. Work Starts on Albemarle-Salisbury Road. Stanly News-Herald. Th»* Atlantic Paving Company has already begun work on routfc No. 80, between Albemarle and the Rowan county tine, for which they wore awarded a contract recently. The right-of-way has been cut between Albemarle and >sew London and the construction camps are being made a few miles North of Albemarle, pre paratory to beginning of the grading. Beside*, the building of culvert* over the stream* just north of town are well under way. This stretch of highway is to be hard Surfaced and will lessen the dis tance to Salisbury by several miles. The route will follow north Second Street out of town.' passing under the Winston-Salem Southbond Railroad of town and will keep to the right of the Southern, thus eliminat ing grade crossing*. lllnNewYork ! Miss Legg Is Now in !; New York Buying <ji The Latest Styles in millineby :? Robinson’s || tfilKqfry Dept. HIM HU. U«, | Phone 830 , euioooccccf orocooocxxxx THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE — . i I NORTH CAROLINA’S SI'PPLY OK PI'LP WOOD Being Intensively Studied by Repre. j tentative -of the American Kper and Pulp Association. | l&leigh. N. C., April 28, —OF).— North Carolina's supply ot pulp | wood and the better varieties of trees suitable for wood-utdng industries are being intensively studied by a representative of the American Pa per and Pulp Association, it learned today at the Department of i Conservation and Development. ! The Association representative will make and publish a report on conditions surround this resource, on which important paper and other in dustries, both in western and eastern North Carolina, are based, it is stated. \ I> A. Crocker, who i* secretary forester of the organization, has re cently been making investigations in western North Carolina and has been in conference yvith J. S- Holmes, state forester of the Department of Conservation and Development, at Raleigh. In addition to the North I Carolina areas studied, Mr. Crocker i* to investigate Virginia and a i>art ' of West Virginia as the area to be covered by his report. He will visit the northeastern part of this state iu connection with investigation* made in southeastCvn Virginia. \\ hen asked by Mr. Holmes for a general statement of forest eondi- ! lions as he had observed them ini western North Carolina, Mr. Crock- > er said that he found tin* forests con- j siderably depleted by lumbering operations and the forest fires which have followed them. Regrowth, how- : ever, is vigorous, he said, ami he ex- 1 quate measures were taken for the prevention of fore*t fires, there would l>e large supplies of the need l'd woods available for many years:" New growth, he said, would probably take care of existing industries x in that section, but an extension of Pulp wood industries and wood-iwing establishment* would call for strong er methods to maintain a supply of the raw material. Prevention of Forest fires, said Mr. Crocker, is the immediate neces sity. There i.s also demanded a re ativcly small amount of planting and a careful practice of forestry to j the cud that the growth of specially 1 useful species, which have become -ware, may lx* encouraged. There i* al»<;> a great problem ahead, he said, m connection with tin* anticipated destruction of the chestnut forests by the blight. At present the blight has attacked the chestnut severely in .some section*, while in other part* of the western North Carolina foreests it has not yet made noticeable head way. Experts agree, however, he added, that the chestnut is doomed, and tlie problem is to find a useful species to take it* place and to uti lize the present stand in the most economic manner. There ks in North Carolina, as in most state*, said Mr. Crocker, a -rent lack of precise information as to forest areas, the amounts and varieties and locations of growing timber, and other information. With out thdfce data, any survey, such as that of of pulp wood on wlHi h the great paper industry de pends. must be to an extent theoreti cal or speculative. Fire prevention is generally the imperative need, and for the future, it is highly import ant that every forested state have a survey, showing its possessions and it* needs with accuracy. Mr. Crocker has made a number of surveys as to timber conditions in other sections, which are published primarily for the use of the pulp wood industries which cooperate in the work- Tlie coming report on the Virginia-North Carolina-West Vir ginia area, said Forester Holmes, should prove of real value in the prosecution of forestry “Vork and investigation in this state. In Italy and in some of the vol canic islands of Gie Pacific the steam power issuing from volcanoes has been harnessed for engineering pur poses. The people of the Tuscan town of Lardello light their streets, heat their homes, and do their rook ing by means of volcanic steam pres sure, which generates enough heat to cook a joiut in less than half an hour. In auother district in Italy volcanic energy is cxpTbited for the purpose of making electricity, which i* sup plied to many towns, some of them more than fifty miles distant. Although the Oxford-Cambridge la crosse team was not very successful in winning its games in America, the tour of the English collegians has done much to popularize the ancient Indiau game. qc <^^jT Mß GRIPPE I am looking for a scoundrel by the name of Influenza. He’s an international crook. In this country he goes under the alias of La Grippe. Abroad he is known as the flu. Some times he masquerades as a bad cold. Have you been attacked ' by him? Your doctor will tell you that our pure drugs will ' sentence him to banishment. ‘ ti . i j; PEARL DRUp j CO. ; ■■■■■ -• i: i| Phone* 22—722 C.-....... i.H b. Vw. Bn. Pl.tur.. Inc. “Why Girl* Go Back Homa" with Patsy Ruth Millar la a Warner production from this novel. BTNOPBIB Marie Dovmey, innocent and pretty, misinterprets the kisses of Clifford Dudley, a matinee idol, as a proposal; he ruthlessly “frames ” her to get rid of her, hut the notoriety has the effect of making Marie's stage fame. Bhe quickly rises to stardom. Meanwhile, the scandalous story gets into her home town papers. John, her former sweetheart, writes that he believes in her and will come to Mew York to marry her if she wants; but ilarie, tasting success, puts him off. j CHAPTER IX—(Continued) She had been such a hit that they had decided to put it up In electric signs finally. Os course her agent had something to do with that and her personal publicity agent to whom a bit of her salary had gone I ungrudgingly for some months. She ] had become hardened to this press j agent not permitting the public to ; forget what she had once so ardent ; ly wishod to prevent it from learn ing—that she had once been the fiancee, cast off in disgrace and in record time, of Clifford Dudley. I She allowed Sally and the pub licity man to persuade her to build up a now personality, that of a chic, adorable, half French, con - scienceless flirt, subtly but not too obviously tinged with what to the theatrical public is an irroslstible perfume of olegant unmorallty— not flagrant immorality, you tinder- She and Bally sat at the orange tnd yellow tea stand. ttand, which is like the disgusting seek of perfume in the making. Dut simply a sophisticated la<St of conventionality. What difference In a syllable! Thomas Burke speaks somewhere of the corners people turn in life, when they suddenly become con scious of leaving behind a definite portion of the road. SUch a corner Marie saw when they gave up Sal ly’s apartment and moved to a spa cious duplex studio in the Fifties. She hated to denude the wails of their pictures and leave them re proachfully bare and lonesome. Each bit of discarded furniture was a wrench. The old telephone number had become a part of her. When she fouud a picture of Clif ford hidden under odds and ends In a bureau draw er she wept. Teh, it’s remarkable how we can keep on loving them even when they're saps aud cads," remarked Sally sympathet ically. Marie flung the picture from her. “Oh, don't be a fool. Sally. The Sight of him, even in a picture, makes me sick. Cut—but—-** She couldn't explain it She cried more than ever. But she could not tell Sally that it was only because she was sorry that a bit of her life had been utterly lived, that one page of the book had been turned over and contents tost to all but memory. It occurred so her oddly that she had never had a picture of John. She wUhed she had had one. She had never even fancied herself in love for such a long time! They left the picture of Clifford Dudley lying face downward op the floor, where the jauitress fouud It and hung it devotedly in her living room to the utter demoralization of her husband. The duplex studio lo the flfties proved to be a very short comer Indeed. By next autumn, when a aew theatre flashed Marie's name to the world, she. with Sally al ways in her tralh, was ready to conquer new world*. There were still (lancing lessons, but there were no ffiore afternoons spent in home groomlpg, nor were there any but the fleetest of visits (0 the big shops. Marie’s maid at tended to the groomlpg aud (he routine shopping. Her sheerer than ever stockings no longer cost $5 a pair, but came in dozens of pairs and were paid for by checks which would have made the old Marie wince. Wherever she went (here were stares and murmurs. Unknown girla besought her for ad While the New York (Hants got away to a giial start aud have since been able to keep out iu front in tfie National League' pennant race, the real ,strength of Mr. McUrastV mop wall not be tested uritil ijhput. the middle of May. When Ijify »vtff batte to meet the slronglßt. IZHiis; (mt'jnusti ami J’ittsbu-gh teams iu rapid succes sion. if the (limits can hold their own against these pennant oontcmlcre tbjir chances of coming through the I seastm a winner will gnpeir very bright. k ,' rice on how to gat op the stage, and the Sunday papers wrote col umns analysing the allure Marie Downee had tor the public. The public discussed on subway* and over dinner tables and with their best friends did she really get a thousand a week or only half that much, and was it true that that millionaire who had been reported engaged to her was keeping her! And was she really French, or bed she really come from the Middle West, as some people said? But it was more than likely that she was French, in view of the gossip about her, and you remember how she threw down poor Clifford Dudley, and so she must be French, be cause you know what these French : girl* are. ' The final move of Marie and Sal ly, three years after the apartment | tn the Forties, left them in a house | like a tiny but super-preciouj ; jewel set in the quiet, super-elo 1 Bant professionalism of a quaint ' street in Greenwich Village that ' has turned its back on Washington Square and the Village both and ! lives a life sufficient to itself. So -1 ciety women trying to turn actress es live there, and famous painters and wealthy dilletantvs and writers who would not know a garret it they saw one. Tho cobble stoned division between the houses dls -1 penscs with any but the merest 1 suggestion of a sidewalk. Its peo ple do not walk, and even its win* down shun the curious passerby. At night the way is deserted, but subdued sounds of cheer, the faint glow of lights and the exquisite comfort revealed by an occasional ly opened door strike envy to the hearts of those who pass. Many jof tbPse sounds of cheer came from Marie's house in the middle of the row. She had de veloped—perhaps it was her inn keeping father again—striking ease and interest as a hostess. In vitations to her after theatre par ties were wrangled for. not only by iheatrtcal people, but by the whole semi-smart professional crowd that lias a foot in all the arts, and bj | people with old and well known I names, who would turn down an I invitation to a house on Fifth ave ; nue when Mario Downeo gave 3 party. "Why, 1 could think of half a dozen men," declared Saliy, “uho'd be willing even to many me il lliey could go to your parties so» the rest of their lives.’’ Sally was as much (he fixer of other people's troubles as ever, I She had grown a pit fleshier, and stjme of the wrinkles, duo to wor-' rying about engagements, road tour 6, the delay of alimony checks, | had been Ironed out. She was al ways sure of a part in a Marie Downee show*. Marie, bn the other hand, had grown appreciably thin ner. She smoked a good deal and had to remember to keep her eve* wistful. F,ut neither her complex ion nor her hair, nor her round | chin, nor the now famous dimple and equally fatr.ou3 knees, had al-1 tered. She was smoking now as she and ' Sally sat In lhe living room over! the orange au-1 yellow tea stand, | smoking and looking lmpatieut 1 over a letter. “Letter from home?" guessed Sally. ”Yop,’’ said Marie briefly. She folded It and tossed It at Sally. “Read it and weep I wish I couM nut that town oft the map, where il belongs." “What's all the shootin’ for now?'' sighed Sally. A newspaper clipping fell out of the folded let ter. She read it, ' Teh-tch'-intr. WinesviiK- was not letting" Ma rie forget. Ti’.rpe years meant lit tle in ils life. Out Marie Downea (who the editor always added mockingly, was better kDown to her home town with a "y"), as a great subject for gossip meant a lot. This latest storv was an ex aggerated aofrnut of her ehgaFe mont to another millionaire, ynth faint innuendos. « “It is said that Mr Clarke's firft gift to his flanree. who may he ex flaneee by this lime, because other well known habit of breaking en- , easements in record time, was a , well stocked cellar. He would not < let her want!” Sally clutched her hair jand went on to the letter. "Yon don’t seem to care for your own reputation, hut you might think of your father's. The lady from the w. C. T. U. was down to see me about this cellar that the paper says a millionaire gave you 1 said she wouldn't believe it of a daughter of mine, when I've al* vnys been a teetotaller, and your mbthsr was a member of the W. C. : T. P. She asked me to use my ta fluince, and 1 "write to ask you to please think of your father if yon don't rare what you do yourself. You might remember how 1 care, ft breaks my heart to think of you doing those things. No girl eonld have a whole house alone. There's something wrong in It. Bren If your friend, Miss Short, lives with you I do not itke what you write shout her — a divorced woman. Yon know I do not believe Jn divorce, Marie—” (To Be Continued}- j Boxing clubs in Boston and New; . York arc try big to sign up Young Strlbliiig for it contest with Young . Muiuilu. tin* fast New Orleans light heavyweight. The two have been , Walch'd several limes' hqt samejJHjli ,■ h“s #l\v*y« plans for their meeting. ; . ; -tt— I Jupiiu is the only country in tin* j 1 1 wbrld nliigb lias more women than linen at work in textile mills. The uvegagg workday qf the women is be - I'ween elect a and twelve bouts. | RESULTS THAT LAST ! Proven ty Concord People. Thousands of kidney sufferers have tried remedy utter remedy with only temporary benefit. Tout s mighty discouraging! But one kid ney remedy has earned a reputa [ Uon for lasting results and there’s ■ plenty of proof right here in Con ( cord. ' Read the experience of one who used Doan’s Pills years ago and now makes her endorsement even stronger. Mrs. L. H. White, 78 W. Corbin St., Concord, says: “There was a dull ache in my back continually. When I tried to bend a sharp, knife-like pain darted through mo. I had dizzy spells and nervous headaches, too. My ankles swell ed and my kidneys acted irregu larly. Doan’s Pius cured me en tlrely.” NEARLY FOUR YEARS LA TER, Mrs. White added: “i have had no return of kidney trouble since Doan’s cured me.” 60c. at all dealers. Foster-Mil bum Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. «_ 1 JL, MOOCWK PLUMBING is the Thing- - - • OF- VMVCH PARTICULAR Peopufe sing* • • A flower garden is the most | beautiful th : ng that can be placed on the exterior of a man’s home. Up-to-date plumb ing is the most efficient, charming thing that can be placed in its interior. What’s the news from the interior, anyway? Are your foiled hap py and healthy? “Plumb” up a bit. CONCORD PLUMBING ' COMPANY i 174 Kerr St. Phone 57f i " 7, ! ' | iffiSltil cU-.-.-.-r.vr//-,-:i-.-;vr rvxJrtr.rr- ‘ i ,v. r.u > e ! j : Our well appointed Funeral Home is dedicat ed to memorial observ- ances of deferential re spect. It's use is sanc tioned by custom and it ad.ds no additional charge Jtojthe service. Wilkinson’s Funer al Home PHONE 9 Open Day and Night AMBULANCE SERVICE Mourning Cards Kept la Stock at The Timps-Tribune Job Office and can be printed on a few hours no tice. ts. 1 -3000000000000000000000000 —>**Jw***w****wOTKwoß«3oooooeooooooooooo \ New Oxfords $ Young Men's AH-Lcather Oxfords—Special Colors, < with Snap and Style. Look at these shoes. They are ! j I eye-openers. Priced $4.95 Per Pair $ * j RICHMOND-FLOWE CO.j joUR FEW IDS. MIS GET MSIIS Thursday; April 29, 1926 BILIOUSNESS 1 Retired Minister TeOs How He Keeps in Good Font With die Assistance of Black-Draught West Graham, Va.—The Rev. Lewis Evans, a well-known retired minister, now past 80, living-here, has a high opinion of Black- Draught, which he says he has taken when needed, for 25 years, “For years I had been suffering with my liver,” he says. '“Some times the pain would be very in tense and my back would hurt all the time. Black-Draught was the flfst thing I found that would give meany relief. "My liver has always been slug gish. Sometimes it gives me a lot of trouble. I have suffered a lot with It —pains In my side and back, and bad headache, caused from ex treme biliousness. “After I found Black-Draught, I would begin to take It as soon as 1 felt a spell coming on and it re lieved the cause at once. I can recommend It to anybody suffer- * ing from liver trouble. A dose or two now and then keeps me In good form.” Made from selected medicinal roots and herbs, and containing no dangerous mineral drugs, Black- Draught is nature's own remedy »or a tired, lazv liver. NC-166 HZ" FOB TIREO, PUFFED-UP FEET The minute you put your feet in a “Ti£” IxAh you feel pain hemp drawn out ana comfort just soakinp in. How good your tired, swollen burning feet feel. “Tiz” instantlj draws out the poisonous exudation; that puff up your feet and cause sore, inflamed, sweaty feet. “Tiz,” and only “Tiz,” takes the pain and soreness out of corns, ca! | louses and bunions. Get a box o' | “Tiz” at any drug or departmem j store for a few cents. Your feet an never going to bother you any more A whole year’s foot comfort guaran teed. TfiniM Tfinirc I By reTZER £k Yorke II unitluriu I Don’t fail to. renew X your fire insurance policy. 8 The devil knows that it Q has lapsed and may send X one of his imps to touch 2 a flame to your house. 6 Get busy, brother. X ’ “ FfrzEiuYomfeAiENcy TJJHBCT CABARRUS MVINOS BANK BLOC. TIMES-TRIBUNE PENNY ADS. 3000ncnnnflivvinnnmMwuuj.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 29, 1926, edition 2
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75