PAGE FOUR Fhe Concord Dafly Tribune 1 18. SHERRILL BWtor and Publisher • W. », SHERRILL, Associate Bator The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of rn sB news credited to It or not otherwise i■: credited in this paper and also the lo •i;- Mil news published herein. V AH rights of republication of spec ial dispatches herein are also reserved. . - Special Representative FROST, LANDIS A KOHN IKS Fifth Avenue, New York Peoples' Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Ocndler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mail matter it the postoffice at Concord, N. C., un der the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES «In the City of Concord by Carrier: One Year $6.00 Sir Months 3.00 ISree Months 1.50 ''■One Month .50 Outside of the Start the Subscription «£. , Is the Same as in the CHty Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre vail: Qne Year $5.00 Six Months ... 2.50 • j Three Months 1.25 (£ss Than Three Months, 50 Cents a » Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect Jan. 30. 1926. Northbound - No, 40 To New York 9:28 P. M No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A M No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. U rt No. 34 To New York 4 :4S P. M ~ .<o 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M **Nb. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M NJ>, 30 To New York 1:55 A M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3 :45 P. M No. 36 To New Orleana 9:56 P. M No. 29 To Birmingbam 2 :35 A. M No 31 To Augusta 5:51 A M 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 C 5 No. 39 To Atlanta 9:50 A. M No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M <, v Train No. 34 will stop in Concord . td take on passengers going to Wash Vttngton and beyond. sr Train No. 37 will stop here to dis charge passengers coming from be yond Washington. All trains stop in Concord except No. 38 northbound. blble •mOUGHIf -IX —FOR TODAY—I H Bible Thougr’.te memorized, will prove *[|}l heritage in after years The Omniscent (iuide:—The steps of a good man arc ordered b.v the laird :—Psalm 37 :23. t —■ NOT A MATTER OF PATRIOTISM Miss Elisabeth -CJonrad, publicity director in North Carolina in the campaign to sell Confederate Memo rial Coins, is disappointed that Tar Heel towns did not respond more generously to her call. Concord is one of the cities which she mentions as falling dowu on the job. High Point seems to have done bet ter and a newspaper there prints a note of thanks from her in Which she -‘'thanks the High Point people for their support. In that note Miss • Conrad says that Greensboro. Salis bury. Kinston. Rurlidgton, Goldsboro, Elizabeth City. Concord and Gastonia, with a combined quota of about 15.- : 000 coins, sold all together about 600. Admitting that the campaign in North Carolina was a failure, The Lexington Dispatch denies that the failure resulted from any lack of pa- Jpotisni. This assertion was proinpt ' -cd by this part of Miss Conrad's note which was in criticism of those cities which did not sell their quota : “That’s patriotism for you. That looks like a man had rather give his life for his country, than give- fifty yVPents for honor.” It is not a question of patriotism. We know for a fact that the impres sion hero is that tlo constructive work has been done on Stone Mountain within the past several months. Miss Conrad said this impression was wrong, yet so far as we have been able to sec those interested in the project have not been able to convince the public that everything is just right with the work on the manner in which the work is being supervised. Says The Dispatch: “ft fx hot because NoftU Carolinians do not honor and respect their Con federate veterans, venerate the dead and cherish the glory the state's men in gray brought to the Tar Heel name. It is simply because the impression had gotten abroad in this State that the committee of Atlanta folks who appropriated entire control of the ixmfiigemeut of the coin sales, and the fnnds from what sales were made, had not been altogether frank with the people of the South. The Borghnn controversy left u bad taste. The reams of propaganda sent out my the ‘monumental' association was so one sided that it offended the average North Carolinian's Sense of fair play. The slight felt in this state wns by no means mended when the commit tee ‘reorganized' after the Borglum row by dismissing Dr. Pinto Durham , and l)r. Ashby .loffe's, pettiaps the • ablest men North Cftvolnm has contributed to tire present day life of | the Georgia metropolis. ■£• * “Time may sftOw that North Cnro l:na took ir wrong view of the matter, but proof to that effect* is yet to come i\ forth." $ ■ fHI ’ll PI*V ,• . , ~ii- i ,a— I ANOTHER P«>iVElt PLANT FOB STATE. From Albemarle copies tb*' report ? of plans for another mammoth power If Jjjuit. in North Carolina. Under pr*s- I ent plans it will be constructed on the Pee Dee river in Anson county. Contract for the plant is to be let in New York on May 3rd and the to tal cost will be about $3,000,000. The plant is expected to deliver 110.000 horsepower and practically duplicate the entire output of the Tallassee Power Company at Badin. The new project is to be construct ed by the Carolina Light and Power Company, a corporation already do ing big business in North Carolina. A $200,000 bridge, erected over the riv er on the Swift Island road, will have to be abandoned after the dam is com pleted, and a new bridge will have to be erected. Every phase of activity seems on the increase in North Carolina. Our industries are expanding ar a faster rate than those in any other State in the South. The Caroling Light. & Power Co. fully realizes that its pow er produced at the new plant will be eagerly sought by business concerns in this State. More than 2,000 Democrats were in Raleigh for the State convention. Every part of the State was repre sented and every leader present re ported plans for an active and com prehensive campaign in the Fall. That’s all the party needs. Its rec ord is tine and its officials efficient. The Republicans nrght carry North Carolina some day but certainly they have no chance now. The Demo cratic party was never in better po sition to place its records before the voters than it is now. DUKE FOUNDATION WAS LONG CHERjfSHED PLAN Vice President, of Southern Power Company Says Duke Had Plan In View Years Ago. Greenville. S. C., Apr. 29.—James B. Duke's desire to aid the people of the which found expres sion in the Duke foundation for col leges and hospitals, was long-cherish ed, W. S. Lee. vice president of the Southern Power company, said at a luncheon here yesterday. Mr. Duke's plan to donate his fortune to the good of mankind was revealed many years ago. Mr Leo said. At that time Mr. Duke sold his holdings in the American Tobac co company for $4,500,000. Asked what he intended doing with -the money. Mr. Duke is said t<» have re plied : “1 intend giving it to tin*. Lord, but in rhe meantime 1 intend inak i g more inter* o on it than any body elc-e can do.” The Duke foundation, signed De cember 11. 1024. was the instrument for carrying out this cherished de sire of Mr. Duke. Mr. Lee said. He stated that Mr. Duke had never re ceived ado Tar of salary or expense during his connection with the Duke enterprise, creating a fortune which was intended to serve the people of his native state and of South Caro lina- The millions left by Mr. Duke for the benefit of his fellow man, can be divided into two classes, he said. Twenty per cent can be invented for the maintenance and betterment of the power companies which he found ed and which served this section. The remaining 80 per eetit Ls to be used for charitable purposes, princi pally for educational and hospitaliza tions. “And out of those colleges must come someone to help build up the North Carolina and South Carolina of the future and to carry on the work of hands forever stilled,” Mr. Lee said. Cyclone Mack Has Recovered Health Benncttsville. S. 0., April 29. Evangelist B- F. Me London has com pletely recovered from the nervous breakdown that he had in New Or- Leaus last December, He says that he iss feeling better than he has iu several years. He begins in June a 20-weeks campaign in the mining towns of Fayette and Wyoming counties. West Virginia. The McLendon Bible class of Raleigh, tV. Va., with the help of other organizations, has em ployed him at SI,OOO dollar a week, believing that the religion of Jesus Christ will no more for the coal min ing communities than military com panies, policemen and strike*. Youths Admit Assault of Nine-Year (Wd Girl. Newton. April 29.—Itoseoe Fitts, aged 14, and Eugene Wintener, 13. were tried before Judge J • C. Rudi sill, juvenile judge, this afternoon on the charge of criminal assault on a little 9-year-old girl. The assault is alleged to have taken place near the home of the prosecutrix in Brook ford Tuesday afternoon aoout 5 o’clock. Both boys admitted the assault and were ordered by Judge Rudisill confined in the juvenile quartern of the jail until Saturday, when the case will be disposed of. toother Laity Telli Js Her ExpeHitcc With Farbo “l !Y.husband swore every time I asked him to kalsomtne toy walls. Said it was all the time coming off on his dark suit. Last Spring his paint man recommended rarbb, and, iuut its, he saiJ. we all found Hi at Sold by lorfce & Wadsworth i SAYS GEORGIA WILL BE WORLD CORD TIRE- CENTER Three Million Dollar Mill to Be Built and Other Plans to Be En larged. 1 Atlanta April 28. —The Atlanta 1 Journal in a copyrighted story an - aounced that a contract for one hun dred million dol.ars worth of cord rire fabric had been signed by the. B. F. Goodrich company and the Fisk Rubber • company of Akron, Ohio, with R- E. Hightower. Sr.. 'head of a group of textile mill* at rhomastou, Ga. — r The story also said that a partner ship had been formed between the Goodrich company and the High tower interests by which a three mil don dollar mill of 35.000 spindles will be built immediately in the rhemaston district. A collateral re sult of the cord fabric. A collateral result of the cord fabric contract will be the prompt enlargement of the TUomaston mills by 10,000 spindles. The Journal declared that the leal was consummated last week in New York city. About two weeks ago a group of executives of the Goodrich company headed by Bertram G. Work, presi dent and chairman of the booard, made a tour of Georgia cotton man ufacturing towns. "Georgia,” The Journal's ,story said, “in two years will be produc ing 00 per cent of the cord fabric used in the United States, or 50 pei cent, of all the cord fabric used i world.” Post and /Flagg’s Cotton letter. New»Yo/k, April 29.—The mar ket i»s stili waiting for a c carer view of future probabilities and remains ;. very dull and uninspiring affair. Tin somewhat better weather of late holds buyers in check while the de layed start and fear of renewed bad weather at any time restrain* sellers from assuming the aggressive in spite of the bearish statistical prsi tion and talk of mill curtailment. Consumption may fall oomewhat short of what was expected earlier in the season but there Ls no reason t doubt that it will be large enough to show positively that an ample crop is essential the coming season if sup ply in not to prove a tight tit for the demand Forward btisines* for n<*xt season is reported on a large scale already with what is believed to be the smallest percentage of the pros pective acreage as yet planted that ha* been recorded for years, which points to late maturity with the in clease*! danger of later damage which that implies. Everything may work out pros perously but a genuine crop ! scare later these prices for new j crop* will look cheap even if the acreage proves as urge as *snme an ticipate but which in ay be curtailed I by weather or for other reasons. POST AND FLAGG- j > j A half-niillioii-dollar will penciled j on a nurse’s petticoat at the behest ! of a dying man in Los Angeles ha* been n'pfheld by a jury. Let a pure petroleum gasoline keep the knock out of your engine.... f liflUnfir i ■1 Iflvj 1/ I \Oasl Wjfbcty c thesfao /ANTI-KNOCK CMt&nt , : —— ft all comes out of aiioil well every drop of this new Sinclair ErC Gasoline* Its anti- Vock*... awfc-tiiump".. mtifywsfl It cuts down the wear on your ' eni fine..and it cuts down your repair bills...lt’s all gasoline and gets its anti-knout quality , from its refining process. THE CONCOfct) DAILY TRIBUNE BIRDS THAT'LAYS SI.MNI EGG Dearborn Weekly. Pr.Mwbly few persons know that the Pacific Coast of the States is. the home of a clainrattt for the title of the target*t bird that flic*. This is the California Condor, whose on y rival for sizq :s the Andean- Condor, found only in the Cordilleras of the west coast of South America. 1 In addition to holding a record for size among birds of the North Amer ican continent, the California Con dor lays an egg valued by imideums and collect'ir, at $1,509 to s2,oo—al- ! most in the chi: • rs the eggs of tße , long-dead Dinosaur. And now comes the word that the California Candor is rapidly passing to join the Dinosaur, the Great Auk. he Labrador Duck and tin* Silqer tip Grizzly in extinction. The Cali fornia State Fish and Caine Com mission. which has been making a special c*tudy of the Condor, is auth ority for the statement that today here are no California Condors liv ing in a wild state outside of nfhe counties in California, and that there arc only about 50 of these birds even there, when* they nest in the high and almocq inaccessible ranges. The wing spread of the California Condor Ls mine to twelve feet, a> compared with seven to ten feet, as ' an average, of the celebrated Condor of the Andes, which is believed to b< the orginal of the fabled Roc. The California Condor is a direct de fendant of the .prehistoric super •>ndor. Teratoma* merriami, which ’ad a wing spread of eighteen feeL The California Condor, once pair l remains mated for life, and, if oik >f a pair dies, it is believed that tin* emaining bird never takes another nate. The female lays only one egg. rather large than that of the largest ; lomestic goose, and the young bird" ' remain with their parents for two seasons before setting up a family of A Way to be Well A new-day way—Try it at our cost Here is a new way by which countless people are getting the health, the vim, the youth they seek. Physicians the world over now employ it. This is to urge that you learn what it means to you. These are the facts: A vast num ber of ill conditions are caused by torpid livers. Those conditions, though scant bile, let germs breed in rhe intestines. Those germs Cfc i ate toxins, and the poisons cause : troubles like these: Indigestion ilea-: and l Constipation Kidney Troubles Impure I’.iood Bad Complexions i I:' 'h Blood Pressure Lack of Youth j For generations it has been sup j po d that cathartics stimulate the j liver. Now we know they don’t. 96 I millions have suffered from torpid ; livers, despite all the drugs they ,lheir own. The nest is a holte or cave jin a cliff, deep in some inaccessible ! gorge, and the egg is laid ..otb bare floor of the rave. Only 41 eggs |of this bird are in inUseulMK aS ! pared with men' than TO ot the (Beat Auk, which has been extinct ! for some years. • Extinction of the California Con iilor—to which naturalists are now ! witnesses— in due largely to the de i .sire of the miners in the days of the gold rnsh to ('al'fo'rhia three-quarters of a cent my ago. for the large and hollow quills in which to carry gold j dust. Slow to rise from, the ground j when it had gorged itself, the Condor I fell an easy prey to the rifles of the 1 miners or even the riatas of the vaqueros, who sold the quillß to. the miners. Poison for mountain lions, btdrt. j wolves, wildcats and coyotes, placed : in dead animals by the ranchers, m •ii accounted for many, while «are- I hns eollei tiffH for museums nearly ; completed the job of extermination ' before the Staafe of California took a hand and protected the birds and their eggs with heavy penalties. Laying only tuac egg a year, and re i iiniilng two years to arrive at the ■ mating stage, makes the increase of j I these large vultures slower than thht i •■f almost any Other bird. With his huge beak, bare, orange eolnred head, heavy neck ruff Os glossy feathers, great wing spread I two large white patcars under I ■ the wings, the California Condor is j majestic figure at rest or in flight. A -cording to stories told by early i idepts of afffornia. the Condor va> monarch of the air, easily ahle | whip a golden, or even a bald. | ;lc Condors arc believed to live' to the age of 100 years. * | Sixty Chicago pastors have prom - cd to prcaili on the streets of that i i i: y this season, in an effort to take the gospel to those who will not heek it in the chdrch. - 1 took. Most ill conditions are prob ably due to that. Now medical science has found the way to really make the liver ac tive. The way is ox-gall, a liver secretion. It is bringing to millions a needed help they never found be fore. Ox-gall in its finest form now comes in tablets, called Dioxol. Hack tablet contains 10 drops of purified ox-gall. All druggists sup ply them. Every ailing person, ev ery person below'par, should learn tiir changes that.lDioxol brings. Learn this at our expense. The results may change your whole life, your entire career. They will start within 24 hours. Sec what this modern method means to yon. “Clip nus advertisement, take it to our special .agent, Pearl Drug Co., and they will give yon a liberal sample of Dioxol free.” Southbound Changes Schfdaln Albemarle I’resß. 'J'be' Wireton-Salem Southbound has made a change of' schedule ef fective Sunday. May 2. The South bound traiu will leave Winston- Salem at 11 :45 a. m-, arrive ax Aiba mar> at 1 :|6 and WOdesboro at 2:45 p. m. Returning, train reaves Wadesboro at 3 p. m., Albemarle at 8:5!!, and arrives at Winston-Salem at 0 p.\ja. Stomack Out of Fix? ’phone your grocer or druggist for a ease of this delicious di gestant—a glass with meals gives delightful, relief, <jr no charge for tire first doaen used. Shivar Ale Pure Digestive Aromatics With Shivar Mineral Water & Ginger j Nothing like it for renovating old, worn-out stohiaehg, con verting food into rich blood I and sound flesh. If your regular dealer can- supply you. telephone F. M. * You ligh'ooil & Co.. Wbole j sale Distributors. I ' . HIS^OWN Os cou/se I take my own medicine. All of the drugs sold in this store are tip to the highest j standards of purity. Our pure drugs promote good health. If you don't be h'eve it ask yoUr doctor. He likes the way we till prescriptions, PEARL DRUG CO. ) Phones 22 —722 We have for your inspection the fol lowing used cars: One Ford Coupe One Willys Knight Sedan One Essex Coupe* 4 cylinder One Essex Touring 4 cylinder One Cadillac Tour ing One Star Touring STANDARD BUICKCO. is the Thing- - • • OF- VMVtH PARTICULAR ?eov>ue sing- A flower garden is the most ■ xutiful t'rng that can be cecl \>n the exterior of a ; ' h 'me. Up-to-date plumb ' is ;.e most .a efficient irming thing that can he .red ir its interior. \V.• v. I ■ news from the interior, >yw;./ .xi e your folks h.q - > and health}.’-? “Plumb” up bit. CONCORD PLUMBING COMPANY 74 Kerr St Phone B7P lw,vv.-r.'S','''/--x r ,-;vr?yxrau-<r-~:vjtiy.rs%c Our well appointed Funeral Home is dedicat ed to memorial observ ances of deferential re spect. It’s use is sanc tioned by c\istom and it adds no additional charge t 6 the service. Wilkinson’s Funer al Home PHONE 9 6pen Day and Night AMfeULANCE SERVICE ] New Oxfords j 8 Young Men’s All-Leather Special Colors, 9 with Snap and Style. Look at these shoes. They are O eye-openers. Priced Per Pair | RICHMOND - FLOWE CO.jj aOOOOOOOOOOCXXXy)OOtKOeXXX»<XtrvxXVX'>OOOOCV.OG<XV>OOO< Penny Advertisements Get the Results Friday, April 30, 1926 i' HOTEL WALTON PHILADELPHIA on Broad St, at Locust Main Highway to Sesqui-Centennial Ju- Exposition f y\ Best located hotel for autoists .<► 403 with Baths 3.5© single §.90 double Newly Furnished I _ ' ♦ HOME COMFORTS WITH j MODERN HOTEL SERVICE Excellent Focd-~\loderatc Prices I 4 R. Johnson, Dihectoio Manage. i l- I _____ | Bring Back YOUR Good Looks *• I Are you path, run down, weak and - sleepless? If so, you fifed a powerful i reconstructive tonic. ■ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will help you, by toning up your nerves and removing obstructions which interfere with the circulation of the blood. It mi discovered many years ago by Dr. Pierce, a rkil'ed physicitir, is made ’’ roots end herbs ' r'terly adapted ':•> -! women s ills. Health and Strength 1 will follow its use. Try itt Now! 1 Send 10c for trial pkg. to Dr. I Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, |N. Y., and write for free medical i advice. . MpßflTginOT i PY FETZER &. YoRKE ’i TUHII IUPILJ V i Don’t fail to renew X your lire insurance policy. 9 The devil knows that it Q has lapsed and may send § one of his imps to touch 9 a flame to your house. O Get busy, brother. 8 j JMfKS BATIK BLDG. L . u — ” ~"* '"-4 TI.MES-TftIBUXE PENNY ADS.

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