PAGE SIX I 666 N is a prescription for ipalaria, thills and Fever, flpengue or Bilious Fever. I p, It kills the terms. fco hTo Blame 1 Ilf Your Child Is Weak and Thin? INUM Him Up Quickly with Ne%% f Easy-to-Take Iron and Cod Liver Oil Tablets. ;;5t is your oWn fault if your child stay? and thiii. For Cod Liver Oil and Iron ill produce, flesh and rich red blooc iHten ordinary foods fail. ■ Chemists now remove the vitamines 1 tod flesh-building extracts from cod liver i Ik and throw the nasty oily part away, gratae extracts are then combined , ith iron in easy-to-take tablets. Specif* , Burke's Cod Liver Oil and Iron Tablets $ your drug Store. You’ll soon be proud | the new &>pearance of your strong, ■ Well-nourished youngsters. t .For sale Gibson Drug Store p -1, ' —w • jet Rid of that Backache „ # f Concord f»ople Point the Way. ’he constant aching of a bad back, ’he wearinjßss, the tired feeling; nervousness, Uatressingnurinary disorders— Are often signs of failing kidneys And too serious to be neglected. Get rid of (jiese troubles! Use Doan’s Pills —a stimulant diu- Ke to the kidneys. its of people recommend Doan’s. This is a Concord case. You can verify it. j Mrs. J. W. McClellan, 154 E. De pot St., says: t was all run down . and had so ambition. My back ached so I'could hardly move and 1 felt weakl My kidneys didn’t act right at aH. I felt dizzy and ner 'Vous, too. I began to take Doan’s , Pills, from Gibson’s Drug Store. , Three bores practically cured me.” j, j, SEVERAL YEARS LATER, Mrs. , McClellan added: "My kidneys i haven’t troubled me for some time 1 1 and I give all the credit to Doan’s i Pills." j« 60c. at all dealers. Foster-Mil- 11 tarn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. PAINS ALL OVER lady Says She Took Cardui and ; Never Saw Such Improve* 1' Bent —Was So Weak 1 Couldn’t Stand. [ ‘Weathersby, Miss. —Mrs. James M. : Ball, of this’ place, writes that she > : was “getting weaker all the time” : When Cardui, the woman’s tonic, •was first brought to her attention. , After she had taken Cardui a while. : •he writes that she “never did see such an improvement.” ! “I suffered all the time and had pains all over,” says Mrs. Hall. “I j was so weak I could not stand. My Skin was cold and flabby. I did j not have any color. I had always ; peen a very active woman —used to ; outdoor exercise, walking and going where I pleased, and to get down, not able to get myself a drink, was indeed a hardship. “Nothing seemed to help me, till I began on Cardui. The first bottle Seemed to strengthen me, and I Bent for five more. By the time I had taken these, I was on my feet, going around, doing my work, gained in health and strength. 7 “I took two more bottles, and I Sm well and strong. Can work my garden. I haven’t had any more sickness.” 7 Ask your druggist. NC-165 fsrfgm Visiting Cards Printed at Times Job Office. Panelled visiting cards beau tifully printed at The Times-Trib une Office. 50 for SI.OO or 100 for $1.50. Orders filled on a few hours’ 7 notice. h j| drinks and desserts mv'A ■] Frigidaire gives you ice cubes sized right for tumbler or pitcher. And it - makes dozens of frozen desserts. Keeps all foods in changeless cold H H 191 temperature. ■mj P jgfl Made by Delco-Light Company, ■BImMHaMMMIj world’s largest makers of electric refrigerators. Sold on GMAC easy ® te payment plan. mil MSMife j 1 STANDARD BUICK CO. I] Concord, N. C. 1 RfiJ— —J LATE SPRING MAY MEAN GOOD CROPS A Study Shows That General Crops Are larger in Years of Late Springs. Tribune Bureau, Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh. May 26. —“What’s the use,” sajs the average farmer,” for | when we make a large crop, it 1 j brings a low price and when we j make a small crop we lose in quan j tity. Our very small crop last year brought more than the big crop the I year before. As Governor Lowden, of Illinois said it would be far bet ! ter for us to grow small crops, but. I it has been proved that the farmers will not reduce their acreage and so we have to depend on the good Lord to reduce the production.” “It now looks like that Nature is ! going to take a hand in reducing the State’s cash crops to a profitable j basis, following bust year’s heavy and' unprofitable crops,” said an official cf the State Department of Agricul ture today. Instead of complaining, many of us are wondering if this is not a blessing in disguise. Nature is a peculiar but mighty counter balancing agency in the farmers' af fairs. As is well-known, the crop failure years are the ones when the farmers frequently make the most net money. Take the cotton situation. There was a large surplus brought over from last year's cotton crop. The world demanded is for 14.000.000 bales of the American, crop. The United States made over 16.000.000. This would indicate that to get a fair and reasonable price, not over 12.000,000 bales should be grown this year. If nature could so manage through its weather and other fea tures to hold the crop down to be tween ten and twelve million bales, the price would doubtless be above 20 cents per pound lint. If we make over 14.000,000 bales, the price will go down be’.ow its present level. | With an acreage probably larger! than last year, there was a possibili ty of making another large surplus this year. This would have tun the price .down to below 12 cents. In other words, a three-fourths crop will bring more than a full one, while a two-thirds crop will bring a third more than a full one. The great drawbacks to short crops are that some farmers and some sections have to suffer at the advantage of others. The amazing thing is that with the proser ad vantages of short crops, the Ameri an farmers will steadily go ahead and put in surplus acreages of cash i crop. As soon as prospects of heavy production and low prices begin to come, they criticize the government reports and the cotton trace tor un fair methods who is to blame. Mr, Nat C. Murray, formerly chief .statistician of the federal crop reporting service says: “A study has been made of the past twentyfive years ami it is found that general crop yields have averaged slightly I larger in years of late springs than in years of early springs. But the j difference is not material. In 1912! | the spring was the latest on record, j 1 and crop yields averaged the highest j on record up to that time. The year ! 1920 is also outstanding for its late spring and high yields. In general we may regard the earliness or lateness of the spring as a little value as an indication of final outcome of crop yields.” | This is interesting in view of the reported lateness of crop conditions this spring. Broken Bones Won’t Matter. Tokio, May 25. —1 tis possible that, as the result of recent experiments conducted by Dr. Owaga. an eminent ! Japanese surgeon, the breaking of a j limb, or even a hip, may soon be looked upon without alarm. Healing I broken bones may be hastened and the j fractured bones or even old people ■ will knit together, so it is claimed. ! if the patient is treated with a eer | tain glandular extract. Next to the t'.iyroid gland in the neck are four tiny glands known as “parathyroid glands." It is claimed that when an extract from these is swallowed or injected, the percentage of calcium and phophate in the blood serum is caused to rise. These chemicals arc both essential in bone building, and one reason w'ny bones are so slow to heal is because it takes a long time to extract enough of these sub stances from the blood. Dr. Owaka haH been experimenting with para thyroid extract, with results that seem to indicate success. I One must have a musical ear in | [order properly to speak and under , stand Chinese, for as a spoken ; language it is unique in that it is musical with a purpose The mean- I ing of a word in Chinese is indicated 1 by the musical tone in which it is I uttered. One word may have as i many as five different tones, each of! which, when sounded, gives to the | word an entirely different meaning, i f H°P Off °f Norge for Trip Across Pole aaanfe I to Amel ?«» trom London, shows Amundsen’s dirigible Norge just as it was to hop off on its memorial tnp f rom Spitzbergen across the North Pole to Alaska oniL ° UetteS ° f me “ bel ° W itj hand ling rigging preparatory to starting the bag Harvey Wiley , Pure Food Crusader , at 82. Renews Fight; Says Basis of Diet Is Being Poisoned and Law Paralyzed Charging that “the foundations of our diet are being poisoned” through non-enforcement of pure tooo laws. Dr. Harvey W Wiley, former Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry of the Department of Agriculture and an authority on pure food legislation, is planning a hew assault, through congress, on food adulterants and preservatives injurious to health. “Enforcement of the pure food law has been paralyzed." Dr. Wilev declares, “and the door opened wide to the use of adulterants. Violators nave grown so bold, because of the [ion -enforcement of the present jaw. that they have now Introduced in congress bills which actuallv would legalize the adulteration not only of jams and jellies but even cf bread, cakes, meats and frozen foodstuffs. That constitutes an open challenge to battle, and on this issue of pure foods I. for one. still for war! “Today all the adulterants and eolonng matter banned by me as Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry n the early days of the pure food borax, benzoate of soda. alum. Saccharine, sulphur dioxide—the whole list—are being illegally used in foodstuffs and their use winked at and condoned by the authorities r »» arsfe the law’s enforcement Because of the extent to which people today eat preserved and pre pared foods, this condition of par alysis in enforcing the pure food law is more than ever harmful ine Kemsen Board, supposedly ap* oomted to protect the public from harmful ingredients in its food stuffs. as directed by the pure food taw condones and permits the use of alum. The Bureau of Chemistry. p°Y, e l. er ’ current Farmer’s Bulletin 1438 says: The use of alum in connection with food prod acts is of doubtful expediency, to say the least.’ Igo further. I be lieve that the use of alum in foods is not only of ‘doubtful expediency/ but is both actually harmful and illegal and that the Bureau of Chemistry is delinquent in not pre senting the question of its use to the courts for their determination." . Although Wiley himself is nearly Senator Capper Heads Jury to Award _ 1 SIO,OOO for Best Price Peace Plans Mozley ♦ sit, GAsMU. A call has been issued to the business men of the country to co operate in solving the price-cutting problem, which is said to be the greatest problem affecting business today. It ia particularly detri mental to dealers in the smaller towns and cities, as well as being contrary to public interest, Hon. Arthur Capper, United States Senator from Kansas, is chairman of a committee of na tionally prominent persons who have undertaken to pass upon “price peace plans” submitted and to determine as far as possible the most workable solution. To stimulate interest, prizes amounting to SIO,OOO have been of teed fo* the best plans received MlMntta.aaUi THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BMP lIMWi 82 years of age, his zeal as a pure food crusader is still undimmed and he will carry into the coming fight a vigor few men even 20 years younger possess. Years of temper ate living and of “practicing what he preaches” with respect to pure foods have left him mentally and physically still a stalwart and re sourceful fighter. In the coming campaign to re habilitate the pure food laws, how ever. he will call into his camp some of the younger and more forceful fighters in congress, pro viding them out of his experience with the expert advice and counsel necessary to make their ammu nition effective. Wiley recognizes it will be no i & Fink Products Company, New , York City. , This contest is open to every in ’ dividual connected with a dealer, ! either retail or wholesale, with re i wards ranging from the first prize . of $3,000 to twenty prizes of SSO . each—thirty-seven ia all. In ad dition. a special prize of SI,OOO ‘is ’ offered for the best plan submitted by a professor or student of eco- I homics or marketing in any college i of the country. Senator Capper’s jury of award > will consider only comprehensive i plans covering a definite policy for I retailer, jobber, manufacturer, ■ chain store and department store, taking into account, “free goods” i and discount” 1 plans, law or easy fight Few men of his age would be either willing or able to undertake it But pure food has been his life’s creed. To see the cause for which he fought so zeal* ously being shunted aside and dis regarded after he had forced it once to theoretical victory is a challenge he will not evade He may .die in the fight, but hy dying fighting he may more effectively pass- on to younger men the spirit that! sustained his battle and thus insure a certain and final victory. At any rate, at 82, Harvey Wiley, foe of the food adulterator faces the interests that have fought him for a generation with this chal lenge: “I. for one. am still for war!” There is no limit to the length of the plans submitted nor ia then any limit to the number of pl»n« , any contestant may tend in, but - not more than one award will be 1 made to the same person. The only 1 restriction is that a contestant can not participate in both the trade i and the college contests. I Ia addition to the chairman, the - jury of award includes Mrs. J. ■ Borden Harriman. chairman of the National Consumers League; Dr, I Melvin T. Copeland, Harvard School of Business Administration; Trade* Commi*? 1 ’ form e Mo^cley.^M-^aßident^of^fte^NU- “Applesauce,” Sparkling Comedy, a Chautauqua Feature IT* ' Mg-] 1 . ’ t - «■ «! gfM . uc OBh«*v«imx * T jk. fW JET 1 The smashing Broadly comedy hit, “Applesauce." will be one of the big features of the comma Rednnth Chautauqua. It will be presented by a splendid east of New'York actors. B neupatn The play gets its name from the blarney of a lovable, good-looking, happy-go-lucky youth who wants to marry Pa Robinsons daughter. Hazel. p a , and Ma want her to wed a plodding, well-to-do youth of the L , Hollo Jenkins. She does accept Rollo, bnt Her love for Bill and his "applesauce" cannot be downed nnd vin.i out. just as the audience wants it to. ' 11 UUI, JUcl UO HIV uumrnvo ” as- W TODAY’S EVENTS. Thursday. May 27, 1926- Thirty years ago today St. Louis was laid waste by one of the most disastrous tornadoes on record. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America convenes today in Baltimore. Delegates to the Nortnem Baptist Convention now in session in Wash ington will be received by President Coolidge at the White House today. The American debt agreement will be one of the first subjects to receive the attention of the French Parliament when it convenes today. The Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Sweden are due to reach New York today enroute to Wash ington to attend tho Ericsson Me nu rial unveiling. Sir James Elder. Commissoner for Australia in the United States, is to be the guest of honor at a luncheon, to be given in New York today by the English-Speaking Union. Representatives of 22 States are to attend a debate in Detroit tonight between* former Governor Harding of lowa and Congressman S. Waliaec Dempsey of New York on the sub ject of the Grent Lakes-St. Lawrence waterway. Sound travels faster and farther through the ground than through the air. it is because of this fact that one secs pictures of scouts and others with their ears to the ground —sounds can then be picked up which are otherwise quite inaudible. Jeff Pfeffer. the former well-known major league pitcher and later with the San Francisco Seals, is now wear ing the uniform of the Toledo A. A. team. ; • , .r,vi They Just Don’t Happen To Be Good ' „ l ' i: ; .> {'■ You hear a lot about Goodyear Tires. They have a fine reputation all over the world. Did you ever stop to seriously figure out why they are so well thought of? You can’t tell much about tires by merely looking at them. They all look pretty much alike But you know, Goodyear tires don’t just happen to be good. They Are good for very definite reasons. Most of the reasons why Good year tires are good are due to patented processes—materials and mothods not found in any other tires. The All-Weather Tread, the Goodyear Bead, the remarkable new Cord material—SUPEß-TWlST—the group ply construction— these and many other things are the reasons why more people ride on Goodyear tires titan on any other kind. And the beauty of it is—-you can buy these superb, quality tires for no more, frequently less, than you pay for the general run of tires. Yorke & Wadsworth Co. The Old Reliable Hardware Store Phone 30 y ’ f GRAND MAY ! CELEBRATION j SALISBURY, N. C. J MONDAY, MAY 31, 1926 FOUR TRAINS VIA Southern Railway System Don’t Miss This Big Day! A Big Time For Everybody! . Special Train From Blacksburg, Kings Mountain, Gas- * l tonia and Charlotte, May 31 • Charlotte —£t;3s A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1.50 5 , Newell 8:48 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1.50 s ! Harrisburg 8:57 A. M. Round-Trip Fare. $1.50 i i Concord 9.07 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $1 00 - | Kannapolis __ 9:20 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ .50 5 S Candis :9:27 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ 50 i S China Crove —9:35 A. M. Round-Trip Fare, $ 50 ; I ARRIVE SALISBURY. 9:50 A. M. j l RETURNING, LEAVE SALISBURY 7 :10 P. M \ SAME DAY \ [ j Baseball Games, Horse Racing, Big Barbecue, Dancink s Fire Works Display. | Tickets on Sale May 31and Good For This Date Qnly j; Thursday, May 27, 1926

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view