PAGE TWO
BENNY COLUMN
I Kidd Frix's, J 5
Trot.
—Fox Trot.
Ihild, vocal.
ggy Bide.
All Done This
I
11-lt-c. I
Saturday. San
-11-lt-p.
>y Cantaloupes.
11-lt-p.
Gray Trout.
>. 11-lt-p.
ns For Light
irms’ued or un
lessie Kendrick.
11-2 t-x.
imished Rooms
ing, North Un
ll-4t-p.
rket Coder New
erything in the
fresh fish every
lay. Call 815-
est. Cline Ma
ll-2t-p.
Cantaloupes.
(ranges, lemons. .
nas. I-ippard
11-lt-p.
rhes for Pies.
o. 11-ltp-. |
ng Scarce But |
some. Call 92
:y and service.
11-lt-p.
y Cow, FVesh.,
.•ord, N. C. I
9-3 t-p. I
VII Kind 6. Day
t or 562 J. E. C. '
5-ot-n.
iinnoaueemenis
t The Times
‘ We have a ■
redding invita
ments in stock
few hours no
le Job Office. I
Cards Kept In Stock at
Ie limes-Tribune Job Office and
I be! printed on a few hours no
bved Wedding invitations and
aouqcements on short notice at
nea-Tribune office. We repre
it one of the best engravers in
i United Stataa. ts.
nil Nice Fresh Milli Cows For
e, of will trade for beef cattle,
one 18S. C. H. Graeber.
lottr .Wan Has Miraculous Es
inKtqn-Salem, June 10.—C. G.
rbto#, of Charlotte, miraculously
led teath when an automobile in
h h£ was riding was struck by
tight' ear on a spur track of the
oik-and Western railroad here
today,
hNOTHERFARMERTELLS
I ; OF HIS CONDITION
■C. U. BfiYigle Says HERB EXTRACT Known as HERB
JUICE is the Best Remedy He Has Found For Bowel
K. Trpublue; Gains 15 Pounds.
■f v . , i
I rPiJx
1 h. mpPtl w;~
Hi m iMgaH|| . x /"*
■ Fmm jjm JjM
■ MR. C. L. BRINGLE.
i r.» i is . i • rninn rfii'U ..-L1..1, uoatdu In Ito flu>
■ Herb Extract is the
lmve ever fotiud for
1 tried other reme
i satisfactory results,
could hardly do any
1 this great medicine
iet," said C. L. Brin-
Extract witl do the
Mr. Bringle iu a re*
the HERB JUICE
lieine I am
>rs. Before
bad all the
bed its !<>w
ike doing a
sere ill ant
irhit I ate,
food would
from which
My appe
■lf like eat
bl*°nißntlw
known Mi
You WiU Enjoy a NeW Record for
your phonograph. Come in and
hear the late ones.
Fox trots: Spring Is Here
She's a Cornfed Indiana Girl
Valencia
Lantern of Love
Waltzes: A Night of Love
In the middle of the Night
Princess Flavia
I Pipe Organ : Always
I Prisoner's Song
After I Say I’m Sorry
Sacred: Qld Ruggged Cross
1 Shall See the King
My Mother’s Prayers Hava Fol
lowed Me
If I Could Hear My Mother Pray
Again
Quartettes: Just Rround the Cor
ner
Lantern of Love
Where Is My Rose of Waikiki
Old Time Tunes:
Asleep at the Switch
Charming Biliy
Arkansas Traveller
I Wish I Was Single Again (new)
Frank Dupree
Behind These Gray Walls
Kidd-Frix’s. 11-lt-c.
Plymouth Rock Squabs For Sale.
Charles Query, South Union St.
Phone 147. 9-4 t-p.
Fancy Red Bliss Potatoes, Choice
tomatoes, cucumbers and squash.
Sanitary 'Grocery Co. 11-lt-p.
For Rent—Two Furnished or Un
furnished rooms for light house
keeping. 26 Bell Ave. 10-2 t-p.
I
| Fresh Cow For Sate. No. 138 Smith
j street. John Gross. 11-2 t-p. J
Nice Lot of Young Chickens. Any:
size. Sanitary Grocery Co. 11-lt-p.
Wanted—Agents to Sell the Old In
j dian medicines. Good commission. |
Write or apply in person to the I
Nanzetta Medicine Co., 237 E. I
| Trade St., Charlotte, N. C.
9-eod-10t-p. |
For Rent—6-room House on Caldwell
street. Mrs. Julia Welch. 10-2 t-p. I
Birth Announcements Beautifully
; printed at The Times-Tribune Job \
Offiee. Call 922. 8-ts-p.
High School Graduate*—Alter grad
uating what? Yon must fill*some
position in life; and the printing
industry offers both opportunity
and remuneration. Why not take
training in one of the several
branches of the printing trade?—
hand composition, proofreading, lin
otype and monotype composition,
and automatic presswork. Investi
gate. Competent young, men and
young women trained in from zve to
eight months for positions. Write
today for eata.ogue, terms of tui
tion and full particulars. Address
Southeastern School of Printing.
508 Union Stgeet, Nashville, Tenn.
! 31-ls.
The freight ear. it is said, was
backed into the automobile at a grade
crossing. Tile machine tnrned over
three times and was demolished but
Creighton came out of the wreckage
with only minor bruises.
You would think it would wear
him out.
—- -f
HERB JUICE which seems to be the
very thing for rty trouble. I began
to feel better ilmiusliately and since I
have taken several bottles I have been
eutireiy relieved of that awful gassy
feeling in my bowels and now I can
ret whatever I please without any
bad after effects. ' I have a good ap
petite now, have gained 15 pounds, eat
heartily of what 1 want and I do not
look or feel lifcqe I did when 1 com
menced to take HERB EXTRACT.
When anyone asks me abont tj>e great
change in my appearance, I always
tell them that ‘Herb did it.’ I expect
to keep a bottle of this wonderful
medicine in my home all the time, as
it is the only satisfactory treatment I
have ever found for bowel trouble and
constipation, and I would advise any
one Who May be suffering from shbi
lar ailments to fry a bottle. I know
it will actually do the work and do it
well.”
For sajc by Gibijop Drug Store.
«■-.» , ■—*
| IN AND ABOUT THE CITY |
CONTRACT AWARDED TO
E. J. BERRY CQMPAN}’
County Beard Education Accept
Bid of Charlotte Firm For Build
ing of Mt. Pleasant High School-
Meeting shortly before noon at the
office of Professor J. B. Robertson,
Superintendent of County Schools,
in the Court Houee, the members of
the County Board of Education yes
terday discussed the virtues of the
various bids sent in for the contract
of building the new high school to
be erected at Mount Pleasant. The
E. J. Berry Company 'of Charlotte
was finally awarded the .contract
from a field of eight bidders. Accord
ing to Professor Robertson, the cost
of the building when completed ready
for furniture will be about $68,000.
The plumbing and heating con
tracts were awarded to the E. B.
Grady Plumbing Company of Con
cord. Including the bid of this firm,
there were tour bidders for the
plumbing, and seven for the heating
contracts.
M. R. Marsh, of Charlotte, is the
architect for the buildirg. He was al
so architect for the school guildings
now in the process bf construction
by the county at Harrisburg, and
Bethel.
The Yadkin Brickyards of New
London will furnish the rough tex
ture tapestry face brick that is to be
used on this new monument to edu
cation in Mount Pleasant.
When the new- nigh school lias
been finished it will be one of the
most complete and ' most modern in
this part of the state. Laboratories'
j for both domestic and general science
| and a large libraiy will be only a few
jof its features.
| Yesterday afternoon Professor
' | Robertson and the members of the
', Board of Education, accompanied by
j Mr. Marsh and a representative of
! E. J- Berry Company, motored to
■ I Mount Pleasant tor the purpose of
! chocsing the exact spot upon which
! the toundation of the building will
|be laid.
i Work will begin almost immediate
j ly. Every effiPt will be made to
' rush the cmpletion of the building to
j the earliest possible date,
j When ground is broken for tile
Mount Pleasant High School. Cabar
rus County will have educational build- 1
ings under construction that will
cost appn/ciinately $190,000. It is
estimated that the Harrisbury and
Bethel school building will cost about
$120,000.
KANNAPOLIS WEN’S
SEASON SATURDAY
Play Gibson Mill Team at Cabarrus
Park.—Export to Have as Strong
a Team as Last Year.
Diamond dust will tiy for the first
time this year ill Kannapolis Satur- j
clay afternoon at 3:30 o'clock when |
the Toweli Makers clash with old riv- 1
als. Gibson Mill, in tlieir opening I
game of the season.
Either Andy Ferguson or the!
lengthy Culp will take the mount in:!
an attempt to put the first game un-. |
der the won column. When in form.,,
either of these pitchers are capable
of making any amateur team in the
state know that they've been in a
real game of baseball, and. if given a
margin of a few runs to work with,
are wetl-ui ght unbeuable. Hawkins |
will do the receiving. Saunders, of
Duke University fame, will be back
at liis favorite spot—the hot corner,
and the outfield composed of Fink. I
Holt and Lee is one of exceptional
batting strength. 'Either of those
gentlemen are likely to send a ball
game gloo-ey with a hit over the
fence. . *
Gibson win use the same line-up
that played against the Charlotte
firemen this afternoon. Either Sim
mons or Brown will pitch.
The lineups of the An teams arc
i as follows:
Kannapolis: Ferguson and Culp,
pitchers : Hawkins catcher. Lentz first
base. Johnson second base, Mot singer
shortstop. Saunders third base. Holt
right field. Kink lefttield, Lee center
field.
Gibson: Hatley lefttield. Basinger
third base, Hager shortstop, Jarrett
ceuferfiehl, Richard riglittield, An
drews second base. Lentz first base.
Watts catcher. Brown and Simmons
pitchers.'
TRAFFIC ENDANGERED BY
DETOUR HIGN'S REMOVAL
Youngsters Carried the Sign From
Church Street to Yard of Rich
mond . Reed.
Traffic on Church street Thursday
.night was endangered by a prank of
youths but fortunately no one was
hurt.
During the pust several days large
holes and cave-ins on Church street,
iu the rear of the Concord Hospital,
have been repaired, making it neces
sary to cut huge holes in the street.
To keep traffic from these holes de
tour sings were placed at the iuter- <
section of Church and Loan streets
and Church and Marsh streets. Some
time during Thursduy night the sign
at the latter intersection was carried
from the street to the yard of Rich
mond Reed, thus leaving the street,
with its dangerous holes, open totraf
ie fie.
n “It was the work of youngsters
I seeking amusement, I know," said one
n city official this morning, "but it Was
y a very serious thing and we are try
n ing to find Hie boys who did it. Some
y one might hove driven into ode of the
holes and suffered serious injuries.
(t Detour signs are not playthings and
persons .found moving them will be
dealt with. The signs are put up
' as a wurning to traffic and that some
L '. one was not hurt after the sjgn on
II Church street was removed Thursday
’s night was most fortunate."
9 Persons who see other persons ro
ll move any of Pile signs at aqy time are
® asked to notify police officers.
<1 Evidences of an advanced pcehix
r- torie civilization lmve been found near
i- the westdtri base ot the Alages moun
iv tains, Transcauresfa. The inhabitants
it lived an intensive community life,
traces of eangjs, nVtifchil lakes, wells
and roads betfig found. -»
THE CONCOftD ttAILY TRIBUNE
MECKLENBURG-CABAHKI S
YOUNG PEOPLE’S UNION
Baptist Young People Will Meet in
Charlotte on Sunday. June 18th.
Many members of the Mecklenburg-
Cabarrus Association Baptist Young
People's Union from Concord are ex
pected to attend tlie meeting to be
held Sunday afternoon at the Pritch- .
aril Memorial Church in Charlotte.
President John L. Stickley has sent ■
a personal letter to all members of .
the association, urging them to at- .
tend and poiating out interesting facts
about the association and its work.
“We would fall short of the B.
Y. P. IT. spirit and ideals to have an
attendance of less than 800 at our
first convention." President Stickley
said in the letter urging all members
to attend the Charlotte meeting.
The following are extracts from
the letter:
The first annual convention of the
Mecklenburg-Cabarrus Associational
B. Y. P. IT.
Aside from its inspirational and
educational features, it is a require
ment of the standard of excellence for
an A-l association, townrd which we
are striving.
Rev. H. G. Bryant, Dr. Clay I.
Hudson and Rev. C. Herman True
blood are on the program. There will
be an orchestra and a B. Y. P. IT.
male quartet. Brief annual reports
will be made and the election of offi
cers held.
G> t in touch at once with your lo
cal president, or associational vice
president, and either will see that you
are furnished transportation.
If it is hot, bring a fan: if it rains,
carry aii umbrella, if it snows, wear
your overshoes. The point is. come
anyway.
Every member of a B. Y. I*. U. in
these two counties and all friends in
terested in B. Y. P. IT. work should
attend.
Boost this convention in your
church and community, pray for it,
work for it. enthuse others crer it.
and if you have a car. offer its use
to your local president that transpor
tation may be provided for all. Above
all. come yourself, and bring others
with you.
, Association officers please note: A
brief complete report of your activi
ties for the past six months is re
quired.
And don’t forget the state conven
tion in Raleigh June 22, 23 and 24.
WOMEN OF ASSOCIATE
REFORMED CHURCH MEET
District Meeting in Session in Con-
Cocr Thursday.—l)r. Jeanette Alex
ander Speaks.
Women of the Associated Reformed
Church of the first district held the
j first of a four-day session iu Concord
j Thursday with members of the mis
| -ionary society of the. local church.
: Other sessions will be held with ither
i churches in tip- district, the second
i beitig held in Taylorsville today,
j Mrs. Miller, of Gastonia, president
of the district, presided at the sessions
j here Thursday. Various phases of tfac
I work were discussed after which plans
for enlarging the work were made.
Dr. Jeanette Alexander, a returned
missionary from India, was one of
the speakers at the meeting here on
Thursday. Various phases of the
(hurch's work in India were discussed.
Dr. Alexander at the same time point
| ing out some of the needs of the mis
i sion workers in India.
At 12:39 dinner was served to
those attending sessions here. The
dinner was served in picnic style at
the church yard.
PYTHtANS CONQUER THE
De.MOLAYS ON DIAMOND
Erratic Work Behind Melnnis Chief
Cause «r His Defeat.
Timely hitting behind good pitching
by Bill Boat, of the P.vthians. 'handed
the DeMnlay baseball team its first de
feat of the season Thursday. The win
ners got a 10-1 victory.
Melnnis of the IteMola.vs, pitched
well as usual, but errors and bone
head plays by his teammates lost the
game for him. It was a rather slow
and listless game, marred by errors.
White of the lieMoiays, und Cleav
er of the I’ythrians. hit homo runs.
D.
Newton Cow Wins National Recogni
tion.
(Ink wood Brown Belle, a mature
Jersey cow in the herd of R. 1,. Shu
ford. of Newton, has completed her
third official test and has qualified for
a gold medal awarded by the Ameri
can Jersey Carrie Club. As a junior
four-year-old Belle produced 444.89
pounds of butterfut and 7,498 pounds
of milk iirGHto days. At seven years
and five months of age she again
started on test, and iu the following
365 days she produced 570.58 pounds
of buttrrfat and 9,476 pounds of milk
in 365 days.
I In her latest test, which she start
■ ut cig'at years and seven months
of age, she yielded 714.01 pound* of
butterfat and 12,621 pounds of milk.
Her milk averaged 5.66 jier cent, fat
for the test, and she was with calf
for 211 days while making her rec
ord. With this showing ahe quali
fied for the gold medal.
Stopa to Repair Stanly County
Courthouse.
Alhemarle Prem.
Monday morning the county com
missioners held their regular monthly
meeting. Several important nnamm
were taken up and discussed.
If was decided at this meeting to
repair the old courthouse. Just what
will be done to It or how much wilt
be siM'ut on it has not been learned.
However, it is safe to say that no
large amount wiH be spent.
It seems that the commissioners
juat wish to spend enough on it so
that it will nusa until; 'something
definitely can [hie decided/ \ Tf* '
A flock of 25JXJ0 gild goeve remain
ed on a Columbia River island last
whiter instead of going, spath, ami
now they deeflm* so tly 11 north because
the nearby wheat fields prove to* at
' tractive.
mi i -*- 11 1,1 ■ 1,11 »
[ - TODAYS HVENTS ]
Friday, June tl, t«8«
Ttslay is Kamebameba Day. one I
of the principal holidays in Hawaii.
On this date 350 years ugo Fro- <
bisfaer set out op his expedition in
search Ilf the Northwest Passage. 1
One •hundred and fifty years ago to- (
da* Congress appointed a committee i
to draft the Daclaratiou of Inde- I
peadenc. „ j
Rt. Rev. Joseph H. Conroy, Homan <
Catholic bishop of ttgdensbnrg. today
obsarres his 46th anniversary in the <
priesthood
la connection with commencement
week exercises at the University of
Chicago the corner stone will be laid
today for the new $1,700,000 univer
sity chapel.
Col. Hanford McNider. assistant
aoilgtary of war. will officiate today
at the laying of the cornerstone tor
the new cadet mess 'ball at the United
States military academy.
The first completely equipped and
armed foreign regiment will invate
Cleveland today, when a body of Can
adian troops attend the celebration of
Cleveland-Ca nada Day.
PHPPER FISHER TICKET
COST ENORMOUS SUM
W. L. Mellon. Nephew of Treasury
Chelf Says $308,205 Spent in 30
Cewntirs.
Washington. June 10. —Expendi-1
turn* of $300,295 in 30 western 1
counties of Pennsylvania on behalf
of the 'Pepper-Fisher” ticket in the
Republican primnry last month was
testified to tonight before the sen
ate campaign investigating commit
tee by W. L. Mellon, n nephew of
the .secretary of the treasury.
Thin compared with $195,000
which the cignmittee hud been told
was expended in behalf of Governor
Pinehot. who with Senator Pepper,
was defeated' in the senatorial cam
paign by Representative William 8.
Vary, of Philadelphia. ■
Mr. Mellon took the stand after C. i
C. McGovern, campaign manager for j
Governor Pinehot. had made charges j
of wholesale corruption in Pitts-1
burgh, the sent of Allegheny county.
He said the Pepper and Vare forces
had employed so many •'watchers"
at the |sills as to make it a "pure
purchase of votes."
WESTERN CAROLINA
IS THIRSTY FOR RAIN
Graham Says Pastures S*. Dry a
Lighted Match Would Send Flames
Across Them.
Raleiglf, June 10—Western North
Carolina is literally parching for
want, of rain. Commissioner of Agri
culture William A. Graham said to
night, on his return from a trip to
file westeren Section of the state.
In some sections there have been
local rains. Mr. Graham reported,
but in general his observation led
him to characterize the situation in
the mountain counties as “very ser
ious.”
Tho pastures are so dry. Mr. Gra
ham said, that a lighted match would
send a ljuc of tire across them.
Fenaer and Beane’s Cotton Letter.
New York. June 10.—Trading in
.cotton broadened out considerably to
day and the market sustained a good
sized drop us most of the activity
was on the selling side. Liquidation
by tired long, coupled with continued
giMid wen tiler reports of great im
proyemqnt in the crop outside of the
northwestern quarter and bearish in
terpretation p’.aeed on the govern
ment weevil report stimulated selling
and kept prices on tile down grade
most of the day The experiment sta
tion at Tallulah. La.,* says reports
from 16 co-operating stations show
that only .82 i>er cent, of the'weevils
placed in cages at these stations last
fall have emerged to June 1, com
pared with 2.92 per cent a year ago.
The 10-year averuge emergence at
Tallulah is 1.07 per cent. This re
port while accepted as bearish on its
face, shows that emergence at all
station in the south half of tbe belt
is nearly ns large or larger than the
10-year average at Tallulah. The
weight of sentiment is on the selling
side and prices are apt to work
lower as long as the weather con
tinues favorable.
FENNER AND BEANE
Sole Woman .Senator Is 91.
Cartcrxville, Ga., June 10.—Mrs.
Rebecca Latimer Felton, the first and
so far tbe only woman to become a
United States senator, received many
• messages of greeting today on the oc
casion of her ninety-first birthday an
-1 niversagy. She appears to be in ex
cellent health and as sprightly in man
ner and conversation as w'len she
■ made her brief speech in the upper
■ house of l lie federal congress on No
-1 vember 22. 1922.
I
1 Fourteen hundred light harness
■ race meetings will is- held on the
i half-mi'e tracks throughout the
F United States this summer.
I rr-ITT-
~I JiTrLTTTTriTj'T T' I" Tft~r~tst-rr''e.TT-tT-ggi
; l j. , i h
Popular Seashore Excursion
■j Norfolk and Virginia Beach, Va. I
, I Southern Ra&way System
; | Saturday, June 19,1926
5 f * * ti
t liound Triju Fare from Concord, N. C. prt Q
J Tickets to Virginia Beach 50c higher O • vOW
l | Tickets good until June 22nd.
I Through Pullman sleeping cars and day coaches.
“ Wonderful opportunity to visit this splendid seashore re
„ sort. ’
0 I: Fine surf bathing, boat excursions, good fishing.
% | For further information and sleeping car reservations call
jW on any SodtHem’"Railway Agent or address
•!| Mt E WOODY, : R. H. GRAHAM,
,i fcj Ticket Agent, Division Passenger Agent.
P 1 Concord, N. C. Charlotte, N. C,
ihhghton I* CLEAR OF s
BANKING LAW GHABOK
Cases Against Former President of I
Bank In Salisbury Are Not Prossed.!
Greensboro News. - - . . I
Charges against .J. K. Doughton,]
former president of the Na
tional Bank of Salisbury, now in bus-!
iness in Ka'.eigh, went off ttje docket
bf the noi pros route yesterday here
in I'nited States court, western North j
Carolina diatriet. - . ,
District Attorney Frank A. Limiey. r
of Boone, noi prossed the charges of
violation of the national banking law.
There were two such cases, one where
Mr. Doughton bail been indicted joint- i
ly with M. L. Jackson, formerly of ■ '
Salisbury, and another where he had'
been indicted singly. \ S
•Mr. Doughton had stood trial on
one such charge, where he had been
indicted with J. D. Norwood, former
ly of Salisbury. He was tried witj>
Norwood at the last December' term
of court here and won a directed ver
dict of acquittal.
A charge of violation of the bank
ing law, brought against Mr. Jackson,
vras also noi prossed yesterday and
he is clear of any charge. Only one
such indictment had beeu returned
against him.
! These indictments were returned by
' t'.ie federal court grand jury here in
February. 1024. Norwood was tried
| here last December, first singly, a mis
! trial resulting, and then tried with
' Doughton. He was convicted and
sentenced to serve three years in the
federal prison in Atlanta. He ap
pealed and his appeal is scheduled to
be argued at the next sitting of the
I'nited States circuit court of appeals I
at Richmond, when three judges will
hear appeals.
One case against Norwood was yes
terday ordered continued until the
next term of court.
The People's National Bank of Sal
isbury .was closed on*Julie 8, 1023.
i Doughton was president of tfie bank,
j Norwood was chairman of tlie board
: of directors and president of the Meck
;j Icnburg Mills Company, which operat- t
| cd a chain of four cotton mills. Jack- ]
son was a director in the mills eoin
. pany. The bank was found to carry
a large amount of the paper of the ]
, mills company, which failed at about
the time the bank failed.
HOLD TWO OFFICERS
FOR DEATH OF WOOD
i Charged With Murdering Funner
i Greensboro Man—His Body Is Sent
to Greensboro.
1 Jacksonville. Fla., .Tune 9. —C. H.
Reed and E. It. Hughes. Duval eoun
| ty traffic policemen, were held tonight
without bond on charges of murder in
‘ connection with the death of William
D. Wood, Daytona Beach, who was
1 fatally wounded near licit* Thursday
i lM<
Testimony before a coroner's jury
1 today was to the effect that Wood was
sliot when Reed and Hughes attempt
ed to take him into custody. ltced
I elaims he shot at Wood in self de
fenap, A quantity of liquor was
found in the slain man's automobile,
it wait- said,.
Wood came to Fjoridu from Wueo,
1 Texas, hut tile body was sent tonight
Ito Greensboro, N. for interment.
, Many lose their labor because they
I do not prosecute to the end the good
. work they have begun.
FOR MEN
t
; New Shipment of
Bostonians
Oxfords, Blacks and Tans
Summer weight Patterns,
Light, Flexible, Airy
i And Style That .Stays
; $6.50 $7.50
$8.50
r
N->
Ruth-Kesler Shoe
• Store
' PHONE 118
Parks-Belk Co.
MOVItL ~ BgOTIMe STOR-Tj
t Auw W«l rr.svoMi.. so rVsATi ''
V 11 c •»» owrjiat a»o e*.o*s»q I loin 3*e mhwuwvh so *■»«. \ kcjkvtstse ;
t e,t “* y ' uow /U«o-.«e» l hn Mate *» you* cold » sobav. I
OO* out o« A/ I coco *so its so wvte *He*| ( Dap 3a*o Vco ccw.o p»b< is c. gp**"i I
E»_. « ,*
so,tc.) " ijusTPAnHom. rot, 0 * y-,
| c
| Don't worry about your Underwear
j or Pajamas. We can fit you. It does
j not matter how large you are or j
\ how small, we have your size. Phone ;
a p
! us your orders.
| OVERALLS! OVERALLS! |
■ Men's Blue Buckle and Belk Brand
I Overalls. High Back and Low Back
Triple Stitched, two double hip j
I pockets, two front pockets, one j
| watch pocket and one change pock- =
j et. Also big hammer loop. Every
, pair guarantee! rip* ravel or tear, a |
; free new paid
Jackets Same Price
! Boys’ same as Men’s, 2to 16 —B5 c
1 Be Sure to See These Before You 1
Buy
I I
INOW IS THE TIME TO GET A
Nestle Lanoil Permanent Wave, !
Special, $15.00 for Whole Head
CALL 898 FOR APPOINTMENT
PARKS-BELK BEAUTY SHOPPE
Concord, N. C. ■ N j
PARKS-BELK
Phone 138-608 . Beauty Shoppe 892
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FmUy, June 11, 1926