; ..... ]ah ' 9 - 3 ****! Self-ad furrn^ 1 ?(1 all our regu- Lil vel( 1 >I ’!!ts J V.'licu y uii need a >*■?£,« *4 »■-• f ri « dv. if • W ' name and audit-ss. - oi Oi** 1 - ‘ * •*,!,.,! tiio nic ' ;, f fp' • jv. , ;■■ < ' •. v.;,!U. and , ' \X. > | -pi nt Mon |V.. : | : ! , t i la- home of ■ * S ' ’•. e. , -!" HI , ft& ur! r ilCOOllUKilliod ' o • y. will* 1 ' . :• i. rtcm. "" , .' .„1 'la' r. K U - "■• ■j j. _ u Roads, V:t., 4,'iii' 1 ' 1 -' . (1 > ( (ilK'ord. Spoilt yrdii 1 ’ I- ;,"j" Tun; xiay afternoon , i,. ( v ivj tinted -' ■ p « Vi ” ' I>. ol Nor ‘ , \' ii,. »»f their »■:•j 'Kudv. , IK |r V 1.-. 8 inn .and clnl jlr. 1 ’ M._ .1, K. Shinn and . a! Locust. Y ‘ r noVv<l Ut r > (lay.. Mrs. -In.*, v ' , v niMiaas. of Con,* t> in-pit ing ad »•-. ; j |,, 'll with Us TV LIP. ~ , dr\ W'cathet at Wyirf Lav ■ - ~ ,• C Vat'> and eliil |r. . . u day s with and .Mrs.- w. risl'avii. TheV have Iti*'. ' j n Vslieluno. Houston is improving af ’v.,!,... Mr. Art ley l airlotte Monday visiting his Y "iii< we-k. • „ - IJJLUES. |j, citised One Year, and He- Opretil in NoriiKi! ami Industrial In stitute Plant. url ,"p pb- rrer. . . ,• j-0,., , r-i.ed i- years '..S, VI: IV tne U'llst'/eS l. 1 hill » . Sahsiiiiry Xonual and fe-trbi h.'-ittiP'. am-rding to a de ■ (*'if,{ !>i tiv<‘ ol trustees in Saiis'oury Friday. • : ’,t t‘;iiav, ba F'di’tre will be .. The h. \\ t’atwba S :a jer 1. Idl’d, in TL- . u i"'ii was turnisli' d The Shu ford I’eeier. of , v;’;.. «tt 1 *•!uit* itii£ Hi sr.. ■ bar'.; ;,t home yester i\, Ti - details also Were rtisiio! i.v M.. Peeler: C;Ki\ jl' "j. ~ the state denomijia beai !l‘-uv »f the Reforteed t’liurch |jwas fir.;; : ahii'jst ,u eeht’,;ry ago, ml'':' ;P.!' e d'l ye;ir> t!i» Itev,.- l.M\ , . of tainted mentory,'. was t- s', t" strotig men hav* ■rvei the 'ge in tiie" eapaeity of . as R v. Dr. . -! live y. ,-;rs the Rev. -I 1 'Ri.ihurr. i ! . !>.. Las been the of !|. ■■■• ■ :in: "0 , -sterday he r>f r . ps-iur'inn president of the <* n >igi it ion was accepted., t Ibrv' r; was tlvmki f! ;..r his untir : r S'half of the c g-* during • iv." i. was decitled that ■■.4a be removed. TO that would !h eb.sp the school ; tf d‘- i in- transit ion is being .to Salisbury. The ' Nanaai ami tudttstria! Tn-ti v by the irasters ' ' 1 dl he.' ra nsferml at ■ ' • tavba <'"liege. ' ~ ot 1“ v. Shuford : j'< v. ,1. H. Keller. 1.. ' • ’iii'l Ivner .!. ■t. Mooso. ; ;,, take & , |t ' a"V ?. t; er Ml d- - !! ' s fdIARY TAA l.ijj* y\ - kXPECTKf) TO RECOVER w >' R ivi-tt.t. Who letter a '"' *' "i Kiilitm ' Sr,;«; v j... ' ' *‘d i lie body of if:.;. " mdlti d snieide wmauling ■ •re last night, lay, : . ' ' * * undertaker to f ' ;i - "1 relatives front j, , 1 fccal “;" ’* J live ning at a R< '' I’ayi >r was'itak : ' ■ ■ vat she re .v . " i* "'"-ration and is ; ' i!i f and Penusyl \l '-""a Alike. • '!••■ people -’ [ 'y of western ! ; -vivania are ■ opinion of A. o ■ AUorney (Jen • yv!;,, recently ■ 1 ' "v, ’ : '•'•livetilion of the !' ion. here. vi of Penn iv. ' 'l' 'tins (luring his ” •' '1 Me l Morjttv : ■. i, p ,' ‘' "t' li-1 risti who set- !,, n of North ’•‘Usjlvam.i and v.,-, .munes abound -lin of North S-,. ' r-tn-nt t'r T bat came **■‘-vi:. v r! )“ f"rtner Cnited .- ! ■ i: v K ~! w: ‘° expressed 1 by.the good ' 4 - Ilf f't ■ •* 'Obtains around * .! . ? Y> r< > Schools. is.., r- 1 UxY'V Salisttirj v; :/ ;: ':• -■ b»;huild a new 5i,,. i1l .j i'" in. Dixon which ZJf'* ob aim hi i,i ■ t 01 * U aw^ A.- ■ >r r(*et rooms tc * the"; lll “ Present 1 ,, KYCK OF FINANCIAL. SUPPORT THREATENS McLENDON SERVICES Evangelist Announcese He Cannot Con tinue AnotJier Week on Basis of Ijjtst Week’s Contributions. Greensboro News, 16th. Rev. I*. F. McT/Ctidon talked straight business finances at both services yester day. He told his congregations that the con tributions of the past week had not been sufficient to pay the* running ex}»enses of the McLendon staff, not to mention re ducing the initial cost of starting the campaign in Greensboro. -»Tm laying all my cards on the table, folks." he said. "I’m talking to you frankly, and l say this to you : the con tributions last week were not enough to enable me to stay here and conduct this campaign another- week. 1 haven't got any money: I’m a poor man. I'm counting on you to back mo up. "Why. look at this crowd," ho said, and .lung wide his arms out toward the night congregation that must have amounted to nearly 8.000 persons. They jammed the tent, jammed the choir, and stood banked, row on io\v. around the outside. "Look :U ilus crowd. Greens boro. "It ought to be easy for yon peo ple .o wipe out this little .$6,000. inci -1 denial expense./ "I have been making .$75,000 a year for the last 6 or 8 years but I've been last sir or eight \ear- b i I’ve been giving it all away. You people have got to help nie. Reach down in y, ur pockets and get the money. He talked of the expenses of this or ganization. "I'm carrying eight or nine persons with me and they are the very best 1 can find in the United Stall's. This is no tin horn, pinwheel outfit. • There's Mrs. Goode, .at the piano,'’ and the congregation, especially the choir, drowned him with applause. "And there is .Jones," and again the applause stop pod the evangelist. Mr. McLendon paid high tribute to'both the musicians at both Sunday services. He talked more seriously about money than at any service yet and devoted long , r time to it. The largest single con tribution has been .$lO. from a man. and the next largest Slo. from a woman. There have been a few gifts of 810. and a few of .$5. he said, but most of the contributions have been small. -Not a dollar of this money goes to me." he said. "It goes to pay the ex penses of the tent, the seats, the lights, the sawdust, the freight. IT you had gone to any other evangelist in the Tint ed States he would have made, you give him a guarantee. He would have made you furnish him a tent and that would have cost 52.500, not to mention the freight. You would have had to pay his traveling expenses. You would have, had to buy lumber and build seats." and he enumerated other expenses. •T didn't ask a dollar of you before 1 came, but the weight of this whole cam paign is resting on me. Now. Greens boro I'm asking you to help me hold a real revival here. Why, 1 never saw a town in .all m.V life so ripe for a reviv al. You help me out." i CAN’T IDENTIFY ASSAILANT Girl Who Was Attacked - Tells Most Amazing Story. Greensboro, July IT. —Deep mysterj still surrounds the alleged case of crim inal -assault upon a girl, -highway rob bery and the larceny of a Cadillac auto mobile here, with the chief ac tors in the drama keeping silent for the most part. Mi-s Myrtie; Morris, of Norfolk. Ya.. a nurse, the woman in the yast. is not able positively to identify AY. R. Melvin, of thi.- city. as. the man who held her and P>. 11. Markham, of this city, for merly of Raleigh, up on the Greensboro College campus here- Yhursdaw night, took Margham's money, sent him to get more., took the girl t (> 11 dark spot and assaulted her. according to her state ment. Here is an amazing story. She ac companied the man to the dark spot and submitted to his attacks, she sa\s, be cause he had said he was a policeman and she was afraid to make an outcry. Further,-lie* took her nearly to where she was staying, and passed couples on tin* way. yet no ‘alarm was sounded. I ur ther. she said that she did not want to prosecute, just drop it. MARRIAGE ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION FORMED New Form of Insurance I .likely to Prove Popular With Those of Marriageable Age: (ij-eensboro. July 14. —A new kind ot insurance company has? been formed in Greensboro the insurance center of the smith. It is the Southern Marriage En dowment Association of Greensboro. X. <*.. Inc., and it will pay policy holders ■S1:000 if they carry* their policies a year before getting married. Monthly dues are .$2.20 and the plan for assessing members to make up the endowment in the event marriage busi ness becomes too brisk among the mem bership calls for $2 additional to bulge the purse l going to brides and bride grooms. < The company is expected to prove pop ular among the single folks as it is con sidered a good featherer for love nests. M. li. Xeese. E. J. O’Brien and Dr. C. 1. Carlson, all of this city, are incorpo rators of the association, which has no capital stock. They are honorary members without benefit because of their married state. S. & \V. Cafeteria to Greenville. Charlotte Observer. The largest eating house in Greenville. S. C.. will be opened about October 1 by the Sherrill and Webber Company, operators of tin 1 well known S. and \N . 1 cafeterias in Charlotte. Asheville and | Winston-Salem. The Greenville case- I teria will be tiff best of the four, it is I planned. The entire building now occupied by ! the Bradley Bonded Warehouse Com pany on the southeast corner of W ash ingtori and Laurens stretts. has been leased for a long term by the company. The anuual rental, it is said, will amount to $7,000 ami improvements and fixtures will cost about $2.",000. The most modern equipment for kitchen and din ing room will be installed. Selection of Dawson Approved by Mor rison. Asheville, July 12.— Hearty approval of the selection of John G. Dawson as chairman of the North Carolina Demo cratic executive committee was given by Governor Morrison when he was called at his rooms.in Grove Park Inn tonight , and given a report of the action of the i committee. He immediately wired -con [ gratqlations to Mr. Datpon, MRS. VANDERBILT SPEAKS ON STATE FAIR FUNCTIONS It is For the Development of Education in' Agriculture, Industry and General Knowledge. Goldsboro, July 14.—" The proper func tion of a State Fair, or any fair, is not the amusement of pleasure ssekers,” de clared Mrs. Edith Vanderbilt, president of the North Carolina Agricultural So ciety, in an address here "This morning. "It is for the development along proper lines of education in agriculture, indus try and general knowledge.’’ * Mrs. Vanderbilt said the mistakes of The past and hopes for the future should he brought out clearly so that farmers might visualize where they can plant better crops and "realize bigger returns —where industry may learn lessons of benefit and where the goal of all that is good for everyone may be placed in a way that is easy to understand, that is ,by the - use of ones eyes and ears.” "The other function of it state fair,” Mrs. Vanderbilt continued, "is its value to the state as a whole in displaying in attractive fashion so that it will bring not only exhibitors of the country’s best, jaut people from other states and parts of tin* country to see what our state has to exhibit. "I will venture to say there is-.no other state on the Atlantic Seabord that can present so much in the way of nat ural resources as North Carolina. I will also venture to state that today a state fair on a state-wide basis and fi nancially organized would do more for North Carolina in five years than a mil lion dollars spent in any other way. Even With the limited facilities and means of last year wo are hearing good comments from as for North as New' Hampshire, northwest from Wisconsin, west in Indiana and Missouri. The whole south is waking up to whate a state fair will do towards boosting the state ahead. "Our cattle exhibits were considered; very fine and cattle breeders throughout, the country have put our fair on their list. Our other departments are receiv ing equal attention. "The fair is owned and run by the I North Carolina Agricultural Society. I This is a membership organization whose! ‘ist is in no wise restricted. Any one • may join who has the interest and will i to do s‘o. It is not in any way a pri vate corporation for making money. In fact if we can succeed in demonstrating tho value of the fair as a state fair ami a state institution the Legislature will he asked to take it over. lock, stock and barrel and run it as such. That is the logical conclusion of the enterprise. "This section of North Carolina has not manifested any particular interest in i the jtafe fair, and I must confess I am at a loss to understand this attitude. I ( am sure the matter has not before been j presented in the proper light and that j is the purpose of my visit here today, 'j "You have some excellent county and j community fairs and 1 suggest that the i best fro ill these be sent on to Raleigh j as an exhibit collectively from such county. The community "and county j fair is an important institution and should be the feeder ror the state fair. "In the first place I should like to have, and I hope it can be arranged! an exhibit from this? county and city. This should include everything of Which you are proud. "Second, 1 would like'very much to have an exhibit from every concern that | is producing anything of which it has the right to be proud. "Third. 1 would more than like to see enough interest manifested by the citi zens of this county to secure afortuidablc list of members in the North Garolina Agricultural Society. "Fourth. 1 would consider it a very fine thing, indeed, if we could set aside one day in the .week of the fair for the people of this section to come en masse. Then we could secure special trains and run excursions. And lastly, please re member that these tilings which I as asking of you to do are not for my Ixaie fit but for your own good and the good and glory of Urn Old North State." Mrs. Vanderbilt -aid her trip through eastern North Carolina was primarily for the purpose of promoting the interest of the North •Carolina state fair and to .stimulate interest in it and the county and community fairs of the state. SALISBFEY OFFICERS MAKE SEVERAL ARRESTS Affray ai Terminal Hotel Leads to Dock eting of a Number of Cases. Salisbury. July 14.—. Local policemen have, docketed for trial in county court next Wednesday a number of cases grow ing out of activities following an affray at the Terminal hotel last night. Edna Hedrick, a white woman, who has been housekVper ! <t the hotel for some years, accused Roy Cauble, who runs the place, of bearing her up. and as a result she turnf*d him up to the officers, charging him with selling liquor. She also pre ferred the information that whiskey could be found at the home of B. 11. Jsenhower, owner of \the hotel. Officers visited this home and were shown by Mr. Isenliower 25 gallons of whiskey stored in live-gallon vessels in an- ouf-house. As a result of the ac tivities of Chief Gallimore, Captain Cauble and Officers Bernhardt and Cook, following the interview with the Hedrick woman, these eases are set for Wednesday : Boy Cauble and Edna Hed rick. or selling liquor, also for an affray : A. .1. Cordell, who makes headquarters at the Terminal, for selling liquor; Mrs. A. J. Cornell for prostitution, and B. H. Isenliower for having liquor in his pos session. Parks-Belk Co.’s Twelfth Aravivnsapy Clearance Sale. The twelfth Annual Clearance Sale of the Parks-Belk Company will begin Thursday morning, July 19th and will continue through Saturday. August 14. This sale includes not only odds and ends but everything in the entire big stock will be put on sale at greatly re duced prices.- During this sale the firm will give ten valuable prizes ou August -L at b o’clock p. m. Read the details of this big prize-giving event in the two! big page ads. in this issue. This s#e will celebrate the-end of the twelfth year of successful merchandising of the Parks- Belk Co., in Concord. Look up the big ads. and read every word of,them. " ■ "T- 1 L. H. Can-, of Durham. Killed. Huntsville, Ala.. July 13.—Fifteen persons injured in a v reck of the Afem phis Special near Scottsboro. Ala., early today were- brought to a hospital here this a. m. L. Carr, 19 years old, of Durham, V C was kJfcffd. It was stated that at least 12 persOTs were seriously hurt. THE CONCORD TIMES iTHE WOMEN PROPOSE ANOTHER AMENDMENT 1 Women Assembly for Conference on the Equal Riphts Movement. AVashiigton, D. C., July 16.—Next Friday will mark the anniversary of the first conference for equal .rights for women, which met seventy-five years ago at Seneca Falls, N. Y. Women from : every part of the United States will as ; semble -at Seneca Falls on that day for fa three days' conference on the progress jand future of the equal rights movement and to do honor to the memory of the pioneers who first raised the banner of equal rights iu America. The proposed amendment to the Fed eral Constitution to provide that "men | and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction” will be discussed and acted upon at the con ! ferenoe. Another event which will help to make the coming conference- memor able will be a pilgrimage to the grave of Susan li. Anthony in Rochester, N. A'. The choice of the seventy-fifth anni versary of the Seneca Falls meeting as the time for action on the new equal rijphts amendment is held by officials of the Woman's party to be peculiarly ap propriate since, they say, the proposed Federal amendment does nothing more ’ thajj condense into one sentence the de mand for complete equality which was signed as the "Declaration of Senti ments" in the convention of IS4S. An argument - advanced by the Woman's party in support of its pro posal for a Federal equal rights amend | meat falls into three divisions. First. ■j the women point out that in the sev j enty-live years which have elapsed since tlu- grst Seneca Falls convention, only ' one point—the right to vote—has been ( gained in the' feminist program. " To i prove this assertion, they cite the codi ’ fixations of State laws and court tleci | sions,acecting women which arc_ being ' com piled by their women attorneys, and ’ have already been completed in thirty three states. Those codifications show [that all of the discriminations enumerat ed ia tin- 1848 declaration (except in suf- I frage) still exist in some parts of the i United States today, and some of them I ! are universal. Such, for example, is | the Rgal theory that the services of the i wife in the household are the property of the husband-. The discrimination in pay and in promotion is also almost un iformly in force against women in State and Federal service as well as in pri vate employment. A point is made from the record of tlu-ir legislative workers in the State leg islatures during the past two years. In that time, equal rights legislation of a partial character has been secured in thirteen States, in addition to the enact ment in Wisconsin of the general equal! riglfts bill, giving women complete equal ity in all fields. The measures which have been most successful have been those enlarging the rights of women to act guardians of their own children, or "covering other guardianship . matters ; making the inheritance rights of women equal to those of men. and making women eligible to public office. These conees sions t to tht> principle of equal rights, however, have been slight tho women say, in comparison with the great mass of dis criminatory law which stands on the statute books throughout the country. As a concluding argument the Wom an's party cites the parallel of the suf frage struggle which dragged on through seventy years of State to State cam paigns. ami was concluded only with the ratification in 11120 of the Susan B. An thony amendment to the Federal consti tution will have a beneficial effect upon the psychology of the country at large, thus tending to remove these inequalities which are rooted rather in prejudice than in law. PROVE CHLORINE- GAS IS INFLUENZA PREV ENTATI YE Arkansas University Faculty and Stu dents Make 000 Tests. New York, July 14. —Tests indicating that chlorine is a successful preventa tive of influenza have been made at the University of Arkansas. Fayetteville. Ark., tin' American Chemical Society announced, today. Nine hundred tests wore made on *SOO students and faculty members, who, for five minutes daily, in haled air containing a small quantity of chlorine. A decrease in influenza cases from a thousand to 44 a thousand was the result, it was stated. It was suggested by the investigators that experiments be made on the possibility of the use of chlorine and other gases in the treat ment of similar diseases. Hoblitzell Suspended. Macon, (ia., July 12. —Manager Dick Hoblitzell, of the Charlotte Sally League Club, has been indefinitely suspended pending an investigation of his conduct nf yestordy.'s game between Macon- and Charlotte which was forfeited to Macon in the eighth inning. OFFICERS Chas. B. Wagoner President A. F. Goodman Cashier C. L. Frdpsi, Asst. Cashier Boyd Biggers Carl Beaver Tellers DIRECTORS Geo. L. Patterson , J. Frank Goodman Alex. R. Howard Chas. B. Wagoner Dr. W. D. Pemberton E. C. Barnfiardt • B. L. Ufnberger j M. L.. Marsh A. F. Goodman . A. N. James P. F. Stallings Dr. J. A. Patterson Chas. M. Ivey F. C. Niblock TYPHOID FEVER Six Cases in One Family in Union Coun ty—Warning From State Board of Health. Raleigh, July 13. —Six cases of ty l'lioid fever among the members of one family in Union county and five cases among the children of a Cleveland county family reported to the State Board of Health called forth today a warning from the Hoard that the typhoid season is just beginning, and that every precaution against this preventable disease should be taken during July, August, and Sep tember when illness from this cause reaches its peak. In both instances of family epidemics the disease has attacked children. The county family is one of negroes with the youngest of the sick children a baby of three years, and the eldest a boy of six teen. The Cleveland county family is a white one with the youngest victim six years of age and the eldest seventeen years. Experience of the health officials, it was stated, iias demonstrated that an nually the typhoid rate, both case and death, rises with the warm weather and the' increase of house flies, considered the greatest factor in the transmission of the germs of typhoid and other intestinal disease. . Each year for the past ten years the typhoid rate lias been con sistently lowered in North Carolina, it was stated, until last year the total num ber of deaths for the first time siuce ac curate statistics have been kept dropped under three hundred, being 208. That this total may be decreased this year the State Board, of Health is ad vising three things: inoculation against typhoid by taking three doses of anti typhoid vaccine at intervals of one week, the cleaning up of breeding places of flies and the destruction of these dangerous, deadly insects by traps, poison, and swatting, and the screening of houses to keep them out ; sanitary disposal of wastes from the body. 1 While the reports of eleven cases of typhoid in two families is unusual, it'was said, figures for the whole state as gath ered through the one hundred local quar antine officers and reported to the State I Board of Health indicate a better condi | tion than at this time last year. A l total of 404 cases have been reported tp date against !)4.> oases for tile first six months of 1022. The deaths reported for the first five months of 1022 wefe 30 as'against 32 for the same 'period this .wear. NO STOP SIGNS BUT AUTOISTS ARRESTED Interesting Point Raised at Salisbury Relative to New Law.—Men Arrested Indignant. Salisbury. July 13.—The North Caro lina railroad stop law caused an interest ing ineiden here Thursday afternoon. At the North Main Street crossing where thousands of automobiles cross each day po-icemen caught a number who did not stop according to the new law. In each case the violators of this law were re quired to put up an amount equal to the costs in county court. This is $6.45. Two of the machines caught were driven by John L. Goins, of Charlotte, and E. E. Garland, of New York, both repre sentatives s os Carbic Manufacturing Company, with warehouses and offices in Charlotte'. These young men paid the costs but. under protest because they claimed there should have been signs at the crossing like there are at other crossings in the state. So keenly did they feel that an injustice had been done and that the city or some one should see that the signs were put up that they had two signs painted and secured two posts and were proceeding to plant the posts near the railroad preparatory to placing the signs when Chief of Police Gallimore stopped them. The activities of the young men attracted many who passed but they finally desisted, threw the signs away and filled up the hole they had made for the sign post. There is no watchman at this crossing but the Southern has an electric bell to announce the approach of a train. Many local citizens have passed this crossing without stopping as there has been an idea that no stop was required here as the crossing is well protected by the bell signal and by a rule which requires all trains to stop before pulling across tin* street. The young strangers contended that the city should see that .signs arc erected instead of having officers lie in wait to catch those who cross the tracks with out any idea of violating law. The 4-ity this afternoon took up with ►Southern attorneys the matter. St having signs placed at this crossing. Three Germans Sentenced to Die. Aix La Chapelle, July 14 (By the As sociated Press). —A Belgian court mar tial here today imposed the death penalty upon three Germans and life imprison ment at hard labor upon a fourth upon conviction of sabotage. Safety For Your Valuables The highest measure of safety can be assured for your import ant papers, jewelry and, other valuables in the “loss-proof” vault of this institution. Rental $1.50 and upwards per year. , CITIZENS Bank and Trust Co. Concord, N. C. GRIN . t * V BUT DON’T BEAR IT! If the newspapers and magazines have been flashing SSO to S7O suit prices on you'and you have been wonderingHf you could stretch your limit to $35 DO THIS: Don’t let it get your goat con\e in and take off your coat. Put it up to us to please you at a reasonable price that allows a man enough left over to see if there are any fish in the lake left over. We can do it —that’s our business — to keep you cool, right and satisfied at sane, affordable prices. • '* Tropical weight Suits $25 to S3O Palm Beach Suits sls to S2O Mohair Suits S2O to $25 Why burn down? We put out cool wearables. Browns - Cannon Co. Where You Get Your Money’s Worth OUR ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE SALE * 1 .*, , f <. •! V.* -• ■* Starts Saturday, the 14th, and Continues Throughout the Month _ " REAL BARGAINS CAN BE HAD SPECIALTY HAT SHOP * * s’ We feel that to close our store Thursday afternoon is an injustice to many of our customers, such as farmers Who may break or need some repairs for his machinery, the builder who cannot anticipate his needs. / We believe in caring for cur employees and appreci ate their faithfulness. We give each one a week off with full pay, and more if he needs it. We feel that the thing to do is to close the stores Saturdays at 6 o’clock as on other days. Ritchie Hardware C« “Your Hardware Store” PHOJVE 117 . ✓ Are you entirely satisfied with the furnishings of your home? Do you feel comfortable and rested when spending some time in it, or do you feel discontented or dissastified with the furnish mgs? j If you are not satisfied, we offer you our services in planning or re-arranging all rooms in your home. As experts along this line it will not take us any time to offer you what suggestions you might need. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO, “T3E STORE THAT SATISFIES* . - »' i USE TIMES AND TRIBUNE PENNY ADS.-IT PAYS PAGE FIVE

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