PAGE SIX 'SM Lowest INSTALLED Bice , \ ever announced fora nJ Jfii llil install a nt-COAiPX£73S° TT TNEQXIAJLLED installation fecal ities, including a nation-wide organization of over 4,000 installation men, make it possible for Delco-Light with their quantity production to set (foe lowest price ever announced for an electric plant completely installed. And it is highly important, in pur chasing any lighting plant that you know the installed price. The installed price for the most popu lar size Delco-Light plant includes not only the plant itself—it includes the freight; it includes the actual installa Terms So Easy You. Cannot Afford To Bo Without Ons . To make it easy for you to get your Ddco-Li&ht Plant we have set a very low £rst pcryaicot a&d terms very easy. The local Delco*Light man wal explain these terms to yen. A liberal discount allowed for cash. Similar Outfit With Smeller Size Plant, 5437— 5 437 The World 9 s Largest Farm Light Plant Manufacturer NOW makes it possible for you to get your DELCO • LIGHT Over 200000 Satisfied Users OSSXXM4CHT COMPANY. DAYTON, OHIO Tarlton and Owen LOCAL AND OTHERWISE. Tlr- f-r: : Mr>. A \V. Perkins "c. • *-i : »'r* : : • c,.... Sun .• <•■ :■ jT : - n M<>:.diLv. i~ •• •• •;-< r. day. ■' new * i-*- v. hooping «-<.ugh was - a-■ ' •• ik>ifed-to ** ’ T ! . v I *' department Monday. a< ore:;.g t<> rtiaent report* Mr. t'r-iy I»e. vs La< moved fam ;iv ;Dto t’if-ir Lands,*s:.f new home on C> Ay- : Tr vj had. be *n living f,Z_ <'p i! ri-fi Sfj* "iff \V. ]’. Mabery is abb* to be our ■ ' - ' A ' >• ... - r . v , J. a ] «]a v - J; ’ rtaz’ Af-ci -«• wa> is*- •*•• 1 Tues Liv -v I; -or Os Deeds Kiio't t , ' . ■: K; : <1 MV. .M i! . y Me- p. of IV,, r . t i.e • • • of 1 hurii. s M>« ~e. «om i Mr-, -i i<. M 0 who under-j • ' ■ the < •‘,r,0.. ( -d H,,<-, ■ la-* v t-*-K. rejwjrn-d to,lav its im-1 proved. ‘ | Dr. S. L. Ibo Laii;,!). county of fi'*-j. !- no *• • :ng a ai-ati<.n of two ' 1 ' D:. I»:;• a ram 1.,-ft Sunday for t< jo ;, M .. Ituelianan and son. vi'if.ng relative- v :here. Air. L. A. Martin has moved his fain i!f‘ from t heir {■ cmer in me on Kerr Str*-er to their new home on the old iee factory road. several mile- north of The eondition < f Mrs. R. c. Corzine. who underwent ::u operation in tlie Con s cord Hospital several days ago. i- re ported today as improving a> rapidly as could be expected. Two pew eases of whooping-cough were reported Tuesday to tite county health department. Th»>e were the only eases of any kind reported during t!ie day. The Southern Railway Company has unloaded material to be used on thecun d<- pass to be constructed between thK ei.v and Kannapolis. The nateral was unloaded Tuesday night. and work <>n tin* pass is expected to be starred ! sm n. During the absence from the city of Mr. J. Lee Crowell. -Tr.. who is jui bis bridal trip. Mr. Morrison Caldwell will act as city attorney. Mr. Caldwell served in this capacity for a number of years and is well posted on the work. The Hobarron MiU has about- been completed and machinery profabl.v will be installed in the near future. The work of constructing the building began several months ago and has been rushed with all practical speed. Chief L. A. Talbirt. of the local police department, is enjoying a vacation at present. Chief Talbirt is visiting friends in Charlotte now, and later he will go to tion of that plant; it includes tho standard Deloo-Light Exide Battery composed of sixteen large capacity cells, built for long life, with extra thick plates and heavy glass jars; the wiring of your house for ten lights to be located anywhere you wish; one power outlet wherever you may want it; a standard set of ten drop lights with sockets and the installation of these lights; and ten standard electric light bulbs the complete installation ready for you to turn on the lights. This is the way to buy your eiectri# light and power plant. Cornlina to spend several days be , i ■: lulling t<> his home h< r»*. -.Mr. A. F. Faggart. who lire been un able to work for several months on ae <■- ii • of illness, has accepted a petition Mi ' ■ Ward Wholesale Grocery Coiu any. „ He began his duties with the company, ibis week. A number of defendants paid fines to talling Sl'i.s in recorder's court Monday. M'ei “of the defendants were charged with gambling, eight Iwing fined on this chaige. Other charges - were intoxication, -pc.ding and using profane language. A large -ign giving publicity to the Cabarrus County Fair has been erected ;ido>- the jiiare. Smaller signs will be ‘•reeled at ether points in the city, and a number will al-o be erected at various • ‘i jiiiimity points throughout the county. Rrick masons have begun work on the King building, which will adjoin the n w Cabarrus Savink- Rank Building. All excavation work for the srueture ha boen complied, and carpenters have com pleted all work that can be (Dm at~This time. .Material lorn been delivered for the county ’building which wifi n • erected on the county’s property near the cot ton platform. Excavation woik for the structure has begun, and actual work on the building will be started in the near future. Miss Cathlecn Wilson, county homo demonstration agent, has returned from South Carolina, where she spent her va cation. Miss Wilson is busy now assist ing in plans for a number of community fairs to bo held, throughout the county in the near future. A new room has just been completed at the. Brown Mill School. New and mod ern desks' have been installed in the room, which will greatly facilitate the work in the school. The school will open next Monday. September 17th. for an eight months’ term. Work at Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute and Mont Amoena Seminary will get underway during today and to morrow. Students in the two schools are reporting in Mt. Pleasant today, and are being assigned to rooms and classes. Actual work in the two institutions will begin tomorrow. TV 11123-24 term at Davidson College got underway during yesterday and to day. Students in the two schools there this year reported today for work. Among the Concord Students this -year will be Tom Coltrane, John M. Cook. Jr.. Nevin Supenfield, Ed. Morrison. Wal lace* Morris, Peter Roger Rost and Ray Morris. The Musette. Inc., which is selling school books again this year, is the scene of much activity each day now as the children purchase their books. Some of the books have been ready for sale for several weeks, but almost all, judg- ing by tho crowds in the store, have waited until the !a-t minute to make their purchases. Mi . Jane _Ash died Tuesdiv night began today. .and most of the Ha rt sell Mill. She was Its years of ag-* and was probably tlx* oldest woman in Cabarrus county. One daughter. Mrs. Mary Melnnis. and a number of grand children survive. Funeral services were held today at York. S. C., a for mer home of the deoeased. Parents who desire to have their chil dren vaccinated according to the State law requiring them till to he vaccinated before entering school, can get the treat ment given their children each afeernoon at elm offices of the county health depart ment. I hi- plan will he followed the remainder of the week by the lieelth de ptrtment. L i- probable that a football game will be one of the features of the Ca barrus County Fair. The local high - hool term i- trying to arrange a game with Charlotte fair week, and if this gaum cannot be scheduled some other team wiil be brought here. The Con cord highs are practicing daily now. and already have games scheduled with Greensboro. Gastonia and Salisbury. Mr. J. 11. Tew has brought to. this of ticc a number of shop made nails which lie took from a cedar chest which is claimed to be ICO years old. The nails arc of all sizes, and were made by hand before the manufacture of nails by ma chinery was known. The nails are in a splendid state of preservation, some of ’hem not even being rusted from their long use. » hoot bn 11 practice in earnest has begun at the Concord High School. Captain Hoover has his men on the field every af ternoon now, and the coaching is being dene by Prof. Moore, who will have charge of all athletics at the school this year. Most of the members of last year's team tire in school this year, and an un usually good team is expected to be de veloped. Walter Parnell, the Conc-ord man ar rested by Rowan county officers last week after a man hunt lasting 24 hours, will not be brought back to Cabarrus at present. He will be kept in Rowan and tried ■ there for shooting Deputy Sheriff Rankin, who was wounded when he tried to arrest Parnell on a capias from Ca barrus county. Parnell is wanted hero on a larceny charge. Ha be Ruth is tied now with Cy Wil liams for home run honors. Roth have driven out 35 circuit drives during the year. New York won in the National League Monday as did Pittsburgh, but < iueinnati lost and is now in third place Rill Harris pitched part of the game for Cincinnati, and allowed but two hits in five innings. The game was howev er, before he entered the box. THE CONCORD TIMES STORM AT KANNAPOLIS . CAUSED MUCH DAMAGE _ | Crops Near That City Were Destroyed and Water Poured Like Torrents Through Streets. Kannapolis was rise center, for the severe e’ectrieal and hall storm which visited this section Monday evening- Re ports from that city show that the rain which fell here was very light in com parison to the downpour at Kannapolis , and the territory inunediatelly surround- { iug that city. At several farms between this city ! and Kannapolis corn fields were com- J pletely destroyed by the hail, which fell in great quantities iu the northern part j of the county. Corn stalks were torn into shreads by the hail on several 1 farms, while on others the corn was j smashed to the ground by the wind and j rain. One Kannapolis man stated that [ water was running through the streets like rivers during ami immediately fol lowing the rain, and in several homes where w ndows were not dosed, the rain bear in to such an extent that water si-iod several inches deep on the floor. In one yard in Kannapolis. where hundreds damage was caused by it. Death of Little Frank Riggers. The entire community was shocked on last Friday, September 7th, when the news was spread that Frank, the five year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. l’hilas Riggers, was dead. Little Frank stuck a splinter in his foot. The splinter was removed and his foot seemed to he al most well on Thursday. *hi Friday morning when the child got up its par ents noticed it was unwell. They imme diately sent for a physician, who was soon there and did all in his power to [save the child's life, but to no avail. Death occurred about 12 o clock. The little body was laid to rest at Running Creek cemetery on Saturday morning at 11 o'clock. September s '. R*23. Mrs. Keach Tells How She Got to Know Rat-Snap. "Have always feared rats. Lately noticed many on my farm. A neigh bor -aid he just got rid of droves with RAT-SNAP. This started me think ing. Tried RAT SNAP myself. It killed 17 and scared the rest away." RAT SNAP comes in three sizes. 35c. j C.V. SI. 25. Sold and guaranteed by Cline's Pharmacy and Ritchie Hardware (Yimpany. Rev. J. Frank Armstrong Returns. Rev. .1. Frank Armstrong has just re turned from Siler City, where he assist ed Rev. <>. I. Hinson in a revival meet ing. Mr. Armstrong reports himself as greatly pleased with that section. Siler City is growing rapidly. It now contains one cotton mill, four chair factories, a broom factory and one of the largest washboard factories in the world. In addition the city ships carloads of rab bits. and cedar lumber that rivals that of Lebanon. The meeting was one of the most sat isfactory lie has ever conducted in so short a time —five days. About thirty - tive people will join the various church es as a result of the meeting. “It Must Have Been I>ead at Least « Months But Didn’t Smell.” “Saw a big rat iu our cellar last Fall." writes Mrs. .Joanny. "and bought a 35c cake yf RAT SNAP, broke it up into small pieces. Last week while moving we came across the dead rat. Must have been dead six months, didn t smell. RAT-SNAP is wonderful.” Three sizes. 355. Hse. 51. 25. Sold and guar anteed by (Mine's, Pharmacy and Ritchie Hardware (Yunpany. 7Kth Anniversary Dinner. Salisbury Post. Mrs. T. P. Johnston gave a 2 o’clock dinner this afternoon -art the Johnston home corner Main and Kerr streets, in honor of Mr.' Johnston, who is today celebrating his 7Sth anniversary, and also in compliment to Misse.s Dorothy and Julia Johnston, grand-daughters of Mr. Johnston, win leave early next week to enter college- Those pressent were Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Johnston. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Ki/.er. Mr. and Mrs. .T. P. McAdams. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnston. Misses Dorothy and Julia Johnston, and Misses Homiselle Mc orkle and Francis McCorkle. “I Spent 51.25 on Bat-Snap and Saved the Price of a Hog.” Jame« McGuire, famous Hog Raiser of New Jresey. says, “I advise every farmer troubled with rats to use RAT SNAP. Tried everything to get rid of rats. Spent $1.25 on RAT-SNAP. Figured the rats it killed saved the price of a hog." RAT-SNAP comes in cake form. No mixing with other food. Fats and dogs won't touch >t. Three sizes, 35c. 05c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Cliue's Pharmacy and Tent Services .at Norcott Mill. Rev. W F. Love, a traveling evangel ist, is having his tent erected near the Norcott Mill for a three weeks' meeting, lie is from South Carolina originally, but has travelled all over the country doing evangelistic work. He is a member of tlie North Carolina Conference of the M E. Church. South. His tent has a seating capacity of from 1.0(10 to 1.200. Services will be held at 7:30 p. m. each day. except Sunday, when a three o’clock service will be held also. The subject <»f the sermon Saturday night will be. -The Prayer Meeting of Hell." On Sunday night the evangelist will preach on “From Prison to Pulpit. He spent ten years iu the Illinois state pris on. The large plate glass in tin* library was broken iu a peculiar accident Monday. A porcelain insulator used by telephone workers had fallen to the ground in front of the library building, and was thrown against the with great force by an auto, one tire of which just touched the end of the insulator. The hole made was small and round and resembled one i made by a pistol shot. The glass was ; fully insured. .i IffHE ISLE OE RETRIBUTION I ' EDISON MARSHALL r.vm ©utis.BßOwn ecoMPANy, 1913 BEGIN HERE TODAY . Godfrey Cornet sends his son, Ned, on a voyage to Northern Can ada and Alaska to exchange two thousand silk and velvet gowns with the Indians for fine furs God frey offers to split the profits 75-20. the lion's share to Ned. Cornet is engaged to Lenore Har denworth. who offers to accompany Ned on the trip if he will take her mother with them. Ned hires Bess Gilbert to go as seamstress The party is bid God-speed by hosts of friends. Godfrey Cornet comes to the dock to bid Ned good by. He asks Miss Gilbert to give his son a woman's care. Mrs. Hardenworth objects to eating at the same table with the seamstress. Bess makes up her mind to avoid the three aristocrats as much as possible. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “That’s three for each table, con sidering one of the men has to stay at the wheel. Why shouldn’t one of these plates be removed?” “Os course, if you prefer It.” Half ashamed of his reluctance, he called the negro and had the fourth plate removed. "Miss Gilbert will eat at the second table,” he explained. When the man had gone, Ned turned in appeal to Lenore. “She’ll be here in a minute. What shall I tell her?” “Just what you told the servant — that she is to wait for the second table. Ned. you might as well make it clear in the beginning, otherwise it will be a problem all through the trip. Walt till she comes in, then tell her.” Ned agreed, and they waited for the sound of Bess’ step on the stair. Mrs. Hardenworth’s large lips were set in a hard line: Lenore hod a curious, eager expectancy. Quietly Julius served the soup, wondering at the ways of his superiors, the whites, and the long seconds grew into min utes. Still they did not see Bess’ bright face at the door. “Send for her,” Mrs. Hardenworth urged. “There’s no reason you shouldn’t get this done and out of the way tonight, so we won’t have to be distressed about it again.” Wholly cowed. Ned called to the negro waiter. “Please tell Miss Gil bert to come here,” he ordered. A wide grin cracking his cheeks, failing wholly to understand the real situation and assuming that “de boss” had relented in his purpose to exclude the seamstress from the first table, the colored man sped cheerful ly away. Bess had already spoken kindly to him; Julius had deplored the order to remove her plate al most as a personal affront. Again they waited for the seam stress to come. The women were grim, forbidding. And in a moment they heard steps at the threshold. But only Juiius, his face beset with gloom, came through the opened door. “De lady say she ’stremely sorry,” he pronounced, bowing. “But she say she’s already promised Mista McNab to eat with him!’' VII THE Charon sped straight north, out of the Sound, through the inside passage. Days were bright; skies were clear, displaying at night a marvelous intricacy of stars; the seas glittered from the kindjy September sun. They put in at Vancouver the night following their departure from Seattle, loaded on certain heavyv stores, and con tinued their way In the lea of Van couver Island. Straight north, day after day! To McNab, a man who had cruised ten years on Alaskan waters, the air be gan to feel like home. It was crisp, surging cool in the lungs, fragrant with balsam from the wooded islands. Already Ned had begun to readjust somd of his ideas in regard to the North. It was no longer easy to be lieve that his father had exaggerated its beauty and its appeal, its desola tion and its vastness. It was a strange thing for a man used to cities Air. I,inn ami Family Leaving Alt. Pleas ant.- Rev. (A. Linn. Airs. Linn alid little j daughter, of Alt. Pleasant, are today ! packing their household goods and stor-: ing them, preparatory to leaving.' Air.' Linn will go to Hartford. Conn., where , he will pursue a higher course of study in the Theological Seminary, while Airs. ! Linn and daughter will go to Salisbury to make their home during the absence of Air. Linn with Airs. AV. F. Snider, mother of Alts. Liun. After visiting rel atives and friends in and near Salisbury for several days Air. Linn will leave to take up his studies. Air. Linn has been pastor of Iloly Trinity Lutheran Church ip Alt. Pleasant for several years, and lie and Airs. Linn have been very popu lar and where they have done a good and faithful work, anti their leaving is a source of regret among not only the Luth erans of the town, but the public gener ally. The mother of Air. Linn, who has been making her home in Alt. Pleasant with him. will go to Hickory to live with her sister. Head What l’. S. Department of Agri culture Says About What Two Rats Can Do. According to government figures, two rats breeding continually for three years produce H 59.709.452 individual rats. Act when you see the first rat. don't wait. RAT-SNAP is the surest clean est. most convenient exterminator. No mixing with other foods. Drys up af ter killing—leaves no smell. Cats or ! dogs won’t touch it. Sold and guar-j antecd by Cline’s Charmaey and Ritchie Hardware Company. Left Yesterday on Trip to Canada. J. B. Sherrill, publisher of The Trib une, left Concord yesterday afternoon for : New York and Canada. He will spend several days in New York, and on Mon* i to go day upon day without seeing scarcely a village beside the sea, a single human being other than those of his own party. Here was one place, it seemed, that the hand of man had touched but lightly if at aIL The impression grew the farther north he went. Ever there was less sign of habitation upon the shore. The craft ; passed through narrow channels betw-een mountains that cropped up from the sea. it skirted wooded islands. It passed forgotten Indian villages where the totem poles stood naked and weather stained before the forsaken homes of the chiefs. The glasses brought out a wonderland scene just beyond the reach of their unaided sight— glacier and snow-slidfe. lofty peaks and waterfalls. The mystic, brood ing spirit of the North was already over them. They had touched at Ketchikan, the port of entry to Alaska, and thence headed almost straight west, across the gulf of Alaska and to ward the far-stretching end of the Alaskan Peninsula. During these days they were far out of sight of land, surrounded only by an im measurable ocean that rolled end- JULIUS, HIS FACE BESET WITH GLOOM, CAME THROUGH THE OPENED DOOR. lessly for none to see or hear. They were already far beyond the limits of ordinary tourist travel. The big boats plied as far as Anchorage at the head of Cook Inlet —to the north and east of them now —but be yond that point the traffic was large ly that of occasional coastal traders, most of them auxiliary schooners of varying respectability. They seemed to have the ocean almost to them selves, rJever to see the tip of a sail on the horizon, or a fisherman’s craft scudding into port. And the solitude crept into the spirits of the passen gers of the Charon. It became vaguely difficult to keep up a holiday atmosphere. It was in creasingly hard to be gay, to fight down certain inner voices that had hitherto been stifled. Some way, life didn’t seem quite the same, quite the gay dream it had hitherto been. And yet this immeasurable vista of desolate waters —icy cold for all the sunlight that kissed up-reaching lips of the waves—was some way like a dream, too. The brain kept clear enough, but it was all some what confusing to an inner brain, a secret self that they had scarcely been aware of before. It was hard to say which was the more real—the gay life they had left, the laughter of "which was Btill an echo In their ears, or these far-stretching wastes of wintry waters. They couldn't help but be thought ful. Realities went home to them that they had no desire to admit. A fervent belief in their own sophistica- | day. September 17th. in company with I several . hundred publishers from various j parts of the country, lie will be the guest of the International Paper ('<>.. on a • four days irip to Canada. The prime ob ' ject of tlie trip will be to visit and in spect the new paper mill of the company at Three Rivers, Canada, which is said to be the last word iii paper making. A visit will also be made to Montreal and Quebec, and a trip taken on the Sr. Law rence River. Tire party will reach New York on the return trip on Thursday evening, September 20. Death of Miss Estelle Black welder. Air. 11. Al. Blaekwelder of this city, has been notified of the death in Ashe ville Alonday.of his niece, Aliss Estelle Blaekwelder. who had been at Oteen for some time. A message to Air. Black wel dor stated that Aliss Blaekwelder died Alonday afternoon at 4 o'clock. , The message also stated that the body would arrive in Concord this afternoon on train No. 40. All funeral arrange ments have been made, the message add ed, but they were not announced. Aliss Blaekwelder is a daughter of Airs. 11. 11. Blaekwelder. of this county. She had been at Oteen for some time. .With Our Advertisers. Everything in hardware at :in* stcre of the Ritchie-Caldwell Company. All kinds of school needs —Parks Helk Co. can supply it. See new ad. today •n pag etwo. The Green Ribbon Club, formed in j Paris to encourage friend hip between! shy and lonely people of . both sexes, has j just recorded the first marriage between i two of its members. Extensive workers report growing interest in permanent pastures in North Carolina. (Livestock and pastures are two great needs of the State. ' Thursday, Sept. 13 102 , - ’ - —0 tion had been their donurarv of view, a disillusionment and a ism that was the tone of their „ tion denying all they couil or hear, holding them<-v , ciliously aloof from Rat' wonder and simplicity blesses little children- but hT SUI something that was *** yond them. They couldn't away. They couldn’t cast it c “» i-v a phrase of cheap slan»- it in order to hold fimTto philosophy of_Self. Her thing that shook their old a-- self-love and self.suffic'tcv 1 foundations. They thought knew life, these three; they were bigger than life - b a* - b “ l had mastered it and found 0 -- stripped all delusions from i t * now their unutterable eone-i*’ -h pillar of their lives, was e to falL This sunlit f??! for them: too big and too r too old. “ ~ Th e trouble with Ned's genera: was Dmt it was a godless genera, tion: the same evil that razed Eh v v lon to the dust. Ned and his yVi had come to be sufficient unto tw" selves. They had lost the wi’-u-. r " and fear of life, and that nothing less than the loss o f**their wonder and fear of the great Vt*-'-- of life. To these, life “had been a game that they thought they had mastered. They had" laughed to scorn the philosophies that a hundred generations of nobler men had b:"• up with wondering reverence. Made arrogant by luxury and ease, they knew of nothing too big for them, r.o mystery that their contemptuous gaze could not penetrate, no wonder that their reckless hands could do* unveil. They were drunk with the • own glories, and the ultimate Source of all things had no place in their philosophies or their thoughts. I* was true that churche's flourished among them, that Charity received her due: but the old virile faith, the reverent wonder, the mighty urze that has achieved all things that have been worth .achieving were cold and dead in their .hearts. But or. here in this little, wind-blown craft, surrounded by an immensity of desolation beyond the power of their minds to grasp, it was hard to hold their old complacency. Their old philosophies were barrenly insuffi cient, and they couldn't repel an ever deepening sense of awe. The wind, sweeping over them out of the vastness, was a new voic-, striking the laughter from their lips and in stilling a coldness that was almost fear in their warm, youthful blooi The sun shone now, but soon vest areas, not far off. would--be iock-i tight with ice; never the movement of a wave, never the flash of a -.a bird’s wing over the wastes; and the thought sobered them and p-.-rhaps humbled them a little, too. Sirr.e-° times, alone on the deck at r.:rtt, Ned was close to the dearest reality, the most profound discovery that could possibly touch h:s life: that the dreadful spirit of God moved upon the face of these desolate wa ters, no less than, as is told in Gen esis, at creation's dawn. Everything would have been differ ent if they had come in a larc-r boat, for instance, one of the great liners that plied between Seattle and Anchorage. In that case, likely they would have had no trouble in retain ing their old point of view. The brooding tone of the North would have passed them by; the journey could still have remained a holiday instead of the strange, wandering dream that it was. The reason was simply that on a liner they would not have broken all ties with their old life. There would have been games and dancing, the service of menials, social intercourse and ail the superficialities and pretenses that had until now composed their lives. Their former standards, the attitudes from which they regarded life, would have been unaltered. There would have been no isolation, and thus no darkening of thetr moods, no haunting uneasiness that could not be named or described, no whispering voices heard but dinu., out of the sea. They could have re mained in their own old ramparts 0 callousness and scorn. But here they were alone —lost and far on an empty sea. under an empty (Continued in Our Next Issue) , Concord and cert.-m. l ,!ir ; county were visited l»\ 1 storm Alonday uiji Lt. rain downfall wa- ver> p . tiling was severe t<.: • .--one section ot the 11 reports, some hail f* ,; h a > as the reason for the nut]’ j following the storm > ; learned, no serious - I the storm. Soin< <. a- L . .cotton near Kannap", lish sparrows were h stones. Air. John K Esp*: . 1 ' u " : C.. who is eotlliee-. • ton News ot t!ia f 1 , • spt tiding hi.- va< ai :<• > Wall nan at the S'. 1 day returning home. There will b. afternoon at 1 ° 111 ” • FAKHV STKU I |N ’ " V< , las Shar, „HI,V v r < ~ Sufferers Seek^ Backache V Kida- e Distxessed with nrinaL Want a reliable kidi Don't have to •"'. ' (i Concord peopl'* ! ’ street in Concord has Here's one Cone - 1 • . • Let Kannie I’" ! ‘ . . M Depot St., tell it. n " is a heavy strain , .... t-« j neys and I ha'* * z I ache, especially " h ‘ n ' ‘" k had an aching ;my kidnesy. ‘ K . | right at all. i ' : ‘. , • • •• :: Pills and they sireng , put m.v kidneys m: " ( , ( . a>rv V ‘° { . Price 00c, at a a o j siu»pl.v ask for a fa -an** " j Doan's Kidney P>ll^ e Alfrs., Buffalo, A. L Jg