PAGE FOUR rhe Concord Times Entered u second matter ■t the aostoffice at Concord, If. C-, u way. and the unright- ; eoiit- man hi> thmiglrfs: and let him re turn unto the Lord, and he will have! mercy upon him: and to our God. for he will abundantly pardon.—ls : ah 55:7. THE FARMS’ GREATEST- CROP. According to reports issued by the De partment of Agriculture yf the United States, the farm population of the nation produce.- almost three children to every two in aii urban population of the same j size. Thus the rejKuts indicate that the , 3d been mentioned in Connection with the ambassadorship, to be sure, but not seriously, and there} was no attempt to hide the surprise created in official quar ters when President Coolidge made the appoint meat. ill. public generally has shown keen interest in the appointment, also. There i" many who point to Mr. Kellogg's ca reer as a lawyer as evidence that he will make a success with the London post, while there as just as many who point - to his political career as evidence that he will not suit the place and will not be popular with the people. Mr. Kellogg s service in tlie United Mates Senate was short, and he was defeated by one of the largest majorities rvfcr—polled against a candidate in his Mste, \ His policy of agreeing with the administration was not popular with the people of hish own ►State, but that does not necessarily mean that it will not be all right with a ma jority of the people in the United States. President Coolidge was expected to ap point a man from the West to file import ant post m London. It has been charg ed by many politicians that the East at A CHANCE FOR BETTER SCHOOLS. The special school tax election which [will be held on November 20th is the (most important School question ptft before j the people of the county during the past decade and longer. It is simply the ques tion of whether or not- the people of the rural sections of Cabarrus County want their children to have better school ad vantages. And the question has to be answered by the people themselves. The matter rests with them now, and wheth er or not they vote for the tax will de termine whether the schools are to be or ganized. *' . f This proposition is the first ever offer ed by which rural lngh schools can be erected in all parts of the county. That is the most important phase of the ques tion and the phase that should be stress ed more than any other. The plan as outlined by county school authorities em braces the following, points: Eight and probably nine high schools located at points where they can be eas ily reached by the greater number of children. Continuation of the present grammar schools. Under the new plan there will be just as many teachers for the gram mar schools as there are now, with not so many students. This means the teach ers will be able to give more time to each student. Free transportation to students who live too far from the new schools to walk. The money for the purchase, upkeep and operation of the trucks is provided in the tax to be voted on. High School studies for the pupils of the new schools. In these schools ac credited High School teachers will be em ployed. Eight months school terms for every school, Thi- applies to the old as well as the proposed schools. Selection of "sites for schools so that ' the greater number of students will be in walking distance. This will mean less transportation expense. Redistrietir.g of school area for the purpose of finding the most central points for the location of the buildings. Elimination of all local school taxes now in force. The new tax will make it possible for all present taxes to be elim inated. School authorities in this and other counties who have a.careful study of rural school conditions have congrat ulated the county school board on the, plan by which they hope to give the eoun present is holding too many important offices, and althoufh Mr. Coolidge- Ims never taken an active part, or at least a talkative part in politics, he has shown by the appointment of Mr. Kellogg that he is sensitive to the wishes of the peo ple. THE PEOPLE TO DECIDE, The County Board of Education for Cabarrus has been severely criticised ~in some quarters because this county does not boast now of a system of modern high This county is not keeping pace with the rest of the State in this respect, it is charged, and on the shoul ders of tie* board members has lodged all complaint. Now the burden is going to be shifted, either to disappear entirely through the medium of the passabo of the special school tax or on to the shoulders of t h«* people of the county. The Board of Education, lias called the special election to be held on Novem ber liOth. The issue is squarely up to the people. If they go to the polls and vote for tlie tax. this county will soon have a system of schools that will com . pare favorably with the system in any .other county of the State. If rhe peo ple don't vote for the tax. then they have only themselves to blame. The board members have authority only to call the election. They have stated that a tine system of schools will be erected and put in operation if the tax proves favorable to the people. Otherwise they will be forced to stick to the present sys ‘ tem. which does not provide enough high schools for the county. There are people in the county who are ! eensuiliug and complaining about our * present schools. They have a chance to get something better now if will work for the tax. They have a wonder ful subject to put before the people and a fine people to talk to. They should put the proposition over without fail. A FINE RECORD. Few young people, serving the State in public office have made a finer record than l the one of Alfred S. Brower, Uoucord boy who for eleven years was with.the de partment of education of the State, and | who on November first will go to State ('ollege to be head of business adminis tration in file College. | Mr. Brower eutered the work of the State education department soon after he graduated from Trinity College. Several years ago lie gave up the work for a short period and practiced law in Elizabeth | City, having .studied law in addition to keeping up his 'regular work. But his ■ services were so important to the de partment that he was induced to return. 1- and for the past two or three years had , (been head of the division of finances and t 'certification. That Dr. E. C. Brooks, * new President of State College and for * many years Mr. Brower’s chief in the < education department, should take the s Concord man to State College with him * is evidence enough of the efficient man i ner in which Mr. Brower performed the t duties for the State. Mr. Brower gave t unlimited time and energy to his work it a nd his! efforts.* proved peculiarly success u ful. - t __JLU.!IJL" , j LAWMAKING MAMA. >-| , * :- i The Gastonia Gazette declares tha p "Uncle Sam is afflicted with the lawmak ,t ing disease,” and ' his case is the wors ty a system of modem high schools. The 'plan calls for a complete system of I schools throughout the county at the lease possible expense, it is pointed out, and without the county going in debt to get the work started.fl In other words if the election carries, and certainly it should, the money for the schools will be assured even before the work starts, and the schools will be possible with out great expense to any one. The present school buildings are not to be done away with because the school board finds that they can still be used for efficient grammar school work. In some counties where consolidated schools are used both grammar and high school departments are combined in one build ing. That usually means congestion and more efficient school work can be done when the teacher has fewer pupils. In one consolidated school in an adjoining county, it was brought to the attention of the school board, there are 90 pupils in the first grade. No teacher can prop erly train such a large number of pupils. Under the plan proposed by the local ! board the grammar grades, or at least the first, second, third, fourth and prob ably the fifth grades, will be taught in the present school houses and the higher ! grades in the new houses. That will | mean less congestion. Under the terms of the fall for the election as issued by the commissioners, a rate not exceeding 35 cents on the 8100 can be levied to take care of the proposed school system. Members of the school board feel that the program can be car ried out with the rate of 25 cents on tlu* SIOO. and it is almost certain that the rate will not exceed 30 cents. The board estimates that nine sclioolhouses can be erected and furnished with money raised by the 30 cent rate, and it is hoped it can be accomplished with a 2o cent rate. Every child in the county will be ben efited by the proposed system, we feel. Even the little tots will get an eight months school terra ami should they be forced to drop out later and help with the farm work they will have secured a bet ter education by the longer term white they will, have secured a better education b\* the luogcr term while they were in school. The taxes will not bankrupt any man in the county and we need the new schools. Our children whether they live in the city or on the farm, deserve the best we can give them. in the history of the world.” Facts seem 1 to support this contention. The output is so large the law librar- . ies cannot house it. the lawyers cauuot digest or assimilate it. j It is said so be a fact that the 48 state legislatures enact more laws than ( are even proposed by five great nations. ( The ratio before the war was fifty new laws in our country to one by any great nation of Europe. It takes 650 large volumes to bold in printed form the Supreme Court opinions , oti questions of constitutionality. The law library of Columbia Univer sity contains 100.UQ0 volumes and in- , creases at the rate of 8.000 a year. i We have carried this mania far enough. Every session of our legislatures and Congress sees the enactment of hundreds of laws, and most of them are unessen tial. WJ. at we need more than anything else is to educate’the ]>eople to respect , what laws we already have. Real edu cation along this line would make a majority of the new laws unnecessary. ISN’T OUR METHOD WRONG? Wj* feel that the majority of the people of the United States, and every other country for that matter, really want peace. The world has had enough war to show its horrors and in most instances its uselessness, and we are giving much thought now to the problems that will" bring world peace. But are we going about it in the right way? We are trying to couvince the grown-ups of today that war is wrong but what are we teaching the youngsters, who will bo the grown-ups of tomorrow? Aren't we glorifying war instead of con demning it? In our histories of war do we men ! tion the horrors that accompany and fol -1 low war? We do not. We point with pride to the deeds of the heroes, but wo have little to say of the horrors brought out during and after the conflicts. In other words we paint war in colors that are too beautiful. The Greensboro News is of the opinion that the revelations of what was done with money appropriated for the ans' bureau is an example of one horror of war. The News says such revelations were expected, declaring farther that "there is not a country that engaged in the recent conflict in which vultures have not settled over the battlefields to prey upon the disabled. There -never was a country that even engaged in a Avar in which this unlovely human characteristic failed to show up prominently.” The News then condemns "our present system of teaching history, declaring "it is the crime of our method of teaching history that this revolting part of the phenomena of war is almost invariably passed over lightly, if it is touched at all. How many school children ever learn, for instance, that during our own revolutionary war the British armies were constantly supplied by American farmers, and not altogether Tories, eith er, but professed Whigs as well? There is in existence a report of a British ' commanding officer, made to his own. : that describes how the ilwell • ers on .Staten Island and’along the Jev : sey shore rowed boats for miles in order to bring provisions to the British fleft lying off New York harbo”, simply be cause the Britishers paid well. Indeed, t Lord Cornwallis after the battle of Guil - ford Courthouse wrote that many of the t inhabitants of the countryside came into THE CONCORD TIMES I hi* camp voluntarily, shook hands with him, and said that they were glad that he had arrived. • "In the Mexican war the sickening story of profiteering at the expense of a suffering country was repeated. In the war between the sections the thing grew to astounding proportions on both sides; and for a generation and a half after the war pension scaudals increased in number and in stench steadily and rapidly. Who lias forgotten rhe ‘em balmed beef of the Spanisu-Auiorican war, or the cheese-cloth raincoats that were supplied to our army in France in 1918? "But are school-children* taught that these scandals are an inevitable accom paniment of war? Is it even biuted that •fresh and glorious war’ is the greatest and most effective breeder of thievery and all forms .of rascality that the genius of hell has ever invented? Is it so much as suggested to future citizens at their most impressionable age that for every hero that war produces it hatches a hundred villains? “Yet the battle of the Argonne is not as significant in our national history as the five years’ unsuccessful battle against native scoundrelism that has filled the time since the armistice. The capture of Cautiguay is not to be compared for importance to the looting of the Veter ans Bureau, for the school children of the present will in all likelihood never have to figlit the foe that held Cantignay, while they will be compelled every day of their active, lives to struggle against the ene mies of the republic who stole the vet erans’ money. "In warning children against the hard ships, danger and horrors of war we pro ceed upon the theory that human cour age has some ascertainable freezing point. whereas if the great war taught anything at al.. it taught that the aver age man has, at need, a sublime careless ness of life. The ardent spirit of the' young boy responds to glory as to noth ing else. If he is to be definitely turned | against war. he must be made to see | that war is composed of foul shame, i whose murk is lighted only at rare and distant intervals with pin-points of light, shed by the splendor of heroic deeds. The smashing of the Hindenburg line was a less perfect example of what war really means than the smashing of the Veterans' Bureau. Sergeant York was 4iot a prod uct of war at all. but of long years of peace, during which he had drilled into him those principles of honor and Lou-' esty, and that fear of God that casts out all other fear, which combined to make him a hero at the crucial moment. The war did not produce York. It merely revealed him. The typical product of war is the unspeakable Forbes. “ -The paths of glory lea l but to the grave’ is a misstatement, if the paths of glory lead through a war. In that case they lead but to the penitentiary, if jus tice is done.” WOODROW WILSON TO BE HONORED Thousands Plan to Greet Him at His Washington Home on Armistice Day. Washington. November 2.—Another demonstration in honor of former Presi dent Woodrow Wilson will occur on November 11. tin* fifth aunivessary of tlie armistice, when thousands of his friends and admirers will make what has come to be an annual pilgrimage to the Wilson home on S Street. Mr. Wilson will receive the visitors on' the front steps of his home. While lie has not promised to make an address, it is expected he will say something with an important bearing on the pres ent aspect of international affairs. Some speaker of reputation, whose name is yet to be announced by the Committee on Arrangements, will address Mr. Wil son on behalf of his friends. This will he the third armistice day demonstration for Mr. Wilson since he left the White House. Large crowds filled the street on the former occasions. Two years ng > Samuel Gompers. Presi dent of the American Federation of extended the greetings of the visitor* to the ex-Prosidont. who, though deeply affected, made no reply other than to express in a few words his appreciation. Last year Henry Morgenthau. .former Ambassador to Turkey, addressed Mr. Wilson, who responded in a five minute speech, in which he said "the United States lias remained content with the armistice and has not moved forward to peace,” and denounced the enemies of his international polices as "the puny persons that are now stand ing in the way,” who would "presently find their weakness is no longer to stand against the strength of Provi dence.” State \V. C. T. V. Meeting. Greensboro, Nov. 2.—Discussion of the part of the W. C. T. U. is to continue to take in the war to make prohibition more effective, a memorial service for deceased members, and reports of va rious officers featured today’s session of tliei annual convention of Women's Chris tian Temperance Union of North Caro lina which is under way at .Guilford Col- lege, six miles from this city. 1 Bandits Get $7,500. Philadelphia. Fa.. Nov. 2.—Five mo tor bandits wearing handkerchiefs -for masks today held up the paymaster of the John Wyeth & Bros. Chemical Co. and robbed him of a $7,500 pay roll. The holdup occurred a short distance from the chemical plant as the paymaster was returning from a nearby bank. ( Rev. ami Mrs. Lawrence Notv Living at Piscataway. Md. Rev. an«l Mrs. T. N. Law'rence and 1 children are now making their home at ' Piscataway. Md.. where Mr. Lawrence ? has u charge. He was formerly rector i of All Saints Episcopal Church of Cou -1 cord. . i J-- ! * .!Little JgQky—Vtvook ■ mother!. ? Tlmt ' bulldog looks like; Aunt Emily.*’ r Mother—“ Hush, child, don't say such t things.” Little .Tacky—“ Well, Mama, the dog can’t hear it.” iJiv** the other man a chance to talk; e he will appreciate the courtesy, and 0 you may something. 1 METHODIST PROTESTANTS CLOSE BUSINESS SESSIONS Preacliers Told That Conduct of Parents More Important Than Theory of Evo lution. Thomasville. Nov. I.—The Methodist . | Protestant conference in annual session here, closed the business sessions this 1 afternoon and 3:30 when a picture of the conference was taken. The morning session opened at nine o'clock with song and devotional exer cises, conducted by Rev. J. H. Stowe, of , High Point, followed by a business ses sion. Several matters of minor import ance were considered, including the pre sentation of letters from absentees and election of members of standing boards and committees to fill caused by resignations. The conference engag ed in prayer for Mrs. D. A. Braswell, of Concord, wife of one of the ministers. Sue was reported to have suffered a se- I vere stroke of paralysis. The afternoon session began at 1:30 with devotional exercises led by Rev. .T. F. Hosier, of Liberty. Following this 1 an address was delivered by Dr. Lewis, president of the general conference. Dy. Lewis spoke very forcefully and inter estingly for nearly an hour in the inter ests of the work of the general confer ence. He was introduced by Dr. C. L. Whitaker, of Lexington, who presided during the afternoon session. Dr. Lewis discussed the financial interests of the denomination in general, declaring that the Methodist Protestant Church as a denomination must pay its way. The speaker discussed the cost of running a church, and said the way to determine the cost of running a church was to con sult the Bible. The chief executive of the general conference urged the preach ers of the North Carolina conference to preach against the love of money and the corrupting influences of money. He asserted ’that the poeketbook must be converted a,s well as the soul. The speak er declared that the gospel of giving should be emphasized as much as any other phase of the gospel. Referring to the great need of better preaching and more frequent church ser vices for the rural church, Dr. Lewis said that two things were needed. a church building in which to have preach ing. and men able to preach the Gospel of Christianity. Continuing his discus sion of the need of a better trained min istry, the speaker asserted that leadership is essential, and said that in many of the rural churches the people are doing as they did of) years ago. The time is no longer when flic people will accept an un educated ministry, was a striking state ment of the noted divine. Dr. Lewis further declared that he was not* worrying about evolution, but the thing that should cause worry is the con ’ ‘duet of parents who profess Christianity. He emphasized the election of progres sive delegation to attend the quadrennial meeting of the general conference to be held at Tiffin. Ohio, next May. Conclud ing his address. Dr. Lewis made a strong plea to the preachers of the conference to accomplish every item of the general conference of the North Carolina con ference. His address was the outstand ing feature of the day's proceedings and was eharactereized by wit and wisdom concerning tin* great tasks now before the Tar Heel conference of the denomi nation. «•«*- CONDEMNS JAZZ CHURCH MUSIC Declares That Substitution of Ragtime for Old Gospel Hymns Hurts Chris tianity. Thomasville. Oct. 31—The feature of the twenty-eighth North Carolina Metho dist Protestant Conference, in session at the new Community Church here, was the election of .conference officers at 3 o'clock. Dr. A. G. Dixon, of Greens boro. president of the conference for the past year, was re-elected by a large ma jority. Rev. C. W. Bates, Henderson, was elected secretary for the eighth con secutive year. Rev. S. W. Taylor, Bur lington, was re-elected conference treas urer, with H. F. Surratt, Whitakers, elected statistical secretary; C. B. Way, og Thomasville, was re-elected conference reporter; V. W. Idol, of High Point, member of stationing committee. A brief business session was held fol lowing the election. , The evening session began at 7 :30 with song and devotional service conducted by Rev. L. W. Garringer, of Asheville, who presided during the session. Mayor T. Austin Finch, of Thomasville, delivered an address of welcome to the 200 or more ministers and delegates. Response to the address was made by Rev. J. E. Pritchard, of Henderson, fonner pastur of the Thomasville Church. The conference sermon, the closing . feature of the first day's proceedings, was delivered by Dr. Dixon, his theme being "The Worker and His Task.” The sermon was a gem of gospel truth, directed to minister and layman, urging the preaching qf Christ and Him cruci fied. Addressing the opening session this morning, President Dixon condemned 1 what he described as the substitution of ragtime tunes for old gospel hymns. He xii’ged a reform of the* tendency to ward the jazzy in church music and a return to the hymns sanctioned by other ■ generations. > The annual' report of the president, i in course of which he discussed church • music, was followed -by communion ser ■ vice. , Textile Department of N. C. State Col lege. The Textile Department, of the North Carolina t State College, which is the Textile School of North Carolina, opened up with a registration of one hundred day students. These students are from all sections of the South but principally from North Carolina. For eign countries are also represented— China, Japan, Wawaiian Islands and In dia. The Textile Building will be enlarged during the present year aiul new- equip ment will Ik* added which will consist of additional machines for carding, spin ping. weaving and dyeing. An important addition will be an experimental labora tory, which will be equipped with all the latest machines for testiug the lat est machines for testiug textile fabrics. Plans for the new addition to the Building are being prepared by J. E. Sir rme . and s Compauy of Greenville, South Carolina. : >. /. - Socialists Withdraw From Coalition. Berlin. Nov. 2 (By the Associated Press). —The Socialists have withdrawn from the coalition, according to the reielr, lit was anouuced today. 1- Experiments are being made with automobile bodies of compressed paper. THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER A WHOLE YEAR FREE Pay $2.00 and Get The Concord Times and Progressive Fanner Both For One Year. Until further notice we will give The Concord Timles and The Progressive Farmer, both one year for only $2.00, the price of The Times alone. You get 155 papers to/ only $2.00. The Progressive Farmer is the best' farm paper publish ed and every farmer should have it. This offer is open to both old and new subscribers. If you are already taking The Times all you hkye to do is to pay up to date and $2.00 more for another year, and The Progressive Farmer will be sent you a whole year free. If you are already paid in advance to The Times, just pay $2.00 for another year; your subscription will be so mark ed and we will send you The Progressive Farmer as full year also. Address, ts. THE TIMES. Concord, N. C. COUZENS CALLS FORD’S CANDIDATE BIG JQKE Senator Says Motor Man’s Silence is Based Upon Fiasco Fear. Detroit. Nov. 1- —Henry Ford does not announce his candidacy for the Presidency because he is afraid it will be "as great a fiasco as bis peace ship.” United Sates Senator James Couzens declared tonight, in an address at a dinner of the Detroit Republican Club. .-Referring to the automobile manufac turer, who recently criticized the Sena tor's announced stand for five per cent, beer. Couzens said : “Why does Henry Ford refrain from announcing his candidacy for President of the United States? He is afraid it would be as big a fiasco as his peace ship.” Senator Couzens and Henry Ford were associated in the Ford Motor Company when the company was still in its infancy. During the address Senator Couzens referred to the auto mobile manufacturer as a “lovable" man. and declare!! that he “loved Ford as much as any man could love another.” FINDS STRANGER BURIED IN HER GRAVE New York Woman Sues Undertaker For SIO,OOO Damages. New York. Nov. 2.—Charging that the bodies of tlu’ee strangers were buried in the grave of her first husband, forcing her to place the body of her second temporarily in a receiving vault. Mrs.. Margaret Holland today began suit for SIO,OOO against Leon E. Bailey, an undertaker. Mrs. Hollantl declaimed her first hus band, Frank E. O’Reilly, had purchased the lot in a cemetery and one daughter had been buried there When Mr O'Reilly died, his body also was placed in the grave. Mrs- Holla ml later married Andrew Holland, and upon bis death it was learned that other burials had been inadb iu the grave, although Mrs. Hol 'nnd she dH not know their identity or when the burials took place. FIVE WOMEN THRUST HOT CURLING IRONS IN EYES Man Kicked in Eye By Grasshopper. Another Accident Reported. New York. Nov- 2. —Five women se riously injured their sight within the last month by accidentally sticking hot curling irons in their eyes, it was re vealed in the census of eye accidents being taken by the National Committee for the Prevention of Blindness. A total of 318 accident were reported, an appreciable increase over September. One man. says the committee. was “Kicked iu the eye by a grasshopper." aiul a 2-year-old baby stuck its finger in its father’s eye. infection setting in iu both cases. At the Miueola Fair a huge Swiss cheese which a man was cutting for sandwiches exploded, a piece strik ing a customer in the eye. Newton Paper Held I p by Postmaster. Catawba News-Enterpries. The postmaster at Hickory looked up an old law that was enacted years ago to break up lotteries in Louisiana and gambling schemes all over the country — and sit« himself down to inform the postmaster at Newton that the said post master at Newton had better look olit as to the passing through the mails of the Catawba News-Enterprise—because of advertisements of the merchants of Newton relative to prizes that they were proposing to give away, but all the pa pers had gone out except the routes, when the instructions were received in Newton. This explains why the readers of this paper on the rural routes from Newton did not received the last paper. We carried out some of them, and others were handed out to readers who were in Newton Saturday. We repeat the re port of the circulation contest for the benefit of those who did not receive Fri day's paper. We will say for the information of the Hickory postmaster that this paper and the merchants of this town have no desire to violate the postal laws and regulations. Will say for him that this paper received the Times-Mereury with the very same advertisement in it that this “paper carried—and it came through the United States mail, too, and was mailed in the Hickory jmstoffice. Will further say that the difference between the advertisements which this paper carried and the one that came in the Hickory Record on Saturday night —is the difference between tweedledum and tweedl^dee. Want Their Goods Skinwed. New York Times. 1 their requests are due to in creased competition among themselves or froid retailers in the smaller cities and towns of the country is yot known, but some of the mail order houses were said yesterday to be asking manufacturers of knit goods to "skimp" the merchandise they buy as much as jwissible in order to allow it to be offered to their prospective customers at low prices. In buying wo men's sweaters, for instance, it was said that these concerns, want .the seams of the garments left “raw,',’- rather than having them covered, that they want the cuffs sewed on instead of fashioned on, etc. As the cheapened garments look the same from the outside, the women who buy sem do not realize that they are infereior in wearing qualities to bet ter goods that can be bought at a little higher price. Monday, November 5. M P. CONFERk^P^ ADUUESSKIi BY ,* p X"f„v -C nomination,-!! Work J ° pfrat, <>n j ** Hhomasville. X r v Carolina Methodist" iwW £ session here this H. Lewis, of Washi n „, , hoar r T the General Confer™,* ’ ~ closer co-operation anloni departments of the d.momfna G* and an apointment i n 5,,.,,, 08-m-fc. Tk* trra .„ r ,. r J' f ll[ ' ence. _ Rev. S. W. p,.,.], \ t submitted his annual report address stated that the ,1, need of a better system f, k budget. The committ ba> New Tort. wood Stokes, resumed the wi ' I; 1: today for cross examination in'die?*! Os IS* SUMIV suit f,„. , M ; '' : ■ said she could not recall having happy day. with Stokes s j !1( m riage. She emphasized she " h ‘• been at the home of K s ] Rar T J. named as co-respondent. Love Can’t Live on l keleleN Honolulu. Aov. 3. o np ,j... every 4.411 marriages was the iX', v record established in the te., ! ' Hawaii during l!f.»i> according’ t- s' ures compiled by the bureau ~f • statistics and the territorial s U „ r^ U court. The number of marriages lH . r f„ r , during the year was 2.4:t3. and tl>, • divorces granted wore r,”,. i„ ;i , : .' to these twelve applicants were divorces. PENNY COLUMN P. O. S. of A. Will Have an Oyster Sun. per and fish fry at Watt's Cm- . next Saturday. November pit;. V. ginning at 2:30 p. m. Public unit..; 5-It-p. Public Sale Monday. November 12. tttgr, I will sell all my personal pr..p-;v in No, 10 township, one mile fr . Flcwe’s store. Two mules, .dot. farming tools, hay. corn. etc. <'hari * ~ M. Barbee. .vjt """ " * ,W Notice—After November 10th \\ Win gin cotton on Tuesdays of each w<*k Brown & Flowe. Lest—Female Hound Black With White speckled breast. Name W. !». Jlmls:. on collar. Five dollars reward. W !», Hudson. Route G. fi-lt-ii. Lost or Stolen—One Bobtailed .White and tan beagle. Reward if retur: * . to Ritchie Hardware Co. 314 t-p -. Landis Hardware Company for Gal vanized Roofing. Galvanized Roofing at a Bargain. Lan dis Hardware Co. 1 -3t-<. The Bost Mill Cotlon Gin Will Hun on Tuesday and Friday of each week, lif ter November 3. Eli Honeycutt. G.. per. l--t t Agents Wanted—Handle Our Preposi tion, $5 to $lO per day. Special:; Sales Co., Kannapolis. X. <' l--'r Wanted—Boy 14 Years Old or Ow*r to work all the'time in Thues-Tribuue fire. Apply at office. Bear in M/nd That Me Give the Pro gressive Farmer a whole year frev to every one who pays a subscriptiou to either The Tribune or The Times for a full year in advance. Pay up to da'e and a year in advance to either papn and get the best farm paper paid -■ ' < every week a year for nothing. d. Pay- Your Subscription to hither Hi'' Times or The Tribune in advauc for a full year .and get The Pr«gn--ive Farmer a whole year free. ” PUBLIC SALK I will sell at public auction of no ev idence. one mile . north ot St. -I""- Church, on Thursday, Novcinl"a y 11 binning at 10 o’clock, the followii - ! sonal property : . , Lot of Roughage. Pur G'tod Binder, two Buggies. Surry, j \vo-tn'i M’iigon, Coin and t ottoii l iann. other farming tools. l-2t*-p. P. A., GOODMAN _ New F all Hats Sport and Dress Models- Felt, Duvetyiie and Velvet- All the new shades in ostne-k MISS BRACKEN BOHHET SHDP_ CONCORD COTTON MARGE 1 MONDAY. NOVEMBER > ,M ; , Cotton u Cotton Seed -• • y ' CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected "Weekly by < hm* k al( Figures name* 1 represent P for produce on the market . Eggs if Butter 2* to Country Ham . - ,li CQuntry Shoulder •• • Ji Cduutry Sides : Young eliickens JJ Hens j- to .3* Turkeys ’ ' j* Lard »I."' Sweet Potatoes Irish .Potatoes sl^s Onions ‘ £l - sl-1 ( ! Corn FARMER