BieT Ist fair p mm Korses safe to ol" the 85 I Big Stable De |bv Fire Discov- Jt Night. Ibih.d THE ■ctuke SOON | \ot Interfere ■an. Being Made E Annua! Fair to I in October. ■termhiEl oi'igin which eert.'iin to burn K.mt ih*‘ fffoiiiKls. last ■ 70 stalls iu tin* big B’abamis Fomity Fair L saved other struc- B| s being driven toward E.;ead "f toward the ■ grounds. T’ae loss is ■v.een .f'l.OttO and $lO,- ■f t he tire is believed ■e carelessly thrown in ■ tlie stalls. Persons ■the tire reported that ■ here near the middle K-hieli had >5 stalls. ■ in the stalls caug’iit ■few minutes after the ■• ( .e|| the heavens were ■ames and sparks. The ■vo directions, burning ■ more rapidity than Bill's were saved after ■ Cimeord lire depart -8,. fair grounds. Hose Bn i'. : e dam behind the Bn tiny stable, a dis- Bfeet. and . with about Bressiire on the water. Be soon out. B were standing but H'.y burned and other- Hhcy will have to be Hre sjiirir of the fair Bnstrated by the fact ■ were at work at the repairing doors nifiee building, standing’ only about l> stable, was not IB the direction of the |H•: the structure was Bn little paint will work to do on ;>e spectators, cer would be burned to take from it Several from their hinges |Buf window panes trie tire department that no call for he sat at the tire and waMied the [Bffn-en tninutes with- it was. There hose on the truck |B as s *e»n as the loca became known, to to the stable and jßtn return to ( "uncord Trio tire was ■ as h ;• water feverishly to save e but they could not Several attempts through the stalls H die blazes progress rs could not succeed only t’nc water of the fire. quarter -I at t !i<* | ■ injury. Two or j r,J quartered in the; 'bey were turned j of the race track jB' va " dis-overed. The | U •Farters the horses "as not burned. ■ Resident of the fair H■ • ■ ( aldwcll, vice JB among the first to' after the fire was F. X. Spencer, sec |W ssy have started MK " r .'“iib h thrown H. , r ! ; s il!s ” Probable in the grounds H °- v <-are!es sh ,. ss ■*T»~ th « WTT W " !v ;l '"tract- KkHl ' fi, T an,i tboir I; . al! ,jv«ilable ■ N ' f a m all ■v f » far fVMiy as ,il “ b’a/.e Hi'" 111 K:iiii,ai,.ilis Hri; 1 ;: suy ,h " wm Bte iW tnr U»wn ■bi! s f S "' orlh «'» has B •«",» h *“ le lhp B«at Ili ; h .' ,nit "'ey HkITIiI't a? ' u bo,h u , ' Il(i i'aa will ■ """ “»t, „ big THE CONCORD TIMES $2.00 a Year, Strictly in Advance. Holdup Men Slay Three In Efforts To Steal Two Autos For Their Work i i KUESTER BACKS MOVE TO CONTINUE BOULEVARD Will Ask Chamber of Commerce to Meet to Discuss Plans for New I . Highway. ! Clarence Kuester, busness manager iof the Charlotte Chamber of Com jlherce. thinks t’lie Wilkinson boule i vard should be continued on to Con cord. plans for which were outlined in The Daily Tribune Saturday. Mr. Kuester wants the chambers of com merce of (Noncord and Charlotte to meet for a discussion of the proposi tion. The Charlotte Observer today has the following to say of Mr. Kuefi ter’s plans: Thnt the peop-.e or Concord and Cabarrus county who are backing a movement for the extension of th.e Wilkinson boulevard from Charlotte to the Cabarrus capital will have the virtually unanimous support of the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce. Clarence O. Kuester, business manag er of the organization, said last night he was confident The Wilkinson boulevard, extending from Charlotte to Gastonia, is now construc tion. I Having read the Concord story in The Sunday Observer to the effect that people of Cabarrus county arc anxious that the boulevard be extend ed from Charlotte on to Concord, Mr. Kuester said he intended to call a meeting some time this week of/the local Chamber of Commerce and in vite a delegation from the Concord Chamber of Commerce to attend the meeting, in order that the two bodies jointly may. discuss the. -movement and determine what course may be proper to pursue to bring about the extension of the highway to the Ca barrus capital. Mr. Kuester spoke enthusiastically of the feasibility and desirability of a wider road or two roads from Char lotte to Concord. It is said that traffic is heavier on the road between Concord and Charlotte than on any other road in the state except that between Charlotte and Gastonia and that between High Point and Greens boro. Provision has been made for building a boulevard between Char lotte and Gastonia and between Greensboro and High “Point. The third road in rank in point of heavy traffic is said to be the Concord- Chartotte- road. The Concord pro posal seems to be to make a hard surface highway of the old Salisbury road from Charlotte to Concord by way of the Mecklenburg and the Ca barrus county homes. This would require, it is pointed out, the build ing of only about fifteen miles of road, as the old Salisbury road leave high way No. 15 about five miles north of Charlotte. It is argued that traffic is increasing so rapidly on the Char lotte-Concord road that something will have to be done before very long solve the problem. W. W. Fitzpatrick With County Agent Thursday and Friday. W. W. Fitzpatrick, southern field representative of the American Guern sey Cattle Club, an acknowledged au thority in his line, will be with Coun ty Agent R. D. Goodman Thursday and Friday of this week in the inter est of the “better sires campaign” in Cabarrus county. During his two days visit a number of different breed ers in various parts of the county will be visited and inspected. Mr. Fitzpatrick is spending Mon” day and Tuesday with George Evans, the Iredell county agent, at Moores ville. On Wednesday he will be with W. G. Yeager, Rowan county agent, at Salisbury, and will come from there here Thursday. The services of Mr. Fitzpatrick are so much in demand that he. is an exceeding ly hard man to get and the Cabarrus farmers are lucky to have secured him for two days. With Our Advertisers. With its more than 700 stores the J. C. Penney Co. is in posittofi to buy goods of high quality *, at prices ex tremely low. Late seed potatoes of the best cer tified stock at Cline & Moose’s—Red Bliss, Irish Cobbler and Green Moun tain. Caillaux Confers in London. London, Jply 12.— -(A*) —The French finance minister, Joseph Caillaux, ar rived by airplane from Paris early this afternoon to confer with Winston Churchill, chancellor of the exchequer, regarding funding of the French war debt to this country. Solicitor Pies* Goes Over the Braswell Tragedy at Tryon Saluda, July 11. —Solicitor .T. W. I’less, Jr., together with Sheriff Rob ert W. McFarland, spent several hours this afternoon going over the scene of the shooting that cost the life of Jean Braswell, Try He was a son of the late Monroe Voils. Mr. Voils was born and reared at Poplar Tent in this county. • He leaves three sons and one daugh ter, namely: I>rs. C. M. and V. V. Voils, of Mooresville; Thad W. Voils. of Louisville, Ky., and Miss Mary Ophelia Voils, of Mooresville. He leaves also two brothers and two sis ters, as follows: Recce Voils, Long Beach, Cal., C. E. Voils, Clarkton; Mrs. C. L. Walters, of Rowan coun ty, and Mrs. E. H. f Johnston, of Rock Hill. , / The funeral tobk place this after noon at 4 o’clock at Mooresville, the services being conducted in the Pres byterian Church, of which he had been an elder for many years. Gold is being mined in a marshy field near Cairo* Wales, on a site worked nearly 1,700 years ago by the I Romans. mit, a warrant charging him with siaying his pretty companion and with then turning the weapon upon himself in an effort to take his own life, will be served on him. Communication with Tryon hos pital tonight brought forth the infor mation that Sonner has an Acellent chance fiwu, recovery if some compli cations in the nature of an infection do not set hi within the next day ,or two. His condition is becoming stronger and is apparently rallying in fine shape from the bullets which tore I into his chest, one above and one just below *uis heart. ! Physicians are inclined to the be j lief that from now on his recovery I will be rapid unless some unforeseen ' ( complications crop up to upset the i present trend of his improvement. CONCORD, N. C., MONDAY, JULY 1271926 BEGIN SEARCH FOB DEAD AMONG RUINS | Marines, Soldiers and Sail? ors Enter “No Man’s Land” to Seek Those Who Died in Explosion* SHELLS ARENOT EXPLODING TODAY Secretary Wilbur and Rear Admiral Plunkett Ex pected to Supervise thi Work Among Ruins. Dover, N. J., July 12.— (A 3 )— Th| bombardment of shells which bft| rained on the countryside intermix tently since the destruction -of th* Navy ammunition depot at Lake Den mark Saturday ceased this forenoon, and dispatches of marines, soldiers and sailors prepared to enter "no man’s land” to make an immediate search for the dead. The bodies will be taken to the hospital at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Rear Admiral Plunkett, commandant of the third naval district at Brook lyn, and Secretary of the Navy Wib bur, are expected here during the day. Sixteen Known Dead. Dover, N. J., July 12.—OP)—The number of persons known to have been killed in the explosion of the naval ammunition depot at Lake Den mark, was set at sixteen today in a telegram to the chief of naval opera tions •at Washington from Captain William Sayles, senior officer at the scene of the tragedy. Worm Among Ruins. Dover, N. ,T., July 12.— (A 3)—Rav aged as by the merciless artillery at tack of an invaded area in wartime, the country surrounding the’ Lake Denmark naval ammunition depot smouldered under a summer sun to day. Marines and soldiers move cau tiously through the shell wrecked area, determined to wrest from the smoking ruins the grim secrets of death and destruction hidden among the devastated ruins. The shells which had ruined their death deal ; ng steel fragments upoif the countryside since a Dolt of light ning first ignited stores of it Satur day ceased their intermittent thunder this*morning and it was hoped that the worst had passed. The scene was reminiscent as a battlefield after with drawal of shock troops of an enemy. | The number of known dead at noon ‘ today was 15, with several times that [ number missing. It was not believ- j ed an accurate check of the human,j loss could be completed today. In the army’s Pickatinny arsenal t adjoining the naval ammunition j dump there still remained vast stores of explosives which might be ignited by a vagrant shell from Lake Den mark. If this should occure officers admitted that the whole grim disaster might be re-enacted. Hundreds of persons living in a radius of a few miles of the depot were injured when the blasts leveled their homes. Most of the dead were marines stationed at the depot. A bolt of lightning late in the afternoon struck an arsenal which exploded. The en tire force at the depot—7o men — was called out to fight the fire which followed and a second and greater explosion caught them, leaving them dying or injured. The terror and confusion spread through the surrounding country made it almost impossible to de- ‘ termine for some time the number of, casualties. Fifty persons were taken i to the Dover general hospital, many { seriously injured; 50 were taken to an emergency hospital at the Amer ican legion headquarters; 13 serious ly injured were taken to Morris town 'hospital, Morristown, N- J-, and scores of others with minor in juries were treated by physicians The entire town of Mount Hope, a few miles from the depot, was re ported destroyed and many injured were found there. It was reported that the to\sn of Hilbernia also had been leveled. , The explosions were felt for 30 miles around the depot, and pieces of steel and concrete, flaming timbers and ashes fell miles away, starting many fires. Towns and hamlets within a radius of fifteen miles of what was until yes terday the navy’s principal’ depot, bore the marks of t’lie continued hail of debris and shock of the detonating stores of powder, T. N. T. and even more powerful propellants. With the less severely injured under treatment in several hospitals and private hoihes in the hilly region in and about Lake Denmark, it was difficult to obtain an accurate cheek of those hurt in the successive blasts set off by a bolt of lightning. Naval men reported' that 18 naval magazines still were intact and it was hoped that with the dying down of the first that they would be saved. Major General C. C. Williams, chief of the. ordinance department of the army, this afternoon estimated the damage to the army reservation at about $5,000,000. Lake Denmark Plant Was Navy’s Largest Arsenal. Washington, July 12. —The Lake Denmark plant was the navy’s la r " gest ammunition storage depot, com prising more than >SO acres of land. During the war it was extended by i an addition of 183 new buildings and other extensions of considerable Sues Turfman | Mrs. William Ziegler filecj •ait in Paris, asking for a divorce from her huband, a prominent New York turfman and polo enthusiast. SONNER IS VIRTUALLY OUT OF DANGER NOW Youth Who Was Shot When Miss Braswell Was Killed Much Itn ptoved. \ Tryon, N. C., July 12,— Hahn, of this city, treasurer. The place for the next meeting was not selected. Sixteenth Anniversary Sale at Parks . Belk Co. The sixteenth anniversary sale at the Parks-Belk Co. will begin Thurs day morning. July 15tli, at 0 o’clock. T’ae store will be closed all day Wed nesday in order that the stock may be re-arranged and marked down Goods have been bought in car loads for this big sale. For the past six teen years this firm has been having an anniversary sale in July, and ev erything in the store will be reduced for the sale. See the big four pages of ads. in this paper today. Even in this big space, there are hundreds of bargains which cannot be enumerated. Go and see. • New Hickory Hotel to. Be Opened July 15- Hickory, July 11. —Ex-Gov. Cam eron Morrison will make an address at the stockholders banquet at the new $400,000 hotel which opens in Hickory on July 15. On the opening date a banquet will be held for the stockholders and their families and on the following night a dinner-dance will take place for the benefit of the public. The hotel will be open frpm 2 to 5 o’clock on Friday afternoon for an inspection of the handsome new building and its equipment which is said to be among the finest in the State. Confederate Veterans to Hold Re union in Florida. (By International Ne\*s Service.) Ocala, Fla., July 12 -—Accepting the cordial invitation extended bye Chamber of Commerce and Civic bodies of this city, L. W. Jackson, Commanding General of the Florida Division of the United Confederate Veterans has issued a general order to all members to meet in Ocala in a grand Reunion next November o, 4 and 5. This will be the 36th Annual State Reunion. Civic bodies of Ocala are planning a hearty welcome for the ex-soldiere and their wives, and an 1 elaborate program is anticipated. magnitude were made. The depot was purely a storage plant at which no work of assemb ling, breaking down, or issuing of ammunition was done. • In describing activities at the depot, the navy department said to night that ammunition supplies were received there either from the manu facturer or from other depots and were forwarded to other points upon orders by the department- ACCIDENIS KEEP UP HEAVF TOLL AMONG FOLK IN SOUTHLAND Thirty-Seven Persons Were Killed and 249 In jured in Traffic Acci dents Last Week. NORTH CAROLINA WAS THE LEADER Seven Persons Were Killed in This State.—Georgia Leader in the Number Injured With 42. MP)—Traffic in eleven Southern States killed 84 persons and injured 246, a survey conducted yesterday by the Associated Press revealed. That total compares with 37 person** killed and 24!) injured the week previous. Not included in the fatality total is the death of Lieut. J. W. McKen- Tennessee national guard avia tor, killed at Nashville last Wedenes day, when his plane became ignited while 5,000 feet in the air. North Carolina led aM southern states in the number of persons re ported killed, with a total of 7 Ala bama followed closely with six. while Virginia and Florida reported four •each. Every State reported one or ■lftore deaths frojn the traffic accidents. Georgia led all Southern States in .number of persons reported injured, with 42 for the week. Alabama was second with 2. Florida third with 31, and Virginia and Arkansas with 30 each for fourth place. A tabulation by states includes: North Carolina killed 7, injured 0; South Carolina, killed 2, injured 4. COOL SUNDAY FOUND ALL IN EXCELLENT HUMOR Low Temperatures Great Relief Af ter High Temperatures of Several Days. Everybody in Concord appeared in good humor Sunday and most peo ple attribute the mood to the low temperatures which came Saturday night and continued over Sunday. .Following three of the Hottest days of the year the mercury’s drop was a great reliefx to the city and the i sudden change did not make it J#ss appealing. There is no official weath* er bureau here but many persons in sist that tire mercury Saturday af ternoon passed the 100-degree mark and stayed there for several hours. In Charlotte it was reported that the mercury touched the 101-degree mark during the afternoon and many persons insist that just that hot there. Almost without warning a stiff breeze sprang up early Saturday night and before midnight there had been a drop of 20 degrees in the tempera ture. All day yesterday this tem perature continued, wraps being in evidence here last night among mo torists. It |s generally presumed here that ,the cool weather resulted from the storm which swept over some of the eastern states Saturday. Heavy, dan gerous-looking clouds hovered over Concord early Saturday night, bring ing a brilliant display. of lightning and some rain, but the change in temperature was too marked to have resulted in a storm that provided no more electricity than the one of Sat urday night. Deeds Recorded Here Saturday. The following real estate tranters in the county were recorded in deeds filed at the court house here Saturday. R. Ben White to,the Cabarrus De-. velopment Company for $lO 'property in No. 11 township on the Concopd- Mt. Pleasant road. The Dixie Realty and Insurance Co., several lots in City View to Laura E. Johnston, the purchase price being given as $750 and $462. J. G. Lowe and C. D. Alexander for SSOO property in No. 4 township to James C. Helms. Mrs. Arey Ballard to S. R. Brown for SSO property in No. 4 township. C. A. Isenhour to Floyd Smith for! SIOO property in Mt. Vernon Heights. D. F. Sossamon to Ida I. Sossa mon and heirs for $1450 property #n Valley street, this city. H. D. Foster to Floyd Smith for SIOO property in No. 11 township. Preacher Denounces Chain-Gang System. Greensboro, July. 11.—Rev. John F. Kirk, pastor of West Market Street Methodist Church, this city, in the course of his sermon this morning vigorously attacked the “chain-gang situation in North Car olina,” particularly alleged conditions in Stanly County. Reference was made by Mr. Kirk to the impending trial of “the convict boss in Stanly County who killed three convicts who bad been placed i?hder his care and control,” as the preacher expressed it Mr Kirk said that “something must be done about intolerable con ditions in some prison camps in the State” He declared that too much force had been employed, brutality has been practiced and that "such evils must be terminated. j Miss Alice Coltrane Dies By Her Own Hand. Raleigh, July 10.— Miss Alice Cob trane, 30-year-old inmate of the state hospital for insane, last night com mitted suicide by hanging herseir with a stocking from iron bars of be wiqjjow. She was a Randolph county woman. J. B. SHERRILL, Editor snd Publisher Who Died Early This Morning at! His Home in Lapraster, N. H. WALTER W. MEDIAN • DIED THIS MORNING Death Caused by Stroke o( Apoplexy. —Funeral Services Here Tomorrow . Afternoon. AValter W. Medlin, for the pastsev eral years a city mail carrier amram of Hie most active members at tne First Baptist Church, died at his home id Concord this morning at 1 o’clock, death being caused by a stroke of apoplexy. He had been ill for about ten days. Funeral services will be held to morrow afternoon at the First Bap tist Clnirch at 2 o’clock conducted by the pastor. *Rev. *C. Herman True blood. Interment will follow in the cemetery at Howells Church, where the deceased herd his membership for a number, of years. Mr. Medlin \qps born 4n Union county on April 28, 1883, a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Medlin. He resided in No. 10 township for several years, moving to this city about ten ypars ago. He was mar ried on December 24.' 1003, to Mite Minnie L. Hatley at her home in No. 10. The deceased was a member of Lodge No. 25 J. O. U. A. M., and was actively associated with the activi ties of the organization. He was one of the most active and most prom inent members of the First Baptist Church, being a member of the board of deacons, chairman of the church’s hospitality committee and an official in the men’s brotherhood. Surviving are his wife and the fol lowing other relatives: Two daugh ters, Mrs. J. P. Joyner And Miss M*e Medlin, of Concord, and four sisters, Airs. Mae Smith, Mrs. Esther 1 Bober, Mrs. Minnie Clark, of Concord, and Airs. Maude Miller, of Chapel Hill. STORM WRECKS CONOVER MILL; LOSS COMPLETE Damage May Run as High as Hun dred Thousand Dollars. Newton, July 11.—Not until this morning did Newton people become aware of the extent of the damage done by the tornado that passed over Newton and Conover late yesterday afternoon. The damage to the Yount cotton mill is variously estimated at frdm $25,000 to SIOO,OOO. J. P. Yount, the owner, says he has made no estimate. AVbatever it is, the lqss is complete, as there was no storm'insurance. Almost the en tire roof was taken off the south end, and about one-half of the sec ond story walls were blown in on the machinery of th6 second floor. All the cards and much of the spinning equipment were entirely demolished, and the large amount of stored up yarn badly damaged by water. Accompanying the wind was hardest rain and hail storm this sec tion has had in a number of years. Everything On both floors w T as thor oughly drenched. The damage to machinery and yarn on the first floor was from w r ater. Mr. Yount has a force of hands at work today clearing up the debris and will repair the damages to the. build ing as soon as possible and-replace the destroyed and damaged maechin ery. NEW COMPANY AIMED TO HELP TEXTILE MILLS Will Conduct Tests to Determine De tails of Quantity, Speed and Ex pense. , Charlotte, July 12.— —An or ganization for the purpose of conduct ing textile tests to assist mills in the solving of production problems, in cluding details of quantity, speed and expense,' was organized here today. Articles of incorporation naming the organization the Arkwrights, Inc, : w'ere filed-' Tests will be made in mills through out the South, it was explained. On ly one such method will be used in any mill with special attention to be paid /to comparison of results ob tained, it was added. Officers of the organization include : F. Gordon Cobb, of Lancaster, S. C., as president; Frank F. Dennis, of Lafayette, Ga., as vice president, and J. T. Hilton, of Charlotte and Ra leigh, as secretary-treasurer. Youth Is Charged With an Attack on Child of • Years. Gastonia. July 10. —Penrl Louder milk, 17-year-old west Gastonia mill emp’oye, is at liberty under bond fol lowing the finding of probable epuse .at a preliminary bearing here today jon charges pf oriminal assault with serious intent on a neighbor’s six ; year-old daughter. [ The child told the Story of the al leged attack to Solicitor John Car -1 penter in whispers while sitting in i the lap of Squire E. Lee Wiiion. Miss Virginia Bailey is visiting t friends in Lenoir. "I t WEEKS IS utAD: 10 FUNERAL PLANS ANNOUNCED Former Cabinet Member Had Been 111 For Sev eral Months and Death Was Expected. DEATH OCCURRED AT SUMMER HOME He Lapsed Into Coma Ear* ly Sunday Morning and Death Came Without His Speaking Again. Lancaster, N. H., July 12—OWy- John W. Weeks, war secretary un der Presidents Harding and* Coolidge> died here at his summer home, Mount Prospect, at Jk o’clock standard tintfe this morning. Death came from an gina pectoris and followed a long fight for health. Mr. AVeeks died without recovering consciousness from the coma irtto which he had lapsed early Sundtty morning. Airs. Weeks, his Ron, Sin clair, and Mrs. John Washington Daviedge, his daughter, were at hkt beside when the end came. Through out weary hours of watching they had never ceased to hope that he would rally sufficiently to bid them * farewell, but the pulse which had grown feeble, continued to fail, and soon death was but a matter of hourwt AA’hen Air. Weeks lapsed iuto tito coma, Dr. R. E. Miller, of White field. personal physician to Air. Weeing advised members of the family thit death was near and the expectation slight for the former secretary to throw off its spell. Announcement of the death wa* made to the Associated Press by Mr. AVeeks* son shortly before 6 o’clock. From the lodge at the top of Moirfit Prospect the news of the death •of the statesman reached this small town where Air. AA’eeks was born sixty : six years ago. Ever since his return here, the people had watched with anxiety the battle with death being waged on the hillside. ' No plans for the funeral had been made at the lodge where the family sought a little rest after their long bedside vigil. Dr. AA T iller said jjlr; body undoubtedly would be .taken,.feu Washington for funeral service*. Lancaster, nearly the northernmost of the White Mountain towns, at this season of the year is normally wear ing an air of gaiety and bustle, as the summer visitors and tourists pour in. Today the flags are at half mast and the little groups quietly discuae ing the life of the man who lay dead on Alount Prospect gave a changed appearance to the village. THE COTTON MARKET Advances Last Week * Followed hp Heavy Realizing and Selling T#* day. New York, July 12.—Sharp ad vances last 'week in the cotton mar ket were followed by heavy realizing and probably selling for a reaction early today. First prices - were steady, but slight to 10 points lower. Active f .months soon showed net losses of 25 to 26 points, October selling off Ao 16 33 and January to 16.84. The South sbld heavily here, and local selling was encouraged by rela tively easy Liverpool cables, com bined with rather more reassuring crop advices from some parts of the belt, and hope of clearing weather. There was furtheri covering and « little trade buying at the decline, but prices were within a point or the lowest at the end of the first hour. Cotton futures opened steady. Oct. 16.98; Dec. 16.98; Jan. 17.01; March 17.15; May 17.26. * # • - * f Excursion to Washington. The Southern Railway will ran an excursion to AVashington July 16tb. Round trip fare $10.50. Three day* and three nights in Washington. Spec ial train leaves Concord at 9:20 p. m., arriving at AA’ashington next morning at 8:35. ■> Tickets will be on sale July 10th. good to return on all regular trains (except 37 and 38) so as to reach or iginal starting point prior to midnight, July 20th, 1926. Weant-Bost. Robert E. Weant, well knows citi zen of No. 6 township, and Mrs. Alice Boat, of No. 5 township, were mar ried here yesterday morning at 10 o’clock by Rev. A. G. Loftin. The ceremony was performed at the home of Mr. Loftin on North Church street, the minister being pas tor of the churches on the Concord Methodist circuit. War Mothers to Meet Tuesday. Members of the Cabarrus Chapter American War Mothers will hold a meeting Tuesday night at 7:30 at the home of'Mrs. John K. Patterson. Hostesses will be Mrs. Patterson, Mrs. J. B. Sherrill. Mni. A. M. Brown and Mrs. Misenheimer. Mothers who have their records are asked to earry them to the meeting as a notary public will be present to witness them. _ . •f J THE WEATHER Fair tonight, slightly warmer in west and central portions; Tuesday partly cloudy, probably local thunder* showers in west and central portions. Moderate shifting winds, becoming southwest. NO. 107