PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN Young Cow and Calf For Sale. Also calf 13 months old.' E.T. Gaines. , Phone 35M. 14-lt-p. Cuban Pineapples, Grapefruit, Apples, oyadges, bananas, lemons, tomatoes, lettuce, new potatoes, beets, beaus, squash, cukes, etc. Lippard & Bar rier. • 14»lt-p. For Sale—3 Modern 7-Room' Cottages. cheap. Cottages, vacant lots, splen did farms, one large timber tract, t\Co tracts in Alexander County on sand clay road, good buildings, 120 and-100 acres, will exchange 100 tract for city property. Six room cottage ou large lot in Kannapolis. Jno. K. l’atterson. Real Estate Agent. 14-4 t-p. Salesman Wanted. Coucord. Good Prop osition. Address Energetic, care Trib une. 13-3 t-p. Wanted —A First-Class Spindle Plumber. None but the best need apply. N. F. Harris. 22 Academy Street, Concord. 13-2 t-p. Auto Owners—Read Big Ad. Save $5.00. J. A. Glass. Phone 412 W. 11-Ot-c. Big Barbecue at Kindley’s Mill Thurs day. June 14th. Square dance Thurs day night. R. F. Kindley. 9-st-p. > For Sale—Pony and Saddle. Buggy and harness. Bargain. IST South T'uion St. Phone 587. 1-ts-chg. Heavy Increase in March In Package Car Loading. During March, 1023. there were load ed on the Southern Railway System 20,- 408 merchandise paekage ears with 440.- 211.322 pounds of freight, sin average loading of 15,142 pounds, as against 25.- 01!) cars with 337.012,001 pounds of freight, an average loading of 13,4!>4 pounds, in March, 1022. This was an in crease of 32.2 per cent, in the volume of freight handled, 17.7 per cent. Hi the 'puuiber of cars, and 12.2 per cent, in the average loading. ‘ On Dines East 17,523 cars with 253,- 705.128 pounds, an average of 17,723 pounds per car, were loaded in March. 1023. this being an increase of 42,5 per cent, in the volume of freight and 4.7 per cent, in the average load. On Dines West 11,045 cars with 192.- 500,104 pounds, an average of 10.110 pounds per car, were load (Ml in March. 1023. this being an increase of 10.0 per J The Lye You Can Trust I ■ Genuine Red Devil is the lye you can trust for quick sure re- H ■ suits. It is economical because of its concentrated strength. B ■ Don’t be put off with cheap wasteful brands. Ask your gro- H ■ cer for the can with the smiling red devil on the label. ■ 1 Wm. Schield Mfg. Co., St. Louis, Mo. I ■| J I ] fl I I i I Southern Railway System I Announces I Popular Excursion to \ Washington, D.C., June 15,1923 | Round Trip Fare From Concord $9.50 Tickets Good Three Days | Schedule Special Train and Round Trip Fares ? Leave Schedule Round Trip Fare II Charlotte 7:30 P. ss, SIO.OO I Newell ....7:42 P. M. 10.00 S Harrisburg .» 7:53 P. M. 10.00 i ; Concord 8:08 P. M. 9.50 Kannapolis 8:20 P. M. 9.50 !! = Landis 8:28 P. M. 9.50 I China Grove 8:35 P. M. 9.50 Salisbury 9:00 P. M. 9.00 l Arrive Washington 7:50 a. m., June 16th. Hound trip tickets on sale all stations North Carolina west of Ma- jj [ rion and east of Raleigh. I’ullman sleeping cars and day coaches. Big League Baseball Games Washington Americans vs. Chicago Americans, June 16-17. , * I ■Washington Americans vs. Cleveland Americans, June 18. See Ray Schalk, Walter Johnson, Stanley Coveleskie and other j ij great stars in action. Tickets good returning on all tegular trains (except No. 37) up to | and including train No. 33 leaving Washington, D. G., 9:35 P. M. | June 18th, 1923. V Make your sleeping car reservations early. !„ For detailed information apply to ticket agent or address ** I R. H. GRAHAM, I Division Passenger Agent. Charlotte, N. C. U Tea Tea. Try a Glass of the Best. Seal J Brand. Dippard & 'Barrier. 14-lt-p. I Inst—Clover Leaf 82x4 Casing on Rim. Notify for reward W. W. Morris. 14-4 t-p. Lost—Black Pocket book Containing about twelve dqjlars, Monday after- ' noon in the stores or on the streets of Concord. Return to 280 Kerr St. Re- . ward. 12-3 t-e. I Wanted—A dob By Able Bodied White man. Married, experienced in mer chandising. Knows city. Drive any j make truck. Not afraid of work. Ad dress “Worker/’ care Tribuue. , 13-21-p. Wanted, By Couple—Three Rooms or house furnished or unfurnished. Would rent house while Occupants 1 away for summer. Box 453, City. 12-st-p. >'-• 3 For Sale—l House on Depot St. Two on Depot street. See D. S. Bond. 140 IV. Depot St. !2-ot-p. | Lost—Male Pig Weighing About 45 pounds, with brown and black spots. Reward. Central Case, S. Church Street. 11-4 t-p. Adding Machine Paper, 20 Cents a Roll, 3 for 50 cents, at Times-Trib- j une Office. -r—?•== - ; ; cent, iu the volume of freight and 22.(> ( per rent, iu the average load. j The Eastern District had the heaviest average loading. 17.G1H) pounds per car, ' ■wn increase of Bl.ti per.cent, over March. > 1922. and the Southwestern District ■ came second with an average of 17.085 | pounds per car, an increase of 20.5 per , mit - At The Theatres. **A Fool’s Paradise,’* a Paramount ; feature nicture, is the attraction today . at the Star Theatre. Tlie Piedmont Theatre is again show-! ing “The Old Oaken Bucket** today. “A Broken Doll.*’ and Buster Keaton . in “The Love Nest’* are on the program : at the Pastime Theatre today. A movement has been launched for the erection in Washington. D. (*., of I a $500,000 memorial to the sacrifices and services in the World War of American women.’’ TT DEATH HERE YESTERDAY OF MRS. P. C CALDWELL ’ Death Pune Suddenly Following Stroke I of Apoplexy.—Funeral Services To- I day. | Mrs. D. C. Caldwell died yesterday ! afternoon about 2 o’clock at her home on Georgia avenue, following a stroke of apoplexy. Mrs. Caldwell’s death was un expected and came as a shock to her I friends and relatives here. She was in ( her usual health yesterday morning un til about 10 o'lcoek when she was striek , en, her condition growing gradually I worse uutil the end. Funeral services will be held this af ternoon at 4 o'clock at Back Creek I Church. Mecklenburg county. No ser , vices will he held at the home here. In | termant will be made at the Back Creek cemetery. Mrs. Caldwell was about 55 years of [age and had made her home here for | many years. She was identified with the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church here for many years and always took an 1 active part in Church work. Before her marriage she was Miss Flannigan, of Sharon township, her family being a prominent one of Mecklenburg county. She is survived by her husband and a number of other relatives. TENNIS TOURNAMENT Will Be Staged at the Concord Y. M. C. A. Beginning Next Week. The annual Tennis Tournament for the Tennis Championship of the City of Concord will begin next Tuesday. Jam* ’l9th, at the Y. M. C. A. teuis courts. I That the coming tournament will be I one of the most successful and most | hotly contested that has ever been played in Concord is practically an assured fact | —many of the competitors have been ’practicing daily and are in mid-season I form. The Courts are in excellent shape , due to untiring work by the Y. M. C. A. , management. Twenty-four names are entered in the list—comprising the cream of local | tennis material. Three matches a day. beginning at 3 p. m. Tuesday, will be played. The tournament will be eoutin ! lied until the winner is determined by his victory in the finals. I The I'. 8. Lawn Tennis Association I rules Will govern the matches. Following is the outcome of the draw Iby a committee for the first day's play : | Jno. M. Cook. Jr.. M. B. Slierrin: Rev. j\V. C. Wauehope, Leslie Bell; Robert I Dick. Jr.. M. 8. Young: Zeb Morris. Ed. Morrison; Joe Foil. Ben White; Miles J Wolff. Tom Coltrane; Rev. Jesse C. Rowan, Kay Patterson: Xevin Sappen- I field. Max Warlick: Farrel White. Joe j McCaskill: W. H. Muse. Jr.. A. R. j Howard: lihea Morris. Prof. Prindell; Bob Bell. Arthur Faggart. Others desiring to enter the tourna ment are asked to notify Joe McCaskill at the Y. M. C. A. Yes, These Stoaways Ripened Some Bananas. New York, June 12.—Nineteen Ja maica negroes who stowed away, in the hold of the Norwegian freighter Saina told officials on Ellis Island today how they unwittingly ripened green bananas by drinking planters' rum and then sleeping on the fruit. The heat thus‘ produced brought the bananas to the height of their flavor in 24 hours, they said. The men will be deported. ‘ We Guarantee King’s NnTreatment the new. scientific prescription which j brings IMMEDIATE and PERMA NENT RELIEF to those tortured by Indigestion t Suffer no more from Gas pressure. ( around the heart —Nervousness—Diz- ; ziness—lntestinal Indigestion—Toxic j Condition Heartburn lrritated i stomach—Excess acids, and other ills | commonly caused by Indigestion. Buy ij 12 ounce prescription today. Take it under the terms of our Guar !| ante**. i KING'S XX DRUG STORE S Union Street CABARRUS DRUG CO., 14 S. Union Street Exclusive Local Agents FM CONSTIPATION Black-Drught Recommended by an Arkansas Farmer Who .Hat Used H, When Needed, far 25 Years. Hatfield, Ark.—Mr. aW. Parsons, a well-known farmer on Route 1, Ms place, says: “I keep Black-Draught in my home all thjjtime. It is the best all-around medicine I have ever found for the liver and (or constipation. We began using it 25 or more years ago and have used it whenever needed since. I have never (buna any other medicine as good for constipation, and that was what I suffer ed with tilt I began using Black-Draught. Black-Draught corrected (his condition, and now we use it for the liver and for indigestion—a tight and sluggish feeling after meals, for bad taste iu the mqutb*, and sour stomach. “My wife uses it for headache ana biliousness. It sets on our shelf and we don’t let it get out. It has been a gnat help to «s. i believe a great deal of aickness is earned by buntat eaNag aad coneßpaHon, and Btack-Dittgbt, if taken I right, will correct this conation.’’ Oat Thedford’t, the original and only I genuine Black-Draught powdered Bver I medicine. Sold everywhere. NC-130 1 ; ’ * THF CONCORD DAILY TRTBUNI ..'ll - , ' ■jU III! ff i n-u ■! 1.111 'll irrn "■ »■ ila i m—uaMas—a-a^—u———aa— a< What is “STANDARD”? .1 / > : f v a ~ that by *which others ate compared • '» , It is as true of “Standard” Motor Gasoline as it is of die Government \ yardstick and Troy pound. “It is as good as Standard,” says the dealer who does not know where his gas- - oline conies from. And maybe it is the carolinas .vr char- —but you can safely stick to the dredsof pumps tiiat otigmal. A distillation test will re ' veal the uniform high quality which vSggjjV has established "Standard” as the all-round pacemakerln quick start ing, smooth acceleration and big, economical mileage. "Standard” -specifications mean that uniform satisfaction can be bought at thou | sands of Standard pumps. I; STANDARD OIL COMPANY fjt- “STANDARD” ' Motor Qasoline NOTED PRISONER STARTS ON TRIP TO BOMBAY Inspector George Miles leaves New OHeans With Former Lieut. Colonel Charles Collins. New Orleans. La.. June 13.—Inspector George Miles, of Scotland Yard, had passage today on the liner Comas, for S' EVENTY-SIX Years Young, LOmS C. POST Says He At Last, Cured of Rhoumatißm. “I am now past 76 years of age and never feitTbetter iu my life,” i said Louis 0. *Post of Washington Piace, Newburgh, Y., ‘‘and I can hold up my eud of a day’s work with the best of them.” ‘‘When I commenced to take 1 NEUTRONE PRESCRIPTION ‘99’, < 1 I was a broken-down old man, my , joints were stuf and swollen and the j pains were so.bad that I could hard ly sleep at night. ‘‘No one ever suffered more from I Rheumatism than I did. I was both a * physical and nervous wreck, com- , ! pletely wom oat, and thought my time had cpmo. ‘‘Today, after a few weeks’ use ; of Neutrone Prescription ‘99-’, I i have as much / »trength and energy as I ever had. I do not feel a day over 40 years .of age, earn my own living and ask no favors of any man, and all my frjends are telling me • how well I look and act. K "To tell the truth, I do not know what would nave become of me if I Neutrone Prescription ‘99’ had not removed all my rheumatic troubles and gifen ms a new lease on life, , 1 and I frill praise it to the end of my J, daysi Neutrone Prescription ‘99’ | certainly put me on my feet when , everything else had failed.” Netfiroae Prescription ”99” ns# comss in Tablet Form as weH as. Liquid Form, whichever is preferred.’ Leading Druggists everywhere. I Gibson One Wore, Now York, for himself and Charles Glean Collins, former Lieut. Col. iu the .Brit ish ' army, and probably New Orleans’ most noted prisoner. It was the first lap of a jourpey intended to end in Bombay. Indian. Colonel Collins. . a veteran of the Boer war. who served under Kitchiner in Egypt and duriug tlie World War. won citiation for gal lantry in the fighting at Autwerp, Gal lipoli and in France and wliqxfurther distinguished himself as a courier be tween I’etrograd ami Vladivostok, is charged by a Bombay firm with having swindled it of $20,000. Col. Collins has lost oue of the longest extradition fights in the history of this country—a fight that lusted more than • i . 029 AM QJOAM QfJSAM.^ Ever Hear of Stale Gas? ' f . Folks don’t buy a thousand cubic feet of gas and then ' , have to throw away pdrt of it because it’s wilted os old. > . ' ' GAS IS MADE AND DELIVERED AS NEEDED AI> T D | USED. There are no “left overs” or stale portions. The , v meter, at your command, pleasures out the quantity you ’ i want—no more. ‘ tGas service is a waste-defying service—oiean, dependable, f If it’s done - efficient. l | with heat you ; can ** That’s one reason why it is so §mall a part of our living er wi . expense. Compared with other essentials, its cost is only a, * | / . fraction of its real value. w ’ / , N . i.;v r ‘ M L Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. >^wi«iiwwuww«i»wiwi»i»iw«i»oiwwwwii»ii>iwwi|ii«ij| five years, that see-sawed between tlie United States District Court in New York and New Orleaus, reached the Su preme Court of the United Btates four time, and cost thousands of dollars more than the amount invloved. The former officer, denied bail, lias spent three of tlie five years in jail in New Orleans, and Arthur Fuller, police inspector from Bombay, who madwtlu* arrest here in 1918, remained in The city two years awaiting the outcome of the extradition proceedings, only to be ordered home without his prisoner. Grandmother of Twelve to Be GraMoi by Her Sons’ Alma Mater. State College, Pa., June 13. —A grand- Thursday, June 14, 1923. mother of twelve children is to be grad uated from the Pennsylvania State Col lege at the commencement exercises this year. She is Mrs. Sarah Shoemaker Far ley, fifty-seven, *of Swartlimore. Pa. Twenty-three years ago Mrs. Farley was left a widow witli four young children. She v saw three boys graduate from col lege, two of them from Penn State, and sent her daughter to Swarthmore. When all but the youngest had married she decided to carry* out her Ideals of independence and a profession and start ed studying scientific agriculture as two of her sous hud done. There are 2.174 different characters In the works of Charles Dickens.