Tuesday, July 24, 1923. GUT EDGE INVESTMOT > ~ i That Magic Turn that means so much to your future rings true when it relates to city lots and I suburban property in or near .■■ ' s Concord and Kannapolis “Tlte Sister Cities” Your Future Depends Upon What You Do Now Here Is Your Opportunity City Lots, Residential Lots and Small Acreage Tracts to be offered at our / , \' \ SATURDAY, JULY2BTII A UPTIHAI Olt I TSATURDAY, JULY 28TH ' 10:30 A. NtT AUu I IUN uALt 3:00 P M t V . See Full Description Below Saturday, July 28th, 10:30 A. M., Mt. Vernon Heights Mt. Vernon Heights consist of 60 very desirable residential lots located on Washington, Avenue, Reed, Jefferson, Lafayette and Adams Streets in a very desirable section cf Concord- Most of these lots are furnished with all modern conveniences offered by the growing: and progressive city of Con cord, such as electricity, water, sewerage, located only about five blocks from the business section of the City, convenient to all of Concord’s industries. A good location for your home. A property that should increase in value steadily as Concord continues to grow. As you know these lots lie well, are *' well located, and your price will do the buying on very easy terms to be an nounced at the Sale Saturday morning, July 28th, beginning at 10.30 A. lft. Saturday July 28, 3:00 P.M., Chas. R. Cline Home Place, Located on the W es t side of the National Highway between Concord and Kannapolis, fronting for a distance of 2,000 feet on this recently paved Highway, just half way between Concord aftd Kannapolis, only 1-2 mile from one of the finest high schools in the County and only 2 miles from some of the largest mills in the State that give steady employment and good wages to thousands of people. Here you have all conveniences offered by a home in the city, telephone connections, free mail delivery, electric lights and gas line main by the property, only a few minutes walk or ride from either Con cord or Kannapolis, convenient to your work either in the City or in the mi 11s, in fact just as desirable a location as you could wish for, at the sakne time free from the dust and dirt of the congested sections of the town, a place for your cows, chickens, garden and truck patch- A real home, a place for the healthful upbringing of your children. ‘ —• i We are selling something that every living, breathing human being must have. You either buy real estate and enjoy the happiness of its possession or else you must pay someone else a rental for the thrift which they have shown in having bought what you need: -i' * . , ' . V" The terms on these sales are easy and within the reach of all. Remember the time-the place —the day. Betheren Sales start promptly. SALES CONDUCTED BY , Atlantic Coast Realty Company, Agents - "The Name That Justifies Your Confidence" Offices: VA., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. X&— , Members of North Carolina Real Estate Association. * t / HIE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE the ISANDMAN STORY f wo. LITTLE DEWDROPS fJJWO little drops of dew renting on a v rosebush one morning trembled delight as the rays of Mr. Sun came shimmering, through the garden treetops. “Ah; we shall soon be beautiful,” iaid one; “all the colors of the lovely rainbow will soon be ours. (JJome. let ns creep out from under this leaf where the sun can fall full upon us'.” ■ Ifcit the other little dewdrop, trem bling, said: “Sister, lam afraid the sun will burn us, for its rays will grow warm, and though for a while we shall vl- Down the Stem Rolled the Vain Little Dewdrop. be beautiful I am sure we shall soon be destroyed. “Let us stay under this leaf and help the rosebush to grow. I shall try to find the heart of the rose and nestle close. I am sure I shall live longer there, even if I am not as beautiful as the rays of the sun wtfuld make me.” “Oh, fie, sister, why are you so Never Was a Woman Bora Who Was Satisfied With the Man She Married By C. E. BYRNE, National Association of Music Merchants. never was a woman bom who was satisfied with the man she married. She always makes him over, or, rather, she mistakes his gradual disintegration for something constructive in her own handiwork. The universal husband! Pathetic^bedraggled scarecrow in trousers. No wonder men always answer their country's call to arms. It is far easier to face quick death on the battlefield than alow death beside the domestic hearth. At home they are helpless, numb. Things overtake them, fasten on them while they are asleep. Whichever way they go, it is not the way of their choice. They are pushed along from behind, never doing any of the things they desire, never wanting any of the things they get. Poor universal husband! As the blare of trumpets and the Bwirl of smoke gradually die down on the feminist battlefront, an unbiased eye seee, still breathing, hut spiritually dead, a pathetic, bedraggled sort of scarecrow in trousers—the universal husband! The universal husband, made out of all the prom ising little boys in the world, is warped and cheated by women from the moment he expands his lungs at birth until he contracts them (often wilfully ) at the moment of death. V omen have very little honesty, no modesty and no sense of shame. They cannot afford such fairy-book luxuries, ileal honesty, modesty and a sense of shame are not things with which to catch a husband. Maiden ladies invariably possess some of these abnormal qualities. That is why they remain maiden ladies. A woman cannot be frail. She is not frail. She is a tigress. She is not helpless. She can move mountains, and does if she is not always given her own way. If she were helpless the universal husband would know how to provide for her, how to place her in his relation to a strug gle for existence. But he does not know where to place hev. She turns up at unexpected moments, in unexpected places, and acts M a positive menace to his psychology and to hi 6 business career. I * g SCHOOL PAqS I A PAGE SEVEN silly?” said the other dewdrop. “Td rather be beautiful for a little whtla than let the rose hold me close to iler heart. She will get all the crsdif for beauty and no one will ever know about you. .... ■ . “No, I shall creep down the stem of this rose aDd catch the rays of the sna and all who see me will say, 'Bow beautiful!’ when they behold me.'" , Down the stem rolled the vein, little dewdrop and soon it was away from the protecting leaf where Its sister Was trembling. 1 Soon the warm sun found It and Its wish was granted—all the beautiful colors of the rainbow now belonged tp the little dewdrop and It was happy. The other little drop nestled close to the rose leaf and soon it dropped down deep Into the very heart of the opbd- Ing flower and was out of sight, but it sank so deep that the rose grew sweet and a passing bee stopped to tell the rose It was'the prettiest and sweetest flower in the garden. “That Is because a little dewdrop nestles in my heart, making me hap py,” said the rose. “This morning 1 had two, but one did not stay; it crept down my stem to meet the sun, so that It might grow beautiful with the rain bow colors, but the other stayed with rile and I owe to It a duty for lta goodness. “I mast grow beautiful and for the dewdrop and myself to repay It, and ts as you say, Mr. Bee, I am the prettiest and sweetest flower in the garden this morning, It is because a dewdrop nestles in my heart.” Mr. Bee buzzed away. He did not tell the rose that the little dewdrop that had rolled from under the leaf ft meet the sun was no more; he kndw that the little dewdrop In the hgeftrt-ol the rose would be sad leamed the fate of its sister, did "because 11 had chosen so What to do that morning 4® »y MSClur* NtWapaptr Syndicate.)