day, September 21, 1023. mm 1 n..iii.il ■■ - - - - —— ||l!llllllllllll!lllllllllllllllll!lllilllll!lllll!lllllillll!lllllll|||||||||||||||!'^l|||||||||J!llllllllfl|||||!nnilllinilt1IlllinilllIIIII^ S \i L—— ■—MM Cooks Better Food | s Keeps the Flavor in the Food.. .55 Keeps in the Rich Juices Prevents Loss of Food by Evaporation. EE Come in and see the Range that Cooks Better Food with Half the Gas. A size for a every kitchen. r | =r COOKS tviik the GAS TURNED OFF? | Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. | llllllllimilllll!!lll!ll!llllllllllllllll!l!!lli!lllll!li IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHK ■■ - ' - 111. 11 4P. ii. 11 ■■ ■ . ■■ . t. . .g-in, lift... .11. , ■■ m I. I ■ I - ' : WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 We’ll Sell More Suits This Fall Than Ever — *• jj| Imart Styles,\Fine Quality and Our Prices Will JfvHf jjf Dolt For Us A 111 :i| by greatly increased clothes-making costs \\ r (tailors’ wages are higher than ever —materials JgSSL y \ iji lave kept steadily advancing)—we oace again \ I I 1 8 Clothes— | * A\ l \ SCHLOSS BROS. & GCX and CORTLEY \ » c At Moderate 'Prices 111 1 1 Ve are depending upon these moderate prices JW J LMjW \ a bring us the bigger volume which will justify \ * he extremely close margin upon which we are | QeJr || working. ; ■■■■ —-—^—• 1 - At $27.50 or S3O At $35 or S4O Smart Rousish 1 Fabrics, including the new Fine Worsteds and Cassimeres in a big irge over-plaids, diagonals and checks. variety of stripes—all types and colors. Single-breasted and double-breasted; one, two, l three button models, including the new wide- ' spaced three button design. j HOOVER’S - jaohooqoooooooooooiooqipoodeooooQodoooooooodooooooooooooooooAoooooooooopooooooooooooooooooopoooooooooCT THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE WORLD HEALTH PARTI 7 ’ COMES TO THIS STATE Will Study Methods Under Direction of the Health Section of the League cf Nations. I Washington, Sept. 20. —Health experts reprf'tenting a seore of foreign govern ments, sept here under the third inter-, national exchange of officers arraigned bv Jt lie health seetion of the League of Nations,* concluded their study here to- j day of Auieriean methods in dealing with hygiene and limitation. Their' studies here, covering a perVl of two weeks, have intruded every phas» J of the work tinder the direction of Sur geon-General Cumin ing, of the publie , health serviee, ami today they were guests at luncheon tendered by Assistant i Secretary Wadsworth of tile treasury. Ur charge of the health unit. Starting i tomorrow the physicians will begin a tour of three months duriug which time : they will investigate state methods of : combatting disease. Divided into three groups, the medical men will go into Virginia, North Caro lina. and Alabama. One group will visit Richmond, another Raleigh, and a third Montgomery. After the e!< «c of their study in the southern states the three groups will visit Pennsylvania, New York and Massachusetts and reas semble in New York for an exchange of views prior to departing for their homes. New York Newspaper Famine Near End. j New York. Sept. 20. —Submission to i publishers of a proposal under which i the International Union of Press men ; would undertake to mail the presses of | the city’s dailies while the local union ; remained on s-trike. tonight brought the ■ end of New York's newspaper famine in j sight. Pending the discussions, other ; features of the plan were not disclosed ; The publishers' committee began con ' of the plan at the close of a day in which George L. Berry, president. • of the International union, had declared ! the charter of the local body “auto s matieal’y suspended" and had wired in ■ Vitatidns fl! pressmen of other cities to I fill the strikers' places. At the same i time he made it clear that members of ■ the outlawed union would be issued j cards in the International union if they | desired to return to work and ts the ■ publishers ratified the proposal. Air. ■ Berry said lie had the support of the j International's board of directors in bis ; program. ■ David Simons, head of the local union, ! and other officials of the strikers were I railed before the directors of the In • terational earlier in the day to bear the | statement issued last night by the pub i lishers, who demanded that the Intcr ■ national, having characterized the strike I as illegal, revoke the local's charter and ! form a new branch here. The local's ; officials were told the International in j tended to continue separate negotiations ; 'with the publishers and offered to nc | cept responsibility in all the press ; rooms. A Job Waiting. : Family landed at Ellis island speak : Inga language nobody could under r stand. If they,could only sing, they • would make a valuable addition to ; grand opera.—New York Evening Mail. 0 coMiwy, mz9^ > BEGIN HERB TODAY o ' Bess Nad Comet and the t latter's^ ftaeit Harden- <j refoca on an Island oeenzded by a a brute named DoomsdorfSd bis In- t daa au& The master ol the island take* Ned and the two girls nrla- y eaters and informs them that he 1 means to make them slate for him. a . Bess and Ned, with bnt very little y help from Lenore, build and y Doomsdorf gives them an old stove. 1 When the cabin is finished Bess and Ned are sent on different routes to > do the .winter trapping for their _ master. ■ Lmore is allowed to remain and 1 top the squaw with the housework, i Ned falls into a deep crevice and , Bess rescues him. The two make idans to escape from the island. r NOW GO ON WITH THE STORE t XXVII TVTHEN food and warmth had j IVtJ brought complete recovery, c Ned took up with Bess the * problem of deliverance from the 1 island. He found that for weeks she * | bad been thinking along the some I line, and Hke him, she had as yet * | failed to hit upon any plan that of- 1 [ sered the least chance for success. 1 3 The subject held them late into the * I sight. | They took different trails in the I dawn, following the long circle of I their'trap lines. AH the way they | pondered on this same problem, con- I calving a plan only to reject it be- I can so of some unsurmoun table ob | »t»cie to its success: dwelling upon a the project every hour and ftream i tag about it at night. But Ned was I tar as ever from a conclusion when, 1 three days later, he followed the | beach on the way to the home cabin. I He bad watched with deadened in terest the drama of the wild things j about him these last days; bnt when ho was less than a mile from home h. had cause to remember it again. To his great amazement he found at the edge of the ice the fresh track of one' of the large island beers. The.sight of the great imprint-was a welcome one to Ned, not alone be cause the wakening forecasted, per haps, an early spring, but because* he was in immediate need of bear fur. | Hie own coat was worn; .besides, he | was planning a suit of clod-proof I garments for Lenore, to be used per | haps in their final flight across the j | ice. And he saw at once that con- ( | dltlons were favorable for trapping ] | the great creature. 1 | Scarcely a quarter of a mile ahead* s | In a little pass that led through thei ' 1 shore crags down to the beach, ~ 1 Doomsdorf had left one of his most J I powerful bear traps. Ned had seen * = it many times as he had clambered 1 I" through op a short cut to the cabin. ] j Because it lay in a natural runway 1 | for game—one of the few spots 1 § where the shore crags could be easi- * § ly surmounted—it was at least pos n slble that the huge bear might fall * S into it, on his return to hi 3 lair in ! I the hills. < 1 Ned hurried on, and in a few mo- : | ments had dug out the great trap ’ S from its covering of snow. For amo § ment he actually doubted his power 1 s to set it. It was of obsolete type. 1 =1 mighty-springed, and its jaws were | 3 of a width forbidden by all laws of 1 = trapping in civilized lands, yet Nwi ■ 3 did not doubt its efficiency. it.-* I mighty irons had rusted; but hot , a even a bear's Incalculable might s could shatter them. | This was not to be a bait set. so 1 = his success depended upon the ski; I 1 with which he concealed the trap ; a First he carefully refilled the ex 1 cavalion he had made in digging out 1 the trap; then he dug a shallow hole a in the snow in the narowest part of | the pass. Here he set the trap, util | izing all the power of his mighty | muscles, and spread a light covering | of snow above. 1 N was a delicate piece of work. 1 Ned had no wish for the cruel jaws 1 to snap-shut as he was working above I them. But his heart was in the ven- I ture, tor all his hatred of the cruelty | Trinity FoolbaJ! i Team Rounding Into %hape. j Trinity College. Durham. N. C.. Sept. I 20. —The Trinity football squad is » rapidly whipping, itself into shipshape. I getting ready for the hardest schedule i the team has faced since Trinity re -1 Runted football three years ago. Since | September (i the New Hanes Athletic I Field has been swarming with candi ' dates anxious to land a berth on the i varsity eleven. | Since head roach Steiner first called i out the men who anticipate making a l race for regular and substitute positions [ on the team, one hundred and twenty I men have responded, about twice as i many as the number of try-outs last ] Iteason. All of the college's uniforms i have been issued out. and the Conch | figures that there are between forty and , fifty men on the tiield unable to get i uniforms issued to them. 1 Coach Steiner is ably assisted this i year by Sam Burbage, a Birnlinglmm i boy. who was here Inst year, and by [ Toni Neal, of Laurinburg, "23. famous i left end and Captain of last year's i vnrsjty. who will guide the destinies of | the 'Freshman team this season, i Letter men of 1022 bnek this year to i form a nucleus for the 11123 team an-: | Captain Jimmie Simpson, who received i severat~\votes for All-State renter last 1 year; W. 1.. Taylor, unanimously chosen | for All-State left guard; H- 1,. Hatcher i steady player at left tackle; Barney 1 Carter, dashing and reliable right end; , Frits Smith, for three years dependable i quarterback; Edward Lagerstatt. sensn- I. tion at left halfback; Harvey Johnson ] and Edward Bullock, freshmen last year i who are still lighting out the question 1 of >vho will be regular and who will be i substitute fullback, and Reid Carrett, i right hnlfback of last year who may not \ be able to play this season because of I a threatened attack of appent^jcitis. ) Os the 1021 varsity several men are ■aHlMMisHßasnM of the device; and ne covered up hla tracks with veteran’* okUL Then he quietly withdrew, retracing hie steps and foQowtag the shore line toward the home Sorely the mighty strength that had mt the powerful eprhkg and the akin that covered op all trace* of Us work could succeed at last in freeing him from slavery. Bess had reached the shelter first, and she wee particularly relieved to see Ned’s tall farm swinging toward her along the shore. Doomsdorf was In a particularly ominous mood to night. The curious glitter in Us magnetic eyes was more pronounced tinni she had ever seen It—catlike In the shadows, steely In the lantern light; and his cruel savagery was just at the surface, ready to be wak ened. Worst of all, the gaze be bent toward her was especially eager to night, horrible to her as the cold touch of a reptile. Every time she glanced up she found him regarding her, and he fol lowed her with his eyes when she moved. Tet she dared not seek shel ter In the new cabin, for the simple IT WAS A STRANGE PICTURE. reason that She was afraid Dooms dorf would follow her there. Until Ned came, her defense was solely the presence of Lenore and the squaw. There was no particular warmth In her meeting with Ned. Doomsdorfs eyes were still upon her, and she was careful to keep any hint of the new understanding out of her face and eyes. Ned's weather-beaten countenance was as expressionless as Sindy's own. The four o.) them ,*••» hui.ii’ the little, runuh .. ■ • 1 ,- | squaw served • i,, u i i ows. If in Ihe lam n . - able lie in sr.ed - , , of I ..... . , , . the'. / I me. i i*.; ■ 1 ■ I I ■II ■1 tea; i.. , : "Wfi;,: •: ■title Me. tO.be. u. Ml.:. ■•(.. . . ..... “Where x,.. i,,.. . ... ....... i,i- He tittered «ie- Uiail!ililfiliumiiiiiii:ui:iii!iiiiiiui. , i!iiiiiiuiui:iiiHifiimmiim!mn»iiUttiir.i on the practice field who did not play last year These are Fritz Crate, full back and punter; Eve English, left half back and perhaps the best ground gain er on the 1921 team, and William Huck abee. right end. who will doubtless try to fill Tom Neal's shoes at the left corner. This leaves open the positions of left end, right guard, right tackle, and probably light halfback. Several hard; but interesting games arc promised in the schedule this year. Carolina will be played again on Oc tober 12 at Trinity, the game being the principal event in the Home-Coming Day to be celebrated at both Institu tions. The score last year was 2(1 to ft: in Carolina's favor, but Trinity says it will be different this time. Trinity plays Virginia October 27 at, Charlottesville for the first time in over a quarter of a century; first time, in fact, since the famous team of 181)2 walked away with the Southern championship. Wake Forest will be the opponents on Novem ber 10 at Winston-Salem. Trinity holds a two-game lead on the Baptists, but the game this year will be no easy strug gle. One of the best and most interest ing games will be the one with Davidson on Thanksgiving Du.v at Charlotte. The seore of the game last year ended 12 to 0 in Trinity's favor, no walk-over. The game Thanksgiving will be fought to a sure enough finish. Five other games are scheduled. In the three years of its recent existence Trinity has made a remark able record. In 1021 six were won. one lost, and one tied- Last ear, out of ten games on the schedule, seven were won, two lost, and one tied. ‘ s Hairbreadth Wss a Measure. The word hairbreadth, now used for lnflnltegtimal space, once named a reg ular measure. It Was the width of alxtecp hairs laid side by side. PAGE SEVEN nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm as N'to the hegtantag of laugh ter. "TfcatSs not what I mean, aad you know it. You’d sooner walk tea miles through the snow than gtvn on inch, wouldn’t yooP His hand reached, dosing gently upon her arm, end a shiver of repulsion passed over her. “That’s a fine little muscle —but you don’t want to work It off. Why dons you show-a little friend ship?” The girt looked with difficulty into his great, drawn taco. Ned 1 stiff ened, wondering If the moment of crisis were at hand at last. Lenore watched appalled, but the native went on about her tasks as if she hadn’t heard. “You can’t expect—much friend ship—from a prisoner,” Bess told bipa brokenly. Her face, so white In -the yellow lantern light, her trembling Ups, most of all the appeal far mercy §| In her child’s eyed tithed to this j beast compared with whom even the g North wee merciful—wakened surg- M tag, desperate anger In Ned. The 5 room turned red before his eyes, his s muscles quivered, and be was rapid- jg ly reaching that point wherein hla B self-control, on which Use Itself de- ; pended, was jeopardized. Yet he ] must hold himself with an Iron'hand. 1 He must wait to the last Instant ,of ' need. Everything depended on that, In avoiding the crisis until he had f made’some measure of preparation. ‘‘Your little friend seems to be get-' ting nervous,” he remarked easily to Bess. “So dot to disturb him fur ther, let’s you and I go to the new cabin. I've ‘taken some fine pelts lately—l want you to see them. You need a new coat.” He seemed to be aware of the s gathering suspense, and It thrilled his diseased nerves with But there was, from his listeners, but one significant response, at first to the evil suggestion that he made with such iniquitous,fires in-his -wild eyes and such, k. g tone In his voice, ' Bess’ expression g| dld not cbange. 'lt had already re- g vejßqd • the uttermost depths of g drta*. Ned stlU held bimself, cold. 1 now. as a serpent, waiting for his B chance. But the squaw paused a single Instant in her work. For one breath they failed to hear the clatter of her pans. But seemingly Indiffer ent, she Immediately went back to her toll. Bess shook her head in desperate .i appeal. “Walt till morning,” she pleaded. “I’m tired now— ’’ Ned saw by the gathering fury of their master's face’that tier refusal would only bring, bn the crisis, so he leaped swiftly into the breach. “Sure, Bess, let’s go to look at them,“~ he said. “I’m anxious to see ’em, too—” Doomsdorf whirled to him, and his gaze was as a trial of fire to Ned. 3 Yet the latter did not flinch. Por a § long second they regarded each 3 other In Implacable hatred, and then § Doomsdorfs sudden start told that 5 he had been visited by Inspiration. § His leering look'of contempt was al- ■ most a smile. “Sure, come along,” s he said, got something to say If io you. too. To spare Lenore’s feel- §1 ings— we'H go to the other cabin.” B Ned was not in the least deceived H hv this reference to Lenore. Dooms- B i.'h'if hud further cause, other than B : rrt for Lenore's sensibilities, for § •I • lA,• I» nXt their conversation In the || ■ . ill. in What it was Ned did g and he dared not think. H ->• hid a vague impression that - ihd Doomsdorf had waged • ::i— of eyes. Bess had 'mys ■ - \ moved from her position. • it her Just at Doomsdorfs . n he saw her again she i > •'-•n feet distant, within a :i.e cupboards where the .- many of the food sup- wits busy with her ism skin. - way out into the clear, { ' whs one of those still, .Hirer evenings, not so - 't been, when the frozen, i aor Id gave no image of ■ • ii'e senses. The snow " * be velvet depths of the • •• iind flashing with a thou ■ • .-minglng hues from the M - i* . -i.t,.scope of the Northern : '*"■ - Moved and held by this 1 ” ’bat never grows old to the man. Doomsdorf halted ;:m-m nisr withdut the cabin door. . if'mirtniied in Our Next Issue} nil: ::;n!iHiiiii!HiiimiiiiiimiiiilimilUlHmimilßiimßniiiui«aiwnuMy Power !n Music. Music Is the common language of all nations and tribes. The man who knows how to. play knows how to reach the heart of anybody In any country, climate, or condition. —Burley Ayres. J SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK It’s Grandmother’s Recipe to Bring Back Color and Lustre to Hair That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brew ing a .mixture of Sage Tea and Sul phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray or streaked, just an application or two of Sage and Sul phur enhances its appearance a hun dredfold. Don’t bother to prepare the mixture; you can get this famous old recipe im proved by the addition, of other ingre dients at a small cost-all ready for use. It is called Wyeth’s Sage arid Sulphur Compound. This can always be de pended upon to bring back the natural color and lustre of vour hair. Everybody uses '‘Wyeth’s’’ Sage and Sulphur Compound now because! it* darkens so naturally aqa evenly that nobody can tell it has 'been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair 'has disappeared,: and as ter another-ifijilica tion - it ' <4lnc ao4 appears glossy and lustrous.

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