Monday, April 6, 1925 [TIRES AT DEALERS COST Jarratts Big Ten Day Tire Sale jj Look ,t These Prices White the Stock Last, Then Look at the Tires *' jjj j ninpr/i t\tptipd riAnrvD STRAIGHT SIDE CORD -■ - ,*i TRTirif tirf'q 1 ; FABRIC £ U q N ?? E ?7 a~°? Q D >? 30x3 1-2—59.45, $10.85 32x4 1-2—517.50, $19.45 j EXTR^HFAVY |Ji 30x3 1-2—57.95, $9.25 32x3 1-2 $lO 75 $1195 33x4 1-2 sl7 95 SIQQS IuAIKA HEAVY ; ; 30x3-$5.90, $6.15, $7.50 Overeize-$9.85 31x4—511.35, $12.95 ' 34x4 ! , 3 o^ 3 1 I ' 2^ ° 31x4.40 Balloon Cords— 32x4—512.90, $13.75 35x4 1-2—521.00 34x4 1-2—524.50 36x5—548.30 ||; 1 31x4—512.15 $11.50 , .33x4—513.35,515.25 33x5—525.95 33x5—529,901 38x7—571.35 jJ; j 34x4—513.80, $15,75n 35x5—526.95 34x5—530.65 40x8—592.00 PJARRAT’S SERVICE I THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY WHEN Cl I swaxs OUT OF THe OPS* House "iSERf- He V .ill.. 1 ALSO (MBC. KEp op ON *THE WINTERS BUSINESS— 1 i. m~ • •• -•■' • ■■■■>'>h. l i* ■' ■■ if.*—s^yi Texaco Gasoline and Oils I Let us grease your car? We use Alemite Lubricants I exclusively, and proper lubrication is the life of any car. Car Washing, Tire hanging, Crank Case Service, Accessor- / 1 ies I CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONE 700 XWOOOOOOOOOCNXIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO j ' The Kelvinator Will Do It jij ! | Electrify your refrigerator, j! 1 Freeze your own ice and deserts i[i Keep your refrigerator dry and sanitary, the tempera- l|! I I ture always the same and much lower than with ice !’ ALL AT HALF-THE COST OF ICE. * !j! 45 Per Cent, of the premature deaths of adults is due directly to ?! 1 1 stomach trouble and practically all of this trouble is caused from sat- <!i 11 ing food improperly preserved. Why not protect your good health when 1 1 1 i mu can create a handsome savings account with the money saved each I 1 ! i year by a Kelvinator. j J. Y, PHARR & BRO. f PHONES 1(18 AND 187 g Fancy Red Fin Croakers I Roe and Buck Shad 1 We have another nice lot of fish this week, nice and 9 fresh. * ! * Also Choice Beef and Pork. Sanitary Grocery Co. g “A REAL OOQD PLACE TO TRADE” ' In and About the City j Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. o&BnTt elße|l£Ron|tß~ Akk£Y|TEN|SHOC 'i.EkL|s|l|Mj|s AlPj o] Sralstor i £ s j ßTfc.ll asldHel BYliAwite" s Blairr OHm an i aMa P L A I N E RBI, a L_ £. T T F|S ! BIBLE SHOULD BE STUDIED AT HOME, SAYS PREACHER In Sermon Here Yesterday Rev. W. C. Lyerly Says Christians Are In Need of Spiritual Food. Taking as his texts “I Am the Bread of Life” and “I Am the Living Bread,” John 6:35, 51, Rev. W. C. Lyerl.v, pas tor of Trinity Reformed Church, preach ed powerfully to his congregation yes-' terday, drawing a parallel between the feeding- of the multitude in Oallilee and the feeding of Christians today with spiritual food. “ Mr. Lyerly’s sermon stressed the fact $ that the Bible should be studied in the p home and in the church so "that we sj might grow in grace.” i| The last sermon to be preached in the jjj building now occupied by the'Trinity Re y formed ■Church is to be given next Sun- I day, Easter Sunday, after which time j the congregation will hold services in the j Corbin Street School building until the I new church which is being erected on j Church street is completed. The new a structure is to be one of the handsomest | church buildings in the city, erected at l] a cost of over $50,000. | The text of Mr. Lyeriy's sermon is as | follows. | “I Am the Living Bread.” These are | the declarations of our Lord Jesus Christ. S' Multitudes had followed Him to hear the 3 gracious words which proceeded out of His mouth, to see the sick and afflicted . cured or made whole. They followed | him in the cities and village of Galilee, i They followed Him to the desert. Out | in the desert He said to His disciples,! i "Give ye them to eat.” They had no j i food. They had so little money to [ buy food. It seemed to them a hope-1 i less task. Yet one of them informed I i Jesus that a certain lad had a lunch,' J small loaves and fishes. Jesus blessed t and break the bread, the disciples dis-j i tribnted to the multitude. All were | fed. After that the multitudes would i have more gladly followed Jesus “for the leaves and the fishes.” Hunger is normal to us. We hunger. l i It has always been so. The lack of 1 hunger is an indication of an unhealthy ! condition of the body. Millions of peo-, i pie today hunger. Who shall satisfy 1 their hunger? Jesus taught the people' 1 in terms that they knew from their own 1 experience. The deep needs cf the soul, of real humanity, has its parallel in the flesh. “My soul thirsteth for the living God,” was the experience of the Psalmist. And his experience was com mon to Israel and to humanity. Men are hungry. What do they hun ger for? Some practice that philosophy of life that is summed up in these words, “Let us eat, drink and be merry for to morrow we may die.” Some have a bread and butter . philosophy of life. All there is to live Is to have something to eat, stimulants to drink, the latest styles of clothing to adorn the body, and a new automobile to race up and down our good highways. The eating of whole stone food, the drinking of water, milk and the frnit juices, the wearing of good apparel is a mark of civilization. On the other hand it is a mark of a loss of the spiritual perception to make these outer and lower needs the whole of life. The world hungers for carnal pleasure which has its satisfaction in the fleah. And how many of us are running after the world. Then • there is the hunger for lame, the hunger for gild and sil ver. k• . L When God was leading Israel out in-, to freedom and into national life, He fed them “manna.” They complained. They hungered for the “flesh-pots of Egypt” with the leeks, garlic and onions. That , is, they were more concerned to have something to eat than to have freedom for both body and soul. It was not , .a natural appetite that craved auch. It was the low estate Which slavery had re- , duced them. God provided the “manna." tj“fl^“ d^^k^ th w^ B £rcvid« THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE I is God who provides for the heart hun ger. “I am the bread of life.” Jesus offers Himself. The murmurers did not receive Him. They criticized. 1 They rejected. And the multitudes of Jews are without Christ. Most of them are wrapped up in gold and have, no hunger for God. The spiritual grouch, the eomplainer, has not health and will not have because he refuses to partake what Jesus has offered. Jesus does not feed by force. He offers Himself, By faith we can be partakers of Him. Jesus offers Himself. The Holy Com munion is Hie symbolic feast that is of fered in the church. All Christians are invited to be partakers with Jesus until that time when the privilege has come to sit down with Him in His kingdom. By faith we receive the blessing even as we eat the bread and drink of the cup Work creates appetite. The working man can sit down at his table and eat With satisfaction. It has its parallel in the moral and spiritual life. The Chris , tian that serves Jesus will have a keen 1 sense of hunger that Jesus can satisfy. The danger is no that we will do too j much or wear ourselves out in God’s 1 service. The danger is that we have hnd too little exercise in spiritual good [ and no deep sense of the need which Jesus supplies. , The call of Jesus to (is is to eat at His Table that in the strength of that ’ food we may give Him. .an acceptable j service. That service is., to be given in j the home, in the school, tie hind the coyn -11 ter, and in every walkaud conversation I of life that conttributes -to human good. The study of the Bible in the home, ' in the church school, is a-way through ' which ■we can be partakers with Him. The knowledge of the Word is the soil “ in which faith grows. The worship on ■ the Lord’s day, the partaking of the Holy . Communion should be means of grace to - us to eat the Bread of Heaven. > Bread of Heaven, ■ Feed me till I want no more. L ' - Albemarle Boys Get Three Years in the Pen. ; Stanly News-Herald. “This is a*sad state of affairs,” said ; Judge Redwine Thursday morning as he began to render Judgment in the., ease against Ralph Williams, xoung Hall and Albert Glover. Continuing His Honor said, “It is sad indeed tot see young men like these convicted of any crime, how ever simple the charge may be. But when it comes to felonies of such di mensions as this, it is said indeed. My duty is indeed a hard one. I need the i aid of a power greater than my own. | Mr. Clerk make the entry,”— not a sound was heard and a pin could have been heard fall—“the judgment of this court is, that Ralph Williams, Albert Glover - and Young Hall shall be. confined in the State’s prison for the period of three ; years at hard labor.” This is the culmination of the break ing and entering of the Wiscasset Hos iery Mill last December by Williams and Hall, and the receiving of the stolen goods by Glover. The third defendant, Bill Arrington, turned State’s witness and confessed the entire thing to Mr. i Gaddy, superintendent of the mill. Ar rington must give bond, and appear be ! fore the court for two years to Show 1 good behavior. Judge Redwine said that in his opin ion the three years for each of these men would be enough. In the charge | of larceny of the hose, judgment wasi suspended, and- in the jail breaking! against Williams and Hall judgment wasj also suspended. Georgia Drops Borgtom Case. * i Gutzon Borglum, sculptor, * will not have to return to : Georgia to face charges growing out of his destruction of modeler for the Confederate memorial on Stone Mountain. With the consent of the Stone Mountain Memorial Associa tion, Gov. Walker of Georgia has with drawn requisition papers seeking the sculptor’s extradition. The Borglum case is “enned” so far as the memorial association is con cerned, according to its counsel. It denies that it is considering re-hiring to complete the work. The sculptor is reported to have obtained a contract to carve figures of Washington and Lincoln on a mountain in the Black Hills part of South Dakota. Models destroyed after-his dismissal by the Stone -mountain association were his own property, Borglum declares. Charges of malicious mischief which grew out of this act resulted In Borg lum’s arrest and suhsequetrtrriease. The Though the government to minting SSISJffi’iyAS.SK: ly appealed to by Borglum, it has de clined to take any part in the dispute. The late John M- Ward, in his days - TOM JIMISON IN THE DEPTHS OF DESPAIR . “They Have Eaten Me Alive,” Was His f Only Comment. i Tom Bost in Greensboro News.' , Raleigh. April 4.—“ They have eaten , nle alive,” was the laconic comment of 1 Tom P. Jimison tonight in his hotel room ; when old friends called on him to offer t their assistance. ; For the first time in his life liis fight ing spirit was gone. He had gone up . against economic feudalism, he had eome . through political knockdowns and drag > outs, had scrapped his ecclesiastical 1 brethren and come out in good humor > at least. Tonight was the first time he . has been seen without ability to laugh. , But he had never tackled prohibitionists before. ; “No, they have eaten me alive/’ he t said to every lead that any friend made, l What he meant he would not say. But . the gorgons have devoured him at last i anti no suggestion for the future would . get him beyond “they have eaten me > alive.” A mind so suple and a tongue i so ready would not fail him, he was as ; sirred; but he was sure that “they have 1 eaten me alive,” consuming his family i With him. “Oh,” he finally said, “if I had killed t somebody, or in the lies that they have t told about me and women or $ had com > mitted some capital felony against one of i them, I would have had a chance. I . think I might have : gotten away with i either out both; but you. See this is Hck . er. I neyvr .was a teetotaler as you , knou, and never pretended to be. And i they found me on my way to Raleigh . with a drink in myself and some liefer, l not mine, in my grip. Os course there i is no escape from that. That’s the - end of me because that was licker and i a man ceases to have any standing ftj law, officers seem to have no regard for laws, when licker in involved.” The former minister was not worried about sentence of sixty days on the road i for transportation of booze, not downed by the court judgments. He thinks there is a chance for him there. But I he has gone up against the real thing i now and as he says: “They have eaten me alive.” The Barium Springs Orphanage has been bequeathed $5,000 in the will of Mrs. Malinda B. Ray, of Fayetteville. Some $15,000 was left tto other objects fostered by the Presbyterian Church. SULPHUR IS BEST TO CLEAR UP UGLY, BROKEN OUT SKIN Any breaking out or skin irritation on face, neck or body is overcome quickest by applying Mentho-Sulphur says a noted skin specialist. Because ' of its germ destroying properties, noth mg has ever been found to take the place of this sulphur preparation thai instantly brings ease from the itching burning and irritation. Mentho-Sulphur heals eczema right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth It seldom fails to relieve the torment ! or disfigurement.- A little jar ol Rowles Mentho-Sulphur may be ob- i tamed at any drug store. It is used j like cold cream. , [an old recipe I ' TO DARKEN HAIR I Sag* Tea and Sulphur Turn* Qray ( Faded Hair Dark and Qloaay Almost everyone knows- that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color and j lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound. You will get a large bob-, tie of this old-time recipe improved W the addition of other ingredients, at very little cost Everybody uses this srwt yrsjurs hair, as it does it so naturally and even ly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, An extradition petition recently re eeived by the authorities in Sacramento bore the names- of three women, all high officials in the Texas state government. One of the names Was that of Mre. Mi riam A. Ferguson, who fills the governor ship of the State. The second name was that of Emma G. Meharg, the seere 0000 °000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I Why don’t you have that old suit i j cleaned? - | It’s Too Good to throw away! We Can Make fc Snappy and Fresh as Se w SEND IT TO | Bob’s Dry Cleaning Co. PHONE 787 BASE BALL FREE Friday and Saturday Each Boy Buying a Pair of Star Brand Shoes from us will receive a Good Baseball Free | RICHMOND -FLOWE CO. THE FLINT FORTY j A car with refinement is now in our show room. This car comes equipped with four wheel brakes and | Balloon tires. Five balloon tires and cover for same. Also B bumper, motor meter-wing, Windshield wiper standard H equipment Delivered Price is $1185.00 I . A _ 1 J C BLUME S fiARAr.F i ■ J. U O | PAGE THREE tary of state of Texas, and the third was Mayme Taylor, clerk of the court from which the warrant was issued. Iceland moss is much used jfor food in the island from which it gets its name. It is ground with fluor and added to soups> for thickening.

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