PAGE TEN ' OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS ( /look oJr\ /Heri’.emins\ /hne ' HtArt FORWSWN BINS U VDEt o’-TK , IF THE. DEAD \MLI_ r fT cigabet Boris \ Paio Beim‘ kinovsi pct more —v. \f6 a.6oim’T \ Piled up use uke a-a i mean/ n 1 * „ ORwAlams the, smoke op a forts Pros . -**.•* 30000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 NOW IS THE TIMETO BUY TIRES I I: As Most All Standard Make Have ij| Advanced From Five to Ten Per I Cent. ijj We have just received a big shipment iji of Goodvear Tires That We Will Sell iji AT THE OLD PRICE Goodyear Is Building a Better Tire jj That Ever Before jj Why Buy a Tire That You Are Told Is jij Just as Good When Goodyear Is No Higher in Price ji Y orke & Wadsworth Co. ijj The Big Department Hardware Store jij Union and Church Street jij Phone 30 Phone 30 jij ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc 90000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 IKELVINATOR | There are seventeen KELVINATORS in homes in Coneora giving 1 1 | perfect satisfaction. Now is the time to give your order for a KEL- <|> VINATOR and be free from the expense and trouble of obtaining ice jij during the coming hot weather. J. Y. PHARR & BRO.' . :|! Phone 103, 127 or 208 jlj OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOnannnnoPOOOOOOOOOOe I SPEED AND ENDURANCE In motoring depend in great measure upon the service I rendered by your battery. If you want to get maximum I speed and power buy batteries that gwill produce maximum I power. Such is the battery we recommend and sell. AUTO SUPPLY & REPAIR CO . Inc. PREST-O-LITE SERVICE STATION I STUDEBAKER SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 228 i | CASH FEED STORE j![ Will insure the life of your baby chicks when you use Star- Iji i|' tina and Baby Chick Chow for your chicks. And if you feed i j !i! according to directions you can grow a two pound chick 1 ! 1 ]!; in eight weeks. All we ask is a Fair Trial. ji p also have Choice Timothy Hay, Oats and Sweet j | | Phone 122 S. Church St CHOICE FRESH FISH Fancy Speckled Trout and Gray Trout Dressed— | | Ready For the Pan ; Also Choice Pork and Be^f Sanitary Grocery Co. “A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” I iA and About the City Answer to Yesterday's Puxxie. CHILDREN’S INSTITVTE TO BE HELD HERE ON SATURDAY Miss Eugenia Lore Has Charge of the Program.—Miss Kluttz to Hold Model Service. Plans for the County Children’s Di vision Institute which is tot be held in the Cenetral Methodist Church. Concord. Saturday,’May 9th, 1925, are said to be progressing splendidly Miss Eugenia Lore, County Children's Division Superintendent, is giving untir ing effort to make the Institute a Suc cess, while other county officers are co operating heartily. One of the most attractive features of the program will be a worship service conducted by Miss Janie Klutz, of Con cord. Tito children will be present and participate in the service. It is expected that this service will be conducted as such a service would be conducted in an up to date Sunday School. The program arranged for the occasion is as follows: Presiding. Miss Eugenia Lore. 3—Worship Program. Miss Janie Kluttz. Superintendent Junior Depart ment. Central Methodist Church. Concord. 3 :15—How to Have a Wide-Awake Cradle Roll. Mrs. John Reed, Superin tendent Cradle Roll Department, First Presbyterian Church. Concord. 3:3s—The Story and Its Importance in Teaching Children—Miss Mary King. Superintendent Primary Department, City Public Schools, Concord. 3:ss—Special Music. 4 :10—Co-operation of Parents and the Sunday School—Miss Daisy Magee. Chil dren’s Division Supt.. North Carolina Sunday School Association. 4:40 —Hymn. 4:4s—Discussion. 5 :00—Adjourn. The Cabarrus County Children's Divis ion Institute is under the auspices of the Cabarrus County Sunday School Associa tion. It is for Cradle Roll. Beginners. Primary, and Junior Sunday School Workers of all denominations and all others interested in the religious training of children under thirteen years of age. Miss Eugenia Lore, County Children's Division Superintendent. J. .T. Barnhardt. County President. J. Sam Query, County Secretary. SOUTHERN PLANS TO HAUL IA)T OF FOLKS Will Operate Special Excursion Train From Here to Charlotte Monday. Greensboro News. The Southern railway is making pre parations for hauling a lot of folks to Charlotte next Monday on the occasion of the 250-mile championship automobile race in that city. Just how many peo ple will patronize the trains and how many will honk their way to the Queen City is problematical, but the Southern believes that with the low round trip raate it is offering people from this and other sections will prefer the train to the auto. Leastwise the railroad is going to run a special excursion train from Greensboro to Charlotte Monday, leav ing here at 7 :45 in the morning and re turning leaving Charlotte at 7:30 at night thus giving patrons of the train a stay of about eight hours in Char lotte. The races at Charlotte are scheduled to start at 2 p. m. While no official reports have been made people who spend much time around the stntion here give as their opinion that travel see mb to hnve picked up both on local trains and through trains. It is said that the Orescent. Limited, the extra fare, extra fast train recently inaugurated by the Southern between New York and New Orleans, is doing a very nice business for this season of the year and railway people are confident that the train wrtl become more and more popular as sea sons come and go. Honor Roll at Central Primary School. First grade: Mary Linton McEachern, Virginia Pharr, Ruth Robbins, Lenna Hinson, James Hartsell. Lindsay Shoe. Bobbie Sappenfield, James Smith, Evelyn Swaringen, Billy Peele, Sadie Bunn, Magie Lee Carter, Mary W. Crooks. Wil liam Elliott, Ruth Irvin, Ella Moose, Robert F. Ross, Edward Sauvain, James Shaw, Louise Stewart, Charles Stoop, Jack Hooks, Carrol Haywood, Sandy McLeod, Oscar Linker. George Rich mond, Phyllis Sapp, Frances Spears, Cenie Davis, Katherine Archibald, Inez West. Second grade. Thomas Morrison, John Gray, Boyd Little, Henry Eudy, Helen Bryant, Mary Furr, Hattie Thomas, Sara Mills, Louise Sears, Frank Russell, Jones Freeze, Bruce Boyd, Alice Duval, Viola Hartsell. Third grade: Pearl Burrage, Mary C. Archibald, Rebecca Bodenheimer, Ade line Widenhouse, Jane Moore, Billy Pike, Dallas Morrison, Charlie Dabbs, Victor Means. David McEachern, Erskine Stew art, Pauline Basinger, Frances Barrier, Myrtle Whitley annd Elizabeth Ervin. Corbin Street School. First grade : James Graeber, Herbert Caton, Franklin Scott, Edna Coraine, Agnes Peck, Annie Lee Culp, Miriam Long, Alice Cress, Marguerite Smith, Morrison King, Jr. Second grade: Lilyan Miller. Third grade: Elaine Blume, Charles Harris, Roy Crooks, JE, and Clyde Rob inson. Fourth grade: Eugenia Brnmley and Henry Smith Barrier. Fith grade: Johnny Pounda and Helen Grady. i . l ' Frankie Scboell, the Buffalo welter weight, made 'a big bit with the San Francisco boxing fana in his recent ap pearance in that city against immy Duf "■ THE CQNCOfeP DAILY TRIBUNE j CROSSWORD PUZZLE Te" I 1 d-Wr So mpr yt» I ““ *1 Many short words may be found in this puzzle. But that doesn't, mean they’re any easier to get than the long er words. Just try. HORIZONTAL 1 Rabbit. 4 Paragraphs. 6 A quick movement. 9 V erbal. 11 At any time. 13 Special topic in a magazine. It! One to be relied upon in emergency. 18 Rodent. 19 Substance used in making lacquer. 21 Aurora. 22 Metal used for pans. 23 Pork. 25 Collection of facts. -0 Boggy land. 27 Colonizes. 29 To weep. 31 Open spot in the woods. 33 The Supreme Being. 35 Aged. - 30 Arid. 37 Beer mug. 39 To nap. 41 Period. 43 Lurked. 45 To total. 47 Large vessel used in tanning. 48 Green plums. 411 Organ of sight. 50 By. 52 Hawaiian food made of taro. '54 Beer. 50 Beasts. 59 Remarkable. 62 Back part of neck. 03 Being in health. 04 Disagreeably sharp. MORRISON SAYS MUST j GO ON WITH MEMORIAL Likes and Admires Bor glum But Ex pects To Sell Half Dollars for the Com mittee. Raleigh News and Observer. “I think that we should close ranks and go ahead and that North Carolina should not be willing to have no part in the magnificent Stone Mountain Me morial simply because we like and admire Mr. Borglum,” declared former Governor Cameron Morrison, who has been ap pointed chairman of the North Carolina eommitte to sei lthe memorial half dol lars which will be offered through banks at one dollar each. “I shall riot definitely determine what I shall do about the appointment until I get back to Charlotte on Friday and see just what they want me to do, but if I can adjust my other engagements so as to do the work I shall accept and do what I can to sell the half dollars in this state,” declared Mr. Morrison. “I like and admire Mr. Borglum and I am sorry he.was dismissed and is uot to finish the job, but that great tribute to the Southern Confederacy must be completed regardless of who does and I see nothing to do but go ahead with the legally constituted authorities. But if I accept the appointment I do not wish that action to be interpreted as the ex pression of any opinion one day or an other concerning the eontroversay be tween Mr. Borglum and the committee.” Mr. Morrison, who passed through Ra leigh yesterday on his return from Red Springs where he addressed the Scottish Bociety of America, has gained flesh since he laid down the duties of governor on January 14th. and appears to be in the best of physical condition. Decrease in Value of Hyde County Farm Lunds. Raleigh. May B.—A decrease of ap proximately 8900,000 in the value of farm lands and farm buildings of Hyde county. North Carolina, took place be tween Jannary 1, 1920, and January 1, 1925, figures made public here today by the department of commerce at Wash ington, D. C., show. The data was contained in the preliminary announce ment of the 1925 farm census by the department in Hyde county. The acre age devoted to farm* also decreased in the five year period from 80,675 acres to 69.615. The value of the farms and buildings for January 1, 1920, was given as $4,672,263 and on January 1, 1925, $3,792,949. The number of farms increased in the period covered from 1,148 to 1,248. White farmers operated 971 of the farms in 1925 while 457 negroes operated the remaining farms. These were divided into 628 owner farms, four farm man agers and 616 tenant farmers. A decrease in the acreage devoted to the principal crop* of the State was shown from the crop figures of 1919 to those of 1924 but a slight increase was indicated in the acreage/ devoted to apple produc tion. The number of horses in use in creased while the total number of cattle and swine on the farms showed a de crease. Mule’s Kick Leads to Suit For Damages. Greensboro, May 6.—A mule got the better of an automobile in a collision near here, wrecking the front part of the Ford and injuring the driver, and as s result the owner of the machine haa filed suit in Guilford Superior Court for SIO,OOO. E. P, Putnam is plantiff and C. B. 65 To abolish. 015 Not as much. VERTICAL 1 White with age. 2 Decaying. 3 Silk worm. 4 To be sick. 5 Obstinate, ti Lair. T Eagerness. 8 Playthings. 10 One in cards. 12 Truck for furniture. 14 To value. 15 Flushed with confidence. 10 To reprove. 17 Male swine. 20 To perform. 23 Covering on a bed. 24 Instruments used in sewing. 20 Meadow. 27 Auctions. 28 Procreated. 30 To submit. v. 32 Quantity. 34 Chain or rope passing through mast. 37 Grazing. 38 Lowest tides. 30 Quantity of yarn loosely rolled. 40 Due. 42 Baker on stove. 44 Past. 40 Ravine. 50 Compartment of a window. 51 Geographical drawing. 53 Dined. 55 Smooth long fishes. 57 Verb of permi^eion. 58 Field. 00 To be indebted. 01 Every. j Hester, a contractor. U defendant in the ■ I suit. Putnam claims that last Novem ber he was driving near Guilford Col ; lege and met a bunch of mules, owned by Hester; that they almost blocked the road; that he drove on the right-hand side at a moderate rate of speed, and 1 that, without warning, one mule jumped ■ in front of his automobile and kicked the front part to pieces. Personal in juries were sustained by Putnam, he al ' leges and he asks $490 for the automobile and SIO,OOO for the injuries. If every young tadpoles are fed thy roid, frogs no larger than flies can be produced. Memorial Day Race! Ciwuns}U Monday . May 11 2P.M. 250-Mile Clmnpwsuliip $25,000 PURSE tickets now on sale All Price* indnde War Xu TICKETS NOW ON SALE In Concord at Standard Buick Co. All Prices Include War Tax aonßßAli ADXXSHOXi BOW BEAUX* Si St " '.l'.r.v.'. SI SuS MBmv,Si Briri we (Baw eat Miaj CRAMPgBCAICP Al SStSr&tm ~.'.?7. I .4MS GRANDSTAND Bi •Hisi 4l^ttßWdßblat.Rr ......SS^SS MAIL ORDERS . Oami L Barringer / Charlotte Speedway M Wtot Trade St. 50-54 South ynion Street 1 Oh Boy! What Comfort In Tnese Stylish Summer Suita . This smart two-piece young man’s hot weather suit is shown in brown, blue, grey and tan in plain shades and fancy stripes. _ Men’s three-button con- /TJmVv aenrative model in natural, Wy (A blue, grey, brown and sahd \ in plain colors and stripes. 1/ jyy Well tailored; shipe-retainidg / |\ I features; cool, comfortable and re- \~~ U markable values at the low price of \ \ j - $9.90 \ l\\| Other Summer Suits at J jft j I $12.50 “$19.75 j> ' — 1 . 1 —' Choose Your Bathing Costumes Early /Mm. Even though you are not quite ready to try the water, it is wise a to select your bathing suit now. 'A First, will you be ready whenever fancy calls. Second, you will find U>. the largest assortments awaiting /V/ r Our Suits are guaranteed to hold their shape and dolor. Ritchie Hardware Co TOUR HARDWARE STORE <- ) PHONE 117 ' oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo6oooooooooocxx)oooooocob I Mother’s Day jj Sunday, May 10th Have you seen the Framed Mottoes, in our Window? !j[ X Also Mother’s Day Stationery and Greeting Cards? ij Kidd-Frix Music & Stationery Co., i, ! | (Incorporated) Phone 76 Concord, N. C. jj| FORD OWNERS | I The Rossoo Automatic Oiler for Ford Coro or Tracks absolutely ■ Insures the proper amount of oil in your crank case at all time*, under ail running coodltitona. Guaranteed to save 40 Per cent on ail. I will give you TEN DATS FREE TRIAL, and absolutely guaran i too Satisfaction. L. E. BOGER I Room 6, Man*sa Building n..——L— The New Bloc Sky Law. Raleigh ' News and Observer. “The new .blue aky law la a bad law or the State,” declared Colonel F. H. Fries, of Winston-Salem, president of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, who win in Raleigh yesterday on bis way to thi banker*’ convention on at Pinehniwt. _ . “We can’t operate under the law: no body can operate under it,” he said. Friday, May 8, 1925 “The law permits ‘reputable dealers’ to buy securities but does not permit them to sell them after they get them. The purpose of the law was fine and people who Were paying 25 and 30 per cent. 4o sell stock ought to have been gotten rid of but the law goes too far and will have to be amended in order to give relief.” During the past two years, Oregon has set free nearly 22,000 pheasants on her game- farms. , jy... ■ - o*7;*' • .

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