PAGE EIGHT IA lc 111 In| A rHlIr IH KY IHr v/iivuLiii/i rciuriiLfe o i iiil HUNDREDS NOW POURING IN PRAISE FOR KARNAK From All Parts Os Carolinas Remarkable Results After Thking Sensational Medi cine Are Being Reported Daily. IT HAS BECOME TALK OF THE ENTIRE CITY “I Wouldn’t Exchange The Good This Karnak Has Done Me For The Highest Priced Automobile I n Greensboro,” Declares John W. Mitchell. The praise heaped upon Karnak, the ' sensational medicine that has caused, such intense interest in Concord since it* introduction here a few weeks ago, grows greater and greater every day. Prom all parts of town men and women are reporting the most remark able results in restored health, strength and energy after taking the amazing med icine, and the demand at the Pearl Drug Company continues to grow by leaps and bounds. Karnak has become the talk of the entire, city, and in every neighbor hood will be., found some one who has a remarkable story to tell about their ex perience. ; Such Statements as the following from John W. Mitchell, prominent resident of 624 Arlington St., Greensboro. X. o.' who declares that he wouldn't take the prices of the best automobile in Greens boro today for the remarkable good Kar nak bas done him. is but typical of the high endorsement being accorded this medicine on every hand. “I'll tell you, this Karnak is simply wonderful.” says MV. Mitchell. "Why, I wouldn’t exchange the good this medi cine has done me for the highest priced automobile ill Greensboro today. There is nothing too good that can be said about Karnak. “Xo. sir. I hadn't bepn able to do a day’s work for more than a year before I got Karnak, but today I have put in a good day's painting about the house,- which is something I couldn’t even thought of doing before I got this remark able medicine. That's what three bot tles of Karnak has done for me. “For four or five years my stomach The Penny Ads. Get Results —Try Them. oneWbman, Ifcdfl teamed. ; ' 35Tfears ago p^§||aajjjgjpcSy Years ago when the first spoonful of Calumet Baking Powder was used, one c housewife learned the secret of success on bake* N day. She found that what she had thought \ bad luck in the past was really the fault of in* ferior haveners. \ x 1 Over a third of a century has passed since that housewife experienced the perfect results that cause loom using CAfffltffT sSLit, TOE world s greatest BAKING POWDER can* instead of v Today millions upon millions have real* ized the same satisfaction that goes with using a k ; perfect baiMgrowder. K, Calumet ha» move friends than any of m the other brands on the market today—women , who after one trial fbun&Shtit for uniform, wholesome ■ t - ' ' bafeings it has no equal. Don’t forget that a few cents worth of unreliable bakktgpowder can ruin several dollars wtlrtn. or other ingredients used in baking. Use i and know what the results will be. EVERY INGREDIENT USED OMORiEY APPROVED Bf U.d POOD AUIHORmBB ♦ r Wm i, wm-v 1 i A—' has been in mighty bad condition, and i my health just got so bad that something ' more than a year ago- I had to give ' up my work as a salesman and retire from business altogether. “I just felt that I was down and out i for good. Every particle of food I ate ‘ felt like lead in the pit of my stomach. | and after meals I would feel so drowsy j and bloated that I simply felt dead on ’ my feet. I had a chronic bronchial cold, 1 too, and only those who have suffered j like I did knows how wretched it really | makes one feel. ’“Well. sir. I hadn't been taking Rar- j nak more than two days before I knew I had at last found the right medicine. I Tt wasn't long before 1 was eating like a man should eat. and now t am digest- j ing all my food perfectly and am entirely i rid of that indigestion and heavy, de-' pressing feeling after meals. “That chronic bronchial cough has dis appeared just about completely, my strength has increased by leaps and bounds, and at the rate I am going, why, in two more weeks I will have so much * surplus energy that I will have to get back in active business again. “It’S amazing to me how anything could do what Karnak has done in my l case. It's some medicine, and if any- 1 body wants to know about it, just tell. 'em to see me.” Karnak is sold in Concord exclusively! by the Pt>arl Drug Co.; in Kannapolis by the F. L. ritnith Drug Co.; and by i the leading druggist in every town. i K4nitn GASOLINE. Youths Companion. ~ H A few weeks ago Um« was- an im- . tots and other men of Mimes at Wash*; ington to determine whether or* nofc “leaded" gasoline—which means gaso- ’ line containing tetraethyl lead—is so poisonous a compound l as to endanger the public healths' * , Our readers will probably remember that the newspapers, several months ago. reported that some of the employees in one of the plant* of the Standard) Oil Company had died under distressing conditions as a result of exposure- to lead fames during experiments with a liew form of gasoline. That was tire tetraethyl, or, as it is called for short, the ethyl gasoline, a recent chemical discovery, which, its manufacturers as sert. is so much cleaner and more ef ficient In eombuston that it will entirely suiiersede ordinary gasoline as nn engine fuel. Under the supervision of the New J Jersey Hoard of Health certain changes I were made in the methods of mnnii | fneturing the compound, and we have j heard of no further fatalities; but the incident moused so lffuch legitimate np i prehension that the government has j undertaken to get the best scientific opinion concerning the possibility of making and using the new fuel safely. | The conference we speak of did not ) oome to a positive conclusion. It found that learned hud experienced chemists do not agree >u|*on the subject. Accord ingly it referred the controversy to the Surgeon General nnd an investigating commission to be by him appointed. No | one disputes the facts in the case, which , are that mnch of the lead in the gaso (line comes out of the exhaust pipe ns . a fine impalpale dust, which, if breathed I into the lungs in sufficient quantity, is ' capable of setting up .lead-poisoning in j the body. And nny physician will tell ! you that lead-poisoning is a very serious ! matter, capable of affecting the health ,in many ways nnd sometimes of cans , ing death. j The question is whether the lead ddst j would be produced in sufficient quantity ! and under such conditions ns really to i become a danger to the public health. Some chemists are sure that it would and that the use of ethyl gasoline ought Ito be forbidden by law. Others are ' equally sure that it would not, and that 1 with proper precautions there would be |no danger to the workmen who make I ethyl gasoline or to the antomobillsts who use it. From the experiments that have been made and the discussions that are now going forward we hope that the investigators can arrive at a conclusion that will command public confidence, for I the matter is of importance not only to I the workman and the motorist but to , everyone who must breathe the air into , which the exhaust fumes of the new fuel will be discharged. ! ; I German sculptor is making a bust of ‘ Hindenburg. The French might enjoy a bust at Hiudy. j Milwaukee man asks divorce because : she kisses him too much. Onions would be cheaper. REMEMBER PENNY ADS ARE CASH THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE ADVERTISING THE SOUTH. L *•*•" South are loyal t« their hoMetlMjijj one of the lorveHrot on ( ’'•***■ have undertaken to- “sell" it i the worldl. And that outfit to be a ’grateful task. J n their great soutnem publicity campaign on which the pub lisbenP aamekttion is entering it will be IpaaeiUc to-adhere strictly to the trutk in-advertising To tell the. world about the south involves a simple yet marvel era* story. . So replete- is the catalogue of the south’s superior advantages that her own people, from sheer fhmillarity with them, are sometimes foraeteful of them. Occasionally they manifest more en thusiasm for. some freak of another coqri munity which possesses the novelty if being less well: known. So magnificent a country as the south, however, cannot be hid permanently under a bushel. In stead it is becoming as a city on a hill, A systematic campaign of advertising the south in it process of being launch ed by the Southern Newspaper Publish ers’ association. In that enterprise the newspaper* 'will practice what they preach, so to- speak. Thay believe in ad vertising and will prove their faith by their work. They will publish, in turn, full page advertisements, setting forth the ilestrable features of the various southern states in every paper holding membership in the association. 1 As already hinted, advertising the ad vantages of the south requires no stretch of the imagination. They nre many and easily discovered. Most of us are familiar with them when we stop to think about It. As basic sources of wealth, we have soil, climate, water power, rail and water transportation nnd thousands of miles of coast lino; we produce cotton and nearly every other crop that grows, and we have coal, Iron, copper, marble and timber. The foregoing nre only a few out standing examples of what the south possesses in abundance. There is a be wildering variety of others of almost equal importance nnd abundance, which cannot even be mentioned here. And the south's development is only just fairly begun. Co-incident with the rapid in stallation of her water power, her in dustry is getting into its proper stride. Capital from other sections is pouring in to find ready opportunities for pro fitable investment. There is no provincialism in this crusade of advertisement of 'the south. It is not conceived in selfishness or the disparagement of other communities. It simply undertakes to set forth facts which have been withheld too long al ready. The world needs to know about the south quite as much as the south needs the world. Publication of the truth will be helpful all around- It is a work which invites wholesome co-opera tion. The Typhoid Fever Menace. Gastonia Gaxette. We do not know when the campaign against typhoid fever in the county is to begin, but it ought to be underway right now. There is ’ more typhoid fever in the county than has been known to exist for years. There have been reported already two or three deaths from typhoid. These cases may have come into the county where vaccination was not prac ticed. or they may have been contracted in the county, because there has not hecß a wholesale inoculation of the count? for several years. * Nothing like the widespread publicity is given the event when it is not put on by the State board of health. Weeks before the campaign starts the county is posted and placarded, and every man. woman or child is informed that the ty phoid campaign is on. Clinics are held at various pointH in the county, for the doctors have to go to the patitents. In a matter like this about one-fourth the population will freely and voluntarily go out of their way for vaccination. This work ought to receive the hearti est support and co-operation from the public of Gastoja eounty. Some 'years ago when Dr. Mangum was in the county, people flocked to the vaccinating centers by the hundreds, and Gaston was freed from the typhoid fever plague for several years. I.et's get down to work in earnest this summer and eliminate any further danger of typhoid fever in the county. The State Department of 'Labor and Priting. established by the General As sembly of 1887. i» one of the oldest State departments apart from those established by the constitution. The duties of the Department of Labor and Printing are: Collection, collation and publication of industrial statistic*; supervision of the public printing! mine inspection and free employment. Up to 1870 tobacco grown in North Carolina moved to mark, largely through theearlier established Virginia markets of Petersburg. Clarksville, Danville and other centers. The growers would prizi tlie tobacco into stout hogsheads and roll these hougaheads many miles to the dis tant markets. > REMEMBER PENNY ADB ARB CASE 9 Nowis DRESS SENSATION . li the Time FISHER'S The Place a They Are Selling SeeThemToday and Be Fitted ~ j Supreme Style Features the Marked Attractiveness of This Suite IS tek-- PUT / ■gijuLS! I *?» ' ' n ll [ » Sk? ifiny rx I HH 7H ’ 'i , I y SOLID CAR LOAD FIBER FURNITURE We have had so many calls for this attractive Furniture—people have wantejYft when we were “doing” their sun parlors and their living rooms and dens. We caught their ideas < —we studied the furnishing styles and we picked up ideas here and there and as a result we have brought on some of the most attractive of the American Fiber Furniture; The new Sea Blue finish is very attractive, also Frosted Mahogany, Barronial Brain and Antique Cop per finisH. Make our Store Your Headquarters. Bell - Harris Furniture Co. ■I - ' \ New Arrivals in Fashion able Footwear Oft Sale Saturday at Special Prices rSijt decidedly new adorable patterns in Black Satin, the laagfeord* in Newness •: -j and loveliness. Low, medium and high an< * $1 9*S> Patents in many beautiful charming and exclusive styles. Latest cut-out ef medium and high heels $2.65 $2.95 An unusually smart showing of White Kid' Pumps. Latest- Styles. Beautiful W and *6* $2.95 $4.95 W fMS Extraordinary disposal of many Odd Lots, Gbodi Grades, Good Styles,J?ut [ i not all sizes in any one lot. Racks reloaded. Cl Oft CO o*l fljT with better bargains than ever before ■*' White Canvas Strapi Pumps and Oxfords. Aft _CT Oft Oft , Low and Medium heels. Extra special JpuPC. 6* +H%M 4«)«wd Beautiful Prima Donna- Hose. All pure thread -silk and full fashioned. $2:00 value, Special’ Cl 4ft Betsey Ross Hose, pure thread silk v A/V $1.50 value. Special ▼**” Ipswich Hose, Pure Thread Silk Oft**' i F Special price .' _ rA • _ Parker’s Shoe Store | S - /. Phone 887 Where Ydu Save rajggg&Pg’ y. ' ■ J**ne iv,.

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