PAGE EIGHT Last Day of Our June Bride Sale - SI.OO Down puts a Sellers In your home with 58 pieces of free goods. | !| Prices on all Sellers numbers have been greatly reduced for this June S i! Bride Sale. Get your Cabinet now. Save $5.00 to SIO.OO on the price. !j l and get the extra free goods. This week only. Make your selection to- | * day, before the best numbers are all sold. j Concord Furniture Co. 1 THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE ■JSFiCmf a 'J a Ji&jmrmmJs Doooooccoooooooooooooaoooooooooooooooobooooooooooboob The Sinclair Law of Lubrication For every machine of every degree of wear, their is a j!j i i scientific SINCLAIR OIL to suit its speed and seal its ij! ] I power. jij Let us look up for you, the grade of Sinclair oil you j!| 1 should use. Is !| Mutual Oil Company PHONE 476 R. jjj wOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOQCX)OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOe«XW>ftftOOOOOOOCT s ™ •» wrr-n r _,. !;r „ INSURE S When You Start To Build H ri £ ht I* m . e t° take out insurance is when you start . H building. Then if through any cause your building should l 1 Pj bn™, even before completed, the Insurance will cover v o ur 5 2 loss. ' * etzer & Yorke Insurance Agency jj ! Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. * | 5 P ' B - FfiTZER A JONES YORKE -1 00000000000000000<X)00000000OOOOOOOOOQOtXX»C»Q0000000000 I BEST \ CEMENT \ PLASTER il LIME Mortar Color, Piaster Paris jij ""'CRAVEN’S kfrr street 8 I SPECIAL SALE |j Monday 9:30 A. M. j Aluminum Ware 4Q r Rarh Watch Our Windows j CHARLES STORES CO., Inc. I 34 South Union St., Concord N. C. J., rk-™r>i C.. i-i-itts..LiiiSS,iOTSE; ll CITIZENS BANK AND 1 I TRUST COMPANY | | Concord, N. C. j The Home of Good !i H *S|l| Banking fij Resources Over One Mil- jj H BK- lion Dollars g pm. ■- - | THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE - The Concord Dally Tribune Ijj TIME OP CLOSING OF MAILS The time of tbe dosing of mails at the Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound. I 139—11:00 P. M. i 36—10:00 A. M. 34 4:10 P.M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 39 :00 P. M. Southbound, jj 39 9:30 A. M. : 45 3:30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29—11:00 P. M. LOCAL MENTION | Movies will be shown tonight on the lawn of tbe Y. M. C. A. together with the weekly current event contest. Mrs. A. J. Shinn is confined to the heme of her daughter, *Trs. C. D. Foil, ou East Depot street by illness. Robert I*. Bell has accepted a position at the Chamber of Commerce to. assist in the distribution of license tags during the ■ rush season. ! According to a deed filed Friday in ' the court house D. A. McLaurin ami A. I F. Goodman have sold to H. C. Brooks i property on Odell street, this eftv. for! * $2,250. i I The first official DeMolay conclave will i be held at Asheville on July 13th. A | large number of local DeMolay members i are making plans to attend the con- I clave. Mrs. .T. Mac Caldwell and F C. Cald -1 well and daughters. Frances. Neely and Dorothy Sue. arrived Thursday fromi Tampa. Fla., making the trip in Mr. j Caldwell's car. Several changes on Southern trains. passing through Concord are announced! for midnight tonight. The changes can be found in the schedule on the editorial i j page, and also in another column of this i paper. j The American Tx>gion of Mooresville,' i Post 06. will hold a picnic on July 3rd !to which file public is invited. A num ber of entertaining events have been planned, including a “sing” in which a ' choir of 200 voices will participate. | The sewer pipe for the new hotel has' been laid and the witch which was dug , for it is being filled again. All of the i ditch on West Depot Street has been. * filled and it is probable that the entire | ditch, will be filled during the day. Miss Mary King will leave Monday for I New York to attend summer school at j I Columbia University. During her nb- I senre her sister. Miss Nora King, will i be with the family of Dr. Parks M King,! | in Charlotte. Notice has been given by the city tax l collector that all persons who fail to have I the city license plate on their cars by | July Ist will be prosecuted. Attention i is also called to the fact that cars for > hire must have a special tag for opera ! tion. ' Eight defendants were tried in police court Friday and each was found guilty. Five gamblers weie fined sls each ajid other, who owned the place where the gambling took place, was fined S2O. One defendant was fined $7.40 for giving a worthless check and another was fined ! $25 for an affray. City mail carriers of Concord enjoy a j half holiday each Saturday now. Under a ruling of the post office department 1 postmasters have the right to give the | holidays in each city if they see fit to ! do so and Postmaster Ward ruled rei-ent ! ly that carriers in Concord should slave j Saturday afternoons off. j. The many friends of Mr. Geo. W. Dry, I formerly of No. 7 Township, who is at j this time with his son, Mr. F. O. Dry, of Albemarle, will regret to learn that he I is in a critical condition. Mr. Dry . : si ! nimble to walk or talk. He has been paralyzed for a little more than three years. Paving work in Mt. Pleasant was not completed Thursday or Friday as had 1 been expected. The rain of Thursday | interrupted the work which was halted i throughout Friday. However, the force | of hands on the job got busy again this i morning and it is planned to complete i the task either today or Monday. i Walter L. Furr, city engineer, moved 1 his office Friday from the city hall to the Dixie building. Mr. Furr will! be i succeeded as city engineer by Capt. Q. E. [ Smith about the first of the month, and i he moved to his new offices Friday so l Capt. Smith can have the city engineer’s | offices when he assumes his work for the i city. i Farmers in Concord today for their 1 weekly shopping bring reports of rains ' in all parts of the county during the ’ week. Probably the heaviest rain, a■- [ cording to the reports, fell in that sec [ tion of the county lying east of Kau | napolis. Some hail also fell in that | community. Crops are looking fine ut [ present, the farmers report, and so far j boll weevils are scarce in the county. I There seems to be plenty of profit in [ soft drinks, at least when the capital | is furnished by parents and the profits I are taken by the children. No less than j‘ a hundred impromptu stands have been ( erected by children in Concord daring I the past week and it is possible now to [ buy “soda pop.” chewing gum, candy and i other goods usually carried by such places I of business in many front yards of the | city. ! Washington cut Philadelphia’s lead in j the American League Friday by winning the first game of their important series. - At the same time Detroit was winning * from St. Louis and Chicago from Cleve- I land. In the National League New | York defeated Brooklyn, Pittsburgh de j seated Cincinnati, St. Louis won from j Chicago and Philadelphia and Boston j split a double header. Charlotte won ] from Asheville in the South Atlantic. | ' Negro Convicted of First Degree Mur der. Winston-Salem, June 26.—“ Guilty of murder in the first degree,” was the ver, diet returned this afternoon by the jury in the' case wherein Fred Jones, negro, : I was charged with the murder of James Nfonroe King, yonng white man. on the | heard °th eTh* dTt » POOR BOY WHO BECAME „ A NOTED SCULPTOR Inal* Genius Pictured in the Life of Paul ! Akers. New York. June 20—There are in stances where the achievements of a man cannot be accounted fer on, any other, hypothesis than innate genius and such j a ohe is pictured in the life of Paul Akers, the famous American sculptor,! whose centenary will be observed iu the world of art early next month. Benjamin Paul Akers, as he was chris tened. was born near the village of Sac rarappa. Maine. July 10. 1525. He was the eldest of eleven children; hence aside from the disadvantages of his obscure - birthplace it became necessary for him I to enter the list of bread winners at a i very early age. His father was a self ] educated but impractical man. while his • mother was refined and energetic. J The family removed to Salmon Falls. , Ma.. when Paul was a boy, and there he icontributed to the support of the family by assisting his father at bis trade, which 1 was that of a wood turner. At .this: , work he disp'ayed artistic taste, in de signing ornamental woodwork. For a while he attended the common school and devoted as much time as he could snatch from his duties to reading his favorite authors, who were Plato Aristotle and Dante. lalter on he became interested in German 'and French literature. He first ■'resolved to adopt literature, and to that end engaged to take a pqsi- I tion in a Portlaud printing office. It was there that he saw in a window that which awakened a talent that brought him fame. It was a bust; one of Brackett’s, and Paul had never seen a ; bust, a statue or an artist, but he then , and there resolved to become a sculp- i tor. His first move was to Boston, where i he studied plaster easting under Carew. 1 iHe was then twenty-four years of age , ! when he returned to his home, where his i ■first works attracted attention. These 1 I were a medallion head and a bust of the , j village doctor. The next year he opened i ! a studio in Portland, where he executed 1 ‘ busts of Longfellow, Samuel Appleton , 1 and other notables. t | He visited Italy- in 1853, and it was j during this visit that he modeled his , most celebrated piece. “Benjamin in i Egypt," which, however, was destroyed J with the Crystal Palace in New York, , where it was on exhibition. A letter I written from Italy covers the situation, j .in it he says: “I was thrown from a , t world where not in all my life had I i seen art into a world where all was art. j all around me an earth, in the far hevn- , cans were multitudes of forms, all silent, t hut all demanding place, and none might \ help me.” i At Florence lie executed two bas-re- 1 liefs. "Night" and "Morning,” but fail- j j ing health forced him to return to his i j native land, and in 1854 he spent some 1 | ime in Washington on work for I’resi- j ■dent Pierce, Edward Everett, and Sam < Houston, and th« next year, 1855. he j went abroad again, where he spent three , years in Florence and Rome, producing ( his best known works, “Una and the j Lion" and “St. Elizabeth of Hungary.” , At this time he modeled the "Pearl Div- l er" and an ideal head of Milton, which j Let Your |j| Next Battery jjjj ijj- Be An |!| ' EXIDE ||| ijj Use Only the ijj j ij Best # j|j i ini Our New Mechanically Refriger ated Autopolar Fountain keeps ice cream in the most per fect condition. W ith this new au tomatic refrigerating device, it is possible to hold the temperature to the zero, mark if desired, ana this insures all ice cream and drinks in the best of condition. PEARL DRUG CO. .On the Square Phone 22 ■I 1 • " J. V. DAVIS GabftrnisflJvtam Binkß ’un* ihe described in Hawthorn’s “Marble Fawn." j | He was permitted to make a cast of \ a mutilated bust of Cicero and restored i the eye. the brow, the ears and modeled j the neck and bust, which become an ac- \ cepted portrait and designated “Akers’ < . Restored Cicero." ! it was Paul Akers who planned a free i ! gallery of art for New York to contain 1 in marble the reproduction of the chief ] works in ancient marble, but he died bo- i fore his plans could be executed! ' |t I \ Money bock without Question if HUNT* GUARANTEED \ I SKIN DISEASE RBItBDIES W| / yj] (Hunt’s Salve and Soap), fall In f II fl the treatment of Itch, Eczema, V'* iA Ringworm, Tetter or other Itch * * log akindiseases. Try thia treatment at our risk. • y ECZEMAH Money back without question A if HUNT’S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES < (Hunt's Bslve snd Soap),fail in T 1] < the treatment of Itch, Bcsema, TfJT W JI 1 Ringworm,Tetteror otheritch- I V / / I * inf skin diseases. Try thie * # ” a• ? I treatment at our risk. PEARL DRUG COMPANY J \ \ 9UOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO) ' I Japanese Lanterns Will make your lawn party ] | 1 a hundred per cent, more at- ] | ' tractive. We have thein in ' i ] many designs and sizes from ! I < 10c to 75c each. Also a fine selection of j place card's, tally cards, fav- ' , ors, prizes and everything \ N you need for a successful ]j| I lawn, porch or bridge party. ij ; j Musette,kc j aoooooooooooooooooooooooboi 1 !][ FREE! ' ' '|i Squibbs Service Package free ] \ 11 with every 50 cent purchase of i i <j i Squibbs Goods. '! 1 Squibbs service package contains J ; jlj a tube of cold cream, tube dental i I 11 cream, talcum, nnnlgesie balm, Ep-' ] j l 1 som salts and sodium b : carbonate. , , 1 1 , All of this is in a nice box. The i i 1 1 very thing to carry on your vaea- j | 11 tion trip. i i | Clines Pharmacy!: Phone 838 Buy All Your Feed From Clihe & Moose WHY? First. Our Feeds are all made from pure, sound, clean Grain, which insures the highest percent, of nutriment and feed values. Second. Our Feeds are all put in plain strong bags. We buy in big lots direct from the mills for cash. You pay for no fancy bags or trade marks, nor for higher price made by buying from mid dlemen, go we are cheaper. Third. Your charge account is good with us. We aecomniodate and deliver . quv : ek everywhere. Our Feeds—Oorno Scratch Feed, Como Ikying and Growing Mash, Dairy Feed, Horse Feed, Ship Stuff, Corn, Oats, Huy, Straw. Cline & Moose BUY FROM US. Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do as much or more than any other one thing toward making your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost es timate. , Concord Plumbing Company North Kerr Street .. ' Phone 578 1 Eoooi •[] j I i ! I . ]i[ I 0000000000000000000<^^ | >ooooooooooo * qOOOOO0 0000CO00oocwoooooo^ —4- HOWARD’S FILLING STATION ! “Service With a BuiUe” 1 ,000000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOCX)OOOOOOOOoaoiVv^ 000 I ICE, COAL j and SERVICE A. B. POUNDS , f PHONE 244 MEMORIAL to the Valor of the Soldier of the South This Is the Message on the New Stone Mountain Memorial Half-Dollar We have received a quantity of these coins, put out un der Congressional authority. They are offered to the pub lie at One Dollar each—the fifty-cent premium will ga to the Stone Mountain Confederate Monumental Association carry out the South’s great Memorial. .. Robert E. Lee and ‘Stonewall” Jfackson appear on one siqe. On the other is the great American eagle, high on a mountain crag. The coin is an artistic triumph. "You wifl-Tvant one or more of these new Half-Dollars. They are ready for you here. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.00 NSW PICTORIAL REVIEW PRINTED PATTERNS 8 Stand in a Class by Themselves j They are the Patterns Best - Dressed Women Use Exclusively PRINTED PERFORATED CUT OUT and [READY FOR USB They Almost Talk to You rtorialßeview Patterns Pattern For July on Sale 45 cents 20c to 45« Summer Fashion Quarterly 25c By Mail 30c MtNTI» in U. $. A> Pictorial Review Monthly PARKS-BELKCO. Phone IU Concord, H. C. Saturday, June 27, 1925 tfl'HEßlt.4 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET 4j (Corrected weekly by Cline ft Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for produce on the market: Eggs .25 Corn $1.85 Sweet potatoes 1.50 Turkeys i 4-.25 to .90 Onions 51.25 Peas 3.00 Batter ). J#l Country Ham .go Country Shoulder .20 Country Sides .20 Young Chickens ~ [4O Hens u Irish Potatoei J 125 CONCORD COTTON MARKET SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1925 Cotton .23 1-2 Cotton Seed 45 Specials Large 50jc Tumbler Monarch Peanut Butter 40c Two for 75c j 1 Lb. Can Farm House Cocoa ' (40c size). Special price 25c Two for i 45 c Still selling Picnic only, per pound 20c Cabarrus Cash Gro-, eery Company PHONE 571 W ...

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