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rridsv Tulv 3 1Q25 Buy Them Now at the Great Alteration Shoe pale > ~ I 1 ’ ■ ' j Sale Now on in Full Swing. It’s an event of Wonderful Opportunities and Savings—coming right at the height of the season —for at these SEN SATIONAL REDUCTIONS it will pay you to buy two or more pair* for summer and vacation wear. Every pair is from our regular stock— not shoes made for sale purposes, and at their original prices, were remarkable values. - t " ,■■■—■■ ■■■■■■■ ■■■ ■* '■ IV;, yui» »■■■!■ l ' - |f M „!!■ I WUBf I II ■ ■■ 'I Children’s Patent, Tan and Colored Plimps— Women’s .Patent Tan; White Rid and Canvas Wopien’s Patent Satin and White Kid, Latest Men’s Dressy tan oxfords, dark, light and medium CCf, toQO, Pumps , • Styles in Fancy Cut-out designs shades of tan uai.551.98“54.95 $2.65 $2.95 “ $4.95 $1.95 $2.95 “ $5.50 95c $1.45 T ? $1.69 . Formerly Parker’s Shoe Store See '"t.y'Sx MARKSON SHOE STORE KANNAPOLIS DEPARTMENT KANNAPOLIS DEFEATS . THE CHARLOTTE TEAM In a Bail Game Marked by Spectacular Playing. BY JAZZY MOORE Kannapolis, July 2.—Another jnb of frenzied baseball fans saw Kannapolis move a notch toward the stifle champion ship b.v nosing out the strong Charlotte All-Stars, 2 to 1, here this afternoon, in a game that will go down in history as being one of the most exciting struggles ever staged between amateur teams. TfcO seven or more hundred people who saw it .veiled themselves hoarse and those who went out as neutrals found I themselves yelling for one side or the other before it was half through. Charlotte put up a magnificent battle. The Mecklenburg boys fought evffry step of the way'but the breaks were ngniust I them. The locals on the other hand, j played faultless bait, and in addition < made some spectacular plays tliitt were iifPMvers in time of need. ( , Herman Holshouser. mainstay of Car olina last season, and. now sought by the New York Giants, who was on the bill for the locals, was airtight and pitched shutout bull for a half dozen innings, in addition to holding the Charlotte charg ers B : .tless during that period. But Wealrtdgo. hurling for the visitors, was equally us stingy, and the count was scoreless. In a manner width can nwer be'adequately described. Manager Lind say Syith a worry that usually come* to a helmsman. tried'Champion, well known -embpro, to break the deadlock. Suffibc it in the same inning the locals came to bat, Johnson, another Carolina protege, slammed Joe lVestridge's fast-- pitched ball over the fence to score ahead of him Wood, who had walked. Hopkins scared the locals half to death in tin last session by crashing one for two bas es and racing borne on Summers’ stinging single. Lapsley ended the game when by tagging Westridge for the lust put-out. JoAinson. in xhortfield. played great ball for the winners, handling four hard chalices perfectly. It was his homer that MONTANA TOWN ONCE NOTED TO JOIN THE GHOST CITIES Marysville Is to Be Wiped Off the Rail road Map Hi a FeW Weeks. * Melena, Mont.. July 2.—-Marysville, Mont* to tye willed off the railroad map within a few weeks as is has been erased from record in its other activities, once wan the oal of a race between two reat railway systems and in the thirty-odd years of it* life wa* the source of metals valued at not less than *100.000,000. The .town, incidentally, produced a base ball team with a record of defeating all I‘acific Coast league clubs of its day and of sending several players to the mnjor leagues. A quarter of a century ago Marysville had a population of 7,500. Petition of the Northern Pacific rail way to remove its tracks from Helena to Marysville relegates to the backwoods what 1b left of the one-time famous town and again it is to become a stage coach town, fifteen and one-half miles from a railroad. ' Years ago the Great North ern, which lost the race for a terminus within the city, and ended its line just outside the boundary, abandoned Marys ville and garduaffy, as the mines worked put, the surviving Hne limited its serv ice until, during the past year, a train operated only when there was an accum ulation of freight for {ts haul. Trply a ghaaf cilyv with a handful of shacks und tumbled foundations left of its opce bustling business district, scat tered,’ weather beaten house outlining its residence section, possibly fifty or sixty families claiming it as home, Marysville indicates its past glory only to the im aginative. Tfce famous Drum Luiumon mine, chief source of its wealth, is still being worked sufficiently, it is said, to pay wages to a handful of men ; some other of the older mines are operated on the same scale and there are numerous prospects whose owners optimistically forecast a renewed activity, in the old camp. Nevertheless, the Montana railroad commission, after an exhaustive investigation, has pricked the bobble of hope and has given its con-1 sent tothe abandonment of ahe railroad. The-Dunn Lomwun mine, discovery of Thomas'Cruse, alope Is said to have pro duced *67,000,000 worth of gold. Cruse sold the mine to a London syndicate for *1,600,000 when the vein had just been scratchet]. The Yiew operators bouey combed the surface of tue hill -and, so the story goes, wade jaUUonalres in Bos-: ton, Helena, and New York, as well go in England. Many other mines parti-. registered the tallies for the home play ers und inspired new hope itito tjie breasts of his teammates. For the visitors Westridge was t)ie star performer, with Hopkins rumrpg him a close second. TlieJvnnnapolia club will carry a crip pled team to Moorcsville today to meet the Iredell forces in n double-bill. Saun ders, Johnson and Holshouser. collegiate stars, will be ineligible to play today and tomorrow, since college rules that a player cannot engage in but three games a week, and Manager Lindsay has (fc elded to use them in tomorrow’s doable I bill with Shorty Laurence's Rockingham i wonders. . ' v I Box score: I Charlotte AH* K H It) A E I Jarrctt. If. 4 0 <) 1 0 0 I Hopkius. bk. 4 11 2 0 0 j Summers. 2b. -4 0 2 1 3 0 , Vtentredge. p. 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 Reid. lb. :. 3 0 0 0 0 2 Oates. 3b. 2 0 0 3 0 0 James, rs. , 3 0 0 2 0 0 Helms, c. 3 0 0 8 0 1 Milbe. cf. 3 0 0 1 0 0 Total* 20 1 41 24 4 3 Kannaimlis AB R H I’O A E Saunders, 3b. 3 0 0 1 2 0 Lapslev, lb. __ S 0 0 12 0 0 Lee. rs. 4 Iff O 1 0 0 Fink. cf. 4 0 1 0 0 0 Wood. If. „ 2 1 0 0 0 0 Johnson, ss. 3 1 2 2 2 0 McO’.ain. e. 2 0 0 10 1 0 Lindsay, 2b. 2 0 0 1 4 0 Holshonser, p. 1 6 0 0 1 0 Champion, p. 1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals -_ 25 2 3/27 11 0 Summary—Two-base hits: Sumqj'PK, Hopkins.' Home run: Johnson. Sacri fice; McClain, Lindsay. Base on bails. Holshouser 1. Wertredge 2. Struck opt by Westredge 7; Holshouser 8; Cham pion 1. Hits off Holshousjr 0 ill si* innings; Champion 3 in three innings. . Left on bases. Charlotte 2; Kannapolis 2.’ Cmpircs Roberts and Laugh!in. Of ficial scorer; Mitchem. Time 1:45, At tendance 700. | leled its development and. from one of I these, the Penobscot, Nate Vestal brought I down to Helena what was then the larg- I est bar of gold in the world, valued at $30,000. '] What- is said to have hecn one of the first concentrators ever constructed on a commercial scale was built below the Druui Luuimon to work the tailings of-| the famous mine. The ruins of the giant plant still mark the road to Ml* •tty. Rule* for Fighting the Boil Weevil, 1. Begin dusting when 10 per cent, of the squares have been punctured. This may occur in late June or not until some time in August. Watch closely ami start I promptly wheu this 10 per cent infesta tion has been reached—when 10 squares. in 100 have been punctured. I 2. I’se five to seven pounds of, calcium arseffate par acre for each application. With a good dusting machine this will cover the plants well. / 3. At least three applications should be made at intervals not more than, five days apart—spur days would be better. The uuniber of applications wiH depend an tlie infestation. If ruin fails. di|st again while the plants are damp. 4. U*e dusting macU'mts approved by your couply agent or your college of sgfi wult.ire. 5. Dust when the wind, is not biowing ( and when the cotton plants are moist. | This may menu that the dustiug must bei done at night or begin just before day-| break before the dew dries from the. plants. 6. Poison and machines for applying it must be on hand before the time for dusting arrives. Practice with the ma chine before goi'ng into, the field. Re sure yqu know how to run it right be fore beginning to dust. The I'rOgresaive Farmer. " A western governor had lost one pf life colonels, and there watt uu uiMretn :ly scramble for the office, despite the [fact that the colonel's body was await ing burial. One of the ambltiuus candi dates went so fur asto call upon the executive und usk: ’’Governor have you any objections to my taking Cojkiuttl Smith’s place?” 1 "No," the governor replied complac ently. "I have no objections if the un dertaker fe wiUinf." f bossed and to know she isn't. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE THE STRANGE CASE OF ARTHUR' FRAZIER j The Pathfinder. f?**; The government went to considerable trouble and expense lo .mrove to the’ Rev. j and Mrs. Charlies Frgzigr, of Winner, 8-1 Dak., its contention tffitt Arthur Frazier. 1 their son, had been trifled in France and that the ‘‘Arthur Frailer” who returned from the war ia an ijtepnator. , An army, officer of the vet-' eeans bureau teatifieij that the present '“son” confesaed he . wife Arthur Lopez, a Mexican. Two Wa*-xlfcording cyriadcis bearing the confession ' Were introduced. | A neuro-psychiatrist told the fsd*r*lrcourt - at Minneapolis that Lope* was fujV.hon-] scious of his shttip- .-'L ,,,W ] The Rev. Mr. Frasier, Indian iletho- j dist preacher, related liiptanoe* ia-which' hfs “uon" proved his identity -by remem bering things of the past. But other wit nesses explained that Lope* wg* gble to I identify Frazier’s relatives by means of photographs which the real Arthur, a war-time buddy, had showed him in France. That is why. it was asserted, lie was able to identify Mary, Frazier's sister, 'at the station on his Ifttme-coming. As for identifying the mother, Lope*’* reputed confession says he took-a chance that the woman he saw weeping on the station platform was Mrs. Fazler. The parents, however, insisted that the claimant was their son aqd said his fa . miliarity with many things precluded any fraud. The government argued that Lopez was an Indian. The minister and his i wife clinched their argument by identify i ing Arthur b.v means ofrithe initials “A. I F,” tattooed on his nrffifi|*pjky i he attended the Fandmtn tjidthn school l before the war. AnidentiffbatiOn expert' I said the tattooing was quite; recent and i claimed it could not have been done ri< , early- as the parents said it was. i To complicate the situation. Anna Mon , cola, brought all the way from Mexico by the government to support its - case. ,in ! formed the court “This boy ? Ah. I know-hlm well! He ; is Arthur Lopex. the son of my dead sis ter." “He is not. This boy in my son." as earnestly declared Mrs. Frasier. After Joyr hours of deliberation the ' jury decided that the real son bad died ■ for his country and dubbed the claimant an iinimstor. The motive was held to Ibe desire for war service compensation and the advantages of a home. Bur the Rev., and Mrs. Fazier refused . to accept the verdict: they have taken Arthur home with them as their son. ”1 t guess I know any own »rp better than 12 : | Ntr “J>lto Wen do," says Mrs. Frazier - j There,_is a grave in a cemetery at Nio : i brarn. Nebr., that holds an "unknown (soldier.” It was there that the Fraziers buried as their sop-, the remains of the i soldier shipped home from the French ■ i batllelfields. However, in the view of (j the "happiness of having their real son i j home •live” they have decided to rontinti# i tp take good care of the grave. Everyday Nobility. Youth's (’ompanlon.^ “TUe way I figure it. l'm-le Turner, the greater part of my life has been lost. ’ said Bob Hampton reflectively, t, “JVbat's happened to give you such a sudden grudge against yourself. Bob?” inquired old Turner GUI. f ’"A quotation that I read. ‘Count that day lost whose low descending sun views from thy hand no noble action done.' or something like that. As I look back over my life I cannot recall a single thing that is entitled to be called a noble act." “What is a noble act. Bob?” . “Why I>—l don't know. Homsthing big and fine. I suppose; saving a life, thwarting the schemes of a villain, en dowing a college or a hospital—some thing Mke that." “I m. Try to give your employer #n honest day’s work for his money, do you. iBob?" I “Oh, yes.” I "I’M your,. Mils when they're due?” I "Os course.” “Try to do the right thing by your children in the way of food, clothing, education, moral training, and so forth?” “Certainly.” "Remember to praise your wife's cook ing occasionally—tell her what a good wife she is and give meaning to yopr words by acting accordingly?” “Yes.” "Ever lend a band to help a fellow traveler up rs grade that’s a little too atiff for his motor?" "Sometimes.” “Dig up a dollar or two now and then to hol)> the charitable organisations?” “I never turn down such an appeal.” "Well, Bob, I shouldn’t worry much •bout those noble actions If I were you. A rainbow is a beautiful sight, but a sky that is all rainbows would be ri diculous. 4 world that is populated al together with heroes and geniuses with out any insignificant plodders like you , and m« to keep the wood thopped and l«uch tiling* would be a very unsatisfac- tory place. The min who follows the path of duty as God; gives him to see it and keeps his hands Mean, his head clear, his heart warm and his soul in tune with his Maker has not lived in vain.” x An Education Free. Youth's Companion. How many American boys know any thing about the Webb Institute—where it is and what is and what it does; who founded it nltd for what purpose? Nol many, we believe; yet it was established for the sole benefit of American boys and is maintained for no other purpose than to give them a free education in naval architecture and marine engineer ! ins. I During and for a time after the Civil War Mr. William' H. Webb was the lead ing shipbuilder of A mei ’ i( ’ tl - H p built vessefe for the Husgten uayy anil the Italian navy, a fgffeptor the United States government, ’ the first of the great palatial steamers that made the reputa tio nos some of the obastwise ; lines. i The technical training that’ enabled him to attain his high position in his railing had come hanj, He had had to work for it. with fe*e advantages and little help, and the memory of the strug gle .was so vivid an# enduring that he determined to make filings eisier for other young men wfij desired to follow his piofessihn. Tbnjfcsult is the JV'cbb Institute, e«tabliHh«*'iuuder his direct supervision' arid *uppij|ted by funds left for the purpose in fits will. It standkin gr-ip’r founds; and a beau tiful situation, tm FordbAto Heights, in the upper pafttordSewJwrk City.; For tbe'’’R>tWriatf y7ußg JPI who ana: ad missicu everything bur their clothing is freer!. Their food., their room Vent, their tuition, even their laundry work, costs them nothing. Although the emuses of study are de voted to naval ureliitZct.ure and murine engineering, the..students also receive a thorough traiiifng in .Objects fundamen tal to general engineering. Next year there will be a.course in aircraft design and construction. The whole period of instruction covers four years. Any American boy between the ages of fifteen arid twenty-one is eligible for admission if he has hud a high school education, is of good charac ter and can pass the entrance examina tions. which are held early in Septem ber. Prohibition's Wofst Enemies. Charity and Children. The liquor interests forfeited ail clu.m to consideration as legitimate business |by their own lawlessness ion;' years be ' fore prohibition became the establishes i policy of the country. Indeed, one of liie strongest factors working for pro- I hibition was the notorious unwillingness, or inability, of saloon keepers ito obey the laws regulating the traffic. At length the people lost patience with the saloon orderly and law-abiding and abolished it altogether. It is worth while to re count this mure or leas ancient history because wc arc facing the fact that pro hibition itself is losing prestige with the country for exactly the same reason. It seems ns difficult to cwnpel prohibition enforcement agents to remain within the law as it formerly was to compel -<aloon keepertp-to remain within it. Hard upon the slaughter upon the public highway of a peaceable, law-abiding traveler. 8. 8. Holt, eame the slaughter of a young mau in Watauga county, Leonard Trip lett. The circumstance* surrounding the latter shooting are in dispute, but it is admitted that Triplet! was not running liquor and that there was no liquor found among the party of which he was a mem ber. It is clear, therefore, that the of ficer* were In the wrong when they stopped gnd searched the ears. Their eue was to apologize and withdraw promptly. Instead, they lingered long enough to indulge in au. altercation which culminated In the killing of Triplett. Now. whatever else it may have accom plished. this affair dm* not tend to heighten respect for the prohibition law. It has exactly the oppuaite effect. When things of that sort occur, prohibition suffers at the hands of its own agents, just as the liquor traffic suffered at the hands of its agents, the saloon keepers. WcU Traitm k A commercial traveler, visiting a large insurance office, boasted to the manager that he could pick -ut all the married step among the employes. Ac cordingly he stationed himself at the door, as they returned from dinner, and mentioned all those he believed to be married. In almost every cose he was right, "How do you do if/*' asked the utan •ger. "The married wen wipe their feet on the mat; the single one* don’t.” In addition to the four normals con ducted for the training .of negro teachers, tire State of Forth Carolina conduct* one for training teachers for the Cherokek Indians of, Robeson county. f HEARS HILLS WHISPER OF GOD 1 HO mf / ' ■ < *£&' ■ 1 | $ Jl ’' \jißiw ' 1 ip ‘ > s* < lsSs«S«S : wSic^rflß^HKM^^^^^^aji i w*s' ■J w * -”T / VMBBN H ■ ~~ ■"■ ~"~'"-•' u m ~~’" AMOVE is "01.1» (i WM>kt in THE TENNESSEE HILLS AND DESIRES NO ANSWEItS TO HIS QUESTIONS. BELOW IS HIS LITTLE HOME. LEECHED 2100 FEET ABOVE THE TOWN OF DAYTON. BY ALLENE SUMNER NEA Service Writer. Dayton, Tenn.. June 26.—" We huinZutb haven’t no call to comprehend the iucqm prehensibie, or scrutinize the inscruta ble." The little mountain cabin of “Old George” Morgan, mountain preacher, hugs the green breast of Waldon’s Ri<|gc, 2100 feet above the town of Dayton, where ’file monkey w’ar.” as the mountaineer* call the evolution battle, rages. The “Worst Reader.” Generation after generation of Mor gans have lived atop Waldon's Ridge and watched the valley folks far below. They call George Morgan "the worst reader iu the county." That means that he reads the most. Mountaiuecrs who sometimes see a newspaper and who keep the Holy Rude and a patent medh’iue almanac upon their ,barc tables, look at Morgan with owe. "Old George Morgan's read thi* Dar win felluvv," they tell you, and a bit of respect and fear for one who would so defy his God. runs through tluvr voire. We found “OUI George” Morgan hoeing his dahlia plants and gazing at the blue misty valley more than 3600 feet Mow him. The monkey war down there’/ George Morgan’s genial old face sobered. "So much wrangling and jangling," he said, "all because -folks want to uouipre- No Sun. No Freckle*. Summer win means frmkles. The per son with light skin shows freckles more often and to a greater degree than the darker skinned person- 1 This, however, is not universally true. Children aye not subject to freckles until about. their fourth year. Freckles are usually caus ed by the suu’s rays which have the faculty of producing pigment in excess of the normal amount present in humans. Rut it seems that some other agency be sides the sun’s rays must be a factor in producing freezes for they frequently ap pear on parts of the body that have never been exposed to the sun. Freckle* also bend, the incomprehensible and scruti nize the inscrutable.” Hie Mountain Know. "Look at my mountains,” and hi* learn brown fingers pointed to a distant peak creamy wyth bloom. "They know and they keep still. When folks know, they keep still, too.” Morgan studied to be a minister long years ago in a little theological seminary down in At he its, Tenn. But he came back to the mountain of his fathers without his degree and sheep skin. But degree or none, he went upon his work, tending his bees und cattle and fruit trees week-days, mounting li,‘s horse, Bible in saddle-bag, and preaching tin \t-ord of God to soul-hungry mountgiu eers on the Sabbath. “Folks can't begin to doubt oue word iu the Bible.” says the mountain preach er. "without beginning to doubt all of them. And then where’ll they be?” Favors School Law. Any evolutionary teachings that deny the special creation of man are a men ace to the state’s young, declares Mor gan. and he’s for any law that will keep tlic schools safe for children. Morgan east a hright blue eye over skies no bluer. “At night I sit in front of the cabin and watch the stars.” he went on. “They make me hunger to know things! Why we came and where we’re going ami I seem to run in certain families. | The best and easiest treatment of freckles says Ilygeia, is their prevention. Those who know they are. susceptible to freckles and wish to avoid them rnust- I avoid exposure to the direct rays of the - sun during .summer. Li-ft -nlone, ; freckles (usually become less nroriouacecr iu the I fall, but sometimes they ’persist through -1 out the winter months when they are known as cold freckles. This authority warns against spots on the skin which for a trine may look as harmless as the simple freckle. Buck spots, even in young people, may be a symptom of a serious skin disease. If they seem persistent. PAGE SEVEN if our folks are waiting for us over there. “But that’s sin, and I make myself stop bothering God and just sit still and watch ’em ups there a_Jt crisp and cold like fire, and I know He knows, an’ that’s enough. "I’m just a homespun plain mau and He is God. Who am I to comprehend the incomprehensible V Easy to Believe. "But God comes closer to us folks on the mountains than to those down in the valley. It’s easier for us to believe. "There were 10 of us kids running ov er these mountains, and our mammy and pappy didn't have much, but they taught us that tool mountain air and spring wat er and the green grass and the blue sky were .enough, and not to be asking for other things. "I learned to keeif satisfied in life. I got another suit of clothes and enough money for buryin’ arid I got my Bible and my wife and I aim I’m the happiest man alive. I can live on SIOO a year up here.” Black smoke rose like u wraith from Hie lowlands, and the toot of a factory Whistle echoed faintly through the ridge. "They slave so down there for things they don’t need.” said the mountain preaeher. ”1 dou’t want to teke nothin’ .'way from life with me but happiness and my belief in my Book. I want those little chil dren down there to have that, too.” uud especially If the skin becomes rough •ml warty, a physician should be consult ed at ones. All three candidates for the nomination general the f.of appointed hy Mr. tUm is assigned to the State HiahwvSfaJiJSL " went. ; - 5> Yon can t keep a good weed down or a rood head of lettuce up. , .
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 3, 1925, edition 1
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