PAGE FOUR the Concord Daily Tribune. u ‘ 1 PKIDSS t!ipfttmsa«t«tß w AMk tetotftl {Sffi'S&’S wny r w! ai anronrt oltH mftU matter ». C, ■»- iu th* Act of March t, i«7». _ V* “ gCBSCKIPTION rates to of cwyora by Carrt^ Ss^g,"g,*^§s s 3w* ptiu " Oat of the city Mid by mall *® Worth Carolina tba followlng'prlcoa WIN P r *' *•0: . ts W OM Taw —* 15* I fe^SrSUTiSSir^ti^ All Ba Paid » RAILROAD SCHEDULE Iri Effect June 28, 1925. i Northbound. „ , Silvia* 1 »Ig; “HI. No. 46 To DanviUe , 8 ; 1» £• " i No 12 To Richmond 7.10 P.m ( No. 32 To Wash, and beyondi 8.03 PM. No. 30 To New York 1:53 A. l)i. Southbound. No. 45 To Charlotte 3.K-P.-M. , No. 35 To New Orleans | ■** ¥ , Kp. 29 To Birmingham 2.35 A. » ( No. *l. T« Augusta 5.51 A. M. No. 33 To New Orleans 8.20 A. M. No. 11 T 9 Charlotte A. M , No. 135 To Atlanta' 8 g P. »• , No. 37 To Net# 0%»“ 8 10.45 A. M. ( No. 39 To New Orleans 9:55 A. M. Train No. 34 will stop ln .£® n F?5f t 0 take on passengers going to Washington and beyond. , ... Train No. 37 will stop here to discharge - passengers coming .from beyond Wash- i of other trains except No. 39 make tegular; stops in Concord. ■w; ■'■'C - M >, IZmi" I IjTbibS^thought I 1 FOR TOfiAY—i ! VFORSAKE VEILThns said the t j’ord Os hosts; Turn ye now from your t evil ways, and from your evil doings.— t Zechariah 1:4. f REPUBLICANS UNEASY. « There are ten seats in the Senate now S held by Republicans that are likely to be held by Democrats after the next elec- tion. The Republicans are aware of this fact and they *re already preparing all- ! bis to be offered when the counting is over and the Democrats are seated. In addition to the ten seats which are almost certain to go to Democrats there art- five other* that may be .won by insur gents. with still others in the doubtful ' column. As .it is the Republicans eon trol only the organization of the Senate and if they lose many of these seats to be contested for in the next election they will be unable even to organize the upper house of Congress. A newspaper correspondent in Wash ington finds that of the 35 Senators to be chosen next year only seven are Dem ocrats, and they come from the Democratic States of the South. The Democrats are sure to retain these seats and if they can win eight out of the 26 . remaining seats to be contested for. they will be able to control the organization and select the chairmen of the commit tees. Indiana, where Senator James E. Wat sou, the assistant Republican floor lead er of the Senate, is a candidate for re eleetion, is now classed as a doubtful state, because Watson is opposed by the Beveridge and New factions. Beveridge is' expected to be a candidate against Watson in the primary and it is predict ed . the contest will be so bitter as to badly divide the party. In Wisconsin the La Follette follow ers are reported to be determined to de feat Senator I.enroot, w-ho is a dependa ble administration Sentator. Utah, one of the two states that cast its electoral vote for Taft in 1912. is reported to be turning Democratic. It elected a Demo cratic governor last fall and it is now be —... lieved a Democrat stands a good chance in defeating Senator Smoot for re-elec tion. If Governor Al Smith decides to make the race in New York for the Senate aga : iwt Senator J. W. Wadsworth. Smith's election is regarded as reasonably certain. Both are wet, but the dry* in New York are saying that they would ‘ prefer a wet .Democrat to a wet Repub lican. f Senator Cameron of Arizona a Repub lican, was elected on the Harding land slide in 11)20. as were Senator Ernst, dt Kentucky. Weller, of Maryland. Oddie, of Nevada, and Spencer, of Missouri. The latter died about two months ago and Senator Williams ia his successor. Seenn tor Hum-Id. of Oklahoma, also came in on the Harding landslide. All six of these Republican seiiatorti, it Is practi cally certain, will be succeeded by Demo- It is believed that the Democrats have, more than an eren chance in Ohio, where Senator Willi*, another Harding land- DftMT Y 10l. H S. Copeland former health commissioner of Xhw Yo»|t City and now t “ txhz each day for a syndicate and recently he 1 has had much to shy about worry. He believes worry 1* carrying- many persons' to the'grave and he warns against it. He says: Look over your friends with a critical eye. Note how they appear some given morning. One will have sparkling eyes, good col or «Ud a happy smile. Another will drag about as if his feet weighed a ton. The face will be so long the chin appears to rest on the chest. A third friend seems absent-minded and in a dream! Too many of the human family suffer from worry. “ Worry killed ? eat,” is the old saying. Worry has killed the usefulness of many a day. It has destroy ed the efficiency of many a hard-working individual. It Is almost silly to tell anybody not to worry. The causes of fretting are so varied and so difficult to reach that it is no light task to. overcome the evil practice. Worrying lowers the vitality. It clogs the mental wheels. It slows down the bnain processes. It lessens the efficiency to 1 a .marked degree-. CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL IN STATE. Gutzon Borglptfi thinks he ean create in North Carolina a Confederate Memo rial that will take rank with the one now under construction at Stone Mountain. The sculptor says his “original concep- * tion of a massive memorial on the face of a rock mountain expressive of the true Confederacy” will be carried out in this State. ; • Borgjum may be able to create a memo rial «m a Jforth Carolina rock, but he will never Be able to lesson the grandeur of the work at Sifcshe Mountain. In the first place this State offers no such site as Stone Mountain, and in the second place Borglum's efforts will tjot have the same suppbrt ,as has been given to the Stone Mountain work. We would like to see Borglum create a memorial ip this State, but we hope it will pot be created as a rival to the ofie at Stone jtbantain. Iredell Farmers Growing More Barley. Statesville, July 20.—Due to a demdn stratiton placed three yea re ago on the farm of of H. Y. Mott and because of favorable experiments on the Piedmont branch station here, barley growing in Iredell county is now on the increase, re-; ported County Agent R. W. Graebt-r. Farmers in nearly evtfr.v .section of flic eopnty are growing barlev. *aid Mr. Gr»e bcr. and excellent'results wfeiV secured this year. Many farmers are beginning to substitute barley for oatd. Bunding* it a much surer crop, withstanding winter freezes and producing a larger yield of hay or grain per acre. Mr. Graeber reported that plans were about completed for staging a big fann ers’ picnic at the branch station July 23rd. The United States has more than 1.- 000,000 lawn tennis players. ■ 1 VI u*l A Good Thing - DON’T MISS IT Send your boom and address plainly written, together with 10 cents, atampa of coin (and this dip) ta Chamberlain Medicine Co., Dee Moinee, lowa, and eeive in return a trial package containing CHAMBERLAIN STABLETS for stomach troubles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd the heart, biliousness andcaostinal tion; CHAMBERLAIN’S* COLIC AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY for pain in sto mach and bowels, intestinal cramp, colie and diarrhoea; CHAMBERLAIN’S SALVR needed in every family for barns, scalds; wounds, piles' And akin affections. Try these valued family medicines for only 10 cants. Don’t miss it. J ! fjljllll 1 il.. |m\ li|j!| '■ ij■ egal || I Make .Ygur Summer free Fropa Ice Worry, Install Kelvinator electric resignation in your refrigerator and you dm forget all about ice deliv ery this summer. ' Kelvinator will keep your refrigerator much colder go viaittag ft wi| stay cold while you an gone. 1 ° r a " ens “ “i 1 * double free. l.«ueHy com 1» » opera, kdv* WWJk- dfhr dads # 9 ,• .'jd/'f’. a- ft ’ lie || Th. Q,4a.t Dontilic Eioctrls R.lrlgar.sia. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE I , M I I, i iiffli First girl: “How are you getting along With your breach of promise suit?” Second giri: “Rotten—ttie fellow wonts to marry me.” r.. .. >. First girl: “That just shows; you can’t trust them. Men are so fickle!” “P*.” said Clarence, “what do they mean by -the quick and the dead!” “The qnick. my son, are those who are able to dodge motor care; the dead are those who are not quick!” “What do you think you boy is going to be when he grows up?” “Well, he has the makings of a poet —lie’s always complaining that he's hun gry!” Customer: “I tell you honestly that Customer: “I tell you honestly that; I won’t be able to pay for the suit for another six months. When will it be ready?” Tailor : “Ih another six months.” Young America. Bessie had a new dime to invest in an ice cream soda. “Why don't you give your dime to the mission?” said the min ister who was calling. “1 thought about that,” said Bessie, "but I thing I’ll buy the ice cream soda ami let the druggist give it to the mis sion.” Nurse: “Willie, dear, don't you want to come to see the sweet little sister a ’stork brought you?” Willie : “No, I don't. I want to see the stdrk.” ‘ “Bobby,” said the teacher strenly. “do you know that you have broken a com mandment bv stealing Jame's apples?” “Well,” explain**! Bobby. "I might just as well Ifl-efik one and have the ap ple as break another and only covet it.” Little Jimmy elitned on a chair and al ter a breathless moment of balancing just escaped a fall. Seeing this, his mother reproached him tender!. “Aha. Jimmy.” she ex claimed.v‘‘who just had a scare?" “Mummy did,” replied Jimmy, cold ly. ■ Mother: “Now, Rit4iard, I want you to take a good soaking bath; you’re a sight!” Richard: “I can’t see any use o’ bath ing. mothre, when I go and git dirty again right off.” Better Late Than Never. Twenty years ago a man in St. Louis told in'» bride that they could not then afford to go on a. honeymoon; they woukl have to wait until they saved up enough money. The years went on. and no heneymoon trip was taken. One after another member was added to the original family of two. until today Caere ire twelve children raning in age from seven months to seventeen years. Last month when the French liner Paris left New York harbor for Europe this 20-years-in-arrears honeymoon man. his wife and their twelve children were aboard. They were going to spend a big fat bank roll that has accumulated through years "of successful living and saving. That's a real honeymoon! 666 is a prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Feyer ..... » It KiMs Hie germs I /*r» rtricrtrrtn n m e* CROc&WORD PUZZLE j i* ii ii iii'iVi-’w —r'-T’-'rrT^ r P F P I 10 | M I™ I . I I I I I Rri ■■Bo 11 _LJ L—L ■pz IrT ** I mm jh T? mpo -%‘S jr You'll find peveral unfamiliar and in- 67 Ghost, tcrestifig words in this puzzle to make it VERTICAL - attractive and entertaining. 1 Cordials. HORIZONTAL 2 Devoured, '> 1 To throw. 3 Planet. ’ 5 Furious. 4 .YVearies. r • 9 Acidity of the stomach. 6 Part of verb to fee. .. ' IS Garret. 7 Throb. 15 Male*. 8 Within. . 1 10 A woman of affected modesty. 9 To drees. '' - 1 17 Erected. 10 To wave hair. 19 Damaged. 11 Poem. - 20 Revlsional. 12. Ransomed. 23 Neuter pronoun. 14 Yielded. 25 To vend.' 10; Trousers. '.V 26 Act of re*()ci't. 18; A’alleys. 27 Myself. 19 J To ascend. ; 28 Part cf most common verb. 21. Nails of an animal. 30 Renders incapable of perceiving 22, Thoughts. sounds. 24' Jogs. 32 To stop water. 27 Men. j, 33 Strong spring. 29 Yfistake. ” 25 To perspin. 31 Fee of an estate. ' 36 Wan. 32 Short lances. •* 37 To sharpen as a razor. 34 Dowry. 39 Wiresless signal for help. 36 Inclined. 40 Binned. 38 Document. 41 A mounted orderly. 40 Narrative poetry (pi.). 43 Stains. 42 Type of fortification. 45 To repulse. 43 Church council. 47 Constituent of pus (pi.). 44 Substance. 4!) Morindtn dye. Ml Having rounded divisions. 51 Fragrance. 47 Runs out. becomes exhausted. 53 To exist. 48 Hunting'dogs. 54 Slight flap. 50 Big. 56 Turned-down collars. 52 A Mongolian priest. 57 Door rug. 53 To sew temporarily. j 58 Snare. ■ 55 Restricts or shuts out. 60 Called. 57 Haze. 61 Court stay of proceedings. 59 To fondle. 62 Heron. 61 Membraneous. 64 Black viacons fluid. 63 Toward. 65 To devastate. 65 Y'ou and I. 66 To renew. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle BUSINESS AND THE OUTLOOK. Philadelphia Reqonl. Some of the visitors to President Coolidge gave him assurance last week that business conditions are so excellent thnt there are even prospects of some thing in the nature of a boom, now about six months or so overdue, accord ing to preditions made in many quarters last November and December. But im mediately came the announcement of a wage cut of 10 per cent, by the Amer ican Woolen Company, affecting 40.000 employees. Nevertbe'ess. the tone in the business world is cheerful, despite the trouble* in spots,* as in coal, where the anthracite operatore and miners have reached no working agreement, and in the bituminous field, where many of the mines are shut down or are work ing short time. Conditions in the Iron and steel in dustry are far better than they were this time last year, when production reached, a low ebb. Production continues in the mills at about the same rate ns in previous weejp. in the neighborhood of 70 per cent- of capacity, and the low level oi prices ought to induce further buying, as postponement of purchasing does not seem to carry with it sny promise of additional profit—rather the contrary. A lirinUf-'S of the markets Is seen tin t wmikT' coDsiderab’e improvement in" fnls great basic in dustry within the next few weeks, after the mid-summer lull is over. The financial agencies report satis factory conditions in general. Brad street* finds that raid-summer dullness and the desire to await crop develop ments make for a certain degree of quiet, but that most of the usual indi cations point to * fair volume of busi ness. The motor production shown an astonishingly large Increase at the De troit plants, where the leading makers of machine* have made and sold nearly us many cars in tbe first six month* of 1925 as in the whole 12 months of 1924. V >3 ”. Employment iq the manufacturing in dustries in the United States declined 1.1 per cent, in June. the preliminary figures issued by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. These were the mo*t marked declines shown for any one month* sinch July. 1924. and' were due chiefly to curtailment in the automobile, boot and shoe, cotton good* and iron and steel in dustries. The figure* are baaed on re ports from 9204 establishments in 52 in dustries. KmnloyOM mt last month sbow-| ed an Increase of 5 per cent, compared with Jane.’ 1924, an* pßjroHrf were 9 ]>er cent, hitaer. ' I As is to be expected, weather reports continue to influence cotton prices. There were cgWitderabV flactudtlbn#. seen in the week** qtwtatione. The fea ture of the trading In the cotton e»th markets was the Mhvttgthrnfng trend in price levels. The dry goods markets sb#w signs of gradual broadening. The titan* thnt j pnimfc’ valiH* and ' 1 fr3^'3 er more trading tt* bm Doted. Tat -1 ner* report Improvement in the volume of sales of sole leather and say that good-sized transactions have occurred. There is also better inquirer for ui>per leathers, with improvement in the volume of sales. The Chicago grain market last week was described as a weather market, with prices showing little changes and with the general trend upward, though the week closed with slightly lower quota tions in wheat. The tone of the corn market was heavy, with crop and weath er news generally favorable. Three Killed In Revolution. I.isbond. duly 20.—Three were killed and 15 wounded in yesterday's revolu tion here. Tasbond is under martial law and the situation is calm. I Ox Gall Treatment Ends Liver Trouble Overcome* body poieon* that caue* diseases of heart, kidneys and high Mood pressure All the blood in our bodies passes through the liver every 15 minutes. The liver is the'blood’s purifier. Our blood is constantly poisoned ,by body toxins formed m food waste, and when the liver becomes weak, or torpid, it cannot perform its work of purification and our systems are at once tainted by im pure blood. These are the poisons that, if not destroyed by the liver, cause diseases of die heart, kidneys, blood vessels, and create premature old age. Nature gives quick warning of a torpid liver. ’ You have sudden sick headaches, dfczy spells; your stom ach is acid from sour bile, your skin turns sallow, blotchy. Doctors know the liver cannot be regulated by drugs, but a safe Na ture substance has been discovered which will act directly on the liver. The discovery is purified ox galL Get from your druggist a package of Dioxol., Each tablet contains ten drops of purified ox gall. In 7A hours the poison toxins will be re moved. Your liver will be regulated. Blood purification will begin. Sallow skin will clear. You will feel so much better you will know you have found the cause of your ill health. Dioxol tablets are harmless, taste less, and dost less than two cents 'f t'. ■ * £;• •• >f * '"r'-’f* These genuine ox gall tablets are ft® you under another name, refute It. Accept only pioxol in the original, xenuine. package. Tes! Dioxol free. • l ' : -31,.. ~ss==m=amasßß ; nssasm ‘ Diosiol is especially recommended bj - Men Heikb I A Good Refrigerator in Itself Means a Bi£ Saving in Ice— § A Saving in Food, a Saving in Health j Leonard Refrigerators are especially well knpwn be- 1 | cause they) are so sturdily built and no outside aiT can pos- j sibly enter except when the doors are opened, a patented i idea on the draining pipe allows no air to enter the ice |jj chamber. It cuts ice. bills. * v . ‘ l Prices range from $25.00 and up. See us before you buy anything in the furniture line, our buying power Is un- ! ! limited. We practically pay cash an'd bupr in car loads. ] | .We can sell cheaper. We own our own building, no rents ' » to pay. !! BEU-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. || ! OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOfinaaamnee l ; . . - - , , CeC In'tlie bathroom there > S BS§ demand for plenty of liant light' and your fix-SH tores must be especially HS designed to provide this necessary light, while at&|S the same time securing ETS an artistic effect. , „ us how. gRB -mm ■mb ■ "Fixtures ot Character”lS mm w. j. hethcox uj £9 W. Depot St. Phone M# \; Personal | Touch y O Every detail of the funeral hi- 0 X rangements is given our personal O 9 attention. We endeavor to impress X X upon our patron* oar desire to • jj serve them in the capacity Os 9 R In-doing this, we hope to mitl- B gate to some small degree their fi burden of sorrow. 1 Wilkmsmi’s Tues Hay, July 21, 1925 We have the follow- W One Buick Six Tour ing 1922 model. One Buick Six Road ster, 1920 model One Liberty Six Touring 1920 mocfsl One Dodge Touring, J 920 model STANDARD b BUICK CO. Opposite City Fire Dept NATIVE SPRING I t.’-f \-y LAMB 4■ i e j i,l‘ 1 1 lU'-i J. F. DAYVAULT & brother - - b.l idm v; jj#s mmm