PAGE FOUR fheCottcord Daily Tribune «*> '‘ ! ’Jij'j-,” —~ i — W. |d' Editor Press is fciehiKivdy entitled to tile use forYepubkoationof ah news creditedito it or not. otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo <*al news published herein. , ■ ;i, te All rights of republieation of spec ial dispatches herein are also reserved. ' peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago 1004 Candler Bunding. Atlanta j Entered as second class mail matter at the postoSßce at Concord. N. C., an per the Act of March 3, 1879. |‘" SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City'of Concord by Carrier: pue- Year $6.00 gri Months 3.00 three Mouths —; I.SO One Month .50 /Outside of the State the Subscription \ Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre- Vail: One Year , $5.00 Six Months - 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in ; Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect June 28, 1925 Northbound No. 40. To New York 9:28 P. M. No. ISO To Washingtota\ 5:05 A. M. No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. M. No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. No. 40 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To. Richmond 7:10 P. M. No. £> To New York 9:03 P. M. No. jiM To New York 1:55 A. M. f.i' ft SoalUMUad No. 45 To Charlotte 3:55 P. M- NcL 35 To New’ Orleans 9:56 P. 51. No. 2!) To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. No* 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No. 38 To New Orleans 8 :25 A. 51. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:05 A. 51. No.' 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. N 0... 37. To New, Orleans 19:45 A. 51. No. / 311 To New Orleans 9:55 A. 51. Train No. 34 will'stop in Concord to "take ,on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond.. ’ . 1 Train No. 37 will stop here to dis charge passengers coming from be yond Washington. r • THOUGHT If I —FOR TODAY—I If HUk Thmgbti memorized, w*3 prove a I ml .. pricaleas heritage in alter yeare Ml Whom shall I fear?:—The Lord is my light ami my salvation; whom shall 1 fear? the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid? —Psalms 27:1. A REVI. FIGHT IN NEW YORK CITY. More interest Is aroused in the may orality: campaign in New York City perhaps, than in any other city in the United States and for that reason the approaching campaign is claiming the attention of thousands of persons who live olitside New York State even. Tammany has nominated State Sen ator .fames J. Walker as candidate for mayor, and 51ayor Hylan heads another slate that will get Demo cratic support since the 51ayor ealls himself a Democrat. The Republican fusion ticket is headed by Frank I). Waterman, a Republican. The real fight so far as the Demo crats are concerned is between Hearst and Governor Smith. Hylan has the support of Hearst who was repudiat ed some few years ago by Governor Smith. Senator Walker came out publicly against the newspaper man, calling him a “big bully.” Mayor Hylan lias the support of Hearst and_ Walker is known as the Smitlf candi date. B Brooklyn and Richmond are respon sible in a large measure for the en , , trance of Senator Walker into the a race. Democrats in these precincts at f times have questioned the loyalty of j. Hylan and they do not like the way an which he has lined up with Hearst. Some of them have even gone so far 5 as to charge that while the rest of the i New York Democrats were trying to f put Governor Smith over as the Dem it oeratic Presidential candidate, slayor , Hylan was conferrirng with and aid ing the Smith enemy, McAdoo. a The tight.promises to be one of the hardest and bitterest in recent years and the outcome will be watched with . unusual interest throughout the coun |- .try. j| ANOTHER TARIFF FIGHT IN Dr. Edwin I. Gay, professor of eeo- i H nomic history at Harvard, told the! 11l Institute of Polities at Wiliiamstown Hfklast week that America’s balance of ||S'trade with other nations will soon Hillftnft from a favorable position to the j i» other side of the ledger, as a eonse-! B&Raence of larger and larger imports of Rsgoode arising from the payment of the BSp|«rterest and principal of Europe's Hjgßebts to. Amereica. Dr. Gay bases ISpHe predictions on the < xpericnoe of n&erhiaii.t just after the Franco-Bus j||®rian:;war. , fe The same argument is being used ■§o7 a number of economists in support g|i|R the view that it will not be long be- American industry will be de s;/ JUupdiu* aae-iiiov*! ui; loweriug of our vsays the-‘.’influx of goods MfctoWfht of European debts will* be Muoauiabied by a jieriml ’ of./lfigh ynm bme. Imported „Wili; be MplVely cheaper ,they arc now, I fmt’domestic gdods will be higher. ’ HBft Nett s•' of Greenville, g, C„ 1 finds that “the price tendency of mestic commodities does seem to be upward at the present time, If Am erican prices cootßiiieupward, ft will be increasingly mp.fe profitable to Elis ropeans to pay our duties on theif goods and sell them at American pric es. This, may he what Dr;. Gay has in mind,. The situation might be met by a demand for even higher tariff walls, but it might be reasoned that this coaid hardly be a permanent remedy. 'Die’tariff and its. relation to our for eign trade is looming up as one of the most important for Congression al thought in the neat few years; Should the trade balance develop an unfavorable trend during the last half of the present year, it might precipi tate a tariff debate at the next Con gress.” .. ■-j WEATHER INJURIOUS TO THE CROPS. Weather and other conditions dur ing July were shown today to have been detrimental to crops generally, in the department of agriculture's monthly report. The large prospective corn crop was reduced 145,000,000 bushels as com pared with a month ago, the produc tion now indicated being 2,050,000,000 bushels. Rye, flaxseed, rice, sweet po tatoes. tobacco, hay and grapes also showed losses from forecasts made last month. Winter wheat, for which a prelim inary estimate of 416,000,000 bushels was given, showed an increase over last month, but spring wheat with a total, of 263,000,00 bushels declined 13,000,000, placing the entire wheat crop 7,000,000 bushels Below the fore casts in July. There was an improvement In oats, the crop forecast being 1.387,000,000 bushels of 95.000.900 more than a month ago. Barley, white potatoes, apples, peaches and pedrs also record ed increases in their prospective pro duction. GIRL FAINTS ON WITNESS STAND Richmond, Va„ Man Bound Over on an Assault Charge. Greensboro. Aug. H-—sliss slarj Bradshaw, of this city. 23 years old, nurse in training here, collapsed while on the witness stand testifying against R. C. Gray, formerly of Richmond 5 a., charged with attempt to commit criminal assault upon her, and again at tile conclusion of her testimony. She had to be carried from the court room by three men, one of them a physician. The inau was bound over by Judge D. H. Collins to superior court and a heavy bond fixed, SIO,OOO. The girl testified tlTat she and Gray left a dance here Saturday night ami took a ride in a car. She admitted that she suggested the ride. In a short while he stopped the car and tried to assault her. but failed of his purpose, brought her back to the dance and home. The defense stressed she did not tell any one of file alleged ' crime until the next evening. Gray was arrested slo»day afternoon. It was while she was being ques tioned as to intimate details of the alleged crime that she collapsed on the stand and she fell to the floor after she had been cross-examined. The distinction of being the youngest regular player in the major baseball leagues belong to Freddie Lindstrom. third baseman of the New cork Giants. Although he is not yet twenty you l's oM young Lindetrom is receiving a salary of more than $7,000 a year. BALANCE Is all right. But some people seem to be so well balanced they never get anything done. What the world demands today is action. Our Service has all the action possible back of it, and you profit ac cordingly. Every big opportunity of the past was simply to cut down waste some where. Your opportunity is to trade with us, where waste is eliminated and Quality, Prices and Service, Guaranteed. “If it’s to eat we have it.” C. H. BARRIER & CO. x Visit Markson Shoe Store For Real Values in Footwear MEN .WOMEN AND CHILDREN Wonderful values in White Kid, Patent Kid and Satin Don’t Make Any Selection Until You Compare Our Quality and Prices MARKSON SHOE STORE Phone 897 . A Good Place to Trade INSURE When You Start To Build The right time to fake out insurance is when you start kyjHiW •, Then? if any cause, your building, should Fefzer & Yorke Insurance Agency PB. FETZE* t 0 out^ iern Lwua and Trust ' ’ * * w ~ r - ’ , : > * -v t r.uch of her—in him—for you to frn him down. Jim. Taking care f him is the price you’ll have to pay p redeem her sacrifice." It was a queer scene in that little pom, hallowed by the ancient sac /fice that had been made by the one tow no longer warm with life—with he shabby and unshaven hobo, a Wanderer on life’s fringes, dominri /ting a homely little everyday tra fedy. •**«. Bob quickly lifted the picture tom the mantel and held it close p Jim, who made a loving but fu- Jfe effort to sqe it through his film ff tears. “Look at this picture, Jim —then bok at that baby!” Bob Counseled tently, again prompted somehow by |n inner fancy that he could not un lerstand himself. Great quivers shook Jim- as he itepped unsteadily to Mrs. O’Leary pd, bending over the infant, tried io see its face, which was thus bap £ted in the .dean tears-, of his faths tr's agony. With quick, hungry tenderness he (fted the baby into his thin arms, (hen turned and looked at Bob ftrearaingiy. ' “Looks—just—like his mother,” to sobbed proudly. Mrs. Bryan Neve* Heard of Woman's Hrove. Af—Mk. 1 W'lligrn s Jennings j Bffyan'thas rntver heard of MuuTflßphtkma' Bryan 'Evans antD has rrtwer^lmO.. her approval; to tJrtlfcsh a national imelnormlc to. the Cprnmquer, at Hlewitton, f Fla., ' the mmSst a*? If Miss’Evans, characterized us Mr. CHAPTER IV ► “You probably haven’t forgotten, 1 1 Bob,” said Jim one day about three I weeks after his wife’s funeral, “that f I told you I was going' away with 1 you—on the road, anywhere, every i where—just ps soon as things here I were settled. i Bob nodded from a comfortably ( indolent position flat upon his back ■ with a humorous foreknowing twin* r kle in his eye, though his face re* r mained gravely attentive, and he I looked at Jim expectantly. "Well,” said Jim honestly and without a trace of sheepishness, "I can’t go through with it." The two men were seated on the : neat green lawn of the little postage 1 stamp backyard of the Fowler cot* tage, in the limpid sunshine of a ! rare June day, making woeful efforts to retrieve their boyhood skill at 1 mumbly-peg. It was by these little ■ artifices that Bob, in his interest and ■ liking for the slender, almost effemi -1 nately intense, mail clerk, had con trived during the acute days of Jim’s 1 bereavement to keep him out of 1 dangerous moods of ingrowing mel : ancholic brooding to which he was predisposed. “I don’t know what drove you out to roam, Bob; but I’ve seen efiough ' of the fine man in you to know that it must have been something big— ’ something that justified you. But : I'm not like you. The open, rib [ bony roads that wind over distant ! hills don’t lure me—even now. But ! from the wistful longing I’ve seen in your eyes, sometimes when we’ve ' been walking and I’ve caught you staring off to the horizon, I know they’ve got a powerful drag for you; and that’s made me appreciate what it cost you to stay here—to, help , me—” > , • “Your chance,” said Bob, hand ing him the rusty penknife, “I miss ed'. It’s ‘backies’ for you this time —you’re two ahead of met” Jim was not to be distracted. “You’re made for that sort of thing,” he continued, “I’m not. You’re hard. I’m soft—” Bob looked up sharply from his dissembling efforts to smooth down the pricked turf, smiling over a sud- ' den realization that Jim had unwit tingly uncovered a truth: which was, that there was a good deal of the protective “big brother” impulse in his affection for Jim. “My five hundred mile run on the Limited Mail is vagabondage enough for me,” Jim went on, with a wry smile. “Anyhow, I’ve been thinking it over a lot the last few days, and it just came to me once and for all as we sat here. It’s no use. Bob, I’d be leaving—her—/’ “Didn’t think you’d pull out with me,” said Bob laconically after a i brief silence punctuated by their careless flipping pf the knife into the grass. “Hoped you wouldn’t, too. Becaiuse, old man, when it i comes right down to it Mrs. O’Lea ry might make a good foster mother for the kid, but she can’t take the place of-r-his mother. That’s your job—mother and father, both! No, you’re not leg loose, like'me, old man!” Sudden apprehension, an antici patory fear, of loneliness, dimmed Jim’s-cyes as he grasped Bob’s hand, stopping him in the act of throwing the knife, and stammered, “You, Bob—you’re not—thinking of—” “I’m thinking I want to be—on my way. There’s nothing more here I can do. You’re leave is up this week-end and you’ll be going back to work on Monday’s run. I’ve lived on you all this time, Jim—eat en your food, worn your clothes. I’m a liability and I’m going to liquidate myself by becoming scarce,” he finished with a short laugh. Jim got to his feet with grim de termination and stood over Bob, frowning, like a defense advocate before a bar of last appeal. “Bob Wilson, you’ve done all the preaching around here for nearly a month, so now I claim the right to crowd in a few words. I’ve guess ed you’ve been in some big trouble, but I know by your manner, your speech, your—everything—that you stand head and shoulders above the average citizen of this town—that you’ve been accustomed to the best and -not to the meanest of this world’s goods. I don’t know or care why you choosq to drift, but J wish you’d let me be your anchor. 1 haven't any right to butt into yout ' plans for your own life—but God, ■ Bob, in a little over three short weeks I’ve come to love you As a brother." t - - (To be continued) Bryan's “go i i tonwht- Tomorrow Alright or ""- Gibson Drug Store. Sure Relief FORIN DIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water WVZZZmi Sure Relief DELLANS 25i and 754 Packages Everywhere \ ; .. . Money back without qunntior sL\l‘f HVNT-8 GUARANTEBt lIBKIN DISEASE REMEDIES /i IT bJJ (Hvnf* Snlvc and Bonp),faLil Ir fe 1 ft the treatment of Itch, Ec reton \ y /d Ringworm, Tetter or other "teh *•—*' Inc ekln dleeaesa.' - Crtctmrat st on: risk. '' ECZENAP Money back without queatlon A if HUNT-8 GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES (Hunt’. Salve and Soap),fall Inf JW/f f' the trentment of Itch, letema yMf/ j Rineworm,Tetterorotherlteb- (If / / Inc niln di.en.ea. Try this * * J trestment at our risk, PEARL DRUG COMPANY Please don’t forget we are now at our new location on Church Street. Most of our old customers have found us and many new ones. If you we hope you .will. Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company PHONE 571 W South Church Street StCdmnd aiooudu - * S’te tdaSti L JW. > urcL | J AO iUahemoblu * Ruth - Kesler Shoe Stbre* ' ’ * *>* •I'"*"* ' : I BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO? Greater Comfort in a Home is Only Received From One That is, Ho|nelA. Our Display of Bedroom Suites is Especially Complete at this Time , 'i ; “ " , ' All -of the p6pulSf period design are presented in the various woods and finishes, and at the low prevailing prices they r4presdnt vales that caftnot be dopHchted eide-' sswisafir 4 .... -■ .3.,,.,. y BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. dedicaled Sewing nt an old fashion- I 4 ■d machine is nothing more or less than a tradi- II tion today in the modern ■■■ £home where wise minds STS have decided that every- M|d w thing that saves time and energy is economy. Let UsR us demonstrate one of ■(] these small motors that \ run sewing machines. Lt| "Fixtures of Character” bM W. J. HETHCOX U U| VV. Depot St. Phone OSS M 000000000000000000000000 I Wilkinson’s § Funeral Home | Funeral Directors? and | : Embalmers | Phone No. 9 | Open Day and night | Ambulance Service We'dnes’day, Aug. T 2, 1025 I We have the fol lowing used cars for sale or ex change: One Bukk Six t Touring, 1922 mod- I el. One Liberty Six Touring, 1920 mod el. One Dodge Tour ing, 1920 modeL STANDARD BUICKCO. v Opposite City Fire Department ■ -O v Add the Comforts of plumbing to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do as much or more than any oth er one thing toward ' making your home a comfortable and convenient place in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost estimate. v • 1 Vi f )Ji | Concord Plumbing Company , North Kerr St. Phone ftj|