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PAGE FOUR Concord Daily Tribune ■ Bfej l .. ' J. B. SHERRILL 1 ■pi’ Editor and Publisher |SW. J 4. SHERRILL, Associate Editor member of the » ■ 4 ASSOCIATED PRESS eg-.' Tbe Associated Press is exclusively ■entitled to the use for republication of S*fl news credited to it or not otherwise jcreilited in this paper and also the lo ftsKl news published herein. ’ F An rights of republication of spec ial dispatched herein arc also reserved. Special Representative IS' '’ FROST, LANDIS & KOIIN », *225 Fifth Avenue. New York K'-Ihtoplea’ Gas Building, Chicago F®' t(X>4 Candler Building, Atlanta 5 Entered ae second class mail matter Sat' the postotfiee at Concord. N. C., un ■det the Act of March 3, 1879. pjfc SUBSCRIPTION RATES tin the City of Concord by Carrier: Due Year- Three Mopths , 1-50 One Month -50 Outside of the State the Subscription w W ils the Same as in the City _ if- Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre gSßa Year $5-6® | Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1-25 Less Than Three Mouths, 50 Cents a Month u f All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in f Advance RAILROAD SCHEDCLE *. $ In Effect June 28, 1925 & *> ’ . Northbound No. 40 To New York 9:28 P. M. No. 130 To Washington S:OS'A. M. No. 36 To New York 10 :25 A. M. No- 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M. No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M. • W ,32 To New York 9 :03 P. M. No.; 30 To New York 1:55 A. 31. J, Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:56 P. M. No. 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. No. 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. We. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. No.\ 33 To; New Orleans S':2s A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8 :05 A. M. Noi 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. No. 37 To New Orleans 16:45 A. M. No. 3SI Tp New Orleans 0:56 A. M. . Train No. 34 will stop In Concord to .take pn passengers going to Wash ington and heyouA hf 1 Train No. 37 will stop here to dis charge passengers coming from be jgoiid Washington. g» : .l BIBLE THOUGHT! I^^—for today— Ifiiljibfc Thongt.tt memorized. wiD prove a|]l m efter^r care Confidence :—I shall yet praise Him who is the health of my countenance, and my God. —Psalms 43 :5. OCR TIME WILL COME. Europe has made greater strides with commercial aviation than the United States but indications point to increasing interest in the matter in this country. In both France and Ger many aeritrl transportation is on a fixed basis, and in England too. air passenger service is receiving much attention. In the United States we have used the planes only as mail car riers with the exception of a few planes made recently by tbe Ford in terests, these planes having establish ed regular service. - A recent French report tells of the work of the government in stimulating and encouraging air travel and states that at the beginning of the present year there were no less than 37 ae rial lines running yon regular sched ules. In 1924 the aerial lines made a total of 11,536 trips, covering a dis tance of 3.647 826 kilometers, and Carried 16.9127 gnsasrepseso9 etaoin carried 16.729 passengers. 877.591 kilograms of freight and 532,777 kil ograms of mail. s L/ We have not needed the airplane f, as badly for commercial purposes as have the European nations. We have the best and most modern railroads in the world and they have been able li to meet our needs pretty well. It is true that Americans have the reputa tion of moving very rapidly in all things, but in this matter at lease we have not yet demanded such speed as can be offered by airplanes over rail ||te , Jfeads. Too, our roads offer fine op s'-'. portunity tor the auto to act as u s', means of transportation and in recent years we have greatly increased the g. use of the auto as a conveyor of pas- Stingers and freight. ' However, we are showing more in ly. terest in aviation from a commercial jtj; standpoint. One company has already I: 4Wkcd permission to use the Los An- Re, Males tor commercial purposes and the plan is said to have received much ll’e consideration from president Cooliilge arid other government officials. This I dirigible was built w ith the uutlet-j lly stun.tmg that it was to he used for ! BefUp U m)rrclsl purposes and it is mil, j ft Baasoiiable to presume that in the I V future it will man u regular schedule! of work. Other dirigibles will be 'v fcuili and additional companies will b>- .|i organised for commercial aviation pm ffis''Jjjusc-s. When we gci stalled on the Hg;. natter ill a serious and determined R vtaamue, we will soon catch th, E" - ft ropemt nations. PpMAKINO A l’bAVbKOlMi or % UEMFTKHA m is it that people will congre ffiOpfi-. in a cemetery? ' Ids a tact that in Tpost i cities in line part of the HHmtr&ljrtJie-uftf cpjcet'eues .a, | / Pitfccs. uml’ii is noi mile fifed graves used as locations for Ibling games of all kipds.'-’. emeteries. are usually public and that reason it is practically im dble to keep people from cougre ng in them. The fact that they frigate is not so b»d ; but it it a serious matter when graves are molest - etT and monuments are used for aero batic stunts. . 1 Several Concord persons who vis ited Oakwood CemeteVy last Sunday were rightjy displeased when they saw urchins climbing over a magnificent monument, each boy leaving marks from his dirty feet on the white mar ble of the monument. Time and time again these youngsters climbed to the top of the monument and slid down its smooth stone. And each time they left foot and hand prints on the stone. These same people noticed that vis itors in the cemetery apparently had no regard for flowers, flower pots and bottles that had been placed on graves. It was reported that on* sev eral instances persons were seen to take a flower pot or vase from a grave, carry it for some distance and place it op another grave, where it was filled with flowers. Other per sons were seen to take flowers, vase and all. It is practically impossible to po lice the whole of the cemetery and it should not be necessary to do so, but it seems that something will have to be done to keep under control the Sunday crowds at Oakwood. The keeper is on the job six days in the week and undoubtedly it is known that he is not likely to be present on Sunday. Persons are wont to take advantage of his absence to abuse property and make nuisances of them selves. The suggestion has been made and we think it is a good one. that po lice officers drive through the ceme tery, several times each Sunday and keep watch for those persons who dese crate holy ground by thievery and abuse. Tax reduction plans are taking more definite shape now and President Ooolidge plans to have another reduc tion in effect by March 31st. when the , taxes are next due. The sooner the . reductions come the better, and the ! more people they benefit the better. There is certain to be no opposition - from the tax-paying public on this • matter, although the nature of the , reductions is certain to bring out a de ; termined fight, in Congress. Let Labor Speak With Its Own Voice. Salisbury Post. President Barringer,,, of the State Federation of. Labor, wants a labor lobbyist. He gives reason and there l is something in his reasoning to com i mend itself. But he is wrong, vve 1 believe, in wishing to set up a lobby. ' which would meau a paid lobbyist. Our reason: The volunteer expression : of labor, and friends of labor, at the right time and place will have far more weight than would ••-voice of a man employed to present the view of the laboring men. Answer to this objection might be that it is hard, and perhaps impossible, to get such expression at the right time and place. And that would be true, perhaps; it ut least would be hard, if not im possible. But nothing would be lost by making serious effort at this way. The very word lobbyist is not in good standing. A lobbyist is not all wrong or all undesirable: there is a lobbying that is in good taste and perfectly legitimate, and that is what Mr. Barringer has in mind. But the minute that labor employes a man to speak at all times for it, then it would lose some of the force of its appeal, and no friend of the laboring man wishes to see that. Mr. Barringer avered in his address that labor was not given a hearing be fore the legislative committee in be half of the child labor amendment. If that be true it certainly ought not to have been possible, for no matter how we may fee! regarding this or any other question, voice should be given those who wish to present opin ion. \Yc have said this in regard to this very case and we repeat it with all the force we may have. No com mittee in a democracy has any legal or moral right to overlook the appeal of any good citizen, whether such ap peal is accepted or not. But would a paid lobbyist have helped matters in this case? We believe not. North Carolina is not going to turn a deaf ear to the voice of laboring men and their petition to be heard. ' There is no danger of that, and our own opinion is that this appeal, this voice, will he more effective if pre sented by the men who work than by a paid representative of their organi zation. In speaking of the question the Winston-Salem Journal says that “the position would be a juicy plum,” that any leader would be glad to fall heir to. He would hold a good po . xition. even if he did not render a great .service.” Let labor speak in its own behalf. Its voice is the voice of a big, honest, representative cit izenry and will be listened to. Not ' to the same extent will the voice of a lobbyist be heeded. Woman Senator Charges Fraud. "I warn you that if a widow, 90 years old. who has been buncoed out of her money, cannot be beard by the legislature, I will publish it from the Great Lakes to the Gulf.” Mrs. W. H. Felton, the first of her sex to hold a seat in the United States Senate, told an investigating oommittre of the Georgia legislature. Tears streamed down her wrinkled cheeks as the Georgia woman claimed she was vic timized in a bank stock deal and de manded "justice.” Mrs. Felton opposed an amendment to the state banking law which would give more power to the state banking commissioner. A Doiialdsonville in stitution in which she was interested tailed, she asserted, after the com missioner had assured her that it was in sound condition. The legislative committee .refused to O. ty-Abitl that paying V 'SJ NftO' a«*«tauteut a*'stock holder in the bank. Plans for a country-wWe organi zation caniiiaign will be formulated by tue Cigar Makers ' International Onion of America at its annual con ventlon. which is to begin in Bristol on August 10. i I COURTESY TO STRANGERS. Gastonia Gazette. ; If there is anything we hate to i see it is a traffic officer “bawling” I out a stranger or tourist passing 1 through the city. Nothing leaves a worse taste in one's mouth, so to speak. And, so far as we know, Gas tonia's finest are blameless In this respect. Most of the officers treat all strangers and tourist with the ut most courtesy. They nearly 'always do the right thing, the courteous thing. Such courtesies bring more renown to a towtr than the average person thinks. And. on the contrary, lack of these courtesies cart give a town a b’nok eye. Take West Hickory, for instance. All motorists on No. 10 hqte to go through that suburb of Hickory, because an over zealous speed cop is too strict in the en forcement. of the speed laws. In illustration of this point the Salisbury Post says: ‘‘The dollars any city fries out of a tourist or traveler does it little good. Hold ups do lasting harm and no lasting good. Some communities have records for bleeding speeders; we wish for no such reputation for our city. No officer ought to be per mitted to make an arrest, lay in a charge and pocket a penny of the re ceipts. It would be better to let an innocent speeder who bnd done no harm escape, rather than to lay an expense on a harmless driver who was a bit over the limit. “There are all about us men and women and children who are daily and hourly violating traffic laws that are likely to result ill renl harm to themselves and to innocent lookers on. Eveiy street of every town has drivers who make little pretense of obeying laws an to these our enforce ment officers should turn for grist for the mill. Laws should be un forced : but there is no use to nag at travel err, rt rangers, passing through and tax them with a cost which if aided by other towns would soon drive them from the roads. Courteous, - sympathetic treatment of those who ■ innocently violate a local ordinance . is what is needed at times what the driver has a right to e.vpect and | what any local community ought to 1 wish the driver to receive." 1 Right now there are scores of ‘ tourist ears passing through Gas • tonia every day and we hope that, ex cept in aggravated and rare in stances, they will go their way with a good feeling toward the "City of ’ Spindles.” ' How Are Your Driving Manners? [ By C. T. MATTHEWS . Director Accident PreventitoU, Caro , lina Motor Club. It is all right to ask this question today but twenty-five years hence a i man would be insulted as much if you p were to ask the foregbing query as he r would be today if you should ask him f "How are your table manners'” c The automobile is comparatively new and motoring etiquette is being formed. When eating was as new as motoring is now possibly table manners were no better than current road manners. The term ‘'Road Hog” is very ap propriate and the name is simply the ory in practice of the adage “neces sity is the mother of invention." Are you guilty of any of the “road hog” practices: horn tooting, speed ing, headlight offenses or careless ness ? Taking the center of the street or highway and refusing to move over to the right on signal from the rear is not only a breach of etiquette but a violation of the law of North Caro lina. A copy of the Sta> automobile law was sent you from Raleigh with your automobile registration card—read it and observe it. Apply the Golden Rule is driving . and your manners will be perfect. Get a copy of the traffic laws of , your city and study them. People •'ho know the traffic laws and ordi ( nances invariably are careful driv , ers. It would look terrible to see a man I push a lady off the sidewalk with I his hand. Does it look just exactly right to see him run her off the street I with his car? Would it be a hail plan to treat people with as much courtesy and t consideration on the streets as we , would in their homes? Courtesy is ' courtesy and people are people,wherev j er found. Hogging Down Corn, f Raleigh. N. C, Rug. 17.—1 f the - hogs break into the corn field this month let them stay there. f»cd some t fish meal to balance the cor and sell ” the hogs on the high market in Sep -1 tember for more prolt than was ever - made before on corn as grain. a Will it pay? Listen to what W. ii W. Shay, swine extension specialist e at State College- has to say about - hogging down corn. 4 “Say. ten pigs averaging 150 f pounds each broke into the corn field on August 12 and the corn was in the drought stage. The field con- tained 11-4 acres and would yield 30 bushels per acre or a total yield of 37 1-4 bushels for the yield. Ninety pounds of fish meal was put into a self-feeder and given them. The corn would carry the pigs until about September 12 during which lieriod they should gain 500 pounds. “For 18 yepcs- the average -price for i ueh hogs 'in September has been per hundred. On that average, our 500 pounds gain is worth $53.15 less the cost of the 90 |>oundx of fish meal which is $3.15 at present prices. This leaves exatly SSO return for the 1 1-4 acres of corn. “But the price of good hogs is high this yar. They arc quoted at $15.40 per hundred this week on the Richmond market. If - they will be quoted at only $14.00 per hundred on September 12, the 37 1-4 bushels of corn in the field v has returned l Wf*T> or : $1.79 i»* bushel ,* w tr™ ■ sold jn the skip of th« ' hqg its a sack. “It cost about. 75 1-2 cents per bushel to produce and harvest a I bushel of corn and so tbe field of 111-4 acres had coat $22.63 when the - hogs so fortunately broke into it and I I made a profit for the owner of $44.22 |on -tka held or $35-21 per acre.” 1 THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE William BgaU Cowtaay -> Copyright, UG, Warner Broa. «THS LIMITED MAIL” with Moate Bine, Is » plctnrlsatlon of this story bj w • Warasr Bros. Pictures, Inc. SYNOPSIS Boh Wilson, a young colUgt gradu ate who suddenly turned tramp, has procured a job as fireman on the rail road and is making his home in Cen ter City, lie is a source of mystery and speculation to the whole town. Going to the station lunch room for breakfast one morning he is surprised to find a new waitress there and finds himself strangely attracted by this *lustrous picture of blanched ivory and old gold." CHAPTER V—Continued "I want you 'o know I’m sorry that I annoyed you,” said Bob hast ily, in a penitent and intense voice. She placed his coffee, and turned to go away. “Er-r-, Miss—Miss Dale, please don’t be angry,” he begged misera bly. She hesitated, resting the rim of her tray on a far corner of the table, and looked at him steadily. “My rudeness came from—my sur prise at seeing anyone so nice as you in this place, after all these years.” “You are not a native, then?” she bsked in a forgiving, tentatively in terested way, after a brief scrutiny. Bob shook his head negatively and started to put sugar cubes in his toffee. He felt on terms of good fellowship with the whole wide world, the June scents of which wafted through the open windows a lulling message of awakened, sun pdurished things. The distilling forces; of an artful nature were at work with rolled-up sleeves on tlje tecond growth enthusiasms in Boty’s , soul. ill#!! *| Bl a- ' ih wm ; i Rliil 1 /r 1 1,4, i ' W'i m i II Mil I w, f “That’s what I said, cutey,” MLa frisk assured her.' k “I hope that after you’ve seen more of me here you won't mind if [ ask you—if I want you to—if I ask you to be friends,” he ventured, continuing to put sugar cubes into his coffee. “Is that a threat or a promise?” the laughed, genuinely amused by his cautious approach. Bob laughed, too. They had a second laugh then, together. Miss Trisk, who had not missed a trick, did not laugh; nor did Bramiey. The one looked jealous; the other, resigned. Their opportunity for hilarity came within a minute, though, when a wild-eyed call boy dashed into the room, came to a disgusted and panting stop when he spotted Bob and the waitress, who were lost to all superficial in- Suenccs, then advanced toward them snd spoke sarcastically, “Wilson, I’ve searohed all over for you. Morran’s going to send your train out with a sub if you ain’t there in half a shake. He's down in the yard chewin’ an oil can now, and six-inch sparks is comin outen his eyes. I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes. Sign here, please!” Bob gasped in panic as he saw the time. Twenty minutes to eight! Ten minutes ’ past the scheduled start of his run. He signed the call book, jumped up, smiled at Caroline and hurried away. The memory of the look of concern on her face—• as though she were fearful that, •omehow, it was all her fault and that he would get into trouble on account of her—stopped him at the door. He went back, shook hands with her, then departed— all in a laughing, excited, happy rush that even the expectation of being struck by Bolts’ verbal lightning could not despoil. Luckily, his day’s job was on a local freight, and while a delay was serious enough it was not vital or unforgivable. In the whirlwind of his departing wake Caroline Dale stood looking •yith a guilty yet happy smile at the ILLINOIS COUNTY BTORM-SWEIT I Hall and Wind Wreak Vast Damage In fMf Iftfrfcppt St*. Mareopib, ,* 111.,JAug.? 16.—*H«il 8»<1 windstaffniH, sweeping over yah arka of, approximately 2IH» «<imt»e ifiilee of wesferfi Mi'Doiiough { county, today indicted' crop and proiiierty damage* istlhimted ut Rom $500,000 to *BOO,- 000. . The storm came out of Hendersqfi county where, at Terre Haute, coin table he had vacated and the breab fast he had left untouched but lot the single bite of'waffles that ha« been, well—the cause of it all! A soggy, dank pyramid of sugar, thf entire contents of the sugar crocl which Bob had absent-mindedly transferred piece by piece into htl coffee cup, was a sweet monument to the gay havoc she had wrought upon his mental processes. "Gee, kid, you’re a fast worker 1” complimented Miss Trisk, back handedly, a little later. “You’re th» first one who ever vamped Bob Wil son into looking as though he knei* that such things as girls existed i» this here mortal plane.” “Vamped him, why what do yot mean?” said Caroline, aggrieved. “That’s your line, huh—sweet baby innocence—budding daughtej asking mama ‘how do cats get kifc tens’ stuff. And yet, I’ve know* others to pull that pose on him and ; never get past his jumper buckles.* Caroline swam deftly aside front . the current of Miss Trisk’s superan i puated sex lore. “Is that his nam< —Bob Wilson?” “Righto, cutey—but the rest o| the family statistics I can’t givt I you,” she volunteered cattily. “He’* been the Elinor Glyn mystery o) , this burg so long we ain’t hoping no , more to solve it.” | Now Caroline was young, re t markably pretty, and intelligent— Life’s rarest triangle—incvitablj and industriously romantic. All in ’ a!!, here was a nature vibrantly re . sponsive to the lilt and the warm j urgings of the petal-sweetened spring air; and she was vividly aware that the young man had somehow deposited with hqr a glow ! ing consciousness of his own fresh |ly youthful, clean-cut good looks j even’ in the undapper habiliments ol | his daily toil. He was the one j bright tracing in the drab patter!) jof her first impressions of this town and its sweaty, swearing, careless bustle. Miss Trisk’s alluring hints about Bob constituted a bracing challenge to Caroline’s spirit, and she mqt it eagerly, dissembling with the sex craft of a thousand cen turies, cloaking her real interest un | dcr a coy air of casualness so well i done that it even fooled herself— I)ut not Miss Trisk. “A real, honcst-to-goodness mys tery? How interesting!” “Yeah, ain't it?” drily. “Surely lie has some relatives that you know of —someone he writes to ' or visits?” “Not so's you could notice it. But you can’t never tell about them tramps—■” “Tramp!" in horror. “That’s what I said, cutey,” Miss Trisk assured her, with comfortable satisfaction in her own swordsman ship. “He was a plain, ordinary | bum when he first came to this town.” The thin cashier paused to enjoy her sport, and Caroline inwardly writhed while she fought to check an outward show of too obvious dis appointment. He had been a tramp! Picturesque and mystifying, but rather rough. She could feel a rac ing of hot blood td her checks; for the rest, however, she was able to meet Miss Trisk’s narrowed eyes on a cool level. “Then I think he deserves all the credit in the world for staying and living down his past!” she main tained bravely. Admiration for the girl’s stead fastness in her interest softened Miss Trisk’s mood; admiration, and a keen sense of the communal debt to Bob Wilson. “He saved the Limited Mail one night, and after that it wasn’t no trick for him to get a job around here for he stood aces high with the trainmen, and the homefolks too, be cause, believe me, there'd have been crepe on many a door only for him. (lee, they’d have given him the keys to the city,” she finished, with an attempt at humor to cover a panicky realization that it was her own emo-j tions that were in full cry now, “only it wasn’t locked, and there ain’t no key for it anyhow.” Capline felt unaccountably proud ’ of this man she had met but once, , and* hen in a business way. Mean while, Miss Trisk’s mood had un* ! dergone a complete change. Per ! haps it was the fragrant outdoor t breeze that had touched her thin . checks, too; but to her it carried, in ’ stead of pubescent impulses, only I reminiscent echoes coming hollow ly back through dim years to aster , ile present and future. t (To be continued) -m. -i. ■ ■' '■""■c: 1 . Iwas cut off or beaten to the grouni by large hailstones- Gurdeir truck un< melon patches were destroyed am automobile.! inorooned in the store (bn, atfqo i wjmipw r. pupo were broken, ffeVeral' smnS.'t tyKJtfaV were reported seen, but all were big up mid did uo damage. The E. H. Harrimnn Mcmorir Medal* :or the beat record ,Sn a< eident prevention among America i !railToa<ls will be awarded this yea l fort)» first time aince 1010. BRYAN’S SON TO CONTINUE I 1 ANTI-EVOLUTION 1 FIGHT Will Carry on Father's Work to For- j bid Tlreory In School*. v Miami, Fla.i Aug. lfl.—Colars un der which William Jennings Bryan waged bis light against the teaching ] of evolution In the schools of Amer- , iea will not be furled. 1 His only Hofi, .William Jennings Bryan. Jr., said in an interview with , the Miami Daily News today that he - will carry on tie work in which his fafhbfrV-ttes eniageil at the tithe of , j fiis death and will Continue to engage i'll legal tights tfc take the teaching of evolution <f ut of the schools. V a*, p U—'Alg 1' ~ \ WHY WORRY WITH A DISORDERED ‘ STOMACH Nature Has Supplied tlie Ingredients. —HERB JUICE Is Based on Na ture's Own Cure.—lt Makes Good , Health Possible. “HERB JUICE'.? When I saw that name in the paper little did I , think that it was going to prove to i be the very medicine to give me Such 1 quick relief, but that’s just what it j did, and I want to give this public statement in order J list other* may know more about this wonderful rem- t edy,”. said Mrs, Molfie Kizziab) of 04 ( Peachtree Street?, Concord, N. C. Con- J tinning her statement to the HERB 3 JUICE man, Mrs. Kizziah said : "The j saying that one never knows how to C appreciate anything until it is gone is j absolutely true. Such was my expe- 5 rience when I lost good health, but iu J HERB JUICE I am thankful to say < I I regained iny health and today am < If celling much imprqved. "I had been j a constant sufferer for a number of J years with stomach trouble; my ( I symptoms were the usual ones—gas < Spains, heartburn, bloating and belch- i ing after eating and constant nausea 1 which made me extremely nervohs. ; ' | Every time I rend the paper- I saw | 1 j something in it gbottt HERB JUICE. ( ■ This caused me to make up my mind j , ! to try it, and ‘like many others, ne- j cording to their' own statements, I , 1 i found what I was looking for—Relief. | I J Since I have thken several bottles I i 1 j feel as well as I ever did. The gas j j ]mills have stopped.- and I am not ( bothered with bloating aud belching , ’ 1 after eating like 1 was before taking 3 J this wonderful remedy. My stomach I ! is now in good shape and I cat eat ! the food I want and do not suffer one " | bit from gas pains or indigestion, n HERB JUICE is without doubt the n greatest medicine?! Imre ever used, and , j I must honestly say that is responsi ! ble for the good health I am enjoying 3 today.” g "Mv son also r,-couinrcnds HERB d JI’K'E." I, HERB JI’ICE is sold and guaran " teed to give satisfaction or money re '• fundeil by Gibson Drug Co. II \ I SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES { /so / hf) (Hunt 1 ! Salve and Soap), tail ic iJI ft the treatment of Itoh, Ecaeitm - 1/ 1 Ringworm,Tetter or other itch * * ing skin di tease*. Try thii traatmtnt at our risk. ECZENAP | if HUNT’S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES , (Hunt’s Salve and Soap),fail in L •*. ! the treatment of Itch, Eczema, / J » Ringworid.Tetterorotheritch- f jUi / ; ing skin diseases. Try thio * * • 1 treatment at our risk. PEARL DRUG COM^ANI 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 haven't we hope you will. Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company PHONE 571 W South Church Street Thursday Morning Specials We are going - to sell all of our yhite slippers at one price Thursday morning only at ; $2.95 I 1 All of these slippers sold at 4 . $5.95 to $8.95. We do not have , each 4kk: * do haiie v all sites in' some of h them. :! Ruth - Kesler Shoe ”, Store . \ I* * \ 5 ~,’i sir.. .1-. A. . u ... BELL-HARMS FURNITURE CO.fJ Every Inch a Furniture Store I Come See a Handsome Overstuffed I Suits Priced $97.50 >! jovii j * v 1., large arm rocker and J j X arm all pieces being loost:'cushioned and X | ; ... .. \ ; j|| Ope of the particular features of this suite.is the loose ,j j ;!; pillo'W usefulness with beauty.. .~j } !ji _tjf tlwtEell. & Harris;Store to offer high grade < X fuiTriture at a’rpoderate price: is well exemplified in this?! ! ;![ Attractive suite which we are -offeririg at the j | ]i astonishingly low - price of $97.50. j ;j[ - , s- 1 X ?.! ! BELL-KARRIS FURNITURE CO. | 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001 A ! ojbhor/urt/fy~ ,; ! AlI : Ilf you have bcenwH planning to make yourJM home more attractive the aid of decorative lighting fixtures, we sag-Mjfl gest that you grasp the la opportunity jrresented hv |M the arrival of new stock f| ] here to make your selec-HM "Fixtures of Oiaracter” W. J. HETHCOX kj W. Depot St. Phone M 9 fcl OOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I Wilkinson’s Funeral Home | Funeral Directors and Emhaltners, Phone Noe 9 lOpen Day and ] night Ambulance Service aOOPQOOOOOqOOOOOOOOOOOOR Wednesday, Aug. 19, 19251 We have the fol lowing used cars for sale or ex change: One Liberty Touring One Dodge Touring One Ford Touring One Ford Sedan One Buick Touring One Buick Roadster. STANDARD BUICK CO. Opposirc Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home • \ Modern Plumbing wilt dc I as much or more thap any oth | er one thing 1 toward makin| [ your home a comfortable am [ convenient place ip which t [ live. It costs you nothing t I get our cost estimate. [ Concord Plumbing Company * North Kerr St Phone 57fl ■; - J