PAGE EIGHT ' I M - --—— ~ ■iir? T Tr'X'Y- : : * HZH; . • U^H 6 Quaker Heat is Quicker Heat —and Cleaner too The Quaker Pipeless Furnace is built of heavy riveted boiler plate steel—and steel radiates heat three tint& as fast as cast iron. That is why Quaker heated hotfies are always so comfortable on cold mornings. Justlopen the draft and up through the Quaker Register pou&Xan enormous volume of warm, pure, clean air. Before you buy a furnace, find out about the QUAKER ••Jtfjl'gr “The Pipeless Furnace Jhctt is built of Steel' ’ It not only gives you quicker heat hut more ol it from the same fuel. Every corner of every ' JM| | :| *«-•) room is wanned thoroughly. It’s cleaner too be- Jy ; 1 I cause every Joint is riveted tight like a steam SXVflHgf 'MW.~>*l boiler. Can't leak gas, soct or ashes, like the cement ilUB' J joints of cast iron furnaces do. Fire pot is lined with high temperature fire bricks. Hold he2c extra lor.K. Vv'on’t « crack nor burn out. Handy water filler outside cx tumace > &&s§sK|;i I keeps afr moist and pure. The Quaker is the ideal heating L [ l|]|8B ( 'JL plant for homes, schools, churches and stores. Easily and V | HT> *■ Quickly installed in ar.y or new building, Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCKXXXXXJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! I COAL r COAL*! Coal prices the coming winter according to present pre- o dictions will be high enough to make the customers hot. X don’t take chances. Get the right kind of heat from A. B. S POUNDS FAMOUS BRAND OF COAL. $ THE RIGHT COAL FOR THE RIGHT PURPOSE 8 A. B. POUNDS PHONE 244 OR 279 | OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO THE UNIVERSAL CAR 8 j 1 An automobile dealer may be correctly judged by what !|! !ji has been the experiences of his owner with him. Noth- ]i| ]i, ing else will tell the story more truly. X j! Ford owners who have bought cars from us must be sat- X < [ isfied, for we do and are glad to go far beyond the usual X X practices to satisfy our ownels. If you would investigate ]ij X us, we refer you to our owners for evidence of our state- X X ment. ! \ “OUR INTEREST GOES FAR BEYOND THE |!| |!| SALE” j!|! REID MOTOR CO. 4 [ ijs. CONORD, N, G. II f %'AKWm !| j IWE KNOW WE KNOW FORDS! ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc j Goaust QicdUes Final DrasHc and . Last ReductionTh olLSummer Goods Prices Smashed for Quick Action The Season’s Successful Dresses | Unusually Low Priced 95c, $2.95, $3.50, $6.74 and $11.74 I FISHER’S f , ' Concord Daily Tribune I TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound 186—11:00 P. M. J 30—10:00 A. M. I 34 4:10 P. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11:00 P. M. Southbound I 30— 0:30 A. M. | 4." 3:30 P. M. i 13r>— 8:00 P. M. ! 20— 11:00 P.M. LOCAL MENTION The Stirewalt-Pless-Yost reunion will be held at Ebonezcr Church on August 07th, - Stuart Henry lias been confined to his home on North Church street by illness since last Sunday. The Christian Endeavor of McKin non Presbyterian Church was enter tained at a watermelon feed Wednes day near the city. A large number of the members attended the feed. The Concord Kiwanis Club will meet in regular session at the Y. M. A. tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock, It is said a most interesting program lias been arrauged. Ail members of the Fred Y. Mc- Connell post of the American Legion are asked to attend the post's meeting tomorrow night. The meeting will be held in the Legion club rooms at 7 :30 o'clock. Supt. A. S. Webb has asked that all persons remember that it is necesary for school children to be vaccinated be fore entering school. Parents should attend to this matter prior to the opening of school on September 7th. The Y swiming pool will be closed Friday owing to the fact Ijiat it will be necessary to get it ready for the swimming meet to be held Friday night. All the aquatic stars of the city are entered in the meet to do the swiming and diving. D. W. Sims, general superintendent of the North Carolina Sunday School 1 Association, was a visitor in Concord today. Mr. Sims came here to at tend the County Sunday School Con venttion winch is in session today at Si. Stephens Church in No. 7 town ship. Committeemen appointed to aid in securing the I'. & N. for Concord are urged to attend the meeting to be held at tile Y. M. C. A. tomorrow morn ing at 11 o’clock. Former Gowrnor Morrison will be a guest at the meet- ' ing. which promises to be a most im portant one. Several hundred baseball fans from Concord went to Kannapolis this af ternoon to see the Kannapolis and Fayetteville teams in action. Fay etteville has won three games this week from Kannapolis and the latter team is determined to get revenge While playing at home. Dr. Herbert Yttell, noted lecturer,' who gave a series of addresses in Concord last winter, is visiting hen l for several days. It is stated that he may give a few of his speeches during his stay in the city although no definite arrangements have yet been made. Police officers again this morning retorted that business with them is very quiet. No session of the re corder's court was held yesterday af ternoon and except for their hunt for mad dogs tlie officers have not been i very busy since Monday. Several 1 cases will be tried in police court to | morrow, it was stated by the officers. , The Giants climbed nearer the lead i in the National League yesterday by 1 defeating Chicago while Pittsburgh ] was losing to Hrooklyn. In the Amer l ican League Washington cut Phila | delphia’s lead by winning while Wash- I ington was losing to St. Louis. In I the South Atlantic the Spartanburg! | team made it three straight from > Charlotte. i Another heat wave that seems to sap the life out of everybody and ev- I erything has gripped Concord. One | , man reported this morning that the! 1 thermometer was 100 on his porch! [ yesterday afternoon and he added, “I i would go without clothes if I thought 1 I could get away with it,” The heat ; this week has been as terrific as it i was last week. i Captain Norman Alston, command -1 ing officer of Company E, will leave j Sunday for Camp Perry, Ohio, where i he will be stationed for about a month as range officer during the national rifle meet. Captain Alston is one of the best marksmen in the North Caro lina guard and for this reason he was selected to serve as one of the range officers at Perry during the big shoot- Since June 28th there has been no connection for western North Carolina for passengers leaving Concord on the 5 o’clock morning train. The Ashe ville train now leaves Salisbury at 5:20 a. m., whereas No. 136 does not reach Salisbury until 5:50 a. m. An other train leaves Salisbury at 8:30, reaching Asheville at 1:55 p. m. Those who wish to do so may leave Concord at 5:52 via Charlotte and Barber, reaching Asheville at 1:55. Let the Flappers Alone. 9 Mrs. Marie Carlson, of Brooklyn, H N. Y., recently celebrated her 100th i birthday by performing intricate U Swedish dances before birthday guests. 1 Mrs. Carlson is a staunch defender Uof modern girls. “Girls,” Bhe says, |J “must dance and sing and play. || Youth is always gay, not bad. Mod ern girls become more reserved as they grow older. There is no danger unless we try to suppress them.” Recent experiments have confirmed the fact that cut flowers may be pre vented from fading by giving them an aspirin tablet. The new Madison Square Garden, designed to be the world's greatest in door sports arena, will hare a seating | capacity of 23,000. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Ck man was arrested for sleeping n a Chicago theater and we think re have seen the same show. - *, r ' "dIF sft - Nine men were unable to land a »sh off the coast of New Jersey grhere booze Is thrown overboard. / Latest' report from ! the ’movies Halms a movie octor and his wife are close friends. Press agent stuff. **.*■ . We never read a news Item from Hong Kong that we don't think it tounds like an auto horn blowing. . -r a Human nature Is what makes your Bog seem to have more sense than ' any other known dog. Just as the boys are planning for college a New York professor re signs to become a carpenter. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) The salt content of the sea is about 35 pouuds to 1.1 >OO pound of water. There are in London more than 100 hospitals', with beds ranging in umber from 50 to 1,000. Statistics compiled by Italian scientists hare corroborated a theory that more earthquakes occur at night than in daylight hours, C’mon, We Wantcha to She thish JANE in “The Wren” —AT— Winecoff Aug. 21st Then say, “Slang, en-hic-joyed the play. Honey, we sho’ is puttin’ on some style.” OI)U FELLOWS NOTICE. Meets every Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, .1. I>. WILLIAMS. N. G. A. L. SHINN, Secretary. WIDEN HOUSE REUNION. The Wideiyhoiise reunion will bo held Thursday, August 20th, at Cen- I ter Grove Church. All connections of the Widenhouse family are cordial ly invited and expected to be present. THUS. WIDENHOUSE. 6-12-c. Chairman. ooooooooooooooooooooooae 5! RUN RIGHT TO ij CLINE’S * ! S| We have it, can get it, !|! S| or it isn’t made. X C Quality, Accuracy and ! ?! Service Our Hobby i I Cline’s Pharmacy Phone 333 000000000000000000000000 | Friends off to | College? ; V Os course you want to make 1 IS! some suitable gift. What \ C about something practical, such i i ? as a gold or silver mounted 1 pencil or pen? We have them. ! ! iJ I S. W. Preslar I JEWELER IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIijjj FREE i [ With each Tube of Palmolive ! Shaving Cream at only 35 cents we give one after shav -5 • ert . v r ing Talc. e ; Gibson Drug Store The Rexall Store e CONCORD COTTON MARKET THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, IMS Cotton .24 Cotton Seed ; ,45 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET ~ (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for produce on the market: Eggs 1 .33 Corn fL3S Sweet Potatoes 1.75 Turkeys .25 te .30 Onions $1.50 Peas * $3.00 Butter * j _3( Country Ham 2K Country Shoulder J, ,2( Country Sides ,2( Young Chickens ,2f Jltdsh P^^VX_'_lV--VX.X_l"'|l'.2< Increase and Punishment of Crime News and Observer. There are many things we ran learn from Engdland as well as teaeh our British cousins some things we do better. The one thing we should learn is how to secure a reduction in crime. Sir William Joynson-Hieks, who has been studying conditions now with conditions fifty years ago, says that fifty years ago there were 20.000 persons in local jails in Eng land and 10.000 persona doing penal servitude. Today there are only 8.- 000 persons in local jails and 1,000 doing penal servitude. The popula tion, too. has increased in that time. Why has crime increased in this country? Here are some of the answers: 1. So many half-baked and un taught. immigrants have come into this country, unaccustomed to our ideas of liberty, that, they think it means they can do as they pleaee ami neither try to acquaint them selves with the lnws nor to obey them. 2. Prohibition is hold responsible for the crime wave in some sections, the argument being that many people break that law because they resent it. and becoming nccustonvd to break one law they lose all restraint and break other laws. It is agreed that prohibition having made the sale and manufacture of liquor theretofore legal, illegal, the number of viola tions of law has increased. 8. The automobile comes in for its share of the blame. Much of the time of courts is taken up with suits growing out of automobile accidents and the stealing and reckless driving add to the number of cases on the criminal docket. This is new. 4. The absence of home training and home discipline is blamed for the increase of crime by youthful of fender!?. Judges frequently call at tention to the increased number of boys and youths arrested for criminal actions. There seems to be no doubt that there is need for better home trnining and a restoration of oid time instruction. In an article in The Monthly for Augu»t on the religious revolution, Dr. Char les W. Eliot touched upon a need that Christian people have been troubled about. He said: The third section of the American Those Artless Little Dears, The street car conductor had ask ed Willie's mother how old he was, to be sure lie was entitled to a ride fre<t "Three and a half,” said the mother. "And mania’s 31.” added Willie politely. Plenty of Pep. Young city Miss—There isn’t much pep to the girls out here, is there? Farmer Jimson —Pep! Wahl, I dunno ‘bout that. lady. Now dis mawnin' our gal Saryh milked fifteen cows befoh breakfast. ! GOING OFF TO SCHOOL— j! Your Fall Coats, Dresses, sweaters, and Wraps will !j | need a thorough cleaning to put them in condition for ]i| j!| the winter’s wear. Why not let us call, today for any- ]|[ iji apparel you may have to be Cleaned as our service will iji 1 1 be of great help to you, as well as a saving. X Telephone 420 ! M. R. POUNDS I ! Dry Cleaning Department ! j ! aooooooocoooooooooopooboooooopoooboooooooooooooooi IHAVOUNE OIL g Is More Than Oil It is POWER We Are Now Ready to Supply You iji With HAVOLINE Mutual 09 Company PHONE 478 R. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQt For Light-Footed j Comfort | \ You’ll find that the pleas ing little one-strap cut-out vamp as pictured here is simply ideal. Made of soft patent kid, it fits so smoothly, at the I V E Y , S throat, instep and ankle. It * v is a dandy comfortable shoe *gj “the HOME OF GOOD SHOES” * or g enera l summer wear. $5.00 ,0 $7.00 5 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO »||fANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAR 8 * loooooooooooooociooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooS people in respect to religion con- ' i taJne tens of millions of men and i i women who take no interest in any 1 ■ religious doctrine or practice ] ! Their children get no religious in- i struetion at home or abroad and 1 , grow to maturity without knowledge j i of Christianity or any other religion i , aand are densely ignorant of the funda- ] 1 mental moralities and of good man- J ners. • No experiment on so vast a seal* | has ever been tried since time began I as these are now trying, namely, ] bringing up ehildren without any re- i ligious instruction or any trasmis- i sion to rising generations of the ] 1 moral traditions handed down ] through primitive, barbarous and < civilized peoples in succession. The unchurched, however, have i aroused all over the United States an ! unexpected opposition to their i theories and practices, an opposition 1 which is gathering great strength but j is not yet organized for effective i work. Tliis opposition comes from 1 teachers, principals, school snperin- ] tendents and committeemen who see i plainly 4n their own school-roomß 1 the effects of depriving children of j religious instruction. i What are the remedies? We have . reduced the number nnd increased fl the quality of immigrants, which, at j . least in port, meets the first cause , assigned. Prohibition is not the cause 1 : of othpr crimes. It is here and here j , to stay. .Tust as soon as those now j i defiant of law recognize that fact. ; and jußt as soon as there is a systc ; mntio concurrent resolve to enforce ( ! the law, violations for that cause . will decrease. Moreover, experience 1 ; has proved that drinking is the . fruitful mother of crime. With on- i foreement of prohibition most other 1 crime will be reduced- As to the j f fourth, the parents and the schools t I add the churches have a compelling 1 duty and responsibility. Parents can- , . not shift their responsibility on i . preachers and teachers, and they j [ cannot, “pass the buck to home fail- , : ure. Each has its responsibility. The i ■ State, as represented by its juvenile ' I courts and reformatories, lias its ( i | large restraining and reforming 1 | function, os well! as its punishment \ i function. i Deliberate Bull. “Never had an accident, you say,” ; murmured the doctor to the man he was examining for life insuuranee. "What about the time a bull tossed you over the hedge?” "Tilat wasn't an accident.” replied the other. “He did it on purpose.” John D. Nolan of Itoobesfcr, N. Y., who is a candidate for re-election as general president of the Shoe Work ers’ Protective Union, is opposed by n field of five rival aspirants for the office. The election will be by re ferendum vote of the membership on September 11. MR. J. HARRY ROSENBERGER is here today, tomorrow and Saturday (Thursday, Friday and Saturday) With Fall Woolens on Display, of the famous i Schloss Bros. & Co. of Baltimore and New York Call and see these imported as well as domestic wool ] [ ens in all the new and popular shades for fall. HOOVER’S, Inc “THjS YOUNG MAN’S STORE” OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOGOOOOOCXIOOOOOOOOCK OQOOOOOOOOOOOeaOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOQGCaot GAS, SIR? w Tes> sir, plenty of iupt greases and other, lub FILI;ING 81 PHONE*SBtf mHe ' OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOoQOQQQQQQOOQOqqqqqqqq^ CAPABLE DIRECTORS | Our directors are men of standing—who have beei j successful in their own lines of business. They are it j constant touch with the affairs of the bank, and give i j the benefit of their broad experience in directing its poli cies. j CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK, ? Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.01 Make Your Summer Free From Ice Worry, Install Kelvinator electric refrigeration in your refrigerator and you can forget all about ice deliv ery this summer. Kelvinator will keep your refrigerator much colder and your foods much better and longer. When you go visiting it will stay cold while you are gone. Kelvinator requires no time or attention and k trouble free. It usually costs less to operate Kelvi nator than to buy ice. Phone or call for details. Yorke & Wadsworth Co. Kelvinator | Th« 01d..! Dom.itlc El.ctrl. R.irtg.r atioa t L ", Thursday, August 20, ll

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