PAGE EIGHT Closed Churches. flfastonia Gasette. < * We are inforiped that a certain : web Hill lady wished to attend ! < burch last Sunday night and started out to visit one of another der.omina- j tjon than her own. the church of her]] choice being closed for Chat service., : She discovered to her surprise that hot one downtown church was open c for service on the evening of August • 16th. It duly and August are vacation t months and services in the churches | art- not as regular ns is true the bal- j anoe of the year. But it appears to j: us that something is radically wrong , with our churches when each and ev- i er.v one is closed up on a given Sun- j i day night. It looks as though there ought to j l»o more co-operation among our 1 churches and some plan made whereby i dt least one church is open to the ( pjjblic for worship every Sunday night - in the year. 1 -This is a matter of serious import- i rfrice to our local pastors who tiave the spiritual life of the community nn- < dea guidance.—Rock Hill Herald. Another thing that has struck many i How to Spoil a Boy. Xew York World. Mr. Prince, who joined the La fayette air squadron in the French war. has a son four years old. The churl ruling on the little boy's <les 'tiiy, • says• the father must establish with!the Old (Colony Trust Company, of Roston. a fund sufficient to pay the little boy at least $2,500 a year. New. thgt seems reasonable, accord ing t<i modern inetuods and costs of t bringing up little boys iiith rich fatii- j ere. A good nurse alone costs $1,200 j a year, plus her board. j The judge also orders the boy's i father to arrange a fund that will ' provide for his son an income of sls.- I 000 a year to be paid to the boy when . he reaches the age of 21. What chance does that give the i bey who will have so much money to spend? Life is not worth while j without hard work. Rut does any boy with $15,000 a year ever work hard while the money lasts, or does he devote all his energies to getting the greatest possible enjoyment out of the $15,000 a year? Men make money and leave it to ruin their Children. aOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGCOOOOOOOOOOOt | It’s Time to Think of Fall Cleaning || To fully appreciate our Cleaning and Correct press- j! ! 1 ing is to give others the once over. j» I A phone call will bring our truck. Telephone 420 < M. R. POUNDS Dry Cleaning Department XJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC NewFallFrocks : Styles Specially Designed I to be Worn From Now on $5.95, $9.75, $16.75 on j I All the Paris decreed Modes are rep- ] resented in Lustrous Satin, Heavy Flat Crepe, Crepe de Chine. Unmistakably NEW DRESSES. j Black leads the mode, with deep cop- \j !' per and red shades exquisite browns and U Royalty’s own purple. 1 Hats That Lead in the Fall Promenade AMA ENTIRELY NEW JjnS $3.45, $3.95, $4.95 The Range of Colors ▼ / Mexico Camel and Chamois Brown, K. Sunset, Falingo, Jadite, Parchmint, \ Taupe and Pewter Gray, matching a yoqr fall costume. FISHER’S church pcojde in Gastonia this sum mer rapeciaily is the smallness of the Sunday night union service congrega- i tiens in this city. ) One would think that, when sir >; large city churches unite in a union l . service, there would be a congregation that would overflow any ordinary church auditorium, but such is not the case. Far from it. The as sembled crowd is hardly ever larger than the usual Sunday night eongre-1 gation at any one of the churches. One is inevitably led to the conclu sion that not more than one-sixth of • the church-going population go to church during the period cf these union services. The majority of the congregation in each' case is made up of those be-; longing to that denomination in whose chureh the meeting is being held, or of the parishioners of the minister ( who is preaching on that particular ; occasion. Members of the other four ] congregations take holiday. It may or may not be a matter of concern to the pastors, but it is a 3 very noticeable fact to many laymen 1 of the city. A Remark That Was Out of Order. Kinston Free Press. Counsel for W. B. Cole, millionaire 3 cotton manufacturer, charged with killing a young man a few weeks ago. is quoted in state papers assay ing: "We are the cockeyest looking set of lawyers you ever saw.” The remark is said to have been made jocularly. Whether or no that be the , j case, it was out of order and should : : not have appeared in the public print • with the attorney's approval. An ! awful crime has been committed, j What its justification was, the pub- I lie has not been told so far, if there | was sue*. But it ill befits counsel I to make light of the charges at this | stage of the game and give further 1 ground for the impression that already j prevails that the defendant's money I will stand him in good stead when he j is haled before the bar of justice. ‘! Miss Catherine A. Doody is the ‘ owner and manager of a heating and E ventilating company V: Boston and • J the only woman member of the Amer • j iean Society of Heating and Veutila ‘ting Engineers. Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mails at the Concord postoffice is as follows: I Northbound 130—11:00 I*. M. 30—10:00 A. M. ! 34 4:10 P. M. 38— 8:30 P. M. 30—11 *» P. M. Southbound * 35) 5) :30 A. M. i 45 3:30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29 —11:00 P. M. LOCAL MENTION Marriage license was issued Tues day by Register of Deeds Elliott to Dewey M. Sherwood and Miss Bessie Furr, both of Concord Jones Pharr, who has been employed at the Brown-Xotcott Mill, has ac cepted a position in Kannapolis as as sistant. purchasing agent for the Can non Manufacturing Company. Conrad Hill has taken the position at the Brown-Xorcott Mill. A number of farmers ia the county are planning to attend the meeting of tlte Xorth and South Carolina Bee Keepers' Association which will sold its sessions in Charlotte on the 10th and 11th of this month. Mrs. Robert Y. Gray has sold to A. M. Honeycutt for $2,000 property on Ann street according to n deed filed Tuesday. Another deed records the sale of property in Tetertown, Kannapolis suburb, by M. F. Teeter to J. M. Benson for $205 There were plenty of signs of rain in Concord Tuesday but they all failed. Monday night roosters crow ed before midnight there was light ning in the north and heavy clouds were hanging low, but no rain fell. Visitors to the city report a big rain at Mt. Airy and vicinity Monday. Kannapolis won the first game in the series with Fayetteville, Gates stopping a Fayetteville rally in the ninth. The score was 7 to 0. The two teams will play in Kannapolis Fri day and Saturday aud arc certain to drew big crowds. A spectator at the game was hit with a foul ball and seriously hurt. Frank Crowell, who has boon man ager of the King Tut Service Station here for several years, is now con nected with the sales force of the Hudson and E-sex garage in Albe marle. Mr. Crowell still owns all i stock in the filling station here, the 3 business being managed by his as- I soeiates. Washington defeated Philadelphia | in the first game of their imporvent I series and now has a lead of four I and a half games. In the Xatioual League the leading teams were idle. | Tuesday In the South Atlantic Spar | tnnburg won again while Charlotte ! was losing, cutting the Hornets' lead to half a game. [ Baseball fans in the city will be in- I terested to learn that there will be a ! play-off in the city league to decide Jhe ! championship. A three-game series ; between the Pythian team and the Locke Mill team will be staged at the : Locke Mill park, the time set being three successive Thursdays. The first game is to be next Thursday. Members of the board of aldermen are expecting a number or important [ matters to be presented to them at i their September meeting tomorrow, I it was< said today. The meeting is | scheduled to begin at 8 o'clock at the i city hall. It is probable that the eom i mittee appointed to make some de | cision as to the street car line here [i will have a report to make at the I I meeting. i[ Stanly Xews-Herald: The Albe i marie friends of Mr. “Jim” Cald i well, will learn with pride of his | election as vice commander of the l Xorth Carolina Division of the 1 American Legion. Caldwell is a fine j fellow and the honor is well merited, i The very wide awake post here has j been such, largely through his acti , vities. We imagine that the "boys” i of the local post will be celebrating. i It has been reported to Chief 1 Talbirt that tierson loitering near I the square have been heard to shout l and yell at motorists as they pass. 3 “This practice must stop,” Chief i Talbirt said, “and I have instructed l officers to arrest those persons found | guilty of such conduct.” Loud nud ' I boisterous language has been used in jj some instances. Chief Talbirt said he i [ had been advised, and the practice iji will not be tolerated. I A Prayer. Nebraska School Journal. God give us men who boast of the money they spend for education. Give us men who are unashamed to be proud of vast amounts spent in the transmission to the youth our cul ture, institutions, and things we hold dear to the human spirit. Give use men who do not quail before the un thinking clamor of greed couched in the man-pleasers’ appeal to the selfish ness of the crowd. Give us men whose courage does not fail and whose hearts do not flinch before the assault of the self-seekers who prey on the future generations. Give us men who will not meet the eager enthusi asm of our children with niggard pen ury. Give us men whose answer to the cry of youth is not empty-handed ness. Give us men whose.philosophy of education is something else than economy. God give us men who are t unafraid to spend public money for tlie children of the race. Give us men who dare to refuse to crucify child hood on the cross of poverty. Oh, God, give us men who believe that the highest function of the wealth of so ciety is its decidation to the upbring ing of the children of men. God give us men who believe In the race to be. The Viscountens Rhondda, a peer ess in her own right and a leader in the fight for the right of womeen to sit in the British House of Lords, is , \ a director of twenty-elx Urge in- TOE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE KANNAPOLIS WINS l FIRST OF SERIES | Hard-Fought and Thrilling Contest Is Played at Fayetteville. FayetteviHe, Sept. I.—Owl's fourth single and Saunders' double with two out in the tenth inning gave Kannap-j olis the first game of the State cham pionship series 7 to (1 in one of the. contests cf the season. The Highlanders who had tied the' score in the eighth and again in the ninth, failed to come back in the tenth I through poor base running. Though I they filled the bases with none out. I Gates replaced Culp and retired the side. i Let’s Care for the Delinquent Boys. Bakersville Banner. While Xorth Carolina is spending thousands—hundreds of thousand for good roads, education, public in stitutions, etc., it's falling down mis erably in providing necessary qtiar ' ters for a very large number of min ors that come under t'.ie jurisdiction of the juvenile judges—clerks of the Superior Courts. In the one hun dred counties in this state, there arc today, perhaps a thousand cases that require immediate ; several of these arc right here in Mitchell. The Jackson Training School and all other places where juvenile delin quents can be detained, are crowded to cheir full capacity, so they say. But the welfare department is sig nally falling down on its job. if they do not immediately take the matter of more room and more funds up with the “powers that be" in Raleigh, and see if some plan cannot be inaugu rated whereby pressing, emergency ' cases that are constantly coming to 1 the force, can’t be taken care of. The penitentiary, insane asylums and other detention camps annually get all the money they want for upkeep. | but when it comes to perhaps the most I important matter in the state—tak ing care of t'.iese juvenile delinquents —little means or places are provided. ; ■ ■ : ■ mmmmmmmmm > Pure apple vinegar, 50 ; cents a gallon. Fresh j country eggs. Homemade i honey in cone, 35 cents per pound, three pounds,,!or - SI.OO. "I ; J. W. CLINE OOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC I NOTICE! ! You are invited to come In and look our new ice cream res frigerator over. We use up salt. It is the same tempera ture all the time. We now car ry twice the number of differ ent kinds. We also carry J Brick Ice Cream. Give us a trial when yo§ J need ice cream and sec the dip , i ferenee. Cline’s Pharmacy Phone 333 | OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOC j 10 PER CENT. DIS- ! j! COUNT | On All Orders For ]! . ENGRAVED ! I CHRISTMAS CARDS | 1 1 placed during the month of \ i 1 September. The advantages of ] 1 1 buying early are: You will save ) ] i money and will not have this to 1 1 1 think about later on when oth- ! 3 1 er matters are demanding at- i , 1 tention. | i S. W. Preslar i JEWELER *>■■■ ..-Tiaaiaß r. -a - -n I I. 1 v* i ( i < i D’ORSAYS PERFUMES Chevalier Muquet - Charme Toujours Fidele Jasmin. Gibson Drug Store The Rexall Store CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET • (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for produce on the market: Corn $1.85 Sweet Potatoes 1.75 Turkeys .25 to .30 Onions IIHO Peas SB.OO Butter 80 Country Ham ■„ 80 1 Country Shoulder 80 Country Sides —... 1 80 Young Chickens 85 I Hens —— .18 | Irish Potatoes SIBO CONCORD COTTON MARKET TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. IMS »«■===l .&8B ‘Hlfh-Powmd Buttsr Canvd Riff' | War. | P«q>lt> coming from Morocco nnd j all neighboring conn trice bare vary ing stories to tell as to how and why the war started between the French and Itiffs. It has never been made ! quite dear as to why Abd-ei-Krim ! voluntarily added the French to the ' enemies he already had in the | Spanish. But Mrs. Mary Summer, ' who is visiting here sister in Cali fornia after 12 years of residence in j Tangier*, explained that It ait start |ed over butter—bad butter. | The Riffs. Mrs. Summer said are excessively fond of butter. Butter and tea are their greatest dissipa tions. But it is not the butter that Americans tire familiar with. It is a sort of educated butter. It must be a least-a year old before it has a pro per 'bouquet' for the trained palate of the Riffs. They like the aroma and the tang, just as some Europeans like their favorite cheese. Mrs. Sum ner related that when her servant* brought it into her kitchen she was forced to leave by the front door. From the yard gate she shouted back orders for the butter to be carried out to the back yard and there buried. ;!; now in season § JOHNSON’S LIVER MUSH For Sale by Leading Grocery Stores and j|j Meat Markets. Only 20c lb. !; PHONE YOUR ORDERS 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ; I THE UNIVERSAL CAR jj ;!» The service on your car should be a source of continual jj !ji satisfaction. If it is not, your dealer has failed to fulfill ij jij his obligation to both you and the manufacturer of your ]i jjj car. Such failures, though apparently of minor import- jj Ij > ance, will not permit a permanent success. ij !jl The service we can offer you as a Ford owner is worthy ■ jij of consideration. At home, we will not fail you, and ! ' ;j wherever you may go, far or near, Ford service as at your 1 1 jjt command. * NEXT TO GOOD VALUE IS GOOD SERVICE j We Have Both REID MOTOR CO. CONCORD, N. C. WE KNOW WE KNOW FORDS : OOOGOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ftOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC ll COAL 1 ! ! The Right Coal For the Right Purpose A. B. POUNDS j j PHONE 244 OR 279 jj North Carolina Popular Excursion | TO WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, September 4th, 1925 • ! —via— ;! j SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Three whole day* and two nights In Washington. ' . 1 j ROUND TRIP FARE FROM CONCORD, N. C. $10.50 S Special train leaves Concord 9:35 P. M., September 4, 1925. Ar- j 1 rive* Washington 8:40 A. M. September 5, 1925. , 1 Tickets on sale September 4th, good on regular trains to junction , 1 point* thence Special Train. Good to return on all regular trains (ex- j j cept No. 37) so as to reach original starting point prior to midnight , 1 of Tuesday, September Bth, 1925. j Returning regular trains leave Washington 8:20 A. M., 11:00 a. m„ and 3:45 p. m., 7:00 p. m., 9:35 p. m. and 10:50 p. m. Big League Baseball Games WhaMagten Senator v*. Boston Red Sox Two Games—September sth and Oth | A fine opportunity to see Walter Johnson, star pitcher of the Sen- , I ators; Ike Boone, star fielder, the Bed Box, and other great stars in ft action. i S This will also be a wonderful opportunity to visit Washington's | many public buildings; Arlington National Cemetery and the various I other points of Interest. I Tickets good in pnllmsn sleeping cars and day coache*. No stop -5 over* and no baggage checked. S Make your sleeping car reservations early. K For farther information call on any Southern Railway agent or j | MM? WOODY, Ticket Agent R. H. GRAHAM, 9 Concord, N. Cl Division Passenger Agent, X Charlotte, N. C. g umnnnn puuuuuotwuuuuuuui ■. . c .Mil' -v ’ " The French put a tax on this dear, adorable butter—and that’s I bow the trouble began. The Riffs might not have been so sensitive about, anything elae. Next to butter, stated Mrs. Sum ner, the Riffa like their tea. The French also put n tax on tea —thna hitting them simultaneously m their 1 strongest and weakest spots. Can there be any wonder that a war re sulted ? But after all. it’s not a very bod war. according tp the observations of the American laxly. The people not ■ engaged in the actual fighting pay ■ little attention to It. She, herself, lived only two miles from the battle front, nnd she wouldn’t have known J there was a war going on but for the i refugees coming in. When a couple of friends from Tangier* were motoring ■ to her home, she said, they nnex . peetedly ran into a raging battle. : But the chauffeur drove on through it without wincing, and not even the i car was scratched, i What’s a butter and tea war, any* way? « Annette Kellerman, twenty years , ago, was the first woman to attempt the English Channel swim. The Early Bird W \\ Finds Earlier Birds *** at Hoover’s "■ jHjEEjpJpj j J So many men are coming ear jßtUTJVut 11 ly to avoid the rush that there V_£|h has been a rush to see the new mj m Fall Suits ever since they ar- In other words—the early bird has got to get up before breakfast to have the field to himself. As soon as 8 A. M. these Schloss Fall Suits are displayed to men who were up at 7 and in dozens of cases we are selling in September new suits to men who usually wait until Thanksgiving. Set your alarm for tomorrow— We’re all set sos you today. IrillVrafr fflfimil SCHLOSS NEW FALL SUITS 525.00 to $45.00 HOOVER’S, Inc. gft “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” v r GA ' S ’ si: |\ ? depend on our service at J HOWARD’S FILLING STA DOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOObOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO i «-uhhi WE To render every assistance in our power to the business men in our community. The progressive business nlan appreciates the facili ties for service that are available to him in this strong bank. Its officers, by reason of their experience and the many avenues of general business information open to them, are able to give sound advice on financial matters. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK . Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.0^ 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..i Doaaaacie Ei.ctria R.irtg *r.tl»a 1 Wednesday, Sept. 2, 19 dg

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