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PAGE FOUR 1— r The Concord Daily Tribune »s« —— J. B. SHERRILL p Editor and Publisher W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor MEHBER OF THE 5 ' ASSOCIATED PRESS I The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo cal news published' herein. All rights of republication of spec ial dispatches herein are also reserved. Special Representative | FROST, LANDIS & KOHN i 225 Fifth Avenue. New York Peoples’ Gas Budding, Chicago ! 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Concord. N. C., un-; der the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier: One Year $6.00 Six Months 3.00 Three Months 1.50 I 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 Dess Thau 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. 136 To Washington 5:05 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. 1 No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M. No. 32 To New York 9:03 P. M. . No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. ’ Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:55 P. M. N<k 35 To New Orleans 9:56 P. M. No, 29 To Birmingham 2 :35 A. M. No. 31 To Augusta 5:51 A. M. ' No. 33 To New Orleans 8 :25 A. M. No. 11 To Charlotte 8:05 A. M. No. 135 To Atlanta 8:35 P. M. No. 37 To New Orleans 10:45 A. M. No. 39 To New Orleans 9 :55 A. M. Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to dis . charge passengers coming from be yond Washington. 1 f I —FOR TODAY— -31 Bible Thoughts memorized, will props a fj nEj .nrictlcsA heritage in after yearn .3) , Not Meat and Prriik:—For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.—Romans 14 :17. WILL. HAVE TO IMPORT FOOD The drouth has made one thing cer tain—Piedmont North Carolina is go ing to have to live on imported goods to a larger extent than ever this year. The dry weather has made it not on ly impossible for fresh vegetables to be raised for the summer, but it has made the crops so small that practical ly nothing has been canned by the fanner for winter use. North Carolina farmers have al ways beeu forced to buy much of their stock food from out-of-the-State due to the fact that they will not raise the things they need. As a rule the farmer of North Carolina wants to put all his land in cotton or tobac co or some other money crop, the prac tice making it impossible for him to raise the food stuffs needed for hiis stock. Os course the drouth has aggravat ed this condition. It is practically u certainty that in many sections of the Htate less than half as much hay has been produced this year as usual, and the total is never enough. Some cattle raisers in the western part of the State have found it necessary to ship their stock to other States while others are already purchasing food stuffs that usually are bought in Jan uary and February, after stuff raised on the local farm Ims been used. There is every indication that can ned goods and certain foodstuffs are to be much higher than usual this winter as a result of the drouth. WHAT IS TIIE CAI SE OF THE FAILURE? School children in Concord and some other North Carolina towns started to work again this morning af ter their usual summer vacation. It .is estimated that more thgn 12,000,000 young Americans will be enrolled in* the various schools in the United States this year. A majority of these students will enter now grades this year, by reason of the fact that they were promoted at the end of the school term in the spring, and many of them enter into the nnew work , with much enthusiasm and ambition to conquer the new field. But how about those who appar ently do not care whether they suc ceed or not? How about those who were not promoted at the end of the last term and who start over the same ... work this year? With the Stigma of failure over them, the Gastonia t. iJaaette wonders if they will glory in , the opening of school. The Gazette goes on to show that | reliable statistics * indicate that the | number of failures is commonly 10 per ‘ cent, and quite often as high as 2o per I cent. |of ,t(iC piip-ils ’ enrolled in a HWfdei fbulj may do! much i to help lotoer ' these per Gazette-answers' th- qives | timis, So Many Failures?*’ with the lolloping \ suggestions: ‘‘Common sense , teaelies tin I i liil ; dreu, as well as adults, develop best through succeeding, not faijiug. Mod ’ «*n child psychology supports this view. I “The teacher may say Heury needs to repeat the grade because he is dull or slow. ,His mother mu.' say he had a poor teacher. The superintendent may say he was lazy, uninterested, did I not apply himself, and so is unprepar ed for the next grade. Ilis father may say :t is all right since he needs the lesson which failure will teach him. His failure, no doubt, may lx- j assigned with greater certainty to one! or more of the following causes which ; j the parents can help to correct: Phys-' I ical defects or ill health, poor home , study conditions, or irregular attend i a nee. Parents should plan to have ! the physical defects remedied before ! school and then co-operate throughout the year that these preventable bar riers may not be stumbling blocks an- j other year.’’ Colonel AVilliam Mitchell, former I air chief of the United States Army, j is almost certain to be courtmartianed j for his latest denunciation of the Army and Navy Departments. In a scathing statement issued in Texas Saturday Colonel Mitchell “cussed” both departments and then said he was ready for arrest. Colonel Mitchell already has gut ten away with more stuff than the average man in the ser vice and it is very probable that ef forts will be made now to make him j pay for liis remarks. Every phase! of aviation in the Army and Navy was | taken up by the Colonel in his latest statement and no one escaped criti cism. Since the general public is in clined to put some faith and. confi dence in the Colonel’s utterance, it fully expects him to “stick by his guns” and take whatever is given him as a reprimand for his criticisms. How Come? Gastijnia Gazette.- ■ Says The Charlotte Observer.- speak ing of the Cole-Ovmond case: "The finding of a pistol tucked away in t’.ie side pocket of the Ford auto iiiohrieuin'.wlrjcli' IV. IV. Ormond sat when bc’Vis' idiot and. killed by IV. 11. Cole is aicirodiOsiant'e that doubt l«fid:.will,'play sj part in the trial of the -RoekinKhaih 'manufacturer. Cer tainly the defense may be expected to make all possible use of the fact that a deadly weapon was carried in the- car, a fact which usually sug gests that one is ’looking for trouble.' “Two days following the ’homicide a dispatch sent out from Rockingham to the daily .papers of the state, con tained this unqualified statement: “ ’No weapon of any description J was found on Ormond or in his car’.*’l Which statement do most people believe? As a matter of fact, it is generally supposed around here that this latter story about the pistol being found is a fabrication upre and simple to create sentiment against Ormond. Prudently Progressive. Charlotte News. "On the whole." remarks The Win ston-Salem Journal, “the McLean ad ministration to date gives every rea son for the confident hope that the Stare will continue to progress. We venture to say that no man in North Carolina : s more vitally interested in the weifar? of his commonwealth than Hie Present Governor, and that no cit izen is prouder than he of the strides North Carolina has made in tile last quarter of a century." That’s getting the attitude of the Governor across in about the proper style, it i.- a mistake to judge the chief executive of the State as a skin flint and stingy in his management of State affairs. No man would like to dish out the money for all the insti tutions and for all the material needs of flic commonwealth in abundant freeness more than Governor McLean, hut he is business man enough to real ize that this is unsafe and unsound unless the people are to be inordinate ly taxed, and lie is opposed to that. The people are. too. What- the gov ernor believes in is prudent progres sivism, not the wild-run-away sort, and he is right." Canned Goods Specials 35c Can Sausage r) Meat ZidC 35e Can Cooked r% r* Brains ___ ZtlC Pink Salmon, •* per can AOC 15c Can Campbell’s Pork and 1 A Beans JLUC 1 Lb. Pail Peanut OC Butter ZdC 15c Can Van Camp’s 1 f\ Milk _ IOC 35c Can Cacoa a (1 Lb. Size) 1 ZI3C You Can’t Beat Our Prices — And We Deliver Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company PHONE 571 W South Church Street i VSTM if°HUN Tb GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES h/J (Hunt*® Salve and Soap), fail It I VI t * le tfeatment of Itch. {Ecseixia m S/\ Rinjworm.Tetter or other itch- Inf skin diseases. Try thk trec.ua ect -i Qur riik. EEiamsa Money back without question Jr' if HUNT’S QUARANTeA) SKIN DISEASE REMKDIIZs /••’/L ill (Hunt’. Salve and Soap),fail in f th.treatni.nt ofltch, Betema, yW/ J i Rinarworm.Tetyar or other! tch- f if / / log akin diaaaaaa. Try thia l '*• * i treatment at our riak. FEARL DBUU COMPANY Copyright, 1925, Warner Bros. “THE LIMITED HAIL" with Monte Bine, Is a picturlzatton of this stagy by Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. SYNOPSIS Bob Wilson, driving the Limited Mail up the mountain pass, has failed to see that the signal light has switched from green to red. A moment later he sees a runaway freight train crashing down from ahead. Ten seconds later the two trains are a mass of flaming wreckage. Bob, recovering from un j consciousness, rushes to the mail car j to find his chum, Jim Fowler, the mail clerk, dead, but Bobby Fowler, Jim’s child, is apparently uninjured. j CHAPTER IX—Continued Caroline, rising quietly, went to the window and made wide the way of the fresh breeze and sunlight. Caroline’s nightgown was not thin; and before this moment Jane had not found a chance to observe what she had been dying to observe — Caroline's figure. Now, against the flood sun, her gown became trans | parent; the slender boyishness of I her young form was revealed to ! Jane’s jealous eyes, who thought of the dumpiness already creeping in behind her own knees. A hurried pounding on the door— and Mrs. O’Leary calling in a high, frantic voice for Caroline to open. Alarmed, Caroline unlocked it hur riedly. Mrs. O’Leary’s face was as white as her apron. “The Limited’s been wrecked!— Jim Fowler was among the killed, and Bob and Bobby are missing!” Caroline sank weakly upon the bed, slim fingers clutching her throat. Jane looked serious, but not particularly upset. Ever after, Car oline remembered that Jane’s face had shown no sorrow—for she had glanced at her in the tragic tension of the moment, and had seen only stone. The rest of the story that had fil 'The Limited’s been wrecked!” tered down the line to Crater City was told as fast as Mrs. O’Leary’s excited, trembling, lips could voice it. “Relief trains are bringing in the hurt. There’s ugly talk amongst trainmen that Bob took a chance and deliberately ran past the red ] signal that was set against him at Rise Ravine station. ’Twas his fault, they all say, ar.d his arrest has been ordered. But they can t lo cate him!” Presently Mrs. O’Leary was gone, weeping—and the two girls were left alone in a dead silence. Finally Jane shrugged, “I guess one must expect those things on a railroad!” Caroline moaned at her in grief stricken intensity. "How can you be as matter of fact about it? Don’t you realize what this means —to poor Bob—” “Means he’s in a hell of a jam, I guess!” Caroline forbore in despair. Shq rose then, goading her quivering body into action, and started swiftly to finish dressing. “I'm going to him—l'm going to Bob —'he will need help!” Jane appraised her coolly; glanc ed up at the picture on the mantel, then back to Caroline and remarked, “It means —ever so much more to me. I think you’d better let me see Bob alone!” Caroline stared at her. If it were true that Bob would rather see this woman, Caroline would not stand in the way; but the disgust oyer Jane’s heartlessness had not left her yet, and Caroline did not think there was much real concern now behind Jane’s declaration. i “You can go to him if you want to,” she cried stoutly, “but I m go ing, too! I love Bob and you can’t keep me from him!” I Jane nodded, and drew out a cig arette. “Os course, but if I tell you | '•feat he is to me—” KINGS MOUNTAIN PEOPLE OFFER PRAYER FOR RAIN Special Services Held in All Church .es of That Community Sunday Hpwrysg, /■'.? 'v' v ■'<% ' - - .Kings Mountain? Sept. ’• 6.—Tbeye ,i " plenty of water in Kings >(0)1111- tllln and of-the bent quality, but'the j mayor, realizing the serlonstiejw ■’of | the ( drpught in (he country iff large, and recognizing the ptuce ; and es- Ificieney of prayer us set forth in the I Scriptures, issued a call upon the THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Caroline, in terror, stopped in the r movements of dressing. Jane smil ! ed on, ever so sweetly, reaching ov- I er the bureau for her handbag and ’ taking from it a significant gold cir r clet, which she held up to Caroline’s ■ eyes. r Caroline gasped—“No! Nol You ■ can’t mean—” “Oh, yes! Yes! I do mean just ! that—Bob is my husband. You • wouldn’t waht to come between man and wife, would you?” For the second time in the fatal five minutes of bad news following bad news, Caroline collapsed to the bedside. Jane met her eyes bold ly, brazenly, and Caroline could not find in them the hint of a lie sho hoped to find. She finished dressing now, apa thetically—courageously trying to hide her hurt from the alien in her room. And, finishing, she went | out—without a word. She was grimly and earnestly determined to help Bob no matter what his former relationship with Jane. Caroline knew in her heart, that somehow Bob’s part in this was aboveboard; it was not in her heart to believe that Bob would make love to her if he was the husband of this woman, j at least without first telling her of the fact and seeking a meeting on honest terms. * i But wait and search though she did through that lortg day, and through many long days that fol lowed, there was no sight of Bob or word from him. The wreck was cleared away, the Transrockian flyers steamed on their wonted way, and the excitement became a part of the City’s remembered past. The charge of negligence of duty hung in the air, to be clamped on 6ob should he* ever be found. And the ' trainmen talked—talked in ways that \ made Caroline's ears flame and her heart sicken within her—of the sort Jol E man Bob must be that he, would run away from the result of his in competence or carelessness or both. Jane had gone. Left without see ing Caroline again, that first day. Then something happened that fired Caroline with renewed hope after many days of despairing wait ing. One of the girl clerks in tho Western Union office — an alert lit tle girl, who also boarded at Mrs.il | O'Leary’s—fell to gossiping with | ; Caroline one day, in the course oi, a combined friendly and dining visit’ [ to the lunchroom, i “Say, remember that woman you had overnight a while ago?” “Well, she was a cuckoo! Came into the office that morning and . gave me a message to guy in Chica go—called him husband. Will yo» believe me if I tell you she took back that message, rubbed out th« name of her ‘husband,’ and inserted a different name no less than four times. She must run a sharem!” The girl fumbled in her bag. “Look, I sneaked out the office copy to let you read it!” Caroline read with a mist of eag erness over her eyes: Henry Gaston: Hotel Amazon, Chicago. At last I have come to my senses comma'dear hus band comma and realize that I love only you stop Wire money order and I will come at once stop Jane Caroline's heart was fluttering like a frightened robin’s, as she. handed the message back to the girl. “But that ain't the worst of it,* v the girl now explained, “for that guy sent the money order within two hours, yet a week later we got a message for her came to the office asking why she had not shown up. I don't believe she ever went there!” Caroline did some fast and furi ous thinking during the next hour, and at the end of that time she slipped over to the telegraph office and with the connivance of her girl friend, sent a message of her own to Gaston, diplomatically phrasing a request for information about the relationship of one Bob Wilson to Miss Jane Gordon, as she called , herself. Before night this return wire ws in Caroline’s hands, which wet . shaking from the very joy of it: Caroline Dale, Crater City. [ Dont know any Bub Wilson but a Bob Snobson was Jane Gor don’s first husband as result of . college boy elopement escapade i stop Boy disappeared account disgrace of his prominent fam ily stop Father had the mar riage annulled stop Jane Gor t don married several times since stop Can you help me find her stop Henry Gaston i (To be continued) people for a special service of prayer for relief in this emergency, In re sponse to this call such services were held, if all the churches of this iqnr uiunjty. \ v' «i \ : n "I supoze yon will be very glad when voof time is up,” said (he sweet visitor to the penitentiary in mate. as she peered through* the burn ut it figure in the glooui of a cell. “I can’t say I’m so keen about it.” was the reply, “i’lu iu here fe.r THE HAZARD OF MOTHERHOOD North Carolina Dosing Each Year 10,845 in Deaths of Infants. Raleigh, Sept. s.—Cf“)—"North Car olina women have not been modernised to rhe extent of women in other states; certainly not to the extent of evading motherhood.” That is the conclusion of Dr. F. M. Register, director of the bureau cf vital statistics of the State board of health. And he bases his view upon , Pie fact that "has been published time , and* time again,” that North Caro lina "has the highest birthrate of any ' state in the union." But. declares Dr. Register, "it is hazardous in North Carolina as well i as in other state.-; —519 women dy j ing last jenr in North Carolina in ! the peurperal state." And Dr. Reg , ister adds a statement ab out the ■ deaths of injants: "We are actually losing each year | 10.845 population in deatlis of in- : fuuts and stillborn children, or 108,-j (tfiO every Igen years, almost twice the population of any city in North Car olina.” ' Referring to the “hazard” of moth erhood, Dr. Register declares that "no insurance company that I know of i would insure an expectant mother or i infant.” "The mothers did their j part" in giving birth to the children, : thousands of which die each year, j They "literally inarched into the jaws I of death.” 1 "Who fell down oil the job? Who failed these women and babes at the most critical time in their lives? Who failed to measure up to the responsi bility? 1 am sorry and ashamed to : say, the men of North Carolina. By j no means do all the men come under oooooocooocoooooooooooboooodooooooboboobooooooboo . I School This Is Headquarters For SCHOOL SUPPLIES Everything you need is now here for your selection. ; i Special Tables —Quick Service—Courtesy—Honest j! i Prices. ’. ! 11 •■ . ]| j Tablets Pencils, Crayons, Scissors, Note Rooks, Pens, X ] Inks, Pencil boxes, Book bags, Crayolas, Rules, etc., etc. i[i i May we serve vou? X I KIDD-FRIX | Music & Stationery Co. !i S 1 Phone 76 58 S. Union St. Concord, N. C. X JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOt | | | the sewer pipes Bi] 'IN j ft are the most important in the \ I\ \1 B M house. They must be absolutely 1 *1 A (] S a>r and water tight. The traps I I jfl must be kept free and clear. Upon V, It m their condition health and possl j M bly life itself may depend. If you jj Jfl have the slightest suspicion that 3 eg there is the least thing wrong with , your sewer pipes, send for us at u»ee. Delay in such a matter is E.B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Co-bin St. Office Phone 334 W I INSURE | When You Start To Build The rignt time to take out insurance is when you start building. Then if through any cause your building snould burn, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your loss. Ketzer & Yorke Insurance Agency j Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. P. B. FETZER A. JONES YORKS aOOO»POO^OOOOOC»OOOOOOOOQOOOPOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO^O I HAVOUNEOIL S Is More Than Oil. It is § POWER I j We Are Now Ready to Supply You] WithHAVOUNE I Mutual Oil Company PHONE 476 R. ! FANCY DRV GOODS WOMEN’S WEAK fi this indictment, for there were indi- I vidual cases where men honorably and faithfully stood by in this hour. We are speaking cf the masses. "You might ask how this neglect came about,” continued Dr. Register. "It came about' for the most part by counties not voting money or j enough money to have efficient health departments with a sufficient corps of nurses in every county to give indi vidual care to each expectant mother, and follow-up until the baby is a year old. While we have in North Caro lina thirty-four whole-time health de partments. they are all, without ex ception, short in personnel. They i need more nurses. The counties need much mere money for mothers’ aid. I You may say it would cost money. Os course it will, but it is worth many times the cost. An empty j pocketbook is better than a vacant chair. j “What is it all about, anyway—are' I we trying to pile up iron men at the i expense of mothers and babes, the most valued asset any state ever rad?, Since the women now have the vote,} Dr. Register suggests, they can reme- j dy the situation If the women would j 1 see that the men they vote for “for county commissioners and legislators are in favor of mothers’ aid and health I departments,” he declares, "they could easily win this battlte of life or i death. “All they have to do is to nail i their banner up where it can be seen, 1 and every man in North Carolina , that’s worth ’a Tinker's Dam’ will i rally to their cause.” A fund of .$10,000,000 will be need- ' ed for Great Britain's natfcnai opera house in London. s | BELI-HARRIS FURNITURE Coil New Victor Records i i No. S'xe ]j f Hl' , j 19717 10 Dear, Oh Dear with guitar and harmonica. Vernon Dalhart tj l . BjR Who's It, Who Loves You—Who's It, Huh?, with guitar \ H and harmonica Vernon Dalhart ij i I 19718 10 I Miss My Swiss (from “Chauve-Souris”) with piano jy/ft ' , , ' . The Happiness Boya iji HK i ' As a’ Porcupine Pines For its Pork, with piano x The Happiness Boys , j ! 10 Sunshine, wjth Ukulele Wepdell Hall ] | K It Struck My Funny Bone, with Ukulele Wendell Hall j 19731 10 Every Sunday Afternoon, with piano by Smnlle Revelers ji| i V Just a Bundle of Sunshine, with piano by Smalle—Revelers iji XDANCE RECORDS H J, 19i19 lO Indian’Dawn, Fox Trot —Paul Whiteman and Orchestra Jij 1 1 Ogo Pogo, -Fox Trot, with vocal refrain i|i HI Paul Whiteman and His Orchestva jij ■ j i 19720 lOFootloose, Fox Trot, vocal refrain by Billy Murray I , Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra i i H iji Sing Loo, Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and Orchestra ] ij i 19721 10 Sonya, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain jll I Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra iji Bi j i Got No Time, Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and Orchestra X I jij 19726 19 Why Is Love? (from “June Days") jj! B - Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra 1 fli. You Forgot to Remember, Waltz, with vocal refrain j j H|i Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra i i I J 19d0 10 Row! Row! Rosie, Fox trot, with vocal refrain 1 George Olsen and his MusigL i HB jlj Say Arabella, Fox Trot __ George Olsen and His MusicT' i ■ Ij! 19711 10 When Eyes of Blue Are Fooling Y'ou, Fox Trot lp, IV * Howard Lanin-Benjamin Franklin Hotel Orchestrd ij> jlj On a Night Like This, Fox Trot Howard Lanin-Benjamin Franklin, Hotel Orchestra jlj B>| i 19713 It I Hawaiian ■ Love; Waltz Hilo Hawaiian Orchestra ij l B", Beautiful Gown, Fox Trot, with vocal refrain K Hilo Hawaiian Orchestra 1j j B ji, 19 714 10 The Prisoner's Song, .Waltz, with vocal refrain. * i1 H& iji International Novelty Orchestra j j I jlj ; { After the Ball, WlJta, with vocal refrain iji I * ’ ' ' ' ' International, Novelty Orchestra 1 1 1 Bl| iji 19715 10 Save Your Sorow For Tomorrow, Fox Trot j B jij _ George Olsen and His Music «]• H •. The Kiss ICan’t Forget, Waltz, with vocal refrain ’jij ■ jij International Novelty Orchestra i i B > 10722 1 0 Jf I Ever Cry Fox Trot—, Ted Weems and His Orchestra I j Siberia, Fox- Tfrdt Ted Weenisi and Hflj OrcUefctra. j | B i; 19727 19 Deem ,Elm, Fox Trot (A Paul Whiteman Qrcheatra) § jij , Basse’s Buzzards Q B ?i j 1 m Gonna Charleston Back t<y Charleston. Fox That, with 8 ■ I* id-no ,„ vof’al refrain —Coon-Sanders Original XighahaWk Orch. ?j B X IJ,2S 10 Alonc at Last, Fox Trot, with vocal .refrain 1 O Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra X otop I lirting—Fox Trot, —Moyer Davis’ Le Paradis Band r I BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE COJj OCXXXXMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ■ cud?///?/ * y&!r !In the bathi-oom there Ls aLfflc demand fov plenty of bril- M Va Rant light and your lix- Uj tures must be especially designed to provide this necessary light, while at the same time securing lu an artistic effect. Ask "Fixtures of Character” W. J. HKTHCOX L W. Depot St. Phono 880 tjj ~ ~ 1 QQOQQOOQOOQOOOOOOQOOOOQO I Wilkinson’s i Funeral Home | Funeral Directors; - and i | Embalmers Phone No. 9 | Open Day and j night Ambulance S Service Monday, September 7,1925 We have the fol- I lowing used cars I for sale or ex-« change: < B One Ford Touring 1 One Buick Touring ■ One Buick Roadster W One Liberty Touring I Chevrolet Sedan Body 1 STANDARD BUICK CO. Add the of PLUMBING ‘ to Your Home j Modern Plumbing will do as much or mure 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. Concord Plumbings Company j North Kerr St. Phone 576 I t.- v .
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Sept. 6, 1925, edition 1
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