Newspapers / The Concord daily tribune. / Sept. 9, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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iesday, Sept. 9, 1925 +* > J WILL SOON BE taking stock of your wardrobe for fall. Don’t orget that our skill in cleaning, pressing, dyeing or repairing may save you real money by reviving the beauty and prolonging the life of your garments. If you MUSI have a newcoat for fall, our care will keep it looking new and our skill will make the old one into a presentable second best. Phone us and we’ll call for your garments when you are ready. Phone 787 ifßjl] YS seek MORE MONEY I TO ENFORCE PROHIBITION ts Say Next Congress Will Be Asked For Additional Funds. iladelphiu Record, tally additional millions of dol * for prohibition enforcement will demanded of the next Congress, ording to a statement issued yes lay by the Association Against I’inhibition Amendment. ’"Ylt*-year's cost of enforcement of Ihibiltion laws and operating the ist guard was approximately $40.- WKIO. Rut this sum would be total inadequate to carry out the en ■cement plan A survey of fhe' ualion- has disclosed that to afford called' airtight protection to, the ists the Government must mniff n -a fleet of close to 1(H) seagoing tte'rs. 200 heavily armed patrol i its and a compltjfflynt of smaller i ift. It fc> estimated that it would! te approximately 10,000 men to )UT OUR WAY _ BY WILLIAMS . I * ■l w/> oC^rr A /^f rtß / wovy OOE-S IF tTvoORKS vdE. \ if 7/.Viow-IDD! Tjts Sfpcrt OF V V<lM HSPNoti-z-e \ * AinTeoviMA HURT COMA HAS 1 TOO? v<tHOA SOME RICH FEUJE.R CHA ATALL. its J Seeki imOuCED. UKE wa was AM&rr HiM "T 1 Oust L\KE.TAvW ThtE HNPmCST\sT GOTm numb Give os a Aft &AS - Ht>/! NioT "Them -Tußms All oyer ? \mi llyuku Dollars / (ffi fjh\ So fastwniA 'AT Amo Bows apiece. y ////A\ BO ° l^ l 1 / lit) HIS AuOIEMCE/ Y I \HE -Tv4EM(----y : HOW -15 become, a CEWTs PER rnOM ' 08V..U,4, - -!. 1 =T’ ■■ _ * CII2I iV MCA SCRVKXj^J MOBTN POP ~ • ~ BY TAYLOR^ V4HAT ON EARTH V/ GONE? WELL (7 I EXPECTED SOMETHING LUCE THIS YIOULD V HAS BECOME OF THE A fiLAO OF IT-THEY \ I HAPPEN AND IT'S ALL VOOR FAULT TOO J T'/TE’S? TtiEIRTeNT I MIERE PEEVED ALL I \ NOW 1 SUPPOSE THEV’II So BACK / IS EMPTy AND ALL J YESTERDAY / HOME AND TEU, OUR FRIENDS HOW \ . TH©R CLCiTHES J) \ \ VIE MISTREATED THEM - t CAN SEE ) X ARE GONE / / 4 VIHERE WE’LL HAVE A NICE SfllfAToN / SowwelTn / Aj o FACE GeT I I V V ENJOY OURSELVES JL wr, J.f VttLL HE AGREED A/ IF SOO HAD KEPT VACATION i" 4 ! TO PAY HALF THE l I QUIET AND LET MATTERS f ,VJC)M'S Soßg AND THE 1 » . ! EXPENSES-ANYHOW yv ALONE ALLThiS TROUBLE l -pwr's WON’T SPEAR \ I'M Glad IF THEY , V COULD HAVE BEEN . > - ALL SKaOSE I ! ARE SORE* TWEV VIONT J AVOIDED - BUT NO« f A TW/NB TRYING *T& L'DHOLD m, ALWAYS ee Borrowing J you’re neuec \ aSS CPHOU^^‘ FROM US VJHEN VJE A SATISFIED OnTh_ \ '‘L, 1 operate thin navy. To create a pro . liibition iwivy of this proportion would mean an initial outlay of $150,000,000, and would cwt ap proximately $40,000,000 annually for operatiou. In addition, at least $10,000,000 would be needed for land enforcement.” Poultry Campaign in Transylvania. Rrevard, Sept. 8. — UP)— As a re sult of a poultry campaign, conducted for one week by C. F. Parrish, poul try extension worker of State Col lege, twenty-two plans for poultry ltotises have been ordered by farmers of Transylvania county, reports Farm - Agent Lewis A. Aminon. In addition to the Ji° us c plans, many feed sheets, showing the mixtures for feeding at different stagey of development, and bulletins on gen eral poultry management have been ! requested. 1 USE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS Fine Crop of Soy Bean Hay. Polkton, Sept. B.—OP)—Grant C. Miller, of Tryon, has a very fine crop of soybean hay in spite of all the dry weather,’ reports County Agent .1. 11. Sams. “It si lows what a man can do if he wants to," says Mr. Sains. Mr. Miller also has a fine herd of pure bred Jersey cattle which he built up himself, starting with two grade cows, Mr. Sams says. Laync Bound Over to Higher Court. Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. B.—OP) Inge Lnyne, Marion county deputy sheriff, who last Thursday shot and killed Sheriff J, H. Hehnessee, of San Sequatchie county, today was bound over to the November term of the United States district court in $30,000 bond at a preliminary hear ing before C. "VV. Lusk, Cfiited States corammissioner. He executed bond. USE PENNY COLUMN—3T PAYS THE CONCORD DAILY TRifeUNE DINNER STORIES ;' * ‘ Koogle: "Why was it that Bertha Vericiite refused to marry Jim De trop, when it was so obvious that they were deeply in love with each other?" Dismuke: "The fact is that site didn’t want to have her initials on her car, her hankerchiefs and every thing else ‘ft. V. I)’.” "They say Jack Poore actually bor rowed the money of his fiancee to buy the engagement ring.’’ "Yes, and then went to Cite jeweler and got trusted for it." Aviator: "It’s all off. The pro peller is broken, and we'll fall (>.OOO feet.” Bathing Beauty: "I hope we don’t fall in water. I can't swim a stroke.” Carrie: "What are you doing to the garage?" Elmer: “I'm having the door made wider, since you are learning to drive the car.” First Knut: "If I were you. Percy, I should tell him just what I think of: him.” Second Ditto: “How can 1? The man has no telephone." Ferdie: "Is Miss Ethel in?” Maid : "No, sir." Ferdie: "Very sorry! I will leave , this candy for Iter.” Maid: "Thank you. sir. She was , just wishing she had some when you rang." The Negro Question. Rastus (at cell door) : “How long is you in fo’. Mose?” Mose: “Jes’ three weeks,” t- Rastus: "Only three weeks fo’ ' killin' yo’ wife?” [ Mose: "Da's all, jes' three weeks. Den dey’s gwine t' hang me." i “Rastus, is my bawth warm?” “Yessab, the wahtfTest Ah was evah ' in.” i In his announcement bn a Sunday I morning the minister regretted that money was not coming in fast ! enough—but lie was no pessimist. "We have tried.” he said, “to raise the necessary money in the usual manner. We have tried honestly. New we are going io see whar a ba zaar can do." SAYS ITS GREAT SYSTEM BUILDER Stomach Was So l"pset Could Not Re tain Any Food.—Says HERB JI ICE Gave Relief. “1 would not take anything in the world for (lie relief your HERB JUICE has giveii me. It has restor ed my health after I hail amout de spaired of being well again, and 1 can not praise it enough,” said Mrs. Graee Rodgers, well known Concord lady who resides at 27 Gold St., in an en thusiastic statement to the HERB JUICE man of recent date. "For ov er a year." Mrs. Rodgers continued, "I was bothered a greut deal with stomach trouble; everything I ate seemed to sour and ferment, causing me to bloat and belch up gas and I could not retain any food oil my stomach. In addition to this 1 was troubled with my kidneys and blad der. I tried first one thing then an other for my trouble, but nothing seemed to bring be relief until I be gan using HERB JUICE. Before 1 had used the first bottle I knew I bail at last found the medicine to suit my case, and since taking it regularly for several weeks there has boeu such a great change in my condition that 1 can hardly realize I was ever sick. I really feel better in every way than I have in a long time. The gas pains and bloating have stopped, kidneys and bladder are in much better condition and I am feeling 100 per cent, im p'roved generally-. I have a better appetite, more energy and have gain ed in weight until today I do not feel like the same person. I did not think it possible for any medicine to help anyone so much in such a very short time as HERB JUICE has helped me. I think it is a wonderful laxative and system builder. At least it has prov en so in my case, and it gives me great pleasure to be able to recom mend such a splendid medicine to other sufferers, for I believe any one taking it according to directions will bo benefitted by its use.” HERB JUICE is sold and guaran teed to give satisfaction or money re funded by Gibson Drug Store. 009000000000000000000000 i | Let Your i | ! I Next Battery l|i Be An j j EXIDE j Use Only the jj Best SbiwrtteCr »Y CHARLES P. STEWART * NBA Service Writer TUTABHINGTON The present Yf Senate ta ao evenly divided that the outcome of the contest for one of the lowa seats has a lot more Jptportance than such a fight ordi narily has, and they always are pretty Important. • i , r !Originally Brookhart" was sup posed to have won by a small ma jority. The Senate committee's recount, recently finished, wiped ptit this margin and more too, giv ing'.Steck a-bigger advantage than Brookhart was thought to have >ad.) However, this is on the basis of gmcontested ballots. There are enough contested ones either to In crease Steck’s lead or to throw Victory Brookhart’s way again, de pending on how they’re counted. r 1 will be up to the Senate, when Congress reconvenes, to decide about the contested votes. What It does decide will determine whether Smith W. Brookhart or F. Steek shaft. represent ONE-NINTH OF DEATHS I CAUSED BY HEART DISEASE Deaths From This Cause Increased Mure Than 80 Per Cent. From 1922 to 1924. Raleigh, N. G„ Sept. B.—GP)—One ninth of all the people who died in North Carolina during the year 1024 died as a result of heart disease. And deaths from diseases of the heart in creased by more than 00 per cent, fiioni 1022 to 1024. And diseases of the heart cause more deaths in this state than any oI bed disease, pneu monia in all forms coming second. .Figures compiled by the Bureau of Vjthl Statistics of the State Board of Health show the various causes of , desQi in this state. The figures show i a total of 33.284 deaths in the State during the year 1024. Os this num ber 3.007 deaths were the result of heart diseases. And dentils from heart diseases increased from 2..557 in 1022 to, 3,301—0 r an Increase of a little ovey 00 per cent.—in 1024. pneumonia is an easy second ’as a cause of death, with a total of 2.- !)2o deaths charged to that disease in all Its forms in 1024. Tiiis is an in crease of IX7 over 1022. Deaths to the number of 2.004 oc curred during the year in which the cause was "not specified or ill-defined.” The next highest cause of death, the bureaus figures show*, is pulmonary tuberculosis, with 2,042 deaths last year from that cause. Next comes 2.207 deaths resulting from, cerebral liemmorrhage or /apo plexy, and that is followed, in the or der of numbers, by diseases of the kid neys which are charged with 1,874 deaths during the year. Other death causes, listed in the order of the numbers who died as a result of their ravages last year fol low: Premature birth and injury at birth, 1,840: diarrhoea and enteritis under two years of age,. 1.484: acci dents of all kinds. 1,413; cancer, 1,285>; influenza. 757; and paralysis without specified cause, 020. These athe onij l causes which took more than'soo lives, each, dur ing the year, the bureau's figures show, Tlie figures do not include deaths under one year of age, howev er. More infants, under a year old, die each year than from any of the causes mentioned. Hie figures show an increase in both homicides and suicides. The tig tires for homicides climbed from 256 in H>32 to 290 iin 1024. which those who took their own lives number 103 'll 1022 as compared with 108 last EVERETT TRUE BT CONDO [ Heße-' 6= 11 nfD| VUS»r A MINUTS * V Bj! TIW6 * I ue Vue. I (S 19.-- [, lotVa In the uit'per Etouae for the next six years. A few commentators have been so unsophisticated as to suggest that it’s a matter for the "intent’* of\fhe lowans’ ballots, not the Sen ate, to settle. Ah, but the controversy has passed out of the lowans’ hands now and into the Senate’s. Little enough the lowans will have to say about it hereafter. •* * * r-E Senate, then, will choose between Brookhart and Steele. Normally the Republicans would vote for the Republican candidate and the Democrats for the Democrat, but this contest is peculiar. Nominally a Republican, Brook hart was so unmanageable in the last Congress that the regular Re publicans would prefer the Demo crat, 'Steck —unless Brookhart means to “be good” in future. Some gay he does, if the Repub licans will vote to seat him. Doubt less they will, assuming he's tamed. It wasn’t because they liked Steck, it was because they hated Brookhart’s • insurgency, that there was any talk of Repub Ucan support of the former. 1 year. A caiise' of death that shows a marked decrease is pellagra. The deaths resulting from that disease de creased from 300 in 1022 to 273 last year. Typhoid deaths are also on the decrease. They were 200 in 1022 and only 270 in 1024. Whooping cough last year is held responsible for 42.1 deaths, measles with 427, and diphtheria 323. AVENUE OF TREES To Be Planted as Memorial to Boys Who Lost Lives in World War. Hickory. N. C., Sept. B.—An ave nue of trees along the state highway in Catawba county, connecting with Burke and Lincoln' counties, will be planted by the women of the third district of the State Federation of Women's clubs as a memorial to the boys who lost their lives during the World War. The work will begin this fall in Catawba county, which was the first to have thd hard-surfaced road com pleted, and will extend through the other counties of the district as soon as flip roads arc finished. The idea of a tree-bordered high way, as a fitting memorial that would be appreciated by all who traveled the highway, was conceived by Mrs. Car rie <lambic, president of the third dis trict, which includes the women’s fed erated clubs in Catawba. Burke, Cald well, Watauga, Ashe, Avery, Alle ghany, Wilkes. Alexander, ami Ire dell comities. At llie time the plan presented itself to Mrs. Cambio, she was president of tin- Hickory club, 1023-24, and it was her purpose to plant trees along the highway between j Hickory aud Newton, the women's clubs of tin- two towns to sponsor the j project. But when Mrs. (lambic was I elected district president, in tlic fall of 1924. she expanded her original idea of planting trees along a 10-mile stretch to avenues of trees through each of the 10 Counties comprising the district. Practically every civic and fraternal organization in the district has hear tily endorsed the proposition, aud the president is in receipt of letters from state highway commissioners, (joV etmor McLean, and other leading state officials, expressing approval of the plan. It may be necessary to purchase ad ditional trees before the work is cotn pleted it is stated, hut it is expected that the majority will be donated by the various organizations of the coun tj. Many, in fact, have already been promised. Time to RE-ROOF p We have a complete stock of GALVANIZED roofing | M and ASPHALT SHINGLES. . We seH-only 29 .gauge roofing and give you nailstand • washers for putting it on. a Yorke & Wadsworth Co. i The Old Reliable Hardware Store Union and Church Streets Phone 30 Phone 3C § : I I; j{ + -irrznm:" .1 3000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000< DELCO LIGHT 1 I | Light Plants and Batteries * |i| 5 .off Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct dr Alter- 8 S i nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- x j nating current. |l R. H. OWEN, Agent I I Phone 661 . Concord, N. C j | 30 °oooooooooooooooooaooo©o90oooaooooooQQOOQQOOooo< j »•-!•:« At- ,«v '-If i! '■ *S»| • f. : I S] j Boys Clothes j lorEall ! I u I Sturdy Well Made Clothes For Your Boy. Suits with jaK jS A’ long trousers or short trousers. A goodly number of, Suits are ready now. Let us show you. Boys’ school toga that will please you. RICHMOND-FLOWE CO. ft m Trerommu -K-- ,-, i |l| Just received a large shipment of Fiber Suites. Many new jJa Styles and Finishes to Select From. Prices most reasonable. Come in and select yours today. H. B. Wilkinson 1 /•« . r c *. ! ' Concord Kannapolis China Grove Mooresvillc - Car Washing! Alemite Greasing! \ I Crank Case Service I ILet us wash your car and grease it with Alemite High ’.-jhl Pressure lubricating system for everybody knows that i ■ proper lubrication’i.s the life of-.anv.car. i>’ i I Texaco gasoline and oils - -Gnodnch'tire-4 aud tubk.''l\ I ire changing. Accessories, Free Air ahd Water \ j .pfl CENTRAL FILLING STATION I I PHONE 700 - |l| PAGE SEVEN
Sept. 9, 1925, edition 1
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