PAGE FOUR II e====^~ — 1 Iruo n-iu, T-a,,.. i.Aoe uuntora usuy 1 riDunc 1 |W. 1 1. SHERRILL, Associate Editor ■Bp • '* r ryx* rpfTjr •- ■ * I I entitled to the use for republication of p tail news credited to it or not otherwise Icredlted in this paper and also the lor | leal new* published herein. 1 All rights of republication of spec si; lial dispatches herein are also reserved. I Special Representative FBO6T, LANDIS A KOHN ft “ 225 Fifth Avenue, New York s - (••'Peoples’ Gas, Building, Chicago (• 1004 Candler Building, Atlanta c . ; I , Entered as second class mail matter I it the postofflee at Concord, N. C., un j ier the Act of March 8, 1870. f , SUBSCRIPTION RATES ? In the City of Concord by Carrier: I One Year $6.00 gg Six Months 3.00 p' three Months * 1.50 i\ Ke Month .50 r Outside of the State the Subscription Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North It Carolina the following prices will pre -1 Wil: e One Year $5.00 p Six Months 2.50 p Three Months 1.25 ' Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month AR Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect June 28, 1025 Northbound i No. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M. ( No. 136 To Washington 5 :0o A. M. No. 36 To New York 10:25 A. M, & No. 34 To New York 4:43 P. M. I No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. f No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P.M. P* 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. No. 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. 1 No. 39 To New Orleans 9 :5o A. M. : Train No. 34 will stop in Concord to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyondi i Train / No. 37 will stop here to dis ehargepassengers coming from be yond Washington. fgL, Bffi^THdUGHTf r |^ t por today-| I Inexpressible Peace:—The peace of 1 God which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds 1 through Jesus Christ.—Phil. 4:7. , SEEING NORTH CAROLINA. ’ One who reads nowadays is of ne . eessity more or less familiar with the natural beauties of North Carolina. “The Land of the Sky” is not only a , by-phrase with North Caroinians. but in every section of the country there are hundreds of persons who have been lured to North Carolina to view ' her mountains and hundreds of oth ers who dream of viewing the unsur passed beauty in the future. Pinehurst and Southern Pines al ready are winter meccas for many per sons who leave home to escape the , hard winters; and Wrightsville Beach is clustered in the summer months with a most cosmopolitan crowd. Our natural beauties are coming into their own with a rush, but we have other attractions that should prove great drawing cards but of | which even our own people are ignor ant. One such attraction is the Guil ford Battleground. How many people in North Carolina • know anything of this battle ground I or its history? Os course school chil « dren read of the battle that was wag . ed there and the public as a whole dim ly remembers that there is such a I place, but how many really know any thing about the battle that was fought and the heroic deeds that were wrought ? | One cannot visit this famous batr tleground, now maintained by the S Federal government, without a feeling | of pride. As one views the statues, shafts and other markers that point s out to strangers the spot where heroes fought and died, there comes a feeling § of hunger for more details, for more I facts about these men who wrote in I blood the early history of the United States. EV “Five Hundred Men Died Here.” K reads a market, while just a little dis p taut from this spot one views the statue of some man or woman who was conspicuously gallant in those | days wheu the pioueers were fighting s for a principle on which this govern | ineiit is founded. |ir‘ Natural beauty as well as a histor i, ica background and patriotic atmos- I phere is to be found at this battle E ground. The tree known as "Corn p|: Wallis' Oak” is but oue of many that gr beautify the grounds today. It would K fee difficult to find anywhere in this | part of the country a tree that ex it,;.,. ceeds in beauty and grandeur the oak I to which General Cornwallis is said to ’ have tied his horse while the battle of Guilford Court House was raging, ft*: Were it possible for every school £ child in North Carolina to pay a visit P $o this battle ground we are sure they K. 'jgjould get a different vision of the g. r battle. They would have u keener gp3gr.de ill the history, to be sure, and 81, jjfcey .would get ap atmosphere that is historical data TOO lug the kindness which is present in! his makeup. Take the auto driver for j example. f Many persons get in their ears, step * on the starter and are off without a j thought of their fellow motorists. So f long as everything goes well they live within themselves or within the bounds of the party of which they are a part. They take reckless chanc es, forgetful that their recklessness is a danger not only to themselves but to other persons on the road. Many of these persons ale “road hogs,” tak ing more than their half of the high way in order to maintain some foolish rate of speed so as to reach an uncer tain destination. An example of this carelessness can be found in, a wreck which occur red on the High Point-Greens boro road Sunday night. Two cars crash ed on an open road, the accident be ing due to a drunken driver, it is said. Soon more than 25 cars were parked at the scene of the accident and occu pants of these cars were willing and anxious to aid those persons who had been injured. • No one hesitated to perform any kindness that was asked; ninny vounteered their cars and ser vices. And wheu the injured had been re moved and the damaged cars shoved from the highways, the spectators moved on, many of them at a rate of speed that was in defiance of all rules of safety and common sense. They were anxious about the injuries of the accident victims but they were unwill ing to “play safe” and thereby make the roads safer from such accidents. How much better it is to show our kindness by avoiding trouble rather than administer to those who need aid because of our carelessness. How TO PREVENT MALARIA- Dr. F. M. Register, in The Progres sive Farmer, How Transmitted—There is only one way in nature that malaria is transmitted—this is by the bite of the Anopheles mosuito. that must have been previously infected by bit ing someone who has malaria. Bad water, bad air, flies, and poor sanita tion have nothing to do .with malaria. How to prevent malaria: 1. Stop the breeding mosquitoes by ' destroying their breeding placed: This is not always possible but we can see that there are no open ves sels of water.,such a?, cans, barrels or small pools allowed near the house. Often mosquitoes come from the swamps at night and harbor in high weeds near the house or iu stables or barns. See that the weeds aud grass are kept cut; screen your i stables, for mosquitoes among stock, and have your barns so constructed that they can be shut up tight at ' night. 2. Don’t let mosquitoes bite sick people. I 3. Don't let mosquitoes bite well 1 persons. This cannot be done 100 per cent but it can be done in a 1 large measure by screens—l mean i good screens, 16 meshes to the inch, 1 well made and well flitted; not only i the house screened but the porch as well and fireplaces, for mosquitoes 1 come down chimneys and stove flue-. ! 4. Cure your chronic cases of malaria by pnoper treatment with quinine. Do a 100 per cent job of this, and mosquitoes will have no 1 malaria to carry. Write your state board of health for directions for giving quinine to chronic cases or see your doctor. i If you are in a malaria com munity, form an anti-malaria asso ciation. and get everybody to join, in. Employ a doctor to treat everybody in the community who has chronic malaria. The dm-tor can have your blood tested and determine if you have malaria. If you live in a malaria country aud feel dull, tired, and without pep. the chances are that you have chronic malaria. By getting rid of malaria in a community, you not only prevent much sickness and save many lives, but you increase the efficiency of the people who are up and at work, at least 75 per cent and by this increase in efficiency you place thousands of good dollars in the hands of the people. Chooses a Poor Time to Fulminate, Raleigh Times. It is not a cheering message that President C. P. Barringer, of the State Federation of Labor, broadcasts to North Carolina on the annual cele bration of Labor Day. It would be disturbing were the conditions al leged by him to exist in this state credible, which they are not. There are injustices still to be found iu industry in North Carolina. There are men taking too large a profit from the labor of others; but to utter as a generalisation that "wealth barons are making their fortunes out of the lives of underpaid men, gaunt women and immature children” is to miss an opportunity for an appeal to the in telligence of the state through mod erate statement which might produce results. There is no profit in the employ ment of immature children, and there are not enough employed now in this commonwealth to make a thousand dollars difference in the income tax paid or dodged by the textile manu , facturers. Nor does gauntness have 1 1 the terror for women that it had ; aforetime; most of those who are ' gaunt nowadays are proud of their i figures. Hours are too long in the ; cotton mills yet, we think: but a ma- I jority of the operatives would have ''been glad to have had some overtime I this year. It just isn't the time to protest against the profit-taking of the tex ‘ 1 tile industry, which with the cotton ', goods trade what It is has not been I beeh so situated as to be able to ex i' ploit anybody. , Few women have - iteoqa 1 pujfftßtld; Hie RttfeicloffWs b*Ve hai tiiqc to irow.-Cotton‘'geoda just aren’s selling to do any good. j Indeed, we believe that President Barringer woulji be hard put to it •to find half , a dozen pairs of cotton ; auioug all the gaunt women “ijfry “ c^m *“ Unce “ th * i* 8 EPT EMBER) FORECAST HIGHKR I Trade an New Qrleana Exchange Had ! Anticipated a Crop of 14,000,000 H l | rt j, , ,v , New Orleans, Rent. 13.—The fea ture of interest in the cotton market I the past week was the government | crop report, issued Tuesday in which the probable yield based on condi tions existing September Ist was fore cast at 13,740,000 bales. Tie trade had been expecting a forecast of 14,- 000.000 bales or over and prior to the report December contracts traded as low as 22.05. Almost immediately after the report prices advanced more than $5 a bale above she lows and despite occasional 1 reactions, the level of values as shown by the December position has risen to 23.85, an advance of 180 points, or $9 a bale. . 1 Undoubtedly the advance was helped 1 by other influences, such as general 1 deterioration the crop since Sep- 1 tember Ist owing to the drought. An urgent demand for spots has helped the advance and not a little outside 1 speculative interest has been aroused 1 by activity in the manufactured goods. ! A moderate reaction occurred ou 1 Friday as a result of rains in the 1 eastern and central portions of the belt which many contended would im prove the late crop and add to the ( number of bales, even if the grade ( should be lowered on cotton open in , the fields. This view was* less gener- j ally entertained Saturday when active and general buying developed on fear , of too much rain but particularly be- • cause of continued urgent demand for J spot interest in the market to be cov- , ered during the balance of the cur- , rent month. The market closed the week at the end of the short Saturday session with ( prices at the highest levels of the pres- j ent upward movement at 23.62 for ( October aud 23.85 for December and ; January. ] I LANDOWNER. A. T>. Jones, Brunswick County, Va, in the Progressive Farmer. Whon I was married 16 years ago , I had nothing and lived in the house , with my father the first year and ' worked half shares. That fajl I moved to another farm just a few rniUs away. I hnppeneh to get with an extra good man and stayed with him for seven years. Part of this ' time I’ worked half shares, and the rest of the years I gave a fourth and ' worked my own team. Eight years ago I bought a small 1 farm—just 60 acres, I had .only ' enough money to x«iy half cash. The plade had been rented out for years aud was in bad shape and had not been improved any. Some of my 1 neighbors told me l would never be able to pay the rest of the money. 1 but my wife and 1 moved in and went to work. We had three little 1 children at that time.' T had"'gotten i hold of a very good mule by that time aud a one-horse, wavon and bug- 1 by. Our first crop was small, but we 1 did the best we could, and the next was better. After we made four 1 crops we had finished paying for 60 i acres, and then bought another tract ' of 30 acres adjoining it. Two years ' ago we finished paying for the second i tract. We haven't, any fine home, i but have a five-room house aud hope to have a better one after a while. : I have a pair of mules, double i wagon, two milk cows farm imple ments, a fine flock of Barred Rock i chickens, and a Ford—and am practically out of debt of any kind. I have never had a store account. My father was a good man. but he got me disgusted with store accounts when I was a boy. My wife ana I made it a rule to raise our own meat each year and a little to sell. My wife raises chicken to ear and some to sell. We raise our owu vegetables aud have plenty of milk and butter. ' I set out an orchard the first year I moved here and now we have plenty of fruit and a nice strawberry patch with plenty to sell aud give our neighbors. As soon us I moved here I started i sowing cowpeas aud crimson clover i and bought all the fertiliser each 1 year I felt I was able to pay for. I i saved all the manure from my stalls and hens. Now I raise plenty of corn and feed for my stork and poultry, 1 potatoes, beans, peas, and some wheat. Then we make all the cotton and peanuts we can for market. We have six children now, with a , good school neur us. and four of the children in school there. We are proud of our children, our home, our school and church, and proud of our good neighbors. The Progressive Far mer has been a great deal of help to us for the past 10 years. I hope what I have written may help some other tenant try to be come a landowner. How Country Folks Once Did. For quite a whilp I have been some what disturbed about the social life of the rural South. When 1 was growing up, farm folks would come together by neigh borhoods for corn shin-kings, wheat threshings, quilting, house raising log rolling, singing school, fanners al liance rallies, etc.; and people went long distances to their associations, quarterly meetings, presbyteries, and other religious assemblies held at'coun try churches, while fox hunting aud horse racing were still. fastbionablc sjiorte. and old-time musters, tourna ments, and camp meetings were still talked of. The roads were worked (what little working they got) by the younger farmers being “warned in” i t° come together for that purpose, and road working days were really in a sense social occasions, while horse] swapping during “court week” since everybody owned horses and every body liked the excitement of a trade . was one of the outstanding "rural i recreations" of the period. , In recent years, however, these oid time country customs have been thung s ing. To entirely too great an extent farm,folks seem to:have been going , fural life I tendency.—Clarence Poe. :| The Corsicuna team appears to be i the class r in the Texan Association, . Pitted by Johnny Van, the Oilers • bar* won both halves for two aucce*- a»v» Mttaont. |Wk f •» jffri ftti 66N66tA SAILY ■ .ii in TODAYS EVENTS. j Tuesday, September 16, 1085. | Todajfi marks the deadline far the straw hat. ; ! • • Today the four Central American republics celebrate their national ip-1 dependence day. >The fourth International Congress of Ottholic Young Men begins Its ses-1 sions in Rome today with an at ttendance of delegates from tnany countries. Primaries will be held in Pennsyl vania today for the nomination of candidates for the various offices to be filled at the election in Novem ber, , i 1 ’ -JV: Emid. Okla.. today will open Its annual two-day carnival and pageant in commemoration of the opening of the Cherokee Strip. All sections of the United States and man; of the countries of Europe and South America have arranged for representation in the Internation al Trade exposition which opens in New Orleanstoday. The national executive committee, of the National Independent Party meets in Chicago today to consider preliminary plan's for participation in the congressional elections of next year. A four-cornered contest for the Re publican nomination is the chief feature of the primary in Wisconsin today for the nomination of candi dates for United States senator to SiffOeriU the lute Robert M. '• La Biol lette. A primary will be held . lini 4V i Second Congressional district of \ today for the nogiina I tiob of candidates to fill the varaMv i caused by the death. of Represent ' ativd GVorge Benjamin. TBS’ election , is to be held September 29. . . i Republicans and Deibedratg. alike j aye split, into factions in \ municipal primaries tinlay, < ■ when < A ■>”“ $2.00 10 $6.95-11 MARKSON SHOE STORE * !|! ' ’ PHONE 897 ’ ’ * . IS ; ooooooooooOoooobooooooQooooooooodoooooobooooooooo ISchooT^^^fe^ This Is Headquarters For SCHOOL SUPPLIES Everything you need is now here for your selection. |[ j Special Tables—Quick Service —Courtesy—Honest 11 1 Prices. ■ Tablets Pencils, Crayons, Scissors, Note Books, Pens, V Inks, Pencil boxes, Book bags, Crayolas, Rules, etc., etc. j i May we serve you ? > 1 1 i KIDD-FRIX 11 Music & Stationery Co. | 1 Phone 76 58 S. Union St. Concord, N. C. ji | < Drainage Pipe Plumbing j ji y||i lis probably the most important the house. Upon its char ■l m j I acter the health and possibly [ Cl ,iC Jrl 11 life of the family may depend. |||L|n —.loints must be absolutely air - H V tight, traps and bends must per *3 gh y ■ H mit an absolutely free flow. We » Jm R ■ make a specialty of such work JH da and will be glad to give you fig- ures on any you may require. E. B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Corbin St, Office Phone 334 W MaTrygTnrtnrgTisgtugrT l. ■i.*r±m?rs’i ati'ea-jj-wini a»u*iCTmi INSURE When You Start To Build , Th€ rignt time to take out insurance is when you start building. Then if through any cause your building should bum, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your loss. Ketzer & Yorke Insurance Agency Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. P. a FETZKR A. JONES YORKE If*" j I b More Than Oil. It b § We Are Now Ready to Supply You! j JS ,• 6 , ‘u , n t \Tf\g IMP X 1 IK 11 a'.. . .Ui WHII TOa Va'JßLalsll*.. . . ,Xy J 6 : :akmyl • S ' • ’■ -M termers, until there is a general! I rainfall. Despite a fair weeatherjj forecast by the United States weath- lj er bureau at VTashiagton. people of j the drought stricken sections of Georgia were hopeful tonight that \ Jupiter Pluviue would upset all in-1 dications aad visit the country in j which he has for so long been a! Stronger. Praying far, rain was the order of the day in churches of the south •yesterday. In rqtqxmee to guberna torial proclamations, tiiany pastors led their folks in supplications for re- I lief mm the drought. Showers in the f afternoon strengthened * the belief , that continued prayer would bring about result wo ardently hoped for. Land Deeds and Mortgage Trust deeds, printed on best paper, Scents each, at Times-Tribune office. j - ■ ‘ ' -*•**•' OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOQO© BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO.I i4* V k %■ it. 4 f- eh* ’. I .• •" i " - .-T ~ ' * ! f J ■ Your Vision of Something Beauti ful May Be Realized Here I QUALITY FURNITURE AND | I -RUGS The kind that make for cozy homes, that’s what we are ready to supply , ; youwith. Here are three floors overflowing j | with sensible new ideas in home fur- j ; nishings and our prices as well as i style and quality of our goods will her i found most;agi^eable. | Good furniture is sound through and i Joined expertly to stay | tight and built up, not thrown to- ; | gfethed and made to look sound until 5 disposed or to an unsuspecting buy-1 er*- - •''* rvit > May wfenot sh6wyitki. 1 ’ i] j BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. / 1 Qffi* M/umtftatm Improved working con-mJH Ut ditions increuse the |>os-Mk sibilities of turning . v ourgLJ| energies into cash. EtpiipJ—J your office with light-Kffid iiig fixtures that aid eyes. We can iit»lp you PH do this. Inspect our fix- ||l ■ turcs. LJ "Fixtures ol Character” Lbj mm w. j. hethcox Lj H W. Depot St Phone HI M j Wilkinson’s Funeral Home ■Funeral Directors | Embalmers 1 Phone No* 9 I Open Day and I x a © ji *"iwiiipiiifP"" t m Tuesday, Sept. 15, 1925 We have the fol lowing used cars for sale or ex change: : * One Ford Touring One Buick Touring One Buick Roadster One Liberty Touring Chevrolet Sedan Body STANDARD BUICK CO. Add the Comforts of 1 PLUMBING to Your Home | Modern Plumbing will do I as much or more than any oth | er one thing toward making I your home a comfortable and I convenient place in which to ! live. It costs you nothing to ! get our cost estimate. rV *;< >i a ; l, ,M l '* j Concord Plumbing j Comnanv - * j f f ;| I t «nr Bt#. Phone 878 I • ■ >: : ‘ fl