PAGE SIX hh " "* 1 "'"" "O'* M b -*’* MBffifci— f,'. '"’***&**> a ?'* Pt?U ! Miss Hazel Logan, riding iiev famous raring horse “Rpanmont." a feature of the big menage aw with the Christy Brothers Shows here today. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCiOOOOOO 10 PER CENT. g DISCOUNT 8 S| On all orders for engraved 8 O Christmas Cards iilaoed during ft S| the month of September. We g ? i represent one of the best en- ft Q gravers in the country. Come ft Si in and make your selection ear- g fii ly while stock N fresh ami com- X | S. W. Preslar | JEWELER lOOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXXiOOOOOOC EAT ICE CREAM > EVERY DAY > ]l| One .piari of iee cream equals i] 111 2 pounds of lean beef; I.S ( l 1 pounds of ham; 2.S pounds of ‘ggs and 5,2 uoiin is r.f potato*.s. 1 1 1 Therefore ice 'Team is one of , ( :ur cheapest foods. Cline’s Pharmacy Phone 333 || OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOG TIMES-TRIRUNK PENNY ADS. ALWAYS GET RESULTS ■ MWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOOOOI i| It’s Time to Think of Fall Cleaning || 'jj To fully appreciate our Cleaning and Correct press- ]|| iji ing is to give others the once over. ijt |i| A phone call will bring our truck. ]j Telephone 420 || M. R. POUNDS Dry Cleaning Department IFOR THE LITTLE MISS Madge Evans l Hats Now on | 'vskTs m See Window Display g IT PAYS TO TRADE AT FISHER’S Iji PENNY MS. MS GET PUS JUR PENNY ADS. ALWAYS GET RESULTS > CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET \ (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) ) Figures named represent prices g paid for produce on the market: 5 Eggs .40 5 Corn $1.35 < Sweet Potatoes _ 1.75 5 Turkeys .25 to .30 K OnioDs $1.50 S Peas $3.00 5 Butter .301 < Country Ham .30 ; 5 Country Shoulder ,20 j 5 Country Sides _ .20 ; < Young Chickens .25 j 5 Hens .18 : 5 Irish Potatoes $1.50 I S CONCORD COTTON MARKET j ' FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1925 j S Cotton 24 | i 1 Cotton seed 58 p-2 ! liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilmi !; BULBS BULBS: 1 1 Hyacinths j. Narcissus Jonquils |j Tulips j! Crocus 1 1 Fusias i; Gibson Drug Store The Rexall Store ? BULBS BULBS " liliiilHiiillliiililllllliiiiilllliililiilllill i Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS | The time of the closing of mails at i the Concord postoffice is as follows: Northbound ! 136—11:00 P. M. 36—10:00 A. M. * :W— 4:10 P. M. 38— S :30 P. M. SO-i-ll .00 P. M. Southbound 80 — 0:30 A. M. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135 S :0O P. M. 20—11:00 P, M. LOCAL MENTION Ten pages today—two sections. Paul A. Lenta is administrator of the estate of the late L. A. Lenta. Marriage license was issued Thurs day by Register of Deeds Elilott to Charles H. Hall, of Spencer, and Miss Mary Cornejia Smith, of Harrisburg, j The condition of Raymond Kluttz, j who was operated on for the removal I of his appendix several days ago, is | very much improved. ! Mrs. Marshall Teeter waj operated j on at the hospital in Durham Thurs ! da\. Her condition it* reported as | being favorable. The E. F. Correll house on South Union street, will be resold at. public auction at the court house door here at noon Monday, September 28th. Mrs. Joe Deaton, who has been con fined to her home on East Depot street on account of illness for some rime, is reported as being slightly bet ter. ! About a dozen DeMolays from Con cord went to Gastonia Thursday night to attend a meeting of the chapter of the order there. Concord DeMolays have visited a number of chapters in •other etiics in the State in recent ! months. j Reports from the Winecoff com . munity state that there was a se.vere j electrical storm in that section Tues day night. The lightning struck a | number of trees and telephone poles. . in one case snapping off a pole about half way from the ground. ! Robert Lee Johnson, son of Mr. | ami Mrs. R. F. Johnson, was operat ed on Thursday for the removal of I his tonsils. Dr. R. B. Rankin perform ing the operation. He is recovering j rapidly from the effects of the opera tion. | Again Thursday night there was , a decided touch of Fall in the air. j Temperatures during tin 1 night drop ! ped below* 70 degrees although dur- ; i ing the day the mercury hung around | the ItO-degree level. Light wraps were in evidence among motorists | during the night. Final plans have been made for the . conference here tomorrow between Dr. !J. Henry Highsmitli, supervisor of ; high schools for the State Department < !of Education, and high school prinei- I ! pals of the county. The conference ! will be held in the court house here | at 0:30 tomorrow morning. i Persons found riding bicycles on the ! sidewalks of the city will be taken up by police officers. Chief of PoVce Tal j birt stated this morning “It is I against the law for persons to ride j their bicycles on the sidewalks,” Chief Talbirt said, “and officers have been j instructed to be on the watch for violators of the law.” The farmers of Rowan county are planning to ship a car load of poul try from Salisbury next Friday in order to rid the county of the surplus, ' Although efforts have been made by R. I>. Goodman, County Agent, to get the farmers of this county to ship poultry, there is very little surplus |and a carload cannot be secured. C. M. Ivey. W. A. Overeash. O. A. j Swaringen and J. K. Davis spent j Thursday evening in Albemarle, where j they attended a meeting at the First , Presbyterian Church at which J. F. | Newell spoke and later attended a meeting for the purpose of reorganiz ing the Merchants’ Association of that city. The American T>gion meeting which was to have been held tonight Mat the Legion Rooms lias been post- ] i j poned until Monday night to permit 1 1 1 persons to attend the circus. An in- i ; i teresting meeting as expected as re- 1 1 1 ports from the Fayetteville meeting 1 | will be given and other business ! , | transacted. , | When the starting whistle blows in s •! Davidson tomorrow for the opening 1 | football game of the season in North 1 1 Carolina quite a number of Concord ' | fans will be on hand to see the David ( son and Elon players in action. The i game will begin at 3 o’clock and Nev ij in Sappenfield, of this city, is expect ji ed to start as quarterback for David son. Washington and Detroit split two Ji games in the American League Thurs i| day while Pittsburgh was winning in 11 the National League. In the South -5 ern League Atlanta clinched the pen i| nantby defeating Birmingham. Rich ji mond defeated Spartanburg in the i > fourth game of their series to deter mine the winner in the South Atlantic !i and Virginia leagues. i; There has been too much loud and 11 boisterous talking and shouting on the ji streets here, especially near the 1 1 square, and unless it »is stopped some J i one will be arrested, police officers i 1 stated this morning. Several coui i plaints have been made to the police recently about persons shouting at 1 1 other persons near the square and of ji Seers are watching now to see just i 1 who is doing the shouting. Hundreds of persons from this city and county went to the freight depot this ipornmg to see the Christy Shows being unloaded. The show will be presented on the lot near the Wine of Geo. W. Means on South Union street so all of the stock" and equipment of the show had to pass up Corbin street and down South Union, where many persons lined the streets to watch it as it passed. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE (lf)saA\S ,W.SAYS Any blame fool can »e« a wise tn«n’s mistakes. 7, :y Bad news from Texas.' Qrasshop* per, there. What Texans need is more time for Ashing. , , , 4. They think a Virginia man who whipped his wife is craxy. It she can cook, we agree with them. f ■■ -"toA ¥?sre and there you see people wanting more happiness yet using only a small part of what they have. Truth 19 great stuff. But if all of R were known practically everybody would be arrested. That’s the trouble with having too many laws. They have a .tendency to arrest progress. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service. Inc.) WALTER MARZE RELEASED UNDER BOND OF $4,000 Charged With Criminal Assault on Pauline Howie, a Thirteen-Year- Old Girl. Momw, Sept. 17.—Walter Harze, aged 22. diarged with criminal as sault on Pauline Howie, aged 13, wa if leased from the Union county jail today on a $4,000 bond. The par ties are from the Indian Trail see tion. in Vance townshiji. ’ On the night of September 2, Marze took her in an automobile from prayer meet ing at Indian Trail Church. They spent the night together, riding until midnight, "anti then remained together at an old (house at Mantels old home place until about daybreak. On the next clay the parents, of the girl, Mr. and Mrs. I). H. Howie, had Marze arrested on the charge of criminal assault. On last Friday he was given a preliminary hearing ami re manded to jail, pending the decision of Judge \V. O. Lemmond. The de cision was handed down today, re leasing Marze on bond. Wife: “Next time vou spend an evening at the club, please let me know if I am to keep breakfast wait ing for you.” "What is life insurance, lirtle Gag face?” “It's keepih’ a man poor all his life so's he ran die rich?" NOBODY LOVES YOU. It is impossible to get anywhere if you are a oral). Nobody loves you. To be successful you must have a kindly, lovable disposition. You can .not have this with an unhealthy liver nd stomach. They don’t go together. Mayr s Wonderful Remedy lias given complete and permanent results in thousands of such eases. Our ad vice to everyone troubled in this way, especially when accompanied with bloating in the stomach, is to try this remedy. It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, liver and in testinal ailments, including append!*, cities. At Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere. K. OF P. NOTICE Regular meeting Cottcormd Lodge No. 51 Tv. of P. Friday evening at 8 o'clock. A cordial welcome to all members. E. E. PF.EI.E. C. C. CAN HARDLY WAIT FOR MEAL TIME TOCOME Concord Painter Overcames Stomach Trouble—He Gives HERB JUICE Credit For Better Health. “It is truly wonderful the way your TIEHB JUICE has restored ino to health and strength afteT I had suf fered so long with stomach trouble and constipat ion, ami to show my ap preciation and gratitude for what it has done for me, I gladly give this statement that others may be helped thereby,” said Mr. It. A. I’lmnmer, well-known and efficient painter, re siding near Hartsell Mill, Concord, N. €.. in a recent interview with the HERB JUICE man. In speaking of his condition prior to the time he had used HERB JUICE, and the benefits he has secured from its use, Mr. Plummer remarked: “For a number of years I had suffered with stomach trouble, and it was no simple ease of indigestion I had. for it had lecojne chronic and I would have terrible gas pains and bloating, especially after eating and had about reached the point whore I was afraid to eat any solid food for fear <>(, suffering for liours afterwards with indigestion pains. Nothing seemed to agree with me. My stomach was completely upset all the time. I was also very constipated and no laxative I took seemed to regulate me. I was hardly able to do my work when I noticed in the paper about HERB JUICE highly recommended for such ailments as I had. I lost no time in buying a bottle, gpd to my surprise I began to improve from the first few doses, and since I have con tinued taking this medicine for over u month, my lost health was soon re stored and today I am feeling fine. I can hardly realise now that I bad’ stomach'trouble so badly, for now the gas and indigestion pains do not both er me any more. 1 have a wonderful appetite and the best part of it Jit I properly digest what I eat. HERB JUICE is a great system regulator, for through its natural action 1 have been entirely relieved of constipation, bowels and livfr are now in excellent working order and I feel like m.v for mer self. Now I can hardly wait for mealtime to come. In my opinion. HERB JUICE la the, best medicine made today for stomach trouble and constipation, and Lam .glad to recom mend it to anyone.” HERB JUICE sold ia Concord a«d guaranteed to give aUtefartien by Gib ana Drug Co. BhJfT' , '*^*“ll Published by Arrangement with First National Pictures, Inc., and Prani Uc yd Productions. Inc. Till STOKT TmrS FAR Pierce Phillips lands frpm the first oat north at Dyea. Alaska, to seek lir fortune in the neuly discovered void fields of the Yukon. He learns (wf the Canadian government re wires everyone entering the country o possess a ton of provisions and a housand dollars. This seems little hort of dismaying to him, but he de ides to stay it out and take a chance n his two hundred dollars carrying im through. - To augment his fortune he is in veigled into a "shell-game'’ which Lucky" Broad and Kid• Bridges are iperatxng. He loses his entire sav ngs in a desperate attempt to secure he necessary f unds to carry him into the country where fortunes are made most overnight. His "grub-stake * pone, Phillips meets up with another trospector who offers to befriend im. CHAPTER 11. (Continued) The approach from the sea was easy, if twelve miles of boulder and bog, of swamp and niggerhead, of toot and stump, can be called easy under the best of circumstances; but tasy it was as compared with what lay beyond and above it. Neverthe less, many Argonauts had never pen etrated even thus far, and of those who had, a considerable proportion bad turned back at the giant pit three miles above. One look at the towering barrier had been enough for them. The Chilkoot' was more than a mountain, mort than an ob stacle of nature; it was a Presence, a tremendous and a terrifying Per sonality which overshadowed the minds of men and could neither be ignored at the time nor forgotten later. No wonder, then, that Sheep Camp, which was a part of the Chil koot, represented a sort of acid test; ao wonder that those who had moved their outfits thus far were >f the breed the Northland loves— the stout of heart and of body. Provisions were cached at fre juent intervals all the way up from the sea, hut in the open meadow beneath the thousand-foot wall an immense supply depot had sprung up. This pocket in the hills lad become an open-air commissary, stocked with every sort of proven ier and gear. There were acres of sacks and bundles, ot boxes and sales, of lumber and hardware and serishable stuffs, and all day long men came and went in relays. One relay staggered up and out of the tanon and dropped its packs, an sther picked up the bundles ana as tended skyward. Pound by poifnd, ton by ton, this vast equipment of supplies went forward, but slowly, sh, so slowly! And at such effort! It was indeed fit work for ants, for t arrived nowhere and it never rnded. Antlike, these burden-bear :rs possessed but one idea—to fetch 1 md to carry; they traveled back 1 md forth along the trail until they 1 •rore it into a bottomless bog, until ! every rock, every tree, every land- 1 nark along it became hatefully I familiar and their eves grew sick 1 from seeing them. The character of their labor and Its monotony, even in this short 1 time, had changed the men’s char ters—they had become pack-ani mals and they deported themselves is such. All labor-saving devices, all mechanical aids, all shprt cuts to comfort and to accomplishment, had been left behind; here was the wil derness, primitive, hostile, merciless. Every foot they moved, every ounce (hey carried, was at the cost of mus cular exertion. It was only natural that they should take on Ihe color of their surroundings. ' Money lost its value a mile above Sheep Camp and became a thing of weight, a thing to carry. The stand ard of value was the pound, and men thought in hundredweights or In tons. Yet there was no relief, no respite, for famine stalked in the Yukon and the Northwest Mounted were on guard, hence these unfor tunates were chained to their grub piles as galley-slaves are shackled to their benches. Toe to heel, like peons rising from the bowels of a mine, they bent their backs and strained up that riven rock wall. Blasphemy and pain, high hopes and black despair, hearts overtaxed and eyes blind with fatigue, that was what the Chilkoot Stood for. Permeating the entire at mosphere of the place, so that even the dullest could fee! it, was a fev erish haste, an apprehensive demand | for speed, more speed, to keep ahead • of the pressing thousands coming ! on behind. i Pierce Phillips breasted the last rise to the Summit, slipped his pack straps and flung himself full length 1 upon the ground. His lungs felt 1 as if they were bursting, the blood Surged through his veins until he , rdeked, his body streamed with I sweat, and his legs were as heavy > as if molded from solid iron. He was pumped out, winded ; neverthe t less, he felt his strength return with I magic swiftness, for he possessed 1 that marvelous recuperative power [ of youth, and, like some tabled warrior, new strength flowed into ‘ r him from die earth. Round about him other men were sprawled; some [ lay like corpses, others were propped 1 ■ against their packs, a few stirred and e- sighed like the sorely wounded after * a charge. Those who had lain long ' est rose, took up their burdens, and > went groaning over the sky-line and out of ’ sight. Every moment new b faces, purple wkh effort or white i. with exhaustion; rose out of the t depths—all were bitten deep with - lines of physical suffering. On r buckled knees their owners lurched '• forward to find resting-pl ces; in J their eyes burned a sullen rage; in “ their mouths were foul curses at this Devil's Stairway. There were strip d lings and graybeards in the crowd, »- strong men and weak men, but here at tha Summit all were alike in (»• particular—they lacked breath for ! anything except oaths. ' 'Took out you doit* broke your j back,” warned the other. Here, too, as in the valley beneath, i was another great depot of pro- ] vision piles. Near where Phillips i had thrown himself down there was < one man whose bearing was in j marked contrast to that of the others, i He sat astride a bulging canvas bag 1 in a leather harness, and in spite * of the fact that the mark of a - showed beneath his cap he betrayed no signs of fatigue. He j was not at all exhausted, and from i the interest he displayed it seemed ] that he had chosen this spot as a j vantage-point from which to study the upcoming file rather than as a ] place in which to rest. This he did i with a quick, appreciative eye and i with a genial smile. In face, ir j dress, in manner, he was different i For one thing, he was of foreign < birth, and yet he appeared to b< ] more a piece of the country thar i any man Pierce had seen. Hi: i clothes were of a pattern commor j among the native packers, but h< i wore them with a free, unconsciout 1 grace all his own. From the peal ] of his Canadian toque there depend i cd a tassel which bobbed when h( 1 talked; his boots were of Indiar make, ami fhey were soft and light and waterproof; a sash of severa • colors was knotted about his waist . But it was not alone his dress which challenged the eye—there was some thing in this fellow’s easy, open bear ing which arrested attention. His dark skin had been deepened by windbum, his well-set, well-shaped head bore a countenance both eagei and intelligent, a countenance that fairly glowed with confidence and good humor. Oddly enough, he sang as he sat upon his pack. High up on this hill side, amid blasphemous, complaints he hummed a gay little song: "Choate, rossignol, chantel” Tot qui a It cocur goi! Tu os It cocur a rirc Mai fPai-t-a pleurcr” ran his chanson. Phillips had seen the fellow sev eral times, and the circumstances ol their first encounter had been suffi ciently unusual to impress themselves upon his mind. Pierce had been rest ing here, ati this very spot, when the Canuck had come up into sight, bear ing a hundred-pound pack without apparent effort. Two flour-sacks upon a man’s back was a rare sight on the roof of the Chilkoot. There were not many who could mastei that slope with more than one, but this fellow had borne his burden I without apparent effort; and what was even more remarkable, what had caused Pierce Phillips to open his eyes in genuine astonishment, was ] the fact th:t the man climbed with a pipe in his teeth and smoked it with ] relish. On that occasion the French- i man had not stopped at the crest to ] breathe, but had merely paused i long enough to admire the scene out- ' spread beneath him; then he had \ swung onward. Os all the sights young Phillips had beheld in thy new land, the vision of that huge, unhurried Canadian, smoking, had impressed him deepest. It had awak ened his keen envy, too, for Pierct was beginning to glory in his own strength. A few days iater they had rested near each other on the Lonp Lake portage. That is, Phillips had rested; the Canadian, it seemed, hail a habit of pausing when and when the fancy struck him. His reasor for stopping had been the antics o) a peculiarly fearless and imperti nent ‘'camp-robber.” With a crust of bread he had tqjled the bird al most within his reach and was ac cepting its scolding with ifitensi amusement. Having both teased anc made friends with the creature. h< finally gave it the crust and resumec his journey. From what Phillips had seen o’ this French Canadian it was plan that he, too, was an [‘old-timer,” ont of that Jovian band of stlpermei who had dared the dark interior anl robbed the bars of Forty Mile it the hard days before the El Doradi discovery. Since this Was their firs opportunity of exchanging speech Phillips ventured to address *he mat* “I thought I had a load this mom ing, butTd hate to swap packs wit) you,” he said. The Frenchman flashed him smile which exposed a row of teet 1 ; snow-white against his tan. “Ho I You’re stronger as me. I see yo ' plenty tarns biffore.” This was indeed agreeable praisj and Pierce showed his pleasure. “O no 1". he modestly protested. *T< just getting broken m.” “Look out you don’ broke you back,” warned the other. “Pis Chil koot she's bad bizness. She’s keel lot of dese sof’ fellers. Dey gi seeck in de back. You hear *bot it?” "Spinal meningitis. It’s parti from exposure." “Pat's him I Pon’ never carr too modi; don’ be in soefi hurry.” Phillips laughed at this cautioi “Why, we have to hurty," said h< . “New people are coming all th time and they'll beat us in If w l don’t look out." i (To be continued) j d—2— 1 j I |jjj« We’re making it easy for you to come here for the - And hard for you to come r] gates isn’t treated any fJ liner than our regular _J £0 J customers —hut lie is tak- ’ ? "/ / , en care °f so well that he - ( I I is a stranger only as long i as we are strangers to the ice freezes. Lome in and see this beautiful collection of crisp Fall apparel—get the feel of real friendship in the Values and you 11 think it strange that you’ve been a stranger so long, i Schloss Fall Suits Schoble Fall Hats HOOVE’S,Inc. m “THE YOUNG MAN’S STOR^” oooooaooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooot fCOAI7| • The Right Coal For the Right Purpose A. B. POUNDS ji PHONE 244 OR 279 , ;!| THAT PIGEON-HOLE | Is it crammed full of important papers? We wager | 5 that it is. But pigeon-holes wrere not made for safety jj » vaults, therefore, they should not andean not serve that | | purpose. Just take a look through your desk and lay out | « jj all the papers that you would not want destroyed by theft | '! j or fire. Quite a collection, isn’t there? Bring them to us. ■ We have just the place for them in our vault. s CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK II L Capital $400,000.00 Resources Over $3,000,000.00 H ■xi.ii-lluiltix-u: mill II 11 Kill I mi I II ■■■ini -- f Tin in ill xAj || ! FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAR o o >’ FREE VOTING COUPON in The Tribune and Times “Everybody Wins” Grand Prize Campaign j GOOD FOR 100 VOTES jj I hereby cast 100 FREE VOTES to the credit of— | Address | V This coupon, neatly clipped out, name and address of the candidate j I filled in, and mailed or delivered to the Election Department 6f The | Tribune and Times, Room 200 Cabarrus Bank Bldg., or P. O. Box EM ■ 431, will count as 100 FREE VOTES. It does not cost anything to BP i cast these coupons for your favorite candidate, and you are not re- y i stricted in any sense in voting them. Get all you can and send them in J j —they all count. Do not roll or fold. Deliver in flat packages. NOTCH | —This coupon, must be voted on or b efore SEPTEMBER 10th. I Know at All Times That You Have ji The Right Amount of Oil ill / Your Ford This Is Made Possible by Installing an 8 Ever-Ready Automatic Oiler Ten Days Free Trial. Evefy User Must Be Satisfied, or X purchase Price Refunded fi L E. Boger, Factory Representative Room No. 6 Maness Builtiing j | ,OUR PENNY US. ALIYS GET RESULTS Friday, September 18,119251

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