North Carolina Newspapers

    ■Saturday, Sept. 19, 1925
WHAT DO YOU CARE, so it LOOKS
Often the ready
I discard needs only the skillful handwork of
1 Cleaning, pressing, repairing, remodeling—
My Hr’tfg] these things have magic power, not onlv to \9H|
prolong the useful life of a suit or garment, JuSR
S; but to savc >’ ou the price of a new one. tv.-J?/
ft Tn Let us show you what our modern service /\J/
1 If can do for your wardrobe. ,
I Phone 787
COVPLE
-ft PIT INDEIt ARREST
1 Husband Runs A Way
Wife of Lexington Mail.
villi'. Sept. 17.—Doe Hull,
having a wife and
children here, and Mrs. Sam
" of I.exingtou. having a
■Mbaud and one child there, were
in Ronoke, Va., Tuesday by j
officers. while found
in apartments there ns man j
wife and were brought to I.ex
where they were confined in
county .jail. A hen rig will prob
"Hl' be given them here on Friday.
bearing may take place in
Kay went for the par
-1 on notification by officers there
they were in their hands. Hall
—r— BY WILLIAMS
- RiCharo?lm\NV FIOvMDNtDO MR
sty VS YOoR Mft IM ?? CtSMOMS! GOSH
■Pf I’v/E OVNEO HER | COME. ON RIGHT INI. '.TiLTk
Bfigl A vnSlT* FOR TH 1 GOLIM, i'm ORF'.L
K LOM6EST -Time. -f’ GEE VA• VsiALH
Bur i'm Just A\NFot_i right im \n\Th me. /. ty.
ABOUT PuTYnJ RIGHT INJ,
GoSH IMGlao /
plCKeo T J ||||f| m jg
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[i § |Jj K mM;:
IKagiflMHtnH •
i»w« lllliv
11 y KmK4 . f ivl C|SPSBBg*s u>S
ip. kiLPSTI-TS
’ OOR DAMOW OL MEiGHBORS -
mo Boom ever gets a uckim’
V ' 9-JO VJHEN TGER’S' COMPtNM- © 1925 er NEA 9C8W31 *■•
IfjViOM’N POP BYTAYLOR
||7 VfHAT WILL The NEIGHBORS T /T /—, v -
■7 SAY ViHEN THEY HEAR ABOUT \( THAT'S RlfiHTf . 0 EVER 1/ ANYHOW-I’LL \ i
W Yoo HITTING mr.tyteonthe V jump on ms- learn to hold your (( ber the old 1 I
H HEAD WITH ATOY AO-TOMO6.LE? V AND ACT LIKE \\ W Tlt
R . 1 T KEEpTo^
■ *SETA6tI n y ROMPERS AND F,x UP A ] HaiuSljS \
° TO X. —SAND RLE IN THE >( -Slf NOT \
11 ii Ai**" / \ BACk VAPD vain r \ ANY MORE \
; x.o
If ftn| l y^^ V ‘?^- D |t Sg V~~ lp YOU HAD ONLY LISTENEDT6 M 6 \ ’
IT AT V I I all This trouble could have been ) i
i/i vSsS alSb?^ e \ v ik avoideo - X told you before we / .
W lOBk or iiSt /wrn
Ii over a - but A |
If NOT t SLPPOSe S 2■/ vj DO? V \ Y °U CAN NEUER SEE THINGS BEYOND j |
Er HAVE To PAY HIS J / TL— 1 THE END OF YOUR NOSE -
..1 c V. 7 . , . . i _. * ..’ ' '* f - V'. :-w «*eY.a , \jeU',.-Le* ,gf* r.
had chaHged his name to tteed an<P
the two were occupying comfortable
quarters in a popular residential por
tion of the city, it i« stated while
Hall was working in a furniture
shop. The parties left here about
three months ago and their where
abouts had been unknown until a
few day** ago.
It is «*aid that Mrs. Earnhardt is
well connected in the way of rela
tionships at Lexington. I‘cftple here
j speak of the episode as one of the
strangest, occurrences that has come
to light and they are nimble to ex
plain any part of the affair on either
I side, more than to say that thought
less passion mu 4 have actuated ;
them in their conduct.
TIMES-TRIBFNE PENNY ADS.
ALWAYS GET RESULTS
Over 6,000 Miles of Roads Under
Maintenance.
State Maintenance Forces are main
taining (>.150 miles of State Highway
system, according to figures from the
Maintenance Department of the Com
mission. These forces are at Work
daily to keep the State Highway sys
tem in first class condition and are
doing so. The cost of this work is
being paid by those who use the
roads since the revenue for carrying
on the work is derived from the li
cense tax an automobiles and the tax
on gasoline.
Bobby Jones is the first national
amateur golf champion who has suc
cessfully defended his title since
1013, when Jerome D. Travers re
peated after having won the title the
year before.
tHE CONGdRD DAILY TRIBUNE
li—:
CHURCH NEWS
Forest HiU Methodist.
Sunday school at 9 :45, A. G. Odell
superintendent, Stonewall J. Sherrill,
assistant superintendent./ Come to
Sunday school and get ready for the
promotion exercise for next Sunday,
September 27th. The child knows
that it is an honor to be promoted in
the day school, and wo should -cause
hi mfo feel that it is an honor to be
promoted in the Sunday school.
Morning worship and sermon at 11
o clock. Epworth League devotional
at G :30 p. m. Evening worship and
sermon at sermon at 7:30. Prayer
meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30.
The Fall season is opening up and it
is some cooler and this should be a
reason for more interest and better
attendance at all our services.
THOS. F. HIGGINS, Pastor.
Associate Reformed Presbyterian.
(M It. Gibson, Pastor)
Sabgth school at 10 a. m. J. E.
Mcplintock, superintendent. Preach
ing at 11 a. m. This service is for
children and young people. No eve
ning service as the pastor is to install
new pastor at Kannapolis. Y. P. ('.
l. at G :30 p. m. Prayer meeting each
- Wednesday evening at 7:30.
McGill S.reet Baptist.
(.1. It. Pentuff. 1). !>.. Pastor)
* R'ble school t) :•'!<). Worship and
. sermon 11 o'clock. Subject: ‘‘Greater :
: Things To Be Done.” Important for
. every church member to be present to
■ help decide whether we will enter a
; revival campaign. Must decide at
■ this service. Sermon at 7:45. Sub
. jeet: '‘Quenching the Spirit of God.”
P Y. p. r. at G :30 p. m. Every
; body urged to be in ail these services.
Central .Methodist
l 9:45 Sunday school, .1. E. Davis
superintendent. 11 o'clock, morning
worship. 7:30 evening worship. At
the morning service Rev. Z. Hinohara,
- pastor of the Central Methodist
Church, South, in Kobe, Japan, wilL
. preach. The public is most cordially
invited to these services.
- Wm. A. JENKINS, Pastor.
St. James Lutheran.
(L. A. Thomas, Pastor)
Sunday school 9:45, Mr. F. It.
Shepherd, superintendent. Professor
J. B. Robertson teacher of man's Bi
ble class. Chief service at 11 a. in.
Luther League 7 p. in. Vespers at S.
Subject of sermon by the pastor:
"Modern Men and Modeiu 1 Sin.” This
church welcomes you.
Calvary Lutheran.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. in. Chief
service at 11 a. m. Light Brigade at
5:30 p. m. Luther League at G:3O p.
m. This church invites you to its
services.
St. Andrews Lutheran.
Sunday,pchooi at 9:45 a. m. Light
Brigade at 10:45. Luther League at
G :30 p. m. Vespers at 7:30. You
are invited to ail services.
Trinity Reformed.
The Sunday school and the men’s
class meet at 9:45 o'clock. J. O.
Moose is superintendent. Services at
11 a. m. and 7 :30 p. in. Sermons by
the pastor. All services in the East
Corbin street school. This congrega
tion welcomes you to worship.
Epworth Methodist.
<J. M. Varner. Pastor)
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m„ Wor
ship and sermon by pastor at 11 a.
m. and 7:30 p. in. Junior League at
3 p. m. Senior League G:45 p. m.
Prayer service Wednesday at 7:30 p.
m. Choir practice Friday 7:30 p. m.
Rev. Z. Hinohara. of Kobe. Japan,
will address the Sunday school at 10
a. m. A large attendance is desired,
as Brother Hinohara will bring a mes
sage of interest to all. !
Jackson Training School.
Preaching Sunday afternoon at 3 |
o clock by Rev. T. F, Higgins, pas
tor of Forest Hill Methodist Church. :
First Presbyterian.
(Jesse C. Rowan. Pastor)
Preaching by the pastor at 11 a.
m. and 5 p.i m. Sunday school 9:45. -
C. F. Ritchie superintendent. Mid
week serv'ce at 7:30 p. m. To all
services the public is cordially in
vited'.
Kerr Street Bat it Ist.
(A. T. Cain. Pastor)
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m., J. J.
McLaui-in superintendent. Preaching
at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. by Mr.
Payne, the evangelist. B. Y. P. C. at
G :30. The meeting will continue all
next week. Service at 7:30 every
evening. Come. You are always wel
come at this church.
Dun's Trade Report.
New York. Sepb 18.—Duns to
morrow will say:
The reports of the week add to the
accumulated evidence of commercial
progress. Dispatches from widely
separated sectious of the countrf and
from diversified trades are, in the
main distinctly favorable, either dis
closing a further increase of activity
or giviug promise of future gains. Os
actual expansion of business, that
which appeals in the steel industry
is especially significant, because it
reflects prosperous conditions in dif
ferent. lines. The railroads, which are
handling the heaviest 1 freight traffic
in their history, have begtiu to make
rep'ncoments of rolling stock anil
other equipment; there is u steady
demand from automobile manufac
turers whose operations keep up at a
notably high rate; implement mak
ers. with their position improved by
the enhanced buying tsower of far
mers, have taken large tonnages of
bars; and building contractors have
made exten-ive purchuses of material
as a consequence ;of the uuprorbdetiL
ed volume of new construction. With
the inflow of orders from these and
other stel output has risen
above 75 per cent, on the average,
and producers are firmer in their
views as to prices.
Weekly hgak clearings $0,200,-
3U7,000.
Ulv WuL 11 ia*sko (euer* 1
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
NEA Service Writer
WASHINGTON —‘Of nil Up:
men this country sonde,
on various missions, into
foreign lands, the experts whom
our big agricultural implement
Rouses dispatch, as Held rep
resentatives, to tinker with the
farm machinery they have sold
übroad, average the highest tyt>e.
* • •
Ot'R mechanic, on foreign serv
ice. Is well paid but not on a
I scale to put up at the leading
hotel—where he might just as well
tie at home—on reaching his des
tination. Ho finds quarters in a
native hoarding house and associ
ates with the (ample of the coun
try. ■ w *
t lie «6os something of urban life
hut most of bin time is spent in
the "provinces." learning the
country's innermost life and
language and thoughts—which the
average American never does, (
A FEW years of this and that
mechanic knows the land of
i his sojourn as he knows his
Own —inside out.
Once every winter or two he
DINNER STORIES
Doctor—Your hands are very fever
ish and dry—now let me see your
tongue.
Patient—Ah. now you’re talking
doctor, now you're talking.
Mrs. Jones—Who beat your bad
little boy that way?
Mrs. Smith—Your good little boy
Struck him with a brick?
Jim—l)o you mean to tell me that
she returned only part of your affec
tions. I cannot understand you.
Jack—-Yes. she returned my letters
but kept the jewelry.
First Wise —"My husband just nat
urally takes to poker/’
Seeornl Wife—" Mine too —much -
more than lie brinks back.”
Clara—" Did you get, that new fall
coat' you were raving over Utst week?"
Itutli—"Oh yes—l got it the next
day.”
Clara—" And what did your father
say?”
Ruth—" Oh—he raved too.”
Charge—She is not exactly pretty ;
still she i$ attractive.
Marie—You mean she is homely,
but her father has money.
Wife (paying an unexpected visit
to oflff-o) —Why, .lohn. yon fold Ync
you han an old maid for a stenogra
pher.
Husband—Yes. dear, bqt she is ill
today and she sent her grandniece as .
a substitute.
Judge—l'll be mVrciful aud give!
you six days.
Prisoner—But. Your Honor, I’m to }
be married this week. I
Judge—l'll be still more inercvful '
and give you thirty days.
The October number of Your Car,
a Macfadden Publication, takes you
"Motor Touring in Romantic Califor
nia” with Herbert O. Warren. There
is "A Man Who Owns Two Cars and
Never Rides in Them." This unique
personage is no less a light than Ben
ny Leonard, boxing champion, who
uses his cars for pacing him when in
training. As he puts it "Charley (my I
brother) rides in the car and times j
me while I use the car to pace me.” i
"Back Seat Drivers" takes us on a |
trip with Charley and his spouse and
gives a new reason for 101 per cent. I
of the country's divorces.
EVERETT TRUE BT CONDO
■j777\ luV£rue-TT, Uouu vfCFtTo’k f-iu;r gu'l
_ Ova.fi J ta, '(ov'rZE. I}ack -u:/.)-. I .'
... .. J . X X—X —_l .
. ‘■V in* xtmnct. «c.‘
■* ♦
Rets a couple of months in th«
United States, to keep him up-to
date ii ml in touch with home, but
invariably he's shipped away
at;-iin. A specialist, by this time,
in foreign holds, he's too valuable [
to be spared from them long.
• » •
THEN n-.aybe he’s transferred ]
to a i lot her country, which he i
b arns, too. as thoroughly as 1
ho did the first one. I’ve met these !
mechanics who have lived in most i
of the Latin American republics, i
in Germany and Spain, in the j
Halkun state, in North Africa, in i
European and Asiatic Russia, who i
speak half a dozen languages with 1
considerable fluency and who un- | (
derstood world politics and condi- i
, tions as mighty few so-called 1
authorities do—not from formal !
study but at first hand.
** * t
OF course not every mechanic, j
any more than every man in i
any other calling, is made of 1
tile raw material to profit by such j
advantages, but some of them are i
—men who would fill an ambas- 1
sador’s post with a credit mighty \
few ambassadors have a right to i
claim. Ambassadors, however, '
aren't picked that way. L. .
COUNCIL OK CHURCHES
MAY BE UNAUTHENTIC
General Secretary of Temperance
Board of Metliedist Church Ques
tions Document.
Moline, 111., Sept. IS.—Dr. Clarence
True Wilson, of Washington, general
secretary of the board of temperance,
prohibition and public morals of the
Methodist church of America, today
questioned the authority and authen
ticity of the report on prohibition re
leased under the name of the federal
council of churches.
Dr. Wilson, here attending the cen
tral Illinois Methodist conference, is
a member of the executive committee
of the Federal Council of Churches.
Ho said he knew nothing of the prep
aration of a report on prohibition such
aS is being issued and declared that
if such a report hffd bdeii ordered
prepared and 'issued he believes he
.wOidd know about it.
"If the writer of the articles for
the federal council is not getting any
thing from the national, association
opposed to prohibition he is a fool,"
said Dr. Wilson. "It is exactly the
j kind of stuff that organization pays
for." The report declares that pro
hibition is facing a supreme test and
expresses doubt as to the final out
come.
I)r. Wilson said that although he
is in constant touch wrtli the federal
council of churches, he has never
heard of any action authorizing an
investigation of the prohibition move
ment and publication of a report on
the findings of that survey.
The Methodist leader also ques
tioned the authority and ability of
the Kev. E. Ernest Johnson, head of
j tile federal council’s research and edu
cation department, under whose dt-
I rection the prohibition report was pre
j pared.
( In Muscle Builder for October, a
' Maefadd'en Publication. Gerald M.
■Clarke tells how Dodged Death
And Became a Champion." Dr. Ed
mund C. Gray in "Is There Such a
Thing as an Athletic Heart?” discuss
es the whys -and wrerefores of this
condition. “Steeled by Struggle" is
the story of a weakling who suddenly
found that he wasn't afraid to fight.
There is another article by Sir Terriss
’TIow do Heat Em to the Punch" in j
which the contender for the world’s j
I lightweight championship gives some
[tips on how to be handy with the
j mitts. .
’ This isthe first year since 1!UI)
| that Greater New York will not be
| represented in the world's series.
10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ~
| THE UNIVERSAL CAR
s \\ hat might be termed “Satisfactory Service” varies ] \
C according to different kinds of business. In most cases it 1
8 covers only a brief period of time, but in the automobile !
s business it is different. Our sales are made to people who j
c use their cars over a period of years.
C Such purchasers, by right, demand a service above the '
8 average. To meet this extra demand, we have first secur- I
g ed men who have an interest in their work and see that
X whatever they are called on to do is done perfc.tly. All
S our men finish each day’s work with the clear conscience
Y that it could not have been done better. In this way, there \
?i are no ‘come-backs,” and our customers are assured of 11
8 satisfactory operation of their cars over a long period of '
g time.
ci May we extend you such a service?
REID MOTOR CO.
?! CONCORD’S FORD DEALER
Ci Corbin and Church Streets Phone 220 ! !
OOOOOOOOOOOOQOOCfOOOOOCOOO OOC-OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOoi
IDELCO LIGHT j M
Light Plants and Batteries
Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- ''
nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- '
dating current.
R. H. OWEN, Agent i
Phone 80S Concord, N. p. j ! ~
~~ —-
I FALL HATS—
j SNAPPY STYLES
I
111 the Newest Colors |
Priced $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 |
Throw that old straw away and
let us fit you in your particular stvle m
hat.
RICHMOND-ROWE CO.
other Large Ship-
Charming furnitur*
reflects good tast» „
ami adds to the atmos- ment or ribre
phere of the home. Out
*“■+■' Reed and Fibrc-Furmtur*
I by Hey wood-W-kc-field w-s »
is colorful, graceful, and f« limit lire
reasonably priced. See it
J' l this assortment wc are
biu'c you will find just the
Living Room. Many new '
styles and finishes to select ■ J
from. Also Odd Pieces.
H. B. Wilkinson
■4 yjj
Concord Kannapolis China Grove Mooresville'
— - '* T - vyfl
U
U -i
! Car Washing! Alemite Greasing! |
Crank Case Service
Let us wash your car and grease it with Alemite fiigh B -
I ressure lubricating system for everybody knows that H
proper lubrication is the life of any par. \aj f M )
I exaco gasoline and oils—Goodrich tires and-tubes.- B >iJi
Tire changing, Accessories, Free Air and Water H
! CENTRAL FILLING STATION H
PHONE 700
PAGE SEVEN
    

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