Miveday, Sept. 23, 1925 , " . , Let Us Show You what Modern Equip- j ment Means in CLEANING and W>M BLOCKING HATS ’Mp * One Day Service * Hying Five Miles a Minute. | w York World. Speeding over a kilometre course of tahel Field in 7.5 seconds—:io2 *e» an hour. or , more than five eij a minute—Lieut. A. J. Wil ijs and his Curtiss plane went fast thrfn some eyes could follow him. ► human being had ever attained •‘l* «; pace, which makes the rnile-a |jtttA,e*lM'ess train seem to crawl, e flyer's diving start, which pro ofed his feat from standing as a cord, helps explain why he could ' badly shatter the French officer outlet s mark of 278.4 miles an hour, f course a kilometer is hot a very ng stretch. But Lieut, William's Cvious records at the Pulitzer races St. Lois show what the speeding irplane of the future may be able ©UT OUR WAV » BY WILLIAMS PjJrt ; ' /8A«EFOOltO» OOSTOAREt)MBJndwX eauQ nbo-qomueri «>E£UV\! havaki* -r Sow neaQW Ljur 2>W<-> □ MENS SrZE. FOR A UTtt.fc SU\P l % — : —— '. uue, voo. three sczts ?vS :r 4 'Tham lastnear. jiKJtfuue. a Raw \f ° FIDDLE BQXES «,UKE. r&SSw- t ■ . FROM TP* AKUAJES OOhhiKl-"TRiOO TftMKYT jf U ‘ o> scx>c7 less Turned uMOEt? for / j ! • FFET . Vt/AiVu-PA SEES EKA-HE'IE / ItyHln/ HEROES ARE MADE - KiOT OO9M 5 ■ 1 ""■ r-^ MQM*N POP BYTATLOR S Yf There GoEsTTt*r cawver. J *\/ 32 fePSPEWr NTS SEE TVTE AtSAiM- N1 Ht AeE3tIESS vs MAVBE HE WOULD LISTEN /-"w O—i—• NIGHT / Xo A CASH PROPOSITION / \ if/T. , \ >fter h,s f X \ OK There I'-" HfIIORNEY Vs CA9E-l!U-V\WT TTU. / "y" I to accomplish on long flights; for in 1023 h« flew 200 kilpmetres at. 243.11 miles an hour. At this rate Boston would be pne hour distant from New York, and Chicago hardly more than three. Aviation is in its infancy, de veloping by leaps and bounds—at the close of the war the fastest pursuit plape in service could .dp only 125 i miles an hoar. The facing flyer of' todar is simply tasting possibilities that before many years may become as- commonplace' as tlie runs of the ’Twentieth Century. “ To Make New York An English- Speaking City. Improving the spoken language of New York's population through the public schools of the city the pur pose of the oral English plan pro posed ;by Associate Superintendent Gustave Straubenmuller and adopted by thie board dffsu#r6iW*on every oc casion. IT ALWAYS PAYS TO USE THE TRIBUNE PENNY ADS. TRY IT. m 66M6kb SAILV ffctfctM ■ •- t •' - - DINNER STORIES I “|f you refuse me, the days will be I dark. duU and dreary!” declared the swain. | And so, since be was the man who ; wrote the weather forecasts, she had marry him. Uncle Tobey had a neighbor who was in the habit of working pn Sun day, but who later joined the church. One day he met the minister to whose church the man belonged. “Well, Uncle Tebey.” said the min ister, "do you see any difference in Mr, Smith since he joined.tbff church?" "Yes," said Uncle Tobey. “a great difference. Before, when ha went to mend the fences on Sunday, he car ried his ax on his shoulder. Now. he carries it under his coat.” Traffiic Cop: "What’s the matter, couldn't you see my signal?” Eif-Football Star: “Yes, but I ' thought it was a center Cush." .Mother (at fashionable resort).: i "Elsie, look at your dress, it's a sight. And that's the third dress I’ve put on you today,” Elsie; .“That's nothing mother. Look at Mrs. De Styles' *over there, she's had on four." Little Joe: “Father, why was Adam made first?" Rig .foe: "To give him a chance to say a few words.” Restaurant Hnranr. Waiter: Yes. sir, we're very up-to- , date. Everything here is cooked by electricity.” Diner: “I wonder if you would mind giving this steak another shock ?” A North Carolina Plan Adopted in Greece. Faying the doctor with a dollar a year is a plan which has long been in vogue in a North Carolina cotton mill town and which has recently been inaugurated by the medical director of the refugee districts'and approved by the Greek government.' ' Years ago the mills in Roanoke’ Rapids. N., CX, of which Mi 1 . S. F. l’attorsoh is the head and director, adopted a Co-pperatlve plan for* "pay ment of doctors’ h)lla. Each person | was tgxsd a small, amount and a coiunnihlty doctor was employed to look after the sick, which service was free to the afflicted, with the excep tion cf the small yearly assessment. It was to the doctor's advantage to save all the time he could to Mw the people well, and the last report from the government was that Roa noke ltapids had made a record ,ia health statistics. Practically thissame lilan has been put over in Greece by the medical director .of the refugees and approved by 1 the Greek, govern jnent. ,Each person .Wjtf .be taxed pne dollar a year and 5>19 dispensa ries. each in charge pit « doctor, will be estlbfihbed thfoiighOOt' tHe dfstHo't. jU.ie doctors will 1 make tours on fixed dates through their field and emer gency caUs When necessary. Special aim will be made'to ma laria anfl typhoid and other prevent able diseases,, and also stressed effort in cutting dow lithe infant mortality rate. Deaths* from Gas hi Walls. Winstor.-fenlom Journal.;* - In less.’than a week three instances of deaths, occurring in wells , due to poisonous gases were reported in the newspapertc~Two of these tragedies occurred in counties not fur removed from For-yth. while the last hap l>eucd in this county Saturday. There wqs a variation in the circumstance; pf the latter incident in that the gas was generated from explosive* used in blasting rock the bottom of the welj. In the other cases, the gas was Os the variety that is often found in old wells. These untimely deaths may be charged indirectly to the drought. The descent of the unfortunate men to the bottoms of the wells was in all probability prompted by the urgency of improving the source of water supply. No test of the air in the wells was made, and lonsequently the men who went down soon succumbed to the poisonous atmosphere. It is dif ficult to take ample precautions J against all the varieties of tragedy that dog the steps of man, but the deaths of these men should suggest greater care iu exploring old wells. “Anglo-Baxa phone” is a word coined abroad to describe the speech of Amer icans who know hut one language and who raise their voices to foreigners as if noise would increase their in telligibility. 909QOQPOMOQOOOOOOOOQOOO i Let Your i Next Battery ji' ;i Be An ||i ;l EXIDE i!i | Use Only the Beat ''l I >1 .u^Hsplp^ - • ■ Stasott BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer - TSTASHINGTON—o. O. P. regu vV l&rs are having a hard time v finding a bright side to young Bob La Follette’a sweeping victory at the Republican senator ial primaries In Wisconsin. They bad hardly expected him to lose but they did hope the La Follette forces In the Badger state would prove to have been weak ened by the death of the present Senate candidate's father. Instead of that they seem to be as formidable under the junior Bob as ever they were under thd senior. ■ .a, • • • "WTHAT the regulars didn’t take I W fully Into account was the 1 fact that young Bob was taking over an organization with Which he was familiar. During his ‘ lather's later years be had more to do with managing it than the latter did. - . His Wisconsin Progressive l«ad frship is hardly referred to cor rectly as “inherited.” In reality he had been coming into It gradually for some time and when the elder La Follette died, there was his son in control already. Declares Devil Got Into His Head and He Burned Woman New York, Sept. 22.—Charged with stuffiug Mm. Sophie Polmki, the wife of n close friend, into a biasing furnace in a lower East Side lunjbfcr yard last, night while she was stiU.a'ive, George Symuk, a giant fireman, was he’d without bail today (m * charge of murder.'. He win be giwfo a hearing September 20. Polfre who went to the Polvski home aflffc'he slaying, found the husband, John, in. bed' suffering from a badly enti.efcnd bruise<|.head. “Tim devil g6TJuto my head and I, did it," Symuk told Assistant Dis trict Attorney Ryan in regard to the murder. "She brought, me some wine last night. She. had a bottle filled with -green stuff too.. She wanted me to drink some of it but I thought she was trying to poison me. I fought with her about staying with her hus batid. I hit her over the head with Madera Female- Garb Declared Hy . gienic. HertfM. Aslearned member of the National rustßuth.of Medical Heschi-ch in Bog lanir'phiirt* out that abort sjirta. hae neck gowns and spider-web Ktooflttg are healthy garments for women be cause they allow more violet rays of suit’s light to penetrate their bodies than do more complete and opaque, coverings. The dispatch which announced the foregoing added that the doctor also saidffbtatistics eventually would prob ably prove that women'll re "healthier than men. Already statistics shown that wom en, are healthier than men if length of life is any criterion for estimat ing health. The average woman lives longer tljan the average man by sev eral years. That, probably, has always been the case. It is a provision of nature agaitist the extinction of the human race. M omen bear the children and guard them iu infancy, educate them and watch over them with the greatest rare, self sacrifice and devotion dis played in any human relationship. To nature women are far more im portant than men. Eventually ac curatte statistics will probably abso lutely prove that more femaly infants are born than male, fewer of them die EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO •^^ r ~ —- —,^d THfcRE'S fLCNTf Op= _ J Room on th& floor for Hj I Ttouß TDWeLS < ■s;cE_ [771 / 4N of males and-usually is larger. t ■ . From the point of viewof nature 1 ! W»t!’s cltief duty is to support, chcr-l ish, protect and provide for woman. This duty of men is perceived by women with the utmost clarity, as 1 any married man can tell yoq. Many papers were read by wnniett doctors and professors at. this year's lqeeting of the British Associatiton for the Advancement of Science, held re cently at Southampton. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION tejgggg fc5MHrjS?6 Bell*ns Hot water Sure Relief DELLANS 25* and 75* Packages Everywhere l;, ; ‘ What might be termed “Satisfactory Service” varies gT? | according to different kinds of business. In most cases it ! [ covers only a brief period of time, but in the automobile 8 S ; business it is different. Our sales are made to people who 1 use their cars over a period of years. Such purchasers, by right, demand a service above the ' iM average. To meet this extra demand, we have first secur- ~ e d men who have an interest in their work and see that ’ " 5 whatever they are called on to do is done perfctly, All ! ! our men finish each day’s work with the clear conscience ! [ _ ; that it could not have been done better. In this way, there 1 < come-backs, ’ and our customers are assured of [! satisfactory operation of their cars over a long period of 1 i time. '-. , i ! May we extend you such a service? REID MOTOR CO. J CONCORD’S FORD DEALER Corbin and Church Streets Phone 220 joooooooooooooooooooooooocxxxxjooooooooooooooodoool IDELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter nating current. R. H. OWEN, Agent Concord, N, C. 8 300000 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000« ii „n miina—( *5 \! -J.;/,- :-.rV j ' FALL HATS— ' :■ ■ SNAPPY STYLES In the Newest Colors Priced $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 Throw that old straw away and let us fit you in your particular stvle hat. RICHMOND-FLOWE CO. Just Received An _ other Large Ship- Charming fnmitm. reflects good tast» m p,, »d adds to the atmos- Itieilt Os TlDre pherc of the home. Ou* *-* 9 Reed and Fibre-Furnitur. by Hcywood-W-kcficld n . k is rumiture In this assortment we are sure you will find just the suite for your Sun Parlor or n Living Room. Many new styles and. finishes to select from. . Also Odd Pieces. H. B. Wilkinson Concord Kannapolis China Grove Mooresville Car Washing! Alemite Greasing! 1$ Crank Case Service k Let us wash your car and grease it with Alemite High gjP Pressure lubricating system for everybody knows that 'wßSbf proper lubrication is the life,of any car.) ■), j i Hxaco gasoline and tires and Tire changing, Accessories, Free Air and Wat?r CENTRAL FILLING STATION . L PAGE SEVEN