PAGE FOUR MK J. B. SHERRILL Editor and Publisher p'W. M. SHERRILL, Associate Editor ' MEMBER OF THE 1 R" ASSOCIATED PRESS ET'oWie Associated Press is exclusively K’ entitled to the usf for republication of K ail news credited to it or not otherwise Kggjpfted in this paper and also the lo ft cal news published herein. |-v AU rights of republication of spec- R : i«l dispatches herein are also reserved. ftp "i Special Representative W - FROST, LANDIS & KOHN I «- 226 Fifth Avenue, New York g Peoples’ Gas Building, Chicago E-- 1004 Candler Building. Atlanta V Entered as second class mail matter 1 at the postoffice at Concord. N. C., un | der the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES i In the City of Concord by Carrier: | One Year SO.OO IpSlx Months , 3.00 ft” three Months 1.50 r One Month .60 !■■ Outside of the State the Subscription ft Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North §5 Carolina the following prices will pre t vail: E One Year $5.00 b Six Months 2.50 '<• Three Months 1.25 h Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a £ Month 5 All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance I * RAILROAD SCHEDULE F In Effect June 28, 1925 Northbound i No. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M. | !? No. 136 To Wash : ngton 5:05 A. M. m No. 36 To Jiew York 10:25 A. M. S* No. 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M. i? No. 46 To Danville 3 :15 P. M. '■ * No. 12 To Richmond 7 :10 P. M. E 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. I - 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. *' No. 39 To New Orleans 9:55 A. M. _ Train No. 34 will stop in Concord v to take on passengers going to Wash ington and beyond. Train No. 37 will stop here to dis-' - charge passengers coming from be ■*- yond Washington. IT^bibSthoughtl I X—FOR TODAY— [ In Biblo Thoughts memorized, will prove « £ I I jgl nriceless heritage in after years lg| V In' the Morning:—Hearken unto the foice of luy cry, my King, ami my God: for unto thee will I pray. My voice shalt thou hear in the morning. O Lord; in the morning will 1 difect my prayer unto thee, and will look up.-—Psalm 5:2. 3. ONE ARGUMENT AGAINST THE CHILD LABOR LAW. V. With the opening of Congress just ■: 1 a few weeks off proponents of a Fed eral Child Labor Law are renewing I the : r energies with the hope of get- | y ting such a law through Congress in I some manner. More than enough ! Bt States have voted against the proposal . to allow the usual procedure, so efforts • will be made to get the law passed in , . : some unusual manner. There are many fine arguments against the law. including violation of . State's rights, but the best in our opin sS- ion,. is the fact that the law would .- create a race of loafers in this eoun - try. Surely, we have enough idle peo ple already without enacting a law -that would make it unlawful for a . boy or g : rl to work until they are 18 years of age. Thomas R. Marshall, late Vice Pro.— ; ideut, has been recognized as one of _ the leading Americans in recent years | in the matter of hard, common sense, j Mr. Marshall did not speak ever just J to be talking but when he did talk in had something to so. In his Memoirs, now being published, he wrote: y “Some time since I inspected tin new Indiana reformatory. Tile ward en is a thoughtful man. I said ’What i If'is the principal reason why these' ; bright-faced young fellows are here?' i His answer startled me. lie said the '■ great majority of them had fallen in to evil ways; had become criminals -because in their boyhood they were neither taught any useful catling nor /’compelled to do any laisir: that they Hfwepe just pampered children, who t when they left the home nest, knew tin vgt way to earn a livelihood: were (IK S’inclined to do any work, and eonse *• qrnmtly became victims of the idle ami K*v:cioos associates-. Prophecy about I human conditions is about the most “ useless and uncertain tiling in which .. a man can engage, but the old saw, ♦“‘Satan finds work for idle hands to p do," is quite likely true. If we ean - just succeed in passing the so-called “ child labor amendment to the Consti tution of the United States wo shall ' not lai'k for a crop of young crimi ... nals at any time in the future.” TYPHOID FEVER IN THE BACKGROIND. i Not so long ago typhoid fever was a large factor in the death rate of I) the State, but it is a hark number ' now, and leading the list of death j- causes we find murders^a ml automo bile accidents. The State Board of Health shows it that “North ( aniline contributed mure, -than its quota in the crime 6 .wave of the nation during the past §* year, 220 deaths being designated as homicides in returns home on death I rejiu ,of Ilouifli .id. 11*21." I iClficafco.Vith a record of more than KB'-ipninicr' a day. led the rountry, but gfMorth Carolina* Was shamefully near I I the top of the list in hogiieides. The. g records show that more than double f the number of negro victims among g. jUie itoiuicides at eouipart-d with the whites, the distribution being 94 whites, 201 negroes and four Indians, f The homicides are divided into four classifications. Os the total. 235 were killed with firearms, 47 by knives, or £ other piercing instruments, 6 were ba e hies killed closely following birth, - and 11 were killed by other means. The State Board advises that “ty phoid fever has been one of the caus . es of death against which both State and local health authorities have wag ed a major offensive. Now murders and automobile accidents each levy a greater annual toll of human life than ■ does this once prevalent and is dread ed disease.” The .pity is that we can't arouse ! the people to a “major offensive 1 against auto accidents and murders. Typhoid fever has been prevented by i education more than anything else. 1 People have been taught that it can j be prevented and once this lesson was impressed in the right manner they co-operated with the health officials in such away that the disease is now classed as a minor enemy of health. The people can eliminate deaths by auto accidents and by homicides if they will go about it in the same de termined way they waged the fight against typhoid fever. The system will have to be different, it is true, but the people themselves have the j remedy if they will just apply it. | CHAPLIN PROLONGS VISIT = New Comedy Waits. But His Stay Is Signhlcaiit. New York Mirror. Lita (iray-Chaplin, wife of Charlie, has resigned herself to being a “grass j widow** indefinitely, whisperings from the coast say. Her b*hy will soon be able to write his daddy a letter. I For Charlie, his own master and | with plenty of money in the bank. ?s i still in New York, where he had stay ed instead of going back to Hollywood to start work in a new picture, as he has threatened to do so often in the ' past few weeks. _ I Louise Brooks. Follies beauty and ' new cinema “find," it is reported, has become must chummy with the gray haired comedian. They are seeing ■ New York together, it is said. Their evening usually begins with a , first night Broadway opening. There j are those who wonder if she will re ! turn to the Coast about the time Char j lb* does'and be his leading woman ‘in his oft -postponed comedy. Os course Charlie has a leading -woman already engaged, but what’s a con tract among friends? * B"o»d\vftyi>s a-twiter over what has every prospect of being a blossoming romance. TODAY’S EVENTS Saturday. October 10. 1025 China keep* a holiday in celebration j of the anniversary of the republic. Centenary of the birth of Caul * Kruger, tfio famous President of the Transvaal. 1 One 'hundred years ago today the j first passenger car on any rai'r m.—There was a fairly active demand early from the shorts due to an unfavrrab’e view oat in. “Wall I never had no better (rew," cried the pilot. “What you ’’ink of ’im, eh?” He smiled down it the white-lipped oarsmen, who eaned, forward, panting and drip »ng. “Is—that all of it?” Lucky Broad nquired, weakly. “ Mats non! Look! Dere's Wite Orse;. 1 ’ Dorct indicated a wall of oam and spray farther down the •iver. Directly acrciss the expanse if whirlpools stood a village named tfter the rapids. “You get plenty nore bimeby.” “You’re wrong. I got plenty right low,” Broad declared. “I'm glad * the Countess didn’t iome,” said Phillips. When the men had wrung out their dothes and put on their boots thev (et out along the back trail over the stuffs. Danny Royal was not an knagina ’ive person. He possessed, to be (tire, the superstitions of the aver ige horseman and gambler, and he lelieved strongly in hunches, but be iras not fanciful and he put no faith n dreams and portents. It bothered rim exceedingly, therefore, to dis tover that he was weighed down by m unaccountable but extremely op pressive sense of apprehension. How ir why it had come to obsess him te could not but for some ■eason Miles Canon and the stormy (eaters below it had assumed terrible potentialities and he could, not shake pff the conviction that they were festined to prove his undoing. This feeling he had allowed to grow until low a fatalistic apathy had settled ipon him and his usual cheerfulness vas replaced by a senseless irritabil ity. He suffered explosions of tem per qujte as surprising to the Kirbys, lather and daughter, as to himself. Dn the day of his arrival he was particularly ugly, wherefore Rou fetta was impelled to remon-trate with him. “What ails you, Danny?” she in luired. “You'll have our men luitting.” “I wish they would,” he cried. ‘Boatmen 1 They don't know as ouch about boats as me and Sam.” “They do whatever they're told.” Royal acknowledged this fact un eraciofislv “Trouble is we don't enow what to tell ’em to do. All Sam knows is “gee’ and ‘haw,’ and 1 can’t steer anything that don’t wear I f bridle. Wbv, if this river wasn't tenced in with trees we'd have taken i (he wrong road and been lost, long •go.” / It was a hellish place; it echoed to t demoniac din . . . Rouletta nodded thoughtfully. 'Father is just as afraid of water ts you ate. He won’t admit it, but I tan tell. It has gotten on his serves and—l’ve had hard work to keep him from drinking.” “Say! Don’t let him get started #n that!" Danny exclaimed, earn estly. “That would be the last touch.” “Trust me. I— ’’ But Kirby himself appeared at lhat moment, having returned from i voyage of exploration. Said he: "ThereVa' aood toi»n below. I had t chanco to sell -the outfit ” . "Goigg to do it?” f Danny could «ot conceal his eagerness. The elder man shook his gray lead. ‘‘Hardly. . I’m no pikep." “I wish you and Danny would lake the portage and trust the pilot £ run the rapids,” Rouletta said.-. THE CONCOftfc Daily tribune Kirby turned ms expressionless face upon first phe then the other of his companions. “Nervous?” he inquired of Royal. The latter silently admitted that he was. “Go ahead. You and Letty cross afoot —” “And you?” “Oh, I’m going to stick!” “Father —” the girl began, but old Sam shook his head. “No. This is my case bet, and I’m going to watch it.” Royal’s weazened face puckered until it resembled more than ever a withered apple. “Then I’ll stick, too,” he declared. “I never laid down on you yet Sam.” “How about you, Letty?” The girl smiled. “Why, I wouldn’t trust you boys out of my sight for a minute. Something would surely happen.” Kirby stooped and kissed his daughter’s cheek. “You’ve always been our mascot, and you've always us luck. I’d go to hell in a paper suit if you were along. You’re a game kid, too, and I want you to be like that, always. Be a thoroughbred. Don’t weaken, no matter how bad things break for you. This cargo of rum is worth the best claim in Dawson, and it ’ll put us on our feet again. All I want is one more chance. Double and quit—that’s us.” This was an extraordinarily long speech for “One-armed'' Kprby; it showed that he was deeply in earnest. “Double and quit?” breathed the girl. “Do you mean it, dad?” He nodded: "I’m going to leave you heeled. I don’t aim to take my eyes off this barge again till she’s in Dawson.” Rouletta’s face was transformed; theie was a great gladness in her eyes—a gladness half obscured by tears. “Double and quit. Oh —I’ve dreamed of—quitting—so often! \ ou've made me very happy, dad.” Royal, who knew this girl’s dreams as well as he knew his own, felt a lump in his threat. He was a godless little man, but Rouletta Kirby's joys were holy things to him, her tears distressed him deeply, therefore he walked away to avoid the sight of them. Her slightest wish had been his law ever since she had mastered words enough to voice a request, and now he. tio, was happy to learn that Sara Kirby was at last ready to mold his future in acordance with her desires. Letty had never liked their mode of life; she had acepted it under protest, and with the passing years her un spoken disapproval had assumed the proportions of a great reproach. She had never put that disapproval into words—she was far too loyal for that—but Danny had known. He knew her ambitions and her possi bilities, and he bad sufficicfft vision to realize something of tire injustice she suffered at her fathcr’s/hands. Sam loved his daughter as few par ents love a child, but he was a strange man and he .showed his af fection in characteristic ways. It pleased Rova! greatly to learn that the old man had awakened to the wrong he did, and that this adven ture would serve to close the story, as all good stories close, with a happy ending. In spite of these cheering thoughts, Danny was unable wholly to shake off his oppressive forebodings, and as he paused on the river-bank to stare with gloomy fascination at the jaws of the gorge they returned t nlague him. The sound that issued out of that place was terrifying, the knowledge that it frightened him en raged the little man. It was an unpropitious moment sos any one to address Royal there fore, when he heard himself spoken to, he whirled with a scowl upon his face. A tall French-Canadian, just back froth the portage, was saying: “M’sieu’, I ain't good hand at mix in 'noder feller’s bizr.eses, but—dat pilot you got she’s no good." . Royal looked the stranger over from head to foot. “How dyou know?" he inquired, sharply. >* “Biccatise-*-I’m pilot myse’f.” "Oh, I see! You’re one of the gopd ones.” Danny’s air was surly, his tone forbidding. “Yes ” “Hate yourself, don't you? I s'pose you want his job. Is that it? No wonder—five hundred seeds for fifteen minutes’ work. Soft graft I call it." 'The speaker laughed un pleasantly. “Well, what does a good pilot charge?” "Me?" The Canadian shruggad indifferently. “I charge you one t’ousan’ dollar.” Royal's jaw dropped. “The devil you say!” he exclaimed: “I don’t want de job—your scow’s no good—but I toss a coin wit’ you. One t’ousan’ dollar or—free trip.” “Nothing doing," snapped the ex horseman. "Bit »/ Now I give you li'l ad vice. Hoi’ hard to de right in lower end dis canon. Devg’s beeg rock dere. Don’t touch ’im or you gain’ spin lak’ top an’ mebbe you go over W’ite ’Orse sideways. Dat's goin’ smash you sure.” Royal broke out, peevishly: "An other Hot tip, eh? Everybody’s got some feed-Dox information—espe cially the ones you don’t hire. Well, I aint scared—” “Oh yes, you are!” said the other mgm t "Everybody is jpf <|is P . “Anyhow, 1 ain’t’ feafed a thou sand dollars' wtrrth.' T*ke a lot to scare me that tjmcfi. I Met this place ifi as safe as. a chaoel and I bet our scow npgs.througn vith brier tail up. Let’ her’bump; she d finish with me on her hack I her ’veights/ I Built her and I named her.” Danny watched the pilot as W swung down to the stony shore 2M rejoined Pierce Phillips; then ns looked on in fascination while th»* removed their outer stepped into a boat with Kid Bridges. • and rowed away into the gorge. “It's—got my goat!” muttered .i as for rowing her, it was almost itn possible. She took the first swoop in' rush into the canon, Atrange t« say, in very good form, and there after, by dint of herculean effort* Royal and his three men managed to hold her head down-streanx Sweeping between the palisades, sh« galloped clumsily onward, wallowing iike a hippopotamus. Her long pin* sweeps, balanced and bored to re* ceived thick thole-pins, rose and fell like the stiff legs, of some fat, square* bodied spider; she reared her blu? bow: then she dove, shrouding her self in spray. It was a journey to terrify experi enced river-bien; doubly terrifying was It to Royal and Kirby, who knew nothing whatever of swift water an! to whom its perils were magnified s thousandfold. In spite of his apprehension, which by now had quickened into panic, ,Danny rose to the occasion with real credit. His face was lik-’ paper, his eyes were wide and strained; nevertheless, he kept his gaze fixed upon the pilot and strove to obey the latter's directions implic itly. Now with all his strength l.c heaved upon his sweep; now ( h? | ! eked water violently; at no tirW ! 'diet he trust himself to look at the cl ills which were scudding past, nor to contemplate the tortuous turns in t e gorge ahead. That would have 1 cn toot much for him. Even when Ins clumsy oar all hut grazed a bas tion, or when a jagged promontory seemed about to smash his craft, he refused to cease his frantic labors or to more than lift his eyes. Ho saw that Rouletta Kirby was very 1 ale, and he tried to shout a wow ' e f encouragement to her, but his cry -was thin and feeble, and it failed to pierce the thunder of the water* Danny hoped the girl was not as frightened as he, nor as old Sam— the little man would not have wished such a punishment upon his worj« enemy. Kirby, by reason oi his disability of course, was prevented from lend ing any active help with the boat and was forced to play a purely pas rive part. That it was not to his liking any one could have seen, for, once the moorings were slipped, h* did not open his lips; he merely stood beside Rouletta, with the fin gers of his right hand sunk into he: shoulder, his gray face grayer than ever. Together they swayed as th» deck beneath them reeled and pitched. “Look 1 We’re nearly through !* the girl cried in his ear, after what seemed an interminable time. Kirby nodded. A head he could see the end of the canon and what appeared to be freer water; out into this open space the -torrent flung it self. The scow was riding the bore, that ridge of'water upthrust by rea son of the pressure from above; be tween it and the exit from the chum was a rapidly dwindling ‘expanse oi tossing waves. Kirby was greatly relieved, but he could not under stand why those rollers at the mouth of the gorge should rear thetnselves so high and should foam so savagely. The' bluffs ended, the narrow throat vomited the river out, and th* scow galloped from shadow into pale sunlight The owner of the outfit drew a deep breath, his clutching fingers re laxed their nervous hold. He saw that Danny was trying to make him self heard and he leaned forward to catch the fellow’s words, when sud denly the impossible happened. Th.- deck beneath his feet was jerked backward and he was flung to his knees. Simultaneously there came a crash, the sound of rending, splint ering wood, and over the stern of\ the barge poured an icy deluge that all but swept father and daughtet away. Rouletta screamed, then she called the name of Royal. “Danny! Danny!” she cried, so: both she and old Sam had seen a terrible thing. The blade of Royal’* sweep hau been submerged at the instant 6f thi collision and, as a consequence, the force of that rushing ctlrtont had borne it forward, catapulting (nip man on the other end overboard as cleanly, as easily as a school-bov snaps a paper pellet from tbe end ol a pencil. Before their very eyes the Kirbys saw their lieutenant, theii lifelong friend and sertitor, picked up and hurled into the flood. “Danny!” shrieked the girl: The voice of the rapids had changed its tone now, for a cataract was dhim- j mmg upon the after-deck and there 1 wai a crashing and a smashing as the piles of boyes came tumbling fltfwn. The scow drove higher upon IH reef,; jts bow: rose until*it.stsod at j a sharp inpline, I*in.—lnformed that the Order cf Railroad Telegraphers had ordered a strike vote on the Atlantic Coast Line railroad, the United-States labor board assumed jurisdiction of the dispute. —. Three members of the board will leave tonight for Wilmington, N, C., to start an investigation Monday. New Lamp Burns 94 Per Cent. Air Beats Electric or Gas. A new oil lamp that gives an amaz ingly brilliant, soft, white light,-even better than gas or electricity, bus been tested by the U. S. Government and 35 leading universities and found to be superior to 10 old nary oil lamps. It burns without odor, smoke or noise— no pumping up; is simple, clean, safe. Burns 04 per cent, aid and fi tier cent, common kerosene (coal ©ill. The inventor, S. (J. Johnson, (>42 X. Broad St.. Philadelphia, is offering to send a lamp on 10 days' FREE trial, or even to give one FItUE to the first user in each locality who will help him introduce : t. Write him today for full particulars. Also ask him to explain how you can get the agency, and without experience 'or money make $250 to SSOO i>er month. Just Arrived Another lot of that delicious Moore County Honey, packed* in three pound jars, 95c Let's Us send you a jar—it’s fine. Cabarrus Cash Grocery Company - PHONE 571 W South Church Street < - - - T~ \ MOn«r back without-auestior j mJWT’B GUAR A IST EKE ’ 1 SKIN DISEABE REMEDIES | /(%§ Yy) (Huot*# Salve and Soap), fail It I U ft the treatment of Itch. Eczema j V //J Ringworm, Tetter or other Itch- tag akin diacaaaa. Try thN treatment at our risk. I «i., ing akin diaeaaas. Try thin * « * ‘ treatment at oar risk. | PEARL DRUG OmftANt Beoaooooaaoooooooocino ! INITURECO. Records Are 1 ■g' • \ a andola and Guitar a Jim Miller-Charlie Farrell C ith Mandola and Guitar X Jim Miller-Charlie Farrell Q Billy Murray X Guitar X -- Jim Miller-Charlie Farrell B , r, with piano -Frank Crumit Q with paino 8 The Happiness Boys 0 Away! Hay! Hay!,-with 9 . Jim Miller-Charlie Farrell »r afid ukulele Wendel Hall Fall, with guitar. Carl T. Sprague I with guitar Carl T. Sprague ; iano BW Murray-Ed. Smalle 1 t with piano l Billy-Murray-Ed Smalle i!i Henry Burr 'I 1 rt Sterling Trio jl| I ! D)tNCG RECORDS | 19703—1 Miss My Swiss—Fox Trot, with vocal refrain } 'j i . Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra I The Kinky Kids Parade —Fox trot, with vocal refrain. ! . Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra i 10737—What a World This Would Be—Fox trot, (from Gsorge White’s ' | “Scandals ’) Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra I i l l _ She's Got 'Em —Fox 'ftout Fred Hamm and His Orchestra 1 1 i i 19745—Yes. Sir! That’s My Baby—Fox Trot( with vocal refrain) . !|i Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra 1 . '|' Sometime—Walt* Jack Shilkret’s Orchestra ! 19746 Fooling—Fox Trot —Meyer Davis' I,e Paradis Band i! ij _ Are Lou Sorry 7 Fox Trot Don Bestor and His Orchestra 1 1 19750—Everything is Hotsy-Totsy Now—Fox Trot with vocal re- I 1 1 1 fra in Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra ! Ji Ibats All There Is—Fox Trot, with vocal refrain - ,l! „ Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra ! 1 1 19(51—Summer Nights—Fox Trot Don Bestor and His Orchestra ! 1 1 Charleston Baby of Mine—Fox Trot —Don Bestor and Orch ! C| 19752—Funny—Walt* Jack Sliilkret’s Orchestra i| i Croon a Little Lullaby—Fox Trot, with vocal refrain ll , tI - International Novelty Orchestra' '] 19(54—Hong Kong Dream Girl—Fox Trot with vocal refrain Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra ]i \ Who Wouldn t Love You—Fox Trot, with vocal refrain i 1 „ Coon-Sanders Original Nighthawk Orchestra '! j, 197.>6—The Promenade. Walk—Fox Trot (from Artists and Models") !'! '!'!'• „ „ Johnny Hanip’s Kentucky Serenaded 1 1 1 ji Cecilia—Fox Tret with vocal refrain Johnny Kentucky Scrennders BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO J tLECTR i ¥4N The modern way is V“M the electrical way. Ap Lfl PS plianecs. supplies and II LJ electrical equipment an |U| IB stocked by us in an end-| less variety. Our ergi-Mg neers will advise your/ kJ gratis about your elec-BUB ™ tricttl problem. Service f|| our motto. BjU| Fhrtare. f»f Owrwiw m ' U.l HKTlirov |5 VV I ■ I • A VAULT THAT KEEPS OUT ALL WATER one drop of water can 1 ” enter this vault, because it is constructed on the "div ing bell" principle, of twelve gauge Keystone eopper-bear ing steel which positively resists rust and corrosion. It •fiords the permanent protec tion we tjpahe for the remains of our loved ones. (Stone, brick and concrete vaults let water i in and hold it.) We supply the Clark Grave Vault because it | has {moved to be the most per fect form of protection. It is j guaranteed for fifty years. T WILKINSON’S FUNERAL HOME PHONE 9 DAY OR NIGHT -„„m ~ ? RAVEVAULT wm Saturday, October 10, 1925 000 0°QOOOOOOOOOOOOOtXXX>00 Genuine Buick PARTS Carried in Stock at all times j STANDARD BUICK CO. ! I ><*; artment Add the Comforts < N of * \ PLUMBING to Your Home % Modern Plumbing will do as much or more than any oth er one thing toward making your home a comfortable and convenient plpce in which to live. It costs you nothing to get our cost estimate. Concord Plumbing Company ) North JUrrtk. Phone 178