PAGE SIX ; THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH I Southern Railway I Development Service ' The Southern Railway Development Service was established to promote the prosperity of the South by assisting in—the attraction of new indus tries—the development of mineral resources —and the improvement of agriculture. ■n * Cooperating with all associations and individuals engaged in broadcasting informatiort regarding the resources of this land of opportunity, the I Southern Railway Development Service partic -1 ularly offers its assistance to: Manufacturers looking for a site close to sources of supplies of raw materials, convenient to coal or hydro-electric power, with ample railway facilities and favorable labor conditions; Home-seekers desiring to locate where winters are mild and summer heat moderate, and where the community environment is attractive; Farmers seeking a farm or orchard where mod erate-priced lands, fertile soil, easily accessible mar* kets and good railway service contribute to profits. Illustrated publications and special reports of the Southern Railway Development Service on the resources and opportunities of ■ the South are sent free of charge upon request addressed to Development Service, Southern Railway System, Washington, D. C. i (Si) I SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM pw 1 . ■ v: - - : • — 1 gill* Exhibit | and Sale Presenting Authentic 1925- I 1926 Fur Fashions in all | THURSDAY- OCTOBER 22 | ou are l ny ll e£ l to be here I \ iWM W/Mf Thursday and meet the Fur 1 WMB 3BEM Factory Representative § Mi 3 With a Complete Line of | »SIL Coats, Jacqnettes and § llslßr A Small deposit reserves any E | ifljlf Fur Coat you desire | "(y «4 Black Seal Jacpnetts at $65.00 and on D ll® Ba dMUIk N atur al Muskrat Jacqnett at $145 on B 48" Black Seal at $149.50 and on hl[ 48 us^rat ° n E m It ’ IT PAYS TO TRADE AT Ik Save On Your Fur Coat— Qlljf IL* D * Select Now At These luliLllX O y Lowest Sale Prices It’s Never Better Elsewhere —It’s Always Best Here Em | y "»-a ;u. .«.u. .mi mj. . H. JMBS* UIH THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE THE RIGHT ROAD TO HEALTH. Keep Nostrils, Throat. Mouth and ' Teeth Clean to Avoid Sore Throat, Say* Doctor. Dr. J. W. Perilli. , , Hare you had your sore throat , I yet? This is the time of the year. , I with the change in the season, ween I the cold, blustery wind sweeps dirt , and infected particles through the air that one suffers especially from • throat trouble. . I, You ran trace most sore throats, , from tonsil it is to the slight inflam mation due to a chill or cold to ex posure or a rundown condition of your system or to uncleanlincss.. | As you know, the nose aDd mouth , shelters gernw that are infectious. Only your good physical condition , balks these countless enemies of health from getting a regu’ar Goteh : toe hold on your throat'and laying , you low for a sick spelll. If, by chance, you are in a run down condition at this time of the year, if you are keping irregular hours, suffering from loss of sleep, and if your bowels are clogged, then you are a fine subject for the I germs that cause a sore throat. They are able to get the upper hand and Mr. Tonsi’.itis pays yon a visit. This Usually is over in a few days, but the sufferer knows before it says good by that he has had quite a tussle with the visitor. When the muscle.; become infeced. then the siege is pro longed. with the neck stiff and an inability to swallow, j Hot applications, massage and gargling will reduce the swelling and ease the pain, but why go to that unnecessary bother when a little care on your part will avoid the need of suffring? Keep your nostrils, throat, teeth and mouth dean- If out in the air of the city strets for any length of time, make sure your nose, by ferquent blowing, is free of germs. If you do this, and garg'e your throat once or twice a day, I am confident you will escape a sore throat especial ly if you keep your bowels open by eating plenty of fruit morning, noon and night. A Tribute to Mr. Duke. ' Winston-Salem Journal. No higher tribute to James Buch anan Duke, industrial leader and builder who was buried in Durham yesterday, has come from any source than from the New York World. In an editorial the Word refers to Mr. Duke's qualities of shrewdness and energy" and compares him to John D. Rockfeler- The World points out that Mr. Duke early saw the value of Nation wide advertising; and he pushed h'is consolidation schemes until the Gov ernment had to break up the trust he headed."’ | Discussing the remarkable success of Mr. Duke, the World continues: “More than any other man he made America a Nation that smokes cig arettes by the hundred million. Hav ing given the South a tobacco indus try it had never dreamed of, he turn er! to other fields of Southern de velopment. "Indeed, Duke will be longest re membered as one of the builders of the new South and especially of the new North Carolina. It would be hard to name a rich American who 'lias done so much to re-create his native state. He gave 840,000,1 MiO to a university which he hoped would yet rival Harvard and Yale. He led in the development of its water power and helped make it second on y to Massachusetts in the number of its cotton spindles. North Caro ■ lina, recently oue of the poorest and most backward of States, is now one of the busiest and most progressive. Duke may yet stand as the first rep ! resentative figure in a great new Southern industrial era." In this connection it is well to call attention to the fact that the statis tics used by the World in preparing this editorial arc slightly out of date. For North Carolina hits now passed | Massachusetts in the number of its cotton spindles and Mr. Duke lived Ito see that proud consummation ot his dream for his native State. A Platonic Courtship. Martha Stanley in Hearst's Interna j tional-Cosmopolitan. I The man I married never made love to me. never proposed to me, never kissed me in those days of supposed : courtship. Our acquaintance began i over a book. He called, took me to | the theater, to dinner with his mother and sister; then one night after at theater we became involved in another book discussion. I was sitting on one side of the room and tie on the other. Suddenly he stood up. “Where shall we live when we are married?” he asked me. Not to be nonplussed, I replied casually: "The suburbs of Boston are nice." "All right,” he replied. “Let's make it October.” Then he came over, sat down beside'me and kissed, me. And in October we went to Bve in the suburbs! Odd Hotel Sites. A 19-story hotel to contain 400 rooms is planned for Chicago. But the most novel thing about it is that it will grace the tup of a 21- story office bifi ding. Going to the other extreme, a modern hotel is about to be erected on the floor of the deep valley in Yosemite national park. It will re place the old Sentinel hotel. £ good road with a maximum grade of eight per cent will wind down to it. An apartment hotel wil! be con tained in the tower of the $4,000,000 Broadway. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION IqjlU S?r* ReHdf I DELL-ANS I, 23« and 75« Packages Everywhere COURTS AND JITITBS. . I.exiqgton Dispatch. Our courts‘have been much in the mind of North Carolina cni»ens during the past few weeks and much discussion has ranged around thowmn nrtt-r in which justice % ad ministered, or fails to be administer ed-, ip some cases. It is an entirely wrong view for the citixen to hold that justice is I not available for all men through any other fault than that which lies, with the lay cititens memflolves. Strictly speaking, the jury is a part of the court, it is true; but. more | broadly, the jury is really the citi xens’ adjunct of the court. And without the aid of thin adjunct a court can hardly do injustice. No matter how able and honest the. judge may be—and honestly and ability mark the judiciary of North Carolina at this time to a degree perhaps never exceeded—and no matter how diligent the law enforce ment officers of a community are, justice will not abide except in the hearts ot the oitixeu; from whom juries arc drawn. Until juries realixe that they can not go outside of their oaths to abide solely by the law 1 and the evidence in the case before them there will continue to be miscar riages of justice. The overwhelming majority of jury verdicts in North Carolina are just. The trouble comes when juries apparently err in eases that hold the greatest public interest. It. is n sad commentary upon tho patriotism of citizen* when so many men dodge jury serv ice in such cases, many of tho ex cuses offered not being sincere. Take, for instance, those who are opposed to capital punishment. Did you ever notice that it usually de pends on- the nature of the case and the prominence of the defendant as to what proportion of veniremen find they aro opposed to inflicting the death penalty? In a country where les than fifty ) per cent of the qualified voters will take enough interest in public af fairs to go to the ballot box on election day, is it any wonder that juries sometimes bring the ad ministration of justice into question. Men who do not take interest in ’ government, in the making and ad ministration of justice, fifty-two weeks in the year cannot be ex pected to have tho proper considera tion for law for one week in two vents or five years as the case may be. If every citizen should fulfill his duties as a citizen the rule of jus tice would be grea‘ely promoted. Gave Judge No Heed. Statesville Daily. Said Judge Grady to the Alamance county jury, trying the Wiles case at Durham : “I charge you most emphatically, gentlemen, that there is no such thing in Nort’li Carolina as the unwritten law; I charge with equal emphasis that tiie relations between Gordon and Mr*. Wiles, whatever they were, or 11 whatever t*he prisoner at the bar thought they were. Were not sufficient to justify him taking the life of Gor don.*’ While this had no effect on the jury it is possible that plain speech of that sort from the court might make an impression after a time; that it would be gradually borne in on jurors that on matter what their personal feel ing. no matter how strongly they may feel that the deceased deserved kill ing in cast's involving the eternal triangle, the killing is unlawful and can not be legally justified. Os course self-defense was plead in the Durham case, the defendant alleging that the deceased made a motion toward his gun pocket, and another witness test!-* fying that when he reached the dead body the dead man's fingers were in serted in his hip pocket. Maybe the deceased made the gesture, and pos sibly the jurors believed that the de fendant shot only because tie felt that his life was in danger—but that is entirely improbable and the result is accepted as another victory far the un written statute. So soon following the Rockingham case, there would have been much sympathy for the Durham man if tie had been convicted, for it must go admitted that he had a'real grievance, although he did not have legal justification. Jl'c alleged gesture toward the hip pocket is a favorite defense and seems to be a fair reliance, even when it is found that -the dead man wasn't armed, as was true in this case. Rest Exercise. Here are a few simple directions for rest exercise: Manufacture and mix your own drugs that keep your body going. Be superintendent of your own plant yourself. Best your thyroid, which produces your iodine or energy for tbe body. To rest your thyroid, relax the whole region where the thyroid is. Relax your neck and every time that it tenses or starts to tense, stop it. To rest your thyroid still more, use less of its product. To use less of its' product, dis tribute what you have it make, where il belongs. To distribute what energy you make where it belongs, practice any form of exercise you like which in tensively balances the body. By bal ancing the body—the most effortless exercise there is, an exercise which is done better tbe less effort it takes— the friction in the body which has kept calling on tbe thyroid for ten times as much iodine as any one lias a right to ask it to make, comes to a stop, and at tbe same time that yon are relaxing your neck, and making iodine 1 less, the body stops drawing on it for more. Gerland Stanly Lee, In Hearst’s In i ternational-Cosmopolitan. | Dallas’, Texas, is said to be the on ly city that ever won a baseball pen l nant in two leagues in one season. | This happened in 1888. After Dal ' las had-won the pennant in the Texas league that year >it took tbe place of Montgomery in the Southern League, winnnmg the pennant in the latter league from New Orleans in tbe tenth inning of the last game of the seaaon. | Dogs rained at more than $1,250,- ' 000 were exhibited at the recent au i nual bench show fat London. JUST 27 DAYS NOW REMAIN In The Tribune - Times SIO,OOO Campaign But I Oof These In SECOND PERIOD VOTE SCORE District No. 1 Following is tbe list ot candidates, with their votes published, in - this district. One or two of the automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize, one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet. commlasion to all other active can didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission or incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at once. H. A. Allred .052,000 Miss Marie Barrier 341.400 Mrs. J. Herman Laughltn ■ 1,175,300 Miss Maefield Lentz - 107,700 Stephen Morris ’ 005,100 Paul Query 702,000 Miss Dorothy Roberts 1,183,100 Mrs. R. M. Sappenfield 1,095,800 District No. 2 Following is tbe list of candidates, with their votes published, in this district. One or two of the automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize, one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet commission to all other active can- ' didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission or incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at once. Miss Lueile Cline, Kannapolis 925,800 Lawrence Fowler, Kannapolis 7,400 A. O. Maulden, Kannapolis 239,200 Miss Billie Sapp, R. F. D., Concdrd —. l. 8 44,800 A_ . Miss Ethel Saxon, Mary Ella Hall. Kannapolis 2-i.—L~ 91.500 -v Mrs. Nina Stogner, R. F. D. 1, Concord : 243.500 District No. 3 Following is tbe list of candidates, with their votes published, in this district. One or two of tbe automobile prizes, one S2OO cash prize, one SIOO cash prize and 10 pet. comm'ssion to all other active can didates must be awarded in this district. In case of any omission or incorrect district classification, notify the campaign department at once. Ralph Beaver, Route 1, Concord 159,700 Boyd Carpenter, Stanfield 891.800 Ruth Fryllng Marcho, R. F. D. 5, Concord 902.700 Ed. Gray, R. F. D. 6, Concord 918,700 C. H Xipe, R. F. D. 2. Mt. Pleasant 912.300 Rev. E. Myers, R. F. D. 6, Concord 898,800 - ■ - THIS “Second Period” IS VITAL This “Second Period” gives time enough for anyone to make victory a certainty. Get started Wednesday morning, keep going, and finish the big gest campaign ever inaugurated in Cabarrus County, with a finish that will do you justice and make you prosperous and happy. EXTENSIONS on subscriptions takdn during the first period will count second period extension votes. Extra votes are given on extensions as they were in the first period. Subscribers who are now on the list are considered % old subscribers, and their extensions will count the regular vote extension only. During the “Second Perjod,” a bonus vote of 10,000 votes will be given with NEW subscriptions. While second period new subscribers count a greater number of votes, at the same time, thousands of votes can be secur ed by carefully going over the list of those who have already helped you and secure their extension of a year or more. DON’T LET UP NOW MAKE THESE NEXT 11 DAYS GOLDEN ONES FOR YOURSELF-MAKE SURE ‘ ' - y . V- • j. ■ Wfftwtay. Q