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Te.ine3day\ Oct. 23, 19,25 ' j BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL I 867'-677 BROADWAY | NEW YORK 1 Accommodations For 1,000 Guests n .^ le ears °f the down-town business section, j Connections to all parts of the City within a few minutes jf from our door NEWLY FURNISHED AND RENOVATED High Class Service at Low Rates Large Banquet and Convention Halls jj oooo^^ i FISHER’S ' ' 1 PHONE 325 FOR KOTEX -? OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMOOOOOOUOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC HaKsFuiHl a ala H j GOOD FOR 20,000 EXTRA VOTES I FIRST SUBSCRIPTION COUPON j . Accompanied by the nomination blank, and yobr first subscription Ytbit coupon will start you in the race for the magnificent Tribune and Tines gifts with a grand total of miore than 88,000 votes. Thiß cou s pon maw be used only once and is valid only when accompanied by a ■ subffiription remittance. Torry « r 3 Name of Subscriber ! 3 Contestant's Name • I it Amount Enclosed | This coupon will count 20,000 fr« votes when returned to the Oam- I paign Manager, together with the first subscription you obtain. It pj must be accompanied by the cash, and the subscription must be form 1 1 period of one year or longer. The 20,000 free votes are IN ADDITION B to the number given on the subscription as per the regular vote schedule. 1 Boys And Girls- Bicycling Is Fun Your IVER JOHNSON Is Here t 4 v Come In and Lode It Over Ritchie Hardware Cc j YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 ■ TOi'iaaaaiKaaaanuci 1336333^ i FREE VQTING COUPON I in The Tribune and Time* “Everybody Wins” Grand Prize Campaign GOOD FOR 50 VOTES I hereby cast 50 FREE VOTES to the credit of— j M /. 2 Address This Coupon, neatly .clipped out, name and address of the candidate filled in, and ma : led or delivered to the Election Department of The 1 Tribune end Times. Room 200 Cabarrus Bank 'Bldg., or P. O. Boi\ «'i 431, will count as 100 FREE VOTES. It does not cost anything to 1 rant these coupons for your favorite candidate, and you are not re !jr4tricted In any sense in voting them. Get ah you can and send them in —they all count Do not roll or fold. Deliver in flat package. NOTE U —This Coupon must be voted on or before OCTOBER Slit. D tt?t3 riramaa'imgmiaaaaafla^^ I Greenville Architect Says State of Florida Is Crazy ' 1 Greenville, 8. 0., Oct. 27.- -.tamos | C. Hemphill, architect, of Greenwood I has returned from a trip througr Flor i ida and says: r * j "It is impossible to magnify the | development going on in Florida. You II would never believe it unless you saw j it yourself. In every town of any 4 size at nil there is spme kind of build |. ing going up on #very vacant lot and 11 most of them are large expensive- - |; buildings. Work goes on 24 hours ev il ery day, including ' Sunday. Miami 41 seems to be heading the list in devel j opm'ent, and at the time I was tliere I 20 sky-scrapers were going up at the i same time. A laborer there gets $5 | per day. carpenters sls to S2B, plas | terers sls and brick masons sls, and i there they iiave to beg them to work at that price. , } "The real cstnters bore naturally gone ernzy and have the prices up so high it is comical. The stories about them selling,the bottoms of the lake? is i really true. They go out and stake off ; the late in lots near the edge and sell i this ns lake front- property ah enor -1 mous prices, and later put a dredge to work filling it up and making the lots. It is almost impossible to get office space, telephone connections, a place to stay and money enough to pay for these if you are fortunate ] enough to get tljom. “I had a rather nerve-racking cx -1 pericnce coining back which settled ! my mind on the point of pieking up people on the road. Going down two young boys asked for a ride just out of Augusta, Ga„ and they they were walking from Johnson City, Tenn., to | Tampa. I /rode them all afternoon i until supper and then told them I would stop at a little town for the \ night. After supper I decided to go on and jffst out of town picked them | up again, and rode them until late i that night through the swamps of 1 Georgia. I stopped at another town ] for the night ami next morning picked them up again, and then again coming ! out of Jacksonville and rode them to 1 St. Augustine .without getting knock- ] ed in the head. "This gave me a little confidence in I th : s class of people so, when coming 1 | back, a fellow flagged me just out of j i Jacksonville I les him in and started ' on my way toward Augusta. He was I THE DUKE BENEFACTION. ( Asheville Citizen. ■ Millions pile on millions of dollars to make it probable that Duke Uni-j ' versity will become one of the world's' ■ greatest universities—an educational institution which will at least rank with Harvard, Princeton, Yale. I Living, James B. "Duke distributed more than $40,000,000 to public serv ice institutions of this state; his death automatically adds $17,000,000 to the approximately $30,000,000 he had generously donated 104 Duke, r Each sum was a colossal gift, gs measured by college standards—combined they constiute a benefaction of the first magnitude. ‘ j It constitutes a living monument to James B. Duke—it so complements the masterly achievements of the dead man as to warrant repetition of our previous estimate that he was a great 1 man. His eminence in material mat ters proved his claim to this name in a limited sphere—his dying bequest added to his lime time gifts lifts the limitation. As if by means of a magician's' wand the former trinity College is over night raised to a potential emf-l ‘y nence whose eminence we can 'scarce I virion now. ft' Is aH too sudden for us to sense, -the full possibilities of the situation in which Duke Uni versity now finds itself. It has now the ineans of becoming a great educational' institution. Its capable directors nnist reconstruct! their plans for tile future—must, and | will, expand even tbh great plans' which the gift of the living Duke made possible. They *-111 vision more mag-1 nificent buildings rise; they will seej in 'the future a university more than) a merely large cipllege. It will incarnate a broad educa-' tional idea, rising to heights surpass ing present conception—it should be more than a Y’ale or a University of. Chicago or a Johns Hopkins. It! should cover the field of knowledge— I its chairs filled by the most noted edu-| I cators. It will have the needed- I physical 1 equipment and with an in- I come of more than a million and a I half dollars a year it will be able I to accomplish its heart’s desire. I The Methodist Church sees its once I struggling Trinity rise to power and I fortune undreamed of—it will, we I are sure, be a faithful trustee for a I cause which touches all of North | Carolina—nay, as oyr hope beckons I —all the nattion. I Wilson Home a Shrine? I Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, widow of I the war president, is considering mak- I ing the house in Washington where I her husband spent his last days a I* permanent memorial to his memory. Under the proposal, the house would be kept just a,s it was When Wilson . lived there. The Woodrow. Wilson memorial foundation is considering j taking it over. Mrs. Wilson would j live elsewhere in Washington. She j is now abroad. j The 8 Street house contains valu | able books collected by Wilson while j president. Under the plan, these ! would be put at the disposal of recog : hired scholars.' f It was in the 11- | brary that the war president spent most of bis invalid days. He died ib this house February 3, 1924. The new Wilson shrine would add to the number of homes of presidents and other prominent figures still pre served in and rear the national cap ital. Alfred Noyes, the celebrated Eng lish poes, has one charming supersti tion. When lecturing, he always in sists that his wife occupy a front (seat in the audience, wearing a bunch of violets for luck. IF YOU WANT SURE RESULTS USB TRIBUNE FENNY ADS. THE CONCORD DAILY. TRIBUNE r a very canrtcons fellow and seemed to appreeiate the ride. He talked good , English and had a straight tale about . himself. , "Along totvatd the last of the as- { ternoon he told /ne about a shooting , scrape in the hoarding house he had been staying ih the night before and’’, this led up to one of his owp experi ences.' He got real confidential, and j j the expression of his eye changed from - a peaceable, mwtest fellow to a blood- ! thirsty looking fellow, with as much hate and revenge as 1 have ever seen on anybody's face. He said a hoot- ( logger came up to him once on the . street of a southern city with a quart , of liquor to sell, and a policeman, see- , ing this, came to make an arrest. The bootlegger dropped the .whiskey and j ran Wand the policeman arrested him , instead anti started to the look-up. j Just as they were nearing the police station he jerked loose, and, as he ex- , pressed it. "I reached back in my hip , pocket and pulled out a .44 and stuck it in the guy's chest and pulled down . three t : mos just like that * * and he fell in his tracks." (About that time, , I was ready to let him take my ear on and let me follow afoot.) The oth- j er polieemnn nabbed him, he said, and lie was tried and sentenced to five i years in the penitentiary. When he was being taken to tdc penitentiary, ] he went into the toilet, knocked out , a window and jumped off the train. He told how he slept all night in the \ swamps with bloodhounds howling all around and the next morning he got a kind hearted farmer to break his handcuffs off. ‘‘About the end of his talc we were ; still about five miles from the next town and it was getting dark. If he had snapped his fingers at me I would have fallen over in a dead faint from , nervousness. I waited until we got into town and then told him 1 was going to spend the night there and Ihe would have to go on foot. After i snpper I decided to go on and about i two milcH out of town tliere he stood | waving ine down. I got my car up to about 60 miles an hour and passed j with my heart in my mouth for fear I I would have a puncture beside him. i That settled my mind absolutely about ' picking up people along the road. I I never expected to again.” ; CHARLOTTE BUSINESS MAN KILLS HIMSELF Thomas R. Garrison Accidently Shot j to Death While Hunting Squirrels. Charlotte. Oct. 27.—Funeral serv ices for Thomas R. Garrison, 36, prominent Charlotte plumbing and i heating contractor who was accident ally killed while squirrel hunting shortly before 7 o'clock last night wiP -be he.ld Wednesday morning, it was said early this morning. Mr. Garrison, one of the best known I business men of Charlotte, was hunt ing near the city with Howard White According to White, he was using the butt-end of his shotgun to prod a 1 pounded squirrel from a hollow tree, ' when the weapon fired, the load of shot taking effect in his abdomen. He died almost instantly. Mr. Garrison was a native of Meck lenburg county and was a son of Mr and Mrs. J. E. Garrison. He is sur vived by his widow, who before her marriage was Miss Ottilie Brandes, of New York; two small children, his ; parents, three brothers and a sister. ' Mr. Garrison was a Mason and was a member of the First Baptist ! Church. He was a veteran of the World War. One of America's most noted golfers has calculated that on an average round on a championship course with two long holes and others that call . for long second shots he uses j his clubs as follows: Driver 14 times, j brassie 2 times, driving iron 2 times, ; mashie iron 10 times, raashie niblick 16 times, mashie 6 times, niblick 2 time, midiron 2 times and putter 30 times. This gives a total of 74 j strokes for the round. THANKS THE HERB | JUICE MAN Says His Medicine Completely Re stored Health and Hopes AH Suf ferers WUI Try It. “I want to thank you for coming to Concord with your medicine; ' HERB JUICE has done wonders for me, and I feel as though I should tell ; others about it,” said Mr. F. Smith, , valuable employe of the Locke Mill. I Concord, N. C., and resides on St. Mary’s Street, in a recent nterview with the HERB JUICE man. In telling of his condition prior to the ' time he commenced using HERR , JUIOCE, Mr. Smith said: “I never , knew what it was to have a well day or be free from pain. I could not eat 1 any thing without it hurting me and ■ would suffer for hours after eating 1 with gas pains and bloating. The , food I ate would sour and ! could not eat any food and properly digest it. , I knew from this that my digestive ' organs were not functioning m the 1 natural way so after being urged to > try HERB JUICE for this trouble, I finally decided to buy a bottle and give . it a fair trial. I will admit that I , was skeptical about HERB JUICE at first, but after I had taken one bot ' tie I noticed a great improvement end nave since continue# taking it until • today I feel as well as I ever did. I ; don’t have any more trouble from gas i pains or bloating, in fact, can eat any thing 1 want without any ill effects. That is why I am so eager to tell oth* 1 ers about HERB JUICE, That it has i put me in such a splendid condition . again that living is the pleasure it . should be. I have also found HERB JUICE to be a wonderful laxative, for since I have taken it ray bowels and also my liver are in excellent ' working order and I am not bothered . one bit with constipation. There is . nothing too rood that eonid be said for HERB JUICE, for I know that my improved condition of health is due to the use of this extraordinary preparation.” HERB JUICE b sold in Coucoid I and guaranteed to give satisfaction by Gibson Drug Stom A SUNDAY SERMON. By a Sinner. Text: Proverbs, Chapter IS: Verse 24: "A man that hath friends, must show himself friendly." The most miserable people in the world are not the penniless, bat rath er the friendless. So the happiest peo- 1 pie in the world are not those who ' have the most money but rather those who iiave the most friends. , Even if the rich man has friends lie never knows when their friendship is genuine. He is always suspicious that 1 they love him merely for 'his money. Not so with the poor man. lie can trust the sincerity of his friends. Friendship then is a more valuable ' asset that wealth. It |>a.vs a larger ' dividend upon the capital emplmed any species of investment That can be mentioned. The beauty of it all is (Bat the capital for this invest ment is so easily obtained. The sin ner's text this morning tells how : if , yon would have friends, show yourself , friendly. That's all. V. • | The man who is a good "mixer" Jias a Wonderful advantage ia life and i lo be a good mixer it is only neees- 1 sary that one should show himself friendly with all around him. If the sinner were asked to names the one who, in his opinion is the most < popular person in Charlotte, he would 1 have no difficulty in complying with i the request. He would name a certain lady of his acquaintance. Klje never, gives parties or receptions, but she is invited to them all from the humblest to the swellest. .She knows more peo ple and speaks to more than any oth er in the city. She grasps the needle pricked hand of (lie seamstress with the same cordiality with which she greets my lady of the diamond-spark ling fingers. She shows herself friend ly, and therefore, she has frieyids. The sinner regrets to say that it looks lo hint like politeness is fast becoming a lost art. In the mad rush after money we forget to be polite. A terrible indictment, is brought this morning against the young men and young women of the age. While there are some notable exceptions, yet, as a rule, they are sadly lacking in manners. Dudeness, indifference, lack of reverence and respect are the pre vailing characteristics of this day. All, the older members of the sinner’s con gregatiou who agree with him in this statement, hold up your hands. Just as was expected, nearly every hand is up! What, a pity that the big Public Service Corporations operate so much on the public-be-damnod principle. What a pity they do not realize that enemies are just as surely liabilities of a pecuniary nature as are the mortgage bonds they owe. From a purely monetary standpoint, these Public Service Corporations ought to aim to get rid of enemies. If they adopt certain rules and regu lations for the purpose of saving them selves money and yet find that, these rules and regulations anger and irri- Itate the public, they ought to abolish them, because these rules and regji- Htions then become enemy manufac tures. Tqlte as an oxamole the regulation of the railroads requiring holders of nrlenge books to exchange the mileage for tickets. This regulation lias beeu a regular enemy factory. .The rail road companies claim that they save money by this requirement. Granted: but these companies do not take into account the vast sums of money they lose through the enemies that this reg ulation makes for them. The rail roads never stop, it seems, to consider how many thousands upon thousands of dollars the verdicts of juries are increased every year on account of the enemies that are made through hostile and irritating rules and regu lations. The Sinner heard the late Col. Ham ilton C. Jones say that more than 40 years ago there was a general manager of a certain railroad company with headquarters in Charlotte, who treat ed the public with such uniform kind ness and consideration in all dealings of the company with the public that it was well night impossible for a plain tiff to get a verdict of a jury against this manager’s railroad. He adopted the publie-be-plensed policy. He show ed himself friendly and made friends for his company. If the sinner were put into the con fessional aipl made to tell what has been the greatest mistake iu his life ,lie would say it was that lie had not been careful enough to avoid making enemies. This morning he would leave that as a parting lesßon, espe cially to the young; A friend is an as set ; an enemy is a liability. Therefore, make friends: and re member "A man that hath friends, must show himself friendly." CHARLES W. TILLETT. Charlotte, N. C., Feb. 27, 1915. (The above was found in the scrap book of the late Mrs. »E. C. Register, of Charlotte. —Editor). Have You Seen the Wind? The wind is a remarkable phenome non. One can feel its blasts, can see the disaster that often follows in its wake, and yet, who has seen the wind? The home of the wind is sail to be in the Valley of Scistan, in Khorassan, Province of Persia. It is known as the windiest place in the world. In fact it is so windy that the natives regard it as a bewitched place. The valley is swept by steady, hot, dry and irritating winds from June to September. So trying are these winds to the nerves that on'y impassive, untemperamental people can withstand them. The endless winds seem to blow all the energy out of the persons with whom they come in contact. Most people found in the valley are dull and listless. Antarctica is also (famous for its . winds. Explorers tell us that these winds often blow a. steady 100-mi'.e gale and that they contain particles of ice which sting and blister the flesh. Napoleon Lajoie, in tais day one of the greatest of baseball players, Is now a member of the boxing com mission in Cleveland. Notre Dame has lost as many foot ball games this season as it did in all the preceding five years. BEAGLE HOUNDS TRAILS ! TO BEGIN NOVEMBER 17 Sr f.rJ Annual Evrnt Will Be on J. P. Grimes Farm Nesr Salisbury. I Ha'isbury. Oct. 27.—An announce ment of interest to all lovers-nf the boajflc hound ha* just boon mads ooucCrni.r..g tlio .second annual A. K. ('.licensed field tritv’s for North I Carolina. Th.c-se trials trill begin j November 17 and will run through the week until nil hounds have been ran. They will be held on the ,1. P. Grimes farm near Salisbury. and headquarters oT the club will be at the Yadkin Hotel. S. G. Setzer. of Salisbury, secretary of the State citilj, in making the announcement concerning the event, states that lie will bo glad to hear from anyone in terested in this class of sport. From all indications this will be one of the large it meets of the kind ever he'd south of Virginia. Virginia is the home of the national beagle club which lias held trials and bench shows at Alidin. Va„ for years. | Judges for the Salisbury trials will be J. YV. Scott, of Elkon, Mil., assisted in the 111-inch class by C. T. Gardner, of Salisbury, and in, the ■ lp-inch class by I. I. Wade, of Lincolnton- Mr. Wade is president of the State club: John Wn’ton. Jr., of Statesville, is vicc-presklent ; S. G. Setzer, of Salisbury, .secretary treasurer. The club was organized in Salisbury in the spring of 11124 and ;since that time has held two spring trials and one licensed A. K. (’. trial. Inquires about the coming I rial have bier.' received from New York. Maryland and Kentucky. Century Supply of Potasli. The American farmer of the future will be independent of. Europe for his supply of potash. This prediction is made by chemists of the I'nited States bureau cf soils. A new process has been developed for making potassium sulphate front she vast quantities of m green sand in New Jersey. Delaware and Maryland. The process was not commercially practical until it was found that alum, alumina, edict's, and glaucosil. a new earthy absorbant, could be manufactured ns by-prod- , uets. The new. process consists of j extracting the raw material with sul-. phuric acid. Those engaged in the I experiments at Odessa. Del., say that the deposist are ideally located in re spect to transportation by rail or water and can be handled with steam shovels. Eight Hours for Housework. Miss Eloise Davidson, of Ames. lowa, estimates that more than 00 per rent of the rural homemakers do their own housework. Housework in the average rural home, she says, re quires G1 hours of labor each week, I which takes no account of outside work such as care of poultry or gar den. The most time is spent in cook ing—l 4 hours. Dishwashing, clean- „ ing and care of children come next. Each 'of the latter tasks require ten hours. Ironing uses five hours of the rural homemaker's time, washing four, care of clothing three, general management problems three, and mar keting problems two. t On the basis of these figures. Miss l)avidson prints out, the average country woman spends a little over eight and a half j hours , work every day on her house duties alone. Find Temple of Ashtaroth. The University of Pennsylvania’s expedition at lieisan announced the discovery there of the Temple of Ashtaroth, the Philistine" sanctuary, where King Saul's armor was hung as a trophy after his defeat at the battle of Gilboa. The building was ob'.ong with three columns on each side. In the corner stone were found several deposits, among others ingots of “plectrum," a mixture of gold and silver. TIMES-TRIBUNE PENNY ADS. ALWAYS) GET RESULTS (HRv Jnv |®g sj? ' tjF itj i 1870 Barony FROM SCHOOL TEACHER TO GREAT EMINENCE A young man who was brought up on a farm in Western Pennsylvania studied diligently and qualified for district school teacher. Further pur suing his studies and teaching, be managed to save up enough money to put him through medical college. Af ter the Civil War, he began the prac tice of medicine in the new oil sec tion of Pennsylvania, and often rode horse-back through the woods to reach and relieve those who were seriously ill. He was a student of nature, knew and could easily recognize most of the medical plants growing in the j woods. Later, he moved to Buffalo, N. V'., where he launched his favorite reme dies, and, in a short time, they were sold.by every druggist in the land. Today, the name of this man, I)r. R. V. Pierce, is known throughout the world. His Golden Medical Discov ery is the best known blood medicine and tonic. More than fifty million bottles have been sold in the IJ. S. If your druggist does not sell the Golden Medical Discovery, in liquid or tablets, you can obtain a trial pack age of the tablets by sending 10 'cuts i to the Dr. Pierce Clinic, in Buffalo, N. Y. - —---- - -m. m ■■■■■'■■ I ..»■ 11 'Tfin fliwnm-mtst mm IW - INSTITUTION- I J fijjrenneyvQ DEPARTMENT STORES 50-54 South Union Street. Concord. N. C. Buying a Winter Coat? Don’t Mis* Our Offerings **~k** , \ Our ( ' oat pepart ment probably isn’t tho JkM. ( most elaborate nor at v, " N J tractive; the fixtures iFASvmA T M ■' aren’t the most costly *«- rTJfCTm —but there’s VALUE %j\ and STYLE supreme \ in every garment '■f, Ik 11 In Bolivias and Smooth Fabrics \ Jtm \ The: materials an y f ! wIIIIr \) nC v ’ as or sue< *.' J) •'C-JPfflraßl cious styles of this sea _\ \ —■ son. A most interest f*V— *— -JsZpW'iP-Pl jng group is this, pricet 1 ** W $24.75 [ For every hour of the day is a Smv shoe style tliat milady must have to be in fashion. Shoes ' fl for walking, shoes for after- /(dflEsaHV m noon wear, for the matinee, for the shopping functions and for Ui\\ (lancing the newest jazz tunes. [/U rj Truly styles for every hour on \\ the clock, and yours to have at * f\ very moderate prices right JI Twenty Distinctive Styles— \ AAA to D , Ruth-Kesler Shoe Store When Will keep your home Combination shaker and comfortable even in the -aft doors designed to coldest weather, with lit— vent dust and ashes tie attention and less fuel, 1 scattering about because the Hot-Blast room. Down-Draft bums all the coal and all the gases. Holds Fire Over Night And gives you warm rooms to dress in on cold inter* nornings. Th,o Double-Seamed Steel id Machine-Fitted Doors are Air-Tight >u Tight, Yorke & Wadsworth Co. PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Oct. 28, 1925, edition 1
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