November 3,1625 fment , j Fancy >* Our Clean . ers — \ We L Use |, VQN-O -LIN | Holds tbe Color as it Cleans \ Delicate laces, ribbon sashes, | elaborate embroidery it | ; matters not what the dress or J its adornment, our Improved I process with VON-O-LIN brings your clothes back just like new, _ _ J Mail wur \J§||y PHONE 787 *27.50 , *27.50 Saves .one-third on fuel—burns the gasses and smoke, most of which us ually goes up the chimney. Ash pans to catrh the ashes. - Shake the grate without opening the ash pit door,. Loth* Hot Must Special Sale at Yorke & Wadsworth "Co.” 2-6-t2e.‘ | USE PENNY COLt^JN— IT PAYS OUT OUR WAY BY WILUAMS ' ' ' '■ 1 * ' 1111 "" ■» /voo're a Queer Bird\ /niotßvvj' queer GouT% - ! CuRUf! THERt iSviV A \ TUET VAJES l NUft/S VAVJGE.' ] , SIMGrUE MAM r AROOMO HERE tS A MtSMTSf GOOC*-FRIEWD J WHO WOULD Wf MARRV •- O' MIME, AKI A GOKft UKE. j! ' * miss vamce "Tomorrow me marrnim' iHin vnouV£> / r 1 lIF THESCOOYD, AMO VOO g E A OtRIV tt?»CK - AM’ J' ' . CORES ll MARRV LOVE , lftOM’N POP BY TAYLOR y f HENRY 60 DOWM'T6'THe } £7 THAT’S "THE PFZICe &TTf Mo -THEYfee ) “\ 4 BAX6RY BEFOREDIMMER 1 THOSE COOW6S-A J "FIFTEE/O tft AND GET SOME CAKE CSMT apiece? r 17 Cemts a gip ¥ ' ■ y Gimme A*. A y MERE YOU V 4f. f VIHV THE EXTRA HALF T ,—. f| t HALF DOZEN ) k ,AR6- N—-- V CEOT? I GUESS I'LL ) f g^WM J - t''-V '* ' :ti, V:V ■> i s 44 ' PEOPLE THE WORLD OVER ASK 4BOIT THJS STATE t tintJtx?—Fynm Page One) | The California writer who indi cated that farmers in his .section were anticipating a move to. North Caro-1 .Jilts, mentioned Salisbury as the.place j tfround w’.iteh they would like to j settle. _ His knowledge of North Car olina may be explained, however, by ! the fact that he is originally from! Richmond, Ya., according to his let , ter. ' “Received the book,*’ his letfer read, •- his reference being to "North Caro- j liua—the Land of .Opportunity," a j department of agriculture' publication, j "It is just what I want. ■Another f thing, it contained facte. I wish j yon would advise me'the best section to live ill. lam thinking of going to Salisbury. There are several fam ilies here interested l*t North Caro lina, and as I am a native of Rich mond. Va., I am boosting .the state and its people." The- California writer stated that he was interested in a .small farm, near a town, Suitable for poultry, fruit and “a Tew hogs." I Inquiries front other states, far and j near, continue to arrive, it was stat i ed at the department of agriculture. Numbers of jiereßns making inquiries have indicated that they desired to settle in North Bardina. These let ters have come from present residents t of Illinois, New Y'ork, New Hamp shire. ‘and points in Canada. A recent letter from a Winder, (la, school pupiTstated that her grade was? making a special study of North (Car olina. Mint asked for a -map and other information about this'-state. -Instances of North Carolina thrift and prosperity, which have been pub lished in thi newspapers, account for many of these numerous inquiries, in the opinion of department of agricul ture officials. Some of North Caro lina’s agricultural activities have evi dently been related in foreign 'news ; papers, probably through the ukeliange j,< f newspapers, the department be lieves. although it has no direct evi dence of such an explanation. x Among recent; agricultural aotivis ■ ties whieli have received publicity and whitfi. it ht believed, are partly re sponsible for tbe 'widespread interest* ' in this state, was tic shipment for ■ farmers of this otate of a million j pouiuls of poultry; the marketing, I'traugh the department’s services, of > ( 3,(500,000 eggs fer North Carolina , farmers, at a saving placed at live, ; cents a dozen, or a total of *13,000; tbe department’s certified hatcheries movement, by which it is hoped to produce in North Carolina next year a millibn or more baby chicks-of cer l rifled stock: and shipment from this j Statd during the past season pf 13,- | 500 carloads of fruit and truck. In | addition to these carloads, it was said i at the department, 18(5,808 express packages of lettuce, green beans, cu cumbers, picklets, carrots, etc., were shipped from the Wilmington (dis trict. ' It was pointed out that North Car olina, from lfl2o to 1825, jumped from fifth to second place in the Union in the number of its farms, Texas alone leading this state; that the Farmers' Federation, lire., ha* made remarkable progress', in .western North Carolina; and that western, piedmont and east ern North .Carolina are coining to be ; recognized as'being adbiirabl.v adapted for farming, partiwflar crops fitting ' each section. ! ~ — . Careful Treatment for Orchards. Lexington./ Nov. 3.—(#)—Fifteen ■ home orchards in as many ebmmuni ! ties have been treated recently with ■ I’-henzine, to -controll peach tree bor- ers, reports ('. A. Sheffield, farm agent in Davidson comity, in which : county these treatments have been - given. More than 3.000 trees have been i treotetk and farmers are beginning to ■ realize that orchards respond to care. ■ as well as livestock and (Tops, says • Mr. Sheffield. The orchards are «cat - tered over several townships and the » treatments and results should prove •<cf much value to those farmers fto ■ forested in better kept crchjirds, Mr, Sheffield believes. THE CONCORD DA£Y TfttftUNfi NO DECISION YKT v FROM MORRISON Former (bneraor Not Talking Poll tics New He Says. Charlotte Observer. “They've had me running for (everything from. United States s*r. x ate to the stute legislature. I don't know which I’ll select," former ■Governor Cameron Morrison humor ously replied Hi-t night when asked about the latest report .that .he was \ scheduled to run for the legislature in Mecklenburg county next year. I He added that he is not talking politics declined to .make a statement as to his thoughts with reference to the last or any of the other "booms" that have been started to get h ; m into politics again. Governor Morrison said lie had not seen the, recent stories emanat ing from Raleigh and putting him in,the gederal assembly next fall. He. indicated amusement at the many things some of the papers have been printing about his ruaning for this or tHat office, intimating that sinee "they” have started him oat, then b- is up to "them" to stop him. He appears to be enjoying the con nections “they" form for him ir. ef forts to draw him out on subjects political, ■> Wants to Stay Out. He -aid that be had not talked politic* with several people ffie is supposed to have conversed with along such lines in the past few i months and that newspapers stories along such lines were mere. speeu-a ; lotion. “I prefer that ‘they' speculate and i ’.cave me out Y>f it,” he said, inti i mating that he has a right not to be i precipitated into a political decla ration. so far in advance of any , election in the state. Z i Aged Man Has Neck Broken In Fall ! From Frnnt Porch. Salisbury. Nov. 2.—George Catnip, , eldery-(citizen of flic Liberty church . neighborhood, ten miles east of Jsalis , bury, broke his neck today in a fal' on his front porch. Mr. Camip and his wife alone at the old home Where'they had resided since youtlf. 1 Today he was found prostrate on the porch with his head hanging off, the edge of the porch and an ii vc-ti ' gat ion revealed that his neck ‘w as broken and death hail probably come nstantaneously,. : , He was uiwin !i() jtears„' ol<] arut j had recently .been ill" ill health'.»ia f partially blind. One brotUu/r of: the deceased S. JjL,Cnmi|»n iiW*Tin' Salis bury. The 'nKzi takeis place dny morninjr fiY>m liberty ;chth-i-h whe,rc Air. C.inup held" mem-] hm-sliiu since .a hov. ‘ , r, >,Syfiji&j , Thu StnziHte Ox^ugf. i , Hlorj of Ijtrfiyy-iiiinßiVa; • ni tuWn. t Js v V'. . feljrjSays Her Back Night Bnd J&ay”—Least Noise Up set Her. Better After 4 Taking Cardui. r, " 1 f, baifk tnil’t RigHt and day,” ' says Mrs. C. L. Eason, of R. F. D. 1, this place. "I • ached -and ached until I, could hard ly go. I ftlt weak and did not feel anything. My work was a great burden to me. I just hated to do up tbe dishes, even. I was no-decaunt and extremely nervous. “My mother, had taken Cardui and sfie thought it would do me good. So she told me to take it My husband got me a bottle and I began on it I began to, improve at once. It, was such a help that I continued It until after the baby’s birth. “I took eight bottles and I can certainly say that it helped ine. It is a fine tonic. It built me up and seemed to strengUiefi me. I grew less nervous and began to sleep better. “I can certainly Tecommend Cardui to expectant mothers, for to me it was a wonderful help. ... In every way I felt better after taking it and I think it is a splendid medi cine." '•** Cardui is purely vegetable, and contains no harmful drugs. For sale everywhere. NC-162 CWQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOQ I Let Your Next Battery Be An EXIDE Use the Bsst Stewart gSrfHAKLES P. STEWAtfT NBA Service Writer Wf ASHINGTON Jutlson [ Yy - iChurchtll, Welliver, much ! • - bettor known as "Jud" Web liver, who has jugt retired as White House chief clerk to become pub licity director for the American Petroleum Institute, got his start «s n public character by disagree ing with President, Roosevelt. • • * JUD was Washington corre spondent for the Munsey puhli „ cations at the time. One day the president sent for the nsvrspa- ’ p?r mi'll, among them Jud, to out line, for their benefit, a’ scheme he had doped out looking towifrd a so lution of the country's railroad problems, just then pretty nuttier- , ous and acute. Concluding, he looked expectant iy at hiR auditors, awaiting their Vferdict evidently in full confidence that it would toe favorable. / It was. Presidential plans sel dom are looked very closely in the *0» th Presklent Roosevelt’s was itrcei ed. almost unanimously, with j t=-"L ■ -:-*******■***♦ * A(iRICULTURAL COLUMN * * * (Conducted by R. D. Goodman) * * ♦ ;*-It ****'#»'****♦ Sup]))' incut Recommended for New Crop Corn, either Snapped or Hogged Down Sulfa!* For Hogs Weighing from 75 to 125 pounds each Flsli meal . 100 pounds Wheat Short.': 400 pounds I Slop mixture 500 pounds Feed one and one-half pounds of the above mixture to end 100 pounds live weight of the hogs. (1000 pounds live weight slioul d re ceive 15 pounds of tlie above mixture once daily in the form of a thick slop.) / 7)61) addition Ao .the above, they : Akjilli! cither "liiTve 'tite rtfii of a corn "ifiß dr be supplied, V'itb all the siiap paßi'eni they will twice, daily. ’flElc following Jinineral ipixture sbii il be kept before them at ail MilWrgi Mixture. ft)M| "ooitattdiys-UE Ijuesiane jl'T® i'c.iuds. m . . tfohm- n '‘'J A\’hen the n* ( get a number Nts us si im times might be \expected, the' subscriber is i iclined to givo to :i f«*w na-sty reniarks. Sohietimes he* “ba\dH out” the girl at the* switch boavjj* Jilyt ’ iHiulent afqjcv i<*-- Fhflt* l .-*♦••■ Wl ftl-I ci'aled, their significance, should deter in- angry subscriber. Here is one -f wjlieh the Cleveland Press tells:--- "in Colil)tibus, (.Mis aHuvry fltumiett Was working «n a ear in bis garage, tlie door* being closed. He was ov-j lerccitte by, carbon monoxide gas from I'd diflaitst. ‘ Monoxide poison acts quiokiy. The victim felt tiipiseif fainting, but stumbled to the ‘ tele phone and removed the receiver. As lie did so lie collapsed with a moan, ami was unconscious. Miss Emma Kuhlweiu was teje-l phene operator,who answered -Num ber please I' when the light appeared j on liyr board. It was one light i among ’hundreds, (n the course of a i hard, itay's work. Rut the operator beai tl the groan, just as she answered ! the isgnal. and she received no other j response to her repeated calls. She* EVERETT TRUE BT rONIIQ as conis- A”s |, I --,J rs": IT' ' NOW,. XOOP. -foeTU THAT XOC WANT TOR* j THCS-is's Lots oy it out Hisfte m , Svs&c /etl er* entn uniastic ncciaim. Annual, uui not quite. Jud was glumly silent. * * * UTIITH. WELLIVRR," said the IVI colonel, severely, "what do you think of my pro-, gram?" A. 'A "I don't .think much of It." re-, joined Jud. “Wh-what!" stammered the presi dent, aghast at such lese majesty. "You don't? W>y not?” [ "Before you can do a thtng to ward straightening out the trans portation tangle,” Jud. who had specialized* on railroad news for years, "you've got to have a valuation of all the com panies' properties made, and you don't ray a word about that-tY A PRETTY hectic 15 minutes followed, but Hie upshot was that Jud "sold" his idea to President Roosevelt. It really was the origin of the evaluation of America's railroads which has been going on ever since. Sena tor La F'ollette introduced the bill, but it was Jud who won for th* undertaking its first pcssidentP ' ~ knew that something was wrong. "Miss Kuhhvein called the assistant chief operator, and presently the chief operator joined the consultation. The three const have said. 'Well, it s none of our business. la-t's keep the traf fic moving ami let that one light burn.' Rut they didn't. One of tiiem called the police department while Tjio other two checked over the numbers and located the address. The police emergency ear was ready to stant when the address was Hashed, and Sir. Gunnett's life was saved. “Telephone company records ate full of such incidents, "In all fairness..- dontt use that smart quip again about the telephone operator. It isn't ✓ true, and .it's rather cruet; ’ Some Good Tongue Looseners. Start a good tongue, twister going at the next dull jiarty you attend. See if it will not create a little ex itemeut. Tongue twisters ;are , riot • only good fdf this purpose, but they aid one's speech by helping tu make his utterances more di-tinct. - are some good ones: ’ • ~ Two toads totally tired tried' to i (lot to Ted berry town. 4-..s\#am swam over the sea : swim. * snyun swam swam back : I wifi suslun, ,-yvan. Jgtt'dndtf;' -if- haddock, a biaek -4* b’ack spot on the] ft'Wfe pf ’Cblaek laflldock. iLflillffJfapihg round tlie room; ] Jenrt, Jfyt* run, or the cat wmL A ( lutttlrj .Moltgage Blanks, 2 fajijj • cciir?.-»r’'2nc a dozen, at TfEWSHf Times Office. rs FwTffip 1 BUILD Peoplo ha**; 00^0 : cold^.mQg^ : .Ww«rlley lack resistaitee and are not adequately nourished. Scott's Emulsion ; . . •/ j rich in vitamins supplies the ! I weakened system with ! i nourishment that helps ! restore resistance. ' Build tip your strength yw vith Scott’s Emulsion. | Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 25-23 I BBMHBniSHaB NetO'forVs Newest Equal Distan^^orrT'^TcilH.ilY^ BSS& ta oP All transportation *. 1/WIUIIWJ VJJ lines at our door/ _ fSS'te&f’Jl Times Square the most important- Manage tiotor objective n the world v , PaaSCsT!3 ! ■iritn grin .jia.jj Jia an II i.'rMLnjML—— I KAYSERS HOSIERY \ V.' All the New Season’s Colors A Pure Thread Silk Stocking that j Will Wear . ■ U Light Weight, Medium Weight and Heavy Weight r | Kaysers Slipper Heel Stockings I | the First in Fashion | PftHMOND - FLOWE CO. DELCO LJGHT j |; Plants ~an| Batteries ! g Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- j J nating current and Washing Machines for Direct oT A.l- | ternating Current. . - , t . "“itf | R. H. OWEN, Agent f > —Phone 669 Concord, N. C. WOOOOOOO °° OO0 0 00 °Q^^ % •**»; HAVE YOU*SEEN THE SIMMONS’ NEW GRACELINE all-steel beds? In \\ liitc, Copper Oxidized and Beautiful Wood Finishes? > Embracing the new shape post and tiller made exclusively By Simmons. Come and see Them Today H. B. WILKINSON Out of the High Rent District Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville China Grove II - ■ B CYLINDER REBORING ; AVe havf installed a ltoltler Hebe ring machine so that »c can re- H* [bore the Cylinders of car# and tit new piston#, rings itnd wriwt. pins fe , without removing the motor from the frame, thereby suviug a large C ■* lubor charge. Just give us a trial and convince y.mmdf. Jr f ' M We carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, Tubes. Piston Rings and ’ * I Pins, Uusco brake ’lining, tS part on Horn.-, Prei<t-0-Lire Battericw, tj < . Whiz Auto 8oaj» and Polish and Genuine Ford Parts. r "« '• 1 ;j: : V- v * iV -- J” SITDEISAKEK SALES AND SERVICE —‘ | * Auto Supply & Repair Co. I* HONE 828 * jjl . * '< * r'• - ■ ■■ ■ PAGE SEVEN

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