»L- 'vj ' , <T\-
Tuesday, Nov. iO, (925
Proper Cleansing
■ J \ Jwvdlves almost in-
Li jyr \ finite details.
There is the necessity for un-
MHB' derstandtßfg- the changes in
fabrics constantly coming out,
the late shades and modes in
colors; the new styles and
I j vtpys of draping.
J /.. Attention to these gives
I US < our cleansing the up-to-date
-7 \ . v ness that makes it distinctive..
. . y •. y
/
rtione7B7
OUT OUR WAY , S BY WILLIAMS
—* —*—.—* —.—.—.—^^
' ’ O>4R BuNKttt. *
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MOM’N POP BY TAYLOR
(f Sav oar- i notice why don't you \ /"vvell i've Been A''
( ThERE’S A YOtWOSLAOy
( ViaTIWS AT TyTE’S- , ( MOM lT IS HER J ACQUAINTEDF*/ fto HFff I
nrri V «SS*£«KJ
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XOUI.D QST EMOUSH OT A. R|$HT- I'U> L DOUAR -AS SOON AS PoP SETS )
) 60 OVeR AFTER [ HOME WITH THE CAR I'LL COMB If\ f>\
SHEDAPPREOATE J ( VIHILE AND _> \ OVfcR AND TAKE YOU BoTh TZ>J >c m )
MEYHODIST PROTESTANT
“ .. APPOINTMENTS READ
Confcrcnca Gcca on gainst
the booty of Evolution.
High Point, Nov. i).—Greensboro
was selected a* the place for the neat
f meeting of the North Carolina annual
confercnmed Cue Methodist Protes
tant Church, which adjourned-here to
day after having been in session since
last Wednesday. ,
Before adjournment, the ccnferenee
joined in the’anti-evolution movement
by adopting,a resolution going on rec
ord as Being in opposition “to any
theory being tanght in any of the
schools of our state which are sup
ported by, taxation that unites tnan
by blood to the lower animals,”'
The action of the Conference did
not apparently meet the approval of
I>r. T. H. Lewis, president of the
general conference of the Methodist
Protestant.. Church, who was quoted
as having said in ail address to the
student body of High Point College
last week that he did not believe the
state should tell it oteachers what
to teach. • However, so far as could
be legrned Dr. Lewis, who was one
of the’l'hief speakers during the ses
sions here, made uo comment on the
adoption of the resolution.
Jibe conference closed this afternoon
after accepting the report of the sta
tioning committee which assigned pas
tors to the various charges in the
stat,e.
The following are some of the ap
pointments :
Concord—H. F. Fugleman.
Caswell—lt L. Hetlicock.
Charlotte-=-n. F. Surrat.
Faljston—J. hi. Morgan.
Friendship—Atlas Ridge.
St. Paul, Greensboyo—J. H. Mor
ton. 1
y Grace. Greensboro—L. C. Little.
Haw River—W. It. Reed.
Midland —J. D. Cranford,
Mockqviile—J. T. Sisk.
Randolph—A. O. Lindley.
Roberta—N. Brittain.
Spring Church—A. D. Shelton.
THE CONCOftft &AILY TRIBUNE
Tabernacle—Edward Suits.
Left it, the bands of the president: -
J. M. Ridenhour, C. B. Way, H. S. i
B. Thompson, Lloyd E. Cagje, W. B.
Surratt. R. E. Andrews. Robert 1 1
Lloyd, H. B. Buckner, J. W. Quick,
E. G. Cowan.
1,1 a ,
ELECTRIC CBEB'
FOR THE FARMER
Seven Jobs That May Be Done Better
by Power.
, Raleigh, •Nov. 9.—The value of elec
tNc service on the farm cau be com
puted in terms of economy of mosey,
time or, labor resulting from its use,'
says the North and South Carolina
public utility information bureau.
A recent analysis of the consump
tion of electrical energy for typical
farm tasks shows theSe average fig
ures :
one and one.half
to two and one-quarter "kilowatt '
hours or current are required to miik
one cow for one month, depending up
on the operator and size 'of herd.,
Electric milking /produces 100 pouhs!
of milk in an average of 10 minutes,
as against 84 minutes by hand milk
ing.
Separating Cream—Cream from 100.
pounds of milk can be run through!
the separator for .028 kilowatt-hours
of current.
Pumping .Water —The’ average farm,
equipped with a pressure tank can 1
pump water electrically on a chh
numption cf 20 kilowatt-hours a
month.
Grinding Feed—One-half kilowatt
hour per 100 lbs, rye; one kilowatt
’hour per 100 pounds oats
ter kilowatt hour per 100 pounds of
corn; 1.1 kilowatt hour per 100
pound* of bone.
Cleaning Grain—One and one-quar
ter kilowatt hour per 100 bushels, N
Hay hoisting—o. 4 kilowatt hour
per ton put in mow.
Wood sawing—One and one-fifth
kilowatt hour per cord.
NOW DRIED EGGS
ARE THE LATEST
Electric Process, Keeps Them Fresh
Indefinitely
Raleigh, Nov. o.—The electrical en
gineer has successfully applied electric
light, to increase the lien's output of
eggs. His colleague, the chemical
engineer, has now developed a pro
cess, already in commercial use, where
by large numbers of eggs can fee
kept for indefinite periods without the
use of c<dd storage or preservatives
and which, it is <xaid, promises to
have a material efifeet upon the seas
onal egg markers of the country.'
The new process, says the North
arid Soutli Carolina public utility in
formation bureau, produces perfectly
dried eggs in I lie form of a powder,
and is based upon the maintenance
of a precise tempo ('at are' through the
application -of electrical heat.
Rotating disks of screening are
made to pass through a tank into
Which the fresh eggs have been
pcured. Each screen takes tip, a
film of egg, and is carried by an
elegJricaUy operated mechanism
thr'nog’i 11 drying chamber; in which
electric hearts and fans keep tlie tern;
perature at, an exact point. The
traveling disk emerges from the dry
ing chamber bearing a thin wafer of
completely dried egg, and then is car
ried into contact with revolving wire
brushes, which brush off the egg in
granules into a receiving hopper, af
ter which the disk automatically re
turns for another load.
Eggs treated by this process will
keep indefinitely, take up little space,
and can be used in almost any form
of cooking.
Fertilizer no Good Without- Soil
Humus.
Raleigh, .V. Nov. !).—-Tarheel
farmers have been taught 11 lesson in
farm management this year that
seldom crime-, to the experience of
the average farmer iu a lifetime.
■The, value, of humus or vegetable
matter in# the Aiil has for nil time
been proven. There is no further
room for argument. Reporfssfypm all
over North Carolina berfr out rcce,nt
statements made by Comity Agent
W. G- VPager of Rowan County.
"The dry season has emphasized
the importance of humus in crop
production,” say- Mr. Yeager. “111 a
careful check on a considerable num
ber of farms in Rowan County this
fall, we found low yields, fuir yields
ami high yields, all in the same
neighborhood, and on farms that re
ceived the same amount of moisture
throughout the season. There was
but one an-wer to the variation in
yields and that was the productive
OGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
I Let Your j j
Next Battery I
Be An
EXIDE
Use Only the
Best ij;
I power of the soils and the factors
that*enable a soil to produce crop
growth. On soils- of low humus con
tent, we had without exception, low
crop yields. Here,,eon* produced from
tnrec to ten bushels per acre and the
quantity of fertilizer used was of
.minor importance. Where \ue had a
! fair umount of humu , corn yielded]
1 from fen to 20 biashels per acre and
responded in a fair degree to the
fertilizer applied. Where we had a
high humu content, the corn yielded
from 20 to 40 butibe 1 w per acre and
the soils responded to the fertilizer
uaed
“In the first group of farms, we
had nu n who expended sl2 per acre
for fertilizer for cotton and gathered
Iflia than 711 pounds of lint from the
ucre. In the third group of farm-, we
had men who spent sll per acre for
fertilizer and gathered 500 pounds
of 4int per ucre.'’
cTrhis survey, states M* Yeager,
ctftifinned S)s faith that a
in-humus, can use the essential
plant foods Hyided to if, while a soil
poor 1 11 bum as will not be able to
use the essential plant foods and tlje
solution as he .sees it,- is, more,
legumes on more acres 011 nnuy j
farms.
N. ( Cotton Growers Sales Corpo- j
ration. :
Rnleig'.i, Nov. !).—C4 s )—As a sub
sidiary organization of the North Car
olina < 'otton Growers Co-operative As-'
speintion, the North Carolina Cotton
Growers Sales Corporation has been
organized here with a capitalization!
of SIOO,OOO. The incorporators of
the sales organization are B. XV. Kil
gore and U. L. Blalock and Others.
Dr. Kilgore is president and Mr. Bla
lock general manager of the cotton
growers association.
The organization, it is stated, was
.organized to meet a need apt filled by
file ec trim growers,association and it
will nindle only cotton of the asst)-1
elation. There will be no profit m
it for tile organizers nor Will they
draw any salaries. The benefits will
be all for the members of the associa
tion. y
Mr. lilalock states that the organi
zation of this sales corporation will
give the association an opportunity
to compete for business of the mills
on an even footing with the cotton
merchants who sell direct to the mills
on “their call. The sales organiza
tion is expected to prove of great
bein' tit to the association in closing
Contracts for cotton of its growers
with tile mills wtiich u-e the product.
How He Got Wise,
Monroe Enquirer.
■M. S. Baueoin, good fayinef and
citiz, u of Goose Creek township, one
day last wcok_told the first and
onjj chattel mortgage lie ever gave.
It was about forty years ago when
as a young man he and his wife began
housekeeping. Aii agent, came aTong
and |n r aued Mr. Baticom to purchase
.1 e . el;—price $11.50.
“Money was scarce 'in those days." j
stated Mr. Hhucpm. “We needed a
clpf k. so i paid part of the purchase
price and gave a mortgage for the
balance in order to possess it. . A!
few days thmeafter an old uncle of:
; iiiide visited us. He spied file clock |
and asked me what I’d paid for it." j
*' ’Eleven dollars ana a half,' he!
was told. I
" 'Why.' said uncle, 'you could have
purchased the same clock over at I
John 1. Long's storfe for only $4 50'.“ !
“Then," continued' Air. Baucom. j
my uncle sagely observed, ‘Experience!
(ceps a dear school, but fools will :
learn in mv other, which, no doubt |
mis kept-me from inventing in l’uul,
Rubber Compuny stock qnd other get-1
ieli-quick si’iiemes all during the years !
since I purchased that clock and gave 1
a chattel mortgage.”
Charlotte Speedway Track Record is
Cut.
Charlotte,'*N. Nov. o. Ben
nett Hill set a new lam record for
the Charlotte sjnwhvay W.ere this
afternoon when lie drove the mile
ami quarter at a speed of Klfi.y mile*
an hour average. The mark was made
while tlie driver was qualifying for
the Armistice Day> race.
GVERETT TRUE 8* CONDO
SAV, MIST£R, A PIPE IN A PUBLIC I
eating- plAce is extremely
OFFENSIVE TO A GREAT ITT. ■--
V\ANV ReRSOIHS R—- 11 wetL '
OF \AJOIC44 l \a«4AT* AR£
AM ONE U 'f\bV GOING To 30
AOO.OT IT ? '
Stewards M I
WASHINGTONWif j
‘LETTER \
Washington, Nov. 9.—Judson j
Churchill Welliver, much better j
known as "Jud” Welliver. who has |
just retired as White House chief i
clerk to become publicity director for ’
the American X’etroleum Institute, j '
got his start as a public character ;
by disagreeing with President Itoose- j
velt.
Jud was Washington correspondent j
for the Munsey publicatipus at the j
time. One day the president sent for 1
the newspaper men, among them Jud, j
to outline, for their benefit, a scheme )
he had doped out looking toward a j
solution of the country's railroad prob- j
lems. just then pretty numerous and j
acute.
Concluding, he tooKed expectantly j j
al his auditors, awaiting their verdict j
evidently in full confidence that it !
. would be favorable.
| It was. Prexidenttial plans seldom j
j arh looked very closely iu the lmftth. j
I President Roosevelt's was greeted. |
almost undirmously, with enthusiastic |
acclaim. Almost, but not quite. Jud !
was glumly silent.
* * *
“Mr. Welliver,' - . said the colonel. !
| severely, “what do you think of my •
program?” '
i “I don’t think much of it,” rejoin- 1
1 ed Jud. I
“Wh-what!" stammered tile presi- *
dent, aghast at sudi lese majesty. ]
“You don’t? Why slot?" I
“Before ycu ean do n thing to- ]
ward straightening out tlie transpor- (
tarion tangle," explained Jud, who 1
lmd specialized on railroad news for j
years, “you've got to have a valuation I
of all the companies' properties made, 1
and you don't say a word about ,
that." . i
A pretty hectic 15 minutes follow- j
ed. but the upshot was that Jud “sold” i
bis idea to President Roosevelt. It 1
really was the origin of the evaluation ]
of America's railroads which has i
been, going on ever since. .Senator 1
LaFollette introduced the bill, but it |
was Jud who won for the umlertak- i
iug its first presidential support.
It Is Saving That Counts. ,
Charity and Children.
The state of- North Carolina is pro
viding a brilliant example of the j
truth of the old saying that it's not t
what you make that counts in thi 1
long run, but what you save. A re- J
cent issue of the University News let- I
ter show this state is fourteenth j
among the 4N in the total value of j
what is produced by its farms, sac- 1
tories. forests and mines annually: !
but ; t. is much worse than fourteenth i
in accumulated wealth. North Caro- '
I lina produces- at the rate of a billion
| and a half a year, but she seems to
j. be lacking in the invaluable art of
holding on to what she earns. Vir-
I gitia. producing less than two-thirds
as fnuch as North Carolina, has a
i greater total of accumulated wcaelth.
■1 However, it is to be remembered that
I North Carolina lias not: been produe
i iug at the rale of a billion and a
| half a yeny very long. That is easdy
! understood by anyone who remembers
how farms were run in this xtaie 20
, years ago. aud who knows how they
I arc run today. Twenty years ago we
j lmd few facorties and they were small
! ones. The* forests 20 years ago were
: perlinps more valuable than they are
I now, but the price of lumber was not
j as high, so the total value of the for
| est products perhaps has not decrens
jed greatly. The great growth in our
I income ax a- state is of recent date.
But observers seem to agree that the
growth iu savings bank deposits and
other barometers of a people's saving
power is not proportionate to the in
crease in tlie state's income. That is
evidence that we have learned how to
make money better than we have
learned how to save it. And until w« ,
have learned how to save it we shall
not be on the road to.real wealth.
USE TRIBUNE PENNY ADS.
j i FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEA„
2:S.:i T .it IJISXSXLLi ,-SJ i i!38m8p333T!12X3Xl 213.3.3JL3. air mnim •
:. Satisfaction for I
* a little Money
A Whole Lot of
jl Here is an oxford that is exactly right, search the world over, you
|.i won’t find a more comfortable and likable shoe for daily wear. They
j" are soft and pliable andsnug fitting through the heel and arch be- ■
i!i cause they are specialty lasted. We are showing these in both black
t. .«u... $4 0 o TO $5.50
IVEY’S
“THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES"
N 1" ~—--Vi
!jj Chowder for your hens
jj Cow Chow for your cows
Omolin for your horses and mules
i j Pig Chow for your hogs
< We carry groceries of most anything to eat.
|| PHONE 122
CASH FEED STORE
3 WHERE QUALITY COUNTS >!
It Bj
l Thanksgiving Is Near-If You Have s
3 E
I Turkeys to Sell See Us J
a We buy and sell more Poultry and farm produce’ JT
jj than any store in the city. Jj
Why sell your butter for ill) and 40 cents per pound, J
■’ when you can sell us your butter fat for 45 cents per V
... pound and save the work and worn- of churning? |
j C. H. BARRIER & CO. \
xor *00000000000000000000000000CXTVXX.IOOOOOOO'WV'x'x-x--
I DELCO LIGHT |
Light Plants and Batteries
Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter- j ,
5 nating current and Washing-Machines for Direct or Al- 'J'?
5 ternating Current.
R. H. OWEN, Agent
I I --Phone 669 Concord, N. C.
JOOOOOO °OOOOOCXXX)CCOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOd
Above Floor Furnace 7
At last a furnace has been designed to be
tinn of tlie heating problem for small home
owners. No longer is it necessary to wor-
You may have a furnace without the cx-
ALLEN’S PARLOR FURNACE
wonderful new Furnace above the floor, which heats by moist
air circulation. Conic by and sec it. v
i his invention is the latest development in the stove indus
try. Come by and see it even if you do not intend to buy. Let ,
us explain how it works.
H. B. WILKINSON
Out of the High Rent District
Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville China Grove
CYLINDER REBORING
+
ill We have installed a Rottler Reboring machine so that we can re- jjf
i bore the cylinders of cars and tit new pistons, rings and wrist pins ft
} without removing the * motor from the frame, thereby saving a largg
... labor charge. Just give us a trial and convince yourself. |j
Wf carry a full line of Goodrich Tires, Tubes, Piston lP.ugs and J
;,} Fins, Ruseo bn*kc lining, Sparton Horns, Prest-OLite Batteries, I
Whiz Auto Soap and Polish and Genuine Ford Parts. “ *
V STLDEBAKER SALES AND SERVICE *—/ fj
• Auto Supply & Repair Co.
rUONB 288
W3P33::’: wi: :c:l: :::: j l: :::: Os
PAGE SEVEN