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PAGE FOUR ? W. M. Editor The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use (or republics tion of all news credited to it qr not otherwise credited in this paper and also the lo cal news published herein. All rifhts of republicadon of spec ial dispatches herein are alas reserved. 3 SpSial Representative FROST, LANDIS A KOHN 225 Fifth Avenue, New York Peoples' - Gas Building, Chicago IW* Candler Building, Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Concord, N. C. k un der the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES In the City of Concord by Carrier: One Year $6.00 Six Months 3.00 Three Months 1.50 One Month r .50 Outside of the State the Subscription Is the Same as in the City Out of the city and by mail in North Carolina the following prices will pre vail: One Year $5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1.25 Less Than Three Months, 50 Cents a Month All Subscriptions Must Be Paid in Advance RAILROAD SCHEDULE In Effect June 28, 1925 Northbound No. 40 To New York 9 :28 P. M No. 136 To Washington 5:05 A. M. No. 36 To New York «, 10:25 A. -M. No. 34 To New York 4 :43 P. M No. 46 To Danville 3:15 P. M. No. 12 To Richmond 7:10 P. M No. 32 To New York 9 :03 P. M. No. 30 To New York 1:55 A. M. Southbound No. 45 To Charlotte 3:sfi P. M No 35 To New Orleans 9 :56 P. M. No 29 To Birmingham 2:85 A M No 31 To Augusta 5:51 A M 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 Train No. 34 will stop in Concord 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. f BIBLE THOUGHTf I X —FOR TODAY—I II Bible Thoughts memorized, will prove * 111 jg| oncelesa heritage in after year* jdj 1 AN END TO WORRY:—Be care ful for nothing: but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. Aiul the l>eace of God, which passetli all un derstanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. Philippiaus 4:0, 7. WILL COTTON PRICES STAY DOWN? Immediately following the latest government report on the size of the 1925 cotton crop, prices broke about $0 a bale within several days, how ever. prices rose again, indicating that the “trade"’ helieves the govern ment estimate is too high and that prices for the staple eventually willl be higher. Writing in Commerce and Finunee, Theodore H. l*rice expresses the same views. Mr. Price is recognized as a cotton expert and Ids views arc ac cepted as sound. The total of ginning- up to No vember 1, he says, does not sustain the government's estimate of total production. The giunmgs report shows that only 1,079,000 bales were ginned between October 18 and No vember 1. lie points out, which is .only 140,000 per working day for the period, “and the'per diem rate is so low that it suggests a reduction rath er thun an increase in the productive expectancy." An interesting view of the price trend in cotton is thus’ex pressed by Mr. I’riec: "'There is, indeed, sonic evidence that the trade is coining to believe that higher prices arc inevitable be cause the money in which the value of all merchandise is expressed is de clining. This decline in the value of money commenced With the beginning of the war, and has been intermittent ly in progress ever since.’’ Pointing out that It now takes about 81.60 to buy what would have cost 81 before the war, Mr. Price says that, “in round figures this means that a present price of-10 cents is the equiv alent of about 12 cents in the money of the pre-war period. Therefore there, is some plausibility in the argil- I cent that 19-cent cotton is no dearer now than 12-cent cotton was in 1018." And Meantime, of course, the uses of cotton are increasing uti'd the de mand for it continually goes up. The export movement thus far shows a gain of about 811 per cent, ou last j year's figures, and, says Mr. Price:' “If it continue to increase ut this rate and our domestic consumption amounts to about 6,000,000 bales, as ' now seems almost certain, there will be no surplus, ot cotton this season. Therefore the price level after New ■ Years will probably depend upon the ' popular view of next year's acreage and production.” I’KOfKCTING Tllft .MAN WHO I .', “TAKEN A CHANCE.” with ‘“Mind” crossings L SjtD severely criticised and in many in ! atandes arc timid* ,to pay dearly for them! in]law suits. , States are spend ing millions’. In,l >lltoitetwlit/ grade .■crossings ami (tie diminution is also penally to t|* railroadt*! And yet the public seemingly is not, disposed to Wflto precautions in keeping! with the. f precautions required of the, railroad*. It ii Nesting the public millions vt . ; dollars to protect the man Who “takes a chance.” Grade crossings are bad, to be sure, but they are bad instances because the person? using : them arc careless. j Figures recently carried in the I Greenville, 8. C., News show that , “between two-tbirds and three-fourths | -«f the grade crossing accidents that occur in^the United States occur at ‘open' crossings; that is crossings at which there is a clear view each way. * • Most of the accidents occur In day time, and in ab&ut one in seven such accidents the motor ear actually runs into the train.” The News points out this interest ing fact—most accidents occur at crossings that are not considered dan gerous. That means Just one thing— people are careless. “The fact that fewer accidents occur at the more dangerous crossings,” says The News, “may mean that upon approaching a crossing known to be dangerous or trceacherous, the motorist feels the need for exercising a greater caution, while at the open crossing he feels that the need is not so great and may become actually careless.” In North I’aroliua the new high ways for the most part arc free from grade crossings. Similar plans are being used in other States which have a building program. The best way it seems, to eliminate the grade cross ing accidents is to eliminate the cross 'ngs, for the public apparently is not concerned enough in the matter to use common sense. Persons who are willing to take chances with grade crossings think nothing of bond issues to raise money to eliminate them. They could save themselves much if they would use sense enough to be careful at the crossing-. BILL TO STERILIZE 1 NWED MOTHERS German Urges Weak-Minded Girl Parents of Illicit Babes Be Made Sterile. Berlin, Nov. 13.—A resolution has been presented to the Reichstag which if translated into law would make compulsory the sterilization of un married mothers. Dr. Boeters, author of the resolu tion. has evolved what lie calls a "de fective class" which is wide- and sweeping It includes deaf and dumb or blind children, of mentality below the average: “morally irresponsible’* adults, ami those afflicted With heredi tary blindness or deafness. This lat ter class would be iiermitted to marry only after a certificate of -operation had been issued for them. The resolution further declares: "Women and girls who have borne more titan one child whose father can not be determined are to be examined, and if it is found that their mental ity is below normal are to be made sterile or kept) in public institutions until they are jpast the child bearing age.” It is provided that criminals who consent to the operation will be pur doned. Should normal persons be sterilized by careless or malicious doc tors, a long term of imprisonment is provide,} for the doctors. Dr. Boeters has long led a move raent in Germany for a drastic ster ilization law. Deputies in the Reich stag point out that even if it were possible to adopt such a law the prob etn would still be to determine what a normal mentality is. A group of bureaucratic physicians could hardly judge, they insist. It is not likely that the resolution will receive more than perfunttpry at tention during this session of ttie Reichstag. The bill, its author in sists, already lias such popular sup port that his wishes will become law at the next session. BROKER REGRETS. “KINDNESS” TO GIRL Charges She Beat Him Astor Supper and Ride. New York Mirror. “She asked me for a ride, a supper and a lean—and then assaulted me.” Milton Levy, real estate broker. No 47 IV. 42ml St., told Magistrate Ob erwager in West Side Court yester day. "He took me for a ride, gave me supper, and then insulted me,” said pretty Gloria Fay. 18, No. 77 W. 92nd St., cashier in a restaurant. Levy had put a charge of disorderly conduct against the girl, alleging she had asked him for a ride on Broadway from 86th St„ to 72nd street. Then, he stated, she said she would appre ciate being invited to supper. After the popper. Levy said, the girl asked him for,a loan of 8-0 and on his re fusal broke her Timbrel la over his head, heaved a paving block and a dry battery at him. \ The Magistrate placed Miss Fpy under SSOO bail and committed her to . the Florence Crittenden home. Dun’s Trade Review. , New York, Nov. 18.—Dun's to morrow will say: No percentiblc le-sening o{ busi ness confidence resulted from the . Co'lapse of stock prices early this, j week. The primary cause for the re action was within th market itself, speculation having been carried to excess and during the period of read ■ justment in that quarter, attention temporarily was diverted from some of the best industrials news of the year. Another large gain in the un , filled orders of (he principal -steel producers has added substantially to the accumulating evklencra of com mercial progress, while the prospect of extensive buying of railroad equip ment in 1926, which is stressed in current reports, further strengthens sentiment. Results disclosed in fi nancial statements bf various eor norations, moreover, lutve exceeded estffuates and resumptions of ong ■ 'e’erred declarations of extra _ puy • meats show :.fk*L proeperinix eondi- Hoa* jpretoi'il in different lines. There , are. lit fact, few dlo-oHlart notes in , dispatches from the leading trades and geographical sections of the ' country, adverse phases being Ike vx- Wcekly bunk eleurings 89^)12,199,- : 000. f* e4i MHfWti / 1A HI-'j Published by Arrangement with First National Picture*, Inc, and Frank / Lloyd Production*. Inc. ' CHAPTER fcXVIII From Dawson City the Yukon flows in a rforthwesterly direction toward the International Boundary, and although the camp is scarcely more than fifty miles due east of American territory, by the river it is ninety. Since the Yukon is the main artery of travel, both winter and summer—there being no roads or trails—it behooved those malefac tors who fled the wrath of the Northwest Mounted Police to obtain a liberal start, for ninety miles of dead flat going is no easy run and the Police teams were fleet of foot. Time was when evil-doers had un dertaken to escape up-river, or to lose themselves in the hills tc the northward, but this was a desperate adventure at best and had issued in such uniform disaster as to discour age its practice. Tha Police had won the reputation of never leaving a trail, and, in consequence, none but madmen longer risked anything except a dash for American soil, and even then only with a substantial margin of time in their favor. But yie winter winds are moody, the temper of the Arctic is uncer tain, hence luck played a large part in these enterprises. Both Rock and Doret were sufficiently familiar with the hazards and the disappointments of travel at this time of. year to feel extremely doubtful of overhauling the two McCaskeys, and so they were by no means sanguine of suc cess as they drove headlong into the night. Both teams were loaded light; neither driver carried stove, tent, or catnp duffle. Sleeping bags, a little cooked food for themselves, a bun dle of dried fish for the dogs, that was the limit the pursuers had al lowed themselves. Given good weather, nothing more was needed. , In case of a storm, a sudden buz zard, and a drop in temperature, this lack of equipment was apt to prove fatal, but neither traveler per mitted himself to think abput such things. Burdened thus lightly, the sleds rode high and the malamutes romped along with them. When the late dawn finally came it found them far on their way. That wind, following the snowfall of the day before, had been a happy circumstance, for in many places it had blo.wn the trail clean, so that daylight showed it winding away into the distance like a thread laid down at random. Here and there, of course, it was hidden; under the lee of bluffs or of wooded bends, for instance, it was drifted deep, completely obliterated, in fact, and in such places even a seasoned masher would have floundered aim lessly, trying to hold it. But ”Po leon Doret possessed a sixth sense, it appeared, and his lead dog, too, had unusual sagacity. Rock, from his position in the rear, marveled at the accuracy with vhich'the woods man's sled followed the narrow, hard-packed ridge concealed beneath the soft, new covering. Undoubt edly the fellow knew his business and the officer congratulated him self upon bringing him along. They had been under way for five or six hours when the tardy day light came, but even thereafter Doret continued to run with his hand upon his sled. Seldom did he ride, and then only for a moment or two wh£n the going was best. For the most part he maintained a steady, swinging trot that kept pace with the pattering feet ahead of him and qaused the miles rapidly to drop behind. Through drifts knee-deep, through long, soft stretches he he’d to that unfaltering stride; occasion ally he turned his head and flashed a smile or waved his hand at the man behind. Along about ten o’clock he halted his team where a dead spruce over hung the river-bank. By the time Hock had pulled in behind him he had clambered up the bank, ax in hand, and was making the thips fly. He sent the dry top crashing down, then explained: “Dem dogs go better for li’l rest. We boil de kettle, eh?” Rock wiped the sweat from his face. You’re certainly hitting it off, old man. We’ve made good time, but I haven’t seen any tracks. Have you?” ~ “We see ’em bimeby.” “Kind of a joke if they hadn’t come, after all—if they’d really gone out to Hunker. Geel The laugh would be on us." “Dey come dis way,” ’Poleon stoutly maintained. Soon a blaze was going; then, while the ice in the blackened tea bucket was melting, the drivers sliced a slab of bacon into small cubes and fed it sparingly animals, after which they carefully examined the dogs’ feet ahd cleaned them of ice and snow pellhts. The tea was gulped, the hardtack swallowed, and the travelers were under way again almost before their sweaty bodies had begun to chill. On they hurried, mile after mile, sweeping past bends, eagerly, hope fully scanning every empty tangent that opined up ahead of them. They made fest time indeed, but the im mensity of the desolation through which they passed, the tremendous seal* upon which this country had been molded, made their progress seem slower than an ant-crawl! Eventually Poleon shouted some thing to the trad under runners, &ut into them he*couM not read much significance. It was an encouragement, to be sure, buts nev ertheless, he still had doubts, and fhoie doubts were not dispelled un til Doret igain halted hi* team, tUI i • 777 mt concord Daily trironr time beside the cold embers of a fire. Fresh chips were scattered un der the bank, charred fagots had embedded themselves in the ice and were frozen fast, but ’Poleon inter preted the various signs withotft dif ficulty. “Here dey mak’ breakfas’—’bout daylight,” said he. “Dey go slower as us.” “But they’re going pretty fast for all that. We’U'never get them this side of Forty Mile.’* "You don’ spec’ it, do you? Dey got beeg scare, dem feller. Dey rtin niiF so fas’ dey can.” Forty Mile, so called because the river of that name enters the Yukon forty miles above the Boundary, was a considerable camp ‘prior to the Dawson boom, but thereafter it had languished, and this winter it was all but deserted. So, too, was Cudahy, the rival trading-post a naff-mile below. It was on the bars of this stream that the earliest pion eers had first found gold. Here at its mouth, during the famine days before the steamboats came, they bad cached their supplies; here fhey had brewed their hootch in the fall and held high carnival to celebrate their good luck or to drown their ill-fortune. Reck and his companion pulled up the bank and in among the window less cabips during the afternoon; they had halted their dogs before the Mounted Folice station, only to find the building locked and cold- The few faithful Forty-Milers Who came out ttt echange greetings ex plained that both occupants of the barracks had gone down-river to succor some sick Indians. Rock was disgusted, but his next question elicited information that cheered him. Yes, a pair of strangers had just passed through, one ot 'them an activff, heavy-sCt fellow, the other a tall, dark, sinister tnan with black eyes and a stormy de meanor. They had come fast and they Trad tarried only long enough to feed their dogs and to make some inquiries. Upon learning that the local/police were on the main river somewhere below, they had'held a consultation and then had headed up the Forty Mile. “Up Forty Mile?” Rock cried, in surprise. “Are you sure?” "We seen ’em his informant declared. “That's what made us think there was something wrong. That’s why we been on the lookout for you.. We figgered they was On the dodge and hard pressed, but we couldn't do nothing about it. Ydu see, it’s only about twenty-three miles to the Line up Forty Mile. Down the Yukon it’s forty. They been gone mos’ two hours, now.” “What do you want ’em for?" an other bystander inquired. “Murder,” Rock exclaimed, short ly; then he heaved his sled into mo tion once more, for 'PoleOn had started his team and was making off through the town. Down into the bed of the smaller stream the pursuers made their way and up this they turned. Again they urged their dogs into a run. IVtook some effort to maintain a galloping pace now, for the teams were tiring, and after some mental calculations Rock shook his head doubtfully. Os course, his quarry was at a disad vantage, there being two men to one sled, but—twenty-three miles, with a two-hour start! It was altogether too great a handicap. JThe lieuten ant had figured on that last forty miles, the last five or ten, in fact, but this change of direction had up set all his plans and his estimates. Evidently the McCaskeys cared not how or where they crossed the Line, so long as they crossed it quickly and got Canadian territory behind them. Barritig accident, therefore, which was extremely unlikely, Rock told himself regretfully that they were as good as gone. Two hours l It was too much. On the other hand, he and ’Poleon now had a fresh trail to follow, while the flee ing brothers had unbroken snow ahead of them, and that meant that they must take turns ahead of their dogs. Then, too, fifty miles over drifted trail* at this season of the year was a heavy day’s work, and the McCaskeys must be very tired by now, lor neither was in the best, of condition. In the spring, when the snows were wet and sled run ners ran as if npon grease, such a journey would have been no great) effort, but in this temperature the steel shoes creaked and a man’s muscles did not work freely. Men had been known to play out unex pectedly. After all, there was a pos sibility of pulling them down, and as long as there was that possibility the Mounted Policeman refused to quit. Rock assured himself that this flight had established one thing, at least, and that was Pierce Phillips’ innocence of the Courteau killing. The murderers, were here; there could be no doubt of it Their fran ticV haste confessed their guilt. Friendship for the boy, pride in his own reputation, the memory of that oyation he had received upon leav ing, gave the officer new strength’ *md determination, so he shut his teeth and spurred his rebellious limbs into swifter action. There was no longer any opportunity of riding the sled, even where the trail was hard, for some, of the/ Police dogs were ljmpjfi* and loafing in their collars, This :was? indeed a race, a Marathon, a* twenty-three mile test of courage and endurance, and victory would go to him who, could tall into fullest response his last uttermost ounck of reserve power. , r Doret ted promised that he would •- * ;% •I show his trail-matr how to travel and that promise he had made good| all day he had held the'lead, and without assistance from the lash. Even now his dogs, while not fresh, were fat from exhausted. As (of the man himself, Rock began to feel a conviction that the fellow could go on at* this rate eternally. Luck finally seemed to break in favor of the pursuers; acciaent ap peared to work in their behalf. The day was done, night was again upon them, when Doret sent back a cty of warning, ahd, leaping upon Bis sled, turned his leader at right an gles toward the bank. His companion understood the meaning of that move, but the Po lice team was less responsive to command, and before Rock could swing them he felt his feet sink into soft slush. f “Dam* overflow I” boret panted' when the two teams were safely out upon the bank. “You wet your feet, eh?” Apprehensively the officer felt of his moccasins; they were wet to the touch, but as yet no moisture had penetrated his socks. “You yelled in the nick of time,” he declared, as , he dried his soles in the loose snow. | “Dem feller got in it ankle-deep. I bet we fin’ camp-fire soon.” This prediction came true. As the travelers rounded the next bluff they . odor of burning spruce and came upon a trampled bed of boughs beside which some embers were still smoldering. “Jove I That gives us a chance, doesn’t it?” Rock panted. His companion smiled. "We go in’ start travel now, for sure. Dey can’t be more ’n a mile or, two 1 ahead.” Down upon the river-bed the i teams rushed. With biting lash and sharp commands the drivers urged them into a swifter run. Rock was forcing his dogs now; he made the smoke fly from their hides when they lagged. He vowed that he would not permit this French Ca nadian to outdistance him. He swore a good deal at his malamutes; he cursed himself as a weakling, a quitter; anger at his fatigue ran through him. • The travelers were up among th# hills by now. Occasionally they phssed a deserted cabin, home of some early gold-digger. Valleys dark with night opened up to right and left as the Forty Mile wound 1 higher, deeper into the maze of rounded domes: the Boundary was close at hand. The hillsides hid their feet in black thickets of spruce, but their slopes were thinly tim bered, their crests were nearly bare, and the white snow gave off a dim radiance that made traveling possi ble even after the twilight had deep ened. By and by it grew lighter and the north horizon took on a rosy flush that spread into a tremen dous flare. The night was still, clear, crackly- it was surcharged with some static force, and so calnt was the air, so deathlike the hush, that the empty valley rang like a bell. That mysterious illumination in the north grew more and more impressive; great ribbons, long pathways of quivering light, un rolled themselves and streamed across the sky; they flamed and flickered, they writhed and melted, disappearing, reappearing, rising, falling. It was as if the lid hid been lifted from some stupendous caldron and the heavens reflected the radiance from its white-hot con tents. Mighty fingers, like the beams of polar search-lights, groped throdgh the voids overhead; tum bling waves of color rushed up and dashed themselves away into space; 1 the whole arch of the night was lit as a world in flames. Red, yelloiq, orange, violet, ultra-violet— the tints merged with one another bewilderingly and the snows threw ' back their flicker until coarse print i would have been readable. Against that war of .clashing colors th* mountain-crests stood out in-silhou ette and the fringe of lonely wind twisted trunks high up on their sad- * dies were etched in blackest in]*; It was a weird, an unearthly el feet; it was exciting, top.'*/ As al ways when the Aurqra js in (tin play, the onlookers/marveled that SBOh a tremendptfs exhibition of en •rgy could continue in such silence That was the oddest, the mat im pressive feature of all, for the crash | of avalanches, the rumble of thun def, the diapason of * hundred .Niagaras should have' accompanies !#ueh appalling, > phenomena. It fanned odd indeed that th/ whin* of sled runners, the scuff of moo caains. the panting of dogs, shouM be the only audible, sounds. |p (To be continued) I ' 17" 77 . ■ 1 "" MhAiiVUii DINNER stories 4" 1 ■ '■ '■■■ ■ Th* F*et: “How noon we *re for gotten when We are dead!’’ / ' Hie Politician: “How soon we are dead wtien we are forget ten.” Tommy: “Paw, what is the Board of Education?" Mr. Figg: “In the days when 1 ' w«it to school it was a pine shingle.” ' “He made an unusually good af ternoon speech.” “What did he say?” “He said: ‘Waiter, give me the! £heek\” ' Mother (to little girl who was \yawning): "Fanny, you have your mouth open.” Fanny (unconcerned): “Well, I opened it” “WeH, Nancy,” said Uncle John, Who had just come on a visit, “come and take u walk with me and show me your town.” “Alwight,” agreed Nancy has two ice cream parlors—l specks you want to see them first, don't you?” No Job for the 8. P. C. A, V “It says here,” remarked Mnrphy, looking up from his paper, that a bi-01-o-gist who wanted to study the effects of alcoholism kept a guinea pig under the inSuence of whiskey for four years.” “Think of that!” exclaimed Flaii nagaa. “A*’ only yesterday a man was tryin’ to tell me that scientist# are cruel to animals!” ! - , MAY KIN AGAINST HI'SBANU FOR CLERK Mrs. Stella Health May Turn in and I Make Jess Her Subordinate. I Kinston, Nov. 12—Frjfcnde of Mrs. Stella Health, deputy clerk of . Superior Court here, have been pledging tlieir xuport if she will run for the office of clerk- Mi's. Heath de clares she is considering it,..but In timate acqiiaintanceH say she i facetious, about it. Her opponent would probably be ter husband; Jesse T. Heath, who lias held the office a number of years and is a mainstay of the Democratic party it Lenoir county. "It would be great.” Mrs. Heath, admits, “to sit back and bo s' Jesse. Os course, I would hi to him as my deputy. 1 would do the gudding around ami Iniy-gaging with every body having u Vote,” Tho couple, 1 grandparents, arc exceptionally imp ular. 'X)nly Mrs. Heath could get the jow away from Mr. Heath,” their friends say. I-cnoir already has two women officials. N *S The finest import ed Flower Bulbs, Narcissus Hya cinths, Choice Tu lips and Laities di rest from Prance and Holland. —at— # Pearl* Drug Co. On the Square Phone 88 Stuffed Country Style Sausage Liver Pudding, Native Pork Chops and Pork Ham Sanitary Grocery i, Company , PhoyiSs 686 and 676 / . y l ’* /j fegwor^TmtroroUurtub- | J!' X: i • / PSAHL DBCG COMPANY wEll-harris furniture coJ lAn Attractively Furnished Dining || | Room and Good Appetizing Food | | Make the Day Complete life* ■ ; 4 » » Unexpected good fortune in the receiving of new ! ' ;!| shipments promptly gives our patrons great advantages in ; I the choosing of new Dining Room Furniture. Whatever < ! ma J’ be the need of yoitr dining room, we believe ] ; | you wilt hardly fail to find just the suite you want. | A very distinct personality is possessed by a charm- i[ j | ing' new suite that is similar to the above illustration in \j! X walnut. It is a correct and harmonious reproduction of ] j ; | tbe Chippendale type, unusually well built and imposing ! !|! for the price that is upon if. We can sell cheaper. ]!| Conle in and'look* ouf line oyer. We own out own U i building no rent to pay. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO.j \a - s\ /j \ (Mce Jj/uHtiitalm C r Improved working ditions increase the pos-Lfl sibilitics of turning your ■■ energies into cush. Equip ZJI your office with lighting E—l IV fixtures that aid yonrLd eyes. We can help do this. Inspect our fix-pUn “Fixtnres of Character” R | S W. J. HETHCOX lj I \\. Depot St. Phone 6«« K Ner Better Service § Realizing it is our duty * X to render better service, 8 O we have added the latest 8 8 model to otir a 5 equipment which is at 9 g your service day or night. X PHONft 8 f Wilkinson’s | Funeral Home I CONCORD, N. C. 1 Saturday, Nov. 15.'1025 ■ * -n Charlotte Speed way Tickets Buy your tickets now* We have good seats in Grand stand A. STANDARD BUICKCO. Opposite City -X" Fir.* * Department §; \ Add the Comfort# of u | PLUMBING to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do * mutjh or more than any oth er one thing toward your home a comfortable and • convenient place in which ter. live. It costs you nothing toy get our cost estimate. v. tt-f, *' | *. i. u i , ,i|K ■ Concord Plumbiilg Company * North Kerf St Phone 873
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1925, edition 1
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