Wednesday, Nov. 18, 192 S
r ■
M Ninlaiiaaa
employees
of the
Chy
It is a noble calling to
be in the public service.
| W e desice also to be pub
> l* c servants. Our service
‘ car stops weekly at the
i homes of our best citi
- s : Jens. Their exacting de
mands are met here be
cause we are particular
that “Refreshed by Bob’s”
I means the finest work
manship and courteous
;' service.
MASTER CLEANERS
Phone 787
Handsomely Engraved Visiting Cards,
100 lor from $2.35 to $4.00, includ
ing plate. From old plate, *1.50
per 100. Times-Trlbune office, ts.
OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS
- £2 , eg/is wotvftw vebse\js\ —.\s o
5S ~ hsto a Good swift M I
yn GALLERV EsnfWNCF K ' CK IM BFftTtmsr] r W W ffife
- . I-TRowiM STUFF AT J :=, C 0
MOMtMTB W&D UKk TO LN£ OVER TEN CEUTS,
A BAG OF PEANOrS, FIRST IN LINE AND ONW AN HOoR To WAIT! ijH4 , j
’ r
MOBTN POP BY TAtLOII
r 6ffcee CMCK M£T THAT ]l HE ISNT WOIiTH Yf HE CttJJMNW jg it t OonT KNcfcf vWf s
tfffiL NEXT OOOR HE / Hts 6ALT AT THE ] b
HASN’T BEEN HIASELF // OFFICE- JUST SITS WONT EAT ATOMS J <siß>_fc (SET Kiß dbtf.
AT AU.-1 WISH He W AROUND RSADW6 ATMEA|JiM|A\© 1 UK6 THAT L y
WOULDN’T LET HIS / > POETRV ABoOT HE SOES AROWVp M WAS NEVER SO
HEART RON AW AT" Juta/ LOVE AND X THE HOUSE WITH foouSH IN MY
...
Wh*t Ex-Governor Morrison Said
About Editor Wade H. Harris
Charlotte Observer. v
“Mr. Harris Is the only real mod
tgF man of my acquantauee left in
the world," former Governor Cam
i eron Morrison said, affbr stating lie
would “speak of him as he is, and
the influence he has exerted in this
Community and eorrtrnonweatjh.” He
expressed gratitude that the Cham
ber of Commerce should carry
through the suggestion of E. K.
“Preston, W. W. Watt and C. O.
.Kuester in honoring “this extremely
modest geatlemanf’ saying he would
i attempt to express the high esteem
jin which he is held.
I “Mr. Harris is net ojrly n modest
man, but he is a man of great kind
liness. Throughout the years of big
j newspaper work. 1 doubt if he has
•ever availed himself of the oppor
tunity. given under the name of “the
I freedom of the press.” to degrade or
I insult any living man,. He is too
| bravo to take the opportunity of
(cowardly attempting to misrepresent
any man or woman.
‘‘For many years he lias partici
pated in every great contest in the
state aud I will say this, that be
does not have a single personal
enemy living tonight.
Nothing Weak About HinL
“He is modest, kind and gentle,
but he is stubborn. Ido not know
a man in the state who know more
People and stands more squarely on
the principles in which he believes
than does Wade Harris. There is not
a weak thing about tfiiU. Through
the great paper he edits, he de
manded a strong and progressive
government in the state and when he
had won he did not desert the man
he had selected and helped to put at
the head of that government. His
soul has long hnil n window for my
1 eye and mine one for his, it seems.
"The toastmaster gave great praise
to my administration. It never could
have succeeded’ but for the never
failing rapport of The Charlotte Ob
server and Colonel Harris. When
Hegiot Clarkson, Boy Kirkpatrick,
Carey Dowd and Wade Harris were
talking about the matter of, my can
didacy they came near shutting me
out at one time. It was then that
Mr. Harris would say: *Cam, don’t
let them scare you. They can't beat
you to sgve their lives-’ •*"
Mr. Morrison related that after
he was elected he tried to do what
he had promised to do, and at every
period of doubt The Charlotte Ob
server, with. Wade Harrin at the
helm, helped him to tight out his
problems.
No Editor so Often Right.
“No other editor in North Caro
lina has been so often right as Wade
H. Harris,” said the former gover
nor, after saying there may have
been men at times who inay have
written a greater or more brilliant
editorial tbun he could. “He knows
the people, if very close to them. He
is a democrat in the broad sense of
the word. He does what he thinks
| is- best for the welfnre of the people.
His judgment of men is remarkable.
"There is mo business so big that
he fearis it; none so little br to re
ceive his 'contempt. He loves all
legitimate business. The multitudes
never njiake him join jn an attack
unjustly and they have never eoiued
money enough to make him fight
against the rights of humanity.
’Die.se are strong words,, I admit,
but they are unquestionable.
Influence in State.
• “Mr. Harris loves North Carolina
and its people and. it was a genius
who suggested this gathering of re
spect. He has long been an influence
in the state and has probably in
fluenced the editors more than any
other man. for they read and re
spect his words. No expression of
esteem can measure up to the good
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
he has done for tifis city and state. |
«* “He is not Only a great edfth*T A
noble North 'Carolinian, exemplify
ing and disseminating the spirit of
democracy, but he is a lovable neigh
bor, a staunch, sweet and sympa
thetic friend, loyal at every turn.
“Wade H. Harris has about all
the virtues any yfuvmain can have in
his life. I am told the Chamber of
Commerce has given this token of
esteem in which we hold this brave
and powerful editor.”
AD JOKES
New York Mirror.
Adv., (In photographer's window)
—Our special Fall offer, babies ss.so
» doxen. - i -
Adv.—Before you put yoflr baby
on the floor clean it with a vaentjm.
For Sale—Brand new baby carriage,
only used once, black kid inside.
•Wanted—Young man to work in a
doll factory making eyes.
Gas Co. Ad.—Mothers, if the chil
dren get their gloves wet, hang them
over a slow-burning gas fire. Most kids
blister and shrivel up if left on the
radiator to dry.
Salesman Wanted—Chance for am
bitious men to sell new toys With
foolish expressions on their faces
when pushed. \
Wanted—Girls as artists models to
pose in the nnde from 18 to 25 years
Wanted—For privae school, unmar
ried teeacher with ,3a chjklrefi at
present, maximum capacity 30.
Ad. —If your husband doesn’t like
fresh fruit, get him stewed.
Wanted—Foreman to run large fac
tory and 300 girls 15 miles from city.
Adv.—Butcher has legs of lainb.
pigs feet and cows liver.
Adv.—The Ladies’ Benevolent So
ciety has discarded clothing; call for
inspection.
Models Wanted—Girls between 18
and 22 who can wear “nine” gfookipgs
and “four” shoes, and have a gracewul
appearance.
Wanted—Plumber to put me in a
bath tub.
Wanted—Good garage man to han
dle cranks.
For Sale —Mahogany table -slightly
damaged by a young couple breaking
up their home.
For Sale—Eight-room house- and
dog kennel by lady who has lived in
same for the past 15 years'.
SAYS SHE HAS AT
LAST FOUND
* RELIEF
Mrs. S. C. Fisher Gives HERB
JUICE Credit For Her Good
Health Now.—Though She Is Past
64 Years Old.
"After suffering for years, during!
which time I used all kinds of medi
cines and treatments without getting
any relief to speak of, I am thankful
to say that today I feel better in ev
ery way than I have for year.- and
though I am now past 04 years of age,
I feel in perfect health today and give
your HEUB JUICE credit for the
good health I am enjoying today,”
said Mrs. 8. C. Fisher, of No. 137
Vance S., Concord, N. C., in u state
ment made to. the HERB JUICE man
a few days ago.
Speaking of her condition prior to
the time when she began to use HERB
JUICE, Mrs. Fisher says: “For a
number of years I was in a general
run down condition, brought on by a
chronic case of stomach, liver and kid
ney trouble and ft looked as though
nothing would -relieve me of this
trouble. My food would not digesl
seemed just to lay ip the stomach and
ferment, causing gas -to .fqSrm, from
which I would bloat terribly and I
would, suffer day and night. I was
also very nervous and felt tired and
worn out all the time. But. as bad
as J was your‘HERB JUICE seemed
to help me from the start anfi before
I -had used all of my first bottle, I
fell a great deal better; I continued
taking this medicine regularly and.
after having lifted just two bottles I
now feel as though I had never been
sick a day in my life. My. bowels
are now as regular as clock work,
nerves arc in line shape, have a tine
appetite and can feel myself gain in
weight and strength every day. and
as I said before that although I am
past til years oUII feel better in ev
ery way than I have for years. HERB
JUICE is aH that is claimed for it
and is indeed a wonderful medicine
and I. do not hesitate in the least bit
to recommend it to all my friends.’’
HERB JUICE is sold and,guaran
teed to give satisfaction or ffibney re
funded. in Concord by Gfltam Drug
Co. Also F. 'LI. Smith DWkg Co., Kifti
napolis, N. C.
goffioooooewooooodbbooeodo
I Let Ydiß j |
Next Battery
Be An i
EXIDE I
Use Only Ae I
I Bead I
Mk
f .
»m in in ffEirwtui T
About the most dejected looking
food in earth is prunes.
Every man thinkß he can cure a
cold or raise a family until he gets
oue of his own.
Might as well put something by for
olj age so you can retire then instead
of just give up.
Don’t raise your boy to be a bur
glar. He might catch peuumonia
staying out late at night.
Being "a,self-starter is almost as
important as being a self-stopper.
A fool only thinks he knows while
a wise man only knows he thinks.
(Copyright. 1925, NEA Service, Inc.
A CONNECTING LINK
Between the Old South and the Old
North, Says Mrs. Davis. |
Hot Springs, Ark.. Nov. 17. —C4o I
The National Society of the United,
States Daughters of 1812 is a "con
necting link between the past and the
present” and “also a connecting link
between : the old north and the old
south, Mrs; Samuel Preston Davis,
of Little Rhck, president of the so
ciety toda/ told the United Daugh
ters of the Confederacy in welcoming
them to Arkansas for their, thirty-see
omf annual convention.
After recalling to the delegates that
her father was a Confederate soldier
and her grandparents pioneers of
Arkansas, Mrs. Davis said that the
organization she represented was a
connecting link between the old south
and the old north, because Mr.-. Flora
Adams Darling, born of New England
parents, who formed the National So
ciety of the United States Daughters
in 1812, was the wife of a south
erner who, became a Confederate sol
dier. ,
Mrs. Darling, who was a lineal de
scendant of John Quincy Adams, mar
ried Edward Irving Darling, of Louis
iana, shortly before Fort Sumter was
tired upon, she said. He left her in
the north and joined the Confederacy
as a Coloneel. Soon he was severely
wounded, and she was permitted to
come sotith under a flag of truce to
nurse her husband lack to health. He
afterward was transferred to the
blockade service and perished when a
vessel loaded -with cotton was sunk
by federal shore batteries in the
Mississippi River.
Mrs. Darling, she -said, delighted in
acts of kjudness to all ex-Coufederhtes,
“Let The Man Do The
Wooing!” says Elinor Glyn
If passion’s too strong it may not be returned,
1 declares famous authority on love
DO not lavish- all caresses the
moment your admirer demands
one," Elinor Glyn advises in a
; straight-forward talk to the mod
em girl in December “Smart Set”
“Give only enough to leave him
desiring more.
“It requires a mighty lot of in
telligence, and an array of re
-1 sources, to enable any woman, tar
nished or pare, to hold a man in
these days I Ami I would advise
them all to try and curb their emo
tions when the man seems to be
growing into the sun, moon, and
stars for them.
“Try to use moderation, because
here is a terribly cruel fact about
love between this sexes. When on
either side i| becomes a burning
passion it seems Jto lose the power
to draw a return. The tarnished
ones who have at last learned to
love are often capable of this inor
dinate passion—and if repulsed by
one man they are quite likely to
feel the same sort of mid longing
for another. This is the result of
ffieir promiscuity for the first
veers of their adolescence.
WBRErt XBUE Dt CONDO
FRISNU, You'Ve: J WEU _ T 1
|
■—«— » ..!■ .<o| t.
I JPBI - . m Jk*JL {
*X»rmi %gjis
~&y CHARLES P. STEWART i
NEA Service Writer
Washington, Nov. 17.—There ig, no <
use talking. President Coolidge is onto ]
his political job. Waiting his mes- ‘
sage, for the opening of the 09th
Congress, to whom did lie turn for ;
advice concerning the best tilings for
him to say? Per whom did he send
one of the White House automobiles,
to come up and confer two or three
tijn&i a day? To whom did he show
tKat message, clause by clause, asking
anxiously, “What do you think of
it?" as be set it down? With whom
did lie compromise, making liberal
concessions, when at first they didn’t
quite agree?
Was it that old wheel horse, siena
tor Curtis, Republican leader on the
flpor of the upper house? Or Senator
■ Butler, the President’s own political
I manager and close personal friend?
Or Senator Moges or Senator Smoot
'or Senator Wadsworth or Senator
Willis, among the rock-ribbed-est ad
minlstrationists of them ill?
No 1 None of these! Thbu to
whit true-artd-tried dependable did
the President turn?
Ife turned to Senator Bdritb. wild
isn't dependable abit. What’s the
use in turning to a dependable, guar
anteed to stick through thick and
thin whether lie’s patted on the back
op nos, when there’s a thorough un
dpehdable to be flattered up and
converted to dependability, o£ pos
sible?
Why indeed! observed the Presi
dent. Get out the best auto we
SinvC in the garage and bring back
the senator from Idaho.
Teacher: “What do you mean by
saying that Benedict Arnold was a
janitor?"
Student: “The book says that after
ins banishment he spent the rest of
his life in abasement.”
and after the death of Jefferson Da
vis, slic had two life-size portraits of
the president of the Confederacy
painted, one of which the presented
tp the Confederate Soldiers Home at
Beauvoir, Miss., and the other to Wil
liam and Mary College at Williams
burg. Ya.
■ Regarding the society's connection
between the past and the present, she
said there are 200 daughters of the
War of 18H2 enrolled in the society.
•'Never forget that no matter
how yielding and docile a man may
appear to be, your hold over hint
is only while your fascination for
him lasts. The male spirit is es
sentially insubordinate and de
mands freedom, and if it begins’
to feel the curb, a great force of
subconscious resistance is aroused
which eventually Phases away love.
“So, girls, never ask your lovers
or husbands questions —or make
them give a minute account of
their time when absent from you.
If you do they will certainly He to
you after the first or second occa
sion, and nothing bores men more
than to be obliged to He. Do not
boss, your fiances or turn them into
menials to obey your requests. You
were not such fools as to do tins
while the chase was on. So, why
suppose it is all right when yon
become engaged? You have to be
even more careful to be attractive
then than before, because some of
the male hunting instinct is ap
peased, and in consequence he mag
become'less keen.”
oooooooopoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooobobobbfißJMp
■ii mi mum in i m
: FANCY DRY GOODS WOMEN’S WEAR I
SHOES OF REFINEMENT
Six New Styles This Week 1
FOR TOUR APPROVAL If
jj Discard yoiir shaffy shoes and get info a’ pair of these neat dressy ?®
new ones and get the benefit of a full season’s wear, they’re the pret- ft
| tiest bits of footwear you have seen and the most stylish we have ft
a ever shown. May we show them to you ?
$3.95 to $9.00 I
! IVEY’S 1
“THE HOME OP GOOD BH6EB" 1
1 FEEDS AND MORE FEEDS 1
8 Chowder for your hens ft
x Cow Chow for your cows ft
1 Omolin for your horses and mules •
O Pig Chow for your -hiogs ft
2 We carry groceries of most anything to eat. 8
PHONE 122 - X
CASH FEED STORfe 1
| WHERE QUALITY COUNTS I
I We Want Your Thanksgiving Ordeal
for Turkeys and Poultry I
Me have several hundred Turkeys and Chickens aad tliqy ■ arirft
cheaper than Ptork and Beef. . ft
Why not buy the BEST when the Best is cheaper than the rest Ift
Try some of our Heme Slade Bauer Kraut, Home Made
and Home-made Liver Mush? ft
Live at Home and Trade at the "Old Home Town Store.” ’ -fl ft
C. H. BARRIER & CO. ft
DELCO LIGHT 1
Light Plants and Batteries j
; ; Deep and Shallow Well Pumps for Direct or Alter?®
i nating current and Washing Machines for Dirdct or AT|ft
R. H. OWEN, Agent 1
; -Phone 6Q9 Concord, N. C. 1
X^OOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOCXXXXXXXXXXXaOOOOQOOtIOOOOOOojI
Above Floor Furnace A
At last ajurnace has been designed to be
placed above the floor. This is the solu-
don o{ the heating problem for small home lßaßißß|ir
owirt>. No longer is it necessary to wor- HHftftH
ry along with stoves. HpHHftHH
\ou may have a furnace without the |k
pease of a basement.
ALLEN’S PARLOR FURNACE OW&Sapit
No room heater can compare with this
wonderful new Furnace above the floor, which heats by
air circulation. Come by and see it.
1
This invention is the latest development in the stove indu&
try. Come by and see it even if y&u do not intend to buy. L<Sf
us explain how it works.
H. B. WILKINSON '
Out of the High Rent District
Concord, Kannapolis Mooresvillc China Grovfe
I CYLINDER REBORING 1
H "’e have installed a Rottler Reboring machine so that we ca» re- ft
H h°re the cylinders of cars and fit new pistons, lings aud wrist ping ft
['j without removing the motor from the frame, thereby saving 4 Inffftft
1,4 labor charge. Just give us a trial and convince yourself. 'W&U
We carry a full line ofjOpOdrieh Tires, Tjjbes, Piktou Rings and ft
{;;{ Pins, Rusco brake lining, Spartim Horns. PreSt-fl-Llte ButterlML®
Whiz Auto Soap aiid Polish aud Genuine Ford Piqta.l j ft
§j
I Auto Supply* Repair Co.
'I rifONE 22W • est
PAGE NINE