PAGE EIGHT Big Reduction in Floor Lamps During Our Stock Reducing Sale Full Size Floor Lamps $14.95 Polychrome Stand. W eighted Base, full silk lined shades, in nig variety of colors to select from. Iron Stand Bridge Lamps Complete for $1.95 Everything has been reduced for this sale. See our goods and get our prices and terms before you buy. Hoods guaranteed as represented or your money refunded. Concord Furniture Co. THE RELIABLE FI RNITVRE STORE 110 Per Cent. Discount For Cash ON ORDERS FOR k Engraved Christmas Cards On all orders received for Christmas Cards before De- i tember Ist. we will allow 10 per cent, discount for cash p from our already low prices. We have in stock a beauti ful line of these cards, and can furnish them on a few L hours’ notice. Call and see samples. Tribune-Times Office aoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocx —:: —Eat—::— | JOHNSON’S PURE PORK 1 LIVER MUSH I ' IT IS DELIVERED FRESH EVERY DAY TO 8 YOUR GROCER 8 Price Only 20 Cents a Pound ■JtrgffiSlas -5 alirlrha.asa-g.a ' INSURE When You Start to Build The right time to take out insurance is when you start , building. Then if through any cause your building should • burn, even before completed, the Insurance will cover your loss. Fetzer & Yorke Insurance Agency I Successors to Southern Loan and Trust Co. P. B. FETZER A. JONES YORKE ■ OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC IY. M. C. A. Members Take Notice! jj THE SPECIALTY STORE Headquarters for All Athletic and Gym Equipment S. Union St. Opposite Court House j aOOOOOWfICfIfICfICOO^^MM^BMM<Me«^wi ff n^nA J Twenty fanvjufc Aulbors Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING MAILS The time of the closing of mailt at the Concord postofQce is as follows: Northbound 136—41:00 P. M. 30*-10:00 A. M. 34 4:10 P. M. as— 8:30 P. M. SO—11:00 P. M. Southbound 39«- 9:30 A. M. 45 3 :30 P. M. 135 8:00 P. M. 29—11:00 P. M. | LOCAL MENTION | Regular vyeekly services will be held Sunday afternoon at the Stone wall Jackson Training School with Kev. T. F. Higgins scheduled to preach the sermon. J. F. Hurley, editor of the Salis bury Post, was host to a party of 35 or 40 Crieuds at an oyster bake in the basement of his home Friday evening. Hr. It. M. King and J. B. Sherrll went up for the delightful occasion. Judge John M. Oglesby, who spent several days here this week, left this ' nforning for Asheville, where he will preside at regular sessions of Bun combe county court for the nett four weeks. A number of primary teachers of the county met here today in confer ence with Prof J. 15. Robertson, su perintendent of the county schools. "Primary Methods" was the subject for the conference, which was held in the court house. The Light Brigade of St. .Tames Lutheran church will present on to morrow night the pageant: The Fruit of the Thanksgiving Tree. Miss Ruth l>ry will render the lend ing part. The public is heartily in vited. Police officers report that §161.90 was collected in recorder's court Fri day. One defendant paid §93.05. paying SSO for carrying a concealed weapon. $25 for having liquor. $lO for being intoxicated and the costs in the three cases. Concord Odd Fellows. Cold Water Lodge No. 62. are to have their fu ture meeCngs in the newly completed Masonic Hall on the corner of Cor bin and I'uion streets. They have be gun moving their paraphernalia in , preparation to occupying the new lodge rooms. A1 Johnson, former professional at the Cabarrus Country Club, visited friends here Friday nig'lit. He went to Salisbury from Concord, telling i friends here that after spending the i week-end there he would go on to | Kinston, where lie plans to take up i work with a country club. I Gastonia Highs won the football | championship of the west Friday by ! defeating Greensboro 10 to 0, thereby I winning the right to play the eham | pion in the east for the State high i school championship. The ohampion l ship game will be played at the Uni | versity at an early date. Quite a bit of local interest has I been aroused over the case at Albe | marie in which X. C. Cranford is I charged with brutally handling con } victs. Cranford is personally known | to many Concord and Cabarrus per ' sons, it is said, and the progress of the trial is being closely watched in this county. Football fans and coaches through . out the state are selecting All-State i elevens now. The sports editor of t The Daily Tribune will in the near j future announce the eleven men he j thinks deserve places on the mythical team. Fans of Concord who wish to I do so are invited to send in their > teams to The Tribune for publication. > Clyde Propst, of the local game law ; commmission, states that he has is sued quite a number of hunters’ li censes during the past ten days. The , law requires all hunters to secure li • censes before hunting in this county, the license to be secured from Mr. Propst at the Citizens Bank and Trust f Company. I A. F. Goodman and D. A. McLaur - in have sold two tracts of land on > Odell street, according to deeds filed j Friday. One was to P. E. Penninger i for $550 and the other was to C. E. [ Clarke for $575. Another deed filed I I Friday records the sale of land in No. I 9 township by J. H. and P. L. Furr ji to J. M. Furr. ji The football season comes to a close I today with the Army-Navy game tbc biggest contest of the day. In the South. Center and South Carolinn play 1 in Columbia, this being the last game i for this section of the country. The Army is the favorite with most fans \ who have watched the progress of the two teams this season. Thursday afternoon has been fixed as the date for the Bazaar to be held by the Parish Guild 4>f the Episcopal j Church. The doors will open at 3 o'clock at the Y. M. C. A. and from [ that hour until 6 o'clock the ladies i will sell turkey dinners, noodles, tur f key salad suppers, ice cream and i cake. The various committees in 1 charge of arrangements have prao [ tieally completed their plans, and all i indications are that the Bazaar will 1 be a splendid affair. ; "Where did the ear hit this man?” asked Lawyer Garner when question ing the physician at the trial. ‘‘At the junction of the dorsal and , cervical vereebrae,” responded the doc tor. . The foreman of the jury rose in his seat and remarked: 'T’ved in this county for upwards of GO years and I know every crossroads but I never heard of any such place; I believe it’s a made-up case.” Miss Spinks—l did not know pro fanity was so prevalent until I drove a car. Mr. Winks—Do you hear much of [it on the road? " l! Miss Spinkß—Yes; nearly everyone ||l bump into swears dreadfully. » . I THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE gOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ _ Fifteen Year Loans 1 , i l l arp spared to make 15 year loan on Concord Property, jrii with a small semi-annual curtailment and interest at six per cent. ] I V These loans are to be first mortgage and based upon 50 per cent, val- ! | V nation of house and lot. i ij iji Minimum loan $2,000.00 No red tape, no delay, loans closed ] , ;i; within 30 days after application received and accepted. No life in- I ij X surnnee requTed. Loans can be transferred without extra cost. ;» iji Write or phone for tnll particulars. Thies-Smith Realty Company !]! CHARLOTTE, N ,C. J 1 ]l | No. 200 Commercial Nat. Bank Bldg. Phones S27S and 4415 ' ‘ i|i o. J. Thies, Pres. F. B. Smith, See. & Trcas. ] ooooooooooooooooooaoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo gOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPQ K.L CRAVEN & sons! PHONE 74 roAi £ | MoJteJ Colon 3 °oooooopoaoooooooooo6ooooaoooooooooooooooooooooo RAILROADS TO MAKE THEIR RAILS LONGER Executives Announce That It Will Save Money ami Reduce Chances For Accidents. Atlanta. Ga., Nov. 28. —As a fur ther step to bring about increaMtl economy in railroad operation, new specifications have been approved by the railroads of the country, it was pointed out here today by railway ex eeeutives, by which the length of the rails used by the railways is to Is' increased to 159 feet. This means oil increase of six feet over the rail in preseut use although the weight per | yard will continue to be the same, it I was stated here. This increase in the length of the ! rail from 33 feet to it!) feet, it wa ; pointed out here, means a reduction of Hi per cent, in the number of rail joints while it al-o will mean a see ing of about one-sixth of the'total amount of expenditure required for bolts, nuts, joint bars and spring washers used in connecting rails to gether. It is estimated that 50 cents out j of each dollar spent for track mainten- j ence goes for maintenance of joints, j ties and ballast under the point where j two rails are joined together. This, increase in tile length of the Mill therefore, will will mean a saving of I about Hi per cent, in such expendi tures as there will he fewer joint#. | "Surveys, Atlanta executives state* have shown that a large number' of the breaks and the greatest wear and deterioration in rails occur at the point where they are joined together so that by increasing the length of the rail and reducing the number of such points, the chances for acci dent due to broken rails are reduced. In addition, cars: passing over a track constructed of longer rails will move more smoothly than over a track where shorter rails are used. This, it is claimed, will result iu a saving in the wear and tear on rail way equipment. STANLY PRISON BOSS INDICTED FOR MI'RDER Cranford Alleged to Have Killed Several and Maimed Other Stanly County Prisoners. Albemarle, Nov. 27—Superinten dent N. C. Cranford, of the Stanly county chningnng camp, stands in dicted by the grand jury in two murder oases and one case of as sault with a deadly weapon. These indictments followed close on the heels of the decision of Judge P. A. McElroy this morning that mere was probable cause, he having found as a fact from the hearing that Cranford ought to be held for tria’. True Rills Returned Quickly. Pursuant to this charge the grand jury retired to their room where witnesses were examined and before noon a true bill against Cranford had been passed c(urging him with ■ assault with a deadly weapon on Henry Wooten, a prisoner who died in the camp some months ago, and before adjournment two true hills [ against Cranford for murder fad been passed and signed by the fore man. The two men named in the ‘ bills as being murdered by Cranford. were James Terry and James ; Howell, and the date of the murder charged is August 5, 1918. The Stanly ebaingang boss, wilk therefore, be required lo answer to these charges at the next term of the Superior court for the trial of criminal causes in county. Cranford promptly arranged his bowl and wga released. It is generally believed, although it has not been officially announced, that the board of county commis sions will, at their December meet* ing. abolish the Stanly county chain gang. That body has authority, at their discretion, to abolish the chain gang, that authority having been, granted by special act of the last legislature. ALICE RHINELANDER \ May still love kit She is Exported to So TcaUfy When She is Quest lotted on the Stand Monday. White Plains, N. Y„ Nov- 27. Counsel for Alice Jones Rhineland er is expected to question her Mon day on her present attitude toward her husband. Leonard Kip Rhine lander, and her desire for a lecon ciiiation with him. Alice will testify in her behalf in the annulment suit of her husband, who charges she withheld from him tW fact that she was of a negro b'ood. Lee Parsons Davis, counsel fori Alice, is expected to ask her If she] t , * -S. J i still loves her husband and hopes to return to him. She. it is believed, will reply in the affirmative. Tho lawyer refused to admit the possibility of tbc case being settled out of court. The wife, he said, is not seeking her husband's money and never has sought it. What she wants to do, he said, is to clear her self of all Charges of fraud- Isaac N. Mills, counsel for Rhine lander. laughed at the report that the young man has spent most of his $300,000 iiersonal fortune in trying to annul his marriage. "I have uo idea that he spent any '• thing like $300,000," the attorney said. "Aid certainly I got very lit- I tie of it." i A Second Term Doubtful. ( harlotte Observer. The speaker of the house of the Texas legislature has given Ma Fer guson. the governor of tile state, until December 10th to make up her mind to call the legislature in special ses sion. If she refuses, then he will I convene the body on January 4th. | If the special session is called by the 1 governor its functions may be eon ! fined to investigation of State high i way and other departments of gov j ernment; in case it is called by the j speaker of the house, its purpose 1 would be resolved into the proposi tion of impeaching the governor. As a special session seems fore-ordanled, it might npi>enr the better policy of the governor to make the call demand ed. but she is schooled in politics j under her husband ond stands back * of the contention that the war on her! is instigated by Ku Klux "left-overs” j and 5,8 legislative irreconcilnbles. She seems stubbornly set to allow these to force the extra session. There had been talk of a second term for rAIs. | Ferguson, but the developed situation | does not look promising for that. Meantime, the attorney fceneral is determined upon preventing payment of $351,900. outstanding on highway contracts, and recovery of SIOO,OOO alleged highway graft. Evidently a gubernatorial shift it, in prospect for the Empire of the South next election. The percentage of protein in Kan-' sas vgkeat this year is so great that the bakers are afraid to bake with it unless diluted with a poorer grade of fiour secured from other states. Loaves made from this “peppy" flour hit the top of the oven, they art- so light, according to the State Board of Agriculture. i ' New A'ork once received its water supply through s piDe log water main, and a log 14 inches in diameter from its first water main of 1799 was dug up in a perfect state of preservation on July 27, 1923. Dr. J. W. Turrentine, of the IT. 8. Dejia rtment of Agriculture, says that half the girls living in a Dclt extending from New York to the Rocky Mountains hare incipient goter. I FIVE GALLONS I Free Gasoline Free Air and Water With Ever y 520.00 Gash Purchase Tbmorrowand All Next Week Yorke & Wadsworth Co. THB OLD RELIABLE HARDWARE VrORE ? r ,' , ■ ■.. *■ 'V CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET , (Corrected Weekly by Clin# tc Mooee) • Figure* named represent prioa* paid for produce on the market: . . Eggs - .60' Corn 61.10 I Sweet potatoes 61.00 i (Turkeys U— .36! , Onion* 61TJ0 i Peas : 63.00 Butter - .35 Country Ham .40 f ountry Shoulder 415 Country Sides' .20 Young Chickens ... .30 Hens ,26c Irish Potatoes 61-60 CONCORD COTTON MARKET SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 2*. 1025 Cotton 19 1-2. to' 10 1-4 Cotton Seed ... .40 1-2 * ii • ■ , V,jI ! i ■ i Experts in I ♦ ' ' | J ■ j Advertising i - s ii >'. - i , r . !| What would you =>ay in advertising copy for a Cleaner and Dyer vvho i produces the finest re- j suits in America? As < satisfactory as our ser- j vice is. we realize it is j good business to adver- j tise. Though we aim al- ( ways to produce better . | drv cleaning than adver- ] rising. Rut keep on pat- i ronizing us. ! v -i; . i i i ' Phone 787 • MASTER CLEANERS The best sympathy 1 IT is only human far a fu neral director to feel sym pathetic in the presence, of bereaved patrons. But it is real sympathy when he recog- , nute* an obligation to*ee to it that the highest character of burial equipment is furnished at honest prices. Such a policy has bqgn responsible for the success of this concern. * . Typical of the burial equip* ! ment 'furnished 'by us ts the » Clark Grave Vault, recognized as a leader in the vault indus try, because it gives positive and permanent protection. WIIAVINSON’S FI N ERAL HOME Call 9—Dsy or Night _ 1 Syou couldn't- afford a new Overcoat this Winter. ! the men who plead this ex ruse are correct—the other ! •5 per cent, are shielding a J threadbare garment with a-i threadbare alibi, when they ! dtould own the happiness ) ran bring- j ; Tie"into your income stayed -trade would be stagnant— | ;. ' ' J o preyent you from having $18.60 to $40.00 i s Woolen Hose S' It’S,lnc. IN’S STORE” W aooooooqopQooooooooooooooeeooooooooooooooooooocioo ■ooooooooboooooooooodoooooooooooooooooooooooooooot COAL I || The Right Coal For the Right Purpose A. B. POUNDS | PHONE 244 OR 27» ouowooooooooooooooqoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooS fcr&fcu LT~rrL.rrrrtr.rrn:rrrEa || For twenty-eight years a factor iti furthering the de- j if velopment of this .vicinity, the Cabarrus Savings Bank \ jjj .still extends its constructive sendee and excellent facili- j | ties in the interest of progressive enterprise. | CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK 1 CONCORD, N, C. I PHONE 799 I' Our Product is Right—the Price Is Right—the Ser- |j| vice is Right, and this makes a combination Hard to Beat. ||- You'll need some Coal Soon. When you do, remem- I her we are here to serve you with the Coal that stands 1 the gaff. * ] ; Cline & Mabery Goal Co. PHONE 799 § 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 HOT WATER IN A JIFFY \ is surely a friend in need and | a friend indeed of every cook 1 Isl i match and in a few minutes S BH steaming hot water will run E.B. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Otrice and Show Room 89 S. Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W JR GOLDFISH Common Comets t Japanese Nymphs \ ' American Farttailt Shubunkins Tadpoles V Pond Snails ~, Sea Moss 1 ; Fish Bowls CLINE* PHARMACY O. iw ADS. <W Qrfd, R~*. Saturday, Nov. 2S, 1025 \ j For the Young Man A most appropriate gift is a high i grade whteb. Its lessonh in accuracy are of much value and its permanence assures a perpetual reminder of the giver. You get accuracy combined wflfi Beauty and Permanence when you buy an ELGIN.' S. W. Preslar • JEWELER

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