PAGE SIX I IsSSmImI Sf . pi a| • r ::: ?1 “Best Heater on Earth” I 1 *5 That U what our rustoinorfi who are using them sa.v about this ?t r! Buck’s Circulating Dark t Ibvi’cr. Heats two to four rooms with Its.s |..i •i fuel than one grate. Will carry fire twenty-four hours, under j.crfeet H control at all tunes. Water pan in top keeps heat moist. Cireula* \\ il tion changes the air every thirty minutes, making it pure and healthy. f*4 Beautiful mahogany finish. burned into the ca-t iron, and guaranteed |! H to last a lifetime. Ii t u< show you this heater, or furnish you the ; I names of several who are u«ing this heater. •; • 810 RFDITTIONS DFRIXG Ol’R ST o'clock this morning. Mrs. Davis is survived by her hus band and several children. She was a cousin of Mrs. 1., A. Talbirt and Mrs. W. F. Li taker, of this city. The aldermen are all set for their meeting at the city hall tonight. This will be the regular December meet ing of the board and it is reiiorted t hat several matters of importance will be presented for action by the board members. The meeting is scheduled to begin at o’clock. The regular monthly meeting of the American Leg : on will be held Friday evening at 7 :3(> o’clock at the Legit n Club Rooms. All members are urged to be present at this time as important business in connection with a now year’s celebration is to bo dis cussed. A fire chief and several regular fire men are to be elected by the aldermen tonight to serve the city for the next two years. Coder an ordinance passed several weeks ago, the aldermen choose file fire chief and firemen, the old law paving the election to members of the fire department. Sheriff Caldwell reports that one day la..oo() in county taxes, the amount being the largest in one tlay since lie has been sheriff. This is about sri.ooo more than was col lected Monday by City Tax Collector Fields foe Concord. High winds which swirled through the city Tuesday night and part of Wednesday, quieted down yesterday afternoon, resulting in higher temper atures. Although it was exceedingly cloudy early this meriting, it became clearer during the day and signs of rain are 1 yesterday. Sh'rley lames, of London, general manager of Piekford's, the largest shipping company in England, and J. T. Martin, general manager of the In. ternational Mercantile Marine Co., of Atlanta, are in the city today avrang w-itk Mr. Blanks the tour to Europe next summer, one feature being an au tomobile tour of England, Scotland and Wales. While local cotton m'Us are stand ing but a day and a half a week now, they are busy and those mills which do not operate a night shift are op erating the day shift until 9p. m. It was reported here last week that the Southern Power Co. expected to be able to lift the ban on power entirely this week, but .so far this has not been done. Defendants paid $138.40 in fines and costs in police court yesterday. In addition one man was given S2O days in ja 1 and required to pay the costs in the case and his jail fee on a charge of having liquor. On another liquor charge he was given a 30-day suspended sentence. One boy 16 years of age was bound over to Superior court on a charge of check flashing Traffic on Union Rtreet in front of the new hotel building is badly con gested today owing to the fact that the street is blocked with the single exception of space sufficient for pas sage of one automobile. Half the street is taken with building mater ials for the hotel and bank, and most of the remainder is taken with a trench which has been dug through the asphalt to connect the hotel with the water main. It. is said tkqt King George main tains a . rnstom. initiated by Queen Victoria, of sending Christmas pud dings to most of the rulers of Eu rope. These are all prepared in the royal kitchens at Windsor, from a recipe dating back to the 18th oen utry. and are despatched to tbeir des tination in airtight containers. Miss A. M. Maloney, a Cincinnati woman who in twenty years rose from a position of stenographer to the sole ownership of a proprietary medicine concern tfitk a countrywide reputa tion, has recently idsposed of her bus iness to a syndicate for a sum said to be nearly one million dollars. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE BASKETEERS TO PLAY ... FIRST GAME OF SEASON Local Quint Takes on Salisbury To ilight at Salisbury.—Conecrd Pros pects Are Good, Concord Y basketeers play their first game of the season today when they gu to Salisbury for a match with the \ team of that city. The local are not too Hopeful Jot a victory. The prospects are good for the season but there has been less than two weeks practice and the team is hardly up to mkt-soasjn form as yet. Practice this week indicated that there,will be a smooth-working five when the team work is worked into mere polished form. ’Die influx of new blood seems to have helped and the new team looks like ons of the best that lias been here in recent years. From toe lineup of the first tenm at practice Wednesday night, it look : as though Livingston Easley will bo at center, Dick and Lir.ebvrger will l>e at forward and Wolff and Harris at guard. Cole, a newcomer, sbowd up well at center and guard and will get a chance to show what he can do tonight. The Salisbury team has been prr.e ticing for a number of weeks and so that reason will have the edge oi the locals in tonight's game. Poi sons who saw them in action agaitis Kannapolis say that they have an ui. usually goo ( ] team this year. Her man Brown and Dunliom are tficii outstanding men again this year. THE TEXTILE FUTURE IS LOOKING BRIGHT State’s Cctton Manufacturers Are Optimistic. Says Hunter. Charlotte. Iks-. 2.—A more tiopef i and optimistic spirit prevails among the cctton manufacturers of tins stale today than lias at apy time din ing the past two or three years, ac cording to Hunter Marshall, Jr., sec retary and treasurer of the Cotton Manufacturers’ Association of North Carolina, who lias just returned from Pinehtirst where he attended the mid winter convention of Pile organiza tion. "With the exception of a very few mills that have been manufacturing specialties for which a fair market has existed, the mills of this section, generally speaking, have made t, money during the past two years, remarked Mr. Marshal. "In fate many of them, in order to provide work for their complement of help, have manufactured goods at an actual loss. Market conditions during re- 1 if HUNTS GUARANTEE L SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES /fbf Tyj (Hunt'* Salve and Sa»p), fail ir | II T# the treatment of Itch, Bcmb« V~ /A Ringworm, Tetter or other Itch iog skin dtsceses.- Try the treatment at ear risk. ECZEMAf} if HUNT’S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES Ji (Hunt’s Salve and Soap),fail in [ Jtjwfll the treatment of Itch, Eczema, J RlnKworagTctterorotheritch- flf / / ing akin diseases. Try thic * ' « . treatment at our risk. PEARL nRTtO COMPANY 3riQr^ The best sympathy IT is only human for a fu neral director to feel sym pathetic in the presence of bereaved patrons. But it is real sympathy when he recog nizes an obligation to see to it that the highest character of burial equipment is furnished at honest prices. Such a policy has been responsible for the success of this concern. Typical of the burial equip ment furnished by us is the Clark Grave Vault, recognized as a leader in the vault indus try, because it gives positive and permanent protection. WIIAVINSON’S FUN. ERAL HOME Call 9—Day or Night —-ffif 'yggjjtfci SALE OF AUTOMOBILE UNDER ORDER OF COURT FOR TRANS PORTING LIQUOR. By order of the Recorder's court of the City of Concord, the undersign ed will sell at public auction at the court house door in Concord, N. C., on Saturday. December sth, 1925. at 12 o'clock M., to the highest bidder for cash, the following personal prop erty seized in the act of transporting intoxicating liquor, the owner having' been convicted of said charge in open court. One Six cylinder 5-pasaenger Buick tourjng car in good condition. L. A. TALBIRT, Chief of Police, City of Concord, N. C. l -4t c. cent weeks ’have improved greatly,! however, »nd the majority of mill men are anticipating a period of reason-! ably profitable operation.” ' Mr. Marshall slated that in formal and informal discussion at the Pine httrst meeting the matter of tuxation received a great deal of considera tion. This was also true of the summer convention of the association at Asheville a few months ago. "Toe textile ifklnstry in North Carolina has developed ami prospered because our legislators in the years gone by have maintained an attitude of fairness in the matter of taxation and regulations.” declared Mr. Mar shall. sort of treat ment at life hJmni'of our legislative body, and with the interested and sympathetic moral support of the peo ple of the state generally, the textile industry in North Carolina lias reach ed the point where it consumes more cotton thatl does any other state in the Fniou. It has played the Old North State on the map industrially nnd economically and the taxes, at reasonable rates, have helped to put North Carolina in the forefront of the states in the matters of educa tional progress and assistance to the helpless through our eleemosynary in stitutions. "Thi> ta«l legislature, pressed for founds, imposed upon the cotton mills nnd other industries in the state taxes heavier than had ever been imposed before and the disposition manifested by some members of the legislature has caused fiuite a bit of uneasiness among cotton manufacturers. There is little doubt in the minds of ob servant mili men and economists t'aat burdensome taxes will put the brnkes on the development of the industry in the state, and in the end, produce less revenue to the state as well as put a handicap triton the industry. § PRICES SMASHED ON 8 RINGS AND WATCHES O WHITE 001,0 EGGIN' BRACELET WATCHES $18.75 5 sni.ii> Goi.n emblem kings, gold encrusted 5 EMBLEM ON 1U BY— $8.50 O I We have just gotten in a bunch of gents' Masonic, Odd Fellow, Junior. Woodman. Pythian. Elk. lied Man and Moose emblem rings with the emblem encrusted in gold on ruby. We bought these rings several months ago but the factory could net ship them ns early as we expected so rather than run the risk of keeping them until next year we have decided* to sell them at the surprisingly low price of $8.(31 each. We also have a stock of gi-nts’ watches, fountain pons, pearl necklaces, leather hand bags, compacts and many other things that you should look over before deciding on your Christmas presents. Wc are a mile from high prices on everything. , ■ S. W. PRESLAR JEWELER , Christmas Cheer for lAll the Year 'jTESTFUL, cheering music ia the key to Christmas loyal JC« You can make this joy yours, through all the year, if you "Cultivate Your Musical Bump,” with a Conn. Populari ty, -social advantages, life-long pleasure are yours when you play one of these superior instruments. Select your Conn for Christmas Now. Stocks are com plete—prices to suit all purses, easy terms, if desired. Come in today. No obligation, we’re glad to show you. (See large advertisement in The Saturday Evening Post, November 28th.) Kidd-Frix Music and Stationery Co. Aonn BAND Xgg m< INSTRUMENTS Fifteen Year Loans We are prepared to make 15 year loan on Concord Property, with a small semi-annual cnrtailtnent and iptereat at six per cent. These loans are to be first mortgage and baaed upon 50 per cent. yah nation of house and lot. j Minimum loan $2,000.00 No red tape, no delay, loans closed within 30 days after application received and accepted. No life In surance required. Loans can be transferred without extra cost. Write or phone fee full particulars. Thies-Smith Realty Company CRWLOmNAw,' No. 900 Co— new Ist Nat. Bank Bldg. Phone* IS7S and 4415 ] O. J. Thies, Tree. P. Bi Smith, Sec. * Trees. ] Automobile Dealers * Your experience proves I there is a demand for ev- I ery kind and price of au- I tomobile. And- all of I them are - worth just I what you pay. It is not I so ip cleaning and dye- I ing, for everybody wants I only the BEST. And we 1 meet that expectation. I But does our service-car I stop at your home each I week? I Phone 787 ! MASTER CLEANERS I j&yC&h jgEM3Emmr >oooooooooooooooacooooooooooooooooooooooooooo No Shop Worn Goods! . f I No Shop Weary Buyers! 'ljp6S|L Merry faces greet vqii at The here : l ro not srtd cvcd or drawn lipped. They getting thCy afC merr - v W'yins )' Selections so easy—with # Prices so reasonable— with prudence. Gifts for men in every nook—gay throngs line every aisle but no crows feet line the happy faces. Cotne to Hoover’s and Smile. Merrily we roll along! HOOVER’S,Inc. “THE YOUNG MAN’S STORE” COAL V' v The Right Coal For the Right Purpose A. B. POUNDS PHONE 244 OR 279 For twenty-eight yeqps a factor in furthering the de velopment of this vicinity, the Cabarrus Savings Bank still extends its constructive service and excellent facili ties in the interest of progressive enterprise. CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK CONCORD, N. C. PHONE 799 Our Product is Right—the Price Is Right—the Ser-' vice is Right, and this makes a combination Hard to Beat. You’ll need some Coal Soon. When you do, remem ber we are here to serve you with the Coal that stands the gaff; Cline & Mabery Coal Co. PHONE 799 HOT WATER IN A JIFFY is surely a friend in need and J [ a friend indeed of every cook 1 H ! • match and in a few minutes steaming hot water will run ft Pays for itself quickfy.^ EB. GRADY PLUMBING AND HEATING DEALER Office and Show Room 39 E. Corbin St. Office Phone 334 W CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose) Figures named represent pricy's, I P aid for Produce on the market: > CSS®! Egga .50 ' Corn - sl.lO j wP Sweet potatoes ."I lIJW » GOLDFISH Turkeys 20 ! Common fi-M ( Comets [ Japanese Nymphs Country’Hk)7’.!sfi t American Fantails * ountry Shoulder „ .25 I Shubunkins ® r ' u,tr y «§>£> ! Tadpoles Heps* | Pond Snails Irish Potatoes .. - SI.BO i Sea Moss Fish Bowls Sale —“For Hire” Card. For JMr CLINE'S PHARMACY b Tribn,, *- TimM ld 1 [ Our Penny ADS. Get Quick Results Thnr r .diy, Dec. 1*135'