ednesday, Mar. 24, 1926
ajSgfpi | ijjL
Music
OTART now to culti- * \\H(j
O vate you • musical & ,
instrument. It will fp vA
bring you both profit wfec-A
you get ahead quickly;
exclusive,easy-playing OjY\
features enable rapid LflV
progress.
Come In sad let w demon. \ \\ I
etnte the instrument that \ \ \ Jl
nppeab to you most. No \ V// /
, obligation. Ask about our V \ \Y/
Easy Payment plan. UJL, l V
Oww
< Kidd-Frix Music & Stationery Co
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THEY’LL DISHRAG |
YOU EVERY TIME I
Ij! Trying to buy a tire for les<f than it’s worth is just one ex- !jlj
| ! ample of the triumph of hope over experience. X
V Sure, some tire dealers will dicker with you — give you all V
iji sorts of trick discounts and long trades. Why not? It’s ‘|i|
X a cijith to pad up the old price list to allow just such Xl
deak. 51
■|But.clon’t fOTget you’re playing the other fellow’s game X
J, and "the odds are nine to one that he’ll dishrag you every X
I ! t' ni c. 1 x
j j My customers buy Goodyear Tires because they have 'j l
j! learned that Goodyears give them the least trouble and Ij!
ij the lowest cost per mile. These—after all is said and X
j j done—are the things to look for in any tire. X
I i Let me show you a Goodyear next time. . !j!
Yorke & Wadsworth Co.
j[ Phone 30 Phone 30
; ! The Old Reliable Hardware Store j
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OUR PENNY HR ALWAYS GET RESULTS
EASTER
New Coats K|^||
Dresses and Head
EASTER • iSbP' '--
PROMENADE O j/M '
Be Well Groomed ' jA I, JV.
It Pays to Trade at Iv
FISHER’S Mri—l
Popular Prices
i'"~ .'L-'XvX '" :;r : — 1
KENT CALLED A “GROUCH.”
Senator Heflin in From Foot
Takes Fling at Writer.
Aroused by a story written by
Frank R. Kent for the Baltimore
Sun, in which he was ridiculed. Sen
ator Heflin, Democrat, Alabama,
early this week delivered a de- I
nnneiation against the news writer I
from the floor of the Senate.
While the Senator from Alabama i
! wan npeahing Kent sat in the press :
gallery.
"i have known this little fellow '
: Kent in his better and brighter
j days." the Senator began. "That was j
1 before he tiad descended inio the I
i grouchy and sonr little thing he is." j
After Senator Heflin had conclud
ed, Representative Fpshaw, Demo
crat. Georgia, who slapped the face
of Robert B. Choate, correspondent
of the Boston Herald, last Saturday,
warmly congratulated the Senator
and then returned to the House.
"A polity 1" he exclaimed. ‘“Why. j
I get more than that for inking eas-!
to:- oil." j
j
Polish Your Floors
by Electricity
Here is a wonderful
new invention that
takes all the work
out of keeping floors
. e beautiful and makes
I V this household task j
I \\ aplcasure.Tentimes
l . Y faster than present
l Y methods, it enables
l Y y°u to polish all the
l Y floors and linoleum
l Y > n your home in the
1 Y time it formerly took
l Y to do a single room.
Y Sturdily built to last
Y a lifetime) and guar-
Y anteed absolutely.
JOHNSGNIS WAX
Electric floor "Polisher
I This marvelous new electric labor -
•aver coats only s42.so—and we
include FREE a $1.50 Johnson
I LarabVwool Mopand apint (75c) of
the famous Johnson’s Liquid Wax.
Ask for a demonstration
RITCHIE HARD
WARE CO.
Your Hardware
Store
Phone 117
x, ’ ■
THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE
THE NEXT AUTOMOBILE I
RACES AT CHARLOTTE
Will Take Place May 10th.—Milton.'
Hill and De Pardo to Be There, j
C'uarlotte. March 215.—Racing in
terest in the next speedway classic
I here May ,10th. southern memorial
j day, centers about two of the young
est drivers in the game. IVtcr Do
: pnelo, the 1025 AAA champion, and
■ Bog McDonough, the former protege
; r.f Torr.mv Milton. 1021 AAA ehnm
| pion. WheVicr the consistent jinx
which has followed DePaolo around
I the Charlotte oval for the past three
j races and which has prevented him
from finisfling in the high money will
have the same effect on the little
spepd king is the matter of conjee-■
turc.
Regardless, DePaolo has already;
made entry, and promises to run his '
usual splendidly clean race at Char
lotte. The Carolina fans are fond
of DePaolo. who entered the first!
j southern race a very new raping
| driver. He finished fourth in the
I initial Charlotte race. Os course,
I there is little eomparison between the
j work of the champion and Rob Me
j Donough, but there are many who
'predict a brilliant future for the Mil
ton protege. In admirers, at least,
this young rarer hast fallen 'heir to
the toga of his renowned patron. Mc-
Donough finished third in splendid
time at the Miami-Fulford 300-tnile
classic and he is expected to make a
noble showing in Charlotte.
A close competitor of the two is
Harry Hart/.,' probably one of the
grentest sprinters on the American
track. Hart/ finished in second mon
ey at, two Charlotte races and fifth
at the inaugural race. He found
second place at Fulford, the first race
of the lf)2t> season.
Any deductions made, of course,
must include the veterans Earl Coop
er and Bennie Hill, botli of whom
have been persistent contestants for
j tlie Charlotte laurels. Cooper was
successful at the May 11th meet last
year, it will be retneinbpred. and Hilt
reached third place in his effort to
gain high money in the first meet on
southern soil.
Doctor Estep's Candidacy.
Charlotte Observer.
If Representative R. 1,. Doughton
desires to serve his district in Con
gress another term, we should not
think he has very much to fear in
the “ndependent candidacy” of Dr.
Thomas L.Estcp, even tfhough /the
doctor hails from “Fanner Bob's”
own county.
To be sure Doctor Estep's plat
form will appeal to some voters, but
as we understand it he proposes to
run independently of both Democrat
ic and Republican party organiza
tions. That is enough to settle the
question at the start, because the vot
ers of North Carolina and the eighth
district are not in the habit of elect
ing men independent of party organ
ization to office as important as that
of Representative in Congress.
While the doctor makes bid for
the vote of all the "wets" in the coun
ties of Stanly. Cabarrus. Rowan. Ire
dell. Alexander, Caldwell, Watauga-
Ashe and Alleghany, he abandons all
possibility of getting “dry” votes in
those counties by his bitter attack
upon the eighteenth amendment and
the Volstead act. And. while many
“wets” doubtless will like his plat
form on the liquor question, lots of
them will vote for the candidate of
their party, Democratic or Republi
can as the ease may be, rather than
for an independent. In other words,
many Democrats who may be classed
ns “wet” would vote for a “dry”
Democrat rather than a “wet” inde
pendent and likewise many “wet" Re
publicans would vote for a “dry” Re
publican rather than a "wet” inde
pendent.
Resides ail that, the doctor cannot
hope to count on any support from
his own profession—the medical fra
ternity—because he makes it appar
ent that he is against the “unjust
system of the medical practice rules
and regulations by the will of the
special-privileged Medical Society and
its private board of examiners.”
Doctor Estep doubtless knows lie
has little or no chance of election, but
he probably figures on having some
fun at the expense of some folks he
does not like and proposes to make
the race witli a view of making use
of the opportunity it will give him
to fight some things that he feels like
fighting.
Okl Music, Old Songs, Old Customs.
The Dearborn Independent enters
a plea for the aneient and beautiful
things. That paper says:
“We ought to keep them forever j
—aneient and beautiful things..
“There are no songs being written
in this jazz day that compare with
the old songs that grew up out in
our own country. What jazz songs
compare with the plantive, melan- ■
ehol.v. and the deeply moving melo-!
dies like ‘Swing Low Sweet Chariot.'
‘Nobody Knows De Trouble I’s Seen.' (
‘I Can’t Hear Nobody Pray,” ‘Singin' i
All Over God’s Heaven’?
“Just now there is a revival of in
terest in the negro spirituals. A
dozen books have been published re
cently on those spirituals. We are
beginning to put a proper valuation
on our aneient and beautiful things.
“There is n national revival of the
old American dances; they are finding
their way back to their place in the
heart of America.
“He who saves for America the old
music, the old songs, the old hymns,
the old customs, the old recreations,
the wholesomeness and freedom, is
making America his debtor."
Couldn't Fool Polly.
An old lady kept a parrot which
was always swearing. She could put
up with this until Saturday, but on
Sunday she kept a cover over the
cage, removing it ou Monday morning.
One Monday afternoon she saw her
minister coming towards Iter house,
so she again placed the cover over the
cage. As the reverend gentleman was
about to step into the parlor, the par
rot remarked, “This haN been a damn
short week."
The shell of the snail is built up
from lime in the plants it eats; and
they are never found in soil which con
tains no lime.
American Wives Biggest Grafters \ j
Says Judge Strong , of New Yor\ l
,'OUDGE SELAH B.’STRONG'
In an age of grafters, the big
gest grafters are American wives
and the easiest graft is marriage
under American laws.
Such are the conclusions of
Judge Selah B. Strong, of the Su
preme Court of New York, after a
five year study of graft and graft
ers from the vantage point of the
judicial bench. The situation
leading to this condition, and which
Judge Strong declares threatens a
breakdown of ethical and moral re
straint, he holds to be a result of
laws providng for the payment of
alimony as a recompense for “lost
love.”
A recent announcement by the
Jtylge that he would refuse ali
mony in all cases where wives are
healthy, able-bodied, childless and
capable of supporting themselves,
brought down on his head a deluge
of criticism from divorce lawyers
and beneficiaries of alimony allow
ances. In a new attack on the ali
mony evil, however, in the April :
issue of Hearst’s International
Cosmopolitan, in an article “Wives
Are Grafters.” Judasa Kli'auar cucc
WHAT COULD BE BETTER
Than \to Be So Quickly Relieved by Taking j
HERB EXTRACT Known as Herb Juice?
MHF ' Bk
m
H M I
MRS. GRACE GATLING
| "J ask, what could be better than
to be sick and then be relieved at
once? And with such a pleasant med
icine that there were no ill effects
from which to suffer. All I did was
to take doses of Terb Juice, known
as HERB JUICE. the great herbal
remedy, and I soon found my self en
tirely well,” Mrs. Grace Gatlin, w*no
resides at 4111 East Sixth Street,
Charlotte, N. C., came in to see the
HERB JUICE demonstrator and told
how she was praising Herb Extract
known as HERB JUICE since it had ]
.cured her, and she gave the following)
facts:
l “1 do not believe (here is any feeling
to be compared with the sick feeling,
the tired feeling one has when suffer
ing from stomach trouble and consti
pation. I would get up ill the morn
ing with a dull tired feeling. I would
attempt to eat breakfast aud instead
of feelling better 1 invariably felt
worse, for I could not d : gest what i
ate. Gas would form on my stomach
and 1 ofteu felt ns if my stomach
were blown up. The fact that I was
constipated made me have severe
headaches, for it kept my system in a
bad condition and the impurities aud
poisons went into my blood instead of
being normally excreted. My stomach
far beyond his previous declare- ]
tions and invites far-reaching j
feminine wrath by asserting: that i
the alimony evil turns wives inti 1
parasites, liars, cheats, mone) ]
grabbers and contributors to im- i
morality on a wholesale scale. Th( 1
avalanche of criticism which h< j
foresees he is willing to brave, hi i
says, believing that only by such >'
frank and fearless discussion ol j
the situation will the public con- i
sciousness be jolted to the point 1
where it will get actively behind a !
movement for adequate revision ol i
the statutes relating to marriage
and divorce.
In reciting a number of cases ol ,
which he has knowledge he de
clares, “the whole business of ali
mony grabbing is degrading. It
cheapens the relations between J
men and women. I truly believe l
alimony keeps thousands of couples' <
from being reconciled. The woman j
being supported by her husband i
under order of the court isn’t an- 1
xious to effect a reconciliation. She ]
is dawdling in idleness, free, irre- i
sponsible. She’s making him suf- 1
was sore to touch it and I felt gener
ally miserable.
“I constantly read in the papers
about Herb Extract known as HERB
JUICE, and then when I had several
friends tell me how effective they had
found Herb Extract known as HERB
JUICE. I decided to take it. It was a
lucky day for me that I made that de
cision, for my change for the better
dates from that day. It was sur
prising how rapidly I began to im
prove, and by such a simple means, as!
| I have said. Only doses of Herb Ex-1
j tract known as HERB JUICE taken j
' regularly, and Herb Extract known as
HERB JUICE is a very pleasant dosel
I soon was so improved that I could
eat auything I wanted and not suffer
from indigestion. No more gas form
ing on my stomach, and I am relieved
of my headaches, for Herb Extract
known as HERB JUICE put an end
to constipation, and my system is now
in good working order. I feel like a ’
different person since I started tak
ing Herb Extract known as HERB
JUICE, have energy, itnd have really
gained in weight. I consider Herb
Extract known ns HERB JUICE the
most satisfactory medicine obtaina
ble today for stomach trouble and con
stipation and recommend it gladly on
all occasions.”
Special Used Car Sale
g 500 Votes on the California Tour contest, for each j 1
8 dollar received for used cars this week, Help yourself by ]
5 getting one of these bargains in used cars, and help your
g contestant by getting the votes for them.
| PRICES TO FIT EVERY POCKETBOOK
WHITE AUTO CO.
g Concord, N. C. 17 E. Corbin St. Phone 298 ]!|
I Newest Easter Modes
IN FOOTWEAR
An array of smart models that willl delight you with '
their newness. \ |
Our Shoes will more than please you in Style, Qual- j j
ity, Fit and Price — n
$2.95 $3.45 $4.95 TO $6.95
MARKSON SHOE STORE
PHONE 787 i
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I “When Spring Comes”
|!| Now that the ice is all melted and the Crickets soon j
y will come'from their hiding place into the darkness of
!{! those beautiful nights, and their chirping will cause us to
\ l l lift our heads in delight. We will then know that spring ]!
]I But in order that you may be ready to meet those warm '
||[ days that are to come, we have our new and complete line 1
ji[ of Leonard Cleanable one-piece porcelain lined Refriger- !
I ! ators, all sizes and styles ready for your inspection, and '[
] | will be glad to have you look them over.
BELL-KARRIS FURNITURE CO. I
OOOOOOOOOQQQOnnOtMVinClOOOeKMCimnoniafiWfVVVvvvvyyftft^
I
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
Thermo-Syphon Cooling System
i The circulation of water in Ford cars is entirely gov
! erned by engine temperature—the flow starting as the
] motor warms, and being most rapid at the points of the ;
i greatest heat. On cold mornings the Ford engine warms 1
up quickly, because the water does not circulate from the
cylinder block until it becomes heated. In hot weather,
too, the Ford cooling system is equally effic : ent, for the
capacity of the radiator is unusually large in proportion I
\ t 0 the heating surface of the cylinders. Since there is no \
water pump requiring frequent need for packing, the Ford,
cooling system is exceedingly simple and always efficient.
REID MOTOR CO.
CONCORD’S FORD DEALER
I! Corbin and Church Streets Phone 220
J; | •
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OPPOSITE NEW HOTEL
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