*£ Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1926 THE UNIVERSAL CAR 49.3 Niles To One Gallon Os Gasoline! Final mileage tests in Charlotte on September 15th, show this to be a fact. One-third of the 36 cars entered in the Contest got more than 40 miles to the gallon. Buy a Ford and Bank the difference. Reid Motor Co. ) Ladies’ Sport Oxfords' We are showing this popular fall Oxfords in all the new leathers and combinations. For Style-sparkle these Oxfords are born lead ers, look them over, try them on and you'll feel the difference. $5.00 TO $7.85 v IVEY’S OUR PENNY ADS. ALWAYS GET RESULTS Varnishes Now is the time and this is the place to get Rogers Paints and Varnishes. All sizes and cbU ' 2 ors. Quality considered you can’t beat our price. Come in or phone us today. Yorke^Wadsworth Co. The Old Reliable Hardware Store .' -j'. 1 1 ANOTHER CLOSE OUT 10 PIECE SLTIE FOR $170.00 ’ Buffet 66 inches. Two 'cupboards, two drawers and an extra apartment for silver. China Closet full size, with glass front and one large drawer for linings. Table large size, extends six feet. Extra heavy legs, well braced, making the table very strong. Server full, 1 size, with two large cupboards. One arm chair and five side chairs. Chairs have extra heavy blue backs in corners, well braced and very substantial. Seats upholstered in good grade ma terial that Will not fade. OtfLY TWO SUITES AT THIS PRICE. i The original price on this suite was ss£o.oo. Discontinued pattern is the reason for this low price. Suites cannot be broken. If in need of a good Dining Room Suite you are in luck, as you can save $71.00. See this Suite in our window. > Concord Furniture Co. The Reliable Furniture Store THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE NMi M SM ChSat&% " " -N. c., Bn>i. 2o. — UP) • —Defects of school children hero are to bo attacked by the Lions' Club, it was decided at a meeting this week. Special attention will bo paid to rem edying cases of poor eyesight, which, it was stated, not only hindered the victim but impeded the progress of other pupils. Dr. John H. Hamilton, head of the local board of health, has been called into consultation for the next meeting of the elub. Bdeowed and "Blocked HAVE YOU BOUGHT. A NEW HAT? Y«f Good!— hot dooV ducard the old okc. Bring it in her* and leas. r evdsn fork to be cleaned . and : blocked, rctrimined If necessary. That will make two new heal ’ Velour and felt closed end blocked. Velvet steamed end blocked. Pccea from 50c to 1.00 Phone 757 RE UNITED LUTHERANS WILL MEET IN 80UTH Convention Takes Place In Richmond Capital of Confederacy, October JO-28. Richmond, Va., Sept. 28.—1 n Rich mond, the old capital of the Confed eracy, delegates from the reunited Lutheran churches in the north and in c.ie south will meet from October liith to 26tli at the iifth biennial con vention of the United Lutheran Church in America. Three times in 1 the past eight years Lutheran dele gates from the south have gone forth into northern cities to confer on ec clesiastical methods and plans the work of the church. Once, in 1920, the convention met at Washington, This year for the first time delegates from the northern cities will meet their southern brethren on southern soil. At the time c,f t'ae Civil War schisms appeared in the ranks of the great churches, and the Baptist, Meth- odist, Presbyterian and Lutheran de nominations divided into northern and southern groups, the separation of three of these denominations continu ing to the present day. In three of .’.leso groups almost herculean efforts have been exerted to reunite the di vided churches but wit hour success up to the present time. In ther Lutheran Church in America the Lutheran people of these two sec-; tions of the country have worked to gether for file common good. After overtures toward merger on one side or the other lmd been made during a period of four, decodes, the first approach, being made in 187(1, delegates of three outstanding Luth eran bodies met in New York City in 1918 to organize the present United Lutheran Church in America. Two northern bodies, the General Synod and the General Council, and one southern body, tfie United Synod of the South, had previously taken defi nite action favoring the merger and sent representatives to the conven tion instructed to vote in favor of a union that would at. once submerge the animosities and differences of half a century before and pave the way for effective co-operation of all groups in planning the future great work jof the church. Their unity in the fatfi outweighed all sectional and political issues, and inner unity found its tri umphal expression in union for ser vice. Outside the Lutheran Church eager eyes have watched the progress of the United Lutheran Church in America for eight years in the tiope of finding therein the solution of their own problems of merger. When delegates, representing 1,- 379.742 members grouped together in 34 district syonds, arrive next month for the fifth biennial convention of the United Lutheran Church in Amer ica at Richmond, they will learn of the great gains that have been made in number of pastors, number of mem bers, totnis of money raised for ben evolences and eongregationnl expenses and in property valuation. They will hear reports on the increasing ef fectiveness of home missionary worjt in hundreds of communities through out the lkitd and the plans for a equ solidatio nos such work under one leadership. They will note the de velopment of American Lutheran work in tile foreign fields ill India, Africa, Japan, South America and the West Indies; and the purchase and occu pation of a new field in China. They (Sill receive summaries of vast educa tional and social service activities of the church, and of the efforts made to lighten the burdens of Lutheran immigrants to the United States and Canada from foreign lands. And hav ing passed approval on the accom plishments of past years, they will plan the most effective methods of ex tending the work into vast new fields as yet almost untouched. SHARPE WILL DEVOTE EFFORTS TO BIG MEN Little Bootlegger WIU Get Scant At tention From Carolinas Adminis trator. Charlotte, Sept. 27. —Prohibition forces in the eighth district will be particularly directed in the future agninst the violator of the Volstead who operates on a large scale, Ben C. Sharpe, prohibition director, indicat ed today. The minor offender will receive scant attention, it is believed, unless lie is a constant violator. “The only way to make the prohi bition laws successful.” Mr. Sharpe declared, “is to increase respect for the act by building up a sentiment favoring it. “It has always been my poliey to try to increase respect for the law by making an effort to catch the large liquor dealer and not wasting time on the little man.” General Lincoln C. Andrew, prohi bition czar, has placed his stamp of approval on this method, Mr. Sharpe said, in the recent Washington con ference. The subject of prohibition policy came up when Mr. Sharpe was asked about a recent rase in the Charlotte police court in which a white man was given a suspended sentence for having hard eider in his possession. Mr. Sharpe said that any man who .had in his possession a beverage with half of one per cent alcohol in it was technically guilty of liquor law violation. It had not been and would not be, . he added, the policy of his agents to harrass the small man while letting the man who deals in large amounts go free. IT’S ALL OFF ' Famous Singer’s Romance Reported to Have Been Broken. Rumors have come from the home of the eminent operatic singer. Mine. Frieda Hempel, Fuat her announced engagement to August Heekscher, well known realty operator and phi lanthropist, has been broken. No comment has been made on the mat ter by either party. Will Have Beer Referendum i\ Madison, Wls., Sept. 21.—UP)— The State Supreme Court today denied application for an injunction to pie vent the proposed referendum on beer at the November election in Wiscon sin. COUNTY AGENTS ASSIST ; FARMERS TO SELL HOGS Ail of the Hogs Were Fed According U Methods Advocated by Swine Bxtension Department. Raleigh. Sept. 28. — (A*) —During the last few weeks ten county agents have assisted 139 farmers of North Caro lina to sell 2,220 '.iea<l of hogs for $04,70911. All of these hogs were fed according to methods advoented by the office of swine extension nt State College and complete records kept on the animals from 'the time ihej were put on feed until they were sold to the packing plants at central markets. " - “These 2.220 hogs filled 32 cars and made an average of 16 hogs worth $393.53 for each of the 139 farmers who co-operated." says W. W. Puny, swine extension specialist at State College and leader of this special feeding work iu North Caro lina. "The hogs which wefe sold arc the results of work for six months. A Urge number of the farmers are simply repenting what they did last spring when these same shipments were duplicated. In this climate, .it is possible for us to grow out two litters of pigs each year and ship them during April and September.'' Mr. Shay makes it clear that the point of this hog shipping project is that ail of these 2.220 hogs orig inated in only fen counties. He be lieves that there are more than ten counties which can muster 139 farm ers v.io can each produce IC> surplus hogs twice each year and thus in crease their own income from S(>(MI to SBOO per year am) that of the county by SIOO,OOO per year. Sys tematized feeding and marketing are lacking in most of the counties which explains why more farmers are not taking advantage of this source of farm income, states Mr. Shay. It is true, he cxplnrns, that spine other men are growing and feeding hogs but t’jey are not commanding the highest market prices been use of im proper rations given and lack of sys tepiatized effort on file part ot th« owners. Plato Durham to Open Fair at Shelby. Shelby. Sept. 27—Fair officials are expecting more than 50,00(1 people here tomorrow for the opening day of the Cleveland County Fair. Governor McLean in unable to at tend. so the opening address will be made by I’lnto Durham, Stone Moun tain orator ami native of Cleveland County. The Carolinas racing season will be opened here tomorrow afternoon, and one of the greatest assemblies of racers ever held in the two states is on hand for the race events of four days. 666 is a prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever. It kills the germs. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. This is'+o notify ail persons that we did, on the 10th day of February, 1920, sell our entire interest-in the Midland Hardware Company, in Mid land, North Carolina, to J. Lee Brooks. And you will further take that we will not be liable for any debts contracted by the said J. Lee Brooks. This the 21« t day of September, 1926. C. D. THOMPSON. 27-4 t-c. G. A. HAYWOOD. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. This is to notify all persons that I have this day sold my entire interest in the stock of merchandise situated in Town of Midland. N. C„ in the store building formerly occupied by the Haywood Store Company, to C. G. Beaman, ,T. G. Tomlins and O. A. Haywood. You will further take no tice, that I will not be liable for any debts contracted by the sa.!d store af ter this date. This the 21st day of September. 1920. 27-4 t-c. D. I. MILLER. * DRESSING. ACCENTUATE The arrangement of the hair can alter ones ap pearance either for bet ter or worse. We dress the hair in such away as to accentuate the beauty of the face. “Our Methods Please" PARKS-BELK CO. BEAUTY SHOPPE Plvon* 892 \ v, ' -*> V Q t ’~'£si'i , ylk in - o '*! / jfi '** \ ,‘i -*“*' V, _ . y f < t SryilrMt ''flftk \, MKaßasiifiSa^^^»«SagHaMßMß» - -> ; ’ißßh Ja^B I I iji \ H \ v *ll Bp S B n I JH" I I i . bn^ Jr * "<fM T ' ; - Light a Camel and you taste that rare pleasure that only the choicest tobaccos can bring. Experienced smokers know it. That is why they prefer and demand Camels. V’J tn all the history of smoking, no popularity has approached Camel’s. Os all the brands in all the years, Camel preference towers above every other cigarette. Camel’s favor is as big as its quality. For the leadership of this famous cigarette grows out of goodness. Camels get the choicest Turkish and Domestic tobaccos grown ... perfect blending ... the best of everything, regardless of price. The makers of Camel spend millions for quality . . . nothing is too good for Camels. We invite you, if you have not yet met Camels, to prove their goodness for yourself. What welcome mildness and mellowness 1 They never tire the taste or leave a cigaretty aftertaste ... Have a ; Cornell** ©i*a« B. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. • PAGE THREE

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