PAGE SIX ... I ‘Smashable as Tile '' % " {Sr .... handsome as expensive enamel SA DAMP cloth removes every XX smudge from the satin-smooth surface of Barreled Sunlight. And ' f the finish doesn’t wear away! ||g i The finest enamel is not more jjj handsome, yet Barreled Sunlight I costs less, covers better, and spreads // , easily —without leaving brushmarks. j' Guaranteed to remain white longest. If more than one coat is required, /4ar apply Barreled Sunlight Undercoat J/ =*"*• J g ■ i Where tints are desired, you can match any color ■ scheme by simply adding Wi .. . oil colors to Barreled Sun- » light. Ask about the new, g 1 easy-mixing Barreled Sun- ll&fnAjJi/ill jvljt light Tinting Colors in handy tubes Wfa. aEiijjm > S Yoirke & Wadsworth Co. is » =' =i| gt ’§Yes, sir, it’s genuine Ihanes—and costs <■/ A*>’ • but one dollar! ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ | Here's an armhole that can't curl or rip large, room' and friction-free. 2 Talk about comfort! The H \M s closed crotch s:av» . !■" v stitched in away \ I ) \\ to insure comfort. /y 3 There's double 1 double the 'HIk L Hanes web back. It’s j > single. Sewed to \ I 4 wide, full-length knee \ f AHhIvH that won’t creep up your (kY hHIIV le tf — won't bind. k\ £ The seat button refuses to come off. It’s sewed CMmlm nesses of material instead I ,u of the usual two. No |z HHBHHK—LjfIHHHi /ll W . ...,. patch! One dollar spent for Hanes gets you real hot ‘ weather comfort and longer wear. There’s plenty of material in this garment—the air can get to your skin and keep it dry. It’s won derful quality material too. Hanes Athletics wear * loflig and laugh at wash-days. Put together by ex jH j perts. The web back is double strength and won’t rip or tear. Buttons are sewed on to stay. Hanes Athletic Underwear comes in round or V-neck styles, in button front or popular two. gßshutton shoulder models. Both chest and trunk measures in every union suit. Made in fine checks and fancy madras patterns. For the youngsters too. Sizes 20 to 34 for boys 2 to 16 years at 75c. Sfe-' Ask for Hanes at your regular store. If they |i| can’t supply you, write to us. "Read this Guarantee: We guarantee Hanes Underwear ‘ your money or give you a new garment if any seam breaks. : TJfc. H. Hanes Knitting Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. k ■ New York Office: 93 Worth Street ' College Combination. Young men everywhere are enthusiastic over the new Hanes College Combination—flat-knit, pull-over ahirt and nainsook drawers. Unequalled value. Shirts 50 cents, Ip®-' ’ drawers 75 cents. **************** | All Styles Hanes Underwear on Sale At I EFIRD’S DEPARTMENT k STORE -3 1-- _____ - I “An Evening fc Hawaii” at Redpath Chautauqua “An Evening in Hnwali,” an original mnsical production to be given at the coming Redpath Chau tauqua by Vierra’s Hawaiicns, instrumentalists and singers, portrays most vividly the music and customs at Hawaii. With the aid of novel lighting and scenic effects and appropriate costuming, an atmosphere of artistio beauty and realism is secured. In this setting Vierra's Hawa'ians play the instruments peculiar to Hawaii, %pnni? tbo afoul cniiton Woof ♦i’au ciiiff fcho snnac thaf «ro u no rt of t\hx» frnp TLftWftii Meet the Crown Prince ol Swat! Gehrig Seen as Certain Successor to Babe Ruth s^uamo* Lou Gehrig is doped as the logical successor to Babe Ruth, and he’s already rivaling the I Bambino in the matter of home runs. Much is attributed to his powerful physique. His fore- I arm, detailed above, is more powerful than Ruth’s. He’s fast on the bases, too, as the smaller ' action picture shows. ...... By JACK Y. KEENE r Internatisnal Illustrated News Sports Authority —*- NEW YORK (I-I-N) —It must be tough to be the trwo hundred pound home run king qf the diamond, still in your prime, and watch your throne being meas ured for the crown prince. Our sympathy goes out to Babe Ruth. Bat he doesn’t heed if now as much as he will in a few years from now when the /nns, between cheers for Lou Gehrig, will murmur, -‘Poor t abe! He was a good fellow when he had it.” i For Larruping Lou seems foreordained to be the next cock ; v ' the base lines. Vivs years ago Gehrig was gradu pA-a, ir*e Eddie Collins, fro . Colum- Tf~ University into the New York >—nkee college. He was assigned to Walter Pipp, regular jV«t baseman. He showed Uttle •j'.'-e than promise for the i’rat two hut the promise was good. •"- wasn’t a flashy player, but he determined and hard working. Memphis Bobbed Bandit and Lover, Out of Prison, to Start Life Anew By International News Service. Memphis, Tenn., May 2o.—A child hood romance, crucified on the altars of love, hardened by years of prison , toil, aired in the grim courts of jus ] tice and scandal-smeared i>y publicity, will blossom’in June when a gunman ; walks from behind gray prison walls of the Tennessee state penitentiary into the waiting arms of his wife sweetheart, who left the same institu tion anly a fsw months ago. It will 'be a great cay for Ernest Strait, bandit and gunman, and Mar ion King Strait, a pretty little Mis sissippi heiress, who turned bandit, “weathered the scorn of society and served a prison term to win thd man -, she loved even as a boy. I Behind the romance or Marion and Ernest lies a heart touching tale, the story of a country boy who “went wrong,” the undying love of his child hood sweetheart which led her through years of prison life, a story of a girl who sacrificed honor and years of her life for love. This long dreamed of day, the day when Ernest would be free again, the day when they would move to her little farm down in Mississippi, the day when their sorrows would be ended, is coming soon —the second week in J °£. world wiH remember Marian King as the during bobbed-haired THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE and in his third year he shared the bag with Pipp. During that year : be hustled Pipp out of his job. Last 1 year he played regularly, and kept ' coming on. 1 He’s a remarkably well built man, > even for a baseball player. His mas ■ todonic shoulders, his sturdy legs and > his powerful forearm, the biggest in , baseball, gives him tremendous ad- bandit. An orphan in infancy, her real name was never known to her, Marion, with her big brown eyes and baby smile, won herself a home when a laughing baby. Khe was adopted by Sheriff and Mrs. Tom King, 0/ Thpelo, Miss. t , * She grew up on King's plantation ns Marion King. Just over'the hill lived G. C. Strait, whose son, Ernest, was a couple years older than Marion. As Marion 'blossomec Into a pretty lass of Id she was sent away to « school. While the years passed by things changed. Both Sheriff King and bis wife died. Their estate, a large plantation, was left to Marion. Marion graduated from school. Ernest had not been writing lately. She wus worried. She returned home. His parents said he had gone to Memphis. Marion tried to find him and failed. She heard he was in trouble, and hur ried to Memphis. > Ernest had fallen in had company, had drifted downward, had joined a bandit gang and was in jail. Without legal advice, friendless in a big city, a poor business judge, Mar ion visited her lover. She talked to him through prison bars., / She must have Ernest. ‘Hf would be freed on 110,000 bond but this would cost |l6O from professional bondsmen, Ernest hold her. He had -v • ,-if vantage' a* a hafffer. During 182« Be started to show his real stuff. Home ryn after home run, three-bagger after three-bagger he slammed against, through and over the fence. And this season he's started off In even better form, thus far having the greatest sluggiag average of any player in either major circuit. He’s clone to Ruth in the number of home runs. The breaks one way or another may decide whether he finishes ahead or behind the Bambino at the close of the season. Every one Is watch ing him. He’s got more powerful arms than Ruth, and although he’e 1 not as smooth a swinger as the lat ter, he’s perfecting his wallop. He’i 1 playing a clean, errorless game al 1 first. And what’s more important he’s got about five more years of top , notch baseball in him than Ruth. And so it comes to pass that, while 1 the old king has not been burled—id 1 fact, he’s not even dying—the ned ' - king has been selected. a plan, told her how to do it, and she decided it was the quickest way to have Ernest out of that “awful place.” So, following his suggestion, Mar ion took Ernest's big pistol, strolled into a downtown cafeteria and calmly help up the cashier. She got some thing over 1200. That night Ernest was free but less than half an hour elapsed before Mar ion was in jail, facing a- charge of highway robbery. A jury gave Marion five years und Ernest was sentenced to from 3 to 10. Both were freed 011 bond pending trial and in the shadow of the pen itentiary they were married. Both went to prison two years ago. in the state penitentiary at Xaahville they were allowed only five minutes together each week. They talked through the bars and touched each other's fingertips during five minutes each Sunday morning. A few months ago Marion was freed 1 on parole to Deputy Inspector Joel Bishop, of the Memphis Police depart . niestt, who interested himself in her case. The second week in June the parole , board has promised to exxtend to 1 Ernest a parole. Marion, now in Memphis, will be waiting outside of i- the prison gates at Nashville for him! After the middle of June it will be: > Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Strait, farmeit, , Tupelo, Miss. I Gray received only |2OO for his 1 poems, and pot a cent for his im- I mortal “Elegy.” Automobilitis Ruins Farmers Says Observer I s Who Is Sorry Motors Were Ever Invented j ( • (By luternationnl News Service) Smith Center, Hans., May 24.—Wil liam IMetcher, wealthy farmer nnd extensive land owner here, believes he Iras found out what ails the farmer. It's ‘'automobilitis.” So fixed in his belief be has set an example for others to follow nnd declines to run his own car which has stood unused in his garage since last November. He preaches econ omy. Listen to his sermon: “Automobiles have ruined financial ly hundreds of thousands of fanners. “I’ye learned that to be the case TUBERCULOSIS RELIEF. Doctor Says Manual Labor Is Im portant in Treatment. Atlantic City, May 26.—Contrary to general opinion, manual labor is an important part of the treatment of ; tubercular patients. Dr. Phillip Hillko witz, of Denver Colo., declared in ad dressing the twenty-third annual con vention of the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society in the Hotel Breakers, here yesterday. He is president of the society. At the Denver sanitarium, he [mint ed out, patients profitably employed \ have gained a new interest in life. . Eighty [ier cent, of the patients in the Denver institution come from New York, the society was told. A branch sanitarium is to be built on n 300 acre estate at Goshen, N V. The site has already been purchased. Plans for the sanitarium have been approved by the New York. State Board of Health, and , are now before tbe State Board of j Charities for approval. The society approved plans for a $1,000,000 building program in Denver. Prof. Allan K. Krause of Johns- Hopki.UK University, Baltimore, a lung specialist, declared that the paramount problem in the cure of tuberculosis HER MULTI-FRANC SMILE! . v-SEy- • ■ ’ ppssr pm!- Jr i BL\ / I : « WEA- - ■" Mile. Autires, latest toast of Paris, found her smile to he her fortune It raised her from apprenticeship to queen of models, and then won her the leading part in a revne. Her earnings are enhanced by advertisers, who pajr gladly for per mission to use her picture on their products. ' /t-t.v n«Alnivel 1 ~ .. ,_\ i -i~ imu ~ L Arcadia Novelty Company Popular Chautauqua Attraction if a*' I*ly C. v lw> $* < "\ I - Kmc*'- / f A L<|jfr?y /WJ ■■ ivi* < \ i 'y< gSTtf A ' pluyV 7mm HH One of the Interesting attractions of the forthcoming Redpath Chautauqua Is the Arcadia Novelty Company which will appear here on the lint day of Chautauqua. This splendid company's entertainments are notable for the marked diversification of the selections and the artistry and seat with which these selections are given. This is an nnnsnal company. The four charming young ladles whe compose it are each artists in their own line, and together they present Ooe of tbe best programs of the season. . .. Their programs are rich in Individual and ensemble numbers ol tmlglnallty and charm. For the instrumental numbers, a violin, piano, Bello, xylophone, and cornet are used. Splendid vocal numbers are given, and original coatumed song presentations, cleverly interpreted, MB MKtt 111 &&Ju . i. with all my unsuccessful neighbors! and friends. “If autos had never been invented, f farmers in all the states would have . [denty of money and land would be j selh'ng for $1(W) per acre anywhere in f the United States. . , "The whole country has gone speed , mad. The highways bring us noth- t ing but buzzing sounds. The little , trading communities are dead exeept for the filling station business and | hot dog stand. Whenever the farmer , wants to buy he hops into his flivver i and goes to the far-away city. Let's i get sensible again.” ] < . , today is the prevention of relapse dur- ' ing the three to five year period follow- ■ ing the discharge of the patient from ( an institution. Pay Honor to Gatling. j Winton, N. C., May 25.—This little North Carolina town is preparing to commemorate its most illustrious son —Richard Jordan Gatling, the in- 1 ventor of the gun which bears his name. Mrs. R. C. Bridget, president of the Hertford county chapter of the j United Daughters of the Confederacy, has asked Senator Simmons, of North ] Carolina, to aid in securing an obso lete Gatling gun to be erected upon the court house square here. Senator Simmon* mas rnken the matter up with the office of the secre tary of war, and has been advised that either of two available Gatling guns ! will be offered to Winton, provided the gim is- formally- requested by. a Sol j diene' Monument Association or a mu nicipal corporation and that nil ex penses connected with the donation are paid by the recipients. Gatling was born here in lfjlS. He I is called the "father of the machine ’ Kim." Thursday, May 26, 1927 SESSIONS CONCLUDED BY PRESBYTERIANS Creation of Central Committee Os 44 Is Outstanding Feature Os Gen eral Assembly. Eldorado, Ark.. May 25.—With creation of a central committee of f 44 to supervise major executive and promotional activities outstanding among the accomplishments of its Rix days' session, the tilth general as sembly »f the Presbyterian church in the United States adjourned at 11:20 o'clock tonight. Adjournment canie when the assem bly found its docket clear, although another half day remained on the pre assembly schedule. At tonight's brief -business session, Dr. C. C. Carson, Bristol. Tenn., was elected general evangelist of the church. I)r. R. C. Long, Chattanooga, was elected joint seeretary with Dr. J. E. Purcell of the assembly's new committee on stewardship and men's work. I Lawyers May Collect Any Bill But Their Own. Paris. May 23.—French lawyers’ can sue everyone except their own clients. Young Maurice Barreau. newly come to the bar. lias brought this state of affairs to light by demand ing that lawyer; should have the right to collect tliPir fees, just as they collect debt* due others. Tlie council of the order, however, shows no inclination to allow the aw profession to sink to the level of mere trade, in which a business man suck when customers fail to pay. Indianapolis News—ls. ns report ed. Mis. Coolldgc doesn’t know where the Coolidge family is going to spend its vacation this summer, most husbands will have a strong hunch that Mr. Coolidge doesn't either. If iB W Jj ■l . m -■ -JH JB Keep in Trim! Good Elimination Is Essential to Good Health. THE kidneys are the blood filters. If they fail to func tion properly there is apt to be s. a retention of toxic poisons in the blood. A dull, languid feel ing and, sometimes, toxic back aches, headaches, and dizziness are symptoms of this condition. Further evidence of improper kidney function is often found in burning or scanty! passage of secretions. Each year more and more people are learning the value of Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in this con dition. Scarcely a nook or ham let anywhere but has many enthusiastic users. Ask your neighborl DOAN’S TS* Stimulant Diantic to the Kianeye Vottr-MUbura Cn- hilt Ch»m W.Y. I V ASHEVILLE, N.C. special Weekly ejects Spend qour yprind' uac dtion Vim rhe wild flowery of the Sraokq Mountain* The faiuomiinilutorth Inn off err Iqou a special wccWu rate fbrqour, fdtniU) 'Which includes a mar uelour program of cntertainmcnTT flsttn in on WWNC any evenina < AMERICAN PLAN wnrowu /IHCIf KpOM -HOT t/ COU> WAIW. . »4l» \» /mar • -wuvAit «Mii - <o* • doubi* • ■ • • so* '* oouu* * risen • • • life* Vtlujktful, diqntfud surroundinqj ahukuv imfoiimatioh um« rsoqurt - RPJCOE- A MARVEL .< man ao e e— | : 6 66 is a Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever Dengue or Bilious Fever. . t It kills the germs. .. .... > “TIT FOR AGHIN6, SORE, MD FEET Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and saw spots. No more shoe tight ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “Tiz” is magical, acts right off. “Tiz” draws out all the. poisonous exudations which puff up the feet Use “Tiz” and forget your foot misery. Ah I how comfortable your feet feel A few cents buy a box of “Tiz" now at any drug or department store. Don’t suffer. Have good feet glad feet feet that never swell, never hurt, never gel tired. A year's foot comfort guar anteed or money refunded. - j 'C'Asimiikfok 'PsM'ZXc

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