Thursday, June 23, 1927 ; » HOT WEATHER COMING ! f| |j- - ' Why Worry Over a Hot : Wood J Stove? GET A I Florence Automatic (M I Cook Stove Cool, Quick, and Clean - ! JOIN THE BIG ARMY OF USERS . j Sold By 1 Yorke I Wadsworth Co. “The Old Reliable Hardware” oooooooooooonooooßDOOOoooooooooooQooooooonoooeoau .Enjoy your food as it nourishes your body If your appetite is not keen you owe it to yourself to take S.S.S. regularly before each meal. It will give you a good appetite. In these days of fast competition, only full-blooded, robust, healthy people can keep to the front, and success comes to those who have the snap, vigor and magnetism that go With a wholesome, healthy life. Don’t despair because others forge ahead of you. Start right now to re gain the health whicb will help, you progress. A hearty appetite will 1 restore your energy, bnfid yoQ up and give you “pep. 1 ' Thousands have benefited them selves and kept their bodies in goad XWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPOOOPOOOOOOOQOQOOOOOOOOOO jl A NEW ARRIVAL, \ \ \ l This is one of the new summer lußMi i i i it Pumps just added to our already JUQUI J" s' v '// \ 11 i“. well selected stock of quality foot- f S' Jy J j i \ It’s a patent leather and is just 8 Ij i as pictured, a real quality pump / ' ] J that fills many needs, AAA te O SUbW / I / ' iji widths and we fit your foot as it LI / ] i i should be fitted. / J , $9.00 C 1 IVE Y * S Tn nn iin minij"im?n m E a QENTS f qr MAXTIX SHOES ._ J J NEW ! PARTY FAVORS PLACE CARDS 1 I TALLY CARDS J ICE STICK-UPS 1 | NUT CUPS BRIDGE SETS | SCORE PADS , I , PARTY PENCILS PARTY PRIZES and Everything you need or make your next party more attractive than ever. • - YVe are constantly adding new items to our Gift Line and it is here you will find just the article desired for that small gift or> Bridge Priie. ” ' rj 888 zmmxYf repair by occasionally taking a course of S.S.S. It helps Nature build up red corpuscles and It im proves the processes by, which the body is nourished. S.S.S. Is time tried and reliable. It Is made from the- roots of fresh 1 herbs and plants and Is prepared In a scientific way In a modern labora tory; ' S.S.S. is sold at all good stores in two sizes. The larger size la more economical. ~ “ - gff* ♦-# #-#"# ####«##♦ 1 * * i i * AGBNvurtmui column m • K. D. Goodman, County Agent * >i i ' 5(5 ♦###**#*#* Good Pastures Reduce Grain Require ment of Pig*. /; ■ ; i ’On the average dairy farm the num ' bee of hogs grown is limited, quire? largely, by the amount of grain grown, | that is not needed for the dairy herd.; ! This is as it should foe, provided the cows are good enough to make a profit > able return on' the grain. As long as * the grain available is the limiting fac tor- with hogs, an effort should be I made to make it go as far as possible. This may be done by the use of good : forage crops. I \ The Wisconsin Experiment Station j supplies us with good evidence on this point. For five years comparisons ! were made of pigs self-fed corn and tankage in dry lot with similar pigs fed these feeds plus alafalfa and rape pastures. The pigs that were deprived of pas ture gained 1.05 lbs. per head dally and required 441 lbs. corn and 42 lbs. FELT DULL DIZZY Georgia Mu Tell* How He Found \ Relief for Many Complaint* bjr Using An Old Hum Remedy. Athens, Ga.—"l have been married 61 ’years, and am the father of ten children,” says Mr. J. C. E. Weather ford, R. F. D. "A,” this city. "About the best home remedy I have ever found is Black-Draught. I can’t re member when we haven’t used it in the family, giving it to the children for colds and minor Ola where a laxative is needed. "We must have used Blade- Draught for 40 years, anyway, and in that time we have tried it foi many complaints. I would hava dull, stupid feeling, and my head would ache and when I would lean over, I would get dizzy. I found that a couple of doses of Black Draught would relieve this. I used to have gas on my stomach, and would spit up grease. Black-Draught relieved this. "It is just an all-round good med> cine. Now that lam 72 years old, I have to take a laxative, and Black BM In use for over 85 years. Costs only one cent a dose. NC-ISI buck-draught Salts Fine for Aching Kidneys When Back Hurts Flush Your Kidneys as You Clean Your Bowele Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, sometimes get slug gish'and clogged and need aflushing occasionally, else wC have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleepless ness asd> all sorts of bladder disorders'. You simply ,must keep your kidneys active and clean and the moment you ' feel an ache or pain in the kidney region begin drinking lots of water. | Alio get about, four ounces of Jad i Salts from any good drug store here, > take a tablespoonful in a glass of water | before breakfast for. a few days and i your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the add of | grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is intended to flush dog | ged kidneys and help stimulate them i to activity. It also helps neutralize i the acids in the urine so they no J longer irritate, thus helping to relieve i bladder disorders. i Jad Salts is inexpensive: makes a | delightful effervescent lithia water i drink which everybody should take ’ now and then to help keep their kid | neys clean. A-well-known local druggist says he 1 sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who * believe in trying to correct kidney ! trouble while it U only trouble. PIES CIN NAMON BENS 00O83E& | ; t; EXPERT BAKERS J j " Using the Best of Material Make 2 | QUALITY PRODUCTS | *3 Ask x Your Grocer For Our § Cakes, Rolls, Pies -and-- Bread- , \ 4 TOUR GROCER HANDLES OUR. GOODS - AT A GLANCE— '■ ' 1 '■ • i You will be able to distinguish the difference between our method ~ of Dry Cleaning and the methods used by others. t 'Ye give you strictly odorless cleaning as we-use-only the hlgli i eat grade solvents. !., . ' M. R. POUNDS Dry deantag aa* DNa t In Pfo*i*'N*w Hot* ■- ■f • . ' r - ■ fc«re*m.w t i. llT «i, n.llll m u—iwi-H THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Sli-'-.l "■'—■■'■l II ■ tankage for 100 lbs. gain. The pigs fed on alfalfa pasture gained 1.31 Kb. per head daily and-required 3T4 lbs. com a ad- 21 Rte. tankage for 100 lbs. gain. Those pastured on rape gained ;1.3 lbs per head daily on a feed re quirement of 370 lbs. corn and 23 lbs. tankage for 100 lbs. gain. The alfalfa pasture pigs required 67 lbs. less com and 21 lbs. less tank age and the rape- pasture pigs 86 Ibs. less corn and'l9 tbs. less tankage per 100 lbs. gain than the - “dry lot” or “no pasture” pigs. Converting these gains into money value using $93)0 a haundred as the average selling price of hogs and in ducting the feed costs on the basis of 85 cents a bushel for com ami $68.90 « ton for tankage, we have the follow ling- returns per acre over the grain and supplement feed costs: Alfalfa pasture, $09.06; rape pasture, $97.76. The pigs fed in dry lot without pas ture would have returned $47.6T above the cost of their corn and tankage if applied to the same numbec of pigs as were carried on one Sere of rape pasture. No consideration is given to the more rapid gains of the pigs on pas ture. The pigs were started at about 50 lbs. weight and carried to about 225 lbs. On this basis the pasture fed pigs were ready for market about 31 dayp sooner than the dry lot pigs. It is not too late to seed some rape for pasture for this year. Looking ahead one can put in some alfalfa for hog pasture for next year. It doesn’t take a large acreage. One acre of good rape will carry 20 pigs and good alfalfa pasture will carry a few more. Three acres of either pasture will carry more hog* than are commonly produced on the average dairy farm. Lightning Burns Bible ini Negro Church.- Americas, Ga., June 22. —(INS)— Negroes here and in I.ee county, where the -Wooden Baptist Church is located, are fearful of disaster for they have had an omen. During a heavy storm recently, a bolt of lightning struck the chureh, tore a hole in the steeple, demolished the-pulpit and burned a Bible, which was on the rostrum, td crisp. Due to the fact tha the Bible was destroyed by the bolt, many of ■ the congregation - and negroes of the sur rounding country regard it as an oiden of disaster. - Dr. Mauaryk who has been elected President of the- Czeeh-Slovakian Republic for the third time was a blacksmith in his youth. W o mk I——MBik-- TESTIMONIALS of Dorman Medicines Concord,- N. C., Dec; 23, 1926.—1 suffered with female trouble, had celd feet aad - hands, swelling in the stom ach and felt dizzy-headed and ner vous, weak back. I - was advised to go to the hospital to stand a serious operation/ and did go but' didn't get any better. I sent to J. W. Dorman, in Pitieville, N. C-. an d got a bottle of PeHagra medicine; I took his medi cine for about four .months and am now working in the Cabarrus Mill. Mrs. Essie- Jenkins. Dorman medicines saved my life. I suffered for several yeara with stom ach trouble, cold hands and feet and nervousness, female and kidney trou: ble*and in in 1921 I took a treatment of Dorman's blood medicine, female aud kidney treatment, and it cured me. My baby- is 37 months old and weighs- 41 pounds. Estell Blackwell, Lowell, N. C. I, J.- IV. Dorman, am well known over several states, been at this med icine works several years. Any one feels like they have symptoms of Pel; lagra, any chronic troubles, might try oue-of my treatments; if they are not satisfied in 10 or 12 days I will re turn their money, I am running bus iness at Oine's. Pharmacy PHONE 333 Shguld raw CorarrMbt, I>M. Wm*r Bros. PlotoroaTlnc. ■ “WHAT EVERY GIRL BHOUU>KNOW," wlth Patay Ruth Milter, It a r Warner Bros. plcturlzatlon of thla novel. r . BYHOPSIB Mary " Elaine” Sullivan — slender, t beautiful, red-headed — i* a tennis - champion. 4. spiritual girl is Mary, t despite her physical prowess. Her I parents are dead. Wally Mason, a young reporter, laves Mary.(But she i disbelieves in love. Mary keeps i house for her brothers, David and Bobtfy. David, the family support, - hopes Mary will 'get safely married, t David is sentenced to prison for an E auto fatality. The Charity Dtepart s went takes Bobby. Wally proposes; i Mary goes to Hew York, and gets a cloakroom job in a notorious night s club—. t CHAPTER Vlll—Continued J The leader of the band raised his I violin In air, twirled It, caught It L as it fell, nodded his head sharply with Its restorai, and the gleaming 8 Instruments took life. The lights £ were dimmed, casting sinuous r shadows on the dance floor. One t by one-of the few-guests of THE £ WHITE APE threaded their way 1 about the tables with the floor as • their objective. There the women 1 took on such softness of femininity, r such charm of submission that - Mary’s eyes swam with the loveli ness of It, the by-gone courtliness » of it and the old-taahloned charm. Stalwart masculinity bending over - the frailness of the feminine forms 8 —“Sp beautiful,” Mary thought it, * and wondered wherein the harm 8 lay in the much-maligned night club? 1 “Roses are blooming in Picardy, j In the hush of the silvery moon." “ The same old song that Mary _ knew, played differently somehow. Played to a certain lilt, a certain „ hiccough, that made the beat un ‘ even and unconsciously raised your shoulders. Oh, the swing of ® “What's the matter, kitten, don’t you like the showt” ,j It, the gayly swaging rhythm of It! In her thoughts she, too, danced on that waxed floor. With—with 0 Wally. Quite naturally he slipped s Into her arms, and away they went t to the Intoxication of the hiccough , Ing saxophone. Wally l’ve made this already, Wally, and the night i not half begun. My first money earned, Wally, see? Need I depend l upon you, or David anymore when ' I can do this with my smile and the . Bwing of my hair? I “Miss." A perfumed wrap thrust '* at her. A wrap heavy with the fr languor of the body it had the mo ment before embraced. After that lC there was no time to dance with ■® Wally on the gdlden floor. Wraps I? and hats and gloves thrust Into ca " pacious pockets and checks, checks, V checks. It was a little bewildering . at first, and there was the- added II anxiety of her nerves. Her fingers *' were thumbs, and there were so c many of them. Then the discom •’ fort, that internal twitching that y comes with the concentration of an >t alien gaze, and Mary looked-up to - flnd Bennie facing her, which didn't 3- help matters any. Would he think her inefficient? Oh, surely not There! There was that coat neatly hung. "Your check, sir!” X It had grown unbearably close. The air had slowly grown foggy with smoke, and breathing was . difficult Strangely enough, the noise had also increased. Mary had been too busy with Ahe rush 1 of new comers to take notice of what was going on about her. The sibilance of electric fans could be heard between snatches of music, tnaklng long graceful curves in an effort to clear the air. The dance floor was a writhing mass. Shoul ders tilted to the rasp of the saxo phone, but feet remained In place. Nobody really danced. You stood In place, length of body against body, and made motions with your head and your shoulders and hips. There was a sudden commotion In a tar corner and Bennie appeared, running out a befogged youth whose red eyes and lolling head prought a rush of aversion to Mary, . quickly followed by pity. Four of n his companions followed, more or less under the sway of liquor. No body paid any attention to< tjjem. Honoring the Conqueror. Loudon. June 28. —The Mayors of eight French towns were , recent guests of the people of Hastings over a period of three days. This invitation was extended in connec tion with .the; !H*Oth anniversary of the birth of-. William .the OonjHieiSpi-, and is to be .'followed by a • retipn visit W t-he.-Mayor- of* Hastings to take part itv the cetebrqtions in Nor mandy later- in the summer. .. Actually the battle which made William the King of England was ,; ?fpugbt on a hittiabfljjt six miles in: - land from Hneftage. It was near §4 here, at the igot where Harold fell, The bored look of an accidental party to the little scene was quick ly shifted. A party of three men and two women took the places of the boys. These were drunk le fore they entered. The still wrhfc- Ing mass on the dance floor, twitch ing to the “come hither" of the band. A sudden shriek from an hysterical woman. "You let her alone, blast you!” Oh. Oh. This was vulgar. This was low. The cat-like Bennie at her elbow. “What’s the matter, kitten,- don’J you like the show?" She wished he wouldn't come so close. Sh* could seer- the part In his ridged hair, and the little oily drops on the coarse blackness of It “That’s life, kitten. That’s New York. Where do yon come from, h’m, kitten? Tell Benny.” There was such 1 an air of the serpent about to leap, gleaming from Bennie’s heavy-lidded eyes, that Mary could not force tho words Garden City from her mouth. He would think her untarnished lily-white innocence rampant Sho managed, “Chicago,” and had to repeat it close to his solicitously bent ear to make herself heard. “Chicago, eh? Not so hot Can’t compare it with little old New York, eh Miss Sullivan?" Mentally Bennie was rubbing palm against palm In self-satisfaction at thia city of New York, in pride of pos session. He leaned an elbow on tbe little shelf of her cage, and jArked his head toward the danc ers. “Heh—dirty!" It Is-difficult to describe Bennie’s “heh—dirty!" It’s simply one of those things that must be heard. In time to tho rhythm of the music he Jerked his head and twitched one shoulder, and Mary knew, though she could not see it, that his feet, those thin paper-like feet, were drawing queer figures on the floor. Bennie was not wedged in among the mass on the-floor, but nevertheless, Bennie 1 was dancing. At one-thirty Ben nie, the artist, was called upon for his specialty. Shouts greeted him, and whistles, and the clink of coin on the smooth ness of the dance-floor. "Hi— Benny!” “Yay!” -“H-h-ot! Boy!" “That-a-kid, Big Boy! Strut it!” One languorous weaving to his thin black legs about one another, out and about again, brought forth more cries, and hand-clapping, and further cries of “Do that thing!” He Jifted his pink face, from ob servation of those miraculous rip pling feet, to be greeted by a storm of hand-claps. It was evidently a favorite step. Women were stand ing on the tables, supported by the -arms of their men clasped about their legs. One girl slipped, and fell and was kissed all in a breath. With Bennie’s specialty at an end, the floor was onoe more taken ■ possession of by the horde of danc ers, and Mary turned to find Babii ( at her elbow. A transformed little j elf, her brown body gleaming J where the trappings of an Indian ] princess failed to hide it, and of j trappings there were not much. j “I do a jazz on Pocahontas,” she < explained. Then, “Listen, will you, j to that?” There were calls of | “Bennie! We want Bennie!” from j a group est men at a table near the j dance-floor. Their heads were to- j gether, the light reflected on the ( pinknese of their scalps. Wine j glasses were being thumped on the j table in rhythm. “We want Bern \ nie!” They were the source of j much amusement to the dancers ] wedged in beside the table. One ] of them tapped a bald pate smartly < with the toe of her slipper, and the . hilarity resulting from this was loud and general. There was pride in the snapping explosives that were the eyqfc of little Babs. Strangely softened eyes, with lids that were suddenly heavy. “The boy friend," she told Mary. “Bennie. Yeh—tile boy friend. Don’t you think him the greatest little stepper that ever slid on a floor? We’re going to do a headliner for vaudeville- one of s these days. Bennie and ine.” The slnr over "Bennie and- me.” Suddenly Mary knew not what to say, but she longed to- touch Babs, and did, taking and holding her - little brown paw. This, she'- knew, was love, and felt herself unworthy. Unworthy of what? She.did n6t know. But Babs had. I grown. No longer the little brown Babs with the body of an elf, but ft woman, and taking Bennie with ' her to the heights. SO powerfully did It emanate from her. So power fully that it lifted Bennie, with his hair that reeked of oil and his slow repulsive suavity of tone, and, the,, feet In the paper thin patent* leather oxfords. “You’re a good kid” Thus Babs, suddenly, as she gripped Mary’s hand where it held here. Then she was gone, running on tiptoes to ward the ! dance-flSor, waiting to ward it, rather, where the music was heralding, her coming. A naughty pixie with snapping eyes and a heart that was heavy with love for Bennie. Bennie who called Mary "Kittens" and relished the morsel of word, rolling about On his tongue— (To he continued? thut William erected a monastery to celebrate his victory. This place Is now known as Battle Abbey, but billy u small part of the original structure- remains, most of the old building huving been pulled down at the time of the dissolution o£ the tponihfteries. The celebrations in Normandy will be of a very elaborate character, and will include a-great pageant in which a number of shipo, fashioned as in ?voetua» days will set sail as if oQft.tbsir way to England* ip o £ 1 I-When a wife reigns she sometimes FORD 1 ' ONE EXPERIENCE *♦; YOU MUST HAVE if FOR YOURSELF II r Os course you have seen and admired TODAY’33| FORD CAR, but it’s only by rifling in one that yotTil j learn what Ford has really accomplished. No one 1 | can tell you. You must have this experience you?f|l j And remember, a Ford closed model—with I 1 its low, roomy seats and easy riding balloon ..-jSj tires—costs less than an open car of any oth- I j Reid Motor Co J CONCORD’S FORD DEALER I , PHONE 220 j I OAKLAND PONTIH ANNOUNCES J New and Second Hand Autos For Sale -• Cars Washed and Greased jjjSj General Repair Work on All Makes of Cars. Sturgis and Smith Motor Co., Inc. M 58 South Church St. Phoner SHtfeifl We Must Standstill or Go Forward! Two years ago we had 30 customers. Today we have 1 about 2700. ft] WHY? ASK YOUR FRIENDS. > /JJT" * / / ,* 137 W PHONES 175 J \ Forest Hill Cleaning Co. J 8 NEW LOW PRICES ON KELVINATOR 11 x Effective immediately, the Kelvinator complete, 0 eluding cabinet, and installation in your home for the si 5 small sum of IThis machine will be on exhibit in the near future,* 1 , Watch for further announcements. 8] 1 Prices on all other machines have been proportionates! j J. Y. PHARR & BRO. “ CONCORD’S LEADING CLEANER 1 J Phone 787. | ' lll, r , Automobile Repairing ‘ ■ M LtK MOTOR Co. * Phone 400 54 S. Church Sti PAGE ELEVEN

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