Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / Feb. 5, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
February 5, 1923. . j. * ******** i # 1 H\PFENINGB IN OUR *' t >KH HBORING villages * * * * 4 t**'*** * * * * m m * m ENOCH VILLE. v t ) i» John soil's have thp mens !'V- JUn W. Petrea is a little lm >hc has 1 >eefi con lined to her ■ ‘'.V-iiH' «'hfi^tnms. v n lime nt Mrs. Laura Stire i\ evening. Mrs. (’. (\ Upright and: '.,,. Memuia. and Elsie Pauline,! ‘‘V, snrMav with Mr. E. G. F. Ov- RI’SV BEE. k7)ckv river. . Ethel Morrison was operat&l , : ~.!.;.eiulicitis last week. She is ' getting along well, vi- c.ale is rejiorted to be right. ■| i \ Ifind. who is holding down , , Kannapolis, made a/ very ' K . iiiteut and unexpected mid . i-ir t«» home l'olks <V) last j i a we’s basketball team eamo int Kri'ia> and played our second team • -min. resulting in u victory for the jjT.-ky Kivei- Ihivs. Our tirst team, a ~ ,' !n i„i'f the county league, played iVinecut: on their ground, the score i, n- to - hi Winecoff’s favor. Rut T hey .'ii a victory over the Jackson T:\iiniii- St h""l hoys Saturday after-, ■ 111 dllT ILc . .immunity. club met last Thurs t!.iV night, and with a very good nt- Vnilniicc. everything considered. The ~wl l was rather disappointed owing •h the absem-e of the speaker of the evening, which was I)r. Foster. Elec fj.,l) df officers was entered inro. with the iild crticers all being retained for aniilher year. inr school is progressing well un ‘,[er the management of Mr. G. L. simj'"i*it a> principal. .Misses Brown, Brantley and lieed as assistants. JVhitsnii King, of (’harlotte. i^ - visit* his cousin. Ifoyt McCacliren. Mi Arthur Alexander has been hav in- seine improvements jnade on his lease and harn. A SCRIBBLER. ( RI SE SCHOOL. The school is progressing nicety wit h Miss Estelle IVnninger as teacher. .Miss Thelma Suther is confined to her home on account of illness. Mr. Clercnce Fisher spent an hour er-se at the home of Mr. A. E. Cress January There are a good many scolars at* tending school now. Misse> Vera Ilopkins and Gladys fl'atis spent Tuesday night with Miss Ruhr < ’ress. Miss Xellie Dorfon was confined to her home last week on account of ill* ii" l»m now is able to lie at school ago in. Mr Floyd Barnhardt and family, of near Rimer, sjtent last Friday night wirh Mr. and Mrs. A. E. (’ress. Misses Addie and Stella Ritchie vis ited Misses Marret. Sarah, and Emily '""(hnun last Saturday, Miss Blanche Cress spent a few days with her grand-mother. Leah Kluttz. iiear Rimer ('hurch. I There will tie preaching at Roger keformeil Church Februarv 4th at 3 "'••lock. There will lie a box supper at (’ruse '''lii-mil February 7th. (Jirls bring • "M- ;md boys plenty of money. Ih'i ■ will be a program which will imblished later. TWO BUDDIES. WATTS ( ROSS ROADS. __ Mr. A. I). Wilson is still improving. Mrs. M. L. Allman is able to be up ■Mr*T an attack of the flu. Messrs. Vera Hopkins and Gladys M.ttts sjienr Tuesday night with Miss Buhy Cress. Mrs. lioy Safrit is spending a few 'to.vs witlA her mother. Mrs. J. A. ' BLUE EYES. Brown Heads Warehouse System. Ikiloigh, Feb. 3. —James P. Brown, h i several years in charge of the ad ministration of the federal warehouse !l 't for the states of Virginia, North ' :il ‘"liha and South Carolina, has been •M>l»"intcd superintendent of the North ~n warehouse system by the ''itc board of agriculture, it was an h'U(i)(;ed today. Mr. Brown succeeds .T. M. Workman, resigned to enter private Jtnisl in Raleigh. Alter graduating from the Univer "t Alabama, in bis home state. •*! Brown for three years was with a compress and warehouse com- I'atiy of Memphis,” reads the announce :'eilt "Following his experience he " mm general manager and secretary ' !1 “‘ h-ea surer of the Alabama Com a,»d Warehouse . company. In ' In* was appointed 1 as an assistant •'i Wiin iiouse investigations under the "f markets of the United States "pin fluent of agriculture and since ■ - t un has devoted himself to an in .!l l 'i study of warehouse conditions l, 11 be south. ' roinntipn soon sollowed his on ; nue info government work and for -''('Mrs his duties were confined to investigation work in all the | ri Producing states, making a study i’i‘ * Als,i 'ig warehouse facilities, handl er nnThuds, form of warehouse re m, 11 • * l! I ! S< * n,l d their acceptability as ,or loans with banking in 'v ( i ;r '‘ ,, ** ra l construction of cotton im! " sts ' ,o ftnn insurance, freight other factors entering into ‘l. , warehouse practides. tin ’- ,lf ‘ was ml in charge of hC 1:,; ' ni ? tration of federal ware iiiiii V' 1 lor North Carolina t,., s Carol inn. His headquar j v "'.iv in Raleigh and became a j|., ri “"Mil'ivee with the state board of '-Oi-ulfuro I Getting Him Going. Fn •. 1 1 f, '°m . upstairs)—“Helen, ho,n, • ••• ,llllp G»r the young man to go f " nian —“Vour father is a' wl.' 1 ‘ 1 ( over hearingly)—“Well. Gat don’t have a self-stater, a "’lacs In might handy.” u | S "^ ste PPi ,, g Mrs. Grundy, when i' ■ ou on the balcony! ttii.i.. Fl qg? Don’t you like to hear to I* 1 1 that - I want the neighbors T hat I’m no t beating my wife.”, local mention ktcls. c " llB,,l Noran "- Six new cases of whooping cough (%ere reported to the office of the county health department this morn ing. No other cases were reported lor over the week end. son of Mr. and Mrs. M. . Gray died yesterday morning at their home in No. L> township. Funer *J sen ices were held this morning at Fail-view and interment was made in tjio cemetery there. A small number of cases were' on docket -In recorder’s court this morn ing, hut they were not of special im portance. - "Everyone is trving to get on r he,honor roll,” one officer stated, and it was quiet over the week-end,” q lie eity is now extending the sewer line from Tournament street into that part of the city known as High town. The work has been interrupted by the recent rains, but with several clear days the work could he pushed to completion. The Woman’s Missionary Society of Trinity Reformed Church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock as fol lows: Groups 1 and 2 with Mrs. W. P. Mabry, on North (’hurch street, and Group 3 with Airs. 11. A. Goodman, on West Depot street. Concord has oeen blessed with plen ty of rain during the past several days, but it has not l>een visited with sh'et and snow which have fallen in other sections of the South. The storm has l»een general in many Southern States, hut apparently has missed North Carolina, which has been visit ed by rain onl>\ A number of alumni of Davidson and Trinity Colleges plan to go to Charlotte tomorrow night to see the haskethall teams of the two institu tions In action. This will t>e the first lime the two teams have met this year, and as each team is said to lie in tine shajie, the game should he a fast and furious one. Concord people are showing keen in terest in the Charlotte Auto Show, which will ojieu tonight. The show this year will lie held in the Made-in- Carolinas ExjKisition building, and will continue for several days. Offi cers declare the show of 1P23 will he the biggest and best ever held in Charlotte; and a numlier of cars will lie on display. The local Y haskethall team lost an other game Saturday night when it se cured the short ends of a 23 to IS score in a game with the Elerliee Ath letic (’lull. The game was witnessed by a large crowd, and was one of the fastest games played here this year. Inability to shoot goals after getting the ball under the basket accounted for the failure of the .locals to win. Local officers of the Cabarrus Coun ty Sunday School Association declare everything is about ready for the Sun day School Institute, which will he held in this county this week. The In stitute will open Wednesday, the ses sions to lie held ill St. James Entlier an Church. Two smsions will he held daily, one in the afternoon and the other in the evening. The general public is invited. Funeral services for Mr. George W. Brown, who died Saturday morning, were held yesterday afternoon at 4 o’clock at his late home. The ser vices were conducted by Rev. J. C, Rowan, pastor of the First Presbyter ian Church, and interment was made in Oakwood cemetery. The following nephews of Mr. Brown were pall hearers: L. A.. E. H., Leonard, Louis. Eugene and AY. A. Brown. While the opening day for baseball practice lias not been decided upon by the members of the High School team, the play-els are planning to liegin practice in the near future. The lo cal High School students have put out some fast Ijwitbull and haskethall teams during the past several years, hut the baseball teams have not l>een playing teams in other cities, and it is’planned to play Salisbury and oth er nearby teams this year, one mem ber of the team states. In a well played game of basketball the Rocky River High School quintet defeated Bethel High School by a score of 37 to 10. Rocky River start ed off in the lead and at the end of the first half the score was 21 to 4. Rocky River put in second string men in the last half and they showed up well against their heavier opponents. E. Tally starred for Bethel. C’apt. Kis er was the star of the game getting 21 points to his credit, while Starnes showed up well as forward. FINANCE COMMITTEE WILL MEET MNODAY Special Committee to Investigate the State’s Finances Called to Meet Next Week. Raleigh, Feb. 3. —Announcement of the first meeting at 11 o’clock on Mon day morning of the committee to in vestigate the state.’s financial situation at the request of Governor Cameron Morrison, was made today in both houses of the General Assembly. The Senate and House both passe/l several local measures on the third reading, and with only the introduc tion of a few local and private mea sures, adjournment was taken until Monday night at 8;15 o’clock, when the. public calendar will be brought up. J The investigating committee will set-j tie down, the members asserted, at the Monday meeting to the. problem of get ting facts and figures as quickly as possible, that delay in measures carry ing appropriations may not be en countered. Fear was expressed in the House, however, that the session might j lx 1 prolonged because of the situation , with the General Assembly faces] through conflicting accounts of the state's financial uffairs. Becoming Christianized. The American Bible society has re cent! y shipped from its headquarters in Shanghai 187,000 Bi'bles to the sub agency in Pekin, China. This was the j largest single shipment ever sent out in the history of the society’s work in' China. . \ DAVIDSON WILD CATS BARELY NOSE OCT LOCAL Y TEA>| Locals W r ere Leading up to the Last Tt4 r o Minutes of Play. 1 In one of the hardest fought and probably the best game ever seen on the local Y. M. C. A. floor, the David ! son College varsity quintet were just barely able to nose out a victory over the Y team Thursday night, the score being 33-28. It was anybody's game with first one leading and then the ! other, with neither a sufficient lend to j clinch the victory until jn the last two minutes. Staley came in as a ‘ substitute for Mallorys and with reg j ular “nigger” luck dropped in four baskets that won the game. The Y team was leading with a two point margin up to this point, and victory seemed sure, hut with that character istic Dividson fighting spirit, the vis itors staged a real comeback and launched an attack led by Laird and Staley that could not be stopped. Laird was the premier tosser of the game. This sorrel-topped freshman seemed to possess the ability to place the hall in the basket from any place lon the floor, as practically every ball ■he shot at the basket counted for a goal. Crawford and Mauze also play ed a great game. The lighting spirit which these two men instilled into the team was probably what won out in the end. Long led in the scoring for the lo j cals with four field goals and four fouls, tieiug Laird for scoring honors. Wolff and Dick each got three and Bell two. Mef’askill played a good game at stationary guard, and broke up the pass work of the visitors sev eral times, spoiling their chances for goals. Summary: Concord Davidson. Wolff ((V) RF Beall (2) Dick Mi) LF Laird (12) Bell (4) C Mauze (7) McCaskill (0) ItG Crawford H’>) Long (12) LG) Davis (0) Substitutions: Davidsson. Boggs (0) Staley (8) for Mallory. Concord, for Davis. Mallory ((>) for Beall, none. Referee, Petersen. * — : WALTER KLUTTZ WOUNDED ON NEC K BY STRAY BULLET Was Accidentally Struck While Walk ing in Front of the Office of Dr. ,). F. Reid. Walter Kluttz. employe of the South eastern Express Company, was acci dentally wounded Thursday afternoon when a stray bullet fired in the laun dry of Henry I)er Yen struck him in the neck, as he was walking in front of the office of Dr. .1. F. Reid. An drew Brice, negro, was arrested by the police and was ebarged with the ' shooting. According to police investigation, Brice was in the laundry talking to his wife, who is one of the ironers there. Just why he fired the pistql is not known, as he and his wife tes tified that the shooting was acciden tal. But immediately after the shot was fired Brice and his wife both ran. the woman going to her home here and Brice to his home in Kan napolis. The bullet passed out of the glass in Hie front door of the laundry, struck a piece of wood that holds up the laundry sign, passed through the wood and struck Mr. Kluttz on the neck. The wound is very painful, hut is not believed to he serious. Brice was arrested by the Kanuapo lice iMilice officers. He testified that the shooting was accidental, and that he was just handing the pistol to his wife when it was discharged. She testified that she had not been quar reling with her husband, that she did not see the gun before she heard the report, and that she ran from the laundry because she was “scaired,” “too scaired” to rememlier whether she left by the rear or front door. The State tried to prove that Brice was trying to shoot his wife when he fired the guns and used the running of the two negroes as evidence that -ev erything was not as rosy between the pair ns they tried to make it appear when they testified. Mho Was ‘Boss’! A country youth about to embark on the * of matrimony asked his father. "Who should be boss, I or ray wife?” The father smiled and said: ‘ “Here are one hundred hens ana a team of horses. Hitch up the horses, load the hens into the wagon, and wherever you find a man and his wife {dwelling, slop and mnkec inquiry as I to who is the boss. Wherever you find J a woman running things, leave a hen. i If you come to a place where a man lis in control give him one of the horses.” After seventy-nine hens had been disposed of by ‘the youth, he came to a house and made the usual inquire. “I’m the boss o‘ this place,” said the man. So the wife was called nnd she affirmed her husband’s assertion. "Take whichever horse you want,” was the youth’s reply. So tho husband replied,'“l'll take the bay.” But the wife did not like the bay horse and called her husband aside and talked to him. He returned and said: * • “I believe I’ll take the gray horse.” “Not much,” said the youth. “You ' get a hen.” Gets Table Taft Used. The Yaie School of Forestry, at New Haven, Conn., has received a valuable table from the Philippine Islands, the gift of alumni now in the ! Philippine forest service, he table was j used by William H. Taft when he was governor general of the island at one time was owned by the city of Manila. It is nvade of Narra wood, irt aid with Comagon wood. It measures .eighteen by five feet. In announcing the receipt of the i gift recently, the Yale secretary’s of j flee said the table would he used in ' Sage Hall, the new forestry building notv being erected. His Mistake. The burglar re-appeared from the bed-room. “Any money in his clothes?” his pal inquired. , { “Nothing but a d me, a few hair pins and some tape!” 1 “Fool. You got hold of his wife’s bloomers.” THE COffCORD TIMES RENDS SOCIETY AT CAPITAL. Mrs. Poindexter Accuses Cabinet Wives of Petty Graft.” A letter written by Mrs. Miles poin d'xter, wife of . the Washington senator, to a Seattle newspaper' in which she sharply assails wives oi the qabinet officers for a Leged petty graft at government expanse, nas caused a storm in official 'society circles in Washington. The letter also reveals that the Poindexters and Secretary and Mrs. Denby are decidedly at "outs.” Mrs. Poindexter in an amazingly frank manner complains because: 1. Wives,of cabinet officer* go (mop ping in government limousines. 2. Mrs. Denby can give “at homes” and have the famous Marine band furnish music. 3. Secretary Denby took his ram ily to the Orient last summer. 4. The war department furnishes "good looking officers” for inac tions given by the secretary of war. 5. The botanica* gardens fiKn.sh Cowers for the house of Secretary Wallace. Mrs. PoindexUr says she ea allot •understand why senators vote govern ment mol or cars for cabinet officers and then deny them to themselves. Senators, she bslieves, need them more than secretaries. The Denbys were given “special m ntion” in the letter and. according !o society gossips, relations between D‘*nby and Poindexter, who is acting chairman of the senate naval attairs committee, have jTot been very friend ly, since the forhKr declined to make speeches for the senator in the last campaign. Mrs. Poindexter’s comment' on cabinet society is interesting, be cause ijer husband is being boomed for secretary of the interior. T. It. LEFT ESTATE OF $801,171. Referee Approve* the Accounts of Former President’s Executors. Theodore Roosevelt left a net estate of $801,171.68, which was distributed to his widow and children May 81, 1922, according to a report filed with the New York supreme court last week by John F. Conway, referee. The referee approves the accoun. as submitted by the executors, and recommends that the court disallow the claim of Mts. Emma R. Burkett for $69,000. (Mrs. Bufkett filed suit against the former I’riesident’s es tate for that sum, alleging he had in dorsed a note to her by Charles J. Shunson. The suit was dismissed in the supreme court a year and a half ago. The lata Colonel Roosevelt’s per sonal estate, composed chiefiy of railroad and municipal stocks and bonds, was $687,370.10 at the time of bis death, January 6, 1919. Its value increased to $7. r >2,2ir».69 by May 31, 1922. Added to that in trust for the bene- 1 ft claries is' “Sagamore Hill,” the 79.92 acre estate at Oyster Bay, which is valued at $180,500. GENERAL ASSEMBLY HAS 'MUCH TO DO Session Half Over With Many Bills to Be Acted Upon. Raleigh, Feb 3 (By the Associated Press). —With the North Carolina gen eral assembly at the half way post of its 1!)23 session a dozen or more of the important measures today either were in the emDyro or committee stage while only one—the fifteen million dol lar highway bond hill—was on its way to final action by the. house. The Bowie bill to provide a railroad for Watauga, , Ashe and Alleghany counties the general tax measure, the general expense bill, the. administra tion oyster bill nnd one or two others have not been introduced. The Giles’ farm loan measure to create a state farm board and to ap propriate $2,r>00,000 for encouraging farm ownership, the Varser sinking fund bill, the administration ship line proposal, the. general education bill, the drug and medicine act, the anti-mask ing and other bills to regulate secret orders, the Wade state-wide game law, nnd the fight to repeal the Carollna- Te.nnessee Power Company in Cherokee county, were chief among those still reposing in committees in one form dr another. Both houses have'passed on scores of bills of private and public local na ture. but continued requests for fur ther hearings on the part of individu als have resulted in the general com mittees being loaded with, held-over legislation.. Next week, according to observers, will be replete with action on a num ber of measures and the following week is expected to bring more, final deci sions on important As a re sult. it was stated, the flood gates of oratory and contests on the floors of both houses will be opened in full .force. North Getting the Southern Unskilled Labor. Washington, Fe.b, I.—A noticeable movement of unskilled negro labor from the south to northern industrial cen ters, which, though neither widespread nor general, was regarded as unusual heearse of the negro’s normal relvc tancQ to move northward during the winter, was announced today by—Sec retary Davis of the labor department, on the basis of a report by Phil H. Brown, commissioner of conciliation. Payrolls at a number of northern and central western industrial points, it was said, are being slightly swelled bv the employment of these workers, and. while some cities reported no increases nnd a fc.w show small declines in the employment of this class of labor, con tinued migration appeared to be indi cated. Shipman Firsst to Pay to Dough (on. Raleigh. N. C., Feb. 3.—M. L. Ship man, commissioner of labor and print ing, was the first person to pay in come tax to 111 A. Dough ton, new commissioner of revenue. Mr. Ship man happened to walk into the reve-1 nue department’s offices a short time . after the new commissioner had ae- 1 tually started to work, so instead-of t taking up the matter with a clerk or. secretary, he took first honors in in oome tax paying insofar Mr. Dough ton’s record is concerned. Miss Grace Darling, trained ath lete, is coach of the high school boys’ r basketball team in the town of Un- j ion, N. J. : FATHER SAVES LIFE OF GIRL 1 BY SPECTACULAR OPERATION Surgeon Stops Girl’s Heart, Pushes It Aside, Removes Taek From Lung. Chicago. Feb. 2.—A letter in x a \vo nmn's handwriting was the only elite today to the mystery surrounding the death of John Minalian, 21-year-old University of Chicago freshman, who was found today seated in a chair and leaning over a shotgun in his room in the Alpha Tan < >mega fraternity house. Fraternity brothers, 25 of whom were sleep'ng in the house, insisted that the shooting was accidental. Minalian, they said, had arisen early to clean his shotgun in preparation for a hunting trip to New Mexico on which he was to have started tomor row. ' Hyde Park police,, however, express ed the. belief that young Minalian had shot himself because of despond ency over his health. No one in the house heard the two shots that ended the student's life.. This, the police said, was due to the' fact that the gun was placed in his mouth before tlu» trigger was pulled. Minahan’s death came just after the announcement that his father, Dr. John Minalian, a noted Wisconsin surgeon, had saved a girl from threat ened tuberculosis and probable death by a spectacular operation by remnv ing a lack from her left lung. In the course, of the operation the surgeon was forced to stop flu 1 girl's heart, move it to one side, and then start it again. IMPERIAL POTENTATE TO VISIT C HARLOTTE James S, McFandless Will Visit the Queen C ity on Washington’s Birth day. Charlotte, Feb. 2.—James S. Mc- Candless, imperial potentate of the Ancient and Accepted Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, will be a Charlotte visitor on Washington’s birthday, it was announced by uitt cia s of Oasis temple, Mr. McCandless is from Honolulu, and is the first man living in Uncle Sam’s island, or colonial possession, to be honored by elevation to the highest plate in. Amei'.qan (Shrine doni. He was made imperial potentate of the Shrine last June, when the im perial Shrine meeting was lied m San Francisco. He is now~on a visit to the shrines in' the southeastern part of the United States, and will go as far as Havana, Cuba, to attend the Shrine meeting there. We will arrive in Charlotte Wednes day night, February 21. from Charles ton, S. C., He will spend the night here and leave next morning for rvuux ville. Dr. Work is Likely to Succeed jVIr. Fall. Washington, Feb. 2. —-President Hard ing has about completed plans for the cabinet readjustments made necessary by the Secretary Fall, of the. interior department, and it was indicated today at the White House that a formal announcement on the subject might he expected within a week. < All indications' have been that the President's choice for the interior portfolio is Postmaster General Work, who in addition to being an adminis trator of demonstrated ability, lias a wide knowledge of the western prob lems with which the interior depart ment Is chiefly concerned. It was understood also tonight that Senator Harry S. New, of Indiana, who retires from Congress March 4, still was foremost among those under consideration to succeed Dr. Work ns postmaster general. It was pre dicted in some quarters that his se lection for the place would ’be an nounced at the same time, the Presi-. dent makes known formally the trans fer of Dr. Work to the interior post. Senator New was offered a place in the cabinet which went into office, with President Harding in 1021. and he has been for years a close personal friend of the President. He was de feated last year for re-nomination as senator. Find iKmariest Still. There is on exhibition at the head quarters of the prohibition forces at Sal iabury. N. 0., what is said to be the smallest- complete distillery in exist ence It has a capacity of perhaps a ?uart a day. The little still was cap ured in a raid up near Brevard sev eral days ago and was said to be in possession of A. T. Austin, who was arrested and placed under bond charged with violation of certain sec tions of the prohibition law which forbid the possession of such out fits. It is charged that Austin has been in the business of making models for stills. The still captured sits on a board two feet long and six inches wide. There is everything complete for the manufactur of whiskev. The still itself is of about a nint capacity and the other receptacles are smal ler. Shutter Shut. Once I heard a mother mutter, Daughter, go and shut the shutter; Shutter’s shut, the daughter uttered, I can’t shut it any shutter. “Why are you so kite, Bobby Jones?”. . P “Please teacher, I saw/a sign—” j “What has a sign to do with, it?” i “It said, “School Ahead-Go Slow.” TURKISH B Virginia I WiSUmmUm BURLEY I ==fl| AMERICAN TOBACCO iiiiiiiiiiffliwiiiiHiiniHiHHdllHßlHlllßliaiiiiinHUßiiiuw .w - . | A Safe Investment 1 | *, for your surplus funds is as- j sured if you deposit them in ' a four per cent. Certificate of 1 | Deposit wjth this bank. fssa CITIZENS BANK 8t TRUST ; ■ ll=Mllll ‘ COMPANY B ’ flilHßll CONCORD n NEW - BUIL0 ~ C — VV It 3K 'AL ii^i A RAIN! RAIN! )Vjp. RAIN! Umbrellas! Umbrellas! School and Otherwise Children’s Misses’ Ladies 95c ' $1.50 $2.00 up Misses’, Children’s and Ladies Warm Coats at LESS THAN A SALE PRICE $1 95 UPWARD "Et" FISHER’S It Pays IF IT’S A HAT I / • * Be sure to visit us as we are getting New Ones ev ery few days. SPECIALTY HAT SHOP Combination Mahogany Bed Room Suite You can furnish your bedroom complete and in a most satisfactory manner by inspecting the choice and well fashioned set shown above and offered at a very reasonable figure. Made of combination mahogany casework, is ex cellently finished, interiors and back of all pieces finished. Actually seeing it will convince you of its worth. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. • “THE STORE THAT SATISFIES” Meat Eating: Healthy. You lovers of meat who delight in an extra cut of roast beef or a juicy steak, but hesitate because of the be lief that meat eating is injurious to the health, perish your fears and go to it, says Charles J. Brand, Washing ton, D. C„ of the Department of Agriculture. “Many persons,’ Brand declares, “still hold to the belief that meat is . not healthful. Medical science has proved that a large number of ills once charged against meateating are due to infection of teeth, tonsils and other organs.” f .. . PAGE THREE Shelby* Masons Purchase Properly For a Temple. 'Shelby. Feb. 4.—The local -Masonic lodge No. 202 last night voted unanimously to purchase the Orlando Elam property adpacent to the post office for the erection at an uif,y date of a three or four story Masonic f Ag temple with two store rooms on the first floor. Thflfcpurchase price was $20,000. • Nothing For Herself. The Maiden’s Prayer—“ Dear Lord, I ask nothing for myself! Only give mother a son-in-law.”
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 5, 1923, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75