Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / March 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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•- r ;,v March 26, 1923. * + + ********** * * l H V/PENINGS IN OUR * £ M LABORING VILLAGES * L ff f « ***^**** leoorg'fville. ( file school has purcjins _ n for the benefit of the . T , h was badly needed. K. (’..nuts .of Albemarle will m. Uarfins Church next at - o'clock. Holy , ; . |, will In* administered «n \i,!■ i 1 Ist. at 11 o'eloek a. m„ ,1,,1-s and friends of the n i-l nos ted to be present at Mabry attended the teach* , _ in t'oticord Saturday. \!i«,. A. M. Shinn and fain aml .Mrs. C. W. Eudy. of '!' „nt last Sunday evening at Mr. A. Eudy. . , jj..i Eudy. who is attending ..... College. in Charlotte, spent , > . jjud iwitU home folks. ,\|is. E. It. Smith, of Stan- Mils Novella Shinn visited sittiin last Sunday. . ‘i.iz/.ie and Annie Kluttss : ' ‘ u< ck-cn<l with home folks. ‘ \.r .t.cni Teeter has purchased a ] j it barrier is kept quite* busy , ... raito .lays. He has purchased a machine and gone into btisi "'ll,,. , hildrcii of Mr. and. ,Mrs. ;v' r ,.. I'm r. who havi* been <*onfin«Ml i.Kin with whooping cough, i , , i improved, we are glad TCI IP HK.H POINT SCHOOL. :j i_-h Point School is progressing j,,,.,!v' with Mr. .1. W. Bust and Miss l l ,irl hove as teachers. Mr idilpinis Layton <pen* Sunday „di with friends in No. 10 Mr. J. W Host spent the week-end with iiotnc folks in No. 10 township. M;-< Lillie (lix is - spending a while in Albemarle with her brother. Mr. Sluiiipoek. i ini. |dnveil ball til High Point oil j.afternoon. The seore was 4 t„ j in favor of High Point. Mr. Vi.inh Co\ was one of the Fink play ,i~. lb- fell and was hurt, hut not to cause him to, stoj) flaying. Mr Worth Ya interim rg and Mr. M.d-ris Post spent Thursday night with Mr. Louis Furr. Mis- .boenltine Widenhouse spent Tlnirsilay night with her cousin. Miss Lula Mac Widenhouse. Mrs. .1. W. Widenhouse returned Imiiic Sunday evening after spending several days with her (laughter, Mrs. ; Victor I’lott. Mrs. 11. A. Dry. Miss Ola Mae Dry | spent Sunday morning with Mr. and Mrs. .lack Uartseir. Mis- Ethel M. Petrea spent Sunday with Miss (Jatha Dry. ! SCHOOLGIRL. EASTERN NO. 11. Mi. <;. F.. Plott si able to sit up alter licinf confined to his bed- for fw* weeks with Hu. Miss pearl Riggers, of Kannapolis, spent the week-end with homefolks. Mr. Ed Kluttz arid family sp(»nt yesienla.v ai his hrotherls. Mr. Harry Kluttz. I Mr. I*. Host and ljamily visited Mr. \\. S. Myers Sunday] Mr. E. F. Whitley and family spent I a> f Sunday with his son. Mr. O. W. Whitley, near Mt. Pleasant. 1 Mr. Frank Plott. of Concord, spent yesterday wit it his parents, Mr. and Mrs. •; F Plott. who has been sick with tin. The first Easier party in our neigh borhood was the surprise party given at Mr. ,1. Cline's in honor of tin* teach es of Phoenix school. Misses, bloody and Most, who will soon reteurn to their homes in Watauga county. Mis. Hayne Plott has returned to h'-r home in No. !>. after spending y Mule here wit It her son. Mr. Ernest Plott. Mrs. it. h. Cline spent several days II tii her daughter. Mrs. .Inn. Smith, "t West Corbin street. Concord. She ’ - ("died there on account of the ' "us ilness of little Margaret Smith. WILD ROSE. library association at HIGH SCHOOL ORGANIZED •Junior Association Perfected and I‘lans Intensive Work in Future. Tlie .lintior Library Association has ’" ■n perfected among the students of ‘ “ Concord High School, and the nieiiiiieis have entered, into their work ' v ‘tii such an interest that fine re s'ii> are predicted from them. The a-sdeiation will work in connection "•' i ■ I.ibrary Association, and the ineuil"-!- pay dues of 5 cents a " "nth iia> money to l>e spent for High > 'i | "id ii |'(.ioiico h((ks. 1 he billowing officers were elect.ed: I’resideni—Elizalieth I >a.vvanlt. 1 AN-** President—Yirgiuih Batte. '■ -i i \ ice President—Helen Fox. . i!,! Vice President —Hubert Hor ns, . - > < i' 'ary—Eleanor Crowell. Fv.isurer-— .(allies Cleaver. ,: 'mi-(1 of Directors *s composed ' ! -e t.Mowing students: , :i, ~ Savage. Iliram Caton, Slinf | ! h-, Jennie Brown. W. C. Wal j' 'c "i. Widenhouse. Chas. Parks, Wolf. Sanford Neal, Blanche J' '' 1 Earl Benfield. Frank Arm ( , 11 Swindell Hall, Ed. Plyjer, ' ulieinier. Inez Troutman. Ruth s; , ;; l ‘ :i “ is,, h- Blanche Stewart, Sarah S,x \KM\ AIRPLANES are on return trip J Filler Lett San Juan, Porto Rico, on lt ' t Lc» of Flight to Washington. 11 '"y". Porto Rico, March 23 (By i ;| tcd Press). —The six U. S. irplanes. which arrived here r, t 1 -Yntiono, Texas op Monday, I , 'a their return trip to the " s bttes at 10:15 this morning, they will fly to Waslt s. Their destination todav was ""‘Hingo City,'2so miles dis ‘hri'ineu expect to arrive in • ■ n *ngton before April 3rd. WEATHER FORECAST. 6t*neruUy coolcr tonight, Tuesday LOCAL MENTION Cotton on the local market today is quoted at 25) 1-2 cents per pound; ‘•oftan seed at GB cents per bushel. Miss Mary McTnnts is confined to tier home on McGill street on account of illness. Miss Cottrell Sherrill was out for the first time Saturday, after being | confined to her home for sever:! 1 weeks on account of illness. A number of cases were on docket in recorder's court this morning. Sev eral of the cases were of unusual in 'terest. and court was in session for several hours. | Nineteen new cases of measles were : reported to the eount.v health depart j ment over the week-end. No new cas es of smallpox and no new cases of , whooping cough were reported. Miss Cathleen Wilson, county home . demonstration agent, has returned ! from Charlotte, where site attended a i Milk Campaign conducted there last week. Tin* campaign was a wonder [tut Miss Wilson reports. The following couples have received | marriage licenses from Register (if 1 Deeds flllkitt : William H. Misen heimer and Miss Leoler Burnette, hot It ol Midland, and Daniel Bigger slatV and Miss Marie Wheeler, both of Kannapolis. Members of the high school baseball 1 1(>ttm are hard at work now in prepa ration for the opening game of the I year, to tic played Friday with the Davidson High School team. The team will bo in good shape for the game. Mt. Pleasant is to have a moving picture theatre. Mr. W. E. Stewart, of this city,, has made arrangements to use the auditorium in that city, a-nd will show First National pictures. The theatre will open one day this week, with Mr. Charles Earnhardt in charge. Mrs. Nestor Deaton returned yes terday from a Charlotte hospital. | where she recently underwent an op j oration. Mrs. Deaton stood the trip j home all right, and was reported To- I day as resting comfortably at her 1 homo here. There will tie a meeting at Bethel school Friday (‘veiling, March 30th, at S o’clock for the purpose of organiz ing a Community Club and to discuss demonstration work. Everybody in terested in Bethel school ajid com munity are asked to he present tit this meeting. Memtters of the Merchants and Man ufacturers (’luh are making plans now for an elaborate Easter Dance to lie held next Tuesday, April 3rd. For mal announcement and invitations will tie issued later. The event promises to be one of the most elaborate of the Easter season. According to experts who have been following the spring training of the Cincinnati Reds, "Rig Bill" Harris, of this city, wilt lie one of the two rookie pitchers to he retained this year by the Reds. Bill litis shown great prom | ise in the spring training, and is al most certain to start the season with the Cincinnati team. “Rube” Wilson,. Cabarrus southpaw who has played with the Charlotte team for the past several seasons, was in town Saturday. “Rube" says he will report to the Hornets as soon as his father, who has been ill for sev eral weeks, is better. "Rube” lias been practicing with the Mt. Pleasant Collegiate Institute team and is in good shape, he stated. Messrs. W. (I. Caswell. 11. 1. Wood house, .1. G. Parks, I>. B. Morrison and Henry WineeofiT, representing the Men's Bible Class of the First Pres byterian Church, went to Statesville yesterday to attend the Men’s Class of tlre First Presbyterian Church of that city. Mr. Caswell delivered an ad dress before the Statesville class, and the meeting proved one of unusual in terest. Marcellus Corbett, 15 years of age, died Friday night of pneumonia at the Jackson Training School. His body was-sent to his former home in Eliza beth City Saturday night. The man agement of the school did everything jKissilile for the youth, but medical aid failed to save his life. This is the second death from disease that has oc curred at the school since its organi zation many years ago. Mrs. Mary E. Connell, wife of R. T. Connell, died at here home here yes terday morning at 1 o'clock, death be ing caused by tuberculosis. fThe de ceit sed was 27 years of age and is sur vived by her husband, mother, Mrs. John and three children. Funeral services were held this after noon at 2 o'clock at Rocky River and interment was made in tin* cemetery t here. Mr. J. G. Parks, manager of the Parks-Belk Company, stated this morning that his company enjoyed fine business Saturday. "There were hundreds of people in the store,” he reported, “and they took advantage of the Easter bargains offered.” Mr. A. E. Harris, manager of the local EfircFs store, reported tjiat business was “good” Saturday, and he expressed de light - with the manner in which shop !>ers took advantage of the Easter Bargains. Both of these companies carried large advertisements in The Tribune and The Times last week. Getting Even. For almost an hour a gentleman from Denver had been boasting about the magnificence of the Rockies to an Irish New Yorker. “You seem to be mighty proud of them mountains.” the Irishman final ly observed. “You bet I am,” replied the west erner, “and I ought to be, since my ancestors built them.” The Irishman thought this over tor a few moments and then asked: “Did you ever happen to hear of the Dead sea in—in one of the old countries ?” “Yes, indeed,” replied the gentle man from Denver. “I know all about the Dead sea.”' , “Well, did you happen to know that me great grandfather killed it?” BAPTIST WOMAN’S MISSIONARY UNION Thirty-Third Annual Session to Be Held in Durham Next Week. 1 Durham,, March 24. —Arrangements lor the Baptist Woman’s Missionary T nion convention here next week. March 27-20, in its thirty-third annual session, arc being completed. Mrs. C. 1.. Haywood, chairman of the commit toe on hospitality, expects .approxi mately eight hundred delegates to be in attendance. | Dr. Paul A. Baghy. Wake Forest. • will deliver the opening sermon Tues <!ay: night. Dr. R. T. Vann, former ly president of Meredith College. Ral eigh, and now corresponding rieere tnry of the Baptist Board of Educa tion in North Carolina, find Dr. W. C. James, Birmingham, Ala., will he among the principal speakers Wednes day (‘veiling. The convention will ( lose Thursday night with an address | by Mrs. W. C. James and a pageant ] given by the alumni of the Louisville Training school. |. Among the other prominent speak ers scheduled to attend the conven tion are Mrs. I). TV. Herring, China; ,-Mrs. M. 11. Braun, China, and Miss Susan Anderson. Africa, all returned ! missionaries. Mrs; W. N. Jones, It:il leigh, president of the convention, will deliver tier address Wednesday morn ing. Dr. (J. T. Lumpkin, head of the new Baptist hospital. Winston-Salem, will appear before the convention in the interest of his institution. :Raleigh, corresponding secretary and The reports of Miss Mary Warren, mission study superintendent, and Miss Elsie K. Hunter, treasurer of the state work, tire expected to show much progress, .according to advance information by officials. When the re ports were made at the convention in Charlotte last year, it was shown that the women had rafsed approximately $300,000 for benevolences. Final to tals tins year are expected to exceed the figures of the previous year, it was stated. HANGMEN, SPIES AND THE 'POLICE NOW CONTROL RUSSIA Only Handful Form Communist Party, Says Walling.—Denies Claims of the Soviets. Washington, March 25. —Russia, with its people r(*duced to the poverty of barbarism, is now controlled by “an army of police, spies, hangmen, and the relative handful that form the communist party, which is ruling the country on the principle that all Rus sia is private property and till Rus sians its serfs,” according to it survey written by William English Walling, which will he published in the forth coming issue of The American Feder ationist, the official organ of the Am erican Federation of Labor. Mr. Wtill ing's (‘(inclusions arc drawn from a re port on Russian economic conditions prepared by the league of nations. Shipments of grain now being ex ported from Russia by soviet authori ties, Mr. Walling asserfs. constitutes only tire latest of a long Series of deeds that have helped along the desith by starvation of millions of Lenine’s and Trotzky’s miserable subjects." Though drought, which brought crop failure, stnd foreign and civil wars have a share of responsibility for the misery formed upon Russia's population, Mr. Walling’s summary continues, the league report found soviet policies of confiscation arid denial of incentive to individuals to lie the gresit cause of progressive impoverishment that is now encountered. -"The bolshevist au thorities. "at last trying to return to the point they started from or at least making ;t bluff sit it," wore rep resented to he meeting the situation with statements and “paper policies" lo which Mr. Walling denies the slightest practical effect.” Even the soviet claim of credit for having given Russian hind holdings to the peasants. Mr. Walling declares, was challenged by the league's report, since before the revolutionary era. peasants owned 188,000,000 dessiatines of cultivated land, while today they possess 224.000,00#. A complete breakdown of railroads and a gradual cessation of the use of machinery in agriculture and industry he includes in summarizing the report, have been the outstanding ' effect of the soviet regiinte. Rural Schools Visited b|y College Men. Greensboro. N. C., March 24.—One hundred and twenty rural schools in North Carolina visited by college and university speakers in the interest of higher education have voiced their co operation with the movement, accord ing to the report of Raymond Binford. president of Guilford College and chairman of the committee appointed to conduct the campaign, submitted to the North Carolina College Confer ence tonight. “These speakers were most cordi ally received,” the report reads, “and the high school principals and. super intendents express appreciation of the efforts in arranging for the visitation. “Our impression is that the greatest benefit accrues to both high schools and colleges by this means of reach ing the high school with some timely message from the college. They were pleased with the idea of a closer co operation with the colleges. 'As a result of one address, the board of trustees met the following (lay and issued bonds to maintaiu a four year high school. They had been employing only one high school teach er. “I did the work myself and enjoy ed it more than any series of talks I , have ever delivered to high school i boys and girls. Whenever one loses I sight of the immediate interests of his own job and enters whole-heartedly in to the spirit of service for the common good, there comes a kind of freedom that he can get in no other way. I believe this is one of the best oppor tunities the men of North Carolina have to do a real educational service.” Baptist Boards Meet In Raleigh. j Raleigh, N. C\. March 23.—With the question of standardizing till Baptist High Schools in North Carolina and appropriating fumls to aid their sup port as the chief matter before them, the Baptist State Mission Board, and the Educational Board were in session here today. The * parliament of the republic of Czechoslovakia has fourteen women members. THE CONCORD TIMES COSTS OF EDUCATION n Only Two Per Cent, of the Federal Expenditures Go For Tins Purpose. Greensboro, N. C., March 23 (By the Associated Press). —"Not a few brass tack philosophers among us appear to be afraid that the increasing cost of education, if it is not checked, will bankrupt the whole country." declar in'. William Louis Poleat, president of Wake Forest College, in an address before the North Carolina College Conference tonight, adding as his re ply that "it needs only to bo remem bered that eighty-five per coot, of ihe federal expenditures go for past and future wars and two per cent, for ed ucational purposes;" Dr. Potent's address was;on the sub ject of endowments foj- higher educa tion. Institutions for higher education have been divided into two groups, he continued, one the state institutions and the other, -private institutions. Better names for these groups, he said, would he tax-supported and en dowed. “Education is a branch of public service.” he continued, "and this is true whether the schools tire formally controlled by the state and suported by the funds which it collects or sup ported by tuition fees and endowments ultimately paid by the public. Endow ed institutions are part of the ma chinery provided for the education of till the people. “in our state, the endowed colleges lake at least one-half of this public responsibility. Lately, the state de partment of public instruction formal ly recognized this relationship and ser vice in its published reports of educa tional activities and progress. These schools, while free of immediate state control, owe .their origin to the author ity of the state, their property is ex empted by the state from taxation, and in an important sense they are responsible to the public opinion of the state. “On the average students pay about one-half of the cost of their instruc tion in tin' endowed colleges,” he con tinued. "The other half of Unit cost is provided by the income from endow ments. Why should not students pay ihe entire cost of what they M ? It nitty be replied that such a require ment would put higher education be yond the reacli of very many promi nent students. It appears advisable .accordingly to keep the costs as low as possible. “Another consideration is that in not a few tax-supported institutions there is no fee for tuition—it is low in till of them. For obvious reasons, the endowed institutions would be un able to maintain a schedule of fees notably higher. “There has been a marked increase in the cost of higher education since 15)13. Faculties have been increased in number and the salary load has grown enormously—forty per cent, at Cornell, for example, sixty iter cent, nr Columbia. Ystle ami Harvard, and eighty per cent, at Williams. In Wake Forest, it has been eighty-seven and one-half per cent. There Inis been no corresponding increase in student fees. "If it he said that the number of students has been greatly enlarged, that is offset by the enlargement of the faculty. Furthermore the cost of ed ucation has been increased by the addition of many new courses of study, particularly in the sciences. Fif ty it go. many departments of science recognized as now necessary in every college curriculum had no exist ence. “The laboratory method is of re cent introduction and involves the heaviest expense of the entire outlay in equipment. The library is the lab oratory of the .courses in literature, history, philosophy and law, so that a much larger collection of books is now required than in former years. "For this enlarged budget, the col leges and universities have been un der the necessity of enlarging their endowments. In the past twenty years, Yale's and Chicago's endow ments have been enlarged nearly six fold: Harvard's, Brown’s and Am herst's nearly fourfold; Smith’s six fold.; All our North Carolina endowed institutions have been under the same necessity, though 1 the increases do not quite reach the figures I have quoted. “The accrediting agencies of the country have established a minimum endowment fund for an institution seeking recognition as a standard col lege. That minimum by 1025 is likely to he in all eases $500,00. The excep tions now are the North Central As sociation of Schools and Colleges. $200.- 000: the Federal Bureau of Educa tion, $250,000; the Methodist Episcopal Church Board of Education, $300,000.” After pointing out that only two per cent, of federal expenditures is for re search and educational purposes. Dr. HAND DRAWN BLOUSES V Another Shipment just in of these Very Popular Blouses * < SAI.E _ $1.95, $2.95, $3:50, $4.95 It Pays to Trade at l ISHER’S Concord’s Foremost Specialists Potent asserted that the SIBS,OOrt,OOOj sptjnf for education last year by. New York constitutes about one-third of one j)er cent. of the state's wealth. # } '•The threat of bankruptcy cannot I be justly laid at the door of the school." lie continued. ‘‘The youth of the land is the wealth of the land, 1 and all our activities arid enterprises! are justified, if at nil. by the contri-j bution which they can be made to; make to the security and well-beingr of the future by providing with, some 1 degree of adequacy for t lie children of the present. ‘‘No policy of nlministering endow ment finals is legitimate which com promises their integrity and security or applies their income to purposes not contemplated. There are two temptations or perils—unwise invest ment and diversion. The greatest care and conservatism are needed in the investment of these sacred tfust funds, not only to preserve principal, from losses, but also to secure a steady and predictable income. “There are various types of diver sion. One of the commonest is to bor row endowment money to meet, cur rent deficits. However honesty may bo ihc purpose to pay’back, the endow ment is for the time reduced and is jeopardized. Sometimes the endow ment is put up as collateral to secure loans for eorrent expenses or much needed buildings. Here again the en dowment is put in jeopardy. “Another form of diversion is tlie in vestment of endowment money in the erection of income-producing buildings as dormitories. The objection to Ibis policy is two-fold. In the first place, confusion is introduced into the ac counting, and the exigencies of student, attendance may diminish or entirely obliterate the anticipated income. The only safe policy is ‘Once Endowment, Always Endowment,’” lie said. AMERICA* COTTON COKES TO RCSSIA First Cargo Since Soviet Revolution Reported to Have Left Bremen. Berlin, March 24. —The first cargo of American cotton bought .on Russian, account kince (lie Soviet revolution is reported to have left Bremen for Russia in the shape of a consign ment of 15,000' bales. The shipment was made on a Rus-' sian ftoamev which is said to nave hen set aside exclusively for the carrying of such cargoes.. The pur chase was the first made by Russia through the Bremen Cotton Exchange since the war. Trade circles called attention to the fact that Russia’s textile plants have been aide to increase their pro duction to such an extent during the last year that the cotton yield in Turkestan, although now greater than ever, is nroving insufficient to meet the Russian demand. Sudan Temple Plans For a Big C'ere monial on May 17 Washington, Mardh 22.—The Shrine club announces that the evening's en tertainment on May 17. next, when Sudan temple will put on its ceremon ial. will he of a character that will make the events remain long in the memory of the participants. The fire works display will be on a huge scale and will depict Shrine features includ cnmels, emblems and. of course, a novice, "holding the rope." The ball will include a rose dance, a snow dance and best of all 30 of Washington's young ladies will see that Shriners have not a dull moment. A prize will be given to the most at tractive young lady at the ball. Posses Clash With Piute Indians. Salt City, March 23.—Word was received here this morning to the effect that in a skirmish late.’ yester day between the renegade Pint ex and white posses near Washeomb, south eastern Ctah, one Indian was killed and five braves and four squaws were eapt nre.d. You’ll be sorry before the case is over. * ************* sg •* * TEXTILE MILLS * X INCREASE PAY * * * (By the Associated Press). Leaksville, N. C., March 24. — * * Textile mills at Leaksviße-Spray * tK and Draper have announced an ■¥: increase of 40 to 55 per cent in * the bonuses paid their employees which, it was said today, means a net increase of slightly more * than 30 per cent. The increase * will add approximately $250,000 annually to* the pay rolls of the .3K mills. ' * £ * '♦*********«***♦ OFFICERS Elms. It. "Wagoner' President A. F. flood man Cashier C. L. Propsf, Asst. Cashier < lioyd Biggers Carl Reaver Tellers DIRECTORS Oeo. ],. Patterson * . .1. Frank Goodman Alex. R. Howard Chas. B. Wagoner Dr. W. I>. Pemberton E. C. Barnliardt B. L. Craberger M. L. Marsh A. F. Goodman A. X. .Tames P. F. Stallings Dr. J. A. Patterson Chas. M. Ivey F. C. Niblock EASTER HATS! The colors are the very brightest or in subdued shades. The trimmings are of feather fancies, ribbons in be witching becoming ways. And flowers are bright and Spring looking as well as youthful. Hats to suit all occasions. SPECIALTY HAT SHOP ‘ • % FOR YOUR LIVING ROOM! The present exhibit affords wondrous opportunities to see the most exacting that has ever been made for particu lar home furnishers. Os course moderate prices prevail—and are especially called to your attention, as they are really remarkable, when tl/e choiceness of quality in the exhibit is considered. Suites shown consist of three pieces, have loose cushions. Coverings in wide range of velours, silk, mohair, hair cloth and tapestry. F. S. —Do not buy anything for your home until you see our line. BELL-HARRIS FURNITURE CO. “THE STORE THAT SATISFIES” “Well, I guess I do need a new hat! ” “Hadn’t noticed it before now but this one’s done its duty. I’ve worn it all winter and a trim, new one would look much better now that Spring is here. And that re minds me, Easter is just around the corner and I’ll want to brighten-up a bit.” And a new hat costs so little that, considering'the im provement it makes in one’s appearance, a man can hard ly afford not to buy a new one. ✓ There will be a special display in our windofv Tues day and all week showing all the new shapes and colors. Don’t fail to see this display or—better still—come right on in and select your new hat while .the range of sizes, shapes and colors is most complete. Browns - Cannon Co. * \ I t Where ( You Get Your Money’s Worth OUR PENNY ADS. ALWAYS BET THE RESULTS Serving the Financial Needs of this Com munity. This hank is interested in the welfare and progress of the com munity and of the individual. As a public institution, it is prepar ed to serve all in whatever way it can he most helpful. Whether your banking re quirements are large* or small, we invite you to make use of our fa cilities. You will find here the spirit of accommodation that will make your banking transactions CITIZENS Bank and Trust Co. Concord, N. C. PAGE THREE
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
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March 26, 1923, edition 1
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