Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / April 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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Friday, p>23. ' |?| llT" . ' w ' 'if I * ; ® BvfeMap a> fk $ |gj»^ [^agr _^ < * t S $ r - - SB m Grandmother’s Jams, 15-61 S® fH * jar -23 c O CM ALL THE POPULAR FRUITS ANti BERRIES JEfl 1 1 1 1 Sun-Maid. Raisins, seeded, i S 15-oz. package 14c I I| J Grandmothers Wheat Far- v jjj fig ina, large package ___ _. 15c IM .;■ Chili Sauce R9l 8 Ounce IC/> 16'Ounce , Og r |DI Bottle IDC Brittle __— [jjj DU A.&R FLOUR A. &P. fffi »@ FAMILY ‘/OR SELF-RISING peg f fj| 12 Lb. 24 Lb. v 12 Lb. 2$ Lb. /Jiff f l I Bag Pag Bag - Bag |yi , ffi| 50c 98c 49c 95c H Pure Lard, lb. I: - 16 c H P A. & P.'Baked Beans (j jl ° Cans t DC Can AOC (|lj U Q Packages A. &P. Pancake or Buck- 4C r f| | i J w^at Ft ° ur - ------ )JU l« fl O Packages A. &P. Macaroni or OCp [I 1 j || Spaghetti oV Noodles UI If Pacific Toilet Pa- C _ Kellogg’s Corn J ‘S# 1 per, Roll „ # Flakes -- M' BSI Double Tip C r A. &P. Catsup, I{3 I Matches, pkg. 8 Otance .HR luj Heinz Baked Q _ P. &G. Naptha |H |Qf - Beans, can Soap “J Morton's Salt 11- Prunes, 60 to 17r trst Q Package _-. * AC 70 f I?| |J lona Corn .I*! _ ' lona Tofhatoes 11. IJJ - C For AAC fjj iUIA. &P. Sliced Bacon, 1-2 lb. 11 package -_ -. _-. 21c jfl I "' ’ i To die above let us add that the ope stile way to be thrifty is ; to bank REGULARLY a, part of what voiLcarn. The sooner you BEGIN to.deposit your money the better. DCfITNOW! ■ - f Not only, t^giti'but always make tile balance to your credit GROW. *• •- i A WE WILL WELCOME YOUR ACCOTMT 1 1 ".: '■■'■■ ■■—• — Four Year Scholarship Available. • Raleigh, N. C„ April IS.—Dr. E. C. Brooks, supailutendent of public in struction, has available , for ong_ well qualified 1923 big.ii school graduate a four-year scholarship, valtied at. IJSO annually, to ‘the Colorado School ot Mines, Go den, Colorado, it was n notinced tonight. Applies tlopo. “ the superintemu'nt said, should be made to him ana the applicants must be graduated m tne year of their appointment, 'if appoi fat ed in 1923. tbs successful student must be 1923 graduates and must eatisfy all requirements for admit- 1 tajice yvlthdlit conditions. The scholar ship will be awarded for a period of four ypars and exempts the fcoidetv from all tuition on Laboratory n«s. . Cornea Early In Spring. Among the first birds to arrive In spring In the northern part of «rthe United States Is the 'bluebird, gays the American Forestry Magazine o! . Washington. f Which Tomatoes Best Resist Wilt? are the SweeSt? The Select-Rite Seed Charts in the 1923 Catalog of SEEDS Show at a glance the varieties of each vegetable toplant for tarliness, yield, length of bearing, or for what ever purpose is most desired. Mailed you free on request. For three generations we have sup 4>lied our customers the best in seeds, and with the Select - Rite Onarts, you can select the right variety for the results year want. FREE FLOWER SEEDS Our 1923 catalog tell 3 how you can ha»e them V without cost. Send a post card now- for your cop?. T. W. WOOD St SONS, .Seedsmen 41S. 14th St. Richmond, Vo,. DYSPEPSIA CAST OUT BY PAW PAW Richmond Woman Relieved of Head aches, Sleeplessness and | Nervous Depression “I want to say for the benefit of my friends and others that Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic positively cures dyspepsia.” This ip the statement of Mrs. W. E. Moore, of Richmond, Va. Read her letter: '“I was so afflicted with that dire complaint,” she writes, “that whatever ' I ate seemed to rest, as though in a lump, Upon my breast for hours. “It caused headaches, insomnia, and nervous depression beyond description. I could obtain nd relief. -1 tried a bottle of Paw Paw Tonic and from the very first I felt a change for the better. : “My food began to digest and I al most instantly begap to feel like an other person. I have used but one bottle and I really and conscientiously feel that lam cured.”, ' l If YOU are a sufferer from in digestion, dyspepsia, any stomach trouble, K you are continually upset from nervousness, buy a bottle of Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic at once—, and just FEEL yourself improving! It costs SI a bottle and can be bought from the Paw Paw Man, who is at the American Medicine Company stole, at 643 Hamilton St. He is ready* and willing at any time to explain Paw Paw’s merits to you and will S'* let you tiy Paw Paw , / tl\ Tonic free of ,cost. I yvrßr >jg 1 Stop in and hear his * interesting-talk. ' S's' Munyon’s Homoeo vWHi/ pathic Home Remedy Co., Scranton, Pa. For Sale in Concord by Pearl Drug Comnan.v. MRS. W. A. EBU L. Wm*s 1 ] For the Mother This Advice by a Mother la Moat v Y|tnl to You New Drookiand, S. C.—“l wish to iay to all women who are not familiar with Dr. Pierce's remedies, that I took the 'Favorite Prescription’ dur ing the period cf expectancy and it was a great help to me. I kad three children before I had any experienco with the 'Favorite Prescription' and therefore was in a position to know whether or apt it was a benefit to me. I know that is .was, for I was so - much stronger than at provious-times. Also Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets have proved to. be of great benefit in relieving and preventingconstipa-, tion.”—Mrs. W, A. Price, Shull st.' Writd ,Dr. Pierce, Pres. Invalids Hotel in Buffalo, N. for free medi cal advice or send 1W for trial pkg. Favorite tablets. l : ; j,■ , , ~ ' THE CONCXIRu DAILY TRIBUNE r— Stable manure la growing scarcer anil scarcer, nnd more arid more ex pensive. Save your leaves and vege table refuse for a compost heap- this spring. This compost .with commer cial fertilizers lias to take the place of stable manure. Bone meal is good fertilizer for everything. 'Awlays have some of It liund.v. Buy 'enough seeifc the first time so yt>u won't neeil to wait .when yon are ready to plant. Get staples by the ounce a«id half,ounce. Did you know that tomatoes . have | two kinds of leaves? One is fine cut. I The other is "potato” leaved, 'the po-! to to lenved kind Is hardier tluyi the other kind, and stands dry weather better. \ Celery cahhnge, or P« Tsai, doesn't smell like cabbage when It Is cooked. The reason is easy: it isn't, cabbage, but a mustard. If you haven’t grown Pe Tsai or Wong Bok, you Imre mis sed something. Nothing better for n fall salad, as delicate as lettuce and better flavored, and it always heads. If you tryif It"is best eaten raw, but very good when cooked. The government has eotne so the rescue of asparagus growers with a rustproof "glass.” .If you are start ing an asparagus .patch try the new Washington variety. It has trie gov ernment O. IC. for flavor, size and growth. Soak your beyt seeds over night if it is a dry spring. Save celery tops and dry them for soup and stew flavor. They give more flavor/try than they do fresh when' cooked. Put this in your note book: If ma ture heads of cabbage start, to split tiiis summer pull them enough •to loosen the roots in the soil without breaking them. At the Theaters. Dick Hatton is being shown at the Pastime today Ju “The Blood Test.” A comedy is also on tlio program. At the Piedmont today John Hilbert plays the lending role in "Truxton King,” from the hook by the same name. “Big Boy" Williams is tin- star at the Star today in the western drama, “Blaze Away.” , 'Jack Pott Says. A cat may look at a king, but It takes nerve for “two kings” to look at' the “kitty.”—Boston Transcript. >K *- lan old recipe ■TO DARKEN HAIR “ y~ Sage Tea an<t Sulphur Turn* Gray, Faded Hair Dark and' Glossy v Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at hotne, which is mussy and troublesome. t Nowadays we sirqply ask at any drug store for ’'Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound.” You will get a large bot tle of this old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients, at very little cost Everybody uses this preparation now, because no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and even ly. You dampen a sponge or sqft brush •with it and draw this through your hair, taking one smalt strand at a time; by mdrning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark,"thick and glossy and you look years younger. I ATTENTION AUTO OWNER ji , Free Qne Famous Air-Gauge, Extra Heavy Bed Inner Tube j 1 with each Clover Leaf or Long Distance Cord Tire. Limited time ou j t y . Written guarantee one year. Will save you one-third mileage ' on tires. Clover Leaf Cord tare over size built for ear owners who j want High Quality Tire. Written guarantee I”.(KXt miles against h blow-outs'ytnul rim cuts. Long Distance Cords lire oversize, niggl'd j 1 toughness, armoured Extra Strength. Written guarantee 10,000 ij unless* They are*Home Protlftets, manufactured by Paul Rubber Co., • ji Salisbury, if, C. Million Dollar Plant. ' Phone 41-W fur demonstration. * j. a: glass. i j Exclusive Distributor Cabarrus County NOTICE. j Wanted —bids <m framing, inch | hoards and cedar pasts for construe- S tion of fence aiid buildings for Ca- j bai'RUs County Fdir Association. , Specifications and quantities furnished itpon application. • W. .V FOIL. Chairman Ground Committee. 20-ts-e. ' OtD TIMER 18 RACK " j ■ —« — “My l'riehds hud all given upi-and never expected to see mo •around again, J had given up hoping my self. as nojpiiallcino touched my case. The doctors had tried everything. M.V food dhl not digest, and filled me with "gas. My brother in Philadelphia wrote, | . me to try Mayti’s Wonderful Remedy! The first dose gave me wonderful re lief anil I am now as well us I ever was arid x feci • thirty,, years younger.” It is a simple, harmless preparation | that removes the catarrhal mues from i the intestinal 'tract and allays the in- j j fianiQiation which causes practically , all stomach, liver anil intestinal ali ments, including appendicitis. One ■Hpse will Oonvince or money refunded. iCßhsou Drug Store and druggists ev- 1 erywhere. HENRY FORD’S CANDID ATY IMPREBSE CAPITAL CITY; Story Says Hears* Will Rack Fowl If Mr. Harding (Jots His Court j Through. , t Washington .'"'A ;>ri 1 18.—Washington is taking seriously the candidacy of Henry Ford for the Presidency in ■1824. In the first place there is the almost daily lauding of Ford in the I fears t newspapers. Together -with tills' is aj story going the rounds thht, I Hr. Hearst sitting at a public din ner alongside of ißobert Cecil said that if President Harding succeeded, in having the international court of, justice accepted by the, Senate he would put all his money and all his organs erf publicity behind Ford Tbr the Precedency. Then, too. an unusual number of l politicians from sections of Hie west have {Trough! in reports or Ford’s strength in fheir states. The slirewil i est Democratic politician from Ne braska was in town a few days ago ! and was asked whom lie favored for the Democratic nomination for Presi dent. "There are a lot of good men." lie replied, "but what's the , use of talkr big. - Somebody * will enter Henry 'Ford in tile primary in Nebraska and lie'll win the delegation in a walk.” Similarly a supporter of President Hardtng in Ohio said: - “Harding ought to win the renomi nation without a contest and lie un doubtedly would if it were not for the Presidential primaries. Suppose for example, that Ford is entered as a candidate in the Republican pri mary ip Ohio, H<> would attract all] the dissatisfied elements regardless of parti- and he might raise the devil." Ford's shadow lies across both the regular parties aqd as for a third party it depends upon * wliat Ford means to do. One of tlie progres sives who is favorable to tlie nomi nation. of Senator I’.jiFollefte discus sing the possibility of a third party movement said: “What is . Henry Ford going to do? Everything depends on tlie answer to that, question. J f lie runs as an in dependent oandi|date- LaFollete and nil tlie others may, as well give up. He would get enough of the Indepen dent-rote to spoil the chance for any one else." As for Ford’s intentions Mr.-Hearst may know that they are. But the chamies are that he does not and Is; merely displaying tlie name of tlie :nV toffiobile maker- prominently for the purpose of frightening President Harding out. of supporting the league court. Many politicians have talked to Ford about 1924. Ford listens in (silence to all each visitor lias to say ' and then remarks “It's in tlie laps I i of the.gods.” That is liis stock reply, j A dozen persons have heard exactly those words from him. •Ilist as when lie ran for Senator from Michigan against Truman New berry he will probably be a c;indi-| date in the I'residential primaries i of both parties. If tie has any politi cal leanings it is toward tin- Reputi licftli party but they are not strong enough*, to keep him from standing for President as a Democrat. Anil it is in tlie Deinocratic convention that lie will out tlie largest figure. However, lie is not likely to otrtain the Demieratie nomination. Call For Mr. Diogenes—an Honest Man is Fouml. Salisbury. April 18.-—W. L. Ray, a local magistrate, has received a dol lar from a man ut Hot Springs. N. C., in payment of a debt made 40 years ago while Mr. Ray was con ducting a store near Hot Springs. When Mr. Ray wont out of business the man denied the debt, hut now. at the age of 83. he says he could not stand the idea of dying without pay ing the debt, and so he sends the dol lar witli tlie statement that at , ihe time he denied the debt he knew lie owed the money. * Something in This. Clolhes make the man when people do mit know, the man. Tlie folks who would not -know a man when they see one are tlie very folks who do know j clothes when they see them. —Ex- change. , idodbbddoodoodoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocsooooooooooooooooocxsoooooooooooool ) \ * , ( i ~w. Eat Bread More Often in. Place I rc *\ With this tkm foundation of S? 00{ 1 healthful, low-priced fooil I'cuu ayd \'Hir purse on the bal .•fys Butter-Nut Bread “The Better Brett^ ll "' l tp Lust Sunday } Fresh at Your mi r ‘■is Y , CAROLINA BAKING COMR’Y • ) We’ve > S' ; \ Go t Your Suit Here ! And we are anxious for the privilege of fitting you tip. Whatever your size, of your personal taste, we’ll fix you up in just the suit that you have pictured. A wealth of smart models for young men, just as Varied are the conservative pat terns, and there’s just no end to the showing of two-pants suits for boys. ' . ■„ Straw Hats Here, Too -• / ( , 4. \ Straw hat time has arrived. Gopd idea to come in and make a selection while you are sure to get your correct si2e and the style of straw you prefer. Haven’t seen so many on the streets' yet, but an other day Or two and the old felts will look like back numbers. . All the Things of Dress v The sticking new Eagle shirts, many with collars attached; new hosiery; easy fitting summer under wear; in fact everything that goes to make up the summer wardrobe. Fiorsheim Shoes “For the man who caresl’ Smoke j||j|| MEN B(JY IT because it repeats g| in quality. That’s Cinco. Smoked by ||g millions just like you, with your same ; discriminating tastes. It represents the utmost in valqe and smoke-content. |j| 2 for 15c, everywhere V j|| Newspapers Copy No. N. Y. 23 2 cots, x SO lines P. 0.334 ) PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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April 20, 1923, edition 1
5
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