Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 24, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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Thursday, May 24, 1923. Br BOSS COTTRELL SHERRILL Club ancl Society Items Are Solicited. leicoboae 78, Tribute Office. • Misses Brown and Coltrane Honored at Luncheon. In honor of Miss Alice Brown and Miss Ellzalietb Coltrane Mrs. C. W. Byrd and Mrs. W. M. Sherrill enter tained at a lovely luncheon today at the home of Mrs. Byrd on Church Street. * In the center of the dining room table was a silver bowl filled with sweet peas shading from white to deep pink and further emphasizing the motif of pink .were bowls of pink, sweet peas and lady gay roses. Elegant refreshments were served in buffet fashion. Those invited were Misses Brown, Coltrane. Cora Vaughn, Jenn Coltrane, Mary and Adele Pemberton and Mrs. C. A. Cannon, Mrs. L. I). Coltrane. Mrs. E. C. Barnhardt, Jr.,, Mrs. A. B. Howard, Mi» ? , L J. Davis,'Mrs. .7. A. Hartsell, Mrs.,Y.;\. Meu'ns. Mrs. 1t.,1’. Gibson, Mrs. t>. L. Bost. Mrs. J. A. Cannon and Mrs. Grice Brown Saun ders. Miss Stern Dodson is Again ion Way to Beloved China. Kinston, May 23. —Miss Steva Dod son is again on the way to her Be loved China. Her stay there will be brief this time, it is understood. She, is going to witness the fulfillment of great hopes. She will land at Shanghai in a few ays. and attend •exercises dedicating St. Mary’s nail at “Jessfield,” scene of her mission ary labors for many years. Miss Dial son returned to this coun try from the Orient a year or two ago, pensioned |>/ the Episcopal church. She had worked in China 32 years 'as a missionary and church teacher, giving' the best of her life to the cause she represented. She be came. one of the best known mis sionaries in the country. The mis sions organization of her denomina tion has ordered her back to "the field” once more, to witness the ded ication St. (Mary’s and the. con summation of one of ithe things to ward which she labored. ■Miss Dodson is accompanied by her sister. Miss Mary Dodson, wno is taking the trip “just to be going’’ and share the ex-missionary’s pleasure. (Miss Mayy Dodson was formerly a teacher in the Concord Graded schools, and is a niece of the late Mrs. W. J. Montgomery.—Editor). Dancing Class to Give Soiree. The members of the dancing class which Ims been conducted for the past mouth by Messrs. Joe Bost and E. H. Brown. Jr., will give a soiree Friday evening at the Merchants and Manu facturers club. Members of the dub and tlieir families, as well as the fam ilies of the members of the class are cordially invited to attend. ~, , ... Graduates From Winthrop College Among the graduates from Winthrop College. Rock Hill, S. C., this year are Miss Elizabeth Smith, of Concord, and Miss Frances Johnson, daughter of the late Dr. D. D. Johnson, formerly of Concord. The commencement exer cises will he held June 3-5. j Mi's. Macßae and Miss King to Enter tain. Mrs. Cameron Macßae and Miss Mary King will entertain this evening from 8.30 to 10 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Macßae in compliment to Misses Alice Brown and Elizabeth Coltrane. dames Sappcnfield to Graduate. Mr. James Sappentieid will graduate* today from the Southern College of Pharmacy in Atlanta and is expected to arrive Saturday, night to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Sappen lteltl. WHOOPING COUGH must run its course— Jhere is no “cure,” but Vicks helps to ease the coughing paroxysms. ' Apply oftjen. Use freely at bedtime. WM Over 17 Million Jan UseJ Year/;, r Che Honorable j (conduct of % , business not m only wins the- M mT» u i It establishes jfpP .JP-abondof s!\trust between faMd H AnsweredJDay & Night^ 1 PHONES W' 64ONIGHI^3e ' 0 ‘ 1591 '^ PERSONALS. * Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Wolff have re turned to their home at Hanesville, La., after spending some time here with Prof, and Mrs. ■S. A. Wloff. • * • Mfss Rosa Caldwell, who has been a, student at Salem College for the past vear will arrive tonight to spendUhe holidays with her purents, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Caldwell. Miss Margaret Long, of Unionville, is visiting relatives here. • * * Miss Elizabeth Mauney lias returned to Columbia, 8. C., after spending a short time with Miss Kathleen Sap penfield. * * * Miss' Elizabeth Hahn, who recently graduated from Mont Amoena Sem inary, has returned to her home here. She was accompanied by Miss Vir ginia Lee Patterson, who will spend several days with her before return ing to her home in Hagerstown, Pa. Mrs. Goodman Undergoes Operation The condition of Mrs. A. F. Good man, who underwent a slight opera tion at the Concord Hospital on Wednesday, is reported today as im proving nicely. CAPITAL IS READY FOR THEjSHBINE HOSTS Gala Dress of Washington Put On; Arrangements Completed. . Washington, May 24 (Capital News Service).-“-Washington is ready for the Slu-ine Convention of June 5. (i anti 7. With the co-operation of the Government, housing and feeding ac commodations for four hundred thou sand guests are provided. The city is elaborately decorated: Pennsylvan ia Avenue is a veritable bower of fifty thousand electric lights. The "Garden of Allah’’ I hat stretch of wide street in front of the White House between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets, is tilled with stands, with huge pillars, with sjihinxes. with ga.v colors, with electric lights. Parking arrangements for thousands of Pullman cars and any quantity of automobiles have been matle. Hundreds of guides have been assigned the various shrine units which will come. The three massive parades are planned to tip; last details. Hun dreds 'of hand concerts have been scheduled, with especial reference to tlie Government’s Hospitals, that sol diers and sailors who can not come in to see the "big doings,” can yet hear something of the music of the conven tion. Washington, accustomed to ticing iiost to throngs from her four-yearly inauguration displays, looks confident ly forward toproviding fun, frolic, and hospitality to the greatest throng of America us which ever visited her at one time, and hopes to show tlrem not only a "good time,” lmt to provide all who come with such knowledge of the government machinery and* such ap preciation of the real workings of ‘Tudo Sam,” as will make all who visit the convention better informed, and therefore, more enthusiastic Am | erica us. I LIQUOR PERMIT REGULATIONS ARE CONSIDERABLY MODIFIED Treasury Ultanges Rules Which Have Seriously Hampered, Physicians in Tlieir Practice. , Washington, D. C., May 24.—-Formal orders modifying prohibition enforce ment regulations affecting physicians, dentists and veterinarians, by provid ing Unit their permits hereafter may be obtained from State 'prohibition directors, instead of at Wasnington headquarters, were issued today by Secretary Mellon. ( In addition to permitting physicians to obtain permits from State direc tors, the Treasury orders authorize issuance by State directors of permits for dentists and veterinarians to use alcohol. Under the orders, permits for transportation of liquor by trucks also will be obtainable from State directors without reference to Wash ington headquarters. Secretary Mellon also issued anoth er order designed ito simplify with drawals of liquor from Government bonded ' warehouses. Those selling boded liquor* to purchasers with ap proved permits will not hereafter be required to exhibit all copies of the .selling permits, and officers at the warehouses wll not be required to ascertain from State directors whether the withdrawal papers are authentic. The rigid requirements for obtaining permits for withdrawals and restrictions thrown around with drawals, together with safeguards against forged permits recently worked ouL now are believed' to be sufficient protection against illicit withdrawals. Revival Services Largely Attended. The revival services at the Second Presbyterian Church are being largely attended. The music by the junior choir of forty-odd voices is a note wor thy nnd inspiring feature of the ser vices. Last night the roll of the church members was called by the clerk of session, M l ’. J. 0. Query. Many members responded. Tonight a male quartet will sing. The quartet is as follows: , First tenor, Rev. W. C. Wuuehope; second tenor, Mr. John Chaney; first lmss, Rev. M. A. Osborne; set-nod bass, Mr. C. H. Long, You ure cor dially invited. Pastor to Go Into Evangelistic \\ork. There will be no further services at Tucker's Chapel until further notice is'given. Thtychurch memliership will he moved to Kannapolis. The lmstor, Rev. Henry G. Bluck'veUler, will go Into evangelistic work. He has been pastor here for a number of years and the members regret to see him go. E. O. Approximately eight and a half mil lion .women are included among the wage workers in the United States. JAIL TREATMENT OF WOMEN UNDER FIRE Florida Floggings Turn Spot Light on Other Prisons. Washington, May 24 (Capital News Service).—Dr. Hastings H. Hart, di rector Os the Child Coring Department of the Russell Sage Foundation, speak ing before the Policewomen's Section of the National Conference on Social Work,, wbirh/Eas just met in the Cap ital of the Nation, finds that treat ment of w.omen prisoners in comity jails is a disgrace to the country which peMnits. \ Dr. Hart said conditions in the treat ment of women prisoners are especial ly had in New York, Connecticut, Minnesota, and Ohio. He cited inci dents, including one in New Haven, where lie said 40 women were kept in the jail without adequate fire protec tion in their quarters and where show er boths had not l>een connected with the water supply for two years. “The greatest disgrace to our civili zation in America is the county jail,” said Dr. Hart. "The brightest pros pect of redeeming penal conditioifc comes from the entrance of women in to active service in police and prison work. With them have come a new’ rule of kindness, and we have learned that brute force is not needed in the handling of either delinquent men or women in jails.” How much are you worth? To many men that means how much has the -world been worth to the, not how much they have lieen worth to the world. SAVE ALL YOUR PLOW SHARE MONEY chanpinif plow shares. RI\l)Y quick touchable Pl.OVt POINT-filttA s oq and stays pul, niaJe from specially tempc?«E|Hj,-h grade chilled semi-steel finished in red, ad*ptabl&£jb tractor plow,, gangs, sulky, and walling plows. Fitsused share. / nFIW /Pending on a / P " l P ? ( S J^ A,D * ey order. Fully guaranteed. J. A. GLASS 169 N. S. Street Concord, N. C. Concord Music Studio Dixie Building ALAN I>. PRTNDELL Teacher of Voice MARY B. FLOWERS Violin Telephone 791 CALL 36 For Your Wants In Our Line Porter Drug Co. Phone 36 PHONE 333 For Your Party. Wo>im give you the follow ing individual moulds of ice cream: Bell, Heart, Cupids, Lilly, Daisy, Rose, Basket, Doves, Rab bit, Turkey, Battleship. Cline’s Pharmacy Telephone 333 piiiiiiii!niiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii|iiiiiiiiiiiiig TRADE EVENTS SPECIAL | sfe *4 For Any Old Gas, Coal, | | 1. U Oil or Wood Stove • 1 . With the Purchase of a New . H | CABINET GAS RANGE 1 fj Low Prices—lß Months to Pay jg [ Ten Extra Coupons in Addition to I , jj, Payment, on Ford and* j | f J ¥ Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. | ;illllllll!ll!llllllUllll!lllllllilllllllll!lilllllllll!|!il||||||||||||i|||||||||||||||||||il!llllllllllllllillllllllllllllll!i!llll||||||||||||||iiiiiS ITHE CONCORD -DAILY TRIBUNB YOUR< [HtwteaZlYoin I4ANH ”ck»»“*H»ii«. rXfA.ll U and Tmdenda* the WtKBKBBBM CihiMMu er Week* I Rmmi That Make for Suceete or I Failure M 9h«*ra fake Your Ptiu IX7HEN a line of travel, on Luna, ”” ends In a, small cross, we may foretell or read a voyage that has ended or will end in disappointment. A line of travel that ends in a square shows danger arising to the subject from his travels, but he will be pro tected, since the square Is called the “mark of preservation." Note whether the __ line of travel ends In an island, ho matter how small. If it does, loss through the journey is indicated. When the line of travel reaches Jupiter, the journey will be very long. When it runs to the mount of Saturn, or fate, some fatality will govern the entire journey. It will be subject to good or evil fortune, as the other signs in the hand Indicate. But when the travel line runs to the mount of the sun, or Apollo, under the ring finger, there may be expected, or there are indicated, very favorable re sults from the journey, such as riches and fame. When the line of travel reaches the mount of Mercury, at the base of the little finger, sudden and unexpected wealth from the journey Is seen. / (© by the Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) Homes in America, The total number of homes in the United States, not including homes on farms, was 17,600,000 in the year 1920, according to figures recently issued by the census bureau at Washington. Os this number 7,195,000, or 40.9 per cent, were owned by their occupants, and of these 2,855,000, or 39.7 per cent, were mortgaged. The total amount of these mortgages is estimated by the bu reau to be $6,000,000,000, while the to tal value of the homes is placed at $14,090,000,000. The ratio of the in' debtedness to the value is 42.6 per cent. ' <® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) 1 - Express Train on Serene Frightens Yeung “Savaggij”. London, May 23—The first movie show ever witnessed by peasant cnil dren on the island of St. Kilda so ter rified them that they stampeded from the schoolroom where the aim was being exhibited, and sought safety on the wild hillsides,' says the cor respondent of ithe Daily Express, who is touring the loney islet that lies west of Scotland. St. Kilda, isolated for several months of the year by the stormy Atlantie, is inhabited by a s--mi civilized people and a party of visi tors, thinking to give the natives a treat, arranged a moving picture en tertainment. The young folks, were out in rull force despite the warnings of tneir elders who suspected magic. The audience sat unifßoved iffifough a pic ture of a football match, but when an express train rushed at them across the scene the youngsters screamed and fled, ignoring the as surance of the operator thpt the train was not real. When faith in God goes, mail, the lover, loses his fairest vision. | EAR MONUMENT MUST GO ■ , vju i SS® H sssisi&ms; I§s| View of the Mimi-Zuk’a, or ear mon ument, erected on a hill at Kyoto by Taiko, a hero of old Japan, to cele brate his victory over the Coreans. He caused thousands of ears, cut from the dead Coreans, to be buried beneath i the Mimi-Zuka. It is now to be de- I stroyed—presumably so that it njpy not serve to keep alive Corean ani mosity to Japan. Shut That Door! This common command will soon be out of date, if a recent inventor lias his way. His device slips over the hinge of any door and prevents it from stand ing open; and at the same time it can be slipped off the hinge and under the door to serve as a door stop and hold It in any desired open or partly open position. In connection with this dou ble duty, it is necessary to point out that no screws are required for at taching the little spring-mid-wlng out fit. To attach, the wings are simply bent toward one another and the spring slipped over the hinge.. Re moval is just as quick and easy as attachment. —Scientific American. TY COBB CONTINUES TO FLASH OLD-TIME FORM Is Not Yet Among the Bench Manager Class, Despite His 37 Years. IBy the Associated Press.; Detroit. May 24.—Tyrus Raymond Cobb, variously yclept "The Peerless One,” and "The Georgia Reach,” is not yet among the bench manager class, despite his 37 years and the thinning hairs on his head. Fre quent predictions, first heard when he succeeded Hughie Jennings as mana ger of the Detroit Tigers two years ago, that he was through as a player, have failed of fulfillment. It is a different Cobb who guides the destinies of the 1923 Tigers from the player who flashed ami jig the major league constellations in 1905, gaining brilliancy and renown until in 1911 he became a .420 batter. The speed that "gave Cobh a new major league record for stolen bases in 1915,’ with a total of 98, is waning, but in its place has come craftiness, and be cause he had so iuuch speed lo lose, la; stnl is a great outfielder, still a i dangerous man on the paths. ■| At bat, he is the same “Peach.” Ilis je.ve seems as clear as in his earlier j days .when he was the bugbear of all j pitchers in the league, lie continues to meet the hall squarely, and his faculty of driving the ball out of reach of the fielders, seem, greater, if any thing. this year than ever. From the start of this season he lias ! had the Tigers among the league lead ers. Close followers of the game have I seen in Detroit the principal menace j to the New York Yankees in this sea son's race. Cobb’s heavy artillery is conceded to tie the equal of the New York club's “murderers’ row.” and liis pitching staff, considered the prin cipal weakness of the club, has shown surprisingly well during the first month, the veteran Dauss especially appearing near the peak of his form. Some critics see indications that j Cobh may direct his club from the bench soon, in the acquisition of two slugging recruits, Fothergill and Mun ttsh, both of whom have been used ef fectively this year, hut Cobh smiles ! and continues to take his stand in cen | terfield, I Chinese women have organized the I League of Political for Women, with j headquarters in Trade Event Specials ' 63 MEN’S • SUITS Mixtures, Blue and Black All Wool Values to $35.00 Choice Only $20.00 Size 33 34 35 36 37 .38 40 1 6 8 23 16 ' 7 2 100 PAIRS MEN’S LOW-SHOES All Kinds, Tan, Black and Patent If Y ou Wejtr a Small Size here is Your Chance Value to SIO.OO Only $4.50 x These are all from our Regular Stock and are Real Bargains Browns - Cannon Co. v- Where You Get Your Money’s Worth $ GROCERIES AND PRODUCE :: Prices in Keeping With the Grade of Goods We Sell. Who knows but that one of the Automobiles will be won from this store. Anyway, you are certain to get First- Class Goods at Attractive Prices. WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS. RAIFORD & BLACK No. 42 Buffalo Street Phone 711 PRICE UP Last call at old prices on the test Inner Tube made. A few of old stock fFcoMwesswll BIG BARGAIN jMp Save time, worry and cash —double Ask our customers if the McWade . ]NFlatbi> Automatically Sealed Inner Tube isn’t by far the -best value offered in Tubes. HOME EDUCATIONAL CO., IMione 3611 or Local Hardware Stores. KJIdHJ44 lOTailH tirlh-b-b-u-..U.IMS.Jij ~j J!),!,.u j- -jin-wmij.m «mi.iui jii nw PROMPT COMPLETE I Building Material service right here at home. , It is worth while to you to be able to get practically anything you may need in the building material line in one place and without delay. This is the service we render. ! YOU haven’t a need in our lines too large or too small for us to handle. / | F.C.NIBLOCK I ARE YOU A QUIET BABY? It is a well known proverb that “a quiet baby gets no milk.” There are more ways tham one to make a $ noise. THE TRIBUNE. An advertisement in The Tribune is a good way to break the silence. _ ' S PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 24, 1923, edition 1
5
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