Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 15, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Concord Daily Tribune (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
PAGE TWO PENNY COLUMN 1 Fresh Shipment of Midas Water Today. It’s healthy. Dove-Bost Co. 15-lt-p. Try a Fresh Ripe Pineapple. Lippard & Barrier. 15-lt-p. For Rent—Duscnbery House, Infiimlsh ed room; storage rooms. Jno. K. Pat terson, Agent. 15-Ct-p. Wanted—A Well Drilled at Mt. Pleasant. Apply at Halifax Cotton Mills, Mt. Pleasant. 15-3 t-chg. i Plenty of Good Fresh Country Vegeta- i bles of all Kinds. Ifove-Bost Co. 15-lt-p. For Sale—3 Modern 7-Room Cottages. cheap cottages, vacant lots, splen- ; did farms, one large timber tract, two j tracts in Alexander County on sand clay road, good buildings, 120 and 100 , acres, will exchange 100 tract for city ! property. Six room cottage on large j lot in Kannapolis. Jno. K. Patterson, Real Estate Agent. 14-4 t-p. Salesman Wanted. Concord. Good Prop osition. Address Energetic, care Trib une. 13-3 t-p. For Sale—Pony and Saddle. Buggy and . harness. Bargain. 187 South Union St. Phone 587. 1-ts-chg. Jjost—Clover Leaf ;tg\4 Casing on Rim. “Notify for reward IV. \Y. Morris. 14-4 t-p. I , E. B. GRADY TO BI’ILD NEW STRUCTURE HERE ! Building Will Be Erected on His Lot on ; East Corbin Street, Work to Start at j Once. A modern brick building, which will ‘ combine store rooms and three apart-j meats, will be erected here in the imme- 1 diiyte future by Mr. E. B. Grady. Plans ) fn'r the building have already been-drawn I arid approved b.v Mr, Grady, 'and work on | the building will start immediately. •Mr. Grady will erect it is. new build- | inlg on his lot on East Corbin street, ad- l joining his plumbing plant arid office. The | house en the lot now will be moved | -and Mr. Grady has already moved his 1 family, preparatory to the moving of the house. s The building as planned by Mr. Grady will be two-stories high, and is to be built entirely of brick. The ground floor and basement will be constructed for bns- For Sale By CONCORD MOTOR CO. Means Street R. M. HOUSEL Kannapolis SMITH’S GARAGE Mt. Pleasant Half the Goodness of Jm Pancakes Depends J The smooth, mellow sweetness of GOLDEN CROWN SYRUP [(' ■■ .r . i *lends with the tastiness of any ' food on which it is spread,' and gives it a rich, irresistible appeal. Furthermore, it’s one of the 'cf- — nutritious foods —the 5 or 10 pound cans are most vCs 1 •mjjm. economical because it costs less per V« This Golden Crowh pas /\ r maim » —. Crvstal-Cut Glass • c r * W+TGm SYRUP PITCHER UV/ Syrup. f I Mail th* GoWen Crown Syrup label and 50o—check. atarepa or HI HU money-order—*nd we will ml the pitcher by Prepaid Parcel**?. M 1 Wll gntUAKT. SOW * CO., Praaident Street. BALTIMORE, MS. gE my / y Peaches! Extra Nice Peaches and Fresh hbme grown vegetables. Lippard & Barrier. \ 15-lt-p. Get Your Brunswick Stew and Dutch barbecue' meat at Dutch Lunch Room on ('flinch street. Also fresh fish and Reich's Special on tap. Fred Cook. 1 Manager. 15-2 t-p. Fresh Layer and Pound Cakes of All kinds. Dove-Bost Co. 15-lt-p. ' Another Fresh Shipment of Watermelons. j good and juicy. Also North Carolina I aud Georgia peaches. Ferris Candy Kitchen. 15-2 t-p. Wanted,- By Couple—Three Rooms or house furnished or unfurnished. Would rent house while oecupajjts away for summer. Box 453, City. 12-st-p. For Sale—l House on Depot St. Two on Depot street. See L. S. Bond, 140 W. l>ei>ot St. J2-6t-p. Lost—Male Pig Weighing About 45 pounds, with brown and black spots. Reward. "Central Case, S. Church Street. 11-4 t-p. Adding Machine Paper, 20 Cents a Roll, 3 for 50 cents, at Times-Trib une Office. Auto Owners—Read Big Ad. Save $5.00. J. A. Glass. Phone 412 W. 11-6 t-c. ;i n css houses al] <1 the second tbnir will lumso thfeo apartments. The building will be 4<).\S-1 feet. tine of the apartments will run the | entire length of the building and will be occupied by Mr. Grady aud his family. I On the other side of the building will l be two apartments, each to consist, of a j bring room, bed room, breakfast, room, bathroom and kitchen, j A modern heating system will bu in j stalled in the building, \vhieh will in • elude all other modeni equipment. • Mr. (irady declared., in discussing the j building, that there ha» been a scarcity of homes here for several years'aud this fact influenced him in jmilding thf j three apartments in his new building. The building will have an attractive front and the plans call for a structure that will compare favorably with any other in the city in appearance. At the Tlieaters. I’ete Morrison in "Making Good" and Carter DeHaven ill "Say It With Din-1 nionds” are on the bill today at the j Piedmont Theatre. The Star today is -showing “The Champcen" with Hal Roach in the lead ing role: also Harold Lloyd in the com edy "A Sailor Made Man." 'The Leather Pushers." and Jack Hoxie in "Gallopin' Through" are the attractions at the Pastime today. Real happiness i.-, cheap enough, yet how readly we pay for its counterfeit. CATARRH i „ Cat.-; rrh is a Local disease greatly In- I .Tieneed by Constitutional conditions I HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con sists of an Ointment which gives Quick j Relief by local application, and the ' j Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts j through the Blood on the Mucous Sur faces and assists in ridding your System of Catarrh. Sold by druggists for over 40 Tears. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. O. S ANTS \ r -Ml MOTHS, BUGS kv /PLEAS.MITES MOSQUITOES Spray SHEPARD e'KaiNSECT Kil” l [POSITIVELY NO KEROSENE] KILLS GERMS J » ~ > 9 » KANNAPOLIS 9 » DEPARTMENT & © 6 @S999«ISO«| Kannapolis, June 13.—Miss Mabel Reek, will go to Asheville the 15th to at tend summer schooj. Miss Reel left yes terday for Marion, where she is visiting her grand-father, and will go from there to Black Mountain to spend a night with her aunt. Mrs. Ergen, proceeding thence to Asheville. Mrs. J. P. Brantley and grand-daugh ter, little Miss Claudine Brantley, of Mooresville. spent a few days of the past week with Mrs. Brantley’s daughter, Mrs. Glenn Deal. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Dennis and family, of Yadkin Bleaehery, vffiited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Spry Saturday. Miss Mabel Gillliam has returned from the Charlotte Sanatorium, when- she un derwent An <>)h>ration for the removal of her tonsils and adenoids. Miss Gilliam’s friends will be glad to know she is much improved. Mrs. Harmon, of Church street, who has been very ill, is improving. The condition of Fred Jr., little son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lomax, who has been ill the; past week or two. is im proved. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Harinon. Thursday, June 7th. a son. The following invitations are out: Mrs. N. P. Watt requests the pleasure of your company at the marriage of her daughter Rachel Arthur Goodwin to Mr. Ralph Andrew Caldwell on the evening of Wednesday, the twenty-fifth of June nineteen hundred and twenty-three at eight-thirty o'clock at the residence of Mi's, J. W. Flowe, Kannapolis, N. C. At Home after June thirtieth Concord. X. <’.. Route One. Mrs. Archie Henry and children spent the latter part of the past week in China Grove with Mrs. Henry's mother. Misses Gladys Wagoner., and Miss Flora McQueen and Mr. Paul Maulden left yesterday for Davidson, where they will attend the Young Peoples’ Confer ence during the next seven days, as, del gates from the local church. Mr. and Mrs. Wellington have gone to Mrs. Wallingtoti’s imme in the coun try to make their home. Mrs. Walling ton lias been successfully operating the 1 Li taker Hoarding House for sixteen years. Her daughter, Mrs. O. B. Hoff man. has charge since Mrs. Wellington's departure. Mr. Lack Willett made a trip to Coo icemee Saturday and purchaser! his brother-in-law's car. 1 Mrs. I*. L. Ketchie is attending slim mer school at Boone, X. C. Misses Mary l-’lowe and Lueile Cline 1 left yesterday for Raleigh, where they ' will attend summer school. The friends of Mrs. Norfleet will learn with regret that shejs ill at the Mary El- ! la Hall. "Mother'’ Nor Hire t returned last week from a trip to Washington, 1 where she visited her son. ( 1 Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Yarborough and - son have moved from Concord to the beautiful new bungalow on South Main street. Mr. Yarborough having been j some time ago transferred to the Ca barrus Mill office. Kannapolis people * extend a hearty welcome to Mr. Yar- 1 borough and family. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander, of Charlotte. ' and Mr. Young, recently of Asheville, ' are new cowers at the Kannapolis Inn. I Mr. Mauney is visiting in Gastonia. 1 Mr. aud Mrs. L. E. Funderburk aud little Dorothy, spent Sunday in Salis bury. ' Miss Myrtie Walker spent Sunday in the country with home folks. Invitations are out for the marriage ' of Dr. Nolan and Miss Morris. Miss Morris' home is in Burlington and she was a member of the Kannapolis school 1 faculty the past term. Miss Nell Haynes, of Piedmont. S. C., is the guest of Mrs. E. E. I sidy. Miss Carrie Watson, of the Parks-Belk clerical force, wiii leave tonight for 1 Atlanta and Tiffton. Ga., on a mouth's vacation. Tile pupils of Mrs. J. G. laiwe gave a recital at her home on South Main street on last Saturday afternoon. The fol lowing is tin* program: Duet : Robin Adais—Viola Thorn and Mrs. Lowe. Duet—Mildred Fisher and Mrs. Lowe. Soug of the Katydid— Cart Wilhelm Kern. Op. 1!), No. 2—Frank Sloop.'" Duet—Myrtice Lee and Mrs. Lowe. In May—Francis Behr, Op. 575—Ne1l Lowe. Singing aud Swinging—Mae Aileen Erb. Op. 1!), No. 10—Carolyn Craven. Tinkliug Bells—L. A. Bushel— Kath erine Ixi we. In Jolly Mootl—Daniel Rowe—Louise Lijie. Doll’s Funeral—Spaulding Norma Soarboro. On tile Wain—David Dick Slater- Shirley Morris. Maypole Dance—L. A. Bugbee—Cleo Barger. \ The Ship—Slater—Alma McGuirt, Bicycle Waltz—Adam Geikl—Norma Cook. Enchantment— Mari l’aldi—Elsie Mc- Knight. A Poppy Field—William Baines—• Idell Connell. Duet—Katherine I owe and Louise Lipe.r ! Auburn Leaf—Hans Harthnui—Lomu Sloop. Twilight on the River—Ludwiek Renk —lmuise Starrett. 1\ altz—Spaulding—Anita Soarbnro. Minuet—L. Van Beethoven—Sadie Sloop. Fairy Voices—H. D. Hewitt—Gallic Barger. A Summer Mardigal—Carl Motor — Mary Lee Hill. Duet—Edna Widenhouse and Alma Durham. N Playing Tug—J. Margstein—AJHe Smith. \ In the Daisy Field—Milton D. Blake— Elizabeth Nason, Spinning Song—-A. Alleneurich, Op.*, 14, No. 4, —Myrtle Sloop. * i Fairy Piistorikl—Wilsou G. Smith— 1 Alma Durham. Serouatn—A. D. Turner, Op. 35 No. 5 —Edna Widenhouse. Mrs. Lowe win teach ufitfl frst »I July, at which time* she will spetW Are summer m the motmtaias. of Western North Carolina She will returns charge IRE CONCORD D7HCT TRIBUNE ( of her clash again on September Ist. I Miss Mary Wampler will arrive from * Chicago Saturday to visit her parents, i Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wampler. Mrs. T. P. Moose's home is nearing i completion and she will occupy the ( house scon. / Committees have been appointed -to i make arrangements for the July cele bration. It is expected that the plans 1 will be very elaborate. Friday. July (>, will Re the day for these festivities in • stead of the 4th, so as not to divide the : week into two parts for the mill era -1 ptoyees. The mills will npen v again on the following Monday. Mr. Hoover Walter and of Gastonia, wHI move back to this city as soon as Mrs. W. A. Honeycutt and fam ily are able to procure another house, and vacate the Hoover home. Mr. I.uther Gillon. Jr., Miss Rosalie and Mr. Leonard Uilloti spent Monday afternoon in Charlotte. Messrs. -. M. Widenhottse. IV. B. Dur ham. W. C. Graham, aud O. E. Scarboro have gone beyond Hickory on a fishing excursion. They expect to be joined in Newton by Rev. W. B. Shinn, Rev. 'Sir. Tucker and Mr. Cox. Mrs. Dunean is visiting in Farming ton. Mr. Cox and family, of Newton, visit ed relatives in Kannapolis the past week. Mr. W. D. Durham made a recent triii to Burlington. Miss Kathleen Khcm and Mr. E. B. Young were married Sunday in Greens boro. They left after the marriage for a trip to New York aud Washington. This news is of much interest to Kannap olis, people'as Mrs. Young was a mem ber of the Kannapolis school faculty the past term, and has made ninny friends here. Her home is in Haver, N. C. Mr. Young's home is in Rock Hill. S. ('., though he has been for some time em ployed at Spruce Pine, N. G. Miss Goodwin, Mrs. Frank Flowe. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Halstead and Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Sharp will leave Saturday night for Washington. Mrs. 'lra Wlncrofi. of' South Maih street, aud Mr. J. M. Barringer. 'of 'Mt. Lila, were inarViyd Saturday evening at S :.*lO o'clock at "the home of the bride oil 'Sburli Mailt' street. Key.' Mr. ftrowb officiating. MinSs Queen and Marie Graeber played the wetjding mareh. Mrs. Barringer wore a beautiful gray cantoti crepe gown with accessories to match. Quite a number of friends and relatives were in attendance. Immediately after the ceremony the couple left for the groom’s home in Mt. Lila. Mrs. Barrin ger was for quite awhile the popular superintendent of the dining room at the Cabarrus Y. M. C. A. She has resided in this city a number of years and has many warm friends here who regret for her to leave. Miss Ruth Walter. who is taking treatment at Biltmore hospital, is ex pected home the 2nd of July to spend a two Weeks’ vacation. Mr. G. Dudley, head baker at the Kannapolis •bakery, expects to make a trip to Roanoke"; Ya.. Saturday to' visit bis mother. Mrs. Lois Earnhardt left Monday for Lenoir-Rhyne College 'to attend summer school. b Mi's. Wims-off Barringer left today for her home in Mt. I'lla after spending a day or two iu the city. / Little Miss Margaret Willene Yost de lightfully entertained on Monday. June 4 at the home of her parents on South Main street iu celebration of her ninth birthday. A boor fifty guests were pres ent. The home was attractively decor ated with pink roses. The party engaged iu interesting games which afforded much fun and amusement. Nine can tiles decorated the birthday ettke, corre sponding with the number of anniversar ies. I’ittk and white ice cream and cakes were served, the color note being observ ed throughout hi detail. The honoree was the recipient of many beautiful pres ents. She is very winsome and popular, and her friends 1 wish her many more happy birthdays. Mr. and Mrs. I<aney. of Juniper street, made a trip to Rock Hill. S. G„ Satur day, returning Sunday. 1 Mrs. P. G. Wagner is spending this week ill Salisbury with tier parents. Mr. and Mrs. Mack Irvin spent Sun day in Mill Bridge. Tim revival meeting at Trinity Meth- odist Church, conducted by Rev. D. Y. York, of Athens, Okla.. aud his singer. J. W. Glance, also of the same state, has ( been in progress for ten days now and | will coutinue through next Sunday, at I least. The preaching has been plain and | powerful, and. there have been more tliuu eighty professions. On Wednesday evening, June 2(>th. at S o'clock Wilde C. Smith, the famous deft who writes "Little Jetts" for the Sunday School Times, will give an illustrated lecture at Trinity Methodist Church. You have opportunities like this only once or twice in a lifetime. Ev ery one invited. Indian elephants cannot live in cen tral Africa, tile home of a larger and more hardly species. Os the 2(1 barons who signed the Magna Charta on'y three eomu write their names. =' ' ~ ~ ■ EASY TO DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR ; You Can Bring Back Color Did Luatre With Sage Ton i, and Sulphur When yon darken your hair wißi I Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, 1 because it’s done so naturally, so even- t ly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and troublesome. At little cost you >can buy at any drug store the ready-to-use preparation, im proved by the addition of other inert- , dients called “Wjfcth’s Sage and Sul phur Compound.” You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning all gray hhir disappears,! and, after ; another urgnt. Gray, faded hair, though no diagram, is a.signofjM age, all 4e> t Sage aad Sulphur Compound years younger. . - J lit). Youthful 1 ourists Bring Home New Steps to Be Used in Modern Dances : \ * /i; c * ? U & t ' > •*:. v«a . „ ♦ ; --* * • -V " 1 '^mmßmmNm, * __ :: ’ _ ■ • ■ •__ <- . .-. .-■■■>.•■.••,-. • :■:•: Latest Steps From Waikiki. San Francisco, Cal., June I).—When l*ablic (lancing first cauic into vogue about ten years ago; with the "turkey trotf' dancing masters and other devo tees of terpsichore dwlnred that tfie craze was but a passing fancy and that a few months wou(d again find dancing confined to private functions. How they were mistakai the world ay a whole knows. Now dancing is unques tionably the most popular universal pas time, with steps created in New York. New Orleans. Chicago or San Francisco being stepped all over the world, intro-- duced into the capitals of the leading nations by the ever-moving army of Am erican tourists. The worshippers of the great god ■’Jazz are legion, and always on the lookout for new figures to embody in their dances, with the result that' one who yesterday may have been considered the best "stepper" in his or her com munity, today may have no standing as a dancer at nil. having failed to keep up with, the over-night changes suddenly introduced. New dance steps are com ing from the Orient, beiug brought here by tourists on the Pacific Mail lines. Though the majority of the dances of the modern school, the "Chicago,” “Ral conades. ‘ and "Toddle.” are American creations, either gotten up by profes sional dancers or expert amateurs, the inspiration for the steps on which they arc based, the rhythm of the music to which they are danced, are, in the main, of foreign origin. The American tourist. always iu search of something new when abroad, whether it be in clothing, scenery or entertainment, is maiuly responsible for the new steps iu the jazz curriculum. , • Passengers returning from the Orient* and Hawaii on the steamships of the Pacific Mail l,ine aoe leaders in this connection. Witnessing the age-old steps of the Chines* tea house girls, the geisha giifis of Japu,u. the hula dancers of Hon olulu, the younger tourists see possibili-. ties for astonishing their friends at home with new versions of the fox trot, and once back aboard ship, set to work, with the assistance of the liner’s orches tra. to adapt the steps to ragtime. A party of school girls and college men who recently toured the Orient on the Pacific Mail Finer President Cleve land kept the orchestra aboard working overtime while they developed a new dance embodying movements they had witnessed iu various Cities they had vis ited. The finished dance, ns yet-unnam ed. promised to startle even the most blase of the younger dancing set. Though everyone, naturally, does not take to dancing of the jazz variety, the dame, however, is one of the most pop ular forms of diversion on ship board, and those older passengers who find no delight in the newer fox trot -and kin dred dances do take considerable pleas ure iu floating through the measures of 929 AM \ - l ‘ , ' ’ j L Ever Hear of Stale Gas? Foiks don t tyuy a thousand cubic feet of gas and theh 1 ' have to throw away part of it because it’s wilted or old. GAS IS MADE AND DELIVERED AS NEEDED AND \ ► USED. There are no “left overs” or stale portions. The , meter, at your comnland, measures out 'the quantity you ’ 1 • want —no more. - v • „ \ ’ ' T - , , , , . as S€l- vice is a waste-defying service—clean, dependable, ’ .11 £• *>»« • efficient. ' 1 » with heat you 1 . < , f can do it Bet- A,,.., r> „ 1 with OAS.” mats one reason why it is so small a part of our living expense. Compared with other essentials, its cost is only a jf — l ■. ' " -fraction of its real value. Concord & Kannapolis Gits Co. : \ , . * - ;>■ • /;- ■ . :>• - - ■ , a waltz, especially in she springtime, when a seductive moon and calm smooth sen. together with the soft cadence of a well trained orchestra, lure them to the promenade deck. Skimmed milk is being condensed and stored in sacks for indefinite storage as stock feed. When 5 to 1 condensation is secured the skint milk mixed with ab sorbent grains. After the grains have absorbed the milk they are dried and Sacked. , money ut Regularity jp* HUSBANDS AND FATHERS:— The best way to be in a position to do the duty you owe to your family is to have money on deposit in the bank. You should also teach EVERY MEMBER of your falmily the banking habit so that if anything happens to you they can look out for themselves. Everyone should not only have a bank account but should make the balance to his credit grow. Regular deposits make the bank balance grow rapidly and encourage thrift. WE WILL WELCOME YOU£ ACCOUNT Cabarrus Savings Bank Friday, June 15, 1923, ' TODAY’S SVmS. ; Friday, Jne 15, IMS. Kossovo Day, the national fete day of the Serbians. Annua! observance of Pioneer Day in tfie State of Idaho. Oqtenary of the birth of fftory if. Sanford. who distinguished himself in the diplomatic service of , the United States. Nineteenth Anniversary of steamer General Slocum disaster In the East River. New York, in which nearly 1000 lives were lost. If William 11. had not been deprived of bis throne he . would -Jhave com pleted today a reign of thirty-five years as German Emperor. A number of the most prominent journalists of the United States and other countries are to take pjirt in the International Press Congress which opens today at Gothenburg, Sweden. There were only 1K.H53.00Q horses on" the farms of the United States January 1. 1023. This total was smaller by 203.-, 000 than on the first of January, 1022. DOING HIS DUTY. “For two years I suffered agonizing pains in my stoihach, belching up sour and bitter fluids and gas. Tongue al- ways coated. Doctors were unable to help me. The first dose of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy made me feel 100 per cent. better, and I am now feeling bet ter than at any time in my life. 1 deem it my duty to advise other suf ferers." It is a simple, harmless prep aration that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation .which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Gibson Drug Store and druggists everywhere.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 15, 1923, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75