Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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Tyes'day, June 26, 1923. ' 11 i You’re a little thirsty and Tm • little "Tliirstie”—. diet nwlw us pals for thirst. I always make you think of die most delicious sparkling drink for Thirst, also Lemon-Crush—Lime-Crush Ward’s "Crushes” owe their distinctive and delightful flavors to the natural fruit oils of orang*o, lessons and limes. To these Ave - been addfd pure cadi sugar, citrus fruit 'juices, U. S. certified food colar, fruit, add and carbonated water. ORANGE(RUSH BOTTLING COMPANY \ SPENCER, N. C. • -rmr~ "A SAGE TEA DANDY TO DARKEN HAIR It's Grandmother’s Recipe, to (ring Back Color and Lustre’to Hair , 1 "■ ■ You can turn gray, faded hair beau tifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you’ll get a bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound” at any drug store. Millions of bottles of ttys old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other ingMdients, . are sold annually, say well-known e gists here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can (ell it has been applied. - Those whose hair is turning gray'or becoming faded have a surprise await ing them, because after one or two ap plications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful. This is the age of youth. Gray haired, unattractive folks aren’t wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound to-night and gou’ll be delighted with your dark, andsomc—hair and your youthful ap pearance within a few days. WOONO Society Beauty, I MABtB MURPHY, De clares She Is Now Cured of Bheu- SMibllOL tv -i "Tbete are few people n.e have suffered more than I did, but NEU TRONS PRESCRIPTION ‘99’ has made a clean sweep of all my rheu matic pains' and swellings. ' / “Ever sinee a child I have been subject to Rheumatism. _ Attacks would come oa me at the least un expected time. My Ugff and arms ts -would -swell and stiffen up, and I would be hltoless for weeks at a time. The pain was horrible aifd I was all dieeouraged. “I read shout Neutrone Prescrip tion ‘99’, got some, and started the treatment. Before I had finished the second bottle, the swellings went down, my museles limbered qp and I felt fine. “-Two years have gone by wd I have had no Rheumatism. I am com pletely cured. . “Word* fail to express my grati tude, now that J am free from Rheu matism, and t want to givb Ne«tro>e Prescription ‘99’ full credit for mt good health and happiness. I cannot recommend it too highly to everyone suffering from’ Rheumatism. ” . Prescription “99 ’ ’ '4he Editors. Raleigh News and Observer. * . No one caff* blame John B. Sherrill for wanting relief from activities con ueetfd with the North Carolina Press As sociation. His king apd faithful service , as secretary and president should-make every member of the association feel debtor -to him. In Mr. Webb, of the Asheville Citizen, the association has a mbst capable executive, one who will give a progressive and successful adrainistra tion. As secretary, Miss Beatrice Cobb, tJte. talfnted editor of the Morgan ton News-Herald, as Mr. Sherrill, did. can serve just as long as she will for mem bers of the association know there is no one glee who can do as well. Tha asso ciation did well to call for vigorous law enforcement. Individually and ns an or ganization tbe newspaper people of the State stand firmly for law and order and exert a constant influence of no small Weight to that end. It was proper and fitting for the editors to renew their pledges to continue in this necessary work. USB THE PEWSTV COLUMN—IT PAYS' 'l 1 ! f i' l ' ’ STOPPED HIS “DON’T CARE” FEELING Charley Fisher Sgys Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic Whetted His Appetite gad Gave Him Strength. “I was having much difficulty with my stomach and whenever I would get up I wopld feel drowsy and really did not care for anything.” So writes Charley Fisher, of Bunker Hill, HI. “I began taking Munyon’a Paw Paw Tonic, and after the first dose I felt much better, and after about half tbe bottle was taken it seemed as if I could not get enough to eat, my appetite had improved to such an extent. I felt much stronger. I have altogether taken three bottles and my condition has been wonderfully improved. “Our local druggist carries the tonic in stock, and I am able to procure it , from him. I have been .telling my friepds about it ana some of them are also taking the Tonic and find it as I 'told them. There is no better tonic for the blood, and the iron in itopakes one strong.” \ If YOU are run-down or suffer from' indigestion,. heartburn, sleeplessness, stomach, liver, kidney or blood trouble, you owe it to yourself to try Munyon’s Paw Paw Tonic. It has put thousands hack on their feet and has given them the happiness of health and strength again. There’s danger in further delay! Buy a Si bottle of Mun yon’s Paw Paw Tonic TODAY at any first class drug store. Munyon’s Homoeo pathic Home Remedy Co., Scranton, Pa. S For Sale in Concord byPearl Drug Co. “WORSE THAN PAIN” i . Lqmium Sstjt Sho H** “Nib er Found Aaytttag Bettor ‘Hub Cardoi for i R»Om Condition.” Morgan City, "It wotyd be hard for me to tell how much benefit I have , derived from the we of Cardul,” said Mrs. I. Q. Bowman, of 1319 Pront Street, this city. “1 was so run-down in health | could hardly go. I was thin. ‘T had" no appetite. Could not rest or sleep well. “I suffered sortie pain, but the worst of my trouble was from being so weak and easy, to get tired and out of heart. “Tills nervous condition was worse Qian pain. “Some one told me of'Cudul, and I decided to use it. B3R*SttW?3l beggo *o eat and sleep, and grew stronger and was soon well. s “I have never found anything bsttei for a run-down condition." If yousuffer as this Louisiana lady did, y ourtroubl!» C * fdwl I ** x Oet a bottle of Cardul today. NC-HM WOMAN SO ILL QOULD NOT WORK Gained Strength, Weight and Now Doing Own Work, Ipr Taking lords» E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Marion, Ind.—“l was all run-down, nervooa and bent over. I could haritiy [drag around, up [alone do my wont- II read some letters in thejpapers telling Iwhpt Lydia B-* Pink- Ihaifi’s VegetabTe Compound had done for others and I thought I would try it. Then a man toll my hurtiand about his wire and whiit rilHßfllllllll ■ mm B{ saasat..if?ir ta b i , sys fB/gSSKLttSsSZi&t and was doing my own work- 1 took it traced glad to any woman who supers from female ail- fur 1 know whjt ♦####*«#*#*####♦ « HAPPENINGS IN OUR * | NEIGHBORING VILLA GEB * ♦ mxxiifff ixiifixjiie BUFFALO NO. ». people are tinwigh with their har vest and find the wheat very good. Mr.. H. A. Plott has a Ret of lightning rials aitaehed to Ms dwelling recently. The infant' qf Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Widenhouse is very sick at this time. The hot weather is here and crops are looking fine. The little daughter of L. D. Whitley is improving slowly. The crops looking well except they are late. Most of the cotton is of a late Flat Dutch or short atem drum head, and the boll weevil will have to crawl on the ground to get all of the blooms. Wake up Bear Creek, and oome on with your good news, as we like to read i4 ' ' &i‘ ■ s FAITH. It. L. Patterson, of phina Grove. Route 2, said on the 18th of June that they had rip? tomatoes, and had them a week or so. If you can beat that trot out your tomatoes. ■T. T. Heilig, as Salisbury, wrote us on -June lil, and said they had their first .mess of roasting ears on that day from their gardefa. If you can beat that for early corn, trot it out. Born to Mr.-and Mrs. Ray Lyerly, at Crescent, June lbth, a son. Born tO' M*'. nud M>'S. Charley Earn hardt June 11th. a sop. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Earnhardt June Oth, a son. Mrs. D. M. Pless, of Crescent, who has been at the Sanatorium in Charlotte for three weeks, where she underwent an op eration, has returned home much im proved. Ray Reaver and Miss Mary Cannp were married May 26th. Miss Canup formerly lived in Faith with her par ents. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Canup, but now lives in Kannapolis. Harold Canup. Claude Canup, John Lewis Canup and Clifford Letter, of Kannapolis, spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Hoyden Lefler. Venus took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Lefler Sunday and got a dine din ner. They had lots of company. They had chicken, honey, home-made lighr - bread, huckleberry pie. apple pie and other good tilings too numerous to men tion. Tlie home-made cement that was dis covered in Faith is made of only three things and every family in the world has it right at home. You can get the recipe how to make it for six cents in postage stamps by addressing J. T. Wy att. Salisbury. N. C„ Route 3. Mrs. Jack Eller has been confined to her bed for several weeks and is not im proving. Mr. Banks Artz Ims bought a fine home near Crescent and also « fine car. He is a hardworking ouarryman. and a , fine yonng fellow. He married one of Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Letter's duugliters. I Mrs. G. O. Miller had her first mess of ' sucumbers from her garden this yenr on June 9th. Who can beat that? W. J. Wallace, of Palmerville, N. C., motored up to Faith Sunday. A lady in Washington lias juat writ r Ten us 'that the- home-made ctzenwr *rem ed.v cured her child. She bought from us recently. Mr*. Alexander Parker and daughter, Mrs. W.-L. Walton and little Frauds Malton. motored out to Faith. Mrs. Parker drove tier large fine car. jThey bought some young chickens from \ enus. I Everybody hero likes to read The Con-1 I cord Times when it arrives. VENUS. Norwood Should Resign. * Salisbury Post. m J. li. Norwood should resign as cl(f»r --| man of the State Democratic eommitee! I That is tiie opinion of the Evening . Post after a careful consideration of the j circumstances surrounding the collapse of tbe Mecklenburg Mills and the clos | ing of tbe Peoples National Bank. Whether Mr. Norwood isdo blame for the circumstances or not, many people thityv that he is to blame, and his re- I nmining as chairman of the Democratic party will certainly embarrass the party. ■ We do not know that Sir. Norwood deliberately used hi* position in the . party as a means of selling stock in the I Mecklenburg SliUs but he certainly ! stocked his political friends with it. He may. and we don't doubt, ft, have thought the stock gopd, but nevertheless his lead- I ership iu party ranks will he ques-| tioned. * - - , Mr. Norwood, in our opinion, should I have followed the example set by the man who is genei'nlly understood to have | been, and still is for tlmf'vnattier, con ’ sidered the bead of tltte Democratic par ty. When Watts was caught in an act that would undoubtedly have caused his party embarrassment, he immediate ly resigned his position. And the immejigte resignation of Mr. Norwood with a statement saying that he did not wish to embarrass his party wo\ild have placed him in n much higher regard than his remaining silent. Although the campaign managed by Mr. Norwood was got a difficult qnO for the Democrat*, judging by results, he directed the state campaign as well as one could bftYo expected from any one. The only thing in connection with the campaign we would blame upou Mr. Nofwood was his attempt to dominate Jtowan politics, an act we consider be- - neuth the dignity of the party .head in North Carolina. His candidates were defeated in botli city and county primaries largely as a protest against his tactics. Whether Mr. Norwood was partial or attempted to dictate in state polities, we cannot say. but such tactics failed in Rowan and would eventually fail in North Carolina. North Carolina is forced by circum stances to look to the Democratic party for the progress of the state, and a dic tatorial group in control of- that party will eventually ruin the party and do immense damage to the state of "North 'arPlina. _ , The Democratic party in North Caro lina should hi pbove suspicion., J. D. Norwood should resign as chair man <|f the State Democratic committee! N« Idea far “Wagfibowls” nutfj •t , 'it *♦••••> dlamater and IT liicins r i ce*t*r arc suggesteddn -■ washing motor cars; The - chicle rua round ia t)ie water and is rheg spruced ', with 4 hose an J,dried by electricity.— ‘ Chicago Ajaerlcao. fflß qpNCORD DSILT TRIBIjHB ********************** a***************************************** ' PARKS-BELK CO. We&ieaday morning we begin tt« l a *t four day* of the big Dollar Sale . Days Event. Crowds of people ere attending every day for the tala is j big and the bargains plentiful. EVERY DEPARTMENT IS OVERFLOWING WITH DOIXAR SALE BARGAINS A DOLLAR WILL GO A LONG WAY AT THIS SALE A Special Feature During Dol- N lar Sale Days Save all the Sale Bills that we put in the ' packages during Dollar Sale Days—They ’ are valuable. i Every ticket is stamped “Dollars Sale k Days.” Save these tickets and bring them f or send them back to the store on or before 'Saturday, June 3Dth, and for every lot of bills that the amount o 4 the purchases added together is $25.00 or over, we will buy the tipkets fronvthe customer for SI.OO. Remember all tickets stamped “Dollar Sale Days” are redeemable, and for every $25.00 lot of tickets we will pay SI.OO for them. y , ! ! .- / DOLLAR SALES TOILET SPECIALS. i I », ' . W e reserve the right to limit all goods on sale ' i During Dollar Sale Days. i 1 5 Cans Mennetvs Talcum Powder QQ , 3 Tubes Pehecco Tooth Paste QQ , 3 Tubes Pepsodent Tooth Paste QQ ! , 3 Tubes Pebeco Tooth Paste SI.OO 3 Bottles Hind’s Honey and AltnOnd (1 Ask Cream for- - , 14 Sniall Pebeco Tooth Paste SI.OO ' ' 5 Cakes Packers I 3 Cakes Cuticura Soap SI.OO , ' 5 Cakes Woodbury’s Soap SI.OO < ,_v - 14 Small Colgate's Tooth Paste SI.OO ' r v - U 5 Cakes Good Bath Soap SI.OO ' ■ 4 Bottles Odorond SI.OO I ' 14 Cakes Colgate’s Barber Soap SI.OO . ' 4 Colgate’s Shaving Sticks . SI.OO 1 , 4 Boxes Pond’s Vanishing or Cold Cream SI.OO ' t 3 Jars Three Flowers or Vanishing ftl QQ Cream for ® Y , [ t 3 Tubes Mennfin’s Shaving Cream SI.OO 8 Boxes Colgate’s Talcum Powder SI.OO , | 3 Boxes Nadine Face Powder SI.OO ; These are only a few of the Toilet Specials. . | Dress Cinghams, 32 inch- One special lot of smaller ' , es wide, fine Apron Ging- size Table Runners and , ' hams, 36 inches, Pieces, 2 for fas.t color suitings, Cham- £ 1 AA ■ f brays, Voiles, Crash, etc., WffiavV « | 8 yards for AA One special lot of $1.50 »*• W value Ladies’ Hand Bags. 1 for One big counter Apron AA Ginghams , Calico, Yard WliUll ; ! Wide Chambrays, Yard ■ , wide Suiting, Cambrics, Folks, here is yom ' > 12 yards for chance. Think of these Bargains. One big Caun -9)1*00 ter Gibson Mill Spit ; ings, Bleachings, Curtain | Scrim, Everyday Shirt , ! One hig Counter Dress Goods, Alamance, Yard 1 , Ginghams, Baby Dress \yj^ e Percales, etc., Dol ] ' Calico, Cttrtain Material, v lar Sale, 7 yards for Calico, etc., 10 yards for aa SI.OO um ' SPECIAL! j , Ope special lot embroid- One Table Fast Color ■ 1 ?red Linen Table Run- of Guaranteed Spindale ners arid centerpieces, 1 Gipghams, all the new ■ for cqlors, Dollar Sale, 4 yds. SI.OO SI.OO PARKS * BELK COMPANY hosiery values for DOLLAR SALE | DAYS THAT CANNOT BE EQUALED ANYWHERE | 25 Pairs Ladies’ Black Cotton Stock- #1 AH ings for' i VI*UU , • 15 Pairs, Ladies’, 15c Value Black*, Blue" 1 flfl AA and Pink Cotton Stockings a 25 Pairs Children’s Cdtton Stockings flj 1 AA ’ black only . , 1 —22 Pairs Children's White Cotton 1 QQ Ladies’ 50c Value Silk Hose, slightly* second'in ' black and brown, Dollar Sale Prjcfi SI.OO I 75c Pairs Indies Pure ,Silk Hose, a real QQ fqr •VV ► $1,50' value .Ladies’ Pure SilkxHose in all colors, as long last, 1 pair to a customer, SI.OO | 5 pairs Children’s 1 25 c and 29c value fancy color and ; ’ solid *color Socks, Dollar Days SI.OO I 5 Pairs Children’s 3-4 length Socks in 1 AA solid colors #i.UU SPECIALS FROM ALL OVER OUR SECOND FLOOR DE- ’ PARTMENTS j , Read These Carefully and Come and Get Your Share ! $2.00 Voile Shirtwaists in Stripes and Plain Voiles, several j styles, $1.60 values, Dollar Sale Days A< A A ' One for f * ♦UU $1.50 value Ladies’ White Satin Undprskyts A"J AA Dollar Sale, one for '* 75c value Short Sleeve a A 1 A A real good quality, two for “ A • W Ladies’ 50c Value Pink Brassieres, all sizes A 1 AA Sale, three for V *A/$/ One special lot of Corsets on first and second rt* *1 A A floors, sizes 22 to 30, two for W A *^/vr ■ I ; | MILLINERY SPECIALS! One Special Lot Ready Trimmed Ladies’ Hats, a regular $2.00 value, ulso Ladies’ Trimmed Panama ffa 4 A A * Hats, onp for ....' *P 1 Children’s Streamer Huts iu several styles, A 1 AA Values $1.98, one for ’ ’ 50c Value Baby Caps iu Organdie A AA Three for « 4 • W All Ladies’ Ready Trimmed Hats, priced $1.98 BA- OFF to $3.98. Dollar Sale Pays OwC ; ( One tubleyif Special Ladies’ Hats, a regular A“I AA $1.50 value, two for *P * • W 3 Children’s and Misses’ 40c value Spindale Fine , ’ Skeleton Waists, Dollar Finish Fast Color Ging- • Days hains, Renfrew, Ladlassie ' aa Cloth, for Boys’ Wash W *UI) Suits, Dollar Days, 3 yds. 1 Dozen Cotton Damask , AA Table Napkins, Dollar \ Days, one dozen One special Table Gibson , A | a a Knicker Stripe Cloth and Ginghams, all fast colors. Cotton Goods Included Dollar Days, t yards for in This Sale aa One Special Counter of Jkl 111 l Piece Goods, Curtain * Goods, Ets 20 jjrds for Specia [ Naw H aven>mp ' 51 *OO Alarm. Clocks, Dollar STATIONERY SPE- Days, 1 for ! cials Ai nn SI.OO MIRROR SPECIALS! » 9 Boxes 15c Value ,Sta- A new shipment of Mir- | tionery in all colors rors in \vfiite and black > rtk| a a b?icks, 10Q will go in this sale. A regular 1.50 val -100 Ladies’ and Men’s ue > Dollar Days, 1 for Cotton Umbrellas and AA Parasols two to a custo- wIiVV mer.twofor 75c valpe Mirrors, bevel- li «bI*UU ed edge in white an<^ : . N black CORSET SPECIALS *h* «« Now is your chance to get I that new Corset for SI.OO. We are ofering several 15 Double Mesh Hair ! style corsets—W. 8., Mil- Nets, extra good quality. 1 , ler and Warner’s styles, All colors, also single ! j values up to $2.00, 1 for Mesh Nets, 15 for SI.OO slioo PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1923, edition 1
5
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