Wednesday, July 18, 1923.
SOCIAK PERSONAL
MISS JENNY MONTGOMERY
WEDS JOHN W. DONALDSON
Bride Wan Formerly of Concord; !
Bridegroom Fron\ Bessemer, Ah.— <
Marriage Tuesday.
Charlotte Observer.
Charlotte society will hear with in
terest of the marriage of Miss Jenny 1
' Augusta Montgomery and John
Webb Donaldtion. which was solemnized
Tuesday at 2:30 p. m., at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Brevard Montgomery, in
Atlanta. The officiating minister was
Kev. W. M. Meeks, pastor of the Park
Street M. E. Church. The house was
beautifully decorated with cut flowers
and ferns. Mias Lily Montgomery, sis
ter of the bride, was maid of honor, and
Mrs. J, C. Donaldson, of Bessemer,
brother of the groom, was best man.
The bride entered with her brother.
Mr. W. H. Montgomery, the groom and
his best mnn meeting her before the min
ister. Her wedding gown was dark blue
crepe eharmeuse. with slight touches of
beige, nnd liat of blue pan velvet, with
accessories to match. Her corsage was
of lillies of the vnlley and Columbia rose
buds.
An informal reception was held imme
diately after the ceremony which was
impressively jterformed by the minister.
Punch was served during the recep
tion by Mrs. A. R. Kirby and Miss Isa
belle Montgomery, niece of th ebri.de.
. Mr. nnd Mrs. Donaldson left for west- 1
ern North Carolina, where they will
spend their honeymoon. They will re
side in Bessemer. Ala., going to linuse
keeping soon after their return from
their bridal trip.
The bride is a daughter of the late
Charles G. Montgomery, of Concord, and
Mrs. Isabelle Davidson Montgomery, of
Charlotte and Concord, and granddaugh
ter of the late Brevard Davidson, of
Charlotte, and niece of Miss Bailie Dnv
idson and Mr. Baxter Davidson, of Char,
lotte. She resided in Charlotte for sev
eral years with her mother on North
Church Streets 1 - Hhc is a bright and at
tractive young woman possessed of traits
that endear her to all with whom shp is
thrown in contact. , She was admired
nnd loved by a wide circle of friends
here, where her family has been among
the most prominent of the revolutionary
families.
Visiting in Western North Carolina.
Rev. G. W. Rollins and family left"
tins morning for a trip to Western North
Carolina. They will be gone for about
two weeks, the congregation of McGill
Street Baptist Church having voted Mr.
Rollins a vacation recently. They also
expect to spend a few days with rela
tives in South Carolina. They were ac
companied ou 1 he. trip by Miss Wilton
Gaston, who had been visiting Mrs. Rol
lins, and who will spend some time at
Linoolnton, returning from there to her
home in Greenville. 8. C.
Quietly Married July 14th.
Miss Ruth M. Reed, daughter of Mrs.
A. B. Reed. 237 Oak Street. Oberlin.
Ohio, and Mr. John S. Carpenter, gen
eral secretary of the Cabarrus V. M. C.
A., were united in marriage at the bride’s
home on July 14th at 2:30 p. m.
After a stay of a few > weeks in the
mountains they will be at home after
October first in Kannapolis, N. C.
A Golden Wedding.
On Tuesday, August 7th, at their borne
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Ritchie will cele
brate their fiftieth wedding anniversary.
The public is cordially invited to come
and bring well filled baskets.
At The Theatres.
“Grumpy”, an unusual feature with
several stars, is being shown today at
the Star.
At the Pastime today Katherine Mc-
Donald is being offered in the big I’ni
versal feature, “Money, Money, Money."
"The Eagle Man,” “Fighting Blood"
and a Hal Roach comedy are being
shown today at the Piedmont. > .
(MB THE ramt cot™*—lT PAT*
MOSQUITOES
I | An application at night
tends to keep the pests
away. Vicks is fine also
for reducing the inflam
mation caused by all bites
and stings.
VICKS
W Vapoßub
Omr If milion Jan U-d Yearb
V bAvc eloselij Jj
k. observed our m
acttltu.de m
toioardour
ms professional- m
H# th&^coe.
pare alioays mm
» ’ circumspect ~
¥ and polite—
' ' * ■ .
• • . i
PERSONALS. 1
Miss Rosa Turner and guest. Miss '
Blanche Bodenheimer, are spending sev- I
eral days in Albemarle. i
•** , (
Mrs. Roger Moore and children, of
Wilmington, are visiting Mrs. Moore's
sisters, Mrs, ,T. A. Cannon and Mrs. R.
P. Gibson.
Mrs. R. M. and children, Mar
garet nnd Morrison, Jr., have returned
from Montreat, where they spent a Week.
V • * •
Mrs. R. A. Brown spent several days
in Gastonia at the home of her son, Mr.
L. A. Brown.
Mrs. Kate Kimball has returned to
her home in Statesville after a visit here
to Mrs. E. A. Moss.
• • •
Mrs. Borden, of Wilmington, is the
guest here of her daughters. Mrs. J. A.
Cannon and Mrs. R. P. Gibson.
• * •
Miss Jennie Gibson Brown has re
turned to her home here after being a
Wrightsville Bench guest for a week.
• ■ •
Mrs. Cameron Macllne nnd children
have returned from Wrightsville Bench,
where they spent two weeks. -
Mrs. A. E. Harris has returned from
Polktou, where she spent several (lays
at the. home of her father.
* * *
Air. and’MrS. 0. O. Long and son, C.
O. Jr., of Richmond. Va.. aud Air. Gray
son Barrows, of New York, have re
turned to Air. Long's home after visit
ing relatives here for several days.
• • •
Air. Henry Craven and family, of
Raleigh, are expected to arrive ill Con
j cord Friday to spend a week with Air.
; I and Airs. K. L. Craven.
I STANDING OF THE CLUBS.
' i South Atlantic League.
; (Second Half).
Team * Won Lost in
’ Charlotte ' 10 '•>' .007
! Mason 10 7 .ASK
Augusta .. .. 7 K .AW
| Greenville .6 8 .420
'Spartanburg 5 7 .417
Results Yesterday.
Charlotte 2; Greenville 5.
| Macon 7; Spartanburg 2.
, i Columbin-Aiigusta. rain.
!
American League.
[ Team Won Lost PC.
1 New York ....155 27 .071
' Cleveland .. .. 40 38 .548
1 Chicago .. ~38 33 .535
5St. Ijouia 41 40 .506
Detroit t 40 41 * .404
‘ Philadelphia .. 40 42 .488
Washington 34 47 .420
Boston 20 47 .382
r
Results Yesterday.
Boston 1 : St. Ismis 10.
' Philadelphia 1; Chicago 8.
Washington V; Detroit 4.
! *t New York 0; Clevehidil 13.
National League.
s Team Won Lost PC.
New York 55 29 .055
s Cincinnati .. 50 30 .025
*’ Pittsburgh 48 33 .51X3
Chicago 42 30 .51!)
Brooklyn 42. 89 .510
St. Louis 43 42 .506
e Boston 23 58 .284
- Philadelphia 23 58 .284
Results Yesterday.
e Chicago 3; New York 7.
St. Louis 2; Philadelphia 1.
Cincinnati 4-0; Boston 3-5.
ti Piedmont League.
t Team Won Lost PC.
Danville t 7 5 .583
- High Point .. .. 7 5 .583
- Durham 0 5 .545
Greensboro 0 0 .500
" Raleigh 0 7 .402
K Winston-Salem 5 8 .385
Results Yesterday.
- Danville 11: High Point 7.
* Winston-Salem, fi-I; Greensboro 2-3.
• Raleigh 7-2; Durham 2-3.
Kerr Street Revival.
The meeting on Tuesday night was
great. The* weather was fine, aud lots
of jteople were there. The revival has
started and it has a great power behind
it. Somebody bus been praying and
their prayers are being answered.
Rev. Air. Sisk preached us never be
fore. His text you will find in I Cor.
2:9. But as it is written, eye hath not
seen, lior ear heard, neither have entered
into the heart of man the things which
God hath prepared for them that love
him. The singing was great. Aliss Queen
and Miss Shoe sang as a duet "Who Is
That Knocking?” That is a great ques
tion. We should all stop and ask our
selves “who is that knocking at my
heart’s door?” Surely 'tis Jesus, wanting
to be let in.
You are going to miss a good treat if
you fail to attend these meetings.
There will be special music every
night. Come out and let God clean you
up. Services at 7:30 o'clock. You have
an invitation. X.
__g_
Couhtry Produce
Fresh Corn, Tender Snap Beans, Big
Red Ripe Tomafoes, Crisp New Cabbage,
Cucumbers, Squash, Beets, tc.
Always an abundance of Fresh Coun
try Eggs, Fat Spring Chickens; in fact,
if anything comes from the country we
, have it.
It’s Acknowledged Eastern Cabarrus
Feeds Concord. We have first chance at
all of it. (
With ua it’s fresher and cheaper.
Cline & Moose
DEATH TUESDAY NIGHT OF ' •
MRS. LAURA ALLEN BO ST
Had Been ill For Several Week*—Fun
eral To Be Held Tomorrow After
noon. |
Mrs. I.aura Allen Host, wife of Al. E. I
Bost, well known carpenter of Concord.!
died Tuesday night at 10:30 o’clock at j
the home of her dnnghter. Mrs. Tom
Eudy. on Kerr street. Airs. Bost had
been confined t|o her home for four j
weeks, and during the past several days t
iter condition had been so critical that
no hope was entertained for her recov
ery.
Funeral services will be held tomorrow
(Thursday) afternoon at 2 oelock at
Kerr Street Methodist Church, and in
terment will be made in Oakwood ceme
tery.
Mrs. Bost was 62 years of age and
had made her home in Concord for
about 18 years, moving here from Ca
tawba County, where she was born and
married. Surviving are her husband,
several children nnd several brothers and
sisters. The children are: John Bost.
of Gastonia, James and Sam Bost, of
Thomasville, Airs. John Beaver. Mrs. R.
A. Huttender, Airs. Tom Eudy, of Con
cord, Airs. L. W. Hansel, of Greensboro
and Airs. Everett Shote, of Indiana. Her
surviving sister is Airs. L. 15. Brown, of
Spartanburg. S. ' 0.. and the surviving
brothers are Avery. Allen, of Troutman,
and Walter and P. Allen, both of Ca
tawba county.
The deceased was a member of Kerr
Street Methodist Church, nm( was an
active Church worker. She was known
ami greatly admired by a wide circle of
friends in this and Catawba counties.
Telegraphs in Uganda are not always
reliable,, as the natives covet and often
cu,t down the copper wire for making
ftifo bracelets, neeklases anil leg bands.
Fourteen times in the last eight hun
dred years has Alount Etna, the snow
capped volcano on the east coast of Sic
ilv, burst into violent eruption.
•
Birmingllal, Ala., has a 27-story office
building which is the tallest in the
South.
Executor’s Sale
At Linn Home. Rockwell, N. C..
Thursday, July 19tl», 1923 at 10 A. M.
The following articles, belonging to
the estate of Rev. J. A. Linn, will be
sold to the highest bidder, to wit:
1 Hockley Piano, slightly used: 1
large mahogany china press, more than
one hundred years old ; 1 extension din
ing table: 1 set of 10 dining chairs; 2
oak bed room suites; 3 oak bed steads;
2 marble-top walnut tables; 1 ice box:
’ 1 three burner oil stove with baker; 3
' poplar kitchen tables: 1 White Alouu
* tain Freezer; 5 small heaters; 1 wash
i pot.
* Oil lamps, crocks, jars, pitchers and
• howls; cooking utensils, fruit jars, iron
• itig board, rocking chairs, cottage chairs,
dishes, cariwds, etc; 1 one horse wagon :
1 automobile, good condition; 1 washing
uiachiue and ringer; 3 cultivators; 1
plow-stock; 1 two horse Syracuse turn -
ing plnwT 1 wheelbarrow ; 1 sot plongh I
gears: 1 rubber hose; 2 saddles.
Pitch forks, pick, mattock, shovel, gar- I
den tools, and other articles.
Other articles, belonging to individual !
’ members of the family, will be offered
. for sale, to wit:
; i oak bed room suite; 2 large chairs,!
( mahogany finish, leatlier upholstered; 2
. matting floor covering; 1 small oak ta
[ ble: 1' llladdin oil lamp; 2 small oil
( lamps. 1 box couch: 1 davenette, ex
tends into fug size double bed; t wash
ing machine;' 1 refrigerator; 1 wheel
barrow.
18-5”-lt.
Why he a Drudge in the Kitchen?
Why spend long hours efficient way to cook with 1
slaving over a hot range gas. It keeps the flavor in
when you can cook the the food and uses about
Chambers way, with the half the gas.
gas turned off, and be ~ , .
free to leave the kitchen? Co^ e m and Jf thls
modern range. There s a
The Chambers Range has size for every kitchen —
been approved by domes- new models in all-white
• tic engineers as the most and black-and-white.
Chambers
COOKS with the GAS TURNED OFF?
Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co.
THE CONCORD DAILY TRJJSUNE
! A mysterious "aarmy" of white ants"
lias caused considerable damage in the £■!
I south of Franco, aid" colonies of these U
insects have now been discovered in H
, Paris. j"j
| BALE~OF PERSON A L PROPERTY, [j
| On the 20th day of July, 1923. Airs. 1-1
Daniel Hill will sell at auction at the fej
Kimlley farm, at Mt. Pleasant, to the tj
I highest bidder,, terms cnsli;
Three head of young horses; 1 mule; |e|
1 buggy and harness; 1 wagon: 3 I;,|
shoats; and all farming tools; a 1 kinds ¥4
of roughness: household and kitchen
! furniture. Sale begins at 12 o’clock 43
noon. I j-j
17-2 t-c. , |H
11! Right over the
'U home plate—and «
; Ifc MILKMAIDI
His BREAD 4
: liifjCONCORD BAKERY.]
' llllllllinililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
|4^
theice bos, tcA A /•
GUtin’there /
TiU
earn e and X. .* J
gobbled him,
An d now it it
Kanak prevents fishy
butter —oniony milk
KANAK goes on the top shelf
of your ice box or refriger
ator. That’s all. Put anything in
you want. “Kanak” will gobble
up all odors and gases,—keep
| ing foods sweet and untainted.
“KANAK" Is bright metal.
| It cannot rust—nothing to spill,
only 454 inches high. No care or
attention. Put it In your ice box
and forget it
Approved by Good Housekeeping
Price SI.OO
Pearl Drug Co.
■ga t**? i?fiffri !
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:| You wouldn’t try to sing |
| a quartet by yourself—
I Then why ask one suit to make the
1 rounds of Spring, Summer, Autumn
I and Winter?
•
I What every man in Concord
| needs is at least one cool suit —
I a weight lighter than he wore in May.
I Look at Vacation time coming.
1 Look at the Values that are here to-day.
H i
| Look at how the girls are dressing
and then let us introduce you to our
dressing room.
Mohair, Palm Beach & Tropical Suits
$15.00 up
will wear this, next and all
thru the summer of 1924
Browns - Cannon Co. j
Suit? tailored just a little better.
Luggage too.
PROMPT COMPLETE
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 , ji jp
one place and without delay. j
This is the service we render.
YOU haven’t a
need in our lines too large or
too small for us to handle.
"'sseviee is r ?*v
p^r-CNIBLOCIfI
SPECIAL RECORDS FOR JULY! |
19003 —Barney Google Great White Way Orchestra J |
I Criet! For You The Collegians i i
1 19092 —When You Walked Out Someone Else Walked in *] [■
Bebe Brooks .Tones and His Orchestra i i
19087—Stella Great White Way Orchestra ] ]
Carolina Mammy Great White Way Orchestra i i
19094—Gulf Coast Blues Tennessee Ten ! | '
Down Hearted Blues Tennessee Ten . i
i 79086—Waitin for de Evening Mail Noble Sissle and Blake
Down Hearted Blues Noble Sissle & Blake
19085—Triflin Blues Lena Wilson i i
'Taint Nobody's Business If IDo ~ Lena Wilson [ '
19083—I'm Going Away Edna Hicks ,
You’re Always Messing Bound With My Man... .Lizzie Miles i 'f
' 19081—How High Up Is' (Part I) Arthur Moss and Ed Frye j j
How High ITp Is? (Part II) Arthur Moss and Ed. Frye i i
19063—Running Wild Great White Way Orchestra 11
Little Rover nlternational Orchestra ■
19070 —Louisville Lou Arthur Gibbs and His Gang i j
Beale Street Mama Arthur Gibbs and His Gang |
;! BELL & HARRIS Music Department
Little Boy Blue go to blowing your horn!
801 l weevils in the cotton and chinch bugs in the corn,
Crops grown above ground are subject to the pest; 1 . .«■>»
Plant underground crops and let your horn rest. jij
We have a nice lot of Peach Bloom Seed Irish Potatoes that, we ij
| are-selling at only $1.75 per bushel, while they last. ij
Bring us your chickens, eggs, hotter, cream and vegetables. B
We buy anything you raise provided you don’t raise too much B
i C. H. BARRIER & GO. I
},, | n.i i_iMi.iimi.Lß, .J—llil Ll-E!—14BllLlILBiIUL!g--LILLiL l ILBiIUL!g--LILLiL* 1 ii|i| | |
The Penny Ads. Get Results—Try Them.
W-y -V - ■■ -*BBI
PAGE THREE