Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Aug. 1, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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Wednesday, August 1,1923. £*************. I happenings in our * * NEIGHBORING VILLAGES * ♦****** * x * s * * bethpaGe. Farmers are about through la/ing hv. Our cotton growers association had a very enthusiastic meeting recently. We \ had with us one of bur field workers, Mr. Thomas 1,. Warren. He is putting on a reinforcement 'Campaign for uew mem* hers. The result was most gratifying, we estimate that 7!> per cent, of our lo cal have enlisted. The Gil wood string . band Was present and gave some good old time music. Mr. Roy T,ipe and mother aud sister, of ,Mt. Ilia, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Host. Jtfrs. C. M. Seaford accompanied them home. Mr. F. A. Rankin spent Sunday in Concordl with his an At, Mrs. D/ (}. Caldwell. * . Mr, and Airs. X W. F*sher w ill go on ■ Mr. and Mtk, .T. W. Fisher went on the 1 excursion to Washington, D. 0., the '£T to ivsit Mrs. W. F, Fisher, their brother. Mr. aud Mrs. Harris Siiller, of Con cord, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. ,1. Frand Goodman. . Mr. C. A. Fisher has measles in his family. * p, * v —, UEQROEVILLE. A large number attended song service at. /Center Grove Sunday. . Miss Anpie Kluttz left last week for Texas, where she will si>end some time with relative*. Mr. Edward Shinn, who has been at tending camp for six weeks at Anniston, Ala., arrived home Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. A. Eudy spent several days last week in Concord with rela tives. Miss Sela Furr, who has been attend ing summer school in Greens bo ro.J’or the past six weeks, arrived home last week. Miss Furr leaves the 30th for Stanfield, where she will enter upon her duties ns teacher fori several weeks. Mr. ami, Mr**. K. A. Shinn and son, K. A. ,Tr.. of’China Grdve, ami Mr. anti Mrs’. M. C. Dn.vvault, and Xevtn, ’ <jt Con cord, spent Sunday at the home*of Mr. J. C. Shinn. Mr.’ and Mrs. J. F. Turner, of Texas. PARK AtENUE HOTEL" 4th Avenue, from 32nd to 33rd Street* New York „ Eatraace at Dear) ■ ONE0 NE of t ? l ® ***** known hotel* in the metropolis. Convenient to shopping, theatres, and in the heart of the wholesale district. Less than 50c. taxi fare (one or more persons) from either railway * terminal. Surface cars pass door. PRICES FOR ROOMS 50 single rooms per day 100 single rooms $2.50 per day 250 double rooms - - • - $4.00 per day end upward Single rooms with bath • . $4.00 par day anfl upward Double rooms with bath • . $5.00 per day end upward POPULAR PRICE CAFETERIA AND REGULAR RESTAURANT 7 The SUNKEN PALM GARDEN is surrounded by Dining Balconies and a fine Orchesta Is stationed here eve rj ereninf. I GEORGE C. BROWN, Proprietor 1 '* ‘ * ** "' *'*" ■ » »"■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ , , , e. tlMlSMsl fer AMeSKEAC-SECURITY GINGHAMS ' STANOARD SCOUT PERCALES in fAS^I^ORS • . unnsiialasthe price Added Floor S|3(lce Assure Prompt CourteousSerine® On Sale Friday Efird’s Department Store Jare spenditik a while here with relatives. | Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Smith and Mar garet, of Stanfield, spent Sunday here with Mr. J. L. Shinn. They were ac companied borne bj Miss Novella Shiuu. Who will attend school at Stanfield. . Mr. Lee Shinn spent last week in Pinehurst, where he was employed to pick peaches. Quite a number from here have made (.trips to Pinehurst the past week. They report a nice time. Mrs. I. A. Yo\\- and children, Louise aud Eugene, of Concord, spent last Tuesday afternoon with-Mrs. M. F. Bn rier. Little Miss Ora Lee Shinn, of Concord, is spending some time at the home of her grand-mother. Mrs. A. Eudy. Messrs. ’Carl and Charlie Furs, spent last Saturday in Concord. No. !) township Sunday school conven tion will be held Thursday, August 2nd. at Cold Springs, Methodist Church. The exercises will begin at 14:30. The com mittee has a very interesting program ar ranged. The public is invited. ' TULIP. C'roops are lookiug lots better since the rain. Everybody enjoyed the good rain, which was very much needed. Mr. and Mrs. if. Eudy have returned home after spending several days in Con cord. / Mr. and,Mrs. Kenneth Shinn. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Dayvault and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eudy were visitors at Mr. J. C. Shinn’s Sunday. Mr. SC 11. Turner has returned to his home in SVinnsboro, Texas, after visit ing relatives here. Miss Annie Kluttz left last Wednes day for Winnsboro, Texjas, whore she will spend several months. Mr., and Mrs. J. F. Turner are. here on a visit to Mr. Turner’s father. Sir. J. S. Turner. Wheat threshing is about over and. wheat seems to be good. > Born to Mr. aud,Mrs. Marshall Auten a son. July 22ikl. Mr. W. M. Auten has a right sick child. Miss Lizzie Kluttz has returned home after spending some time with Iter-aunt, Mrs. James F. Chaney, of Midland. Sirs. 1). 51. Long aud son,Enron, spent Sunday with Iter sister. Sirs. T. SI. Kluttz. -v, ,< Sir, aud Sirs. Leo Whitley wore Sun day visitors at-Locust. v Mr. John S. Turner spent last Sunday with his daughter, Mrs J. M. Kluttz. FRECKLES. CABARRUS MILL. Mrs. Odell Fletcher who has been sick for more than a week, seems to be im proving gt this time. Mrs. Williams, of Young street, is im proving after being sick for several weeks. The Cabarrus Slill is not running this week. Mrs. Sum McCall has been real sick for more than a week, but is improving. She is expecting to enter a Charlotte hos pital this week, where she will undergo a,serious operation. Mr. Floyd TJJie and family, Sir. Wal ter Blnckwelder and family. Miss Effie Kiser, Miss Anna Alexander. Mr. Sieb Linker and Mr. Stacey Wiser were the guests of Mr. [jam McCall Sunday. SI. CONCORD ROUTE THREE. - Misses Mary anil Myrtle Cline aud Vert re Cooke, are spending this week in Charlotte, visiting Mr. and Mrs. N. O. Olson. V Miss Ruth Brantley is vis-iting friends in South Carolina for a few days. Mr. Paul B. Cline is erecting a new house. He hopes to have it completed within tfew weeks. Services will be held at Keller Reform ed Church Sunday at 3 o’clock,, by the pastor, Rev. J. I>. Meader. "Sunday school at 2 o'clock. TULIP. Faith. Mx-s. Slouroe Byrd, widow of the. late Slonroc Byrd, died Wednesday aud was buried at the Reformed Church cemetery in Faith Thursday, July 19. 1923. The funeral was conducted bg Rev. W. H. Causey, assisted by Rev. H. A. SVelker, Rev. H. A.. SI. Holshouser Rev. C. W. War lick and Rev. G. O. Ritchie, in the presence of a church full of people. The great number of floral offerings showed the high esteem in which the deceased was held. She was a member of the Reformed church at Faith. She is sur vived by several children and a number of grand-children. S'enus is receiving more beautiful cards than you ever saw from people who read flip Faith items, VENUS. Harrisburg Community Club Meeting. The Harrisburg Community Club will meet on Wednesday, August Ist. The following is the program: Song by audience. Pi-ayer. - Recitation—Mrs. Ex-ncst Stallings. An Ox-thodox sermon. Solo—Sir. Primlell, of Concord. » ’ Play "Beat It"—Three characters. Guitar Duet—Slary apd William Fer ris. Talk—Hon. Morrison Caldwell, Con .eord. Solo —-Sir. Prindcl. Guitar Duet—Slary and William Fer ris. Business. Committee—Sirs. J. W. Davis, Sirs. C. L. Sims, Sliss Lula Morrison. -- Sunday School Convention. No. 1 township Sunday school conven tion will be held at Harrisburg Wednes day, August Ist, beginning ut 10 a. in. I’.gifA, -W'»-, 'L..UH .1- (THE CONCORb DAILY TRIBUNE ——a The, following is a part of the program to m given: Devotional—Hey. T. H. Spence. Song—Congregation. • Welcome Address—Member of Harris burg Sunday school. Song—Fairview Sunday School. Quartette —Rocky River Sunday School. Bible Exercise—Harrisburg Sunday School. Song—Hickory Ridge Sunday School. Miners Children—Harfiburg Sunday School. Song—Rocky River Sunday School. ■ Quartette —Fairview Sunday School.. SVho Lives in America V —Harrisburg Sunday School. , Quartette —Hickory Ridge Sunday School. Address. Song—Harrisburg Suuda.v School. Address—Hon. L. T. Hartsell. Prayer. Afternoon: Song—Fairview Sunday School. Quartette —Harrisburg Sunday School. Sunday School Pennies—Harrisburg Sunday School,/' Song—Rocky River Sunday School. Address—Rev. C. H. Rowan. Song—Hickory Ridge Sunday School. Uramitation—Harrisburg S. S. s Song—Fairview Sunday ' School. Address—Prof. J. B. Robertson. Song—Hickory Itidge. Business. Song—Harrisburg Sunday School. Song—Fairview Sunday ' School. Open Discussion. Song—Rocky River. Song—Congregation. Prayer. LONG NAME. ONCE POPULAR, IS NO LONGER IN STYLE Jake Newell Runs Across Two Persons ' With Multiplicity of'Given Names. Charlotte Observer. “For plurality of given . amines, two persons I recently ran across surely take the cake.” Jake Newell. Charlotte attorney, remarked Saturday afternoon as he loafed in an pffice at the court house/ "Fuller Nance was reared in Union county and is now living in Bal timore. His friends knew him as Ful ler, but his parents had bestowed upon him tiie handle of James Hobart Jerome GeorgiVWashington Fuller Devotion. “I saw a little negro girl in Cabarrus county a few days ago with a handful of names. She was Lucy Slatilda Love Divine Seymore Troy Belle Caro line Jones; They call her Chloe.” “I know one as bad as either of those,” a man sitting near remarked. “Her name is Jennie Lutitia Divvy Divine Sycamore Carrie Odella Caroline Price, called Lucy for short.” Multiple names were once very popu lar but arc no longer the style. Spine persons even drop one of the names conferred upon them at birth, as, for example, Woodrow Wilson, who was once known as Thomas Woodrow SS’il son. Royalty usually tries to place upon a defenseless infant all the high sounding names that have come down from ancestors through the gathering generations, adding a few more for good measure. * '' USE PEliii COLUMH-IT I* AI Si I BUICK MOTOR. |l | I[j for |f|! H| an entirely new and distinctive V |||||l I . line of Quality cMotor Gars ||||B In beauty, design, speed and II 11 111 l| B original mechanical Jeatures IIIIIIh I 1 such as Jour wheel brakes. 1111 We H I tfe 1£)24-Buick models provide | ||||| Hi the most revolutionaiy advance 1 111 H 11| il j I in motor cars thus Jar con*- l|||| H Ij S| BUICK MOTOR. COMPANY ffinCMchigm 11 Hi H nlj I Pio««r BuiMae. •€ Valve-.«-H*«d JU»,p«ri • Bri«<*e* u. All Pnnc.pal Cxia • Dealer* ten II jjll lj Hill i|| 1- WH * W BBTTf-It AUTOMOBILES ARB BUILT, BUICK. WILL BUILD THEM '1 | 11111 I StANDARD BIUCK CO - Ii || Today-^j^|| I S ° eaSV I If sanitary package that" can be made. |ij|L J jjl There’s always a well-fitted ice box near M Keep a few bottles on ice at home. I f possible to serve our customers. nlKJfiSOßflßf I I Delicious and Refreshing I II Carolina Bottling Company JI \. CONCORD, N. C. / H Big Bays at Charlotte Exposition. “North Carolina Homp-I>ay" Tuesday. 1 October 2nd. and "South Carolina Bay" Wednesday. September 2ftth. will be fea ture days at the Made-in-Carolinas Ex position in Charlotte September 24t1i to October (Ith. according to a tentative ar rangement of tbe program for the expo sition adopted at a meeting of tbe board of directors of tbe Made-liu-Carolinas Exposition Company in Charlotte. The North Carolina and South Carolina days will be til*, biggest days of the ex position period, on which will be een-_ tered moat of the great attractions that are being engaged for this period. Invitations to Governor Canterou Morfisotf, of North Carolina, to be at the exposition on North Carolina day. October 2nd, and to Governor Thomas B. Met.eOd, of Smith Carolina, to at tend tlie exposition on South Carolina . day, Wednesday, September 2flth, have been extended by the exposition board of directors Senator Simmons 4MB Senator Overman, of North Carolina. And a cumber of other distinguish*;! North Carolinians have also been in vited to attend the exposition with Gov ernor -Morrison, and invitations to the two South Carolina senators and to other distinguished Palmetto state citi zens have gone forward for South Caro lina day. * Civic clubs in the larger. cities of the two sister stutes have been asked to send out invitations to friends and rela tives of tlie members to “come home” to Charlotte on the two big days of the exposition. The North Carolina day especially will be in tlie nature of a great home-coming of the sons of the state to view what has beeu accomplished and in manufacturing in dustries, OP North Carolina, as exhibited at the The board of directors of the, Mado- In-Carolinas been advised by a' number of efties.-in the Carolines that 'delegations from these towns are being formed to come to Char lotte on September 26th and on October 2nd, and many of these delegations will be accompanied by bands of music and other boosting paraphernalia to adver tise these obstouff}tteli. 1 At the meeting of the board of direc PAGE FIVE tors of the Made-lin-Carolinas Exposi tion recently .1. C._ Patton was elected secretary and general lpanpger of the exposition; .1. C. Robinson was * elected field manager for the exposition company, and arrangements made to carry on the preliminary work of the great exposition rapidly from now on unti} the opening of the show. The . meeting was presided over by H. L. lie- I.aren, president of the Made-lin-Caro ; lians Exposition Company, of Charlotte. The exhibition space in the big build- I ing in Charlotte .on Purk Avenue has . been raipdly sold, and preparations are I beW rapidly mild* to place the matiu facthring and commercial exhibits in or . ddr. . V i It was announced j bytthe i. diryctors l that a full schedule of the imfsicat pro i gtaiU iiiciflcntal to the exposition will •Je announced in a few days. Smite of r the greatest artists of the country have I been engaged for the week of the,ekpo- I sitioh. it is stated, and a full program -for each d#.v of the big show ie being worked out .by a committee appointed -for that purpose.
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Aug. 1, 1923, edition 1
5
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