PAGE EIGHT QUAKER HEAT^ iT» nn iif - ' QUICKER HEAT M | 'I CLEANER HEAT ; CHEAPER HEAT mi": BETTER HEAT ' Ijpii HEALTHIER HEAT |y, ll ' IISI BECAUSE IT’S U I QU * KE * S ARE fuel Tli>- Qiuhrr Piinlu'r is All si nl No I i'misitisl joints •to look sim;ke and gas in your home.. Easily installed in old i,r new homes. No rut tins of walls. One Register heats two to ten rooms. Sold on a writ ten guarantee. No lieat. no pay. Try it before you buy it. We have sold over fifty of these furnaces in Concord and Cabttrrus county, and will gladly furnish tin- names of customers who have used these furnaces for several winters, and And them perfectly satisfactory. j Phone 347 for Prices and Terms. .The Quaker burns any kind of ftteL \ Concord Furniture Co. | The Reliable Furniture Store <•'<>"<l siylt* «Ir:i\vs ;iift'liiion fn l In- uf.irt-r, n..t his <h• t lu*>. The tliM nmiii;il iujf T\ / / dn-NSfi- i;ikt*> i;n tlistt his '•l'Ulm's I M lit |-;i \ his rh;l flirt t*l\ v T X^^BhSISP I ’hi i n i! i♦ • ;i ilh- ;11 -1 •»• |»t t*(l IMgf vogue for fall. Sih-li style jaBB <alls for expert tailoring to 1\ \\ achieve the smalt effect. You'll f > \ \ see it expressed in I : sSSllljt-' ■PPENHKI.MKK HH' \ flood Clothes—s3s to SSO V Other In Koppenheiiner m (food Copyright 192), The Hour- of Kuppenheimer W. A. Overcash Clothier and Furnisher BROOMS! BROOMS! BROOMS! We have just received a big lot of Fancy 4 Siring Stick Brooms, which we bought at a Real Bargain and we are going to sell them the same way. While they last you can get them for only 63 cents each. Not more than three to each customer. We want your chickens, Eggs. Butter and Cream. We pay cash, pay tiie top market prices and never get overstocked. C. H. BARRIER & CO. BLUES! BLUES! BLUES! 8015—Last Go Round Blues Sara Martin coco ™ ama ’ s i? ot the liUl< ‘ s ••■••• Sara Martin 80b.)—( Lurch Street Sobbin’ Blues E va Taylor From Now on Blues p vn t«vW 8050-Benlc Street Blues 7." Esther Bige'in a,... T ur - r Blues Sara Martin 807 1 —Tnflm Blues J.ueile Bogan Chirpm the Blues Bucile Bogan 8068—You’ll Have No Luck By Quitting Me ft va Taylor on,o o m 0o “ Da Sw You '.'Eva Taylor 8010—Sweet Baddy Daisy Martin ooc, l!T 1 , UIU I,( ’ U I>aisy Martin —B Takes a Bong lime to Get ’Em Sara Martin 000~ v-°a Pa ‘ ,a B,uw Sara Martin 8067—Modeling Blues Eva Taylor and Sara Martin „„„„ . key Man Blues Sara Martin and Eva Tavlor So7o—Midnight Blues Alice 0a ’ rtel . If You Want to Keep Your Daddy Home Alice Carter ,000 K o UK Tu .L Sophie Tucker 1830 —Papa Better Vi atch Your Step Sophie Tucker If You Don’t Like It Leave It Sara Martin 8078—Nobody in Town Can Bake a Jelly Roll Like Min . . Sara Martin 8065—The Hesitating Blues Esther Bigeon Yeave My Sweet Daddy Alone Esther Bigeon BELL & HARRIS Music Department Go To East Corbin Street Gin FORTY TO FIFTY BALES PER DAY is our ginning capacity. That means that you don’t have to spend a whole day to get a bale of cotton ginned. If we can’t satisfy you, yon can't be satisfied. We buy your seed at highest market price and give ginmrs weight which means that you sell us. the dirt in your cotton. J. B. Linker Ginning Company KEEP I S BUSY PHONE 44SK **> "“i'’y ,* - • % .- v v V ’ Tirade With Merchants Who Advertise- THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE -The C«ncord Daily Tribune | TIMK of closing of mails. ' The time of the closing of malls at the Concord postofflea Is as follows: Northbound. i Train No. 136—11 p. m. Train No. 34—4:00 p. m. Train No. 30—10:30 a. m. Train No. 12 —6:30 p. m. Train No. 38—9:00 p. m. Train, No. 30—11 p. in. Southbound. Train No. 37—9:30 a. m. Train No. 45—4:00 p. m. Train No. 135—9:00 p. m. Train No. 29—11:00 p.m. WEATHER FORECAST. ~Unsettled, probably showers tonight and Thursday. LOCAL MENTION ■ There will be a box slipper at Rimer [ oil Saturday night. September 22nd. The proceeds will go to the church fund. -I No new cases of contagious disease ■ j were reported yesterday to the office of - ' she County Healtli Department. . | The local High School team will leave ■ | tomorrow for Greensboro to meet the ■ team of the Greensboro High School in the first football game of the season. ( Horseback riding is coming into its own again in Concord. During the past j several weeks a number of Concord peo pcople have purchased handsome riding horses, and the sport is rapidly increas ing iu interest ill this city. | The State University and Trinity Col • lege opened this week .for the 15)23-24 term. Tile enrollment at each college was the largest on record. Trinity re porting an enrollment of more than 1.000 while Carolina lias more than 1.500 reg istered. Concord and Cabarrus county are represented in both student bodies. The Charlotte Hornets won the first game from Wilson in (lie series to de termine the champion of the South At lantic and Virginia Leagues. The score was 4 to 2. Charlotte winning through the excellent pitching of Bolt and the timely hitting of Paschal. The two teams will (day three games in Char lotte beginning tomorrow. Mrs. Alex Mays died at her home near the Byown Mill last Monday morning about 4 o'clock, after an illness of several mouths of cancer. Besides tier husband she leaves two children. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. A. 11. Shelton Tuesday morning at 10 o’clock, and interment took place in Union cem eterey. , The members of the Young Ladies' Class of St. James Lutheran Sunday school were guests of Mrs. H. G. Gab sou at her home on West Depot street | on Tuesday evening. Several business matters were also brought up at this meeting, among them being the election of a teacher for the class. Mrs, John M. Cock was the unanimous choice of the ladies for their teacher. t’he regular annual Log Rolling of tlie I Woodmen of the World of this district I will be held in Concord with Elm Camp I No. 16. on Friday of this week. The j meetings will start in the afternoon about j 2:30 o’clock, and there will also be an I evening session. The program includes j au automobile ride for the visitors to 1 the Jackson Training School, and a ban quet iu the armory hall at 7 o’clock. The Tuberculosis Society has a patient at Sanatorium for whom they are entire ly responsible. She has no one to’iook to for assistance. She needs for the winter several suits of warm underwear, a pair of high slmes No. 6, a bath robe, black or white hose No. !) 1-2. felt bed room shoes, a warm sweater, and a rain coat. If any of the friends of the society can give any of the above mentioned articles which they have cast aside, they will be greatly appreciated. Telephone 185. Concord was among the cities of the state in which no fire occurred during the month of August, according to a re port just issued from tilt* office of Insur ance Commissioner Stacy Wade. Dur lwm and Henderson made a clean score as to fires during both July and August. Other cities and towns reporting no fire iu August are Salisbury, Goldsboro. Wil son. Greenville, Washington. Elizabeth City, Oxford, Clinton, Monroe, Gastonia, Lumberton, Mt. Airy, Lenoir, Lexington, and Statesville. Beginning this evening, September 20. and continuing through tomorrow until sunset, the Day of Atonement, called in Hebrew, Yom Kippur, will be observed in Concord as well as all the world over by the Jewish people as the holiest of of, the Syuagog. Everywhere on this day the Jews will assemble in their houses of worship. And there, forgetful of the bustling world outside, in medita tion and in prayer, by fastiug and ab staining from all worldly thoughts they will seek to cleanse their hearts' of sin I and by true repentance, become one with God that they may the better fulfill their duties and discharge their responsibilities toward humanity. Lutheran Conference to Meet at Chins Grove. The Western Conference of the North Carolina Lutheran Synod will convene in St. Mark's church, China Grove, the Rev. C. P. Fisher, pastor, Tuesday. Septem ber 25. und will run through Thursday 27. A large number of pastors and lay men are expected to be present. The principal address on the second day will be delivered by the Rev. J. L. Morgan, his subject to be "The Uniquity of Luth eranism.” The western conference embraces ail Lutheran churches west of the main line of the Southern railway and is one of the two conferences of the state organi zation. It numbers among its enrollment quite a number of churches and pastors in Cabarrus county. Mrs. Coolidge Not to Come to Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill, Sept. 18.—Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, wife of the President, has II written Mrs. Harry Comer that she c m-11 not come here to attend the installation II ceremonies of the Phi Beta Phi Sororfy. II When there was talk of President Cool-11 •idee etmiug to Durham the b»al a'ainmll mvj'jtrs of the sorority, inrough Ur* II Comet wrote Mrs. Cooiige nrg’uz Ire** 11 to aloud the ceremonies. Hope ►ast shell would come was virtually a band >.u.J, ll however. When it %*' Dinned th* -Freni-11 dent i.;>.V.u’f ac ent the Durham invito- j I tiOn,- >1 Have You Learned the most Reasonable Place to get the Best Home Cooked'Food in this City? Our Customers say it is the IDEAL LUNCH ROOM Barbrick Street “Ask Anybody” Dr. J. A. Shauers j CHIROPRACTOR Maness Bldg. Phone 620 Residence Phone 620 Room Y. M. C. A. CONCORD COTTON MARKET. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. ID. 1923. Cotton .-. ... . or) New Cotton .27 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline & Moose.) Figures named represent priced paid for produce on the market: Eggs y 40 Butter Country Ham .25 to *3O Country Shoulder Country Sides .15 Y'oung Chickens ,22 Hens 18 Turkeys . j.. .25 to Lard 12 1-2 Sweet Potatoes $1.05 Irish potatoes $1.25 Onions ... ,-i *1 os Peas 1 $1.75 Com $1.15 Concord Music Studio Dixie Building ALAN D. PRINDELL Teacher of Voice MARY B. FLOWERS Violin Telephone 791 For Rent—One Five and One Six Room bungalow, new. Light and water con nections. Daw ’Phone 80, Night phone OS2J, 8-ts. For Twenty Years the Favorite I H For twenty years Red Devil Lye has been the favorite. H 9 The concentrated strength of Red Devil assures quick results when H ■ there’s real cleaning and work to be done. It is convenient to use, it IB 9 is economical, it sure is strong —it is the standard for good lye. Ask H H your grocer for the can with the smiling red devil on the label. B I Wm. Schield Mfg. Co* St. Louis, Mo. I FOOTBALL GOODS! We have a beautiful line of Football Goods. All guar anteed: r Football Shoes, Jerseys, Stockings, , Helmets, Shoulder, Knee, Elbow and Kidney Pads. Official Footballs—Winchester and D. & M. Bovs’ Winchester Special Footballs, regulation size SI.OO Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE WE SPECIALIZE-ON BUILDERS HARDWARE NOTICE. ' The undersigned. I,ee A. Martin and Eugene G. Martin, having this day pur-' chased of J. W. Connor and O. W. Con nor, trading as Carolina Case, all fix tures. furniture and supplies now locat ed in the storeroom at No. 70 South Un ion Street. Concord, N. C. All creditors of J. W. Connor and O. W. Connor or the Carolina Case, will look to them for payment, as the under signed will not be responsible for any claims, accounts, etc., of the said Caro lina Case or J. W. and O. W. Connor not expressly assumed in writing by the undersigned. This the 15th day of September, 1923. LEE A MARTIN. EUGENE G. MARTIN. ,17-3 t. Ritchie Caldwell Company, Inc. Everything in Hardware OUR PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT Is The Pride of Our Store Prescriptions Filled by REGISTERED DRUG GISTS Cline’s Pharmacy Telephone 333 S'. Land Deeds and Mortgage - rust Deeds, 5 cents each, at Times and Tribune Office. Visiting Cards Printed, 50 tor SI.OO. 100 for $1.50. Times ami Tribune Office. . ■ JGty/ - AdSB' 1 i ■ . -JET 1 iLJßwr' . 4m ■ /<j i - 11» i™ w • - hH r „ ..Wsl ■ ifit- ‘ '' KfH S fwl M B 8B 5 igß Young men want individual style. That’s vjhy we carry] a complete assortment of Schoble Hats, and maintain an! expert organization to aid you in making your selection HOOVER’S INC. The Young Men’s Store FALL HATS! The Shapes are New;. The Colors are Becoming and Youthful. The Prices are RIGHT. Come and see them though you are not ready to buy. SPECIALTY HAT SHOP CO A L A. splendid lump coal for $9.50 per ton. Best Jellico double screened SIO.OO per tori. The above prices for immediate delivery. I will thank you for your order; I sell for cash. A. B. POUNDS Phone 244 ' “Quality Store” Give us your order for Fresh Country' Butter and Eggs and Farm Vegetables. Orchard Produce Company Phone 130. Successor |oLE. Boger If you want that genuine feeling of satisfaction invite us to your next blowout. < We live up to our guarantee of solute satisfaction in all our vulcaniz ing. Motor & Tire Service Co. , *-S T., : ■ ’ ... ■*.■■■ .! I ... I It.. «* Hll.l .■■■■■ II I USE THE TIKES IH TRIBUNE PENNY COLUK . t —'ILJH-'W."- . ——sssmmm—assess The Penny Ads Gel Results—Try Them. Wednesday, sept. 10, 19?3

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