Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Oct. 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 For Rent—Modem 6-Room House Jno. K. Patterson, agent. 15-st-p. Wanted —Neat Appearing Young Man for clerk in gents furnishings on Sat urdays. Apply own writing to Box 114, City. 15-lt-p, Stray Dog at My House. Owner Cam Get same by describing qnd paying for this ad. Carl Robinson, No. 70 Ash St. . 15-3 t-p. Singer Sewing .Machine Office in Stale Fixery, West Depot St.. Phone 550 R. H. I).' Carpenter. 15-4 t-p. For Rent—Two Rooms and Kitchenette unfurnished, in desirable part of city. Phone 471 J. 15-4 t-p. Learn Barbering—Big Wages; Jobs guaranteed. Write for Catalog. Rich mond Barber College, 602 East Mar shall St., Richmond, Va. 13-10 t-p. Wanted—Painting and Paper Hanging. First class work guaranteed. Reason able prices. A postal card will save you many dollars. Address John Ros man, R. F. D. 3, Concord, N. C. 11-6 t-p. For Rent—Nine Hundred Square Feet of storage space. Five dollars per month. Telephone 817. 10-6 t-p. Phone 550 R For Information to the purchase of Singer Sewing Machine. H. D. Carpenter. . 10-4 t-p. Wanted—. Men or Women to Take Or ders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for men, women, and children. . Eliminates darning. Salary $75 a week full time; $1.50 an hour spare time. Cot ion, heathers, silks. International Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 3-10tlp. Horse For Sale Apply W. R. Earnhardt, I 108 Eudy street. 15-Bt-p. SAYS NAPPING MINDS MAKE I K SUBNORMAL By Being Trained More Efficient Work Is Done. .i (Bt the Associated Press.) New York. Oct. 13.—Detailed photo graphic studies of the motions of human beings, made possible through the iu vention of an apparatus called the scale cage, have led to the conclusion that absent minded persons temporarily in dulge in motions similar to the motion behavior of imbeciles, according to the Engineering Foundation of tliis city. The foundation says also that great waste results, in some manual occupa tions. from ill-directed motion. -Many persons occasionally are absent minded and. while their wits are wool gathering, the motions of their bodies. 4s recorded by photography, are strik ingly similar to those of the weak-minded and subnormal. Bricklayers of Ordinary training have used the #;ame metthods probably for 7,000 years. The berry picker, the most apcient of crafstnum. has followed sim ple and natural methods for thousands of years. Studies of these workers give no indication that the best way to do work is a matter of instinct, or is de veloped through successive generations by natural processes. By finding out the best way. as dem oustarted by the most expert worker, the bricklayer can be trained to do more than three times as much work with the same effort. The amateur berry picker, most highly educated in everything ex cept berry picking and motion study, may be so trained as to increase his out put fifteen fold. If You Need a Medicine You ShOHld Bare the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgot ten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies mere par ticular ,’v to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system, the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says, "Tate >r example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to re commend, for in almost every case it shews excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kid dey remedy has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc cess of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to tile fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and blad der ailments, corrects urinary trou bles and neutralizes the uric acid ■which causes rheumatism. You may receive ? sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcel Post. Ad dress Dr. Kilmer St,Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten ceuts; also mention thr paper. Large and me dium size bottles for sale at all drnv stores 1- K * FALL OPENING SALE 8 • Continues With Wonderful Success | PARKER'S SHOE STORE Between Parka-Bells and McLetian 8 and 10c Store 8 j CONCORD For Sate—New Bungalow on Edge of city. Address “Bungalow," Care Trib une, for terms find price. 15-6 t-pf For Sale—My Gardner Touring Car, Re cently repainted and completely over hauled. In A1 condition -mechanically, for $350.00 cash for quirk sale, as I am leaving city. M. Y’erburg, 47 Loan st. 13-4 t-p. Garage For Rent. Dr. J. E. Smoot. phone 88. 12-ts-chg. Miss Ethel Griffin. Public Stenographer and Notary Public at St. Cloud Hotel. 10-6 t-p. Apples, Apples, We Have Fresh Car lit Bulk aud they are tine, and also cheap. Phone 565. We deliver quick. Ed. M. Cook Company. !)-6t-p. The Kannapolis White Bus Line Dur ing Fair Week will run through from Kannapdlis to the Fair Grounds. The same hourly schedule will be m'aiu tained. Buses leave Fair Grounds for Kannapolis after last show each night. 9-6 t-p. For Sale—Two Mules. Three Yews Old aud thirty. Also piano ami organ, in o. k. condition. Also have for sale Valuable real estate at Kannapolis. Stores, barbershop, dwelling. Rented now at good prices. Will sell one or all of stores in Bellvue (Petheltown) now occupied by McCombs & Son. Bruce Ford and others. Will sell the barber shop and the 7 50-foot vucant lots below. With the exception of the North Side this property is surrounded by the Cannon Mills property, and only four blocks from the mills. Rents well. Set your own price. Sell to the highest bidder. See or phoue B. L. I’mberger, 3603. 9-ts. Old Newspapers, 5 Ceuts a Roll of 25, at Times and Tribune office. SEEK RELIGIOUS TRAINING FOR AMERICAN CHILDREN International Sunday School Association to Stress ChUdren’s Work. Westerville. 0., Oct. 15.—Mine of the greatest efforts of the year of the In ternational Sunday School Association to arouse the continent “to the spiritual needs of children” will be put forth the seven days starting today. The organization lias designated that period as Children's Week in the Sun day Schools of the United States, the ninth annual observance. , Dr. Waller G. Clipptnger. chairman of tiie children's division of the luterun t ions I Association, said today that at lease 13.1)00.000 of the 25,000,000 chil dren under 12 years of age in the coun try are not receiving any religious educa tion. “It is admitted universally that our national life and prosperity can be pro moted only as it is established upon a healthy religious idealism. It is to help change these conditions and make it possible for all children to receive re lations training riiat this movement is hieing promoted." Dr. Clipping*'!- said. The program of the week will consist of meetings of parents and Sunday School teachers, holding of Sunday School exhibits and institute and house-to-house visitation. FOR CONSJIPATION Black-Draught Recommended by an Arkansas Farmer Who Has Used It, Whea Needed, for 25 Tears. Hatfield, Ark.—Mr. Q. W. Parsons, s well-known farmer oa Route 1, this place, •ays: “I keep Black-Draught in my home all the time. It is the best all-around medicine I have ever found for-the Uver and for constipation. We began using H 25 or more yean ago and have used it whenever needed since. I have never found any other medicine as good for constipation, and that was what 1 suffer ed with till I began using Black-Draught Black-Draught corrected this condition, and now we use it for the Uver and for indigestion—a tight and sluggish feeling after meals, for bad taste in the mouth and sour stomach. “My wife uses It for headache sue biliousness. It sets on our shelf and we don’t let it get out It has been a great help to us. I believe a great deal ei sickness is caused by hurried gating and constipation, and Black-Draught, if taken right, wBl correct this condition.’* Get Thtdford's, the original and ealy genuine Black-Draught powdered Ivor medicine. Sold everywhere. NC-HO WORLD COURT WEEK 18 TO BE OBSERVED SOON Will Be Observed by Churches in Am erica Next Month. Washington, D. C, Oct. 13.—World* f Court Week will be observed by the - Churches of America November 5 to 11. The week will come to a climax on Arm * istiee I>a.v. which will be known as ' World Court Sunday. r The observance is in the interest of the • United States joining the Permanent 1 Courf of International Justice. Thou -1 sands of congregations will take part as the call is being Issued by the Commission ; on International Justice aud Goodwill of the Federal Council of Churches. Co-op , erating with it is ‘the American Council i* of the World Alliance for International . Friendship Through the Churches. The plan of conducting a campaign of education in behalf of the United States i joining the World Court was submitted . to many religious, social and educational . organizations and institutions. It was endorsed and active support promised. The program calls for all Christian organizations that hold regular meetings | during the week, such ns church prayer meetings, home and foreign mission ‘ study groups. Y. M. C. A.'s, Y. IV. ’ A.'s and Student Volunteer classes, Chrft -1 tian Endeavor Societies and Epworth Leagues to,make the question of Amer ican membership in the World Court u principal topic for study. It asks that chambers of commerce, labor organiza tions, Granges, Rotary. Kiwanis, Civi tan, advertising and other similar clubs, women's clubs and all distinctively wom en's organizations, the American Legion, and all peace societies provide for dis-j cussions on the World Court iu their regular meetings aud publications during the week. In tlfe Sunday schools a special ten-j minute service ou the World Court- will 1 be held in the mornings and community rallies of Sunday schools will be held in many towns on the afternoon of World Court Sunday. In some of them a jiag eant will be presented and a united pro cession will be "held. The plan is for all clergymen on \ World Court Sunday to preach on some phase of America's in ternational responsibility aud opportun ity, and on the significance of the World Court as an important step in substitut ing law for war in the settlement of in ternational difficulties. Cabarrus and Concord. Greensboro News. Concord, “best home city iu piedmont section," aud Cabarrus county with its 1 tremendous textile interests. furnished The Concord Tribune with subject mat ter during the past week for a 52-page newspaper, an edition which compares favorably with snperpapers prepared by tiie bigger newspaper plants of the State. Cabarrus with its Concord 1 - and Kan napolis and their numerous extensive oot tou mills, and with its farms, famed for their fertility aud production, thoroughly is advertised in this edition and good re sults ought to follow upon the publicity thus given to one of the finest and most promising sections of North Carolina and one of tiie leading textile communities ifi all the south. Publishers John B. Sher rill ami W. M. Sherrili and their asso ciates have every reason to feel proud of their effort. N Mrs. Margaret Bin* Gets U&55.000 Charlotte. Oct. 13:—A verdict sor 1 $3*1.000 was awarded iu civil court here today before Judge Harding by it jury iu tln> suit of Mrs. Margaret Blum against the Southern Railway for death of her husband, George J. Blum September. 1022, at Inn wood. Rowan county. Robert Hayes, another Charlotte citizen was killed in the same accident. Mrs. Hayes has also sued for $75,000 and the case is scheduled for trial at once. The verdict is one of the largest ever rendered in a Mis-kleuburg court. For the same reason the Southern paid a 840.000 verdict to Harry Talley, young Charlotte man. who was injured in the wreck of the Carolina-Virginia football special at Salisbury iu 1015. .Mr. Talley died last year as the result of his in juries. Calvin Coolidge. Jr., son of the Presi dent. is picking tobacco for the firm of.- Diekerman and Day in Hatfield. Massa chusetts. for $3 a day. He rides a bieyle to and from work. Surely this indicates true democracy. niiiiiiuiuiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiimnnniHiiiiiiffiiiiiiuiniffihHiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiffiniimimiiuiiinimiiiuniiiiijii cp 17 171 r lx. Ej Ej J f -*n During the Month of October We Will Give Absolutely Free With Every Chambers Fireless Range Purchased j Jj¥" IT a Humphrey Radiantfire as shown "TT Padiantfim Cuts Gas Bills in Codes a roast with twenty, to Hr@E||if§©F™ , thirty minutes gas. M\ ft Bakes bread with fifteen minutes 1 Boils three vegetables with ten Come in and see the range that . j will pay you monthly dividends. 7 v Cooks With the Gas Turned Off Ranges Sold on Easy Monthly Pay- f It/lfttltp-yic yp ments. r SS, Concord & Kannapolis Gas Co. HlltHHHllllllllllllHllHlllHliJllHlillllllllllUlllllHlHHllllHUlltlllHHlHlllimiiimillUlllliltlllllHlHUllllUmm<lffilimiWllKllll THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE llik, CIGARETTES Use times h tribune penny ms-it pws —— ~ ■ - Keep the Egg Basket Full by feeding Purina Chowder with Hen Chow, the perfectly balanced rations for laying hens— We don’t Keep it—we sell‘ it. ' s 1 SANITARY GROCERY CO. PHONE tW i"■ • nr.nii mb. r ; nMwriTii jiiTliriii r OmtWM JEWS MUST MOBIIJZK AGAINST ANOTHER WAR Israel Zangwlil Teds Hebrews They Must Forego Jewish State in Pales tine. \ New York, Oct. 11. —The forces of Israel must, mobilise against another w*r ami rather than “throw a match into such it powder factory as the globe lms become,’’ forego their poetical hoptjh in Palestine, it ,was declared tonight .by Israel’Zangwill, Jewish' authpr arnTpub liqiat who spoke before »e Jewish congress Here, lie-arrived here, .from England recently, * • o r j “There was a -moment when a Jewish state might Imvel arisen id FWeatine;” the sajd, "but the hour of destiny has V«*»«d.” } Arraigning what he" terms the “po’it- Moaday, October 15, 1925 mvsmssaiiimrr ■ i /" mi ical mishandling of Palestine" by Kng i Innd, Mr. Zankwill asserted that the rr cent Carlsbad congress had been too lata with its protests against the fact that not even ’state lands ..and waste lands’ had been allotted to tip Zionists and thut the .lows ware not fo* beSgiven the ■ right to control their own immigwitiou-in- - “Politics Is' the. real matter' of fact." he said, ''-'.iZh' but Zlouisb can only rely itiKjn as_ much of England’s might i ‘ as suits tbe poHry of England and since this Zionists are wady to accept any con dtyionis however hurniilsting and imprac tical, it is d«*r JJijtt a pHuuaum of might will beM.tKdiapmwl of jewiah mi Usual home ami that'mainly in the Eng lish inter**” Oeooraiktis far Sate**t Musette, Inc. t ~
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 15, 1923, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75