Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 2, 1923, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT t V I For sixty-seven years, I I BUCK’S have served so 'k, < 1 well that today they arc JRm— ii rhosen bv particular housewives the country m over as most desirable & LI Hi LI The Good Name which Buck's enjoys is due not ord of satisfactory ser -4* vice, but many finer fea tures developed by time and experience. Beauty, Economy of Operation, Convenience and me chanical excellence are features which place Buck’s Ranges in the position of supremacy which they occupy today. Visit our store and let us demonstrate this wonderful range without any obligation on your part. Concord Furniture Co. The Reliable Furniture Store Trade Is (food—What We Sell Is Good. In fact our store is a good place for you to trade if you like good things to eat. Aside from our regular line of staple and fancy groeeries, we car ry a nice line of fresh and cured meats, fresh fish, fancy fruits, poultry, and all kinds of farm products. If you’re a “Grumbler” trade with us and quit your grumbling. If you can’t live cheaper you ran get what you like to eat. If your credit is good we invite your account. 'lf we once get it we’ll do our best to keep it. We deliver the goods. C. H. BARRIER & CO. NEW VICTOR RECORDS! 10152 When Clouds Have Vanished Elliott Shaw Why Don't My Dreams Conic True Henry Burr 19154 —Complainin' Eddie Hunter 1 Got Eddie Hunter 10151—I Love You .............. y. Whitman and Orchestra The Life of a Bose Dornberger and Orchestra 10155—Cut Yourself a Piece of Cake Whiteman and Orchestra Oh You Little Sun-tiv-er-Gim . a.. Benson Orchestra of Chicago 1915ti—.lust a Girl That Men Forget The Troubadours Steal a Little Kiss While Dancing .. Green Arden Orchestra 051—The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise R. Wevrenrath Rose in the Bud R. Werrenrath 45370—1 n a Shoe Store Marie Cahill The Symphony Concert Marie Cahill 044—Faust Stokowski and Orchestra Mignon Stokowski and Orchestra (1410—Sonata in R Minor Olga Samaroff Nocturne l. .i Olga Samaroff \ OUT ONCE A WEEK—EVERY WEEK—FRIDAY BELL & HARRIS Music Department GLOBE AND HOLYOKE TIRES | Are Made From the Best of Material and Built to Give 1 j 20,000 Miles of Service. They Are Guaranteed 10,000 Miles You Will Make No Mistake When You Buy These Tires. j TRY THEM OUR AUTO LAUNDRY IS THE BEST CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONE 700 | TIRE PRICES ADVANCED We Have Not Advanced Yet We have bought a big supply of Cord Tires, all sizes, at old prices. Remember all ours are guaranteed and we carry the best tires that money can buy. A few of our specials: 30x0 Fabric , $7.50 and SB.OO L 30x3 Cord SIO.OO 30x3 1-2 Cord SIO.OO 32x4 Cord i $20.00 All First Class and Fresh Stock. Let us Show You What We Have. Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE ' Phone 117 THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE The Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING OE MAII.S The time t»f the closing of mails at the Concord pcdtoffice : s as follows: Northbound. * Train No. 136—11 p. m. Train No. 84—4:00 p. m. Train No. 36—10:30 a. UL Train No. 12—6:30 p.m. Train No. 38—9 :00 p. m. » Train No. p. m. / Southbound. Train No. 87—9:30 a. m. Train. No. 45—4:00 p. m. Train No. 135—9:00 p. m. Train No. 2ft—11:00 p. m. LOCAL MENTION j Born, a (laughter to' Mr. and Mrs. Dorris Fletcher, on Wednesday, Novem ber Ist, 1923. Marriage license was issued Thursday by Register of Deeds Elliott to Heilig I’. Freeze and Miss Bertha Overcash, 1 both of Kannapolis. | Only a few cases were on docket fond trial in 'recorder's court this morning. Most of the defendants were negroes, i charged with larceny.. having liquor and | ’carrying concealed weapons. i Rev. D. Ac Braswell was called from ThomnsvilU* on account of Mrs. Braswell having a second stroke of paralysis \\ cd- I nesday night. The condition of Mrs. j Braswell is considered serious. The condition of Miss Virginia Day j vault, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. .1.! Day vault, who underwent an operation j for appendicitis in the Concord Hospital i several days ago, continues to improve, j S Mrs. R. K. Black has returned from a Charlotte hospital, where she submitted*, to a very serious operation. Her friends will be interested to know thdt she stood , the trip home all right and continues to I show improvement. Mrs. Edward Parnell returned Thurs- 1 day to her home here from the I’resby-, [ terian Hospital in Charlotte, where she' [ Underwent treatment for setyral days. ; Her condition is reported by relatives as favorably improved, j Mr. Henry McClure, for several! months county jailer, plans to leave the jail to day. He will engage in the manage [ ment of the Central Case. It is under stood that Sheriff Caldwell plans to oc cupy the jail in tile future. Mrs, Zeno Horde was carried to a (Tiarhitte Hospital Thursday and ' went an operation there at 9:30 this, morning. Relatives here have been ad vised that so far as can be told now, the operation was successful. Patrolman Baxter Robinson, of the local police force, entered the Concord i Hospital Wednesday night. He under went an operation Thursday, a report from the hospital this mornuig indicat ing that the operation was successful. The regular weekly meeting of the Concord Kiwanis Club will be held at the Y this evening at 7 o’clock. Mem bers of the club will take lunch at the Flower Show at 7 o'clock and after the lunch will hold their regular meeting. Mr. E. C. BarnhardJ, Jr., lias charge of the program for the meeting. The Concord high school football team this afternoon is to play its first game in the State championship series. The Lexington team is here as Concord's opponent, and both teams are -.aid to be in good physical condition for the game. The game will be staged at the Gibson mill park beginning at 3:30 o’clock. Announcement was made Thursday of the purchase of the Cline & Mabery res taurant by I. B. Morris and Henry Mo- Clure. The case will be consolidated .with the Dutch Lunch and will be op erated in the future as the Central Case at the Cline & Mabery stand. The Dutch Lunch was located on Church Street. Relatives here have been advised that tile condition of Mr. H. G. Ritz. who is undergoing treatment in the Charlotte Sanatorium, is critical. Mr. Bitz has been in the hospital for some time and his condition during the past several days has been so unfavorable that some doubt as to his recovery is felt by,rela tives- and friends. City Tax Collector Fields now lias the tax receipts for .Wards pile anfl Two ready. Receipts for, the other wards probably will be completed within another week’s time. -Persons livyig in Wards One and Two can pay their taxes nt any time now. The tax books for the county were opened this morning by Sheriff Caldwell. Interest in North Carplina football games tomorrow centers in the State- Davidsonr game which will be played in Charlotte. North Carolina University l<nys South Carolina University at Co lumbia. and Trinity plays Elon. Quite a number of Concord people plan to go to Charlotte to see the State-Davidson game, both teams having many suppnrt ers.in this city and county. Prof. .1. B. Robertson, superintendent of the county schools, made an address at ‘Roberta Mill Thursday night in the interest of the count-wide school lax, which will be voted on November 20th. Mr. Robertson declared that he wgs heard by a good sized crowd at Roberta and the audience showed keen interest in bis subject. Mr. Robertson will speak in other parts of the county during the i next two weeks. Roberta at present hits a local tax, put on by ffnanimous' vote several years ago and another fine vote is expected in this comnftinitv for the tax. Cold Wave and Snow :n West; Below Zero in Wyoming. Chicago, 111., Oct. 31—Cold weather, preceded by snow, was general through out the middle northern section of the country today. Casper, Wyo.. reported 8 degrees be low zero last night following Us heavy snowfall. The thermometer was mount ing rapidly today. f From one to thre inebs of snow cover ed lowa this morning, with the mercury ranging between 16 and 19 degrees . above zero. j Northern Nebraska had a heavy snow, with a minimum temperature at Norfolk of 6 above zero. , Wisconsin and Minnesota had their J first real cold snap of the season, while Mb Chicago a light snow feH 'early to day. ■ ■ gpp>] Tom gF-pSims E^gjSays This country will take part in a repa ration conference, it being the, only way to get our part. A Canadia girl saved 17 hunters. lVe think the least they could do is let her keep one of them. News from far-off Japan. Crows are stealing golf balls. Maybe they think they are squirrels. King of Bulgaria wants to marry a rich woman. That’s easy to do. except you have to be richer. Man-powered taxis will be used in | Berlin. This is fine. Cussing the en- • gine will do some good. « J News from Paris. New serum cures hoof and mouth disease. We trust .some golfers will try it> , In Sayre. Pa.. S2OO in bills was burned , in a stove. Even coal would have | been some cheaper. Package maUpd nine yeafs ago has ar-1 rived in Seattle. Do your Christmas mailing early. Man in Lima. 0., refuses to wear any | clothes at all, so perhaps he has seen the new prices. 1 Boston bay of 12 has insomnia. Doc ims can’t, cure him. We can. Make him study his lessons. Wind in- Panama destroyed 350,000 hanana trees. Another evil result of that no banana song. Revenge is sweet. New York girl married a cop who arrested her. All the world problems must be settled every day to make room for more world problems. _ Many people who don't have to work , do work and many people who do have to work, don’t. Do you remember what yon were wor ried about this time last fall? We j don't. Very few do. i A plumber’s pipe dream is a dreatn j about a broken water pipe. Rotten. Rotten. Rotten! Philadelphia Record. At last we are beginning to learn something about the underground doings at Washington during the past two yeprs and eight months. So long as the Republicans had an overwhelming majority in both Senate and Hfeuse they resolutely squelched any effort at investi gation of alleged misdoings in the execu tive departments of government, j Now. however, that control has passed to the Democrat*, and independents, the truth jp begjnnmg to come out. and startl ing *it is. indeed. Nothing more shocking, we venture to say. has emanated from Washington in many years than the testimony of the witness Mortimer regarding the manage ment of the Veterans' Bureau under Charles R. Forbes as director.’ These are only accusations, of course, appar ently ringed with personal feeling, and Mr. Fdrbes will have every opportunity rb refute them: but it is impossible to believe that’ where names, figures and direct charges are handled with such freedom there ft no substantial bqsis for nt least a part of them. The terrible feature of these indictments is that they are made against a man who should have regarded his office as a particularly sa cred trust, in which every personal and political consideration should be subor dinated to his solicitude for the unfortu nate ex-soldier*' -committed to his care. There is ampV evidenre that Forbes re garded his position in no such light. Whether he has beeu guilty of the direct corruption charged against him is a mat ter upon which there will be a tempo rary suspension of judgment- Os less serious import, but still of de cided significance, is ex-Secretary Fall's admission that, after leaving office, he, took SIO,OOO from Harry F. Sinclair, the -oil promoter, for services in Europe. It was Sinclair, it frill be recalled, to whom Fall, while Secretary, leased the Teapot Dome oil reserves —a matter now under probe. IVhen. asked why he had with held nnnouncementXof this least while there was hectic speculation in oil stocks in New York, he replied brazenly: I am aware that my reticence in this matter may have justified some criti cism, but I have no apology to make. Then there ia Gaston B. Means, one of Attorney General Daugherty’s pets, who. when" indicted for alleged bootleg gfcg operations on a large scale, an nounces that, iU he is prosecuted, he will make revelations that will blast many Republican reputations. It is predicted that the charges against him will not be pushed vigorously. Politics, politics, politics! When that is the only thought that dominates of ficial Washington, why be surprised at tiuy exposure of crookedness that may be made? , <? The Cup That Cheers Q *8 “is a bracing c.ttp of tea, coffee Or cocoa, Kk A fresh made and daintily served, alone, or with some solid food, to cheer the inner , II man or woman. Our cup service is gen | yw’NWpßft orally praised because we use only the best tea, coffee and cocoa, all with an r~ Ij, jit w? i R exquisite flavor of their own. WflV * CAROLINA CAFE ' I Special Sunday Dinner artificial flowers. We are now showing our lovely j artificial flowers. Make your ! homp attractive with flowers. Clines Pharmacy PHONE 333 ' ] cm the nrarmr ooMWif— » pats ■ ‘ *••' ", >-'• ' ■ -e' How to Satire a World Supply of Cot-1 ton. Manufacturers Records. “The shortage cf cotton is undoubted ly the greatest problem facing the cot ton spinning .industry today." is a statement made by W. Irving liullnrd of Boston, treasurer of the National As- , socintiou pf Cotton Manufacturers. In discussing this situation Mr. RuUnrd stated 'that during the past two years | the world! has consumed about 41,000.- 000 bales of cotton and has produced | during that time only 33.000,000 bales, its consumption in two years hnving ex ceeded its production by 8.000,000 bales. In this brief period the world has drawn on its reserves to the extent of almost a full American crop based on the average of the last few years. This year's production he says will fall far below the requirements if the world’s mills are to be run full. There are 137,- 000,000 spindiea lie the world. When operating on a normal basis they re quire annually from 22.000,000 to 23.- 000,000 ba’es, whereas the* world’s pro duction this year he estimates at 18.- 759.000 bales to 19,000,000 bales, a very serious shortage with which to face the next twelve months. It irf in the light of suoh startling facts as these that the National As sociation of Cotton Manufacturers, which meets in Boston on October 31. will bring to bear upon the subject of cotton production all informa tion. Cotton will be discussed from every angle, and efforts will be made to crystallite opinion and point some way to practical action by which production may be stimulated to meet the world’s nt-eds. The best jtossible way is to pay a living price to the cotton growers and only in that way will it. be possible to increase the yield to such an extent ns to meet the needs of the world. KJ OF P. NOTICE. Regular meeting Concord lodge No. 51 K. of P. Friday, evening at 7:30 o’clock. Degree team will please be present for practice. R. E. RIDENHOUR, Jr., C. C. Batteries Recharged Cars Repaired Experienced Mechanics AH Work Guaranteed % Reasonable Charges Bollinger Motor Co. Forest Hill Eyes Examined Glases Fit ted Dr. E. C. Pierce OPTOMETRIST Eyesight Specialist Office Hours: 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. Office on Second Floor Op posite Efird’s Depart- • ment Store. CONCORD COTTON MARKET. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1*23 Cotton 30 Cotton Seed 66 We have a Good Supply of the Befct Hog Feed on the market Pure wheat Shorts and Red Dog. Phone Us Your Or ’ ders CABARRUS CASH GROCERY CO. Phone 57HY A. THE RITZ Another / 1 ■ young man’s model three fA. tr frfwwk butfftn sack, with notched ' Ijff\ •*, Li'4J a P e ' s - More form-fitting f~y\l an< * more shapely than the // j h “Oxford”—a smart style— I #/ r k Ut not quite' as extreme. ' jF^^^^^^ OWeVCr> 3 Smart * Hoover’s Styles that are Newest in Hats wZESj { Are Being Shown at jSEw i fin 1 * SPECIALTY i HAT SHOP COAL Order a ton of my Best Jellico Double Screened Coal— it will please. A. B. POUNDS Coal of Quality “Quality Store” Give us your order for Fresh Country Butter and Eggs and Farm Vegetables. Orchard Produce Company 00 ® Successor to L. E. Roger * / If you want that genuine feeling of satisfaction invite us to your next f * blowout. i We live up to our guarantee of ab solute satisfaction in all our vulcaniz ing. Motor & Tire Service Co. CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by aloe * Moose.) Figures named rgpreseat priced paid for produce on the market: Butter ,80 Country Ham .25 to .30 Country Shoulder '. .15 Country Sides .15 Young chickens 25 Turk** .25 to JO Laril IS TO Sweet Potatoes fl.oo Irish Potatoes j SI.OO Onions ... $1,25 • • y $1.36 Com SUQ Fwr gals ■ Ford Racer. See Chao. Alta, Tribune Office. 25-ts-p. Friday, November 2, 1025 ! HARRIET HUBBARD AYER’S | ■> PREPARATIONS i How to Massage Tour Face; | Reduce Your Double Chin; j Remove Crow’s Feet, Brow Lines, Frown Lines, That Tired Worried Look: With Full Directions for Same. I Gibson Drug Store *4he Rwwll Store” f
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1923, edition 1
8
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