Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Nov. 27, 1923, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT sl98 —Thanksgiving Price—sl9B 10-Piece Mahogany Dining Room Suite Low in price but high in quality. A Suite you will be proud to own. A suite that will be admired by your friends. A suite that will give lasting service for years to come. Your old suite taken in as part pav bt*nt. Balance in sm:ill weekly or monthly payments. Our entire stock IS now being sold at reduced prices. If in need of Furniture, it will pay yon to see our goods, and get prices before you buy. ♦ Concord Furniture Co. The Reliable Furniture Store The Cup That Cheers C n 8 - is a bracing cup of tea. coffee or cocoa. (,<V } fresh made and daintily served, alone, or 2.2 ■gp* Wu) d * with some solid food, to cheer the inner "3, man or woman. Our cup servicers gen- I | orally praised because we use only the I | Tgjf i'itjr best ton, coffee and cocoa, all with an V )'\ \I j i'jljy* «ciwL M m exquisite flavor of their own. vfifT! I V CAROLINA CAFE j Special Sunday Dinner New Victor Records for Thanks giving 19163—01 d Fashioned Love Arthur Gibbs and Orchestra Charleston Arthur Gibbs and Orchestra 19174—Broken Hearted Melody The Troubadours The Waltz of Long Ago The Troubadours 191 <;>—Steamboat Sol Garber-Davis Orchestra Down South Blqes __ The Virginians 19141—0 h Saviour Hear Me Charles T. Tillman Be Thou With Me Charles T. Tiltman 19171—1 t Ain’t Gonna Rain No Mo' Wendell Hall Red Headed Music Maker Wendell Hall 19173—Kiss Me With Your Eyes Della Baker Indiana Moon Clair Brookhurst and James 19176 —Out There in the Sunshine With You Henry Burr " You Didn't Care When You Broke My Heart Elliott Shaw 935—Sleep on, Fair Lady Guiseppe de Luca Because Guiseppe de Luca 6424—Adiago Mi,-In Elman German Dance Mic-lia Elman Ol’T ONCE A WEEK—FRIDAY BELL & HARRIS Music Department dust Received New Shipment of Holyoke and Gotham Tires We have absolutely got the best tire that we have ever sold. We are not merely taking a salesman's word for this statement. We have tested and proven to ourselves that the Holyoke and Gotham tires will stand a test with any tire on the market today. They are not Cheap Tires. They are hand made and every ounce of cotton in them is long staple cotton. The rubber and friction stock is the very best and it is properly cured. You will agree with us when you try a set of these tires. As a special induetment to you on these tires we are going to offer them for a limited time only at 10 per cent, below our regular re tail price which is astonishingly low for these high grade tires. Put a set on your car and test them with any tire on the market. They are guaranteed for 6,000 and 10,000 miles of good service. All we ask is that you try one set. OUR Al'TO LAUNDRY' IS TIIE BEST CENTRAL FILLING STATION PHONE 700 Sportsmen’s V Headquarters Lovers ot the great outdoors will find , our stock of-sporting goods unusually complete. One of the world famous lines we carry is ammunition Jf\A ; *V *<@s* /M Notliing has ever approached the IIM xu consistent accuracy of Western shot- N|r V gun shells and rifle and revolver car tridges. No other ammunition has 'X ever won such a smashing string of uk championships. First choice cf the ■IBvV. w world’s crack shots, Western* mMcvV • Cartridge Company Ammunition is irat typical of all our lines cf sporting goods —winners every one. i Ritchie Hardware Co. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE | The Concord Daily Tribune ! TIME OF CLOSING OF MAILS ” The time of the closing of mails at the Concord posSsffiee is as follows: Northbound. Train No. 136—11 p. m. Train No. 34—4:00 p. m. Train No. 36—10:00 a. m. Train No. 12—6:30 p. m. Train No. 3S—8:00 p. m. Train No. 30—11 p. m. Southbound. Train No. 37—9:30 a. m. Train No. 45—4:00 p. in. Train No. 133—S :30 p. m. Train No. 29—11:00 p. m. I LOCAL MENTION jf| The weekly meeting of the Concord FI Rotary Club will be held tomorrow at iiil the Y. M. C. A. at 12:30 p. m. Mr. Charles S. Barry, of New Orleans, Ijlhas arrived in Concord and will be asso ji'l dated in business here with Mr. Joe W. M Hendrix, public accountant. [4 I s Mrs. uD. Coltrane. Jr., and son, are !;: spending several days in Charlotte where | the child is undergoing treatment in a | hospital. j» The condition of Chief L. A. Talbirt. " who is undergoing treatment in a Char si lotte hospital, is reported as improving. He probably will return to his home “J here this week. Mr. W. A. Foil returned Monday night from Charlotte, where lie underwent an operation for appendicitis several days ago. His condition continues to show im provement. and he stood the trip home in good shape. The St. John's Community Club will hold a regular meeting at the school house tomorrow- Wednesday—night at. 7:3ft (.'clock. An interesting program has been arranged for the meeting, it has been announced. Miss Lane.v Miller, who recently under went an operation for appendicitis at the Concord Hospital, today was carried to the home of her mother on South Union Street. The condition of Miss Miller has shown daily improvement following the operation. There will be services at tin* West Con cord Baptist Church on Thanksgiving night. The Woman's Missionary Socie ty will present a missionary program. "Making Missions Real." The service will begin at 7 :3|) o'clock and the public is invited. The public schools of the city wilt close tomorrow l Wednesday I afternoon for Thanksgiving. As usual the schools will observe holidays on Thanksgiving day and the day following—-Friday. This means that when tin* schools dose tomor row work will not be resumed until Mon day morning. Union Thanksgiving services will be held by practically all of the downtown churches this year. The service will be held ou Thanksgiving morning at eleven o'clock in Central Methodist Church, and the sermon will be delivered by Rev. W. C. Lyerly, pastor of Trinity Reformed Church. Members of the county chain gang are at work now on the IV.plar Tent road. This highway is to be put in tine condi tion and the material used on tin* road is of .the best. When completed tin* road will be one of the best in the State, according to members of the county high- Genrgc L. Deaton. of Sail Marcus, Texas, died Monday at the home of rela tives in Mooresville, and will be buried there this afternoon a( 2:3ft o'clock. Mr. Deaton was Sft years of age and was born in this county, having moved to Texas when a youth. He has visited here on numerous occasions and has a number of relatives in this county. The funeral of Mrs. R. A. Gourley, who died Sunday at her home at Harris burg. was held Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Rocky River Presbyterian Church. The service, which was at tended by a large number of relatives and friends of Mrs. Gourley, was con ducted by Rev. T. N. Spence. Inter ment was made in the church ceemtery. Tlie funeral of Mr. Joseph White, who died here Sunday afternoon, was held Monday afternoon at 3 o’clock at tlie First Presbyterian Church. The ser vices were conducted by Rev. J. C. Rowan and interment was made in the Rocky Ridge cemetery. The pall bear ers were H. S. Williams, I). B. Morri son. C. C. Stonestreet, J. F. Harris, H. W. Caldwell and G. Ed. Kestler. The Light Brigade of St. .Tames Lutheran Church on Sunday evening will render a pageant, "Signs of Grate ful Hearts." This will be given in place of the usual Vesper service at 7 o'clock. At this time little Miss Re becca Norman will render a song in Jap anese. and her father, the Rev. Clarence E. Norman, returned missionary from Japan, will deliver an address. A number of defendants paid $177.3(1 in fines in recorder's court Monday. The largest fine. s3(l was paid by a man charged with operating a car while in toxicated. Six persons charged with gambling were fined $lO each, one man charged with having liquor was fined $23. another charged with intoxication paid s2(l and another charged with be ing intoxicated and disorderly paid a fine of $12.50. / ‘ The Gastonia high school football team is here this afternoon for a game with the local high school team. The game will be played ai the Gibson Mill Park beginning at 3:30 o'clock, and should be the best game of the season. The two (earns played a bard game in Gastonia re cently and tlie locals are determined to get revenge for the defeat suffered at that time. The game may be the last of the season for the local team, which lias been going good for the past two weeks. The funeral of Mrs. Mary Foy, who died recently in Cincinnati at the age of 101 years, was attended by 18 griind childreen, 42 great grand-ehildreen, and two great great grand-children. MASONIC NOTICE. All Masons are requested to meet at the Lodge Room on Wednesday night, November 28th, 1923, at 7 :30 for rehear sal oT the Master Mason Degree. By or der of the W. M. 27-2 t. a. W. CREECH",' Sec. W-p Sims Mil Says Goats are nice nnimals. They get in bad by not bathing, but you never hear goats kick on the food. Goat will eni tin cans, dynamite, bride's biseuii - or what* have you. Then efll a shoe for desert. Imagine being phased about the yard by a goat full of dynamite? Why not take this Illinois goat who eats dynamite and let him butt a nice fat bootlegger? What could he nicer than feeding a bill collector on dynamite and then throwing rocks at him. They milk gnats in France, but Ger many's goat has gpna dry. Goals will eat dynamite. Why not start feeding the stuff to people who are always butting in? Wouldn’t it be too awful if somebody fed football players dynamite? Eating dynamite will ruin a goat’s health. It will make him very thing and several miles wide. What will happen to a goat who eats dynamite? Why. he will butt once and nothing else butt. What's left of a goat that eats dyna mite is the goat's goatee. Biggest example of a goat that has been eating dynamite is Germany. France has Germany*! goat. She feeds it on dynamite. And kicks it about. " Look out, France! France is after England's goat. Would have it already only England .says she hasn't any goat. France even wants Italy’s goat. Buy she can't get that goat. Italy's gnat belongs to Mussolini. When our own government gets the taxpayer’s goal she always returns it 'just before elect ion. ATTEN TI ON, M EIM H ANTS A special meeting of the Merchants Association will be held in the office at s o'clock this evening. Members are urged to be present. By BEULAH V. TYSON, 27-lt-e. Secretary. Regular meeting of Elm Camp No. i 16 W. O. W. Tuesday evening at 7:30 j in the Moose Lodge Room. Every I member is urged to be present. TV. R. FISHER, C. C. s C. A. ISENHOUR, Clerk. ! CSR THK PK.VtY Clll.lMX IT PAYS 2 TOILET SOAPS 5 0 .AND C R TOILET POWDERS 8 Just the Kind For Baby or X| 5 the Adult jX | Clines Pharmacy § 0 PHONE 333 l!li We Have the follow ing Used Cars For Sale or Exchange: One Ford Racer One Oakland Six Touring. One Chevrolet Tour ing These cars can be seen at our show room on Barbrick street. STANDARD BUICK COMPANY Opposite City Fire Dept OUR MENU FOR SATURDAY Fat Hens Butter £ nrk, *- vs Fresh Fish Geese Young Chickens Oysters Beef Celery Pork Sausage Grapes Veal Apples Boiled Ham ' Oranges Breakfast Bacon Cranberries Eggs Nuts and a Thousand and One Other Things. Why scatter your orders all over town, when you can get what you want here? C. H. BARRIER & CO. Generous New photo of Nathan Straus, the philanthropist, snapped just before he sailed from New York on the new Italian liner Duilio. He is en route to Palestine, where his gen erosity feeds more than 1700 per sons daily. AT LAST The Big Cheese Bar Has. Been Cut Phone us your order and avoid the rush. We have anything for that Thanksgiving Dinner. Dove-Bost Co. Where Quality Reigns Supreme Batteries Recharged Cars Repaired Experienced Mechanics AH Work Guaranteed Reasonable Charges Bollinger Motor Co. Forest Hill ARDEN FACE POWDERS All the skin treatment in the world is wasted if your powder is not right. It must not be coarse. A pure, fine powder will greatly enhance the appearance of the skin and prevents impurities from entering the pores. So many cheap, heavily-scented powders are used that coarsen the skin and even the appearance of the person, that I particularly urge the use of only the purest. Gibson Drag Store Fresh Norfolk Select . Oysters Every Day This Week Special Dinner Every Day Only Ideal Lunch Room STREET Where You Always Get Good Coffee Style and Service with Grace and Beauty Have been embodied in the “Clothes Beautiful.” We are proud of these clothes and when you have examined the fabrics and tried on the New Models you will under stand why. HOOVER’S Inc. THE YOUNG MEN’S STORE Nothing Like Home Talent in Dressing a Doll. Let Us Solve This Christmas Problem For You Busy Mothers SPECIALTY HAT SHOP OOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOQOO© COAL Order a ton of my Best Jellico Double Screened Coal— it will please. v • A. B. POUNDS Coal of Quality “Quality Store” Give us your order for Fresh Country Butter and Eggs and Farm Vegetables. Orchard Produce Company K>ne 180. Successor to L. E. Roger siyr-nt U d uJtigTa j: flairag, £ 'iajSH-'t 3 *«:: If you want that genuine feeling of satisfaction invite us to your next blowout. \ .. ■ . ■ We live up to our guarantee ot ab solute satisfaction in all our vulcaniz ing. i ' Motor & Tire Service Co. CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected Weekly by Cline A Moose.) Figures ntyned represent priced paid for produce on the market: Eggs ■. 50 Butter 35 Country Ham .26 to .30 Country Shoulder 15 Country Sides 16 Yonng chickens 25 Hens 18 Turkey* .26 to .80 Sweet Pots tow' V.7.V.V.V.V.V.". .^$lAO Tuesday, November 27, 1923 Irish Potatoes ,80 Onions $1.50 Peas - 51.50 Corn „ SI.OO CONCORD COTTON MARKET. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1828 Cotton 34 Cotton Wed J 2 Our Vest Pocket Memorandum* For 1824 are ready. We want every subscriber of The-Times and Tribune to-have one. Come la and get it. G-ts. • 'll i
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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Nov. 27, 1923, edition 1
8
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