Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / Dec. 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 5
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• ttraSt "TVfuvi * I uII unit ■iiiTf^lr'lfflr ■ jrr Dance M Evening. -“Wf '?; Ushering in the Christmas holiday sea son, the dance give*' at- the Elks’ Home Wist evening by the young men~of. the nity, proved a social event of unusual in terest-to a large number of dancers. Dancing began at 9 o’clock and contin ued untjl ode,, o’clock this morning and during the eveiitaff about 50 couples were on the floor. In addition to'the young people of this city who were present, a number of dancers from nearby cities were also present for.(tie dance. Music was furnished by the Mark .Goff Orchestra and the latest dance music was interpreted by the musicians and proved one or the features at the occasion. , A number of dther dances will be giv en by various organizations in the city during the holidays. , Black-Griffin. A marritfge tjlfft will be of much in terest td friend? fit, the contracting par ties took fflttce last evening in the offices of Dr. John A.’ Patterson when Miss Ethel Griffin, of this city,, became the bride of Mr. John I*. Black, of Greens boro. ’The ceremony was. performed by Rev. G. W, Rollins, pastor of McGill Street BaptibT Church, and was witness ed by oiily a few friends. Mrs. Black is popular with a wide circle of friends in this city, where she has made her home for many years. Mr. Black ffrtade his home here for a short timi year, being connected with a mattress’factory. He is a prominent bus iness man OT*Ureensboro now. Mr. and Mrs I .^ Black-.left Cont-ord last Bight and will make t/beir jhomjf ’jin Greensboro. Moves to Concord. t Mr. Howard Collie, of Danville, Va.. Ms become associated with the Kidd- Frix Music & Stationery Company and will beeopie secretary and treasurer of the concern 1 , according to announcement by Mr. Paris Kidd, who has been in charge of the store since it was started here several years ago. Mr. Collie is a well known young business man and formerly lived in New Bern. While there he was a member of the Shrine and Kiwanis Club and otherwise active in the civic affairs of the town. He be gghshjs new duties here this week. Special Movie Program at “Y” A special movie program will be of fered the public at the Y. M. C. A. Fri day night at 8 o'clock in the gymnasium. This is in Connection with the Pet and Hobby show which opens to the public at 7 o’clock, and remains open until 10 o’clock, when all exhibitors will be able to remove their exhibits. Spa cious cooi<s are being moved from the fair gronnffa? to the Y in order to prop erly take care of the exhibits. All persons having relics, collection of any kind, ace asked to place them on exhibit. They will be shown under glass and l be perfectly safe. Dennys clows wfll 'do stunts for the crowd and it is hoped that every (die in Concord will avail 1 themselVes" of the opportunity of visiting 1 some of the Bhow. No admission wiH be charged and you will miss one of the best things of its kind if you fail to be 1 present.. I T%e judges, Rev. Mr. Scovill, of All : Saints Church. Mrs. H.- S. Williams, and Mrs. George B. Means, wiH place the ribbons at 0 p. m. Tile Y will be 1 closed from 8 until 7 o’clock. All ex- 1 hibits will be brongkt to the Y. M C. A. 1 at 4 o’clock Friday afternoon at which 1 time they will be assigned to their re- 1 spective coops. - i At The Theatres. “The Virginians,” the screen version 1 of the famotis Wister story, is being of- I sered today at the Star. Special music I tonight. “A Friendly Husband.” and a Hal i< Roach combcly make up the program at ji the Piedmont today. i] “Crooked Alley” and “Western Skies" r i two dramas, are being shown today at i the Pastime. USE THE ififfiSreolOT—lT PAYS J - . 1 PNEUMONIA Always cefi ft phftsician. Until hid arrival uaa “emergency” treatment with Vicks. This does not ' * * ' sX * - ~ 1 ' i.iffls’ jive,, ilLr, ,; interfere witn anytmng he may prescribe. K ' t j WCT*ftf Iff " PERSONALS. s Miss has arrived' home > from the North Carolina College . men and will spent the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. T. ’Kluttz. • * ■ |- Mrs. Stanton Northrup, of New York , City, is spending the holidays here with ' her mother, Mrs. B. E. Harris. Mr. | Northrup will arrive tomorrow to spend , several days here. , Miss Rosa Caldwell, student at Salem ■ College, is spending the holidays here f with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. 1 Caldwell. Mrs. .John Yorke has returned toTher home in Charlotte, after spending several days here with her mother, Mrs. B. F, Rogers. 0 * * Misses Elizabeth Hahn and Grace Propst, students at Lenoir-Rhyne Col lege, are spending the Christmas holidays 1 here with home folks. • • a Mrs. -Frank Dusch, of Norfolk, will spend Christmas in Concord with her father, Mr. 0. B. Coltrqne. Mrs. W. S. Hartsell has returned to her home in Mt. Pleasant, after spending several days here with relatives. Miss Margaret ifartsell. student at Salem College, is spending the holidays here With her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Hartsell. • * • Mr. Leonard Suther, of Trinity. Col lege, has arrived to spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Suther. « * * Miss Elizabeth Dayvault has arrived from Winthrop College to spend Christ mas with her patents, Mr. -and Mrs. J. F. Dayvault. - 4 •' • Miss Rebecca Dayvault, daughter, of Mr. and. Mrs.'J. F. Dayvatilt, will arrive tonight from Rnndolph-Macon College. She will have as her guests tonight Miss Daniels, of Augusta, Ga., and Miss Dix on,' of Hendersonville, who will go to their homes tomorrow. •i • * Miss Grace RSdenhour and Miss Su die May Dry, students at Lenoir-Rhyne College, are visiting home folks here. Mr. William Stafford Webb, of Chap el Hill, will silend tomorrow with Mr. A. S. Webb. ■V m 0 Mr. Halbert Webb will arrive tomor row from Trinity College to spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Webb. WILLIE MARION PRESLAR DIED THIS MORNING Death Due to Complication of Diseases After Chaff Was Accidentally Burned. -Willie Marion Preslar, six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Preslar, died at her home here this morning at 7 o’clock, following an illness of three weeks. The child was severely burned three Weeks ago while placing some' coal on a Are and death was due to a com plication of maladies that set in follow ing the actident. Funeral services will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Preslar on Bell Av enue, tomorrow morning, the hour to be decided later. The services will be con ducted by Itev. G. A. Martin, pastor of the First Baptist Church, of which the parents Os the deceased are members. Surviving are Mr. and Mrs. Preslar and two children. The announcement of the death of the little girl Whs received with .sincere re gret Irt all quarters of the city. While her burns were not regarded as fatal at the time of the accident, it soon devel oped that the Child was more seriously rnjhred than at first thought, and the public generally had followed the change* in her condition with unusual interest. Pneumonia set in about fen days ago and for several days little nope was enter tained. LnUt week there was a decided change for the better, however, and it was not generally known that the child had suffered another relapse. By virtue of an order of J. B. Mc- Allister, Clerk of the gtijierior Court of Cabatrus County, N. 0., Unfds.in a Spe cial . Proceeding brought bjg NtrtUie ft. BfUwA, Marjjs|feT C. ,ft CaTtipvmy MM husbabd, H. W. Ctfflbwafy, Motile 8. Brown, and H. W. Calloway and Mollie S. Brown, Executors of jG. W. Brown, deceased, Ex Parte, I will, fit 12 o’clock M.; oh ffridhy, December 28, 1923, at >the Courthouse door in Concord, N. C„ expose to sale at public auction to the highest bidder, that certain lot Or body of land, lying and being in Ward 3, City of Concord, Cabarrus County, N. C., adjoining the lands Os W. M. Linker, Mrs. ft. A. Brown, A. M. Brown and Mark Linker and others, and' being bounded H fofkrtvs: Beginning at a stake In the east edge of 8. Union St„ City Os Concord, Ca barrus Comity, N. €., whith Is north 70 B. 22.5 ft, from a sewer manhole In 9. Umdji st., and Is also the N. If. corner of W. M. Linker, and ruffs tbOnte in tt nortirwe«teriy direction witn saw edge Os said afreet W ft. to .a wtake, which is also a corner of Mark Linker; tbeffee eleven likes as follows: Ist, N. .45 E. 288 ft ; 2gff g. gj if.^aW.^N.^6 rw, *. . ffiv-A A rrn •vw it., to luc u?§innnigi cojiiuininj u. • u antes mure or less, akd being the resi dence m Os the late d. W.Brown, de stiff Jiwtr. 1 TKe Warn of sale «rt esa». Th.s ° Veln F b Kax K ARMffIELD, THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE f KMWAPOLIS % department a Kannapolis, ft. C.,' Dec. 19.—she A. ft. ft. ChriStmaß exercises will be ren dered on Mbnddy evening, December 24, at 7:30 o’clock. Everybody is iffvited. Mrs. C. E. Robinson spent Monday in Charlotte. _ Mgster Rnvon Lisk, eight years pld son of Mr. W. E. Jiisk returned Monday from the Concord Hospital, Where he had been rushed Saturday after being run over near His home on North Main street by a eat, driven by Mr. Moser, son of the Methodißt minister hefe. Lit-, tie Ravon waß running across tjid street and did not see the car. He sustained » broken I limb. Mr. Moser quickly ap plied 1 the brakes when he saw the boy start across the street, but to no avail, as it was impossible to avoid the accident. The boy is getting ulong nicely. Mr. William E. Manlden spent Mon day in Charlotte. 1 Mr. Sam Harmon, who is in the gov ernment hospital at Knoxville, Tenn., is spending the Christmas Holidays with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Harley nil! leave Christmas eve for Orangeburg. S. C.. where Mrs. Harley will spend about ten days with home folks. Mr. Harley will return after a stay of a few days. Mrs. R. G. McGuirt and two daugh ters, Misses Alma and Nell, will leave Friday for Richmond, where they will visit Mrs. McChjirt’s sister. Mr. Janies Winecoff wiH retutn Sat urday, the 21*t, from Wake Forest to spend the Christmas holidays with home folks. Mr. Fred Nance returned Monday to ! the Walter Heed Hospital in Wushing -1 ton, after spending a few days here with home folks. Mr. Nance has been in ser , vice at this hospital for about ' two months. Mr. J. T. Nance Jr., of A. and E. Col lege. is expected hoihe Thursday* to spend the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lomax are now i rooming at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts. Mr. Leek Willett, of Lexington, spent i the week-end at home. ' Mrs. J. H. Helms has returned from ] a Charlotte Hospital, where she under- i went an operation. Mrs. Helms’ friends ] will be glad to know that she is getting along line. i Mr. Mike KoOntz, ho is boarding at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Propst, will spend the holidays with home folks at l Tyro, and with college chums in Hickory. ' Mr. Willie Fairly will spend Christ mas in Tyro with home folks. Miss Laura Chandler, one of the ! teachers, will leave Friday for her home 1 in Maxtoii. where she will spend the hoi- 1 idnys. Miss Hazel Fuirclofh will go to her home in Wilmington, Miss Ruth Kit trell, to Bailey, and Miss Grace Smith field to Advance. Christmas exercises and a treat for the Sundqy school at Mt. Olivet, will be, giv ens, Monday evening at 7 o'clock. Juniors Orphanage Decision Saturday. Hickory, Dee. 19.—North Curplinn Juniors Will know sometime Saturday where the branch orphanage will be located. The national committee, which left here last night for Washington after inspecting half a dozen sites, has promised to he ready with the informa tion before the end of the week. Hickory people generally are confidence either this city or Lexington will be chosen, for it is realized here that the David son county people made an attractive offer. Juniors feel that Hickory has m6re than an equal ehanee. For one thing this is a stronghold of the order and tor another it is a community of diversified manufactures, probably to a larger ex tent than any town or city of near its size in the entire s-ate. ' - • ■■•i.i.M—rt in i.am i..t> i inniH minHmm inmmn iinum h n i mi’ COAL AND WOOD HIGHEST QUALITY Xtoe Plaster Cement PHONE 74, K. L. Craven & Sons fiiftilflillf If fflliHlf HHfßffllllflllll 111111111 IffHnftnilllfVllflnlmlllmllllVlVlllllllllliv Seal Sweet Oranges Washington Box Apples ’ 'the following varieties: f ... ' Rorne Beauty, Spitzberger’s De licious ■ The Price Is RIGHT I ‘ We had the advantage of buy ! ing in big lots of first grades. We . save you the difference. ;By : the ; box or the dozen. Cline & Moose Phone BE We Deliver Qefck [another FLAGGING IS REPORTED IN THE EAST ff. Y. Barnes, Nashville Citizen, Taken From His Store and Blogged By a Band. Rocky Mount, Dee. 19.—The third flogging to be administered to persons in and around Nashville occurred last night, reports reaching this city today indicate, when J. Y. Barnes, Nashville citizen, was taken from his store, car ried in an automobile to a point in the woods which he claims to be near Wil son and flogged. Reports indicate that the flogging took place early in the evening as sev eral men, it is stated, "cXme for Barnes at. his store shortly after 6 o'clock. He is quoted as saying that there were seven or eight unmasked men in the party which carried him some distance and then administered a flogging. He is understood to have been brought back to the county seat shortly after midnight and to have said that he did not recognize any member of the band. Advices from Nashvillr say that Barnes claims that approximately S2OO was taken from him by the band. Whether or not he was lectured to or giving a warning could not be learned I BEAUTIFUL GIFT WATCHES | For those planning to give that best of all Gifts, a Watch, j I we know that our exceptional display will prove especially ] | interesting. Many styles for both men and women afford ample choice ij \ from which to select. v ] I LADIES’ $lO TO S4O ' I MEN’S $6.50 TO $90.00 Starnes - Miller - Parker Co. I JEWELERS AND OPTOMETRISTS 2 ■ I Holiday * Sale SPECIAL BATTERY PRICES FORD $17.00 CHEVROLET Oversee $20.00 | | GENUINE EXIDE BATTERIES—LONG LIFE jj Electrical Troubles? Take Them to Bollinger BOLLINGER SERVICE STATION § PHONE 232 VTfHH>ftQ0000QQ6QQ000P0 OOOOOOOQ0 D oo0 00000000C00000000O : DELCO-LIGHT Farm Electric Service | jjj Lights, Water Systems, Washing | jij Machines Call the Delco Light Man § R. H. OWEN § ||| Phone 669 . Concord, N. C. SCARBORO’S | Special Values in Gift Goods I New Line Stationery. Priced 25C t 0 SI.OB 1 1 ' per box Maxter Embroidered -Bath Towels 98c it I priced aj Gordon’s Silk Hosiery $1.48 1 [ all colors. Per pair - - > A | Lehigh Fine Silk Hosiery, all the new $1.95 it colors. T «, _ I Phoenix jersey Silk Vest Qfi HI Priced I Phoenix Jersey Silk Knickers $2.98 i Corduroy Kimonas. All colors $2.98 11 Serving Trays with ; Gld§s Bottoms, mahogany OCp y i« coined ffkmes | SCARBORO’S mm i>»inn ■ wm m r M—R——— this morning. Barnes is the father of the yming woman with whom association is alleged to have been the cause of the first whipping administered at Nashville several weeks 'ago to a young married man employed in highway construction work. At that time .a warning is reported to have been left at the home by the band- The second flogglni activity occurred about a week after the first when another young mart was caught at the home of a woman some distance from Nashville and; given a lashing in the; presence of the woman in the .case, and last night’s affair brings the total known floggings up to three. ; rj * Chester Concession Anntded. London, Dec. 19.—A telegram from Arigpra received in Constantinople, says: that the commissioner of works yester day notified the agent of Colonel Clay ton-Kennedjr of thU 'annulment of the Chester concession for Anatolian de velopment, says a neuter’s dispatch from, Constantinople this afternoon. Advertisers will kindly remember that copy for change of ads. must be in The Tribune office not later than 10 o’clock a. m. ■■■! —mo—. ... i. i. IM| wmmmmmmmamiami u > r -ri» EVERYTHING WORN BY MAN Suits He’ll like these gifts $25 to SSO Overcoats’ , > . * S2O to S6O nrst, because they come from you Wool Vests ' *■ $6.00 *•.’ 1 '• Trousers $Up * . ' ' , $2.50 to sls and next, because they come from us. Sweaters ' $3.50 to $12.50 5 He knows our quality., He knows, if $1,75 to *25 it’s here it’s right and if it isn’t t " - - [■ - - $5 to $25 Hosiery , / ■ 25c to $2.00 Hq respected tsur label when he was Mufflers fixing up for his vacation this summer $1 to $7.50 1 that comqs to him via , Handkerchiefs BROWN S has a place in his heart’ Linen or Cotton before you add the holly. . loc to $1.50 * * ” ’• Neckwear ’’ $1 to $3 1 ££e gifts are here NOW. Underwear The names are on your list. $1 to $6 We are at your service to Shirts help you as well as profit. . $1.50 to $8 Belts $1 to $3.00 Browns - Cannon Co. __ ' v-i , 4 , • Father starts—Mother nds m Enrolls She can add a little—even the 1 Yon Kiddies will contribute theiii I pennies and at a surprisingly $ s J? ort *? me *** whole family is enjoying the'pleasure of owning a Ford. I CABARRUS MOTOR CO. I ' Ford Cars Fordson Tractors Ford Trucks ’ | Dr. Frank Crane Says You Always Think of Things in ! Paris, such as ] Ham and Eggs Salt and Pepper Doors and Windows ! 1 • Day and Night ■ nAr S °, natllra,,y you must think of COLD WEATHER and ALCO- X 9 HOL for your radiator. Come down and let us flush out your radia- 5 5 for, put in the proper per cent, of alcohol—Causing you to think of 8 , SAFETY FIRST. KING TUT SERVICE STATION I Come Down and Get Tanked Up 1 National Highway Below Southern Station 8 ° eoooo ° oc<:>oeec<, <>o<>oooooooooQ£ | ooooo^ > oooeoooooooooooooo I The Christmas Giving Spirit Should ' | Be Sensibly Applied I Every mart, woman and child likes really GOOD SHOES. TVy ! give a. feeling of dress satisfaction that’s mighty comforting and is a gift that is appreciated not only now but several months after Chri t | mas time. ? j 1 Hosiery and Nice Comfortable House Shoes are also especially M Is pleasing. | IVEY’S > I ‘THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES” BUY CHRISTMAS CEALS STAMP OUT TUBERCULOSIS NICE CHRISTMAS GIFT SUG GESTIONS A Boyce Motometer, Windshield Cleaner, a Goodyear Tire, a Willard Battery, Battery Tester, Goodyear ! Inner Tube, Wool Duster, Pyrene Fire Extinguisher WE HAVE THEM N NO TUBERCULOSIS 1 NORTH CAROLINA IN 1933 Southern Motor Service Co. LET US SERVE YOU. L ? 'Sf *f°»*** -: , &l ° ll,e ” T'” , A“™ , , Wi, “ PAGE FIVE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 20, 1923, edition 1
5
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