PAGE SIX I Buck’s Blue Flame Grant Burner Double Heat, With Less Fuel. Guaranteed to cook quicker, and ij with less fuel than any oil stove on the market. Cook on this stove C in your own home for thirty days, and if not satisfactory, money will jlj be refunded. Sold on easy terms. <[ CONCORD FURNITURE CO. 1 THE RELIABLE FURN LITRE STORE - SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO TO OUR CUSTOMERS— !! I! We extend our grateful apprecia tion of your business for the past year . and we enter the New Year with a de termination to excel our past efforts to please you whose friendly business has helped make ours successful. Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE • PHONE 117 PHONE 117 'SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Why Does Our Trade Increaese Daily? . j The Quality of our COAT and the Class of Service we render will 1 J l l convince you. CALL C. P. CLINE Mutual Oil Company jjl PHONE 19. THANK YOU oOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOnoOqnnnftftftft«yMMMKM>Or POOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOonoooobaryaoiywyvwttyMMMMyijreKMw^wyf. I, JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE FISHER’S |j| AGAIN WE TELL YOU of a ;!; GREAT DRESS SALE • ' I I In This Clearance \ ] Dresses of distinction Sale Price $11.95 and $13.95 ! \ $2.00 and on The Above Are Wonderful Values! See Them! , ! 1- CORSETS S . AT HALF PRICE 1 i f 8 $2.50 Gossards, Sale.. $1.25 .]!' g $3.75 Gossards, Sale __ $1.75 ' i O $5.00 Gossards, Sale —52.50 | 10 PCT. OFF ON ALL HOSIERY CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET I (Corrected weekly by Cline A Moose) prieeß P “ M tor produce/on the market: I Eggs ——— -foi ountry ..... * -251 ■VZSZ £22** «l vZScSXLi J I Onion* . |IJ» Pea* 2.50 [Corn 1.25 [ CONCORPCOTTON MARKET TUESDAY, JANUARY IS, IMS [Cotton .23 jlotton Seed .flp THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE \ The Concord Daily Tribune ' TIME OF CLOSING OF MAULs! The time of the dosing of mail* at the Concord postoßce is as follows : Northbound Train No. 34—3:45 p. m. Tisin No. 44—11:00 p. m. Train No. 38—10:00 a. m. Train No. 38—ft p. m. Train No. 80 —11:00 p. m. % HjisifLlwumil I Train No. 37—ft :00 a.m. Train No. 45—3:45 p. m. Train No. 135 0K» p. m. Train No. 29—11:0ft p. a. LOCAL MENTION 1 Twelve pages today—two sections. j M. H. Caldwell, Jr. who recently ac- j cepted n position with the Hoover Hos iery Mill here, began h's duties with the company Monday morning. I Mrs. E. L. Hicks is confined to her home with an attack of influenza. , condition is reported as being unchang-. ed. ‘'Daddy Long Legs” will be presented at Mt. Pleasant next Friday evening by ! the Senior Class of Mont Amoena Semi nary. Admission. 25 and 50 cents. j A regular meeting of the Virginia Dare Rook Club will be held tomorrow after-, noon at 3 :30 o'clock with Mrs. J. L.! Hartsell at her home on North Spring j Street. According to a deed filial Monday at ; the court house Mrs. T. M. Barnbardt lias sold to F. A. Barrier proiierty in Ward 2, the purchase price being given as ”SIOO j and other valuable considerations." J Dr. P, R. MacFadyen and family mov- j ed into their handsome new home at the ; intersection of Grove and White streets i Monday. The home is one of the hand- somest erected in Concord in years. , The condition of Mrs. James Dorton, who became suddenly ill Saturday night and underwent an operation Sunday at! the Concord Hospital for appendicitis. | continues to show improvement, a from the hospital today stated. All the city schools will complete the work of the fall term January 23rd. At this time children will be promoted to the next section of their grades. The spring term will begin Monday. January , 26. At this time beginners will be re-, ceived in the first grades. Relief from the recent rains came Mon- j day and the sun broke through the clouds in earnest during today. The sunshine | today was the first the city has had in [ several days and it was very welcome. 1 The weather mail indicates that the clear weather will continue for the next sev eral days at least. Nine defendants faced Judge Caldwell in police court Monday afternoon and in each case the defendant was found guilty. The court received SOO in fines and costs from eight of the defendants and the other defendant was made to pay the costs in the ease. None of the cases aroused much interest. R. L. Barrage, manager of the Ca barrus Creamery Co., is spending the day in Charlotte attending sessions of the North Carolina Ice Cream manufacturers’ Association. 'He was accompanied to Charlotte by Mrs. Burrage and son. Rob ert Luther, who are spending the day with friends. We published Monday a news item re garding Wesley Taylor's smashing of the fine writing record, stating that he had succeeded in putting by the naked ejre, 600 words on the back of a postage stamp. Mr. Taylor is a son of the late Rev. R. M. Taylor, a former pastor of Concord cir cuit. and lived in Concord six years ago. Dr. M. R. Trabue, head of the Depart ment of Research in the Education De partment at Chapel Hill and the editor of The North Carolina Teacher, will de liver an address to the teachers of the city schools tomorrow (Wednesday) af ternoon at 3 :30 in the auditorium o fthe new high school. Friends of education are cordially invited to hear Dr. Trabue as he is a vtjj-y interesting speaker. Reports reaching Concord during the day indicate that many of the creeks and branches in the county which were swol len by the recent rains, are subsiding as rapidly as they rose. The rivers, how ever. are still running high and they will continue to do so for several days, per haps. It is believed all of the streams will be back to normalcy in a few days if the sun continues to shine. Rev. W. A. Jenkins is again in posses sion of his Dodge touring car which was stolen in Charlotte last week. Mr. I Jenkins was advised the second day as- 1 'ter the theft that his car was found standing about 200 yards from the spot where he had parked it. All of the | gasoline in the car had been used up and an army blanket and very expensive laprobe were stolen from the car. The aldermen of the city met at the city hall Monday night to discuss the , question of widening East Depot street i at its intersection with Union street. | Nothing definite was done at the meeting i and it was announced that another meet i ing in regnrd to the matter would be ] held sometime during the week. At the I meeting citizens of the city will be given | an opportunity to express their views on | the matter. i Ashevffle’s Crime Wave Has • the Hi-Jacking Stage. ! Asheville, Jan. 12.—Asheville’s wale of crime, which has baffled the police ; tor several week*, reached the “hi-jack l ing” stage when two thugs attacked P. W. Davies in his garage, severely beat ing him with a heavy piece of lead pipe. A trespasser on the Vanderbilt nutate waa arrested early this morning, but his * two companions attacked a Biltmore ranger and made their escape. I Jack Green who said he lived in i Winston-Salem and Charley Williams ; of California were arrented in a bo* car. , Two storm were entered in the vicinity sometime Sunday night. An overcoat and bicycle were stolen from I the Fi.pt Baptist church during eerv i ices, it was reported to the police to ; Lin, in tfie northern!out parts of Siberia Is a tegu lar business and In the past century the l k to thirty ton*. mTmSm 1 JviT vJI/C A stitch >in ttime eaves ninfc cuss words. * The ram falls on the just, especially on the just washed auto. ' J What you can buy for a song is sel ' dom * worth singing about. One good turn deserves another, and one bajl turn ugualy gets another. A spendthrift is one who spends all I his money to prove he has it ; Tyrn up your nose at other people and they will turn you down. The femaly of the species is more dead ly than the* jail. • Jumping at conclusions is jumping at j delusions. ] If it really is paved with good inten tions. it can be repaved now with the broken new year resolutions. .1 The. early bird gets the worm. That’s true. But you never can tell if you will be the bird or the worm. I (Copyright, J 025, NEA Service, Inc.) | Since this is the age Os speed, wouldn’t I it be great if next summer arrived about February? j The new year starts off fine. There are five pay days in January—for thofce , | who get paid on Saturday. ' And. since there are five Saturdays j in January, it should give the soap mak- , I ers a good start and the perfume makers i I a setback. I Leap Year’s gone, and the women didn’t { propose to the men any more than usual. ' April Fool’s Day comes on, Wednesday J l in 11125. We don't know whether Con- i gress will meet in special session on that J i day or not-. ( May will have five pay days, but you i j will need more than that to pay for the j i new spring clothes. ( ; June will start on Monday this year, i l That's wash day—and a warning to the j I prospective June brides. ( KICKS Oh the loudmouthed bore journeyed into J the store i | Where I and the clerks were all busy. i He told on old tale so ditty and stale, ' It made nil the listeners dizzy. ' He jeerede and he jawed. 1 He hummed %nd he hawed. Rut no one v fejoice " e not only clean every part i i of chassis and -body, but lubricate the jl 1 Jj (S®-# important parts and give the body a ! 1 [ 'JJ | fiD ‘ sll wit ** our Point saving pol- ' 1 | HOWARD’S FILLING STATION jj! I | |l “Service With a Smile” “ ' '' PHONE 880 Call Me 1 | For BEST COAL I ( 279 i I Will Answer Telephone < 244 X 517 I | is A. B. Pounds j | Saves and Checks " I A checking accouilt here: Lj 1. Saves time—just mail your checks. j| H 2. Saves money—you get a “check” on your expendi- j*| ] 3. Saves annoyance—canceled checks stop all argu- 3 I ments. And for this there is no charge. Open Your Checking Account Here Today I CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $450,000.00 \ Purina Chicken Chowder Saves Money—Saves Hens j Why not use the BEST? It is cheaper in the end. We' g guarantee you more, eggs or your money back. GASH FEED STORE j Phone 122 S. Church St. j I ma , n r /SS la- 1 Don't Experiment 1 COAL j s]®3§u! uS X& Certain to Hfeaae 9 «MMr tUll/ yw). /TwMplr We Bell an honest ton of coal J | 8 tAeCOal Xci ti>“t will give less trouble and < 9 tAats ß H mor * < ’ , " nf, ’ rt ,h »» any fuel /tiajuedol JmHHSmSI 5,011 ev * r Bpent your tuoney for. I K. L. Craven & Sons J. V. DAVIS I Office Removed to Fourth Floor Cabarrus Savinca Bank Building ' ' . Ffco- m Bow: %to « Tuesday, January 13, 1925 W O. w. NOTICE. , n H^ al * r Meeting of Elm Camp No. i® P* WTuesday evening at T:3O o clock in the Moose Lodge Room. Every "■^ti W nSK„a ; . B- C. UTAJMB. Clerk.