Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / March 24, 1925, edition 1 / Page 10
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 TEN iffliumiu T 'll in I itt~~ ’ '• I — V. - 1 •»• . ' ;i The Right to be ' <*** M YVbllßom 1 Honc B«*<ttn* io it» Relation S'; a- , to Eugenio J: * ? Mm b>V E. a STOKES HS .v, n I I I HA .1 I HH V • » - - * iff C ‘ <)»*->■< ' 1 K<s&== WED. Stokes, multimillionaire, who Is now on trial in Chicago charged with defamation of his wife's character, is an author. Hero is shows the cover of the book and bow Stokes looked In 1902 on the flyleaf of "Re «Mg«w to-Be Well Born, or Horse Breeding is Its liolntmm to Eugenics. ” —— - THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY " "jfFFft fimFßotAMe ypgetw so'hftAib fjf , 1 , ke==-r ===»j— Tj’Tll'Scy<s*) IT WOULD COST'foUVI 1 r 1 LYbUSAY-old] r M /SOMETHING TOSIftN \ I j no-no-ive (that paper, it wc**n I , y —| [the petition to purr otey walker 1 BACK AS THE TOWN MARSHAL \AAS COMPLETED TOWV, WHEN AUNT SARAH , PEABODY CORNERED QUO JBK. »-kJ? • Easter Is Just Around the Corner 1 j [ And that means it’s high time to stop in and let me show j | ]j; you the kind of suit you’ll want to be wearing on Easter j|. Let me tailor it to your measure in the late style and j|j iji make you look your best. Drop in and see what fine suits jjj iji lam oflfering in the popular price ranges. | M. R. POUNDS || DRY CLEANING AND TAILORING | ' CHOICE FRESH MEATS j ij i Don’t worry about planning year meals. If you’re undecided as to what i i V to have, let us suggest a nice tender Steak or a Choice Boast. We handle only the beat in Pork and Beef. 1 11 You’ll fiipd it convenient to order your groceries and meats together ij l 1j! We will have some fine Shad Thursday or Friday. ! j | Sanitary Grocery Co. “A REAL GOOD PLACE TO TRADE” Lrr- r ; - - : -—in i«iiii»iil«n lii.iinnio v —T i Snil 'i~ ~ j - -- Texaco Gasoline and Oils ? Let us grease your car? We use Alemite Lubricants I exclusively, and proper lubrication is the life of any car. j| Car Washing, Tire hanging, Crank Case Service, Accessor- j U ies I CENTRAL FILLING STATION jj PHONE 700 The Kelvinator Will Do It | O Electrify your refrigerator, I 8 Ereeze your own ice and deserts 9 Keep your refrigerator dry and sanitary, the tempera- O 9 ture always the same and much ltower than with ice 8 ALL AT HALF THE COST OF ICE. g 9 40 Per Cent, of the prmfutore deaths of adults is due directly to A X stomach trouble and practically air of this trouble is caused from eat- V B in* food improperly preserved. Why not protect your good health when X 9 yon can create a handsome savings account with the money Saved each A 8 year by a Kelvinator. 5 x I V PI4 JX T) U fir DD o f J. I. r Ilrtiviv, CX OxVvJ. n ft | PHONES 108 AND 127 * jj <-*r '.V a ‘ V ’ thf misironn riAnv TPmimnr !r ii 1 In and About the City i NORTH CAROLINA STATE SUNDAY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION To Be Held in Greensboro April 28-30. —Great Meeting Expected. On April 28, 2D and 30 Greensboro is to be host to a large number of Sunday school workers from all parts of the state, representing all evangelical denom inations. who will be in attendance upon the annual convention of the North Car oling Sunday School Association. The committee in charge of the arrangements are of the opinion that this will be ;he biggest and best Sunday School conven tion held in the state in recent years. Through the Greensboro committee on arrangements, it has been announced that free lodging and breakfast will be fur nished all delegates to the convention. Greensboro's part in arranging the convention is in the hands of the follow ing oommittee on arrangements, appoint ed :some weeks ago at a meeting of pas tors, superintendents and other Sunday school leaders in that city: general chair man O. E. Lee. director of education, First Baptist Church; chairman enter tainment committee, E. D. Yost, general secretary Y. M.'C. A.; chairman local publicity committee, F. F. Myriek, su perintendent First Christian Sunday school; chairman finance committee, A. ‘C. Davis, superintendent of West Mar ket Street Methodist Sunday school; chairman hall committee. H. C. Marley, of the First Baptist Church. The program committee has announced that the program has been planned with the view of making it possible for all Sunday school teachers and officers to get practical help for their work. There will be general sessions each morning and evening, when topics of interest to all Sunday school workers will be dis cussed. The afternoon sessions will be devoted to special departmental confer ences which will deal with the problems of all departments of the modern Sun day school. | Speaking in the general convention sessions, and in charge of the different departmental conferences, will be she following out-of-state Sunday school spe cialists ; Miss Meme Brockway. Phila delphia. Pa., director of children’s work for the Northern Baptist Church; Dr. Percy R. Haywkrd. Chicago. 111., young people’s division superintendent Interna tional Council of Religious Education; Mr. Charles Darsie. St. Louis, Mo., , adult division superintendent Christian 1 Disciples Church; Dr. Chas. W. Brew baker, Dayton, 0., general secretary Sun day school work. United Brethren Church; Thos. S. Evans, New York. N. | Y\. general secretary International Daily t Vacation Bible School Association. China Grove Man Wins Sweepstakes at National Corn Show. i Salisbury Post. ' J. A. Patterson, China Grove, won the | North Carolina state sweepstakes at the i National' Seed Corn Show at Chicago 1 last week, according to advices reaching | here today. Mr. Patterso ntook first i place from among 107 competitors rep | resenting 46 counties in the state. The National Seed Corn Show, in which Mr. Patterson won high honors, was the largest corn show the world has I ever seen. Close to 30.000 growers had , entries in th eshow, and $17,000 n prizes was offered by the Sears-Rqebuck | agricultural foundation for the winning i ears in the exhibit. Each ear was 1 tested for germination, and the judges' | were ten of the outstanding corn author ities In America. ; REMEMBER PENNY ADS ARE CASH Know Him? jf M Ns v l . % I m? \\ ► JSk ■pp* \ Her * m * have Joe Tinker once ( famous shortstop ot the Chicago S Onto t>ui now a prosperous citizen | ot Orlando Fla Tmkei invested his S baseball savings in real estate down f 1,1 *ke Everglades regain and has | •**> *lth paonounced success He -1 -till interested In the old dmmon.l * . Pastime, nowevut ► t\. * ‘ » , v «., J ,', " T'i" Hte" — i r CROSSWORD PUZZLE || Ftf fTfU- ff LH-FfUPI ! ■ j! mr | | p. i si jftflw jHp v; - * 7t T7\ » |l| Iff 111 ff-Sff-m Here’s the puzzle of puzzles. It has stumped the best solvers in this newlK game. It was recently submittVd to the members of the National Puzzlers , K Dengue, which convened at Newark, N. J. Yet not one of these erackerjacks in to puzzle solving could finish it. ' d If you think you’re good, try your ha nd at it. At least see how far you can X get. Then compare your work .with the answer tomorrow. |i HORIZONTAL 1 An'instrument by which to measure and lay out right angles. 7 The reach of an arm. 13 Sins. 14 The gold monetary unit of Rumania (New Int.) 15 The period of time during which a planet revolves around the sun. 17 A velocipede invented in 1817 by Barou Drais of Mannheim, Germany. 20 A funeral sacrifice (Hind.) 23 A piece of work. 24 The first nan. 25 Anything curled, twisted or spiral. 26 To batter. 27 A negro from Renin. 21) An unele (Scot.) 30 An exclamation of repugnance or disgust, 31 A tailless hare. 32 The fennec. 34 Same as ’’ankle." 36 To cry. as a cat. 37 A title of no significance (Slang). 3» A little child. '4O The rendering of vocal music. 1 41 A salt of acetic acid. 44 Gossip: scandal (Anglo-Ind.) 46 A musical instrument consisting of graduated strips of wood pressed agaiust a rotating wheel by means of keys. 47 A stick or staff for holding the bunch of flax or wool in hand-spinning. 51 Without interest or excitement. 56 A silkworm of Bengal and Assam. 57 An exclamation used as a hunting cry. 50 Rah! foil! expressing disdain. 60 To salute. 62 Weak tasteless. i 64 The fruit of the oak. 66 To cause- prolonged suffering or an guish to. 67 A tall cap worn by Mohammedan dervishes. 68 More than sufficient. « 70 Something not easily solved. 71 Gum or mastic. 72 A fairy or elf. 73 The white substance of the central. nervous system. 75 A mean or malicious person. 76 The radical dr phtbalic acid. 78 A discharge of pus, with continued flow. 80 A small genus of tropical trees of the cola-nut family. 81 Diseased. 82 Place. 83 The racket-tailed drongo. 84 To do away with. VERTICAL. Know This Word—“ Manure." ‘ The Progressive Farmer. Just plain barnyard “manure”—not ' legume crops, leaves or refuse turned under in .the fields. The thin* that 1 makes one farmer anxious to show his 1 neighbor the patch of corn growing- on that old cowlot back of the cow shelter; 1 the thing that makes magnmeent jim- ' son weeds around the hams of the ears- 1 less farmer and equally as magnificent ' sweet potatoes, sorghum, soiling crops, j and other “brag patches” around a well managed farm; the thing that makes it easy to tell exactly where a man grew 1 his watermelons hut year by the looks of the com and cotton this year. “That’s manure. And yet we waste it —let it stay in the open lota to be ' leached of its fertility by every rain, allow it to accumulate in the stables to raise _ the flies that spread typhoid, tuberculosis, pile it up in the lots to heg& and lose Its nitrogen instead of spreading it directly on the fields, and keep no straw in the stables and under the shelters to absorb the liquid part. At present pripHi for commercial fer tilizers for fertiliser alone, fresh cow manure is worth $2.52 per ton; house. $2-90; pig, $4.41; poultry, $12.40. This does not take in its .value as humus. If an average Jersey cow produces 8 tons in a year, half of -which can be collected, and saved, we have $lO of valuable fer tiliser. Bat if it is'carelessly handled $ to $8 of ‘its value may be lost. For all the stock on the average farm, this may mean $75-SIOO lost each year. The simplest step -in conserving barn yard manure is to keep all stalls and stock shelters well, bedded with leaves, pine straw, oat «t»w, or even cane I pomance. A shed to nils (he manure un der and prevent serious leaching is per haps the next easiets step. The best method into haul out all manure direct to the field at least once peril week. This makes for. cleanliness and health and saves most of the manure’s value. Better location es feed lots end tempor ary shelter oftentimes aids ,in getting better use of maaure. Penning the cows for a month or torh on the land tor turnips is gn olfi. custom that worked admirably. , Learn “rianurg." Dae ft tor the Ug ; x - 2 Born or carried on the sea. ' ■» * 3 A marginal reading in the Hebrew i Bible. J 4 A she bear. ,|, 5 To one side. tj i 6 A component or essential part. j i 7 To listen to. ij > 8 A gum resin used in medicine and in i|i the manufacture of incense, perfum- jij ery, etc. ij> 0 To close tightly or to keep secret. 1 10 To amplify unduly. 11 The chief king in ancient Scotland i and Ireland. 12 A water-loving antelope of I'gnnda. ( i[ lft Bramintip (Logic). 18 A gown. jij It) One of a semi-independent Hotten- , 1 1 tot tribe of Xamaqualaßd (New Int.) 1 j > 21 Immense. . ' i 22 A carangoid amber-fish. iji 28 To prepare for publication. 31 Transfixes. 33 An instrument used instead of a sex- i tant. 1 1 35 The prehensile-tailed Brazilian por- ( 1 cupine. < | 3ft To swab. 38 A jet of steam from a volcanic sis- i j sure. 40 Sdnrise. O 42 The twenty-second letter of the 2 Greek alphabet. 43 A village lot. Q 44 A Bengalese monitor-lizard. A 45 A domestic cutting implement of fl general utility (Eskimo). S 47 A union of two characters repre- 9 seating a single sound. ; 4S An adult male fur-seal. 49 To migrate (S. Afr.) 50 A little island, especially one in a i j river. 52 A recently extinct dinornithoid bird < of New Zealand. 53 To reduc^. 54 A rale especially when it resembles r snoring. 55 A place or structure dangerous to 9 human life. -J 57 The bito, a small thorny tree of the 1 . myrrh family. jj 58 Any polyglot book in eight languages. J 61 Reckless. 62 Timorously prudent. J 63 Sacred. j 65 A debaucher. £ 07 Os the nature of or resembling a tela. S 69 A copper coin of the lonian Islands. 1 72 To handle. ’S 74 A more or less complete accessory * covering of a seed. ■ 1 77 To haw, as cattle (New Int.) j» 79 A Portuguese and Brasilian. J A Pledge AU Automobile Drivers Should j Sin- 1 Progressive Farmer. \ Our recent discussion of automobile | accidents has aroused much interest | among Progressive Farmer readers. In this connection we wish to commend j the movement for having all automobile < owners sign a pledge to observe those < definite rules which, if followed, would ! prevent most of the trouble and sorrow t now resulting from automobile aoohfenta. j Following is the pledge which it is sug- j gested every automobile owner should I sign: < I will not cut in. J I will not cut corners. - j I will not pass another car on a j curve where there is not a clear rood 1 ahead. I will not speed up to pass another car j where there is not a dear road ahead l for at least 100 yards. I will slow up at corners and on thor- j oughfares where children are playing in i the streets. " . - , ' . I will stop eight feet or more to the right of a street car leaving .passengers, and never attempt to pass on the left.. J •I win not be a “road hog” and will drive on the right side of the street. I will not pass another car at high I speed at street crossings nor race an other car while attempting to pass legit imately. I will observe traffic rnles and will not abuse the parking privileges nor park my car on highways except where there is a clear view behind and ahead for at least 100 yards. I will keep my brakes in good condition realising that a driver is only as good as his brakes. 1 will not drive a car while under the influence of liquor. One drink ia too many for a driver. No Prophet. . Jinks was sent by his employer, a book maker, to collect a getting debt from Smfthers, who was notorious for his alacknees.ia settling accounts. After listening to several excuses Jinks ! remarked, “Well, at least let me know on what date I stay expect payment.” The other replied: “Do yon take me for a prophet r “No,” responded Jinks. “Dp to the pres- * ent I have always regarded you as a • 00000, * 00^0000000 l*^**!^ < *^^^^?!!^ 0<>ooooooe,000^*^, $325.00 Paris —London —Liverpool • 1 ; 34 Days Conducted ,Tour on the World’s Largest fehips j “S. S. BERENGARIA” <58,70S tons) Never before has a conducted four been so arranged that* the sea voyage is oh the WORLD’S LARGEST AND NEWEST SfITPS, which is the most enjoyable part of the i trip. Chi July Bth, you leave on the CunaAl line, “S. S. ; [ Berengaria,” returning to New York on the new palatial j ; “S. S. LACONIA,” on August 10th. | The tour includes PARIS, LONDON, LIVERPOOL, *■ automobile trips to the BATTLEFIELDS and other places ' i of interest. Think of all the treasures you may see on this j | wonderful trip for only $355.00, -which covers all expenses. j | The party will be limited to make it exclusive and only 1 ! i . the best class of people will travel with you. We will re-* - i serve a TOURIST BERTH for you upon the receipt of a j | deposit of $25.00. For Further Information write * ' COOK’S TOURS, Inc. I. . 03 Wall Street, New York- jj ———VISIT :: ! r The Beautiful .“Magnolia-Gardens- I on-the-Ashley” ] jj CHARLESTON, S. C., APRIL 3rd and 4th, 1925 ! j! The Southern Railway System 'ANNOUNCES ij Special Excursion Fares From North Carolina Points to j 1 Charleston, S. C:, and Return, April 3rd and 4th, ! jl In Order to Visit the Famous Gardens j ij ROUND-TRIP FARE FROM CONCORD $6.50 ji Tickets on sale April'3rd and 4th. Good to reach original starting ,j point prior to midnight Wednesday, April Bth. j Tickets good going and returning on regular trains (except 37 nnd 38) j j i Through Pullman sleeping cars. j i j The “Magnolia Gardens'? v/ill be at their must beautiful stage during ' j this excursion. ji Charleston offers many old. quaint places of interest to visit, ij For detailed Information, Pullman reservations, etc., call on any 1 1 1 Southern Railway Agent. M. E. WOODY; R. H. GRAHAM, i j Ticket' Agent Division Passenger Agent, j i Concord, N. C. Charlotte, N. C, ! XXXXX)OOOOOOOOCX)OOOOO^OOOOOOOC^OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 1 . FOOTWEAR x For most all occasions and to meet.ev.eiy purse, we ha,ve a 9 0 Shoe to fit your foot. A, B, C, D and E widths. From $3.95 TO $7.50 j One Large Lot Specials While They Last— sl.9s T 0 $2.95 PARKER’S SHOE STORE SAVE I r CAPS! CAPS!! Caps Dry Cleaned Free 8 One cap, tie or pair of . ladies gloves Dry Cleaned Free if 1 8 sent in with a dress tit suit to be Dry Cleaned. Call 648. j EAGLE COMPANY j Dyers and Cleaners - j fi PHONE 648 Q J ' '( I DELCO LIGHT Light Plants and Batteries x Deep and Shallow ;Wdl Pumps for-Direct or Alter- -j ] j nating current and Washing Machines for direct or alter- j ' - nating cuffent. ’ i R.H. OWEN, Agent > Phone 666 Concord, N. C. c ?j U^WnrmJWW,JtnJWWWfW^VUU>Jt, : tJU ’ W 7 ■' 1 ?; • U THE FLJNT FORTY A car with refinement is now in our show room. This car comes equipped with four wheel brakes and Balloon tires. Five balloon tires and cover for same. Also I bumper, motor meter-wing, Windshield wiper standard "qpipment. Delivered Price is $1195.00 • * _ J.GBLUME’S GARAGE ■ TK PtWl IDUII BETS '(I E?ERT TIE a'll-: i. ■■—■■■ > r "jUi w -q>'Wl" l -\,i l -| Sift —iiTPiPiy Tuesday, March 24, 1925-
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 24, 1925, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75