PAGE EIGHT - u«a wim——www— XAM&, f] r w '9 4‘ wi n h Food^^mjlMggfJ^^ce I l ■> Hr □■ | I ■ .ls yy? □■ i |yfed| ® I A Good Refrigerator Is the Cheapest in die End | At first a good refrigerator may cost a little more, but j | ice in it will that in ice boxes many times. The Au | tomatic is made' give long, satisfactory service. We j I would be happy to have you visit us during our Spring h Demonstration Week. You can choose the Automatic to j {■- fit your needs from the large variety we have. j CONCORD FURNITURE CO. THE RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE Get It At I Ritchie Hardware Co YOUR HARDWARE STORE PHONE 117 | taster Crocks oJbr >Q Wbmen. and Jesses \ They are here in all Their Splendor, the smartest of styles in an array of dark and high colors SPECIAL Feature Numbers 5 Saturday, $8.95, $11.95 and $13.95 Fisher s i Gentlemen: — i i For Dependability j [ For Safety g For Economy For Durability 8 Use Our Coal, Gasoline, Kerosene, Motor Oil and Greases v Trade With the “Home Town” People 1 Mutual Oil Company j Phone 19 f ANNOUNCEMENT! m Effective January 1, 1825, all Ineuranoe business formerly handled | i) the Southern Loan and Trust Company was transferred to the Fetxer B * Yorke Insurance Agency. ■'? : 'i ' .• ' : ... .. n Offices in Uwamis oftviiifs isaiik Meuanms noer. rnoae 231 1 t etzer & Yorke Insurance Agency | PB. FETZER A. JONES YORKE ,THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE The Concord Daily Tribune TIME OF CLOSING OF iiftiLa * j The time of the cloeinc of mails at I the Concord postoffice is aa follow*: ; Northbound I Train No. 34-3:45 p. m. I Train No. 44—11:00 p. m. { Train No. 36—10:00 a. m. | Train No. 38—8 p. m. I Train No. 80—11:00 p. m. Southbound | Train No. 87—,0 :00 a. m. j Train No. 45—3:45 p. m. | Train No. 135 8:00 p. m. I Train No. 29—11.00 p. m. LOCAL MENTION ] — I Cotton is bringing from 23 1-2 to -4 1 cents a pound on this market today. J James H. Wilkinson left for Raleigh 1 this morning to resume his studies at ] the Brown School of Embalming. The condition of Mrs. Elam King, I who has been ill since Sunday, shows some improvement today. The Study Clnb will meet Thursday afternoon at 3 o’clock with Mrs. ;W. M. Sherrill lit her North Spring street; home. The condition of Mrs. L. IX Coltrane, Jr., who has been in the Charlotte Sanatorium for several weeks, is very favorable. B. B. Beasley, father of Mrs. W. B. Ward of this city, is seriously ill at - his home in Randleman with pneumonia. . Mrs. Ward is now at the bedside of her father. Little Miss Mary King Hetheox, who has been ill with mumps, is improving rapidly. Mrs. IV. M. Long, her grand mother, who is ill with mumps at the age of 83 years, is also improving. Register of Deeds Elliott Monday is sued marriage licenses to the following couples: Clarence Baskins and Miss. Elizabeth Osborne, both of Kannapolis: and L. C. Carson and Miss V junto Tate, also both of Kannapolis. George W. Best, father of Mrs. R. P. Benson, of this city, has been taken from the hospital at Rocky Mount, where he had been for several weeks for treat ment, to Richmond for an operation. Mr. Best has been ill for nearly eighteen months. It is said that busses operating through Concord will be put on a regular schedule in the near future. In some parts of the State the corporation commission already has the busses on schedule and the busses operating in this section probably will be scheduled next week. The April meeting of the aldermen of the city will be held at the city hall on Thursday night of this week. The meeting is scheduled to begin nt 8 o'clock. It is not known now whether any busi ness of unusual importance will be pre sented to the aldermen at the meeting. Eleven defendants were tried in re corder’s court Monda yand nine of them . were convicted. They paid fines totalling $72.25. Several of the ■ defendants were charged with speeding, and officers of the city who are conducting the cam- paign against speeders state that several sr were arrested Monday and today and S will be tried Wednesday, jjj Sheriff Caldwell had a hard fall Snn- S day while chasing a negro gambler near Kannapolis. While running after the negro Sheriff Caldwell became entangled 9 in some vines and was thrown with full i force into a small stream. Water was jj only about an inch deep in the stream H and the sheriff was only partially soaked jj by the water. He was not injured. jj A. M. Surratt, connected with the ii State board of health, was found near 1 Thomasville in an unconscious condition | Monday. Mr. Surratt had stopped his ji car by the roadside and was sitting iu 5 the car when found, he having suffered jj a stroke of apoplexy. Mr. Surratt spent i some time in Concord recently on bnsi " ness for the health department. j* The North and South golf tournament 1 will start at Pinehurst tomorrow and , . several Concord people plan to drive 1 I down to see the stars in action. A1 j Johnson is the only local golfer to enter | the tournament. Walter Hagen, the Ij present titleholder, is on hand to defend I his crown and other stars of national jj reputation also will play in the tourna * ment. ■j Jacob Tucker has sold to M. F. Teeter property in No. 11 township for $6,000, ij according to a deed filed Monday An il other deed records the sale of property i in Ward 2on E. Depot street, by Jacob A. Shoe to Mrs. Maggie Means Fowlkes J for $7,000 and still another deed filed 1 Monday records the sale of property in ■ No. 4 township by Mr. Teeter to Mr. | Tucker for $4,000. I Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Wauchope and son, Donald, left Tuesday morning for Whiteville where Mr. Wauchope has ac cepted a new pastorate. Mr. Wauchope has been pastor of the Second Presby terian Church for a period of nearly seven years and has been one of the most popular ministers in Concord. The mailing address of Mr. and Mrs. Wau chope will be Vineland. I It is reported that various candidates for city offices on the Democratic ticket are working bard now in preparation for the primary to be held on April 11th. If it is necessary to hold a run off primary it will be held on April 18th. A number of candidates are in the field, with, the greatest interest be ing aroused in the mayorality race be tween Mayor Womble, J. L. Miller and C. H. Barrier. S Ohio Boys Leave For Home When They Receive Money From Parents. Paul Wyatt and Lowell Fink, of Pi qua, Ohio, who had their car burned and barely escaped with their lives on the Kannapolis road Sunday night, received money from their parents yesterday as a result of a wire and have gone to their homes. The two boys had been working in Florida and were on their way to the Green Mountains in Vermont, where they had positions, when the accident happen -1. Th,y -ere at on-e token in tißii-i b, ■ am-Mi i SAYS So many mothers have started using rouge the : r daughters may quit it or be considered old-fashioned. Georgia moonshiners used a church bell to warn of revenue officers; a real booze ring. Terrible news from Italy. Ten feet of snow in places. We hope it doesn't kill the spaghetti bushes. . \ We are Living in hopes that spring will make people too lazy to work crossword puzzles. j A horse will pull your ear out of a ditch. And very often horse sense will puli you out. The first sign of spring, as we warned last year, isn’t reliable until you see the last sign of winter. Norfolk, (Va.) jailer got arrested. Charged with bootlegging. Maybe keep ing bad company did it. Who oitnlremember when mince pie wasn't madsTby just putting a few oth er things with a lot of raisins. In St. Ldtais. a crowd'saW a man rob a woman, but maybe they thought he was the landlord collecting the rent. Th? first real sign of spring is when a bachelor decides that maybe his married friends have a little sense. The height of ignorance is sitting up all night because the washwoman has your pajamas. * ■ It is estimated that not, enough peo ple are sating for vacation time. The man who gets by on his looks doesn't go very far. The man who feels sorry for himßelf should. Tlte holes burned in skirts by cigarets would feed quite a few moths for quite a while. Gone are the days when we got three summers out of a suit. There are a great many lies told sim ply because the truth often sounds like a poor excuse. A fool seeks the pot or gold at the end of the rainbow while his wise brothers seek tbe rainbow. Congress reminds us of an alarm clock. It always gets cussed for doing the best it can. ~ We are sorry for the man without a country, especially when it is spring in the country.’ This trtH-'df knowledge you hear about has limbs which break off it you go out too far. Money doesn’t mean everything, but everything seems to mean money. (Copyright, 1025, NEA Service, Inc.) W. O. W. NOTICE. Regular meeting of Elm Camp No. 16 W. O. W. Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock in the Moose Lodge Room. Every member is urged to be present. S. A. WEDDINGTON, C. C. R. C. LITAKER* Clerk. TOOLS 0 j Farm and.' garden picks, shovels, mat tocks, hoes, rakes, diggers, guaranteed by makers. Files, rasps, hack saws, Niehol- 1 son’s line, jnst. in, must go right out. Quart measures and funnel attached, two bits. Galvanized buckets, same price. J Club prices on Enamel and Tin Ware and Pottery. If you believe what you see Instead of what you hear If you can trust your own self, You'll trade some here. CLARENCES COVINGTON, Proprietor | ■ IviNGTON’S n. c. SPECIAL While They Last Swift’s Premium Hams 30 Cents Per Pound Cabarrus Cash Gro cery Co. Phone 571 W. SPECIAL % I ;• ; • i ■ * 1 See our Specie! Window. Ev -1 ery article a bargain. Diamonds, ! Watches and Silverware. 1 .iiiV , r We do ipt Meet Prices We . Make Them. 1 vi s . *“*• ! Watch the Window. We will r put in new articles every day. I f V’-.. sC§§;/i- ; ‘* -y A V j { W. C. Correll Jewelry e . K ■ \jOifloßnv v v? g True Story Magazine tor May, a Mac-1 9 toddcn publication, has »ueh an irrewwt- X ible api>cal, with the human touch so B exquisite, so identical with the things | j you yourself have seen and felt and , , known, that for the time'you forger you 1 i are reading, and live the great life dva- ' ' ma of these men and women with whose i lives it deals. Every story between its ' 1 covers is the climax, the supreme mo- ] J tnent, in a human life. All the stories i i are true, each with a ' vivid, living and | 1 true episode from life-not fret 104. ."Sot j , n single word that is not true. Such stor- - j ies as ‘‘The law You Can’t Forget,” | “Tangle Threads." “The Toll Os Sin” , and eighteen others just as absorbing.— ii" Adv. | | SOUTHERN GAS AND POWER COR- ! ! PORATION PREFERRED STOCK 11 DIVIDEND The regular quarterly dividend of X i i 3-4 per cent. ($1.75 per share) on the j [ Preferred Stock of this Corporation has ] , been declared payable April Ist, 1925, to i i stockholders of record March 26, 1925, ] [ J. C. LIGHTFOOT, Jr., ■! , Treasurer. i i Philadelphia. March 25, 1925. 30-2 t-c. ii DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY ' [ April 11th, 1925 ! l At a 1 meeting of, the' Democratic ex- j ecutive committee tor the city, of Con- j,■ cord held on the 21st day of March, i 1925, the Democratic primary tor the J nomination of mayor, aldermen and j | i school commissioners, was called for C j April 11, 1925, between the hours of 2 0 and 6 p. m. All Democratic voters and persons who intend to affiliate with the Democratic party are requested and urged to go to [ their respective precincts and vote in said | primary. All voters must be registered l i and the registrars will be at the pre- j ■ cineta to register any who are not al- , ready registered on that day. On failure to nominate a candidate tor any of the offices on said date a second primary will be held on April ■ 18th. 1925, between the two highest candidates for said office. E. F. WHITE, Chairman, ■ City Democratic Executive Committee. We have the follow ing used cars for sale ; or exchange: c 1 Ford Touring i 1 1 Ford Roadster 1 Star Roadster i 1 Buick Roadster 1 Overland Touring 1 Piedmont Touring We will be glad to f show you these cars ' any time. STANDARK BUICK COMPANY Opposite City Fire Dept J. V. DAVIS 1 DENTIST \ Office Removed to Fourth Floor Cabarrus Savings Bank Building Phone 433 Honrs: Bto S | Add the Comforts of PLUMBING to Your Home Modern Plumbing will do as j much or more than any other one j thing toward making your home j a comfortable and convenient j place in which to live. It co9ts you nothing to get our co9t es- | timate. j Concord Plumbing i Company North Kerr Street Phone 676 i Your Money Goes [ Further On RACINE TIRES Jarratt’s Service I “I’d rather buy Boys’ Clothing ’’ Tlu-rc why remarks | these go Hvrng about a neigh- jj <J | / / * Mrs. Smith -arc- Si "it ltrr son’s jj (jfti »|W ~/ / spring suit —she tells Mrs. Brown 5 Sy A V r A Mrs.-Brown comes in and" finds 3 /J' our Spring Suits half a year jK: . ahead in Style—she tells Mn^ jgJk Mrs. White is coming in tomor- She’ll tell Mrs. Black. fi. So there you are—in black and white why you caifi profit ! B by listening to Mrs. Brown. * x Boys Spring Suits from SIO.OO . jP Boys’ Kaynee Blouses SI,OO up f Boys’ Kaynee Shirts $1.25 up o HOOVER’S, Inc. i “THE YOUNG MAN’S STpRS” OOOOOOOOOOOOOObOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCCGGOOOOOOOO - 1 NO SHORT MEASURE HERE 5 it You can see that you get full mensurei i BOSHH _____ and you can see that the gas is clean j / lij „,Jy IfFVfff wheu flows .into your tank from! , f K n/jHI I [BfeRKl oup °f our-visible pumps. The eon-' £ I I Hr *|— tamer is made of glass and the meas | A j g|Bl> Jllilll IMlli sj . Il I urc scale is within your view. Fori i ' SiJL honest and dependable filling station 11 Ii KIBMRIfIV service, air and water, as well as ges| [ . j||jj!| | KH and oil, we would like you to try us. i > JJH HOWARD’S FILLING STATION mM, |« | SOM M “Service With a Smile” tOOOOOOQOOOOQQOOtJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOQOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOO COAL PRICES REDUCED Best Virginia Lump, per ton $7.50 !" Best Jellico Block, per ton , 1 $8.50 \ [ i Pocahontas Furnace EGG and Lump, per ton $9.00 ; Coal is cheaper now than it will be- in July. Order in | ton Jpts and SAVE. | A. B. POUNDS CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK Capital and Surplua $450,000.00. 1 Commercial > 4 Per Cent. Certificates Savings Lock Boxes | FOLKS THAT BURN Plgj *** COAL iSyi&’Tl jWe Sell, say "Ha! Ha! t" | [Prove what we say is true —tiy it. R 5 MM 8 j CRAVEN’S J s j fancYdry goods women s wear | ."raa ß Mwarjfitfm , vw t n i l , - ■■■""■nr ■ CONCORD COTTON MARKET TUESDAY. MARCH 31. 1925 Cotton 28 1-2 to .24 Cotton Seed .52 1-2 CONCORD PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected weekly by Cline k Moose) Figures named represent prices paid for product on tht market: Bmp .26 ■■ 2jS Sweet potatoes . LEO Turkeys .25 to .30 Onions $1.25 Peas —* SB.OO Batter ,80 Country Ham __ .27 Country Shoulder .16 Country Sides .16 Young Chickens .25

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