Tuesday, February 23,1026 rSOCIETYI Harlequin I i |®!j Now wo h.ive klio-ji with the new “iVioflmr'' 3 So vmi-co’crod kid *nd »i>a«lo >or’i>inodV with patent father. Thy >lw>r Mnp has a lw<M txoilA WOODMEN CIRCLE WILL INSTALL NEW OFFICERS Installation Will Take Place at Meet ing to Be Held in Room This Evening. New officers of Grove No. 11, Wood men’s circle, will be installed at a meeting to be held in the lodge rooms tonight at 7 :45. All members have bbeh ashed to he present. The following officers will be in stalled : Leqa Lady—Guardian. -Mamie Harrier—Advisor. Martha Barringer—Banker. Annie L. Litaker—Clerk. Rose Alexander—Attendant. Blnnche Carrojl—Chaplain. Myrtle Fetrerf—lnner Sential. ’ Charles Cook—Outer Sentinal. Mata Sturgis, Bess Sherrill and Frank Carroll, managers. Georg* Washington Party. The home of Mfs. Smitla Barrier' was the scene of a merry party when the Mission Band of the Trinity Re formed jChureh celebrated George Washington’s, Ukrthday anniversary Monday evening. Delightful games for the children was a feature of the evening, after which refreshments were served. A large sum was realized from the silver offering, that will £e used in the Mission Band's work. Auxiliary Officers Elected. l At the regular business meeting | (if the Woman's Auxiliary of the ■ First Presbyterian Church, the fol lowing officers were elected for the coining year: President—Miss Clara Gillon. Vice-president—Mrs. Gales Pick ard/ Secretary—Mrs. Ncvin Archibald. Treasurer—Mrs. R. M. King. . These officers will be installed at the March meeting and will go into office in April. Mrs. Goodman Enters Hospital. Mrs. W. F, Goodman entered the Concord Hospital Monday night for treatment. Mrs. Goodman has been confined to her home for several weeks and when her condition failed to show improve ment there she decided to undergo treatment in the hospital. Bay of Prayer For Boys and Girls. . The day of prayer for boys and girls will be observed Thursday afternoon, February 25th, at 3:30 in the ladies parlor of the First Presbyterian Church, - Mrs. T. L. Ross will conduct the meet iug. » Virginia Bare Book Club to Meet. The regular'ineeting of the Virginia Bare Book Club will be held Wednes day afternoon at 3 o'clock with Mrs. R. E. Ridenhour, Jr., as hostess. , Rehearsal Tonight. The first rehearsal for the “kitchen orchestra’’ to be given Friday night will be held tonight (Tuesday) in the auditorium at 7 o’clock. r. PROUP 1 _ For Spasmodic Croup rub Vicks over the throat and chest until the difficult breathing is relieved— then cover with a warm flannel cloth- VISJSS OwiTßiiUwmJmnUmdYimrb — —"" t T nooooooooooooocooooooooo I BEAUTIFUL BLUE WHITE g DIAMONDS 5 Sparkling With Fire and Hplea- O dor All carefully selected for 8 their perfect cutting, rfch color, 8 \>m\ wonderful brilliancy. The 8 mountings are \of 18k solid 9 white gold, also yellow gold, X very latest designs, artistkally 6 engraved, and 1 pierced. Easy 8 terms. I S. W.Preslar I JEWELER I Ask us about the “Lucky Two- I hundredth”' f uoooßffiOonnognngnnnnnnioi PERSONALS. Miss Orchard Lafferty is confined to her home by illness. ' • * • R6bert Ford Ross is confined to hi* home with influenza. • • m Miss Blanche Armfield and her guest, Miss Elsie Crew, who spent the •weekend here with Miss Armfield’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arm geld, returned Monday to N. C. C. W. in Greensboro. • • * Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Lyerly and son, Billy, have returned home from Clear Springs, Maryland, where Mr. Lyerly conducted a meeting. Miss Addie Barrier, who accompanied the party to Littles town, Pehn., return ed with them, Saturday. • • • Mrs. Zeb Walker left this afternoon for Rockingham, where she will spend several days with relatives. m * m Misses Jamie Lee, Katie Isenhour and Beulah Praether were visitors in Charlotte Monday’ • * • Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Burns are vis iting relatives in Chatham county. * * » Mrs. Neils Gron leaves tonight for her home in New York after a visit to Mrs. J. C. Gibson. * • * Mrs. C. J. Harris and Miss Ade laide Harris were guests of Miss Vir ginia Whitlock, in Charlotte, on Mon day. • • • Mrs. Percy Sloane, of Cumberland, Maryland,’ is the- guest here of her sister, Mrs. A. R. Howard. • % m Mrs. David Crosland. of'Charlotte, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Z. A. Morris. • * • Mr. and Mrs. J. L. King, of Green wood. S. C.. spent the week-end hero with Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Linker. Birthday Celebration. Members of the Lutheran Brother hood of Calvary E. L Church were entertained by G. W. Petren in honor of his 70th birthday anniversary Mon day evening from 7 :30 till 10 o’clock. Fourteen brothers were present and they all joined in and sang some good " old hymns played by Miss Dorothy Roberts. B. A. Miller read the 23rd Psalm and offered prayer. Mr. Miller also made a talk on the Lutheran Church and its Brotherhood. The pastor. Rev. M. L. Kester, l* behalf of the members, presented Mr. Petrea with a handsome both robe that lie appreciated very mueb. Miss Myr tie Petrea played the vlctrola until Miss Carrie Petren Called us into the dining room that was beautifully dec orated. On the table was a large white cake with 25 candles forming the figures “70” which Mr. Petrea blew out. We were then served iee cream, cake: oranges and bananas. We all returned to the reception room and Mr. Kester made a short talk. We all sang another good old hymn. Having had a good time we departed, wishing Mr. Petrea many more such birthdays. ONE PRESENT. Mrs. Folkes Up Again. Friends of Mrs. A. W. Folkes will be interested to know that sfiio is able to be up again* after being confined to her home by illness for several days. Mrs. Ross Improving. The many friends of Mrs. Lindsay Ross, who has been ill for several weeks, will be interested to hear of the steady improvement in her con dition. Mrs. Gibson Improving. Friends of Miss Elizabeth Gibson will be glad to learn that her condi tion shows/ii decided improvement. Miss Ofbson is a patient in St. Luke’s Hospital in Richmond, Va. MWs Partridge, a mem ber of the British Women's Engineer ing Society, has just installed a com plete electrical plant for supplying a town in Devonshire with current. I She not only originated the scheme, which is a 00-opiXtive one, but her self designed the power station and supervised its erection. Cage Coach ■ I* jxgSgfjSPiiß; I m, * y||f * j Meet Dr GeorgeKeogarp who un« 5 owing to bis accomplishments as 1 coach Os this season's Notre Dante 2 UhlVeralty basketball team Dr Keo 5 gait's boys have been ripping > k through one opponent after another K several of their victims being Big S Pan aggregations. “Dob,” ah he's if known around the campus, is also P *-.■»! —r - f [ALEXANDER HELD FOR DEATH OF A. N. BOGER Coroner’s Jiffy Holds Raleigh Mam Responsible For Death of Former Concord Citizen. D. H. Alexander, of Raleigh, was ordered held Monday by a coroner’s jury in Charlotte for the death of A. L N. Boger, former resident of" Concord," died in a Charlotte Hospital last , *week of injuries alleged to have been received when struck by an auto driven by Alexander., The Charlotte ■ Observer of February 23rd has the : following to say of the case: Acting on testimony presented by Alex West, city detective, a coroner's jury yesterday ruled that A. IN. Bo ger, Mecklenbury hotel coffee shop manager, met death as the result of being struck by an automobile driv en by D. H .Alexander in a drunken condition.” Alexander was bound ov -1 er to the grand jury under a $5,000 1 bond. The inquest followed the death of Mr. Boger on Thursday from compli cations developing in a fracture of the skull and other injuries sustained in the accident Saturday night.. Alexander, who was at the wheel at the time, was charged with man slaughter and has been held under a $5,000 bond. Mr. West testified that he and L.- E. Moher. another member of the city detective force, had arrested Mr. Alex ander at the Charlotte sanatorium’ shortly after his arrival at that insti tution in the-custody of two unknown men and that he had been too drunk to realize the gravity of conditions. The prisoner insisted on referring the matter to his insurance company, Mr. West said. Other witnesses included Willie Flannagnn, porter at the Mecklenburg hotejj, and Mrs. J. C, Casker. Both were submitted to brief examinations relative to general conditions and ap pearances. Members of the jury empannelled by Coroner Hovie included John M. Wilsom W. H. Miller, C. R. McGuinu, B. C. Levi, W. C. Boyd and George M. Phifer. Mr. Alexander is a resident of Ral eigh and is employed as traveling rep resentative of an Ohio firm with head quarters at Greensboro. TRAINING SCHOOL FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS Attendance Monday Night Much Larger Than at the First Session Sunday Afternoon. Increased interest is being manifest ed in the standard training school for Sunday School Workers lifiw being conducted at Central Methodist Church by the Methodist and Presby terian denominations. This was demonstrated Monday night when between 185 and 200 per sons attended the first night session of the school, the attendance being much larger than it was Sunday af ternoon for the opening session. The courses in the school are be ing conducted by Rev. C. M. Pick ens, who teaches "The Bible” With special reference to the New Testa ment; Prof. Claud T. Carr on “Pupil Study.” Mrs. E. P. Michaux on “The Junior Pupil.” Miss Georgia Keen on “Primary Pupil.” and Mrs/ O. V. Woosley on “Training Beginners to Worship.” The session eaeli night begins at 7:30 and continues two hours. Certificates will be awarded to all persons who complete the courses of fered. “I believe children lose a great deal if permitted to form their early impressions from the screen, rather than from their own observations of the world.”—Dr. Sanger Brown, second chairman of the New York State Commission on Mental Defec tives. USE PENNY COLUMN—IT PAYS Jap Leader 9 I ===^SLg|=p 1 V fluff ] ; j tetijlro Wakatsuki, fortner homy oinleter of Japan J baa been named V 'V -"’lf- *■- THE CONCORD DAILY /TRIBUNE Still Spry pi*: it _ B. F. McClintock of West Salem, Wis., is 82 and a Civil War veteran, jut he’s still active. To prove it he itood on his head, using three tin as a base, while his picture was takers THINKS GASTONIA FOLKS LOVE MONEY RIGHT WELL. Gastonia Gazette.- Some one lias disagreed with the editor in his statement that we are prone to worship money too much. It would be interesting to estimate how badly behind the several churches of the city are in their annual budgets for their various benevolent causes this year—the Centenary, the 75 Million Campaign, the Progressive Program, Forward Movement, etc. It might be found that the love of money ■on the one hand had something to do with the lack of it on t'.ie other. One might ask why there is no li brary in Gastonia. Or. why we have no Y. M. C. A,? Or why there is no war memorial? The answer might be found in the fact that Gastonians love their money better than they do these other things. , It might also explain why there is no hospital for the tuberculosis pa tients of the county, of whom a good ly number die every year for lack of treatment. The small amount of tax might be too much. The lack of a public general hos pital for the treatment of those who can not afford to pay the price in a private institution might be well laid dt the door df Old Man Love of Mon ey. The worship of and greed for, mon ey might also explain the countless number of bootleggers who come up to onrt courts every months. So are the bank defaulters and swindlers who rob many a poor man or widow of all their hard earned savings by a simple stroke of the pen, and then get off with a year or two in the pen. Note Salisbury, Wilmington, High Point, for instance. It-might also explain the several tragedies which have occurred in Gas tonia the past few years. Whiskey figured in all of them—bootleg liquor made a fill sold for the money. Love of money again. It might account foV some of the wrecked homes and blasted lives—too fast a life, trying to keep up with those who had money, too rapid a gait, loose living, hard times, poverty, fail ure, separation—all. because of a love of money and the things it will pur chase. It might also explain’ the presence on the roster of church officials, dea cons, stewards, elders, in many a com munity, of names that are not so ap- MASON'IC NOTICE. Special Communication of Stokes Lodge on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Work in the Second Degree. All Masons are asked to attend. By order of the W. M. HOWARD L. COLLIE, See. DREADFUL PAINS Georgia Lady, Who Had Lost Too Ihch Weight, Was Advised to Take Cardoi and Is Now Well. Columbus, Ga.—Mrs. George S. Hunter, of this city, -writes: “After I married, thirteen months ago, I suffered with dreadful pains In my sides during ... My side hurt so bad it nearly killed me. I had to gb to bed and stay some times two weeks at a time. I could not work and I just dragged around the bouse. “I got very thin —I went from 126 pounds down to less than 100. My mother had long been a user of Cardui and she knew what a good medicine it wos for this trouble, so she told me to get some and take it. I sent to the store after it and be- I had taken the first bottle | I began to improve. “My Ale hurt less and I began to Improve in health. ... The Cardui acted as. a fine tonic and I do not feel like the same person. I am m much better. I am well now. I have gilned ten pounds and am atill gaining. My sides do not trouble nje at all. ■ i ■ "I Wish every suffering woman knew about Cardui.” liropriate. Their money put them there—a sad commentary on the state of the church. It might explain also why the man | with a million is exalted in the public j eye even if he have not a scintilla of moral principle of character; why the biggest man in a community is not the statesman, scientist, scholar, the preacher, poet, but the man w\th a million or two. There are many things which can be laid at the door of this love of money, and these enumerated are only a few. March True Romances, a Macfad den publication, reveals a heart-stirr ing tale of a girß® struggle in “The lleauty Peddler. “When Romance Came" is Marjorie’s own romance, while ‘'Whispering Tongues” as its name implies depicts a boy's struggle against terrifying odds and the flam ing romance of youth. Professor Joseph Barcoft wlio re mained a week in a glass chamber, while all the air was pumped out ex cept the minimum necessary to sus tain life, gained a Cambridge Uni versity post. Tlie twenty-fourth annual North and South championship golf tourna ment for women is to be held at Pine luirst, N. C„ March 25-30. This might be YOU depositor who opened an account with us in Jan uary, 1923, depositing three dollars every week, now has a balance of more than SSOO. How muck have YOU saved? One dollar or more deposited each week will keep your account growing. Citizens Bank and Trust Company | " CONCORD, N. C. !!:■ ' ? jj : ■ THE BEST PAINT jl|j| ; THE LOWEST PRICES UM t HI THE BEST PLACE TO II TRADE f | 11 ■ That’s What Others Are Saying. | Coma in and let us prove that they | YORKE&WADSWORTH CO. The Old Reliable Hardware Store Rhone 30 Concord, N. C. Phone 30 ITOMna* sjmsLP Some people are unlucky enough to v think there is such a thing as being unlucky. Many nuisances formerly found on ly in rich homes are enjoyed by the working man now. If we buy all the attachments we want for our flivver the sheriff will come along with another. Can’t tell if a wild looking man is writing spring poetry or making out his income tax. We always wish we were in some friend’s place without knowing that then we would be out of place. " Choose your enemies as wisely as you do your friends. (Copyright, 1026, NEa Service, Inc.) Wives are still purchased in the ! region of Persia known as the “Roof of the World,” a common price being i 100 sheep. The Oxford- student who gets home, after ten o’clock at night must pay a fine to the gatekeeper. T 'M fI(VATIOW-WJDE! .9 I m I* * INSTITUTION— I (J I *>-54 South Union Street. Concord. N. C. I “Kyber” Broadcloth Shirt*. | “Vat” Dyed—Absolutely Fast Color ' |jl “Kyber” stands for Quality and Integrity. It is out ■I j own copyrighted name. It means Fast Color to Sun, -11 Tub and Perspiration. Real values at I .pUgi means better values ind fit superior. ' , —1 P000000000000000000000000QooOC?OOQOQQQe<v>.-y»^yjqp09a K. L. CRAVEN & SONS PHONE 74 j: • || COAL ir 5 Mortar Colors I > r'l| 1 a000000000Q000000CXXX»0000C3COUoO0OQ0Q00000f v VK?00 ; OUR PENNY IDS. ILK GET RBLTS Our Penny ADS. 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