S»t«rd«r, Marsh 6, ISM rSOCIETV I These tight-fitting leggings, reaching :;i above the knee, are a novel guard f against rain and mud stains. A dec orativt note is a painted design in donttastltig colon. Misses Laura and Rebecca Smart fen- Sr Misses Laura and RebeeCh Siiulrt entertained Friday at their home on North Union street. Dancing was enjoyed throughout the evening and after the dancing de lightful refreshments were served, jf Those present were: Misess Julia Rowan. Askinx Ivey, Bessie Webb. Annie Duffy Day van It. Louise Webb, Millicent Wanl, Anie Louise Hoover, Mary Cannon, Mary Grady Darks and Elizabeth MacFad.ven; Messrs. Jack White, George Patterson, John Brown, David vOrowell, Livingston Easley, Archibald Cannon, Jacob Stirewalt, Mae .Howard, DeWitt Boat, Gene Hoover and Hal Jarratt. Silver Cross Circle Meeting. The Bilver Cross Circle of the King’s Daughters met Friday after noon at -4 o’clock with Miss Douglass Archibald with fifteen members pres ent. Ih 'thc absence, of Miss Addie White, theomeetiag was presided over by Mrs. L. A. Fisher. Plans were discussed' by which books could be - given to children unable to buy them- At the wneluskin of. tßh program M ! ss Archibald served dellHftus re freshments. Mis* Bilan White Will entertain the circle' ill April. Member* of *. ft tX tl; Td AtiMwl District Meeting. , ~ Members of the, Totntg People’s | Christiah union 8f the Askodffite Re formed RrCsbyteriad Church will go to Huntersville tomorrow afteraoon to f attend a district meatibft of the Ot utiloni headed by their Diesrdetif, Miss Aftnie B. Baird, plan to attend the HrtiitSfstilltjf ehufetthcC. MrS. Ward and Mrs. Mauldin Enter tain. • Mrs. W. B. Ward and Mrs. L. L. Mauldin jointly entertalfaetl at bridge Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs: Ward on South Union street. The home was beautifully decorated with a' prbfusion of yellow jonquils and tu* lips. Bridge wSs played at seved tables and after a number of progres sions a delicious salad ctrtirse with ac cessories was served. Woman’S Auxiliary Pleat I’reshytCfl an Church. The business meeting of the \Vem an’s Auxiliary of the First Presby tcrial Churfh will meet Monday af ternoon in tfic Church parlor at 3:80. The new officers will be installed and the personnel of the new circles wilt be read. Reports of the yCsFs, Work well be given and a full attendance is i earnestly desired. Elizabeth Odell Circle to MetC. The Elizabeth Odell Circle of the Forest Hill Methodist Church, will meet Monday afternoon at 8:00 o clock at. the heme of Mrs. Eugene Morgan on. North Cburfch street,, with Mrs. T. J. Smith and Mrs. Floyd Lipe as joint hostesses With Mrs. Morgan. USE PENNY COLUMN-—IT PAYS T I I T BURNS or scalds of small area, mm cover first with wet bak ing soda. When dry, off. £>tessWith Vttkg, gently, Db hot #ttb In. Baudagft lightly. ■ —i -i . f ■■ .Uun-j ajoooooooooooooooooooOQo jj ' PINE OEMS. 1 p in obsolete mountings are as in - consistent as ytiung girls drCss j ed in Grandma’s clothes. The J village gossip has nothing on c the wedding ring when it comes < j bo telling your age. Let us f modernize yOur old wedding j ting. It doesn’t mgr the ocig-, O Inal engraving, t ' ' ~ EeiwonAl. Rev. Harris, B. Thomas has Hrttirn nd from Morgan ton, where he w*e Called by the sudden death of the wife Os the rector of the Episcopal church. • * * Mrs. B. S. Ervin and gi*nd-daugh ter, Berry Ervin, of Salisbury, were guests here Friday of Mrs. Jt F. Har i ns, at het home on west Depot street. e • • Wesley Walker left Friday night ter Philadelphia, where be will take a special course in floral design mak ing. He expects to be in Philadelphia about three weeks. • • • Miss Rath Crowell l«ft Friday ter Salisbury, where she Is Spending the week-end with Mrs. 3. C. Klsiab. a * * Misses Irene McConnell, Wilma Cor rell, Sue Caldwell and Lethia Snyder spent Friday afternoon in Charlotte. fc • * Miss Adelaide Hftrris, of Concord, abd Miss Louise Gibbon, Os Charlotte, left Friday for Durham to attend Jhe S. A. E. dances at the Washington Duke Hotel. While in Durham they are the guests of Mrs. Gilbert White. * • * Miss Frances Overly is spending the week-end in Salisbury With Mrs. Walter H. Hartley, • i f Miss Margaret Smart, of Greens boro. is spending the week-end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Smart. • •’ • Miss Elizabeth Smart, of Queens College, Charlotte, is spending the week-end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs./C. S. Smart. . ' • • » r Mr. and Mrs. J. Leonard Brown and sons, Jofon and Rufus, and Mrs. Grace Brown Saunders and Miss Maude Brown will sfiend Sunday in Gastonia .with Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Brown. * • • Mrs. W. J. Hethcox left this morn- ' ing for Lynchburg, where she will be with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Cayl Brown, who is seriously 111. • • • Robert and John Varner, students at Rutherford College* were called here by the death of their grandfath er, A. V. Varner. ** • ' Mrs. C. H. Barrier. Miss Marie 1 Bajrrier, John Query and James Me- ; Braw went to High Point 4his after- ’ hdfin to dttend th# fuliWal Os A. V. ■ Vlttner. * • * y Frank MorHson and R. ft. Deaton rettiraed Friday ffom NeW York, whert Qkey spent several days on businesV sot Patks-Belk Co. Mrs. C. A. Jones returned this af ternoon to Her home in Lancaster, S. C„ after spending several days here w-ittl her daughter, Mrs. L. T. Hart- ASKrJf.w ... ITT- • » • • Mrs. f. J. Honeycutt and M#s. William Hefslimart; of Concord, ahd Mias Lhhlse Honeycutt, of Shelby, left this afternoon for Florida, where they will spend sevefal days. • it Miss Margaret Hansel, primaty teacher In a tVllkeaboro school, is Spending the week-end with her par ents, Rev. and Mrs. M. E. Hansel, on Franklin Aveune. • ■ • O. F. Barnhardt, of. tYilkesboro, is visiting Ms parents, Mr. and Sirs. W. N. Barnhardt. St their home on the. Kannapolis road during the week end. r Mias O’Neal and Miss M Uleford Hon orees. Miss Mary O’fieal, of Rock Hill. 8. C„ and MiHS Bertie Louise Willc ,ford,-April brides-elcct, were honorees at a buffet luiifctieoii given this after ndan flt 1 o’clock, by Mto Margaret Virginia Ervin at her hom eon North Union street. A profusion of spring flowers were tastefully arranged -in the dining room gnd living room, pink carna- J tions being used In ’the former and | jonquils in the latter. The centerpiece of the dining room table, where the guests were served by Mrs. R. 8. Young and Mrs. L. T. Hartsell, was a handsome bowl filled with carnations. Guests present Jat the luncheon, one of the most interesting of the social events of the season, were: Miss O’Neal. Miss Willeford, Mrs. Stanton Northrop, Misses Elizabeth Blttith; hm Richmond L»nt*, Vir ginia and. Anhis Smoot, Adelp and Mafy Phifer Rehibertbn, Helen Martfh and Mrs. B. E. Harris, Jr., Mrs. L. T. Hartsell, Jr„ Mrs. A‘. Jones Yorke, JUrs. W. H. - Wadsworth and Mts. W. L. Burns. ...T. .ii... ,, Dft.i:. ' Meeting in InteVegt as MomsrM Coins. Mrs. \f»B. Linker, chairman of the local Last Call Campaign for the sale of I'd Moderate MelnUrial C’dlhs, has issued a call ter a meeting to be held Mdnday everting' ill the Merch ants and Manufacturers Club. Committees of the different organ izitiohs of llie city are expected to attend the meeting -and the invita tion is also open to ail others in the dtj tvhe are interested in the work, Jfts. Lliiker states. Miks Elizabeth Conrad, of Charlotte, publicity director for the campaign, has written Mrs, Linker offering a framed Picture df the Central Group of flghfek On Stone MdUdtain for the first school room in the city which Reports 100 per/cent, purchase of the coiiis. It is probable that Mrs. Lin ker will ask that the picture be sent. Circle to Meet. The Laura Hfiortl Circle of Cen tral Methodist Chutch trill meet Mou daj evenitijg /T Mi|s Ite-, South Union Street. i. Ofhe condition of Roland Haupt, who has been ill at his home on Elm j street for several days, is reported to day as being somewhat improved. :c 4 j Roosevelts Rack. i “FIT FOR A FIGHT” ttim’t Changed .Opinion H.b Future Is In Public Life, Says T-R. Jr. New Ydrk World. Theodore and Hermit Roosevelt returned yesterday from the wilds of Central Asia where they went short ly after Theodore failed to take the Govc'rnehip of this State away from Alfred B. Smith, in the 1924 elec tion. Since then they have been hunting big game like their father, the late President Roosevelt. “I am coming back fit for a fight or a ttolic,” the elder brother said yesterday afternoon as the pair came ub the bay on the BerengaHa. He would not tell whether this myant his hat would be In the ring again in a few months against Gov ernor Smith. But he did say he had not changed his mind [about his future being “in the public life.” “For seven months,” said young Theodore, “we Were where there was 00 telegraph and no mail. Every day since I got back to civilization I am finding out something Import ant that has happened while I was away and is so old how that nobody tells me about It” No Political Welcome. His return did not seem to be a political event to the dozen friends and -neighbors who met him at Quarantine and shook His hand. There AaS a ndtable absence of poli ticians of his own party. The wel- I ertning committee of a. dozen was led, in so far as ft had a leader, by Mtirray Hulbeft. termer President of the Board of Aldermen in the Hymn Adffii«f»frati«h. Two doieti photogtaphCm ahd a dozen fepnrtecs took him away from the welcome Committee and asked him all about the big gatee hbnt ftnd the dvM prili. “Vfe Shot Tibetan antelope at 18.000 feet,” Col. Roosevelt s#ld. The Oolohei t<?ld hi* talc in his oWn Way. He told of his caravan of yaks aad pohies that left -Srinagar I about the middle of May and Climbed I into the high places of Tibet. He l tobk his audience through the pass of Karakorum ih perpetual show. He rolled the l-esoniidlhg hnlifts as Mat eo Ppio might have ddhe at a State aPdiCtice When He returned to Venice. “We weht to Uafttatifl,’’ he said, ‘‘in to the Tlah final! MoUfctalbS; then back bf burnt to Srihagar, where we met our wives.” “They’re gorgeous names, aren’t they,” he said. Fina’ly he came to the ovfs poli. “In the Pamirs of China and RuS sia.” he said, “we shot the ovis noli. The Pamirs are rolling gorund, high itt the air, with patches of grass here and there on whigh the-ovis poli lives. It is bitterly cold. “We got eight ovis pbli, with horns fifty inches or longei-. It’s a big sheep called poli, after Mureo Polo, who discovered them on his voyages to Cathay from Venice in the thirteenth century. Ate the Ovis Prtli. “The ovis poli has been tor many yCars ah animal that hunters have ednsidered a particularly fine trophy. It is particularly hard to get because you have to make a long trip and go over the Himalny Mountaffis ter it. Those we got were the first shot in a few years.” “Did you eat any of it?” “Os Course we did.” “How did it taste?” Words failed Mr. Roosevelt. He cUuld remember names, but tastes apparently do not stick. In his mind. “Anything Would have tasted good after you hunt the ovis poli,” pc, said. The subject quickly changed. “We I shot tiger in India, with both Mrs. ’ Roosevelts. Each lady shot her tiger." i “Were they in any danger from tbelr tigers?” a reporter” asked. “No,” said Thedore, grinning at his wife, who looked startled at his answer. “Both ladies shot very well/” hff added, grinned at her again. Eentertains Club Members. Mrs. Frank Armficld was hostess td the members of the Friday After noon Book Club Friday at her Lome on West Corbin street. - The subject of the meeting was * “Negro Art and Literature,” Mrs. IW. M. Linker reading the principal paper of the meeting. Several other, poems and stories written by negroes! 1 Were read at the meeting by other; inembers. , Refreshments were served during tfie afternoon. \ in Great Britain blind persons without means are eligible to the old age pension at the age of 50. How soon can you save a thousand dollars? ; t I If you deposit $3 every Week, your account will increase to s2so'in less Agk than one year. f / \ You Krill have SSOO in h jj less than two Jrears, and Ijflf in approximately 4 3 jlMf months, your balance will be SI,OOO. w! You can open an account |r $1 or ntort* m | _ Citizens BanK m and Trust Company 111 CONCORD, N, C. i| THfc CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNB Members of Trinity Reformed Church To Use New Building Members of Trinity Reformed Church Will hold services tomorrow in their handsome new church buildt ing pn North Chureh streetr' The building, erected at a cost Os , approximately $55,000, is the latest church structure in- Cdneord and it ; combines modern arrangement and equipment with a simplicity and beau ■ ty that make it one of the handsom est edifices in the city. The architecture of the ehurch is Tudor Gothic, the general scheme of the interior and exterior following lines called sot in such architecture, i Simplicity marks the outline and fin ishings of the structure, giving it-a : most pleasing dignity and impressive ness. On the ground floor are located the ' HHmmF' ffnlH > nil jl m |p.D: atidifbriutti alitl class rooms sot adults and juniors. The auditorium and gallery have a seating capacity of 425. Tiie eutii4 interior of the audi torium is finished in red cak, memori al Windows offering a soft ligfit on the general beauty of the room. Just id the rear of the' pulpit are seats fdr the choir and space for a pipe otgan. Steps lend from a rear vesti bule into the choir loft on either side of the pulpit, the arrangement making 1 it possible for members of the choir ' to take their places without entering the auflitdrium. The four class rooms on this floor open into an assembly room, which is : equipped with a small organ. The seating capacity of these rooms is, 120. • In the vestibule behind the audi tdrium are a room for the secretary's rbcords and literature and several other rooms that can be used for closets or for storage. Also on this floor is' located the la dies' -parlor, beautifully fitted with soft toned furniture bhieh blends per fectly with the mellow light from four memorial windows. These win | wods were moved from the old church j used by the congregation and were 'placed in the ehurchvas memorials to Annie Elizabeth Crowell,. Mr. and Sirs. A. E. Moore. Rev. George Boger and Rev. Samuel Fetzer. Ou the third floor more Sunday School rooms are located, these being for the junior and intermediate class es. The rooms, have a seating ca pacity of between 75 and 100 and are also connected with an assembly room. Every Sunday School room in the structure is equipped with blackboiirds. There are six rooms on this floor. The basement floor, built without excavation because of the slope of the land, but still six feet above the ground, houses rooms for the primary ; and beginner classes, with space for | 100 students. j On this floor also is located the ! kitchen, which opens into a large as sembly room which occupies exactly the- Sahie dniount of space as the au (lltorium. This room will be used for banquets and other social gather ings when completed. Under part of »_ I the class rooms is located the boiler ’ room, where is generated steam heat . for the entire building. Four toilets also are located on this basement 1 floor. Each window in the auditorium is : a memorial, these including: I One by David and Ethel Lippard. One by Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Peek ■ for their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Peck and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Heilig. i One by Mrs. M. E. Barrier and • family to the formers parents, Mr. ! and Mrs. Smith Shuping. One by R. T. Lippard to his dangh • ter. Mrs. Carry Bell Royster. One by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lip ■ paid to Mrs. Susan Frances George and Crooks Lippard. One by E. G. Cook. The New Trinity Reformed Church One by J. H. A. Holshouser to liis parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ohrixtenbery Holshouser. ~ One by Mrs. Jt. H. Patterson to her parents, A. G. Bost and Martha Bost. Ope by Mrs. J, M\ Barnhardt to Kcr oarents, Mr. and Mrs. Jfsse Leonard. < j < the by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. A. Hol -1 sbouser to their children, Maty Essie ahd Harry L. Ona by R. P. Benson to his mother, Mrs. In the side of the tower are me morial winddws given by Mrs. W. T. Vfall for her father, Rev. Paiil Bar rtoger, arid Mrs.*B. A. Moose to her. r -.-- .... ■. " r ; J| f-.. *• , . . . '■IB 3 ■'jlß Moore’s Paint 11 i - ‘ ’ ill ®and :: ; | Varnish • <^S > . ■ **«««» VABNIf I ; W ‘“moom'v ts p . j I | «| : iViowu Better J ; ' ‘ ■ .;. _ - ’ ' : ' u 1 and our prices are cheaper j Moore's Gratification and piide in the newly painted home are j Indeed Worth while, but the realization that siin and rain, i Moores 7 j Kt L N ! M snow and sleet cannot injure your property is worth much t*jH Moore’s House Paints not only beautify, but preserve 0 UT,IDE ' rtl M ; 1 We carry a complete line of Moote’s Paints and can •< (1 Supply ybflr requirements without delay. Call feftd talk over with us the selection of colors and ' ' cost Os paintingyour home. YORKE6WADSWORTH CO. Th* Old Reliable Hardware Store Phone 30 Concord, N. C. Phone 30 i • i < mother, Mrs. Cobb Moose. I In the front of the 'tower are two * windows by Rev and Mrs. W. C. 1 LyerlyTo their living sons, William 1 Clarence Lyerly, Jr., and Ray Lenta ’ Lyerly. - Rev. W. C. Lyerly is pastor of the church, and is now serving his eighth year with the congregation. Members of the building committee were: J. O. Moose, chairman; J. H. A. Holshouser, J. A. Peck, H. S. Bar rier, J. C. Lippard, M. B. Moore and Mrs. H. A. Qoodman. There are at present 164 members in the congregation and the new church stands as a-testimonial of their loyalty and devotion to the Christian church. -s-i-M. v-* * ■.y.c Unfair to, the Weak. Winstbn-Stelem Journal. W# are sutptised to see the Char lotte Observdt- advocate ‘'an extension of the existing system by which each 11 ebunty wanting the eight-months schobf term might vote a different tax tijron itself, leaving the opposing and ikenker counties to rdek aldhg with six or seven-months term, as the case might be.” Under the present system it is true that The Observer's own county of Mecklenburg can get along with a School tax rate of only forty-jour cents. But the people of Watauga j county , are forced to pay a rate of sixty eeiifc. And that figure would i . hake to Be raised considerably if Watauga went to an eight-months term. This is unfair, of course, to Wa tauga county; But Watauga is by no means the only county that is suffer ing the grossest injustice under the present system. For while the rich county~-of Mecklenburg pays a com paratively small rate for schools, oth er agricultural counties, which have no great corporations or big cities, pay a school tax rate almost twice as high. For example, Stokes pays . 1 --1- .fUL.; ' . ~ 'fegsga X/ITi fiWlONWtlxf% ■: If U e INSTnvnON- I J L fenneyvo VV&mBkBmEHT STORSB I 50-54 South Union St., Concord, N. C. ’Students’ Ideas In the Suits for Spring I § Lines they like— Styles they expect-*~ Values they demand— Moderately priced 4t i English model Bflits that make a hit with live,’ manly fellows in High’ School, Prep, College ori, in Business. —Two-button, tingle breasted —Easy Hitting back "** —Straight - Hanging Trousers * ‘1 ■—Light and Medium; —Stripes, Overplaids and Mixtures. Other Students’ Suits $16.75 and $24.75~~ PAGE FIVE eighty-one centß; Polk pays eighty; Dare pays eight; Hyde pays $1.18; and Clay pays ninety cents as Mecklenburg’s forty-foar, Guißb(sP thirty-seven. Buncombe and Forsyth twenty-seven.^— Rabbi Marius Ranson, .Jemple Beth-El, Albany, New York, ,«« that the world court be established in Jerusalem. He claims thrinyw’ v sages iu Isaiah and Micah forecast such a tribunal there. i

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